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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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That is if you do not punish him according to that Law before given Exod. 22. 18. Tho● shalt not suffer a witch to live Ver● 9. For every one that curseth his father or his mother shall surely be put to death This word for hath reference to the foregoing exhortation sancti●ie your selves and be ye holy c. and it must be extended also to all the par●icular penall statutes that follow in this chapter as if it had been said For if you do not sanctifie your selves and keep my statutes behold thus and thus as you shall now hear have I in all those following particulars appointed you to be punished The Law that is first here delivered is for the putting of him to death that curseth his father or his mother which is not meant of every wayward word but of such reviling speeches as they might plainly perceive proceeded from a manifest contempt of their parents of which see Exod. 21. 17. By what manner of death they were to die it is not expressed Some conceive that because stoning is appointed both in the beginning and end of the chapter as may be seen ver 2. and ver 27. therefore in all other places of this chapter where no other kind of death is expressed this of stoning is intended But however in this particular of children that cursed their parents we may the rather think it was so because elsewhere this kind of death is appointed for rebellious children Deut. 21. 20 21. His bloud shall be upon him That is he is the cause of his own death which is added to shew that however men may think this Law too severe yet he hath deserved this punishment and must therefore undergo it Ver● 10. He that committet● adultery with his neighbours wife the adulterer and the adulteresse shall surely be put to death Namely by stoning as it may probably be gathered from these places Deut. 22. 22 23 24. If a damsell that is a virgin be betrothed unto an husband and a man find her in the citie and lie with her Then ye shall bring them both unto the gate of the citie and ye shall stone them with stones that they die and so also Deut. 16. 38 40. and John 8. 4 5. The words of this Law are onely expresse for the adultery of the wife and so they are also Deut. 22. 23 24. Nor do we any where reade that the husband breaking the covenant of marriage by lying with a single woman was punished with death and that because the adultery of the wife in some degrees is more injurious to the hus●and by causing him to father a bastard brood Vers 14. And if a man take a wife and her mother ●t is wickednesse they shall be burnt with fire both he and they That is the man and both mother and daughter married to him if both consented to this wickednesse or either of them indifferently whether mother or daughter that is taken to the other And the severity of the punishment was to shew the ●ainousnesse of the sinne Vers 15. And if a man lie with a beast he shall surely be p●t to death and ye shall s●ay the beast Both to shew how horrible and detestable that fact was as likewise that the ●ight of such a beast being unfit for other imployments also for no man would willingly keep such an one might not bring to remembrance so filthy a sin Vers 16. They shall surely be put to death their bloud shall be upon them That is both the woman and the man before spoken of that are found guilty of this unnaturall sinne of beastiality Vers 17. And if a man shall take his sister c. In this law concerning the punishment of incest between the brother the sister there is mention made of their seeing one anothers nakednesse whereby either nothing else is intended but what in other Laws is called uncovering their nakednesse or else because this might happen this is added to shew the hainousnesse of the sinne and how justly it is appointed to be punished with death The manner of their death is not expressed and therefore happely that was left to the Magistrate or else it was stoning as is noted before upon ver 9. onely it is said they shall be cut off in the sight of their people whereby is intended that they were immediately to be put to death and that openly for a warning to others and that if the Magistrate should forbear to cut them off then the Lord himself would do it Vers 18. And if a man shall lie with a woman having her sicknesse c. That is if he doth it wittingly for if he did it unwittingly he was onely rendred unclean thereby and was to be purified and to make an atonement for himself according to the direction of other Laws Vers 19. They shall bear their iniquities That is they shall be cut off for the puni●hment of incest being expressed in other places here it suffices to expresse their guiltinesse Vers 20. They shall bear their ●inne they shall die childlesse That is they shall presently be put to death Here the phrase is thus carried to shew that one reason why the Lord appointed such to be cut off was that the Land might not be filled with the issue of such unclean mixture CHAP. XXI Vers 1. THere shall none be defiled for th● dead among his people That is none of the inferiour priests shall by reason of mourning for the dead defile themselves to wit by touching their dead bodies or being in the house where their dead bodies were or coming nigh them a●d so consequently being present at their funeralls c. And severall reasons may be given why this was forbidden 1. that they might not too frequently be thereby disabled from attending the work of their prie●●ly office 2. that hereby it might be seen that there was a higher degree o● holinesse required in the priests then in the rest of the people 3. that they might be the clearer types of the Messias who should be so exactly holy 4. that their ref●aining to mourn might be a reall in●●ruction to the people of the hope of the resurrection and 5. to teach us what purity is required in those that are by Christ made priests unto God Rev. 1. 6. Vers 2. But for his kinne that is near to him that is for his mother and for his father c. Amongst others here expressed for whom the priests might defile themselves the brother is one But why then were Eleazar and Ithamar the sonnes of Aaron forbidden to bewail the death of Nadab and Abihu their brethren Lev. 10. 6. Uncover not your heads neither rend your clothes le●t you die c. I answer that charge was extraordinary and peculiar 1. Because hereby they were required to testifie their submission to that severe proceeding of the Lord against their brethren and 2. Because they were newly that day entred upon the execution of their priestly office for
again if they were once suffered to come in Vers 19. And the children of Israel said unto him We will go by the high way This is either the reply of the first messengers or a second embassy upon the answer brought back by the first messengers Vers 21. Thus Edom refused to give Israel passage through his border Notwithstanding as they went along their coasts the Edomites suffered them to buy victuals of them See Deut. 2. 28 29. Wherefore Israel turned away from him Fetching a compasse through the wildernesse about the land of Edom. The Lord had charged them that they should not meddle with the sonnes of Esau or their possession Deut. 2. 4 5. Ye are to passe through the coasts of your brethren the children of Esau Medd●c not with them for I will not give you of their land no not so much as a footbreadth so they went about though the way through the wildernesse was very troublesome Numb 21. 4. The soul of the people was much discouraged because of the way Vers 22. And came unto mount Hor. From which some think the people that were driven out of this countrey by Esau were called Horims Dent. 2. 12. The Horims also dwelt in Seir beforetime but the children of Esau succeeded them when they had destroyed them c. and Esau is called the Horite Gen. 36. 20. Vers 24. Aaron shall be gathered unt● his people c. See the note upon Gen. 25. 8. This prediction of Aarons death was to make it manifest to the people that he was by death kept from entring Canaan for his sinne else the death of so aged a man would have been little regarded Vers 25. Take Aaron and Eleazar his sonne and bring them up into mount Hor. These reasons may be probably given why this is appointed to be done in the mount 1. That it might be a signe that this was done by Gods appointment their going up into the mount being as it were a presenting of themselves before Gods tribunal that by his will they m●ght be ordered in this great businesse 2. That it might raise up the peoples expectation to observe what was done whence it is said vers 27. that they went up in the sight of all the congregation 3. That it might be a signe of Aarons ascending by death to heaven Vers 28. And Moses stripped Aaron of his garments and put them upon Eleazar his sonne The priests used not to wear their holy garments out of the tabernacle But this was done by speciall command of God Aaron therefore going up to mount Hor in all the high priests attire that he might die there Moses stripped him there of all those holy garments not so much that they might not be defiled by Aarons dead body as that they might be put upon Eleazar his sonne to signifie that God had appointed him to suce●ed in his fathers office And indeed this done thus once for all was sufficient to shew that God had established this order that the high priests eldest sonne or the next heir of the family unlesse he were uncapable of it because of some blemish was still to succeed in that place and office and withall it must needs be a great comfort to Aaron that before he died he saw his sonne settled in his room and might in his sonne so clothed behold as in a type his Mediatour the salvation of God Luk. 2. 29. But yet in the dayes of the Judges we find that the high priesthood was removed from Eleazars to Ithamars posterity for Eli was of the stock of Ithamar And Aaron died there in the top of the mount This was in the first day of the fifth moneth in the fourtieth year after their coming out of Egypt Aaron then being an hundred and twenty three years old chap. 33. 38 39. and an evident demonstration this was of the insufficiency of the legal priesthood Hebr. 7. 23 24. And they truly were many priests because they were not suffered to continue by reason of death But this man because he continueth ever hath an unchangeable priesthood Vers 29. They mourned for Aaron thirty dayes This was it seems the usuall time of mourning for great men for so long also they mourned for Moses Deut. 34. 8. In Deut. 10. 6. it is said that Aaron died and was buried at Mosera but concerning that difficultie see the note upon that place CHAP. XXI Vers 1. ANd when king Arad the Canaanite which dwelt in the south heard tell that Israel came by the way of the spies c. That is when he understood by the spies he had sent forth to observe the course of the Isra●lites that they were turned back again from the red sea and marched directly upon the south of Canaan where his countrey lay by the way of the spies that is by the way where he had sent his spies to watch them not knowing of Moses purpose to compasse the land of Moab he resolved that they meant to enter upon the south of Canaan and therefore judging it safer to find his eneme in his neighbours countrey then to be found by them in his own he immediately went forth with a great army even as farre as mount Hor in the edge of the desert where the Israelites now lay and there fought with them and took some of them prisoners Many Expositours do farre otherwise conceive of that which is here said of the Israelites coming by the way of the spies namely that king Arad heard they came by the way where the spies which Moses did long since send to search the land chap. 13. 17. entred that countrey and indeed they entred upon the south of Canaan as is there expressely noted But first because the Israelites were now farre from Kadesh-Barnea whence those spies were sent to search the land of Canaan and secondly because it seems apparent by the text that those that told this king Arad of the Israelites coming used the exp●ession here mentioned that they came by the way of the spies and we no way find that either this king or any other of the Canaanites did ever know any thing of the Israelites spies that were sent to search the land therefore I conceive that this is meant rather as is abovesaid of the way where king Arad had sent spies to observe which way the Israelites would take of whose return from the red sea he had before been informed as is noted chap. 33. 40. As for the battel which was here fought betwixt the Israelites and the army of this king Arad very observable it is first that the Lord so disposed of it by his providence that this one king should onely come forth against them and that all the Canaanites in those parts did not joyn their forces together against them for by this means the Israelites were not so daunted but that they were willing to fight with them and secondly that notwithstanding the Lord suffered them to be foyled so that some of them were
eat with them of their peace-offerings because the remainders might not be reserved for themselves but were to be burnt Vers 11. Ye shall not steal neither deal falsely neither lie one to another Though all lying be here forbidden yet principally all lying whereby men are defrauded of their right either in buying or selling or otherwise Vers 12. And ye shall not swear by my name falsely Next after the Law against all false dealing in defrauding this is here inserted because by perj●ry men use to help forward their false dealing Nether shalt thou profane the name of thy God To wit nether by perjury nor vain swearing Vers 14. Thou shalt not ●urse the deaf c. Under these particulars of cursing the deaf and laying a stumbling-block before the blind there is also forbidden all other injuries done to men in confidence that the parties injured shall not be able to know who wronged them and so not have power to defend or right themselves yea even the putting of stumbling-blocks before the consciences of men and that because the Lord will plead the cause of those that are thus wronged which is implyed in the last words but shalt fear the Lord thy God as if he had said Let the fear of God in these cases restrain thee though the deaf and blind need not be feared Vers 16. Neither shalt thou stand against the bloud of thy neighbour Though the doing of any thing against the life of our neighbour is here forbidden yet the evil principally here forbidden is the standing up in courts of Justice to take away a mans life either as a false accuser or a false witnesse and the rather is this subjoyned to the foregoing Law Thou shalt not go up and down as a tale-b●arer among thy people because tale-bearing doth usually tend as in Doegs example we may see to derprive men of their lives according to that of the Prophet Ezek. 22. 9. In thee are men that carry tales to shed bloud Vers 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke c. That is when any man hath wronged you in any thing you shall not go away and closely nourish hatred in your hearts against them or secretly carry tales of them to others and in the mean season never open your mouths to them that did the wrong but quite contrary you shall in a brotherly manner rebuke them for the evil they have done that so you may reclaim them from those evil wayes This I conceive is the drift of this precept yet withall it may imply that he that doth not rebuke his brother when he sees him do amisse doth indeed hate him and not love him and that because he suffers him to runne on in his sinne and seeks not his amendment Vers 18. But thou shalt love thy brother as thy self This clause as thy self doth not denote an exact and perfect equality of love but a certain proportion of likenesse it doth not bind men to love their neighbour with the same degree of love but 1. that they should no more desire or seek the hurt of their neighbour then of themselves 2. that they should endeavour to do all good to their neighbour as to themselves and 3. that they should love their neighbour in the same manner heartily sincerely constantly as they love themselves This expression therefore is not unlike that Joh. 17. 21. where our Saviour prayed that all true believers might be one with him and his father as thou father art in me and I in thee which doth not impart the same union but onely a likenesse of union Vers 19. Ye shall keep my statutes This is repeated and prefixed here to shew that the ordinances following must not be neglected though seeming slight because even these also were Gods statutes Thou shalt not let thy cattle gender with a diverse kind Of this Law there may be two reasons one naturall to teach his people not in vanity or curiosity of mind to alter the shape or nature of the creatures or seem to make more then God created another mysticall to teach them how God did hate both mixture of persons I mean the children of God with infidels as also all mixtures of religions and of mans devices with Gods ordinances and whatsoever hypocrisie or corruption of manners is contrary to that sincerity and simplicity which God requires in his children and this also was intended in the following prohibitions against sowing their fields with mingled seed Vers 20. Whosoever lieth carnally with a woman that is a bondmaid bet rothed c. she shall be scourged And so consequently the man also as being both equally guilty And indeed in the Hebrew there shall be a whipping which may have reference to both because she was a bondwoman a lighter punishment is inflicted for had she been either born or been made free both should have been put to death Deut. 22. 23 34. Thus still the Lord debaseth bond-servants to teach his children to hate the bondage of sinne Vers 21. And he shall bring his trespasse-offering c. Both for himself and the servant with whom he committed uncleannesse if she were an Israelite But because the man onely is appointed to bring a trespasse-offering this seems to imply the former Law was meant of heathen bondwomen which might not bring an offering Vers 23. And when ye shall come into the land and shall have planted all manner of trees for food then ye shall count c. The first-fruit that grew upon young trees newly planted was for the first three years to be accounted as uncircumcised and not to be eaten that is they were to be cut or plucked off betimes and cast away as an unclean thing even as the fore-skinnes of men in circumcision were cut off and cast away as unclean And though herein they were taught to benefit themselves in way of husbandry because if a young tree be suffered to bear fruit too soon neither will the fruit ever be good nor will the tree indure so long this over-early fruit drawing away the nourishment which should make the root and tree strong yet chiefly I conceive it was thus ordained for religious respects as 1. because the first-fr●it was to be consecrate to God to whom it was fit the best should be given and at the best they use not to be till after three or foure years bearing and 2. to shew that through the contagion of sinne all things are rendred unclean to us Tit. 1. 15. To them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure so that we have no right to eat of them till by Christ the seed promised in the circumcision they be r●stored as pure to us again and untill they be sanctified by the word of God and prayer 1. Tim. 4. 5. Vers 24. But in the fourth year all the fruit thereof shall be holy c. That is they shall be given the priests as first-fruits See Numb 18. 12
