Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n aaron_n call_v high_a 32 3 6.1381 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 24 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

a peaceable and harmless passage through Edom. N.B. This unkindness of Relations befel Christ himself his Friends laid hold on him looking upon him as a Mad-man Mark 3.21 And if this was done to the green Tree what may the dry expect Hereupon Christ forewarns us of the failure of Friends and not only so but of their opposition also that we may place our hope and trust in him alone Matth. 10.21 22. Psal 2.12 and 73.25 28. The fourth Remark is The unkindness of Friends ought patiently to be endured as passing through Wisdom's hands which appoints Time Place Measure and Manner Thus David still'd himself with this consideration that the hand of the Lord ordered the Tongue of cursing Shimei But more expresly here the Lord had forbad Israel to meddle with Edom Deut. 2.4 5. in which place Targum Jonathan thus paraphraseth Israel was commanded by the word of Heaven that they should not wage War with the Posterity of Esau because the time was not yet come wherein God would execute Vengeance upon Edom by their hands This is mentioned in Obadiah's Prophecy Therefore Israel at this time suffered patiently the unkindness of Edom and obeyed the Lord herein tho' the way which they after went through the Wilderness fetching a compass round about the Land of Edom and Moab to come into Canaan proved exceeding irksome and grievous to them so that their Souls were discouraged not only because of the tedious length of the way but also because of the many wants and woes that they found therein Numb 21.4 5. And Jephtha pleads this to vindicate Israel's Patience and Innocency Judg. 11.18 Hereupon Israel being denied passage through Edom turned away to Mount Hor Numb 20.22 which was their next Resting-place after they came from Kadesh Numb 33.37 which name signifies a Mountain upon a Mountain for Har Hebr. signifies a Mountain and Aaron or Aharon signifies a Man of the Mountain who died now on the top of this Mountain upon a Mountain so died near Heaven Numb 20. v. 24 28. yet leaving an holy Son to succeed him upon Earth The same hands of Moses that had put on his Priestly Garments for Glory and Beauty Exod. 28.2 and Levit. 8.7 8 9. do now pull them off to teach the disanulling of that Priesthood that now had contracted sin Numb 20.12 Deut. 32.50 51. and the bringing in of a better Priesthood by Christ who is the true Eliazar or Hebr. help of God Heb. 7.11 18 26 27 28. and who is a Priest for ever after Melchizedek's order and ever liveth to make Intercession for us c. ver 25. and 9.24 Aaron is said to die gnal pi Jehovah at the mouth of the Lord as if God had taken away his Soul out of his Body sucking it out with a kiss of Love the same is said of Moses Deut. 34.5 Numb 33.38 He died upon Hor hagidgad that is in a hole there of Gidgad or Gudgod Deut. 10.7 on the first day of the fifth month for his sin committed at the Waters of Meribah in Kadesh Numb 20.12 24 26 c. after his Priestly Garments were stripped off from him and put upon Eleazar his Son and then he was lamented by Israel all that whole month for thirty days N.B. Mourning for the Dead is honourable the People mourn for Aaron as after they did for Moses who was now reprieved only till they came to Nebo Deut. 34.1 4. thirty days whom they had dishonoured forty years 'T is the Lot of many of the Servants of God to have more honour after their death than they had in their life The Burial of Aaron tho' omitted here is mentioned Deut. 10.6 Both Aaron's and Moses's sin at Meribah is call'd Rebellion and both were doomed to death for it Numb 20.12 24. The best man's heel hath some Iniquity cleaving to it Psal 49.5 Some dirt sticks to all our feet John 13.7 c. so need washing and the brightest Lamps have need of God's Golden Snuffers at some time or other Israel then marched from Mount Hor to Zalmonah Numb 33.41 call'd so of Zelem an Image for there the Brazen Serpent was set up after Many Remarks more than ordinary are upon this Station Recorded The first is The Canaanites having heard of the overthrow which was given Israel thirty eight years before their coming to this Station Numb 14.45 and of the hand of God against them in their so long wandring in the Wilderness were hardened and emboldened to encounter them again at this time when they heard of their second approach towards Canaan Numb 21.1 and no doubt but the Devil did endeavour by this new Impediment which he stirred up to discourage Israel making them think that as their Fathers were through unbelief affrighted and entred not into the promised Land Deut. 1.27 32 35. so their Children hereby might also be deprived Yea and God for the Chastisement of their sins and for the Exercise of their Faith out of his unsearchable Wisdom suffered those Cursed Canaanites at the first to conquer them and to take some of them Prisoners a sorer affliction than what Job suffered The most wise God permitted this Malady worse than any before to befal them that his People might know when they came indeed to conquer the Land they did not conquer it by their own strength or for their own worthiness Psal 44.3 4. Deut. 9.4 The second Remark is This Malady that was matchless in all their former wanderings put Israel upon seeking out a suitable Remedy Hereupon they vowed a Vow c. ver 2. that if God would grant them Victory they would Anathematize all they conquered reserving nothing for their own use but destroy all as consecrated to God With this Religious Promise they joyned fervent Prayer for God's help which was the most probable way to prevail with God as their great Grand-father Jacob found it Gen. 28.20 36. and who is therefore call'd the Father of Vows Thus they found it also ver 3. where 't is said The Lord received the Prayer of Israel and gave up King Arad and his Canaanites into their hands c. then according to their Vow they devoted the Conquered Persons to death their Cities to be burnt but their Goods confiscate to the Lord were carried into the Lord's Treasury Levit. 27.28 29. as was done to Jericho Josh 6.17 19 21 24. But this Vow of destroying the Canaanite's Cities could not now be performed unless in some as first-fruits offered up to God for they being now far off in the Wilderness could not destroy the Cities lying in Canaan Numb 33.40 into which they came not till after Moses's Death and still Jordan was betwixt them and it 'T is not to be believed that they now entred Canaan and when they had destroyed their Cities returned again into the Wilderness to take that tedious Journey which was so irksom to them after Numb 21.4 Therefore this is spoke by way of Anticipation they now conquered the Canaanites Army
Interpreter However ever since Luther there hath been a drought upon Rome's Revenues in many Reformed Countreys God forbid those Springs that have been dryed up should be suffered to run fresh again The Floud out of the Dragon's mouth shall be dryed up Rev. 12.15 Christians are from Christ that Day-spring of the East Luk. 1.78 and they are Kings and Priests by him Rev. 5.10 If we follow the Cloud the Lamb Rev. 14.4 the Rock will follow up as he did Israel 1 Cor. 10.4 with supplies of Water all their wanderings in the VVilderness If the Enemy flow in as a Floud he will lift up his Standard Isa 59.19 and lick up the Floud as 1 King 18.38 and make them bread and a breakfast to us Numb 14.9 Psal 74.14 What God hath done he can do c. Antichrist must die by degrees as he rose by degrees he must die of a Consumption Christ will consume Antichrist by the Breath of his Mouth and by the brightness of his Coming 2 Thes 2.8 as I have at large demonstrated in my Discovery of Antichrist Page 75 to 80. The next Rank of the most memorable Remarks recorded was at Israel's fifth Mansion Numb 33.8 call'd there Etham being one continued Desart on both sides of that part of the Red Sea where they passed through and which was made the more and the same while the VVaters were divided and from thence they marched to the Wilderness of Shur Exod. 15.22 where at three days Jorney's-end they met with Marah the bitter VVaters From whence take the following Remarks First This Shur was in the way to Canaan from Egypt This way Hagar fled to her Native Countrey Gen. 16.7 And this was the VVilderness where that wild-man Ishmael led his Rapacious Life Gen. 21.18 This is the doleful Desart Israel must pass thorough towards Canaan and we thorough many troubles towards Heaven Act. 14.22 2 Tim. 3.12 The second Remark is Moses with much importunity as the Hebrew word Vaiassang signifies and Shur signifies caused them to go did bring them from the Red Sea hither from the place where they took the spoil of the Egyptians and sweetly sang the high Praises of the most High God to a place which they found full of wants and temptations Therefore no wonder they had no mind to move till Moses importun'd them So long a Journey as three days into the VVilderness had been requested of Pharaoh Exod. 3.18 Here they take three days Journey till they march to Marah with Moses so must we come with our Messias from Lebanon that goodly Mountain Deut. 3.25 from pleasure to pain at his call Cant. 4.8 The third Remark is Thirst and Bitterness is Israel's first handsel in their Wilderness-wanderings and they must take great pains even three days Journey without any full pause to fetch it which carnal Reason will suggest might have found out fitter Quarters for this great Army and better than this bitter Marah a name which Moses now gave to it suitable to the nature of it Thus God is pleased to mingle his favours with our afflictions that we might not be too much puffed up with our present prosperity whereby many fools are destroyed Prov. 1.32 as proving over-strong Wine for their weak brains In this manner God dealt with his Israel here that they might not be too much puffed up with their prevailing over Pharaoh and his Host after their joyful Melody of Songs and Instruments of Musick for this miraculous Victory and after their delightful Plunder of the drowned Egyptians whereby they abundantly furnished themselves both with Wealth and Weapons They are first sorely exercised with Thirst and then their Thirst is tortured with bitter Waters This World is a dry and bitter Wilderness to us As they thought three days would bring them to Canaan which proved a longer Journey so we think to win Heaven in a short time but 't is a long Pilgrimage exposed to wants and vexations c. The fourth Remark is They fall on murmuring at Marah Water indeed they now had but what the better they cannot drinks them ver 23. hereupon they murmure against Moses ver 24. God can curse our blessings Mal. 2.2 He gives them such a tang as no complacency can be found in them Moses the godly Magistrate must bear the blame of all Publick Persons if never so pious are sure to lead a sharp censur'd life VVell doth Paul brand this People with the style of Murmurers 1 Cor. 10.10 who wrote Marah upon every Mercy and whose Murmurings are recorded twenty times in Scripture being of three sorts 1. Either General of the whole Congregation Or 2. Special of some few Or 3. Particular of some principal Persons First Their general Murmurings were upon these occasions 1. For things which they endured as their hard Bondage augmented at Moses's first coming Exod. 5.21 Their fear to be all cut off by Pharaoh's pursuing them Exod. 14.11 Their weariness in their wandering ways Numb 11.1 Their being bitten with Serpents Numb 21 c. 2. For things they wanted as here For sweet and more potable VVater Exod. 15.24 For Bread Exod. 16.3 For VVater again in Rephidim Exod. 17. For Flesh Numb 11.4 for VVater again when Moses also offended Numb 20.5 11. 3. To their Murmuring they added Disobedience when any thing they liked not was imposed on them as twice they were disobedient about Manna both in reserving it till the morning Exod. 16. v. 19. and in gathering it upon the Sabbath ver 28. and they added to it Rebellion also when they went forth to fight with the Amalekites and Canaanites contrary to God's Command Numb 14.41 4. They likewise murmured when their Expectation was frustrated as upon Moses's long absence Exod. 32.1 when they heard a false report of Canaan that the Inhabitants thereof were invincible Numb 14.2 and when Korah Dathan and Abiram with their Adherents were suddenly destroyed Numb 16.41 These general Murmurings in all were sixteen to which may be added other four in special As 1. Of special men as Korah Dathan and Abiram c. Numb 16.3 3. Of principal persons in particular As 1. Of Aaron and Miriam against Moses Numb 12.2 2. Of Moses himself at the waters of strife Numb 20.10 11 12. And 3. Of Aaron when through discontent he neglected his Office at the death of his two Sons Levit. 10.19 N.B. This Murmuring is an Anti-providence a quarrelling with Divine Dispensations 'T is a little God that sets it self against the great God 'T was the Devil's murmuring at Man's Happiness that cast him out of Heaven and would rather be in Hell than behold Man in Paradise Irenaeus calls Murmurers ora Diaboli mouthed like the Devil The Eagle when hunger-bit makes no murmuring noise as other Fowls do 't is below his generous spirit So 't is a shame for Saints to murmure with the World as Psal 59.6 14. like Dogs c. The 5th Remark is God hath new Remedies for the new Maladies of his
raise themselves to an equality upon his ruine c. The 3d Remark is The event of this murmuring while meek Moses is dumb God speaks in his behalf and while he was deaf God hears and stirs v. 2 3 4. No doubt but this was a great exercise of Moses's patience to be thus traduced by his own Sister and Brother To be derided by Egyptians is threatned as a misery Hos 7.16 but to be reproached by those that are Professors of the same Religion with our selves is far more grievous Zedekiah feared more to be mocked by the Jews than by the Caldeans Jer. 38.19 However meek Moses was a Lamb in his own Cause yet knew how to be a Lion in God's Cause How blessedly blown up was he with a Zeal for God in the case of the Golden Calf and what a stomach shews he in that matter Exod. 32.19 c. But God comes as a swift Witness Mal. 3.5 pleads the part of this silent Sufferer The Lord spake suddenly v. 4. not only as a sharp revenger of his Servant's injuries for wrong done to an Embassador reflects upon the Prince that sent the Embassage but also to prevent all surmises that God came at Moses's complaint to him and seeking revenge the Lord hearing and seeing all that was said and done by those Murmurers and being highly displeased immediately all the three both the Parties offending and offended are judicially Summoned to appear before the Great Judge to the Tent of the Congregation not before the People from whom Aaron's folly must be concealed and then the Judge speaks to the Offenders out of the Cloud as from the Throne of his Glory v. 4 5. Wherein He First Accuseth the two guilty Persons saying Why were ye not afraid to speak against my Servant Moses ver 8. Secondly He vindicates innocent Moses and absolves him v. 6 7 8. preferring him not only above Miriam and Aaron but also universally above all the Prophets Thirdly He passeth the Sentence of Condemnation upon the Offenders v. 9 10. Fourthly The Execution of the Sentence followeth God departs with the Cloud the sign of his presence then woe to them from whom God departs Hos 9.12 all evil comes in as by a Sluce Leprosie rushes upon Miriam a proper punishment of pride c. yea the worst sort and most incurable Leprosie 2 King 5.27 and Exod. 4.6 nor was this all her punishment she must have Banishment also for seven days She was punished for her Pride both in her Body and in her Honour 't was a great disgrace to her to be Excommunicated so long out of the Camp and Congregation This Banishment was a Civil Death as the Law of Nations terms it and her Leprosie made Aaron look upon her as under a natural Death also v. 12. so compareth her to a dead abortive Birth whose flesh was half consumed with this fretting Leprosie Inquiry Why was not Aaron likewise plagu'd with Leprosie Answer First She was first in the fault and likely a mover of Aaron to it Secondly Aaron escaped saith Chrysostom for the Dignity of the Priesthood which was now newly instituted and it would have been a great dishonour to that Order in that legal Worship if the first High-Priest had been made a Leper which would have excluded him from his Ministry who should by his Office be always at hand in the Tabernacle Thirdly But seeing the first Institution of the Priesthood did not secure Nadab and Abihu Levit. 