were in subjection and so made great havock amongst that people and afterwards they could not but suffer much when the Seleucidae did continually waste and oppresse them in the troublesome dayes of Antigonus and Antiochus And if we understand by Chittim Italy even by the Romans out of Italy were the Assyrians afflicted when they began to ruine the Grecian Empire to whom that people were then subject and Dio that writes the Romane history reports that Trajan the Emperour did in his time subdue Assyria and make it a Province As for the second branch of this prophecy that ●he ships which should come from the coast of Chittim should afflict Eber that is the Hebrews or Jews this also was partly fulfilled by the Greeks if you understand them to be the people of Chittim for they could not but suffer much when the Grecians came to get the dominion over them and the story of the Maccabees shews how cruelly Antiochus dealt with them but especially by the Romanes if we understand them to be the people of Chittim for by the Romanes they were often sorely distressed and at length Titus and Vespasian did utterly ruine them As for the third branch of the prophecy that he also that is the people of Chittim should perish for ever this hath been already in part fulfilled both in the utter overthrow of the Grecian Empire and in the low estate whereto the Romane Empire is fallen but shall be more fully accomplished when Rome and her now head that man of sinne shall be utterly destroyed as God hath threatned that he will consume him with the breath of his mouth destroy him with the brig●tnesse of his coming 2. Thess 2. 8. Vers 25. And Balaam rose up and went and returned to his place c. That is he went away homeward though it seems he was afterward stayed amongst the Midianites for among them he was slain chap. 31. 8. They slew the kings of Midian Balaam also the sonne of Beor they slew with the sword With what shame and confusion of face they now parted asunder we may easily conceive being both wholly disappointed of their aims the false prophet going away without those wages of unrighteousnesse which he had gaped after and for which he had taken all this pains and the king having procured nothing by all that he had done but that the ●eople was blessed whom he desired his prophet to curse which how great a mercie it was to the Israelites we may see by the Lords putting them so often in mind of it as Deut. 23. 4 5. They hired against thee Balaam the sonne of Beor of Pethor of Mesopotamia to curse thee Neverthelesse the Lord thy God would not hearken unto Balaam but the Lord thy God turned the curse into a blessing unto thee because the Lord thy God loved thee and again Mich. 6. 5. O my ●●ople remember now what Balak King of Moab consulted and what Balaam the sonne of Beor answered him But though they could not obtain to have Israel cursed yet before Balaam parted now with Balak he gave him that pestilent counsel to wit to invite the Israelites to their feasts and so to insnare them and draw them both to whoredome and idolatry that so the favour of their God being turned away from them they might then be exposed to any mischief from their enemies which how they attempted to put in practise we reade in the following chapter CHAP. XXV Vers 1. ANd Israel abode in Shittim This was a place in the plains of Moab called also Abel-shittim chap. 3● 49. where they continued till after Moses death for from this Shittim they removed when they went to passe over Jordan into the land of Canaan and it is the rather noted here as an aggravation of their sinne which in this place they fell into with the daughters of Moab that when God had now brought them to the very borders of the promised land they should there so shamefully sinne against him And the people began to commit wheredome with the daughters of Moab This is meant both of bodily and spirituall whoredome and besides we must note first that though it be said generally that the people began to commit whoredome yet the meaning is onely that some or a great number of the people did so for all that were guilty of this wickednesse were taken away and onely those remained alive that did constantly cleave unto the Lord Deut. 4. 3 4. All the men that followed Baal Peor the Lord thy God hath destroyed them from among you But ye that did cleave unto the Lord your God are alive every one of you this day and secondly that though the daughters of Moab be onely here mentioned yet under these the daughters of Midian are also comprehended for it is evident that the Israelites did commit whoredome with the daughters of Midian as we may see ver 6. where it is said that it was a Midianitish woman with whom Zimri committed filthinesse and ver 16 17. Vex the Mid●anites saith the Lord to Moses and smite them for they vex you with their wiles wherewith they have beguiled you in the matter of Peor c. Vers 2. And they called the people unto the sacrifices of their gods c. This is added as the effect of their whoredome with the daughters of Moab whereof he had spoken in the former verse to wit that they were then invited by these daughters of Moab to their idolatrous feasts and so at length were drawn to open idolatry Some indeed conceive that in these words Moses sheweth how they were drawn to commit whoredome with these daughters of Moab to wit that first under a shew of friendship they were invited by the Moabites to their idolatrous feasts and then being there allured by the wanton provocations of their young damsels they committed filthinesse with them and so were insnared and drawn further afterwards to fall down and worship their gods But the order of the words is rather this that first they committed bodily whoredome with the daughters of Moab for that is principally intended vers 1. and therefore S. Paul speaks of this as that which was the first originall cause of all the evil that now befell them 1. Cor. 10. 8. Neither let us commit fornication as some of them committed and fell in one day three and twenty thousand and then afterwards they were drawn by d●grees to the idolatry here mentioned It seems therefore that the Moabites under a pretence of peace and amity got some opportunity to have their fair damsels allure some of the Israelites to uncleannesse and then having intangled them in this sinne they called them unto the sacrifices of their gods that is to the feasts they made with their sacrifices and so they went and did eat with them which was of it self idolatry they that eat of the sacrifices being partakers of the altar 1. Cor. 10. 8. and a sinne which God had expressely given them warning
so to Gudgodah and to Jotbath yet there quite contrary in one particular it is said that they went from Mosera or Moseroth to Bene-jaakan so from thence to Gudgodah or Horhagidgad as it is there called and from thence to Jotbathah or Jotbath as it is here written To answer this some Expositours say that the places here named are not the same that are mentioned Num. 33. 31. 32 33. But because all the foure places here named together are mentioned also together there and that with so little variation of the names as Mosera for Moseroth and Gudgodah for Horhagidgad and Jotbath for Jotbathah and Bene-jaakan for Beeroth or the wells of the children of Jaakan it is very hard to think that Moses in these two places speaks not of the same journeys of the Israelites Another Expositour therefore and that is Bonfrerius ●he Jesuite answers this difficultie thus That as they went back from Kadesh-barnea to the red sea the Israelites went indeed from Moseroth which was a part of the mountain called also mount Hor to Bene-jaakan as it is said Numb 33. 31. but as they returned again from the red sea towards the land of Canaan in a way not farre distant from that they had gon before then they came first to Beeroth of the children of Jaakan or Bene-jaakan and so from thence went to Moseroth or Mosera and indeed this answer would be very satisfactory but that there is one objection to be made against it which seems unanswerable and that is that both here and in Deut 33. it is said that after they were gone past Moseroth and Bene-jaakan they went first to Gudgodah or Horhagidgad and thence to Jotbath or Jotbathah which cannot be if Moses speaks there of the Israelites journeys from the land of Canaan towards the red sea at Ezion-gaber and here of their going back again from the red sea towards the land of Canaan since if after they had passed Moseroth and Bene-jaakan they came from thence to Gudgodah and so to Jotbath as they went from Canaan towards the red sea then as they went back again from the red sea towards Canaan they must needs come to Jotbath and Gudgodah before they came to Bene-jaakan and Mosera There remains therefor● onely one answer more that can be given for the reconciling of this seeming contradiction and that is that it seems the Israelites as they travelled from Kadesh towards the red sea went from Moseroth to Bene-jaakan as is expressed Numb 33. 31. but then finding there some difficulty in their passing forward they returned again from Bene-jaakan to Mose●a which is that remove that Moses here speaks of but is not mentioned in Numb 33. and so fetching a compasse about took another way and went forward again towards the red sea first to Gudgodah and then to Jotbath as is well expressed in some mappes The last doubt that may be moved concerning these words is What was the aim and drift of Moses in the inserting of these two verses as it were by the way concerning these journeys of the Israelites where he is relating what he did at mount Sinai And for this we must know that the drift of Moses herein is by the mention of these journeys of the Israelites to give a touch at those remarkable occurrents which at these places happened that might serve to humble the people and withall to quicken them in their care to walk uprightly with God Thus first the place where Aaron dyed and Eleazar succeeded in his room is mentioned because the remembrance of Aarons death might humble them for the sinne of the golden calf whereby God was displeased with Aaron and because the contin●ance of the priesthood in his sonne was a proof of Gods being reconciled unto the people upon the prayer and intercession of Moses whereof before he had spoken and so likewise their removing from Gudgodah to Jotbath is mentioned vers 7. because that was a land of waters as it is there expressed because this bringing of them to such a place of waters as they travelled through the wildernesse was another proof of Gods grace and favour towards them and the respect he had to their infirmity that they might not murmur against him for want of water as formerly they had done Vers 8. At that time the Lord separated the tribe of L●vi c. This is not meant of the time when they came to Jotbath or Jotbathah of which he had spoken in the foregoing verse for now Moses returns to the story of those things that were done at mount Sinai having as by the way inserted the former two verses for the reasons above mentioned inst●ncing in this separating of the tribe of Levi● wherein not the Levites onely but the priests also are comprehended to the spirituall imployments here mentioned as a speciall signe of Gods receiving them into favour again upon his prayers and intercession Vers 10. And I stayed in the mount according to the first time fourty dayes and fourti● nights c. This is thus again and again repeated that they might still be put in mind of the greatenesse of their sinne whereby they had deserved to be cut off but that Moses interceding thus earnestly for them God was pleased to be reconciled to them Vers 11. Arise take thy journey before th● people that they may go in c. This also shews God was fully reconciled and willing that presently they should have entred the land had not they by their murmuring excluded themselves for many years after Vers 14. Behold the heaven and the heaven of heavens is the Lords By the heaven of heavens is meant that which is by the learned called the Empyreall heaven where the Angels and the Saints departed do injoy the glorious and beatificall vision of God and it is called the heaven of heavens both because it is the highest and doth contain the other heavens within its orb and also by way of excellency as the most holy place in the Temple is called the holy of holies because 〈◊〉 farre surpasseth all the rest in splendour and glory Vers 16. Circumcise therefore the foreskinne of your heart and be n● more stiffe-necked That is mortifie all your naturall lu●ts and corruptions rid your selves of that blindnesse of mind that hardnesse of heart all that spirituall pollution wherewith you are born and be no more stubborn and rebellious against the Lord. The first clause is meant of the mortifying of their inward lusts and the second of the reforming of their outward conversation by true repentance and because circumcision was a signe of this work of grace which God required of his people the casting off the old man with all the lusts and pollutions thereof therefore Moses useth this phrase of circumci●ing their hearts yea by requiring this of a people amongst whom there were but few that were outwardly circumcised for none were circumcised in their fourty years travelling through the wildernesse Josh 5. 5. he
the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the devil Heb. 2. 14. whereby also all believers do become conquerours over those spirituall enemies of their souls And thou shalt bruise his heel This is meant 1. of the serpents lying in wait to sting and hurt mankind 2. of the devils assaulting Christ in his temptations a●flictions death and buriall and the faithfull in their temptations and troubles which to him and them is but as the bruising of the heel Vers 16. Vnto the woman he said I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception That is thy painfull conceptions or the sorrows of thy conceptions faintnesse sick fits perill of abortion c. Thy desire shall be to thy husband That is thy desire shall be subject to thy husband upon his will and pleasure all thy desire must depend For in this sense the same phrase is used Gen. 4. 7. concerning Abels subjection to Cain as the firstborn It istrue by the law of creation the woman should have lived in subordination under her husband should have been governed by him for Adam was first formed then Eve 1. Tim. 2. 13. and 1. Co● 11. 9. Man was not created for the woman but the woman for the man but being here denounced as a chastisement for sinne it implyeth a further degree of subjection then that which should have been by the law of Nature and Creation as indeed by reason of the corruption of our nature it is made every where somewhat irksome and hard to be born but amongst some a very yoke of bondage Vers 18. And thou shalt eat the herb of the field And so neither the herbs or fruits of Paradise Vers 21. Vnto Adam also and to his wife did the Lord God make coats of skinnes c. This may be meant of the Lords doing this presently before they were turned out of Paradise by the ministry of angels or how else it pleased him to wit that by the skinnes of slain beasts he made them garments and so clothed them therewith or rather that the Lord taught Adam and Eve and gave them directions how they should of the skinnes of beasts make themselves garments for the covering of their nakednesse and to shelter their bodies from the injury of the weather for seeing there is no question to be made but that the Lord did immediately teach them the worship of offering sacrifices as signes and types of that reconciliation and atonement which was to be expected in the promised seed and therefore we reade in the following chapter of the Sacrifices that were offered by Cain and Abel it cannot be thought improbable that withall direction was given to make them coats of the skins of the beasts slain However by this kind of clothing chosen for them they were taught betimes not to have so much respect to delicacy as to usefulnesse in attiring themselves 2. in the spoils of those dead beasts to wear the remembrances of their own mortality yea of that brutish condition whereinto by their sinne they were fallen And to this that bitter taunt seems to have reference in the following verse Behold the man is become as one of us to know good and evil c. Vers 22. And now lest he put forth his hand and take also of the tree of life c. Some Expositours conceive that the fruit of the tree of life being eaten by man should have prevented all decay of naturall strength and have made him immortall or at least have kept him in perfect health and strength untill he was taken up from earth into heaven and that either by means of a created power and efficacy which to this end and purpose God had given to this fruit or by an extraordinary and supernaturall blessing which God had ordained should go along with the eating of this fruit and hence they say it was that when Adam and Eve had sinned God now resolved to turn them out of Paradise that they might not taste of the tree of life either in mercy to prevent their living for ever in misery or in judgement that the curse of Death which God had threatned as the reward of sinne might not be prevented by eating of this fruit But this conceit is justly rejected by the best Expositours It was no wayes possible that any created food should frustrate Gods decree that Death should be the wages of Sinne. Whatever effect might have followed upon the eating of this ●ruit had man continued in the state of Innocency yet when his body was dead because of sinne as the Apostle speaks Rom. 8. 10. it was not the eating of this fruit that could make his dead body to live for ever The true reason why the Lord cast Adam out of Paradise to prevent his eating of the tree of life was doubtlesse that having by his disobedience and sinne made himself liable to death he might not now meddle with this sacramentall seal of life and salvation which now because of sinne he had nothing to do with Onely as before the Lord had upbraided them for their vain affectation of being like unto him in that ironicall expression Behold the man is become as one of us to know good and evil meaning that by his sinne they were become most unlike him so in these words ironically he upbraids him after the same manner for that certainty of death he had brought upon himself determining to cast him out of the garden of Eden Lest saith the Lord he put forth his hand and take also of the tree of life and eat and live for ever not because there was any danger of his living for ever but in derision of any such hope or expectation if happily he should entertain any such motion as formerly of gaining an increase of knowledge by eating of the tree of knowledge of good and evil Vers 24. And he placed at the East and of the garden c. Where was the entrance into Paradise there at the East end of the garden he placed Cherubims and a flaming sword that is Angels armed with a flaming sword for Moses useth this word that he might speak to the capacity of the Jews who had Cherubims figured in their temple to represent the angels CHAP IV. Vers 3. ANd in processe of time it came to passe c. Abel and Cain had been doub●lesse taught of God thus to worship him and therefore it is said Heb. 11. 4. that by faith to wit grounded on Gods word Abel offered sacrifice Vers 4. And the Lord had respect to Abel and to his offering This Cain perceived and therefore it was manifested by some outward signe either ordinary by giving good successe to Abel in all things and not to Cain or extraordinary as by sending fire from heaven to consume Abels sacrifice and not Cains as we see the like Levit. 9. 24. There came a fire out from before the Lord and consumed upon the Altar the burnt offering