10.1 2 c. a better Reason must be found that Miriam was more passionate and peremptory in her reproofs of Moses and in her reproaches against him than Aaron was But Fourthly The best Reason is that Aaron met God by Repentance and so disarm'd his indignation and thereby redeemed his own sorrow so remained to interceed for his Sister The 4th Remark is The removal of this Remora and Rub that retarded Israel's marching from this Station and the gracious withdrawment of Miriam's double punishment 1. By the intercession of Aaron to Moses and 2. By Moses's Intercession to the Lord in her behalf ver 11 12 13 c. First Aaron cryes to Moses Alas my Lord c. God was now gone in the Cloud not forward as a sign of Conduct but upward from off the Tabernacle where it usually resided aloft in the air and probably disappeared for that time as a Testimony of Divine displeasure gainst Miriam's unclean Leprosie beside had the Lord been present in the sign of his presence Aaron was how conscious of his own unworthiness by his being an Abettor of Miriam's sin to make any immediate address to God therefore requests Moses to mediate for Miriam to teach us both to present our Prayers to God by the Mediation of Christ whom Moses here Typified and also when our own Key of Prayer is become rusty we must make use of the Key of others Favourites of Heaven who live with us on Earth to open the Cabinet of God's loving kindness to us and ours and though Aaron was the Elder Brother and High-Priest yet here he maketh his Request to Moses honouring him with the Title of His Lord Hebr. Bi Adoni confessing their sin and craving pardon which made amends for his former fault he begs his younger Brother's intercession for their Sisters Cure Hereupon Moses like a loving Brother passing by past affronts and injuries which is the most Noble kind of Revenge prays earnestly to the Lord for healing his Leprous Sister as one much afflicted with her affliction He cryes Ael Na repha na Oh God of Might and Mercy as that word signifies heal her I beseech thee c. To which God returns this Answer v. 13 14. Had her Earthly Father spit in her face a sign of anger shame and contempt Job 30.10 Isa 50.6 Mat. 27.30 she should be sorrowful for it seven days the time that Lepers were shut up by the Law c. Levit. 13.4 5 21 26 and 14 8. and Numb 19.11 c. how much more when her Heavenly Father had put this stamp of shame upon her Table of Beauty defiling the face of his undutiful Daughter with such a loathsom Leprosie She shall be shut out of my Church seven days that her sorrow for her sin might be sound and soaking This was a perfect pattern of Impartial Justice against Sinners without respect of Persons for Miriam tho' a Prophetess and Vzziah tho' a present King must thus be separated for their Leprosie Numb 12.14 2 Chron. 26.20 21. both must be ashamed to be seen and shut out from Church-Society When this time of seven days justly inflicted for Miriam's humiliation and purgation was expired she was restored to the Church N. B. And this was done without the Ceremonial expiations prescribed in the case of Leprosie Levit. 14. because her Cure was as Miraculous as her Disease and therewithal her restoring to Society as Authentick as was her separation from it for God's healing her by a Miracle from so sore and
respect of the Priest's Office and this Covering of the Altar with those Censers of polished splendid Brass was as a Looking-glass for all to behold that none might after as Korah presume to the Priesthood The second Consequent is The new notorious Rebellion of the whole People surviving those sad Judgments raised the very morning after which was pacified by a Plague begun but stopp'd by Moses sending Aaron in haste to stand betwixt the living and the dead with Incense a clear Type of Christ ver 41 to 50. Those Rebels after such a severe double Conviction so soon to murmure against Moses who had saved them by his prayer for them ver 22. for his killing the Lord's People seem to be acted and driven by the Devil into this prodigious contumacy Tho' the miraculous strangeness of both the Judgments did declare them to come from God yet Moses must be blamed for killing both ways even while the carkases of the late Rebels lay before their Eyes As the Devil had set the Sorcerers of Egypt against Moses Exod. 8. so he sets this People against him here to make their Rebellion as marvelous as were God's Judgments upon the Rebellious Some say such a furious Devil agitated the People that they offered to assault Moses and Aaron with violent hands whereupon they fled for their own safety as Vaiphenu in ver 43. is translated to the door of the Tabernacle Then Deus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God as out of an Engine appeareth to Relieve his Distressed Servants and threatned to consume the new and more formidable Rebels because more universal with a third deadly Plague which was in part executed ver 45.46 Moses was quick-sighted by his familiarity with God and early discerns Divine Wrath at its first setting forth He spies the Plague running on like fire in a Corn field he bids Aaron run to stop it by making an Atonement Aaron interposeth and therein exposeth himself to the Wrath of God for saving the People yet living God favourably accepts his Atonement Deut. 33.10 11. wherein he figured Christ who poured out his Soul an Offering for Sin and made Intercession for Transgressors Isa 53.12 Luke 22.34 The Hebrew Rabbins observe well how that Aaron made no Atonement for the dead for they cannot hope for any Portion Eccles 9.4 5 6 10 Psal 115.17 Isa 38.18 for after death cometh Judgment Heb. 9.27 therefore there was no estimation nor price of the dead who could not personally appear before the Priest for any Vow in Israel Levit. 27.8 as Maimonides in Erachin cap. 1 well observeth Aaron could not be so quick for staying the Plague but God was as quick in slaying the People fourteen thousand and seven hundred more died of this speedy Pestilence and tho' Incense was to be offered now only upon the Altar of Incense within the Tabernacle yet Aaron offers it betwixt the dead and the living without the Tabernacle in the open Wilderness and God accepts if as done upon an extraordinary occasion so by a Divine extraordinary Dispensation the Plague was stayed here by ver 47 48 49. All which not only sheweth how prevalent with God are the Prayers of his faithful and fervent Servants Jam. 5.16 1 John 5.14 c. but also fore-shewed the efficacy of Christ's Mediation whom the Father heareth always John 11.42 who is our Atonement 1 Joh. 2.2 our Paschal Lamb that stops the destroying Angel from touching us Exod. 12.23 Heb. 11.28 as also 2 Sam. 24.16 Thus the Smoke of Aaron's Incense figuring Christ's Intercession for us Psal 141.2 Rev. 8.4 stayed the Plague from the surviving Israelites for which Moses praised God at the Tent door ver 50. Lastly To prevent all such like Murmurings for the future Numb 17.5 10. God superadds a miraculous Approbation of Aaron's Priesthood by causing his Rod laid up in the Tent of the Testimony with the Rods of all the other Tribes to bud blossom and bear ripe Almonds all in one night's time ver 6 7 8 9. and Numb 20.9 Heb. 9.4 Here are three Miracles in one 1. That a dry Rod made of the Almond Tree should bring forth buds in a moment 2. That those buds should presently become blossoms and flowers 3. That these should immediately become ripe fruit and that all at once or at least in a little space Natura non facit saltum Nature makes no such leaps All this was supernatural to these ends 1. For a Testimony of God's calling Aaron to the Priesthood 2. For a Type of Christ the branch Isa 11.1 3. For a figure of the fruitfulness of a Gospel-Ministry And 4. For a lively representation of a glorious Resurrection N.B. This Kadesh Barnea where this Miracle was wrought was the more famous a Mansion of Isral there because they not only had their Station at this place many days Deut. 1.46 even a whole year as at Sinai as above for tho' they were commanded to remove their Tents the very next day of their murmuring upon the Return of the Spies and the ten reporting falsly of Canaan Numb 14 25. yet they obeyed not that Command but affaulted the Canaanites in the Mountains and were discomfited by them whereupon they returned to their Tents where they mourned as they had good cause many days and there were permitted to linger and loiter a long time wherein those occurrences afore-mentioned fell out For at their first Station here they received those Laws which are Recorded Numb 15. as also that they stoned him that gathered sticks on the Sabbath day ibidem Here it was likewise that Korah and his Complices for aspiring to the Priesthood of Aaron being of Levis Tribe and Dathan and Abiram c. for aspiring to the Principality of Moses being of Reuben the first-born all perished and that 14700 died of the Plague Numb 16. and that Aaron's Rod budded c. Numb 17. that divers Services for the Priests are appointed to save the People from perishing as they complained ver 12 13. Numb 18 and 19. After which Moses mentioneth no more occurrences from this beginning of their third year or the last six months of the second year after their Redemption from Egypt until the first day of their fortieth year Numb 20. where Israel is come after thirty seven or thirty eight years wandring in the Wilderness to this unhappy place Kadesh-Barnea again where they had received their doom of the Divine Decree that their Carcases should fall in the Wilderness and not enter into the Land of Promise accordingly that sad Decree was executed during their many Marches and Stations from this Kadesh towards the Red Sea Deut. 1.40 and back again to this Kadesh some seven or eight and thirty years after All those Wandrings during this tedious Time are barely mentioned by Moses Numb 33. from ver 18 to 36. having no remarkable occurrencies The first Remark concerning those intercurrent years 37 or 38. is That when Moses saw the old Generation fall so fast in this
gone c. this gave them good cause to weep c. but they hoped that in his Wrath he would remember Mercy Habb 3.2 The Third Remark is The Repetition of the Story of Joshua's Dismission of the People from his Parliament at Shechem c. borrowed from Josh 24.28 29. and mentioned here from ver 6. to 11. this is done in order to a discovery of the Time Cause or occasion of Israel's Defection from God and God's Desertion of them these five Verses have Joshua's Death and the Death of those Godly Elders about his Age c. Inserted in them to clear the way of all the ensuing Stories Vatablus his Note here is that these things are spoken here by way of Recapitulation that the Sum and Argument of this whole Book may be in this place set down together and à Lapide calls it an Hysteron-proteron repeating what was done long ago as if now done that the Author might more commodiously pass from Joshua to the Original and Institution of the Judges that succeeded Joshua But others are of Opinion that these Verses have a due Connexion to the words of the Angel in ver 1.2 who told them that the Idols of the Canaanites will become your ruine and now those Verses declare how this really came to pass and when and by what means dating it from the Death of Joshua c. then they began to forsake the Lord but above all Dr. Lightfoot's Judgment in this point seems to me most cogent and of greatest importance saying That all these things that were past are mentioned here as present that the foundation of the future story may be better laid and that the time of the Peoples beginning to degenerate may be the more manifestly marked out and hereupon after the tenth Verse of the second Chapter he placeth all those Stories which are held forth in Chapters 17 18 19 20 21. and after all these Chapters he begins again at Chap. 2.11 with the Death of the first Judge of Israel namely Othniel Let me have leave to transcribe his Reasons for his double Assertion First That all those last Chapters of Judges ought to be placed in the middle of the Second Chapter And Secondly That the Holy Ghost did not preposterously lay those Stories which came to pass so soon in so late a place of this Book of Judges As to the first of these his Arguments take as followeth his Chronology may not be in every hand where this may come Argument the First The Danites were not setled when the Stories of the 17th and 18th Chapters came to pass and therefore this could not be long after Joshua 's Death Secondly Phinehas was alive at the Battle at Gibeah 'twixt Benjamin and the Ten Tribes Chap. 19. and Chap. 20. ver 28. Thirdly The Wickedness of Gibeah is reckoned for one of their first Villanies Hos 10.9 there they began it as in Judg. 19. c. Fourthly Deborah speaks of the 40000 of Israel that perished by Benjamin as if neither Sw●rd nor Spear had been among them Judg. 5.8 Fifthly Mahaneh Dan or as in our Translation the Camp of Dan which was so named upon the March of the Danites when they set up their Idolatry Judg. 18.12 is mentioned in the Story of Samson by that very Name Mahaneh-Dan though that Story of Samson be set before the Story of the Danites Judg. 13.25 Sixthly The first publick Idolatry that was found in Israel had its first beginning in the Tribe of Dan Judg. 18.30 before the Worshiping of Baalim and Ashtaroth in any other Tribe Judg. 2.13 Therefore Dan is omitted among the Sealed of the Lord Revel 7. Seventhly Ehud mentioned in Judg. 3.15 may very well be supposed to have been one of the Left-handed Benjamites and one of them that escaped at the Rock Rimmon Judg. 20.16 47. and 21.13 The Reasons of his second Assertion why there is a transposition of those Histories by the Holy Ghost I must refer to the Reader Lightfoot's Chronicle of the Old Testament pag. 93. to avoid prolixity of Quotations c. Nor is this the private Opinion of Dr. Lightfoot alone and singular but I find an Universal Concurrence of the most Learned and Judicious Interpreters with him concerning this Dislocation c. such as Judicious Junius Learned Lavater Bochartus Malvenda and many others both Foreign and Domestick Writers who do not only Insist upon the Reasons aforementioned but also do much amplifie upon them all unanimously affirming that these Stories in the five last Chapters of Judges did not fall out in the order wherein they are placed but much sooner even presently after the Death of the Elders that out-lived Joshua Judg. 2.7 and not immediately after the Death of Samson as they are set down in this Book Those Divines afore-named make it more apparent by adding Amplifications to the Arguments aforementioned N. B. They add to the First That it is not at all probable the Tribe of Dan which was numerous could want their proper Possessions for so long a time as 300 Years after Joshua's Death yet are they said to seek an Inheritance to dwell in c. Judg. 18.1 this could not be after Samson's Death To the Second is added The Story of the Levites Concubine and the War with the Benjamites happened while Phinehas was High priest Judg. 20.28 who must have been about 350 Years old if these things had falen out after Samson's Death which is more than improbable for Phinehas was at Man's Estate when he slew Zimri and Cozbi Numb 25.7 8. which was before Israel entred into Can●an and he succeeded in the High-Priests Office after his Father Eleazar who died about the same time that Ioshua did