sea passed as it were through death to life the red sea being the means of saving them and of the destruction of the Egyptians so Christ by the waters of Baptisme as the outward signe doth save us our enemies sinne and death being utterly destroyed And the waters were a wall unto them c. That is standing up as a heap Psal 78. 13. He made the waters to stand as an heap and so as a wall of defence to them on their right hand and on their left Vers 24. The Lord looked unto the host of the Egyptians through the pillar c. That is whereas hitherto the Lord had suffered them to go on and seemed not to regard them now he began to shew himself in his displeasure against them And troubled the host of the Egyptians That is the Lord caused grievous tempests and storms to fall upon them thunder and lightnings and hail and rain See Psal 77. 17 18. The clouds poured out water the skies sent out a sound thine arrows also went abroad The voyce of thy thunder was in the heaven the lightnings lightned the world the earth trembled and shook Hereby he struck them with an apprehension of Gods wrath overthrew their tents put them all into disorder and made such a tumult in their host that flying in this disorder they runne one against another and were troubled in their flight Vers 25. And took off their chariot-wheels that they drave them heavily c. That is the Lord by his rain and tempests had so softned the ground that their wheels were clogged and sunk into the ground whereby some might be broken and taken off all drove heavily and had much adoe to get forward Vers 30. And Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the seashore The Israelites being gotten over to the other side saw no doubt how upon Moses stretching forth his hand again over the read sea the waters that stood before up on heaps came rowling in upon the Egyptians who had followed the Israelites close behind them and so drowned them and so it is said in the following verse that Israel saw that great work which the Lord did upon the Egyptians But afterwards they saw also the dead bodies of the Egyptians upon the shore and if they waited not some time for this it was doubtlesse an extraordinary work of Gods power since dead bodies that sink under water do not usually flote upon the water that so they may be driven upon the shore till they have been some few dayes under water But happely indeed the Israelites might wait so long by the sea side expecting to furnish themselves with the spoyl both of the dead bodies and their carriages Nor did the sight of the Egyptians being now but dead carcases crosse the truth of that which Moses had said ver 13. The Egyptians whom ye have seen to day ye shall see them again no more for ever CHAP. XV. Vers 2. THe Lord is my strength and song That is the Lord it is that hath subdued and destroyed our enemies being weak in our selves we are strong in him who hath fought for us and the Lord it is therefore of whom I mean to sing and whose praise I desire in my song to set forth and this is the first song which we meet with in the Scriptures He is my God and I will prepare him an habitation Moses here by the spirit of prophecy foresheweth that the people should build a peculiar tabernacle for the Lords service Vers 7. And in the greatnesse of thine excellency thou hast overthrown them that rose up against the● That is by many glorious and miraculous works declaring the transcendent greatnesse of thine excellency hast thou overthrown the Egyptians who in rising up against thy people did rise up against thee Thou sentest forth thy wrath which consumed them as stubble That is which did suddenly and utterly consume them for stubble is consumed when the fire takes it and is gone on a sudden and whereas when wood is burnt there will be coals left when the stubble is burnt it scarce leaves any ashes behind it Whence is that also of the Prophet Isa 47. 14. Behold they shall be as stubble the fire shall burn them there shall not be a coal to warm at nor fire to sit before it Vers 8. And with the blast of thy nostrils the waters were gathered together In this phrase the blast of thy nostrils it may well be conceived that Moses had respect both to the wind wherewith God divided the red sea chap. 14. 21. for so he seems to explain himself in the 10. verse of this chapter Thou didst blow with thy wind the sea covered them as also to the anger and wrath of God which caused him thus to divide the sea for so usually the wrath of God is expressed in Scripture and that by a metaphoricall speech taken from men who in their anger use to snuff and blow with their nostrils thicker and stronger then at other times as Job 4. 9. By the blast of God they perish and by the breath of his nostrils are they consumed and so in many other places And though the dividing of the red sea was a work of mercy in regard of the Israelites yet was it an effect of his high displeasure against the Egyptians Yea therefore did the Lord lead the Israelites that way that the Egyptians following them might be taken as in a trap and overwhelmed with the waters Vers 11. Who is like thee glorious in holinesse fearfull in praises doing wonders That is there is none either amongst the false Gods of the heathen or amongst their great ones Gods upon the earth that is in any degree worthy to be compared to thee O Lord who art glorious in holinesse c. where by the holinesse of God is meant that transcendent purity and singular perfection in every regard which is in God alone which is that indeed which makes God incomprehensibly glorious and fearfull in praises because we cannot think of those praises which are due unto the Lord but we must needs be stricken with an awfull fear of his Majesty and he is said to do wonders because he is of infinite power to do whatsoever may seem most wonderfull in the eye of man Vers 12. Thou stretchedst out thy right hand the earth swallowed them The Egyptians that were drowned in the red sea are here said to have been swallowed up of the earth not onely because they did at first sink down into the earth in the bottome of the sea but also because being cast up by the waves upon the shore many of them at least were there no doubt thrown into pits by the Israelites and buryed to avoid the corruption of the aire and so did all of them return to the earth from whence they were taken Vers 13. Thou hast guided them in thy strength unto thy holy habitation That is towards the land of Canaan for by the Lords holy habitation here
corner for otherwise we cannot say whether the corner pillar was to be numbred amongst the twenty pillars appointed on each side for the length of the court or the ●●n appointed for the breadth Vers 16. And for the gate of the court shall be an hanging of twenty cubits c. See the note chap. 26. 36. Vers 18. And the height five cubits c. This court therefore of th● tabernacle was but half so high as the tabernacle and therefore the tabernacle might be easily seen yet these hangings were so high that men could not overlook them Vers 19. All the vessels of the tabernacle c. shall be of brasse That is such as were onely for the taking down and setti●g up of the tabernacle as the pinnes or stakes which were driven into the ground to fasten it Vers 20. And thou shalt command the children of Israel that they bring pure oyl olive beaten c. It seems that oyl which was first gotten out of the olives by beating or stamping of them was farre purer ●nd clearer from dregges then that which was afterward crushed out with a presse This therefore th e children of Israel were appointed to provide for the lamp in the golden candlestick even pure oyl olive beaten wherewith the priests were to maintain the lamps to cause the lamp to burn alwayes that is every night by renewing them still at the appointed times As the daily sacrifice is called a continuall burnt-offering Exod. 29. 42. and yet it was offered but twice every day at morning and evening And so this word alwayes is explained in the following verse Aaron and his sonnes shall order it from evening to morning before the Lord. At the East end of the ta bernacle either abov● the vail or at the opening of it there might come in light sufficient in the day time and therefore I conceive then the lamps burnt not but in the night onely and were put out in the morning which some inferre also from that 1. Sam. 3. 3. where it is said that the Lord appeared to Samuel ere the lamp of God went out in the temple of God to wit before the break of day Now by this pure oyl was signified the gifts and graces of the Spirit whereby the ministers of God are fitted to be as lights among the people Vers 21. In the tabernacle of the congregation c. The ●abernacle is here called the tabernacle of the congregation because though the people did not enter into this place yet to the doore of this tabernacle they brought their offerings and there did the Lord meet with the people and make known his will to them Aaron and his sonnes shall order it c. Signifying that the priests lippes should preserve knowledge CHAP. XXVIII Vers 1. ANd take thou unto thee Aaron thy brother c. Because Aaron was the brother of Moses to prevent any envy amongst the people this is in the first place expressed that it was by the Lords appointment and command that he and his sonnes were set apart to the office of the priesthood Vers 2. And thou shalt make holy garments for Aaron thy brother for glory and for beauty That is glorious and beautifull And hereby was signifyed 1. the insufficiency of Aarons priesthood that there was not in him if you look on him in his own person sufficient worth that he should mediate between God and man for th●refore was this holinesse in his garments to cover the pollution of his own p●rson 2. the more then angelicall purity and holinesse of Christ whose type Aaron thus attired was Heb. 9. 14. Christ through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God By whom also his Church is clothed with garments of beautifull glory Isai 52. 1. Put on thy beautifull garments oh Jerusalem the holy citie Rev. 19. 8. To her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen clean and white for the fine linen is the righteousnesse of the Sain●s 3. to shew the extraordinary degrees of holinesse required in those that serve at the altar Vers 3. And thou shalt speak unto all that are wise-hearted c. that they may make Aarons garments to consecrate him c. That is to be a signe of his consecration and sanctification from God therefore it was death to minister without these garments Vers 6. And th●y shall make the ephod of gold c. It was called the ephod of an hebrew word which signifieth to close compasse or gird about because it compassed fitly the body and was tied thereto it was the outmost of all Aarons garments and covered his whole body both back and breast from the shoulders down to the loyns excepting onely the breast where the breast-plate was fastened Vers 7. It shall have the two shoulder-pieces thereof joyned at the edges thereof and so it shall be joyned together These shoulder-pieces were either the pieces which went up both before and behind from the body of the ephod and so met together on the top of each shoulder and were joyned together in the edge thereof a hole being left in the midst through which the priests head went when he put on the ephod or else it is meant of certain wings as we call them which were joyned to the ephod in the edge round about each shoulder Vers 8. And the curious girdle of the ephod which is upon it shall be of the same c. By this is meant two pieces or slaps which came from the back part of the ephod under the arm-holes and are called the curious guard or girdle because the nether lappets served as a girdle to fasten it below and it is said that it should be upon it that is is joyned as a part of it which is added to distinguish it from the girdle mentioned ver 39. Thou shalt make the girdle of needlework which was not a part of the ephod as this which is therefore called often the golden girdle Vers 9. And thou shalt take two onyx-stones and grave on them the names of the children of Israel These two onyx-stones whereon were graven the names of the twelve sonnes of Jacob signified the firm and perpetuall love of Christ toward his Church and also how precious they be to him how continually mindfull he is of them Cant. 8. 6. Set me as a seal upon thy heart as a seal upon thy arm for love is strong as death See also Hag. 2. 23. In that day saith the Lord of hosts will I take thee O Zorobbabel my servant c. and will make thee as a signet Vers 10. Six of their names on one stone and the other six names of the rest on the other stone according to their birth That is first Reuben then Simeon and so the rest according to their age And this signified the like precious faith and dignity which all have obtained before God in Christ 2. Pet. 1. 1. To them that have obtained the like precious faith So Gal. 3.
thousand seventy one pound weight of silver which at five shillings the ounce comes to thirty six thousand two hundred and thirteen pounds in sterling money Vers 29. And the brasse of the ●ffering was seventy talents and two thousand and foure hundred shekels That is allowing three thousand shekels to a talent two hundred and twelve thousand and foure hundre● shekels of brasse and this counting twenty five shekels to a pound weight amounts to eight thousand foure hundred ninetie six pound weight of brasse whereby it is evident that there was not so much brasse as silver and therefore surely the pillars were made of wood and onely covered over with brasse See chap. 27. ver 9. CHAP. XXXIX Vers 1. ANd of the blew and purple and scarlet they made clothes of service c. See chap. 31. 10. Vers 43. And Moses blessed them That is he not onely commended both the people and workmen and prayed God to blesse them but also as Gods publick minister he pronounced a blessing on them from the Lord. CHAP. XL Vers 9. ANd thou shalt take the anoynting ●yl and anoynt the tabernacle c. The performance of this see in Levit. 8. 10. Vers 10. And thou shalt anoynt the altar c. And sprinkle thereof upon the altar seven times See Levit. 8. 11. Vers 15. For their anoynting shall surely be an everlasting priesthood c. So that their children after them shall not need to be anoynted but shall execut● the office by reason of this unction of their fathers onely the high priests were anoynted in the generations following Vers 17. And it came to passe in the first moneth c. They went out of Egypt the fifteenth of the first moneth and now the next year upon the first day of the moneth the tabernacle is erected so that there wanted now but fifteen dayes of a full yeare since they left Egypt Vers 27. And he burnt sweet incense thereon c. As supplying at present the priests office ANNOTATIONS On the third book of MOSES called LEVITICUS CHAP. I. ANd the Lord called unto Moses c. This word and sheweth the immediate connexion of this book of this story upon that wherewith the foregoing book of Exodus was concluded namely that after the tabernacle was reared Aaron and his sonnes consecrated to the office of the priesthood and the cloud descended upon the tabernacle immediately God spake to Moses from the mercy-seat out of the tabernacle for into it Moses was not able to enter because the glory of the Lord filled it and so informed him how Aaron and his sonnes should carry themselv●s ●n the priesthood c. Vers If any man of you bring an offering unto the Lord c. That is any sacrifice whatsoever This is a generall rule concerning all sacrifices to wit that none must be offered but of the herd or flock that is if they were cattel they intended to offer for if they intended an offering of birds what they must be is expressed afterwards vers 14. Vers 3. If his offering be a burnt-sacrifice of the herd let him offer a male without blemish Here the Lord first gives directions for burnt-offerings which were indeed the chief of all their sacrifices and so called because they were all wholly burnt upon the altars whereas of other sacrifices some part onely was burnt upon the altar and the other parts were otherwise disposed of And the direction that is here first given concerning these is that if a burnt-offering were to be offered of the herd it must be a male without blemish that it might be the fitter to figure forth Christs perfection in himself and ours in him who being perfectly holy and free from the least blemish of sinne He did no sinne neither was guile found in his mouth 1. Pet. 2. 22. did yet notwithstanding by suffering death for us perfectly satisfie the justice of God on our behalf that so he might present the Church to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish Ephes 5. 27. for saith the same Apostle Heb. 9. 13 14. If the bloud of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God And so again Saint Peter saith Ye know that ye were redeemed with the precious bloud of Christ as of a lamb without blemish and without spot 1. Pet. 1. 18 19. Yet withall hereby the Lord taught both them and us to give God the best in all our services Vers 3. He shall offer it of his own voluntary will at the doore of the tabernacle That is he that will offer a burnt sacrifice he must do it voluntarily of his own mind and not be forced to it and when he brings it he must present it to the priest at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation that is at the doore of the court close within which the brasen altar for burnt-offerings stood The first of these might signifie the freedome of Gods grace in giving his sonne and the willingnesse of Christ in giving himself to be a sacrifice of propitiation for our souls but principally doubtlesse it was to teach them that in all service done to God it must be done freely and willingly or God will not accept of it The second was appointed to signifie that their sacrifices and so consequently any service that we perform were onely in and through Christ sanctified and made acceptable to God The tabernacle was a type of Christ that greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands Heb. 9. 11. and he is the onely doore by whom we have accesse unto the father Vers 4. And he shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering This was to testifie First that he acknowledged himself guilty of death Secondly that he desired and believed that that sacrifice should be accepted of God as a ransome for his soul that all his sinnes should be laid upon it and so it should suffer death as it were in his stead in all which notwithstanding they that did this had not respect so much to the beast slain in the death whereof there could not be an equall compensation given to the justice of God for the death of sinners as to Christ of whom these sacrifices were types who took upon him our sinnes and the curse due to our sinnes when he died for us Thirdly that he desired and would indeavour to consecrate himself wholly to Gods service as now he gave this sacrifice wholly to be offered upon the altar to the Lord crucifying all his sinnefull lusts and affections and yielding up his whole man to the obedience of Gods will in all things whatsoever And it shall be accepted for him to make