Josh 24.33 and therefore could not out-live Samson To the Third is added That the Sin of Gibeah Hos 10.9 must be soon after Joshua's Death and before the time of the Judges for Jebus or that part of Jerusalem which belong'd to the Benjamites was not yet taken Judg. 19.11 12. but was still possess'd by the Jebusites so that the Sin of Gibeah that Hosea mentions must be very Ancient c. To the Fourth is added That Deborah beside her mentioning the 40000 of Israel slain by Benjamin Judg. 5.8 doth in ver 14. use an Apostrophe turning to God in her words After thee Oh Benjamin among thy People and admiring that the poor Remnant of Benjamin reserved from that General Slaughter of them Judg. 20. should not be discourag'd by his paucity of number but became most forward in her Expedition and encourag'd Ephraim a Numerous Tribe thereunto the whole Tribe of Benjamin though now but small came forth to this War of Deborah's when the Numerous Tribe of Ephraim sent forth but an handful to it and did but follow after Benjamin she admires God in this double precedency To the Fifth is added That the place where Samson's Parents dwelt and where their Son Samson put forth the first Specimen of his Miraculous Prowess
usually say A Cursing Person is a Cursed Person that this Woman was a Cursing and a Swearing and Cursing Woman appeareth from the Hebrew Word Veatteth Alith ver 2. Et tu Jurâsti vel male dixisti vel adiurâsti as the Hebrew is Translated For Alah the Noun from Alah the Verb signifies an Oath with Execration or Cursing Numb 5.21 because Cursing was added to an Oath to confirm it the more Deut. 29.12.21 Nehem. 10.29 N. B. This Womans Swearing was upon a Threefold Account First By Swearing she Vowed that she would make an Idol Secondly In Swearing she devoted the Thief to Direful Curses Thirdly And more plainly In Swearing she Adjured her Son that if he knew any thing of this Theft for probably she suspected him at least to know of it that he would discover it to her and she certainly cursed the Person that stole them imprecating Mischief and Destruction to him The fear of a Mother's Curse startles her Sons Conscience it being denounced in her Son 's Hearing fearing that God might say Amen to it as he had done he well knew to Noah the Father's Cursing of Canaan Gen. 9.35 therefore these Cursed Canaanites were cast out of their Land and themselves became Possessoas of it This Consideration affrighted the Son makes him confess his fault and begs his Mothers Pardon and Blessing Secondly That she was but a Mongrel in Religion appeareth not only because out of the same Mouth came Blessing and Cursing Jam. 3.10 She blew hot and cold in a moment in her Passion over shooting her self into two extreams her first extream was her Cursing at Random she knew not whom and her second extteam was assoon as she knew the Thief was her Son immediately pronounces a Blessing on him not at all reproving him for his sin ver 2. Though his Sin was not common Theft but in her Account no less than Sacrilidge for she tells him I had wholly Dedicated this Silver thou hast stoln unto the Lord ver 3. in the Hebrew it is Jehovah the Incommunicable Name of God which demonstrateth also that she was but a Mongrel and exceedingly Superstitious in mingling the Inventions of Man with the Institutions of God For 't is apparent neither she nor her Son did absolutely design to desert the True God or his Worship seeing as the Mother Dedicated or Hebr. Sanctified this Silver and set it apart for the Service of the true Jehovah so the Son rejoyced at his obtaining a Priest of the Tribe of Levi according to Jehovah's appointment and thereupon promised to himself that Jehovah would bless him ver 13. But both their Intentions were here for the Son concurr'd with the Mother to make an Image to Worship God by their Image as the Israelites had done before them Exod. 32.1.5 and did after them Hos 2.16 according to Jeroboam's Model who was a Man of Mount Ephraim also 1 Kings 11.26 and 12.25 and who establish'd by a publick Law this very Idolatry that was thus privately begun by this Woman and her Son This sheweth that there be two sorts of Idolatry The First is The Worshiping of false and strange Gods as among the Heathens The Second is A Worshiping of the True God after a false manner as oft among the Israelites contrary to Divine Prescription and according to Humane Invention as Micah's Mother with himself would represent God by their Image of their own Heads though expresly contrary to the Second Commandment c. A Good Intention here excuses not an evil Action The Third Remark is Those Eleven Hundred Pieces of Silver thus restored would to God all ill-gotten Goods were so the Mother and Son join together to make an Image c. The Founder hath Two Hundred thereof and with the other nine all the other Trinkets were procured together with furnishing a Chappel for Worship c. ver 4 5. for it is improbable she would alienate any part of her dedicated Silver to her own private use though she might love a cheap Religion as well as her Son who allowed his Levite a very slender Salary ver 10. Micah's Son not of Aaron serves here for an Idolatrous Priest though God had left Israel a stinging Memorial in the presumptuous Case of Usurping Korah Numb 16.40 That no Stranger which was not of the Seed of Aaron come near to offer Incense before the Lord that he be not as Korah and again The stranger that cometh nigh shall be put to Death Numb 18.2.7 This Lying Lesson Jeroboam learnt from Micah here who made Leaden Priests who were not of Levi but of the lowest of the People fitted well enough for his Golden Calves and he made a Mock-Temple to hold his Mawmets and Monuments of Idolatry for himself and the Ten Tribes to Worship in 1 Kings 12.31 as Micah did here a Mock-Chappel for himself and his Neighbourhood round about him v. 5. N.B. From which Act his Name is cut off shorter by two Syllables for whereas the Text in the Original had call'd him Micaiahu with a part of the Name Jehovah affixed to his Name till he had set up his Image c. from thence forward namely from ver 5. the Text all along calls him in short Micah All that Worship Graven Images shall in God's time be cut short and confounded Psal 97.7 The Fourth Remark is A wandring Levite providentially comes to seek a Lodging there and thereby turns the Laick-Priest out of his Office the occasion of this Levite's wandring is set down ver 6. There was no Magistrate in those corrupt times to take care of the Levites Maintenance the Service of God in Sacrifices and Oblations out of which the Levites were maintained was now under this Anarchy neglected and no doubt but in this Depraved State of Apostacy there were faults found on both sides the Levites did likewise neglect the Exercise of their Offices and therefore were the more neglected by the People and others of the Laity put into their Employ Hereupon the Levites were constrained to leave the Tabernacle and their own Cities wherein they had lived before and to wander into other parts of the Land where they might find a Livelihood N.B. This was the Case of the Priests and Levites in Nehemiah's time Nehem. 13.10.11 God grant it may not be our Case also c. This Levite's Lot in that Dispersion fell into the Tribe of Judah ver 7. which seems to be set down by way of Reflection upon that Tribe which God had so highly Honoured Gen. 49.8 9 10 11. and made them the frst Conquerors after Joshua's Death Judg. 1.3 c. Yet now was declined into such a General Defection that this Levite could not find Entertainment in so great and famous a Tribe but he must be forced to wander and seek Subsistency elsewhere ver 8. This wandring Levite wanting Means and Maintenance walks abroad as a way faring Vagabond to seek Necessaries and in his Wanderings lighteth upon Micah's House not with any former