atonement for him Though burnt-offerings were usually given in signe of thankfulnesse to God and so betokened a new creature and holy life Psal 51. 18 19. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Sion build thou the walls of Jerusalem Then shalt thou be pleased with sacrifices of righteousnesse with burnt-offering and whole burnt-offering and Gen. 8. 20. And Noah builded an altar unto the Lord and took of every clean beast and of every fowl and offered burnt-offerings on the altar yet they were also for atonement and remission of sinnes to wit generall sinnes Job 1. 5. And it was so when the dayes of their feasting were gone about that Job sent and sanctified them and rose up early in the morning and offered burnt-offerings according to the number of them all for Job said It may be that my sonnes have sinned c. whereas for speciall sinnes there was a speciall sacrifice and sinne-offering Levit. 4. Vers 5. And he shall kill the bullock before the Lord. That is the priest in the name of the offerer for this was usually the work of the priests and therefore Moses did it when he supplyed the priests office Exod. 29. 10 11. though sometimes the Levites also helped herein when there were not priests enough to do it 2. Chron. 25. 10 11. The priests stood in their places and the Levites in their courses and they killed the Passeover that is the Passeover-offerings and the priests sprinkled the bloud from their hands as being given of God to be assistant to the priests in such services Numb 8. 19. I have given the Levites as a gift to Aaron and to his sonnes to do the service of the children of Israel in the tabernacle of the congregation and to make an atonement for the children of Israel Now the sacrifice was killed to signifie the death of Christ Who was slain that he might redeem us to God by his bloud Revel 5. 9. and the mortifying of Gods people by the word and spirit and it was killed by the priest to signifie that Christ should offer up himself unto God as being both our priest and sacrifice and that there is no possibility for men to please God by any service they do him but onely in and through the mediation of Christ of whose priesthood the Leviticall priest was a type and figure As for the place where it was killed that may be gathered by the rule of Analogy from that which is expressed verse the 11. concerning the second sort of burnt-offerings namely that it was killed at the north-side of the altar And the priests Aarons sonnes shall bring the bloud and sprinkle the bloud c. And this was done in a large measure so that the corners of the altar were filled with bloud Zach. 9. 15. to teach the people that this bloud of their sacrifice should not be lost as spilt upon the ground but should be accepted of God as a propitiation for their sinnes as being a figure of the bloud of Christ which should be offered up to God and accepted by him in our behalf as for our reconciliation so also for our sanctification who are elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the bloud of Jesus Christ 1. Pet. 1. 2. Vers 6. And he shall flay the burnt-offering That is the priest for the flaying of the sacrifice was also ordinarily the work of the priest who had therefore the skinne for himself Levit. 7. 8. though upon extraordinary occasions as is before noted concerning killing the burnt-offerings even in this also the Levites sometime helped them 2. Chron. 29. 34. The priests were too few so that they could not flay all the burnt-offerings wherefore their brethren the Levites did help them Because the sacrifices were offered as I may say as a holy feast unto the Lord whence the altar is called the table of the Lord and the sacrifice offered thereon his meat Mal. 1. 12. therefore nothing but what was usually eaten by men was burnt upon the altar and hence it was that the skinne was alwayes flayed off Yet withall it is commonly held by Expositours that this flaying of the sacrifice did also signifie First the sufferings of Christ who being first stripped of his garments Matth. 27. 28 they did afterwards most shamefully intreat so that there was no beauty in him why men should desire him Secondly the afflictions of Gods people under the rage of cruell oppressours and persecutours Who as the Prophet speaks Micha 3. 3. eat their flesh and flay their skinne from off them And thirdly the mortification which God requires in those that give up their names to him even that They put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts Ephes 5. 22. Vers 7. And the sonnes of Aaron the priest shall put fire on the altar c. Here the Lord gives direction for the burning of these sacrifices by the inseriour priests enjoyning them first to put fire upon the altar Now because they were to use no strange fire in burning the sacrifices but onely that fire which was continually nourished upon the altar Levit. 6. 12 13. and which at first came down from heaven Levit. 9. 24. therefore by putting fire upon the altar is meant onely the laying of the fire together or laying it on again when they had laid it by for the clearing of the altar Secondly to lay the wood in order and then all the pieces of the sacrifices in order upon the wood which was so appointed because the discreet laying of the wood doth much conduce to the well burning of the fire And then lastly thus to burn all upon the altar The mistery of this might be twofold First to signifie the consecrating of Christ and his members by afflictions and sufferings for as he the Captain of our salvation was made perfect by sufferings Heb. 2. 10. so must his members also be ready alwayes through these fiery trials to enter into glory for every one shall be salted with fire and every sacrifice shall be salted with salt Mark 9. 49. Secondly to signifie that holy zeal whereby we should wholly give up our selves to God through the operation of Gods holy spirit which is often in the Scriptures compared to fire as Matth. 3. 11. He that cometh after me is mightier then I he shall baptize you with the holy Ghost and with fire for as Christ through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot unto God Heb. 9. 14. so likewise it is the spirit whereby we must be enabled to consecrate our selves to Gods service Ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth saith the Apostle Peter through the spirit 1. Pet. 1. 22. to which end we must not onely be carefull not to quench the spirit 1. Thess 5. 19. but also by prayer holy meditation and all other things conducing thereto we must do what we can
for which they were to bring a sinne-offering to the Lord and that especially as I conceive to shew in what cases the offerings which they brought for their sinnes were to be of that sort which were more particularly called and esteemed trespasse-offerings for of such it is evident that Moses speaks at least principally in this chapter Much arguing there is amongst Expositours to shew the difference between sinne-offerings and trespasse-offerings some hold that the sinne-offerings mentioned in the former chapter were for sins of commission the trespasse-offerings spoken of in this chapter were for sinnes of omission some again hold that the sinne-offerings were for greater transgressions and others quite contrary that the trespasse-offerings were for greater transgressions and the sinne-offerings for smaller offences But the truth is that these opinions on both sides are no other then groundlesse conjectures Evi●ent it is that these trespasse-offerings are also called sinne-offerings as we may see in the 6. vers of this chapter He shall bring his trespasse-offering unto the Lord for his sinne which he hath sinned a female from the slock a lambe or a kid of the goats for a sinne-offering All trespasse-offerings were therefore sinne-offerings though all sinne-offerings were not called trespasse-offerings Herein onely I conceive the difference lay that for some particular sinnes a sinne-offering was appointed different from the ordinary sinne-offerings injoyned particular persons in the former chapter which because it was for such sinnes wherein some trespasse was committed upon the goods of their neighbour or upon the holy things of the Lord which belonged unto the priests therefore they were more particularly called trespasse-offerings The first particular instance given in the first verse of the chapter is concerning him that sinneth in concealing his knowledge when he might have witnessed the truth If a soul sinne saith the text and heare the voyce of swearing and is a witnesse c. for the meaning of this place so diversely expounded I con●●ive to be this that when an oath is given for the clearing of any controversie for any wrong done by one man to another and those to whom the oath is given do either forswear themselves or cannot discover the truth if one that knows the truth and might be or is called to be a witnesse stands by conceals his knowledge and doth not reveal the truth he is guilty and must offer a trespasse-offering because his neighbour suffers dammage in his estate through his silence whether he hath see● or known of it that is whether he was an eye-witnesse of that which is in question or came any other way to the knowledge of it he must reveal all he knows or be guilty and so o●fer a trespasse-offering Vers 2. Or if a soul touch any unclean thing c. The second instance of sins for which they were to bring a trespasse-offering is concerning those legall pollutions which are afterward● fully expressed chap. 11. 12. c. The law is this The man or woman that had touched any such unclean thing he was unclean and guilt●e of a sinne verse 2. so soon as he had touched it though for the time it was ●id from him his doing it unwittingly should not quit him of the guilt of it but yet when he should come to the knowledge of it vers 3. then he should ●e guilty in his own apprehension and so must offer a trespasse-offering not so much to cleanse him from this legall uncleannesse for in this case there was another way of legall purifying appointed Numb 19. 11. c. as to expiate his sinne because for want of due consideration he had so defiled himself and through ignorance or unadvisednesse had neglected those legall purifyings or had come into the sanctuary and intermeddled with Gods holy things whilest his uncleannesse was upon him And indeed this was as I conceive the reason why a trespasse-offering was in this case imposed because the unclean person did by this sinne trespasse upon Gods holy things and as it were impair the worth of them Now these things also figured that we are to be cleansed by the sacrifice and death of Christ even from that pollution which is contracted by partaking with other mens sinnes of which the Apostle speaks 1. Tim. 5. 22. Lay hands suddenly on no man neither be partaker of other mens sins keep thy self pure and again 2. Cor. 6. 17. Come out from among them and be ye separate saith the Lord and touch not the unclean thing and I will receive you Vers 4. Or if a soul swear pronouncing with his lips to do evil or to d● good c. In this third instance of sinnes for which they were to bring a trespasse-offering it is not easily discerned what the sinne here intended is some conceive it to be the carelesse neglect of doing that which a man had sworn to do to clear himself of the guilt whereof he was to bring a trespasse-offering to the Lord and because there is expresse mention of swearing to do evil and it cannot be a sinne to omit the doing of that which he had sworn he would do if he had sworn to do any evil to his neighbour or generally any thing evil that is sinfull and against Gods law but rather it would be commendable to break such an oath therefore by doing ●vil they understand the doing of something which is hurtf●ll or irksome to himself as if a man hath sworn to do what may bring some damage to his estate or deprive him of something that is pleasing and delightfull to him Again others conceive that the sinne here intended is rash and unadvised swearing to do either good or evil to others to wit when it is sinfull so confidently to undertake it as when he undertakes to do that which is not in his power to do or which he knows not whether he shall be able to do or no or to do some evil to his neighbour which is against the rule of charity and cannot be done without sinning against God as when David sware tha● he would utterly destroy Naball and all his family 1. Sam. 5. 22. And this Exposition I conceive is the more probable first because the sinne of not doing what a man hath sworn he would do is not so clearly intimated in thes● words as is the sinne of rash and unadvised swearing for these words pronouncing with his lips to do evil or to do good do indeed manifestly imply an ove●bold undertaking to do that which happely he may not or cannot do and secondly because they that expound this place of the sinne of not doing what a man hath sworn to do are constraind to understand that clause concerning swearing to do evil of doing that which is evil or hurtfull to himself whereas I conceive it must necessarily be understood of doing evil to his neighbour because for it he was to bring a trespasse-offering which implyes at least an intention of trespassing upon his neighbour so
commanded them not and so were severely punished for it as is afterwards expressed Now that this happened that very eighth day whereof mention is made Chap. 9. 1. immediately after those first sacrifices were consumed by fire from the Lord may be gathered by that which follows from vers 12. to the end of the chapter which plainly concerneth those sacrifices whereof we reade in the former chapter And thus God taught them betimes the weaknesse of the Leviticall priesthood and withall with what fear and exact care it was fit they should carry themselves in the service of God Vers 2. And there went out fire from the Lord and devoured them That is killed them as the sword is said to devoure 2. Sam. 2. 26. Then Abner called to Joab and said Shall the sword devoure for ever For that neither their bodies nor clothes were burnt to ashes appears verse 5. So they went near and carried them in their coats out of the camp Vers 3. Then Moses said un●o Aaron This is it that the Lord spake saying I will be sanctified c. The substance of these following words is in many places to be found as Exod. 19. 22. And let the priests also that come near to the Lord sanctifie themselves lest the Lord break forth upon them again Levit. 8. 35. Therefore shall ye abide at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation day and night seven dayes and keep the charge of the Lord that ye dye not and this is sufficient Yet happely these very words also at some other time were spoken by God though not written As for the words themselves I will be sanctified by them that come nigh me and before all the people I will be glorified the meaning of them is that God will have those that come nigh him carry themselves as become those that serve so holy a God with all possible care and reverence and fear and that God will else manifest his holinesse in punishing them Ezek. 28. 22. Behold I am against ●hee O Zidon and I will be glorified in the midst of thee Two arguments are therefore herein couched to keep Aaron from murmuring 1. because the punishment was just 2. because God should be glorified hereby and both the people and his posterity receive good by it And Aaron held his peace That is though happely at first he began to take on pitifully and to give too much liberty to his passions yet hearing those words of Moses he presently checked himself laid his hand upon hi● mouth and not a word more would he speak And doubtlesse this is noted as a notable instance of his piety and quiet submission to Gods good will and pleasure and that his carriage was herein most singalarly remarkable we shall see if we note these particulars First that he had now lost two of his sonnes yea his two eldest sonnes together at a clap We know what Rebeckah in great angaish of soul said to Jacob when his brother Esau had resolved to kill him Gen. 27. 45. Go ●lie to Paran why should I be deprived of you bo●h in one day Secondly that they were cut off suddenly by an untinely death as we use to say when neither themselves not their poore father did ever dream of any such danger Thirdly that they were cut off by a way which might seem to testifie Gods hot displeasure against them for they were devoured by fire from God the Lord by the manner of their death pointing out the sinne for which they were stricken and what father had not rather lose all his stock of children in an ordinary way then have execution done upon any one of them by Gods immediate hand in such a terrible manner Fourthly that it was at a time when ●heir hearts no doubt were as full of joy as ever they could hold it being the first day of their entring upon that high honour of their priestly function and in such a sunshine of Gods favour to be so suddenly thunderstruck must needs adde to their calamity And last of all that they were cut off with such severity for so small an offense as reason might judge of it onely for taking fire to burn the incense from one place when they should have taken it from another and that not purposely done but onely through mistake an errour into which when they had so much to do and were yet unacquainted with the service they might easily fall Vers 4. And Moses called Mishael and Elzaphan the two sonnes of Vzziel the uncle of Aaron c. The nearest kindred it seems used to perform this office of carrying the dead to be buried and their brethren the priests might not leave their ministery therefore Aarons cosin germans are appointed to do it Vers 6. Vncover not your heads neither rend your clothes c. The severall laws that concern the priests mourning for their dead friends we have largely set down in the one and twentieth chapter of this book where the inferiour priefts are allowed to be mourners at the buriall of a brother though the high priest is forbidden it But this is a speciall charge for this present occasion onely and so here not onely Aaron but also his sonnes that remained still alive are forbidden all the usuall solemnities of mourning for Nadab and Abihu not to uncover t●eir heads nor to rend their clothes nor to go out from the doore of the tabernacl● 〈◊〉 the congr●gation and that first bec●use it was an extraordinary judgemen● of God that was fallen upon their brethren and they were to testifie their ●●bmissi●● thereu●●● by not lamenting their death Secondly because the solemnity and service of the d●y might not be interrupted being newly anointed and now at this time prepared for their first entring upon the execution of their priestly office they might not break off this service to attend the buriall of their brethren But why are they injoyned not to uncover their heads since it may seem by other places that it was not the custome of mourners amongst the Jews to uncover their heads but rather to cover them as we may see 2. Sam. 15. 30. David went up the ascent of mount Olivet and wept as he went up and had his head covered and he went barefoot and all the people that was with him covered every man his head and they went up weeping as they went up and so again chap. 19. 4. But the king covered his face and the king cried with a loud voyce Oh my sonne Absolom O Absolom my sonne my sonne See also Jer. 14. 3 4. The answer is that the priests are here injoyned not to uncover their heads that is not to take off their miters and bonnets which they wore on their heads to the end they might not addresse themselves in the way of mourners to attend the buriall of Nadab and Abihu to wit by covering their heads with the usuall vail or covering of mourners The chief aim of this command was to intimate
whether upon washing it will change colour or no for if the colour were not changed by washing the garment must be burnt though it did not spread verse 55. Because that was a sig●e that it did fret inward Vers 56. Whether it be bare inward or without That is whether the plague be on the inside of the garment or on the out side CHAP. XIV Vers 2. THis shall be the law of the leper in the day of his cleansing c. The solemn rites for cleansing the leper were for two ends so ordained of God 1. To shew how the Lord abhorred the spirituall uncleannesse of sinne since the leper might not after his pollution be received again into the camp though healed without a sacrifice of reconciliation were first offered up for him 2. That the leper might testifie his thankfulnesse to God who had removed so heavie a judgement from him whence is that of Christ to the leper he healed Matth. 8. 4. And Jesus said unto him See thou tell no man but go thy way shew thy self to the priest and offer the gift that Moses commanded for a testimony to them Vers 3. And behold if the plague of the leprosie be healed in the leper When God had healed the leprosie then the priest was to pronounce him clean and so it is God onely that forgives sinnes the minister is onely to pronounce according to that which God hath done nor can absolve any whom God hath not absolved Vers 4. Then shall thepriest command to take c. two birds alive and clean cedar-wood and scarlet and hysop The birds must be clean birds to wit either doves or turtles commonly used in sacrifices or sparrows as some translate the word here or any other clean fowls such as all are save those excepted Levit. 11. 13. c. Onely they must not be of a tame kind but such as used to fly in the open field vers 7. The cedar which the priest here was injoyned to take was a cedar-stick which was to be a handle for the sprinkle and it was to be of cedar-wood as most conceive because the nature of this wood is that it corrupts not but preserveth other things from putrefaction and so hereby was signified the perfect healing of the leprosie which before corrupted and putrified the body Yet I rather think there was a respect had as in the scarlet to the reddish colour of it which made it the more suitable for this work the chief drift whereof was to signifie the cleansing of the sinner by the bloud of Christ The scarlet was a scarlet thred or lace used to bind the sprinkle to the cedar-stick And the hysop was appointed for the sprinkle being fit for that use and withall the fragrant smell of this herb might signifie that the evil savour of the leprosie was gone away Vers 5. And the priest shall command that one of the birds be killed in an earthen vessell over running water That is over an earthen vessell that hath running water in it And as the bloud of the killed bird signified the bloud of Christ so the earthen vessell the basenesse and infirmity of the ministers by whom this bloud is presented unto men in the preaching of the Gospel 2. Cor. 4. 7. But we have this treasure in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power might be of God and not of us Now because the bloud of the bird of it self would not have sufficed to dip the living bird and the sprinkle in therefore it was mixed with water but it must be the purest and most cleansing water running water that is spring water because it signified the cleansing of the sinner by Christs bloud who came not by water onely but by water and bloud 1. Joh. 5. 6. Vers 7. And he shall sprinkle upon him that is to be cleansed c. The sprinkling of this bloud signified the applying of Christs bloud to the cleansing of the sinner which is therefore called the bloud of sprinkling that speaketh better things then that of Abel Hebr. 12. 24. Why it was done seven times see the note upon Levit. 4. 6. And shall let the living bird loose into the open field The letting of the living bird loose figured the deliverance of Christ from death Who though he was crucified through weaknesse yet he liveth by the power of God 2. Cor. 13. 4. being put to death in the flesh but quickned in the spirit 1. Pet. 3. 18. and of all such as are cleansed from their sinnes by his bloud and therefore particularly it represented the condition of the leper now cleansed who being civilly dead and buried was now as the bird let loose to live amongst his fellows and restored again to the communion of Saints And why was this by virtue of the bloud of Christ wherein figuratively he was dipped Vers 8. And he that is to be cleansed shall wash his clothes c. That no part of the filth issuing from his leprosie might remain upon him he was to wash both his garments and his flesh and because washing could not sufficiently cleanse the hair of his body therefore all the hair of his body must be clean shaved off and this was done the first day of his cleansing which signified how exactly every one that hath hope of being cleansed by Christ must labour to purifie himself even as he is pure 1 John 3. 3. And after that he shall come into the camp and shall tarry abroad out of his tent seven dayes That is after he hath the first time washed himself and shaved off his hair he shall be admitted into the camp town or citie but yet he shall not go into his tent or dwelling-house but shall tarry abroad to wit in some place or house appointed for that purpose where he was to continue for seven dayes apart by himself which was I conceive because as yet he was not perfectly cleansed and therefore was not familiarly to converse with others as formerly no not with them of his own family Vers 9. And it shall be on the seventh day that he shall shave all the hair off his head The reiteration of these ceremonies the second time on the seventh day may imply how exactly carefull we should be to cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of sinne and withall how hardly we are brought either to hate sinne or acknowledge Gods mercy as we should do Vers 10. And on the eighth day he shall take two he-lambs without blemish and one ew-lamb c. The two he-lambs were the one for a trespasse-offering verse 12. the other for a burnt-offering as is evident verse 19 20. See also Levit. 1. 10. The ew-lamb was for a sinne-offering Levit. 4. 32. And three tenth deals of fine flowre for a meat-offering mingled with oyl and one log of oyl These three tenth deals were three homers or pottles three tenth parts of an ephah or bushell as is before noted upon Exod. 29. 40. and the log
to appear in the presence of God for us So also Revel 8. 3 4. And another ang●l came and stood at the altar having a golden censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne And the smoke of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the angels hand Vers 13. That the cloud of incense may cover the mercy-seat c. Whereby they were taught how formidable the majesty of God was and with what reverence we ought to present our selves before him Vers 15. Then shall he kill the goat of the sinne-offering c. We must not conceive that he came forth out of the most holy place to kill this goat of the sin-offering for the people for the bloud of this goat as it is said here was also sprinkled before the mercy-seat and had he gone in once with the bloud of his own sinne-offering and then came out and killed this goat for a sinne-offering for the people and gone in again to sprinkle the bloud of that before the mercy-seat then had he gone in twice on this day within the vail which is expressely against that of the Apostle Heb. 9. 7. But into the second went the high priest alone once every year not without bloud which he offered for himself and for the errours of the people These words therefore then shall he kill the goat of the sinne-offering do onely intend that he killed the bullock first for himself vers 11. and then this goat for the people for both of them were killed before he entred into the most holy place Vers 16. And he shall make an atonement for the holy place As being defiled though not in it self yet in regard of the peoples guilt partly by reason of any unwitting approching to the sanctuary when they were not legally clean and partly by reason of all other their sinnes whereby appears the horrour of sinne for though the people never went into the holy place much lesse into the most holy yet were the altar ark and Sanctuary defiled in the sight of God by their sins and could not be cleansed without bloud So our sinnes do defile Gods Church and most holy ordinances and do ascend into heaven it self whereinto we can have no entrance but by bloud See Heb. 9. 7 11 12. Vers 17. And there shall be no man in the tabernacle of the congregation c. That is neither of the priests nor people neither in the holy place nor in the court of the tabernacle for else why is it said no man since the people at no time used to come into the holy place The reasons of this were two 1. As by way of chastisement and for their humiliation they were all excluded from the places and holy things till they were purged from the uncleannesse which they had contracted by their sinnes 2. Hereby was signified that our high priest Christ should without help of any other perfect the work of our reconciliation with God Vers 18. And he shall go out unto the altar that is before the Lord. That is the altar of incense See Exod. 30. 10. Vers 21. And Aaron shall lay both his hands upon the head of the live goat This is the onely unbloudy sacrifice which was appointed in the Law yet was it not if it be well considered wholly without bloud For this and the goat which was killed was indeed but one sacrifice the one representing Christ dying for our sinnes the other Christ rising again for our justification Rom. 4. 25. the one the price paid for our redemption the other the effect thereof that God laying our sinnes upon Christ had removed our sinnes farre away from us See Psal 103. 12. As farre as the East is from the West so farre hath he removed our transgressions from us Vers 21. And shall send him away by the hand of a fit man into the wildernesse That is a man who for ability of body knowledge of the way and sufficiency for this service was chosen and in readinesse as appointed hereunto Vers 22. And the goat shall bear upon him their uniquities unto a land not inhabited That so the place might signifie that by Christ sinne is removed farre away even from all mankind that will believe in him Besides it might signifie that Christ was not onely put to death for our sakes but also forsaken in a manner of God cast off and left in a forlorn and comfortlesse condition Vers 24. And he shall wash his flesh with water in the holy place To wit because he had touched the goat upon which the sinnes of the people were laid The Hebrews say that this washing was not as at other times in the laver of brasse but in some vessell which stood in the Sanctuary which seems probable because after this done he is said to come forth that he might offer the burnt-offerings in the court And put on his garments c. The garments which he was now to put on were his ordinary high priests garments See the note above upon ver 4. And the burnt-offerings here appointed to be offered by him were the rammes mentioned ver 3. and ver 5. Vers 26. And he that let go the goat c. shall wash his clothes and bathe his flesh in water and afterward come into the camp Being unclean till the evening is not here mentioned as I conceive because it was usually evening ere they returned from these services or else in these cases they might presently come into the camp to bring back word that they had done what was injoyned Vers 29. In the seventh moneth on the tenth day of the moneth ye shall afflict your souls c. To wit by fasting and abstinence from all fleshly delights as also by the duties of inward humiliation and contrition and therefore was this day called their fast Sailing was now dangerous because the fast was now already past Act. 27. 9. And this we must know was the very same day wherein all those things before mentioned in this chapter were done by the high priest for the expiation of the sinnes of the people and was therefore called the day of atonement Levit. 23. 27. Indeed the solemnity of the day began the evening foregoing the tenth day and therefore it is said Levit. 23. 32. Ye shall afflict your souls on the ninth day of the moneth at even but the tenth day it was that was allotted for this service On this day the Jubile was also proclaimed of which see chap. 20. 8 9. As likewise for the extraordinary sacrifices of this day see Numb 29. 7 11. CHAP. XVII Vers 3. WHat man soever there be of the house of Israel that kill●th ano● c. Namely with an intent of offering it as a sacrifice to the Lord It is not meant of oxen lambes or goats killed for their own private uses
of the Levites in the middest of the camp c. It is expressely said chap. 10. 17. that in their journeyings when the camp removed from one place to another the sonnes of Gershon and the so●nes of Merari set forward bearing the tabernacle that is the boards and coverings of the tabernacle next after Judahs regiment between Judahs and Reubens regiment and then afterwards the Kohathites onely bearing the Sanctuary went just in the midst of the camp having six tribes before them and six behind them This therefore that is said here that the tabernacle of the congregation shall set forward with the camp of the Levites in the midst of the camp must either be understood onely of the Kohathites who carried the Sanctuary even all the holy things just in the midst of the camp or else by the midst of the camp must not be meant precisely the just midst of the camp but onely that they went between the regiments of the other tribes some immediately after the regiment of Judah and the rest next after the regiment of Reuben and so these last onely were precisely in the midst of the camp Vers 18. On the West-side shall be the standard of the camp of Ephraim c. Unto Josephs sonnes a double priviledge is here given because he was to have a part of Reubens birthright as it is expressely said 1. Chron. 5. 1 2. for first the posterity of his two sonnes are made two severall tribes which might have been an occasion of much contention had not God thus expressely ordered it and 2. unto them the West quarter is given for their pitching of their tents and that I conceiv● as the second place of honour in the camp for in the same regard is the West quarter amongst the Levites given to the posterity of Gershon the eldest sonne of Levi chap. 3. 23. and so as amongst them Moses and Aaron and the priests pitched immediately before the tabernacle and then the Gershonites that were of Levies eldest sonne just behind the tabernacle so in the ordering of the other tribes Judahs regiment pitched before the tabernacle and the sonnes of Joseph behind it And besides when they journeyed they went in the forefront of those tribes that followed the tabernacle and so both when they marched and when they pitched their tents they had the tabernacle still in their faces as if appointed to take speciall care of it whereto some Expositours conceive the Psalmist alludes in that expression Psal 80. 2. Before Ephraim and Benjamin and Man●sseh stirre up thy strength and come and save us For with the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh in this regigiment and quarter Benjamin is here joyned ver 22. and so all Rachels posterity encamped together But yet Ephraim Josephs younger sonne is appointed to be standard bearer in the camp before his elder brother Manasseh according to Jacobs prophecy of Ephraims superiority Gen. 48. 19 20. where he set Ephraim before Manasseh Vers 24. All that were numbred of the camp of Ephraim c. This was the smallest number of all the armies Vers 25. The standard of the camp of Dan shall be on the North-side by their armies He was the first-born of the handmaids children and Jacobs fifth sonne Gen. 30. 6. and by prophecy he was to judg● his people as one of the tribes of Israel Gen. 49. 16. So God appointed him the standard in the left wing with him are joyned the other two remaining sonnes of the handmaids to wit Asher ver 27. and Naphtaly ver 29. CHAP. III. Vers 1. THese also are the generations of Aaron and Moses c. That is these mentioned and numbred in the sequele of this chapter are of the stock whence Aaron and Moses d●scended to wit of the tribe of Levi for by the generations of such and such persons in the Scripture is meant sometimes their ancestours sometimes their children and posterity and sometimes their whole kindred and family as here it is taken Yet even the children of Aaron and Moses are numbred amongst the rest for though there be no mention made of Moses sonnes as there is of Aarons ver 2. yet even Moses sonnes are included amongst the Kohathites of which family Moses was ver 28. And therefore is A●ron in this place prefixt before Moses because in this regard Aarons sonnes as being priests had the preheminence of Moses posterity who were but ordinary Levites As for that clause in the day that the Lord spake with Moses in mount Sinai that I conceive is purposely added because some of these here mentioned though they were living when the Lord spake with Moses in mount Sinai yet they were now dead in the second moneth of the second year when this command was given for the numbring of the people namely Nadab and Abihu mentioned ver 2. Vers 6. Bring the tribe of Levi near and present them before Aaron c. Aaron and his sonnes entred upon the office of the priesthood in the first moneth of the second year after their going out of Egypt as it is evident Levit. 10. but it seems the Levites were not set apart to enter upon their office till they were now numbred and appointed how they should pitch their tents about the tabernacle and what the severall charge should be of each family of them which was in the second moneth of the second year chap. 1. 1. But yet that they should be set apart to this imployment in stead of the first-born was promised them before when they were appointed to slay those that had worshipped the golden calf as is before noted upon Ex●d 32. 29. How this may be reconciled with that in Deut. 10. 8. see in the notes upon that place Vers 7. And they shall keep his charge and the charge of the whole congregation c. That is they shall pitch their tents round about the tabernacle that they may be near at hand to be subservient and helpfull unto Aaron in the severall duties of Gods worship and the service of the tabernacle which God hath given in charge to Aaron and which God hath given in charge to the whole congregation Vers 8. And they shall keep all the instruments of the tabernacle of the congregation and the charge of the children of Israel c. That is that wherewith the children of Israel must have stood charged but that the Levites are separated to take it upon them in Israels behalf Vers 10. And thou shalt appoint Aaron and his sonnes and they shall wait on their priests office c. That is though the Levites are given unto Aaron and his sonnes for his help that they may minister unto him and be assistants in those things which are fit for them yet with those things that belong peculia●ly to the priests office even the Levites themselves must not upon pain of death intermeddle nor must the priests turn over the work of the Sanctuary to the Levites so to ease themselves they must wait