Bond of Religion that it makes the Saints of God not only desirous but even resolute also both to live and die together Thus Peter said to Christ I will even die with thee as well as live with thee and so said all the Disciples Matth. 26.35 Thus David begg'd of God Gather not my Soul with Sinners nor my Life with Bloody Men Psal 26.9 He could be well pleased to die with Saints as Ruth here with Naomi but he liked not to die with Sinners as that Religious Woman once said upon her Dying Bed Lord let not my Soul be gathered amongst Sinners in Hell for thou knowest I never loved their Company while I was upon Earth I will Die Hence Observ 2. All Persons and People should so live as those that do expect them and their Relations may die So Ruth did here expect it both for her Mother and for her self 'T is the grand Statute of Heaven 'T is appointed unto all People once to die Hebr. 9.27 As there be some that do promise themselves great things by such and such of their Relations which possibly are snatch'd from them before they be aware as the Priest was served who promis'd to himself great preferment when he heard his Uncle was made the Pope yet his next Tidings be receiv'd was that the Pope his Uncle was dead which made him cry out Alas I never thought of his Death So there be others that live so Licentiously as if they should never die never come to Judgment as if they were to have an Eternity of pleasure of sin in this World as Psal 49.10 11 12 13. Solomon doth wisely cut the Cocks-comb of the Younker's Courage in sin with a stinging But at the end of all his Jollity that Marrs all his Mirth But know that for all these things God will bring thee to judgment Eccles 11.9 'T is sublime folly then for Persons to have such Inward Thoughts as if their Houses or Lives should be for ever 'T is very remarkable the first Doom that ever was denounced in the World was about the entring of Death Thou shalt surely die Gen. 2.17 and the first Doubt that ever was pronounced in the World was about the not entring of Death Ye shall not surely Die Gen. 3.4 ever since that time though the Doom hath been exactly executed in all Ages which was in the first Age denounced There is something of the Spawn of that Old Serpent left still in Man's Nature prompting to doubt of that whereof there is the greatest certainty Death is certain though the Day of our Death be uncertain Although every Man granteth that he shall surely die yet there is scarce any Man that futureth not his Death and thinketh not he may live yet and yet a little longer he may live a few more fair Summers he may see This is Folly in an high degree especially that sond Conceit of an Immortality and abiding here for ever which Ruth here had not so fully confuted by daily experience There will I be Buried Hence Observ 3. As Burial is one of the Dues of the Dead so dear Friends desire to be Buried together Ruth desires to be Buried with her Godly Mother It is very observable That the first purchase of possession mentioned in Scripture History was a place to bury in not to Build in Gen. 23.9 The Seed of Abraham God's Friend should be mindful of their Mortality and not fondly Dream of an Immortality this Blessed Proselyte to the Faith of Abraham Ruth is very mindful of her both Death and Burial 'T was a great Curse upon Conijah That he should be Buried with the Burial of an Ass Jer. 22.19 That is his Corps shall be cast out like Carrion into some by-corner he lived Undesired and he dyed Unlamentented and then had not the ordinary Honour of a Burying-place but was thrown out into a Ditch or on the Dunghill to be devoured by the Beasts of the Field and by the Fowls of Heaven a Just Hand of God upon this Wicked Man that he who had made so many to weep by his wickedness should have none to weep for him at his departure he who had such a stately Palace to sin in while alive should not have so much as an ordinary Grave to house his Carcase in when Dead Many great Ones have so lived that they have met with in the end the Death of a Dog and the Burial of an Ass Abraham therefore is careful for a Place of Sepulture for him and for his as Ruth doth here for her own and he would not be joined with Infidels in Burial but he desires and purchases a distinct burying place from them who neither had Belief nor Hope of the Resurrection of the Dead they offered him the free use of their common Burying-place Gen. 23.6 but he will rather pay for a Propriety to him and his than hold such a Community with them for he was desirous to be separated in Burial from them who believed not the Resurrection with him as Ruth doth here and his place purchas'd for Burying in was at Hebron which signifies Society or Conjunction for there lay as in their Repository or Resting-place those Godly Couples Abraham and Sarah Gen. 23.19 and 25.9 Isaac and Rebecca Jacob and Leah Gen. 49.31 and though Jacob Dyed in Egypt yet took he an Oath of his Son J●seph for his Burying of him in that place Gen. 49.29 30. and 50.5 This was the common desire of all the Godly Ones in Scripture to be according unto Scripture Phrase gathered unto their Fathers as desirous to sleep with those in the Bed of Dust with whom they hope to awake to Eternal Rest Thus Ruth doth here with Naomi such Sepulchres are Symbols of the Communion of Saints and of the Resurrection of the Dead Hence the Hebrews do call their Burying-places Beth-Caiim the House of the Living and Job also calls the Grave the Congregation-House of all Living Job 30.23 the publick or common meeting place of all People as the Apostle after him calls Heaven The Congregation-House of all the First-Born Hebr. 12.23 Thus Christians may have an honest care as Ruth hath here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with whom they be Buried and where they are lay'd when they are Dead that as they lived together and loved together they may lie in the Grave together and not be divided sometimes in their Death as 2 Sam. 1.23 however not in their Burial 'T was a sad Judgment denounced against that proud Lucifer not Belzebub of Hell as some Antients say but Belshazzar of Babylon that he should not be joined in Burial with his Compeers and Fellow Kings in Funeral State and Pomp c. Isa 14.20 The Lord do so to me and more also this is a form of Imprecation frequently used in Scripture wherein more by an Aposiopesis is understood than expressed The Evils Imprecated are not expresly mentioned yet thus much this form of Speech implyeth Let God bring what evils
of Strength should wither away before they were old saith he 3. This Man of God threatens him with a Rival in the place of the Priesthood which he or his Posterity should behold with their Eyes to their great grief and regret v. 32 33. for though God raised up the Young Prophet Samuel to be his Competitor or Rival in his publick employ in his very day which he in person might see to his sorrow yet the full accomplishment of this threatning was not until the Days of Eli's Posterity which saw Abiathar of Eli's Race put out of the Priesthood and Zadok of the Elder Line put into his place 1 Kings 2.27 35. and that in the Days of Solomon to which this Clause In all the Wealth which God shall give Israel v. 32. pointeth at for then Israel flourished most and the Priesthood was then most profitable 4. This Man of God threatens him with the Violent Death of his Sons before their Father's Death v. 34 35. which was fulfilled chap. 4.11 promising withal to raise up a better Priesthood which would Honour God and which should continue to the Captivity or to the coming of Christ the most Anointed one 5. He threatens h●m with the Poverty of his Posterity v. 36. They shall come crouching as Abiathar did 1 Kings 2.26 when Banish'd to Anathoth Their sin is writ on their punishment before they pamper'd their Panches with Rost-meat c. v. 13. to 17. now glad of a Morsel of Bread and possibly those of the Elder Line did tyrannize over them for being their Rivals so long for withholding the Priesthood so great a term of time from the right Line of Eliazar to whom it was most properly due and hereupon might either degrade those Priests of the Line of Ithamar or cut them short of that plentiful provision God made even for the Inferiour