c. This is the Law for making the water of separation as it is called ver 9. that is the water that was to be kept for the cleansing of those that were legally unclean and for that cause were separated from the holy things of the tabernacle When this Law was given we cannot say but very fitly it is added here to that which went before for as in the foregoing chapter to appease the peoples excessive fear chap. 17. 12. the priests and Levites were appointed to do the service of the tabernacle and to watch over the people that they might not transgresse about any of the holy things so here also the Lord appoints a water of separation to be made that so if any of the p●ople had contracted any legall uncleannesse by the sprinkling of this water upon them they might be cleansed and so might come freely again to the service of God in the tabernacle without fear of those plagues which otherwise their pollutions might have brought upon them The legall pollutions were to affect them with the filthinesse of their sinnes and this water of separation was to teach them that if they desired to be cleansed from their filthinesse they must go out of themselves and obtain it from God from his Sanctuary and sacrifice For the making of this water a red heifer was to be provid●d and that by the common care and charge of all the children of Israel because it was to be for the common good of them all even for the cleansing of any one amongst them that was by any accident legally unclean And indeed as all other sacrifices so this in speciall was a notable type and figure of Christ for first it must be a heifer that the imbecillity of the sex might shadow forth the mean and humble and despised condition wherein Christ should live in the world secondly a red heifer either to denote the truth of his humane nature that he was indeed the sonne of man who was at first called Adam which in the Hebrew signifies red because of the red earth of which he was made or rather to betoken the bloudinesse of his passion whereto the Prophet seems also as some conceive to allude Esa 63. 1 2. Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah Wherefore art thou red in thine apparrel and thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine-presse and that by his bloud it is that we shall be cleansed from all our sinnes even those sinnes that are red as crimson or scarlet Esa 1. 18. He hath loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his own bloud saith S. John Rev. 1. 5. thirdly it must be a heifer without spot wherein is no blemish to signifie the purity of his nature without any blemish of sinne and the perfection both of his righteousnesse and suffering and fourthly a heifer upon which never came yoke for they used in those times to plow and to draw their carts with heifers and cows as well as with oxen Judg. 14. 18. and 6. 7. and that to signifie his fr●edome from the bondage of sinne as also his voluntary doing of those things that were to be done for our redemption John 10. 17 18. I lay down my life that I might take it again No man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self and Heb. 9. 13 14. If the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God Vers 3. And ye shall give her unto Eleazar the priest c. This heifer must be given to the priest to signifie that our redemption and purification was the work of Christs priesthood who was both priest and sacrifice yet not to the high priest but to Eleazar because by doing this service that was now to be done he was to be unclean ver 7. and it was fitter that he should be defiled then Aaron and secondly it must be carried without the camp as an accursed thing figuring Christs being made a curse and suffering without the citie Heb. 13. 12. Wherefore Jesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the gate Vers 4. And sprinkle of her bloud directly before the tabernacl● of the congregation seven times Signifying that though it bore the curse yet it was accepted of God for the cleansing of the unclean and that by Christs bloud we are made clean in Gods sight and have an entrance into heaven thereby Vers 5. And one shall burn the heifer in his sight her skinne and her flesh c. This was done to signifie the grievous suffering of Christ in the whole man both soul and body as also say some the ardent love which he bore unto his people in that he did offer up himself as a sacrifice to God in their behalf Vers 6. And the priest shall take cedar-wood and hyssope and scarlet c. To signifie that these things should be used for a sprinkle in sprinkling the unclean with the water of separation Lev. 14. 4. and that was by the virtue of the sacrifice that these things should be sanctified to this end that to them might be applyed the cleansing virtue of Christs death and spirit for the purging of our sinnes Vers 7. The priest shall w●sh his clothes c. The like is said of him that burnt this heifer ver 8. and of him th●t gathered up the ashes ver 10. and of him that sprinkled an unclean person with the water of separation made of these ashes ver 21. They that were imployed in preparing this water were defiled by that which was for the cleansing of others that were defiled And this was first to discover thereby the abominablenesse of sin in that the sinnes of the people being as it were imputed to this heifer that she might die for them every one that touched her was thereby polluted secondly to signifie that Christ of whom this heifer was a type by the imputation of our sinnes should be made a curse for us and should be numbred amongst transgressours thirdly to teach them that it was not so much the signe as the thing signified thereby that had virtue in it to purifie those that were spiritually unclean and consequently to shew the imperfection of the legall priesthood because by preparing the means of the Churches sanctification themselves were polluted Vers 9. And a man that is clean shall gather up the ashes c. This branch of the Law that the ashes of the heifer must be gathered up by a man that is clean and laid up without the camp in a clean place was because they were now consecrated to a holy use however the man that gathered them was thereby made unclean as is expressed in the following verse because they were the remainder of a heifer slain as
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
Tahath thence to Tarah where it is thought that insolent mutiny began of Korah Dathan and Abiram thence they removed to Mithcah thence to Hashmonah thence to Moseroth thence to Bene-jaakan thence to Horha-gidgad thence to Jotbathah thence to Ebronah thence to Ezion-gaber which was close by the red sea for this was a place for shipping in Edoms land 1. King 9. 26. And King Solomon made a navy of ships in Ezion-Geber which is besides Eloth on the shore on the red sea in the land of Edom then they turned to the North again and pitched as here Moses tells us in another Kadesh which was in the desert of Zin of which Jephthah spake Judg. 11. 16. and this was in the first moneth to wit of the fourtieth year after they were come out of Egypt for at their next station in mount Hor whither they removed from this Kadesh Aaron dyed and that is noted to have been in the first day of the fifth moneth of the fourtieth year Numb 33. 38. So that in their travels from Kadesh-Barnea where the spie came to Moses to this Kadesh in the desert of Zin there were about eight and thirty years spent the most of their fathers that were numbred at their coming out of Egypt being in that time destroyed And Miriam dyed there and was buried there To wit in Kadesh She was the sister of Moses a prophetesse and by her also God guided the Israelites in their travels I sent before thee Moses and Aaron and Miriam saith the Lord to the Israelites Mich. 6. 4. and therefore is the place and time of her death and buriall noted This year Aaron dyed also chap. 33. 38. and Moses Deut 34. 7. and if this was the sister of Moses as it is generally held that was set to watch what would become of Moses when he was laid out in an ark of bulrushes Exod. 2. 4. she could be little lesse then ten years old when Moses was born and consequently she was about a hundred and thirty years now when she dyed for Moses who dyed towards the end of this year was a hundred and twenty years old when he dyed De●t 34. 7. Vers 2. And there was no water for the congregation c. With the same want God tryed their fathers in the first year after their going out of Egypt Exod. 17. 4. who thereupon murmured then also and had water out of a rock for in many particulars these two different stories were alike though not in all but in this these their children were worse then their fathers because the experience their fathers had of Gods succour in the very same extremity did no good upon them nor could prevent these their murmurings against Moses and Aaron Vers 3. Would God that we had dyed when our brethren dyed before the Lord. That is with those whom God did suddenly destroy in the insurrection of Korah Dathan and Abiram chap. 16. and so also at other times This they wished intimating that it had been easier to have been cut off so then to pine away now for want of water but the whilst in a desperate manner they most impudently fl●ght that fearfull judgement of being cut off in Gods fiery indignation as a matter of nothing Vers 6. And Moses and Aaron went from the presence of the assembly c. Namely for fear of the people because of their outrage and that they might go to the tabernacle to intercede as formerly chap. 14. 5. for this rebellious people And the glory of the Lord appeared unto them See chap. 16. 19. Vers 8. Take the rod and gather thou the assembly together c. It is very questionable what rod it was that God here appoints Moses to take for the working of this miracle of fetching water out of the rock Evident it is that Moses took the rod from before the Lord vers 9. that is out of the tabernacle and therefore some Expositours hold that it was Aarons rod which was budded and was laid up before the testimony chap. 17. 10. But more generally it is held that it was that rod of Moses wherewith he had wrought so many miracles in Egypt which seems indeed the more probable first because it is afterwards called his rod vers 11. With his rod he smote the rock and secondly because this was fittest for this imployment the very sight of this rod wherewith God had manifested his almighty power in so many miracles and particularly in fetching water for them out of the rock at Rephidim being enough to make them ashamed of their present murmuring against God And what though he took this rod from before the Lord vers 9. even Moses rod in memory of the great things that had been done by it for which it is sometimes called the rod of God as Exod. 4. 20. might be laid up in the tabernacle as well as Aarons yea and some conceive that Aarons rod which budded and was laid up in the tabernacle was the very same wherewith those miracles were wrought in the land of Egypt the rather because even the rod of Moses is sometimes also called Aarons rod as Exod. 7. 12. They cast down every man his rod and they became serpents but Aarons rod swallowed up their rods And speak unto the rock before their eyes c. Here was no command given to Moses that he should smite the rock but onely that he should take the rod in his hand to wit as a signe of Gods working by him and speak to the rock before their eyes and therefore many hold that herein lay a part of Moses sinne that he smote the rock when he should onely have spoken to it But withall in this command of the Lord to Moses to speak to the rock there was couched a sharp exprobration of Israels hard heartednesse and infidelity for it intimates that the dead creatures would sooner hear and obey God then his own people and therefore also he was appointed to do this before the eyes of all the people whereas the former miracle of the like nature at the rock of Rephidem was onely wrought before the elders of Israel Exod. 17. 5. Vers 10. And Moses and Aaron gathered the congregation together before the rock c. Their return to the enraged people from whom erewhile for fear they withdrew themselves and ready undertaking what God had enjoyned shows plainly that they did not question Gods power to fetch water out of the rock how could they having had experience that he had done it before Exod. 17. 6 nor did absolutely conclude that God would not work this miracle at this time But why then doth the Lord tell Moses and Aaron that they believed him not vers 12 undoubtedly because there was some secret distrust and unbelief in their hearts though it prevailed not so farre against their faith as to make them wholly refuse to do what God had enjoyned them God that sees the heart chargeth them with infidelity and therefore we may be
taken prisoners in this battel for hereby he taught them at first how unable they were in themselves to conquer those nations that so they might learn to trust in God and not in themselves If one king thus prevailed over them how should they be able to destroy all the inhabitans of the land combining themselves together if the Lord should not assist them Vers 2. And Israel vowed a vow unto the Lord c. That is the Israelites intending to renew the battel and again once more to set upon Arad and his army called upon God for help and vowed to devote unto him their enemies and all their cities that is utterly to destroy them If thou wilt indeed deliver this people into my hand then I will utterly destroy their cities for when things were thus devoted the persons were killed the cities burnt and the goods confiscate to the Lord so that nothing was reserved for their own private use as is noted upon Levit. 27. 28. and this was a vow agreeable to Gods law Exod. 23. 32. Thou shalt make no covenant with them nor with their gods Vers 3. And the Lord hearkened to the voice of Israel and delivered up the Canaanites That is this army of Arad whom in a second battel after this vow they vanquished and destroyed And they utterly destroyed them and their cities and he called the name of that place Hormah But how could they being so farre off in the wildernesse destroy their cities lying within Canaan surely had Moses at this time entred Canaan in the pursuit of Arad he would not have fallen back again into the deserts It seemeth therefore that the accomplishment of this vow was performed long after to wit by the men of Judah and Simeon when they were come into the land of Canaan as is expressed Judg. 1. 17. And Judah went with Simeon his brother and they slew the Canaanites that inhabited Zephath and utterly destroyed it and the name of the citie was called Hormah so that this clause was here inserted either by Mosesprophetically or by some other holy man afterwards Vers 4. And they journeyed from mount Hor by the way of the red sea c. That is they went from Hor Eastward a way that led to the red sea which lay North and South the common rode from Gilead and Moab to Eziongaber c. and so crossing that way they passed on to Zalmonah and so turning then Northward to Punon as is expressed Numb 33. 41 42. and here it seems it was that the Israelites were punished with fiery serpents And the soul of the people was much discourag●d because of the way That is because they were led a great way about through a desert full of wants and difficulties and that the rather because now they began to think puffed up with their late victory that it had been easie for them to have forced a passage the nearest way Vers 5. And the people spake against God and against Moses c. And so tempted Christ 1. Cor. 10. 9. Neither let us tempt Christ as some of them also tempted and were destroyed of serpents Vers 6. And the Lord sent fiery ser●ents among the people c. So called because their venemous biting did cause a grievous burning in the bodies of the Israelites It may seem that they were a kind of serpents with wings that so flying amongst them did here and there seise upon them and bite them such as the prophet speaks of Esa 14. 29. Out of the serpents root shall come forth a cockatrice and his fruit shall be a fiery flying serpent The word in the originall is Seraphin that is Burners the very same name whereby the Angels are called Esa 6. 2. because of their burning zeal for Gods glory The wildernesse through which the Israelites now went did abound with many sorts of these serpents and therefore it is called that great and terrible wildernesse wherein were fiery serpents and scorpions Deut. 8. 15. onely God had hitherto kept them from hurting his people till now for their sinne he gave them power to bite and kill them and indeed the punishment was just according to their sinne for now God gave them just cause to complain of thirst and with the venemous biting of fiery serpents he punished their virulent tongues to whom that might well be applyed which the Psalmist speaks Psal 140. 3. They have sharpened their tongues as a serpent adders poison is under their lips Vers 8. Make thee a fiery serpent and set it upon a pole c. This was the way which the Lord prescribed for the curing of the Israelites that were bitten with fiery serpents namely that Moses should make a fiery serpent that is a figure or representation of those fiery serpents wherewith they were stung and that of brasse as we may see in the following verse the better to represent their fiery quality because brasse is of a fiery colour and therefore it is said of the Cherubims that Ezekiel saw in a vision Ezek. 1. 7. that they sparkled like the colour of burnished brasse and then set it upon a pole to the end that it might be seen from every quarter of the camp so that every man that was stung with the fiery serpents might look upon this brasen serpent and thereby might be healed Now this way of cure the Lord prescribed for two reasons first because this being no naturall way of cure did the better discover that it was of Gods mercy and secondly that it might be a type of Christ and our redemption by him John 3. 14 15. As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wildernesse even so must the sonne of man be lifted up That whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have eternall life For first as the Israelites were bitten with fiery serpents and that biting was mortall and deadly so was all mankind in our parents mortally stung and bitten by Satan that old serpent Rev. 12. 9. so that their whole nature is envenomed with sinne as a deadly poison and as it were set on fire of hell as S. James speaks of the tongue in particular James ● 6 8. and that so that without some way of recovery they must needs perish everlastingly By one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne Rom. 5. 12. and the sting of death is sinne saith the same Apostle 1. Cor. 15. 56. Secondly as the brazen serpent which Moses made for the cure of the Israelites had the outward form of those fiery serpents yet had not the poyson of those serpents in it so Christ came in the likenesse of sinnefull flesh Rom. 8. 3. and yet was without sinne Thirdly as the brazen serpent was lifted upon a pole that when any man was stung with the fiery serpents he might lift up his eyes and look upon it so Christ was lifted upon the crosse to the end he might save death-stung sinners or rather so was Christ lifted up and held forth
unto men in the preaching of the Gospel that so all poore sinners might look upon him as the onely authour of eternall salvation according to that of S. Paul to the Galatians Who hath bewitched you that you should not obey the truth before whose eyes Jesus Christ hath been evidently set forth crucified among you Gal. 3. 1. And fifthly as the Israelites that were mortally bitten by those fiery serpents were perfectly cured onely by looking on the brazen serpent whereof there could be no naturall reason so are sinners perfectly saved from that death whereto they were liable because of sinne onely by casting an eye of faith upon Christ whereof no reason can be given but the will of God and therefore is the preaching of this way of salvation called the foolishnesse of preaching 1. Cor. 1. 21. And indeed partly because it was such a notable type of the promised Messiah and partly that it might be a memoriall of this singular me●cy which God thereby had afforded them the Israelites carefully kept this brazen serpent unto the dayes of Hezekiah but then because the people burnt incense to it that good King brake it in pieces 2. Kings 18. 4. Vers 10. And the children of Israel set forward and pitched in Oboth They removed not from mount Hor to Oboth but as is before noted upon vers 14. from mount Hor they removed to Zalmonah and then to Punon and then to Oboth as we reade chap. 33. 41 42 43. whence we may most probably conclude that about Punon it was that the brazen serpent was made because it is said here that they set sorward from the place where that was done and then pitched in Oboth Vers 11. And they journ●yed from Oboth and pitched at Ije-abarim in the wildernesse which is before Moab c. And so were come from Edoms borders to Moabs with whom also they might not meddle Deut. 2. 9. And the Lord said unto me Distresse not the Moabites neither contend with them in battel Vers 12. From thence they removed and pitched in the valley of Zared Zared was the name both of the valley and river that ranne through that valley Deut. 2. 13. where was it seems Dibon-gad for chap. 33. 45. it is said that they departed from lim and pitched in Dibon-gad Vers 13. From thence they removed and pitched on the other side of Arnon c. From Dibon-gad they went to Almon-diblathaim thence to the mountains of Abarim Num. 33. 46 47. which it seems were in this place on the other side of Arnon For Arnon is the border of Moab between Moab and the Amorites Arnon was a river that did at this time divide the countrey of the Amorites from the land of the Moabites Indeed the countrey beyond Arnon towards Jordan had been in the possession of Moab but Sihon had taken it from them ver 16. so that now Arnon was the border between the Moabites and the Amorites which Moses notes to let us see how God by this means had provided this countrey for the Israelites who might not have meddled with it if it had been still in the Moabites possession but were now commanded to take it from the Amorites Deut. 2. 24. Rise ye up take your journey and passe over the river Arnon behold I have given into thy hand Sihon the Amorite King of Heshbon and his land c. and hence it was that the King of the Amorites and Moabites challenged this land in the dayes of Jephthah Israel took away my land when they came up out of Egypt from Arnon even unto Jabbok and unto Jordan now therefore restore thoselands again peaceably Vers 14. Wherefore it is said in the book of the warres of the Lord what he did in the red sea c. This place is diversly translated and therefore also diversly expounded by Interpreters According to our translation the meaning and drift of the words seems to be this There was a book extant in Moses time but now lost called the book of the warres of the Lord wherein it seems the victories which the Lord gave the Israelites over their enemies were more largely described which are here but briefly touched out of this book Moses cit●s these following words What he did in the red sea and in the brooks of Arnon and at the stream of the brooks that goeth down to the dwelling of Ar and lieth upon the border of Moab and that partly to prove what he had said before ver 13. that Arnon was at present the border between the land of Moab and the land of the Amorites though formerly the land beyond Arnon belonged also to the Moabites and partly also to give a touch that here at their entrance into the Amorites land the Lord wrought wonders for them not inferiour to his dealing with them when he drowned the Egyptians in the red sea Our Translatours have noted in the margin of our Bibles that this place cited out of that book of the warres of the Lord may be read thus Vaheb in Saphah and in the brooks of Arnon c. but if it be so read it is hard to conjecture what was meant thereby onely some Expositours hold that Vaheb was the name of that King of the Moabites mentioned vers 26. whom Sihon conquered and others that it was the name of a city in Saphah but the words cited being but an imperfect clause taken out of a book not now extant no wonder it is though the meaning of them cannot be found out sufficient it is for us that they plainly enough prove that for which Moses cites them namely that the river Arnon did divide the land of the Amorites and the land of Moab Vers 16. And from thence they went to Beer Neither this place called Beer nor those mentioned vers 18 19 20. to wit Mattanah Nahaliel and Bamoth are named Numb 33. and therefore it seems they were not severall stations but onely the names of such places as they passed by when they went forward from the mountains of Abarim which were about Arnon to the plains of Moab Numbers 33. 48. That is the well whereof the Lord spake unto Moses Gather the people together and I will give them water c. The meaning of these words is that at this place called thence Beer which signifieth a well the Lord did miraculously again supply them with water and that in the sight of all the people having appointed Moses to gather them together for this very purpose The manner how this was done is not expressed in the story but from the ensuing song we may probably inferre thus much to wit that the people being in some distresse for water in that wildernesse mentioned ver 13. through which they were now going God stayed not now till they murmured again but of his own accord did appoint Moses to gather the people together and to set the princes of the tribes to dig with their staves promising that a well should thereupon miraculously spring
of to wit that they should take heed lest the people sacrificing unto their god any one should call them and they should eat of his sacrifice Exod. 34. 15. and then being thus farre fallen away they were easily wonne to open idolatry even to bow down to their gods and worship them And all this the Moabites did by the counsel of Balaam who knew there was no other way to endanger the Israelites as it is evident chap. 31. 16. Behold saith the Lord of the Midianitish women these caused the children of Israel through the counsel of Balaam to commit a trespasse against the Lord in the matter of Peor and Rev. 2. 14. where it is said that Balaam taught Balak to cast a stumbling block before the children of Israel to eat things sacrificed to idols and to commit fornication Vers 3. And Israel joyned himself unto Baal-peor This Baal-peor was an idol-god of the Moabites so called from the mountain Peor chap. 23. 28. where this idol was worshipped And to this idol Israel is said to have joyned himself in reference to that spirituall adultery they committed by worshipping this idol as for the same reason the Scripture useth a like expression Hos 9. 10. where it is said that the Israelites went to Baal-peor and separated them selves unto that shame And the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel Herein also is implyed the effect of Gods anger to wit that hereupon the plague brake in upon them Psal 106. 29. whereby there fell in one day three and twenty thousand Vers 4. And the Lord said unto Moses Take all the heads of the people and hang them up c. Some Expositours understand this thus That the Lord here enjoyneth Moses to take all the heads of the people that is to gather together all the Heads and Rulers of the severall tribes and take them as assistants to him and then to hang them up before the Lord that is them of the people of whom he had spoken in the foregoing verse that had joyned themselves to Baal-peor and indeed that which followeth in the next verse doth singularly well agree with this exposition to wit that hereupon Moses said unto the Judges of Israel whom he had thus assembled together Slay you every one his man that is the me● that are under your severall jurisdictions that were joyned unto Baal-peor But the most received exposition is that the Lord here commanded Moses that he should take that is apprehend all the heads of the people to wit that were guilty of this sinne and h●ng them up before the Lord that is as a sacrifice to the Lord for the vindicating of his honour and the appeasing of his wrath as those of Sauls issue are said like●ise to have been hanged up before the Lord 2. Sam. 21. 6. because it was done for diverting of the Lords wrath when there was a famine in the land and that against the sunne that is openly in the sight of all men that as they had sinned openly so they might be punished openly for the terrour of others Now this exposition the words seem most plainly to intend to wit that first God commanded Moses to take all the heads of the people that were guilty of this sinne and hang them up before the Lord against the sunne so appointing them to be first punished and that with a more shamefull kind of death because their sinne was greatest and that then afterwards Moses gave a charge as it follows in the next verse to the rest of the Judges that had not defiled themselves that they should slay amongst those that were severally under their command all those that were notoriously known to be guilty of these sinnes Vers 6. And behold one of the children of Israel came and brought a Mid●anitish woman c. The greatest difficulty in this passage of the story is concerning the time when this Israelite Zimri the sonne of Salu as is afterwards expressed vers 14. did thus impudently bring this Midianitish woman to the camp of Israel to commit filthinesse with her and was there with her slain by Phinehas Some conceive that this was done before Moses and the other Judges had put in execution that charge which was given them mentioned in the two foregoing verses for the hanging up of the heads of the people and the slaying of those in each tribe that were found guilty of those horrible s●●nes of fornication and idolatry with the daughters of Moab which had provoked God to send such a plague amongst the people and the reason they give for this is because it is hardly credible that this wretch would have dared to have done this after Moses and the Judges had already with such severity punished those that were found guilty But yet because the plague was stayed immediately upon the killing of these wretches vers 8. it is most probable that those that were s●ain by the magistrate were slain before the plague was stayed therefore others hold that this was done in the order as here it is recorded by Moses and that this was one of the great aggravations of his desperate im pudency that not onely when the people were mourning because of the wrath of God against them but also when so many had been cut off for this sinne he was not yet afraid trusting it seems in his greatnesse because he was a Prince of such renown in the tribe of Simeon but did openly carry his harlot into his tent with him as if he desired thereby to proclaim that he would not be afraid to satisfie his lust though Moses and all Israel should stand by and look on Vers 8. And he went af●er the man of Israel into the tent c. The originall word here translated the tent is not that ordinarily used for a tent but such as signifieth a cave or hollow place therefore some think that hereby is meant such a tent as was made for fornication So the plague was stayed from the children of Israel This plague seemeth to have been the pestilence which God sent amongst the people Psal 106. 29. They provoked him to anger with their inventions and the plague brake in upon them Howbeit the word here in the originall is sometimes used for slaughter by the sword as 1. Sam. 4. 17. Vers 9. And those that died in the plague were twenty and foure thousand The Apostle sayes three and twenty thousand 1. Cor. 10. 8. It seems that one thousand were hanged up and slain by the command of the civil magistrate to appease Gods wrath and that the other three and twenty thousand were taken away by the immediate hand of God or one thousand of the chief hanged the rest slain with the sword Vers 12. Wherefore say Behold I give unto him my covenant of peace That is make this which I shall say unto thee publickly known both for the encouragement of Phinehas that he may not fear because they were such great ones whom he hath
coming out of Egypt from twenty years old and upward there was not a man left at this time when they were numbred again but onely Caleb and Joshua So that we must observe that the Levites are not here included for of them there were left Moses and Eleazar and Ithamar and perhaps many others CHAP. XXVII Vers 1. THen came the daughters of Zelophehad c. Because the Lord had said in the foregoing chapter vers 53. that the land should be divided amongst those they had now numbred from twenty years old and upward and so Zelophehad being dead without sonnes his children were like to have no inheritance in the land therefore his daughters came now to Moses and Eleazar desiring that that share of the land might be assigned to them which should have been their fathers had he been then living Vers 2. And they stood before Moses and before Eleazar the priest and before the princes and all the congregation by the doore of the tabernacle c. Whither they were it seems for this very purpose come that they might enquire of the Lord concerning this difficult case for I conceive they had formerly demanded an inheritance of the Judges and were by them appointed to plead for themselves before the doore of the tabernacle where they should have an answer from God himself Vers 3. Our father died in the wildernesse c. This plea of the daughters of Zelophehad is in effect as if they had thus said Our father was one of those whom the Lord carried out of Egypt to go and take possession of the land of Canaan and though he died in the wildernesse yet he was not taken away by any speciall judgement because he had his hand in some insurrection and rebellion such as was that of those that gathered themselves together against the Lord in the company of Korah and this they alledge to make their cause the more favourable because had he been cut off in any s●ch insurrection some might judge that it was no matter though his posterity were excluded from having any share in the land of Ca●aan but died in his own sinne that is he died his naturall death when his time was come as being by sinne liable to death as all other men are Thus Korahs conspiracie is mentioned here either by a Synecdoche this one being put for all other the rebellions of the Israelites and so the meaning must be that their father died in no particular rebellion against the Lord or else because whereas all the other murmurings and insurrections against Moses were especially the sinne of the common sort of people Korahs was chiefly of the princes and great men of every tribe chap. 16. 2. and so happely because their father was one of the chief of the tribe of Manasseh therefore they mention onely the rebellion of the great ones And as for that phrase of their fathers dying in his own sinne though some Expo●itours understand it thus that he dyed not for any speciall insurrection but onely for that sinne wherein the whole congregation was involved as well as he and for which the Lord threatned that they should all die in the wildernesse to wit for refusing to go into the land of Canaan when God had brought them thither yet I rather think it is meant of his own private sinnes which made him liable to death as all other men are for that all have ●inned Rom. 5. 12. Vers 4. Why should the name of our father be done away from among his familie because he hath no sonne That is why should not he be named amongst others in the division of the land which if it be not his name and familie will be quite extinguished as if he had never been and hence some Expositours conclude that as when a man dyed without issue and his brother m●rried his widow to raise up seed unto his brother his first sonne was in their Genealogies reckoned to be the sonne of him that dyed without issue so it was in this case the first sonnes of those that married the daughters of Zelophehad were accounted the sonnes of Zelophehad and so under his name did inherit his land Vers 4. Give unto us therefore a possession among the brethren of our father This pleading for a portion in that land which was not yet conquered was a true act of faith and must needs encourage others and help to strengthen their faith And besides hereby was shown as in a type that even women have an equall share with men in the heavenly Canaan for all inherit through Christ in whom there is neither male nor female but all are one Gal. 3. 28. Vers 7. Thou shalt surely give them a possession of an inheritance among their fathers brethren c. Thus the Lord granted these daughters of Zelophehad their desire which how it was performed by Joshua we may reade Josh 17. 4. According to the commandment of the Lord he gave them an inheritance among the brethren of their father yet withall there was afterwards a caution added to wit that they might not marry out of their own tribe chap. 36. 6. Vers 12. Get thee up into this mount Abarim c. There was a long tract of mountains which were called the mountains of Abarim chap. ●3 47. and into one of these was Moses now sent to wit that which is elsewhere called mount Nebo which was in the land of Moab over against Jericho Deut 32. 49. and Pisgah Deut. 34. 1. Hence Moses might see the land afarre off though he might not enter it and so the Law did shew the Israelites heaven afarre off but not as it is now revealed to us in the Gospel Vers 13. And when thou hast seen it thou shalt be gathered unto thy people c. That they should not enter the land God had threatned before Numb 20. 12. Se● the notes upon that place Vers 14. That is the water of Meribah in Kadesh in the wildernesse of Zin This is added to distinguish it from another Meribah Exod. 17. 7. where water was fetched out also from the rock but there Moses and Aaron displeased not the Lord. Vers 16. Let the Lord the God of the spirits of all flesh set a man over the congregation Moses at this time prayed also earnestly to the Lord that he might go over and see the land but God would not grant him his desire herein Deut. 3. 23 26. concerning this phrase the God of the spirits of all flesh see the note upon Numb 16. 22. This title is fitly in this prayer of Moses given unto the Lord both as implying that he was the searcher of mens spirits and therefore knew best who was fittest for the place and likewise as intimating that he was able to frame and fashion their spirits as he pleased and to give them any gifts or graces requisite for the imployment Vers 17. Which may go out before them and which may go in before them c. That is who