Priesthood c. 1 Samuel CHAP. III. CHapter The Third is a Narrative of Samuel's Divine Call to his Prophetical Office Wherein The First Remark is The Circumstances of Samuel's Call As First The person who called him was the Lord himself calling him no fewer than four times v. 4.6 8 10. Through Samuel's mistake of the Voice of God for the Voice of Eli Josephus saith that Samuel was now but twelve years Old and therefore might it well be said of him that he did not yet know the Lord. v. 7. Namely in that way peculiar to the Prophets who had their Extraordinary Revelations from God's Spirit coming by times upon them which the Rabbins call Bath-Koll the Daughter of a Voice wherewith young Samuel was not yet acquainted Otherwise the same black brand put upon Eli's Son of whom it is said they knew not the Lord chap. 2.12 might be upon Samuel too who was Sanctified from the Womb and undoubtedly had the ordinary and experimental knowledge of God in his daily Ministring before him even in his tender Years who would not be Debauched by Eli's Sons of Belial as above The Second Circumstance is The Time when which is Threefold 1. When the State of the Church was in a very low ebb The Word of Prophecy was very precious at that time ver 1. a Prophet was very rare then and few or none appeared with open Vision by Name tho' mention be made in general of a Prophet Judg. 6.8 And of a man of God before chap. 2.27 Yet this Samuel is called the first of the Prophets by the Apostle Peter Act. 3.24 as long before that he is accounted the Head of them 2 Chron. 35.18 because he was the next famous Prophet to Moses 2. At that time ver 2. When the Lord had sent the day before that Man of God mentioned chap. 2.27 with heavy tydings to Eli then the very next day God calls and sends Samuel with the same sad message And 3. In that time of the Natural Day ver 3. When the Lamps of the Golden Candlestick were not yet extinguished which had been lighted the Evening before Exod. 27.21 Levit. 24.3 2 Chron. 13.11 So that this was betimes in the Morning and before day that God called Samuel The Third Circumstance is The place where in the Temple or Tabernacle N. B. 1. By which it plainly appeareth It was not the Custom of the Jewish Church to burn day as is the saying which yet the Superstitious Romish Church doth having their lighted Tapers burning upon their High Altars at Noon-day N. B. 2. We must suppose the Levites Lodging wherein Samuel slept was in some remoter part of the Sanctuary or Tabernacle for within them none might lodg or lay c. The Second Remark Concerns the Substance of this Word of Prophecy revealed to Samuel as the First did the Circumstances of his Call to be a Prophet who might say to Eli as Abijah afterward said to Jeroboam's Wife I am sent to thee with heavy tydings 1 King 14.6 The revealing of which would strike such Astonishment and trembling into the minds of Men as Their Ears should tingle to hear such a Thunder-clap ver 11. This Young Prophet first became a Prophet against Eli's House as afterward he was to all Israel v. 22 23. and confirms what the Man of God in the second Chapter had denounced against it that in the Mouth of two Witnesses God's Will and Word might be Established Samuel declareth both Eli's Sins and of his Sons and their punishments Also ver 12 13. that their Sin was Inexpiable ver 14. which some hence suppose was that Sin unto Death 1 Joh. 5.16 For which there remaineth no more Sacrifice Heb. 10.26 N. B. This may hold true of his Sons but not of himself therefore their punishment was Irreversible seeing God had Sworn it as well as said When I begin I will also make an end ver 12. And indeed tho' the fall of Eli's Family was exceedding fatal and formidable for their corrupting Gods Commonwealth and making good that old saying Like Priest like People in prophaneness Yet even the Death of Eli was very dismal he dying the Death of an unredeemed Ass By breaking his Neck Exod. 13.13 The Third Remark is The Gracious carriage of this Young Prophet when so high and Honourable a Preferment is put upon him by the Lord. Behold 1. His Humility tho' his Master observing his towardliness to good had bestowed on him an Ephod a Garment then used in Ministring to the Lord ch 2.18 and his Mother had given him a Coat to wear under his Ephod ver 19. and no doubt she spared no cost in making this Coat fine enough because he was not only her onely Son but also the Son of her Love as Joseph was to Jacob to whom he gave a finer Coat than to any of his other Sons Gen. 37.3 Yet is he not made Proud with either his upper or under Garment as most of such Young Striplings amongst us are especially if they should be dignified to wear Ministers Gowns at his Age. 2. His Modesty is very Marvelous not only
he serv'd him when he could no longer serve himself upon him and this Hypocrite would have served God himself so if he could have reached him as he did his High Priest Saul here did not serve God in consulting with him but would have served himself upon God only Sixthly In his Composing out of his own Will that Cursing Oath and Imposing it upon all his People with the penalty of Death to those that kept it not Hence The Fourth Remark is the Rash and undadvised Adjuration that Saul without consulting with God or his High Prist put upon all his People both present and absent to tast no kind of food that day and such as observed it not He Devoted to Death v. 24 39 44. Wherein there was indeed a shew of zeal for God that the King should command a General Fast that Israel might the more be avenged of their Enemies N. B. Hereupon some Popish Commentators do highly commend Saul for commanding this Fast for say they the matter of the Obligation and of the Adjuration was good But Josephus himself finds fault with Saul for this forced Past and so do all our own best Interpreters who Unanimously affirm it to be Sinful and Wicked in many respects As First Saul thus Adjured his Subjects out of his own Insolent Arrogancy designing that the whole Glory of the Victory should be ascribed to himself and his Zeal which more duely belonged to his Son Jonathan Secondly It savoured also of too Bloody a Mind over-desiring to fill himself with the Blood of the Philistines his fellow-Creatures whom the Lord had now made to fall fast enough by their own Hands one against another Thirdly Saul's severity did indeed extend mostly here to his own Subjects in disenabling them by this over-Rigorous Fast to pursue the Flying Enemy and so he lost the End which he proposed to himself in this Act Namely The compleating of the Victory by using those evil means to accomplish it as good Jonathan affirmed v. 30. Whereas a good Magistrate more regardeth the Life of one good Citizen and Subject than the Death of many Enemies Fourthly he did inconsiderately insnare the Consciences of his People without any warrant from Gods word even the Absent as well as present Who were either 1. Those whom the Philistines had taken Captive and made Slaves to them in the Camp till they took this opportunity to joyn with their Brethren in Battle against their opposers Or 2. Those Fugitives that had fled to the Philistines for saving their own Lives Or 3. Those Cowards that had hid themselves in Holes through fear of the Philestines Chap. 13.6 and now durst creep forth and pursue a Flying Adversary Chap. 14.21 22. But above all 4. Jonathan and his Squire who likewise were Absent and therefore Innocent of this Rash Adjuration v. 3 27. Fifthly Saul's interdicting all manner of Food to any of his followers was over Rigorous insomuch as it admitted of no case of necessity which always in the strictest solemn Fasts finds some Indulgence Sixthly Saul's Law here was like Draco's that punish'd every peccad llo or little fault with the penalty of present Death and therefore were s●id to be written not with Black but with Blood Though Saul was a King yet had he no such Absolute Power to punish his Subje●●s with such an Accursed Death especially his Son for tasting a little Honey v. 43 44. A Punishment far exceeding the Fault Seventhly Saul's Rash Adjuring his Subjects by such an Oath and Curse did not only restrain their lawful Liberty without just Cause but also was the occasion of their Sin When being well nigh Hunger-starved they did with so much greediness Eat the Flesh with the Blood for which they are blamed v. 32. even by Saul himself v. 33. Saul could there see the Peoples Sin but not his own that had occasioned it They made Conscience of the Kings Command for fear of the Curse yet Saul had so starved them that they scruple not to Break Gods Command for fear of Hell Gen. 9.4 Lev. 3.17 and 17.14 Deut. 12.16 The Fourth Remark is Saul's Prophaneness as well as Hypocrisie 1. In Building but one Altar for his many Victories v. 35. That over the Ammonites in Chap. 11. deserved not one in his Account c. 2. He was a desperate Swearer and Curser v. 39 44. rapping out Oath upon Oath 3. God not Answering such a Sinner v. 37. Joh. 9.31 when he would have pursued the Enemy without asking of God had not the High Priest interposed and would have it so v. 36. 