then also as it is noted there vers 9. he prayed for the people again as being much afraid of the great anger which the Lord had conceived against them notwithstanding the Lord had yielded to pardon them before he went down the first time from the mount Exod. 32. 14. And indeed assurance that God hath pardoned a sinne doth not make his servants the lesse earnest still to beg the pardon of it Vers 21. And I took your sinne the calf which ye had made and burnt it with fire c. See the notes upon Exod. 32. 20. Vers 22. And at Taberah and at Massah and at Kibroth-hattaavah ye provoked the Lord to wrath c. This is inserted as by way of parenthesis as if he had said Though I insist chiefly upon this sinne at Horeb because it was a most grievous sinne yet alas many other rebellions of yours I might reckon up at Taberah at Massah c. Vers 25. Thus I fell down before the Lord fourty dayes and fourty nights as I fell down at the first The former three verses being inserted as by the way now he returns to speak again of his interceding for them the second time when God was so highly displeased with them for that their foul sinne in making the golden calf for the fourtie dayes here mentioned are the same fourty dayes the second time spent with God whereof he had spoken before vers 18. which was after he had broken the calf and executed justice upon the people for their sinne and many other passages which are largely related in the thirtie second and thirtie third chapters of Exodus CHAP. X. Vers 1. AT that time the Lord said unto me Hew thee two tables of stone c. That is before my going up the second time into the mount at that time when upon your sinne and Gods displeasure I had earnestly sought unto God for you the Lord in testimonie that he was reconciled gave this charge concerning two new tables of stone and indeed at that time it was that he went up with them and stayed in the mount again the second time fourty dayes and fourty nights Now as the breaking of the first tables might signifie that there was no hope for mankind to be saved by the keeping of the law so this providing of two new tables might signif●e that yet notwithstanding the Lord would have the law to be in force as a rule of holinesse and righteousnesse unto his people and that the Lord by his spirit writing his law in their hearts would enable them in some good measure to conform their lives to the obedience thereof and besides Gods appointing of Moses to provide these two tables might intimate to the people that it was by his prayer and interc●ssion that they had this treasure again restored to them See also the note upon Exod. 34. 1. Vers 3. And I made an ark of shittim wood The ark here mentioned may be understood of an ark made onely for that purpose to keep the tables in till the other ark was made whereof God had spoken to him and for the making whereof he had given him direction in the first fourty dayes that he was with God in the mount If so this ark no doubt was made at the same time when he hewed the two tables of stone before he went up the second time that he abode fourtie daye in the mount But if we understand it of the ark of testimony that was not made till he came down after he had the second time abode fourtie dayes in the mount onely it is here joyned with the hewing of the two tables because in this also he did as God commanded him though he did it not at the same time when he hewed the two tables of stone but afterwards when he came down from the mount and this I rather think is the meaning of the words because vers 5. he addes and there they be as the Lord commanded me Vers 4. And he wrote on the tables according to the first writing c. See the note upon Exod. 34. 28. likewise the notes upon the tenth verse of the foregoing chapter Vers 6. And the children of Israel took their journey from Beeroth of the children of Jaakan to Mosera c. In this and the following verse there are many difficulties and such as indeed the words being read as they are in our translation are almost inextricable yet we must see what may be said for the answering of them The first difficulty is in the connexion of these words with that which went before to wit how Moses being in this chapter speaking of those things that befell them at mount Sinai comes here to mention the journeys of the Israelites in places to which they came not a long time after they had been at mount Sinai as is evident Numb 33. 31 32. But this it is not so hard to resolve for we must know that these two verses are not added here as in order of History but are onely inserted by the way as in a parenthesis so that the meaning of Moses is not that Beeroth of the children of Jaakan here mentioned was the next place where they pitched their tents after they removed from mount Sinai for as we may see Numb 33. mount Sinai was but the twelveth station of the children of Israel Beeroth of the children of Jaakan or Bene-jaakan as it is called Numb 33. 31. was the twenty eighth station but his meaning is onely that having gon many journeys forward and backward as the Lord commanded them at length they went from Beeroth of the children of Jaakan to Mosera or Moseroth as it is written Numb 33. 30. The second difficultie is concerning the place of Aarons death to wit because Numb 33. 38. it is said Aaron died at mount Hor and here that he dyed at Mosera and Mosera in that 33. of Numbers is but the twenty seventh station of the Israelites and that as they went back from Kadesh-Barnea towards the red sea and mount Hor is their thirtie fourth station and that as they returned again from the red sea towards the land of Canaan But to this I answer that this Mosera or Moseroth and mount Hor were but one mountain in the root though divided into divers tops as mount Sinai and Horeb were by the West part whereof called Moseroth Moses encamped as he went back towards the red sea and by the East part thereof called mount Hor as he returned again Northward towards the land of Canaan and so though Aaron dyed at mount Hor yet here it is said of Mosera that there Aaron dyed and there he was buried and that because Mosera and mount Hor were both one and the same mountain The third and greatest difficultie is in the seeming contradiction that is betwixt this place and that Numb 33. 31. in that here it is said that the Israelites went from Bene-jaakan or Beeroth of the children of Jaakan to Mosera
remain all night on the tree but thou shalt in any wise bury him that day c. To wi● whether he were hanged alive or dead as those Kings were Josh 10. 26. And afterward Joshua smote them and slew them and hanged them on five trees and they were ●anging upon the trees untill the evening And this they were enjoyned to do first lest they should by being inured to look daily on the dead carcases of men become merciles●e and cruel and make light of killing men and secondly that the land might not be defiled by that monument of Gods curse remaining upon it visibly And thus were the people taught to look upon death as the wages of sinne the curse of the Law For he that is hanged is accursed of God Since the death of any malefactour might be a monument of Gods curse for sinne it may be questioned why this brand is peculiarly set upon this kind of punishment that he that is hanged is accursed of God To which I answer that the reason of this was beca●s● this was esteemed the most shamefull the most dishonourable and infamous of all kinds of death and was usually therefore the punishment of those that had by some notorious wickednesse provoked God to poure out his wrath upon the whole land and so were hanged up to appease his wrath as we may see in the hanging of those Prin●es that were guilty of committing whoredome with the daughters of Moab Numb 25. 4. and i● the hanging of those sonnes of Saul in the dayes of David when there was a famine in the land because of Sauls perfidious oppressing of the Gibeonites 2. Sam. 21. 6. Nor was it without cause that this kind of death was both by the Israelites and other nations esteemed the most shamefull and accursed because the very manner of the death did intimate that such men as were thus executed were such execrable and accursed wretches that they did defile the earth with treading on it and would pollute the earth if they should die upon it and there●ore we●e so trussed up in the aire as not fit to be amongst men and that others might look upon them as men made spectacles of Gods indignation and cur●e because of the wickednesse they had committed which was not done in other kinds of death and hence it was that the Lord God would have his son the Lord Christ to suffer this kind of death that even hence it might be the more evident that in his death he bare the curse due to our sinnes according to that of the Apostle Gal. 3. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on the tree CHAP. XXII Vers 1. THou shalt not see thy brothers ox or his ●heep go astray and hide thy self from them c. That is thou shalt not upon any pretence withhold thine help yea though he be thine enemy for that is also expressed Exod. 23. 4. If thou meet thine enemies ox or his asse going astray thou shalt surely bring it back to him again and hereby we are taught that much more we must perform this office of love to our brethren even to seek the conversion of them that are out of the way James 5. 19 20. Brethren if any of you do erre from the truth and one convert him Let him know that he which converteth a sinner from the crrour of his way shall save a soul from death and hide a multitude of sinnes Vers 2. And if thy brother be not nigh unto thee or if thou know him not c. Here two cases are resolved that might be questioned to wit what they were to do in case the owners of such cattel as they found going astray did either dwell farre off from them or were altogether unknown to them and the answer is that in such cases they were to drive the cattel home to their own houses till the owners did fetch them away and so in case they knew the owners it must needs also be implyed that they were to send them word of the cattel they had taken up though they dwelt farre off but if they knew not the owners then indeed they were to keep them till the owners themselves did seek out for them Vers 5. The woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man c. Under this all manlinesse is forbidden in women and all effeminatenesse in men either in their attire or in the ordering of their hair of which the Apostle speaks 1. Cor. 11. 4 14. or any thing of like nature as that 1. Cor. 14. 34. Let your women keep silence in the churches for it is not permitted unto them to speak Vers 7. But thou shalt in any wise let the damme go and take the young to thee c. The end of this law was first to teach them alwayes in the least things to have respect to the publick good and to preferre that before their own private satisfaction as here they were forbidden to destroy the damme when it was breeding time because she might ere long have other young ones and so might still continue the store of birds for the good of others and secondly to shew them how well God was pleased that his people should be mercifull and pitifull and how ●e ab●orred all cruelty and hardheartednesse in that he would not allow them to kill the damme when they took away her egges or her young ones because this might seem a kind o● cruelty and unmercifulnesse towards the poore creature that did su●fer enough already in the losse of her young ones that were so precious to her Vers 8. When thou buildest a new house then thou shalt make a battlement for thy roof The houses of the Israelites were alwayes built flat on the tops and so they used to be much on the tops of their houses both to recreate themselves there and for many other occasions Whence is that of our Saviour Matth. 10. 27. What ye hear in the ear that preach ye on the house tops Here therefore they are enjoyned alwayes to make battlements round about their house tops to prevent the casuall falling of any body from thence and consequently also under this one particular they were enjoyned to prevent what in them lay all occasions of bloudshed or of any other evil that through their default might redound unto their brethren Vers 9. Thou shalt not sow thy vineyard with divers seeds c. The main and principall end of this and the two following laws against plowing with an ox and an asse and against wearing garments of linsey-wolsey was I conceive one and the same to wit to teach them what exact p●rity and sincerity God required in them that were his peculiar people and how hatefull to God all mixtures were in spirituall things There was not in it self any evil at all in wearing a garment made of linen and wollen together nor was
or none shut up in houses towers or cities to escape the enemie and none left escaped from destruction and so this phrase is elsewhere used 1. Kings 14. 10. The meaning is that when they are in a manner utterly overthrown and ruined then will God come to their help for indeed such extremities are usually the best opportunities which God takes of shewing mercie to his people See 2. Kings 14. 25 26. Vers 37. And he shall say Where are their gods their rock in whom they trusted c. Some understand this of the gods of the heathen the enemies of his people to wit that the Lord by destroying those heathen people should as it were triumph over their idol-gods that could no way help them when God came to take vengeance on them But it is better understood by others as spoken to his people and that by way of upbraiding them for their follie in forsaking him the everliving God to follow after those idol-gods that were able to do nothing for them in the time of their danger And he shall say Where are their gods c. which did eat the fat of their sacrifices and drank the wine of their drink-offerings the meaning is that God by suffering the enemies of the Israelites to bring them to so low an ebbe that there should be none ●●ut up or left as was said in the foregoing verse the Lord would discover to them what a grosse folly it was in them to go after those idol-gods and to give them the s●crifices which they should have offered to him for as for that phrase of their idol-gods eating the fat of their sacrifices c. all that is intended therein is onely that their sacrifices were offered to them as meat and drink-offerings as in that regard the sacrifices which God required of his people are called the food of his meat-offerings Vers 39. See now that I even I am he and there is no God with me I kill and I make alive c. As if he had said by the experience you now have had both of the blisse you enjoyed whilest you served me and of the miseries I brought upon you when you fell away to idolatry from which your idol-gods were no way able to free you by the experience I say that you have had of these things you may plainly see that I am the onely true God and that there is none el●e can do either good or hurt Vers 40. For I lift up my hand to heaven and say I live for ever God speaks here of himself after the manner of men who used in swearing to lift up their hands to heaven as a signe that they called God to witnesse the truth of what they said Gen. 14. 22. And Abram said to the King of Sodom I have lift up my hand unto the Lord the most high God the possessour of heaven and earth and thus God confirmeth his threatnings by an oath to shew the immutabili●y of his counsel Heb. 6. 16 17. For men verily swear by the greater and an oath for co●firmation is to them an end of all strife Wherein God willing more abundantly to s●ew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmeth it by an oath Now the oath which God here takes is I live for ever that is as sure as I live for ever I will do that which I now say Vers 42. I will make my arrows drunk with bloud and that wi●h the bloud of the slain and of the captives That is both with the bloud of those that are slain and of those that are hurt in battel and so thereupon are taken captive From the beginning of revenges upon the enemy That is from the time that I began to take vengeance upon those that are both mine and my peoples enemies or from the time when I shall revenge upon the enemie all the wrongs which from the first beginning they have done unto my people implying that God doth for a while suffer the enemies to runne on without controul but at last when he begins to punish them he reckons with them for all the old score Vers 43. R●joyce O ye nations with his people for he ●ill avenge c. Both Jews and Gentiles are here exhorted to blesse God for this his goodnesse to his people in avenging them upon their enemies and in this exhortation is implyed first that this which God should do for the Israelites should be so wonderfull even in the eyes of the Heathen that they should speak of it to the magnifying of God and secondly that the time should come when both Jews and Gentiles should together rejoyce in the goodnesse of God to them his Church and people and therefore S. Paul alledgeth this pl●ce to prove the calling of the Gentiles Rom. 15. 10. Vers 44. And Moses came and spake all the words of this song in the ears of the people he and Ho●●ea c. This was noted before chap. 31. 30. but is here again repeated by way of transition to that which follows and to note that Joshua their elect Judge stood by when this song was repeated by Moses as it were to assent to that which Moses said and did CHAP. XXXIII Vers 1. ANd this is the bl●ssing wherewith Moses the man of God blessed the children of Israel before his death In the former chapter vers 48. it is said t●at the very same day whereon Moses repeated that sad dreadfull song there recorded God commanded him to go up and die at mount Nebo but now he addes that yet before his death and therefore happely the same day also he pronounced these following propheticall blessings upon the severall tribes which he left amongst them as his last will and testament and by the sweetnesse thereof did much allay as it were the bitternesse of the former song Indeed the tribe of Simeon is not at all here mentioned and so all the posterity of Jacobs sonnes have their severall blessings allotted them except that tribe onely But that was because the tribe of Sim●on was to have their portion in the mid●t of the inheritance of the sonnes of Judah Josh 19. 1. whence it was that they went joyntly together to fight against the Canaanites Judg. 1. 3. and consequently the blessing o● this tribe is implyed in Judahs amongst whom they were to dwell and yet withall that was confirmed which Jacob at his death foretold concerning Simeon as the punishment of his sinne that he should be divided in Jacob and scattered in Israel As for the titl● which Moses here gives himself Moses the man of God thereby is meant the Prophet of the Lord and so he calls himself in this place purposely thereby to assure the Israelites that what he spake in these propheticall blessings he spake by authority from God and that therefore they were to receive them with no lesse assurance of faith no lesse confidence and comfort then if they had come immediately from God upon which ground