4 He scruples Eating Blood but not shedding Blood even of Jonathan v. 44. resolving it with Bloody Oaths and he had done it if the People had not rescued him v. 45. 5. In taking the Kingdom v. 47. in opposition to God who had said he should lose it Chap. 13.14 6. In turning Tyrant after this Taking their Sons from his Subjects at his will v. 52. as Samuel foretold Chap. 8.11 as now he swears to Sacrifice his own Son in a Chase Learning no Lesson from Jephtah who had so Rashly Vowed to Devote his own Daughter c. But more in Chapter Fifteen hereof 1 Sam. CHAP. XV. CHapter the 15th is a farther and fuller Demonstration of Saul's Hypocrisie and Prophaneness In his War with Amalek as the principal cause of his Rejection The Remarks are 1. The Material Cause of Saul's Disobedience to God's Command was concerning Amalek that licking People as the Hebr. name signifies who had not only assaulted Israel with open Hostility to hinder their March to Canaan Exod. 17.8 c. Numb 24.20 but also had laid lurking Ambushments to lick up and cut off the feeblest of them Deut. 25.17 18. Tho' this double Injury was now Four hundred years old yet the Lord remembred it still v. 12. N. B. 'T is ill angring the Antient of Days his forbearance is no forgiveness therefore doth he now send Samuel to Saul the first King Israel had to Revenge their old Injuries with a charge to cut them all off universally both Man and Beast that as Balaam had prophesied of them they might perish for ever Numb 24.20 Yea and as the Lord himself had sworn that it should be done so Exod. 17.16 Samuel therefore lays God's Charge home upon Saul that at length after all his so heinous Miscarriages heretofore and after God's so heavy Menaces thereupon chap. 13.8 9. saying Yet the Lord that made thee King and whom thou oughtest to obey is minded to try thee once more see thou make amends for thy former Errours and redeem God's Favour ver 1 2 3. The second Remark is The Formal Cause of Saul's sin which consisted in the partiality of his obeving God's Command ver 4 5 6 7 8 9. Thus far Saul obeyed God 1. In Mustering up his Men to a potent Army ver 4. 2. In Undertaking the Expedition ver 5. N. B. 3. In shewing kindness to the Kenites who had shewed kindness to
himself fell down and Died So true Hope lands us in Glory then Expectation Dies into Fruition c. N. B. Note well here This Deplorable prospect of Divine Vengeance in Absalom's Hanging on a Tree may not be passed over without some Divine Contemplations upon it as First This Unnatural wretch was unworthy to be Slain by the Sword but he must be Hanged on a Tree and so Die that Cursed Death Deut. 21.23 Gal. 3.13 Secondly His haughty mind resolved to be on high right or wrong though he made his own too Affectionate Father's Carcase a steping stone whereon to step up to the Highest Throne and now is he Hanged up on high and his Ambitious Head is in its proper exaltation Thirdly He is Hanged by that very Head wherewith he had been plotting the worst sort of High Treason against so good a Father Fourthly His Hair wherein he had so much prided himself God made an Halter to Hang him with The Instrument of his vain Glory became the Instrument of his Death and Ignominy So perilous it is to pride our selves in any habiliments either of Nature or of Fortune Seeing the matter of our Pride may be the means of our ruine N. B. 'T is probable Asabel was proud of his Swiftness chap. 2.18 and Achitophel of his Policy chap. 17.23 as Absalom was of his brave Bushy Locks yet all these three were destroyed by those things they were prond of Absalom was wont to weigh his Hair and was proud to find it weigh so heavy chap. 14.26 and now the Hair of his Head poiseth the weight of his whole Body which having Armour on also must needs make it more heavy and thereby the greater was his Burden the greater was his Torment c. The Fifth Remark is The Dialogue betwixt General Joab and the Souldier that first saw Absalom Hanged in an Oak ver 10 11 12 13. Wherein Mark First It seems Absalom did Hang some time before he was seen being in a By Path and Blind place this long and lasting Dolour was far more intolerable than had he been Hanged outright in a Halter Mark Secondly This Souldier that first saw him durst not dispatch him though Absalom might desire him to do it to put him out of his pain as Saul had desired his Armour-bearer on the like account 1 Sam 31.4 N. B. Tho rich spoils would have fallen to his share thereby yet dare he not do it either to ease Absalom or to enrich himself for David forbad it Mark Thirdly Joab when he told him what he had seen chides him for not doing it and if he would still go back and do it he would give him a Rich Reward ver 11. Though Joab was desirous that such a Publick Pest were Slain yet would he rather have it to be done by another hand than by his own for fear of David's displeasure N. B. Polititians like the Ape pull Nuts out of the Fire with the Paw of a Cat. Mark Fourthly The Souldier Answers ver 12. I dare not do it for a Thousand Sbekels for the King commanded to the contrary ver 5. it would be as much as my Life is worth which is of more value to me than all thy Thousand Shekels and Belts and Badges of Valour N. B. What Mad Men are many that for a few paltry Shillings play away their precious Souls which this Souldier durst not do Mark Fifthly Should I have done it saith he I should have been false to my self ver 13. in betraying my self to David's revenge or should I do it now and then deny it to save my Life by a Lie the King is so wise he would soon discover it and then inflict a double punishment upon me not only for my foul fact in doing it but also for my falshood in denying it Mark Sixthly And Thou thy self saith he would'st set thy self against me that is thou would become my Adversary or Satan Hebrew and would be the first that would accuse me to the King's Court for doing that which thou now would draw me to do against the King's command N. B. Thus the Devil deals with Tempted Souls as Joab would have dealt with this Souldier first he tempts them to Sin and then he Accuses them for Sin as he is the Accuser of the Brethren Rev. 12.10 Job 1.9 The Sixth Remark is Joab's Slaughter of Absalom ver 14 15. Wherein Mark First Daring Joab saith as his Vale or Farewell to the Souldier Without delay I will dispatch him though thou look on that thou mayest know I bid thee do nothing but what I dare do my self Hereupon he takes Three Darts and thrusts them through Absalom's Body Yet were not those wounds Mortal though a fair mark for him to hit seeing Joab's Ten Young Men are said to slay him outright afterwards Mark Secondly Behold here the just judgment of God upon this vilely vitious Ambitious Absalom He will needs be a new King before his time and now hath here 1. This Oak for his Throne 2. His Twisted Hair about the Bough for his Crown 3. Three Darts in his Heart for his Scepter his proud Heart is Darted thorough And 4. Joab's Ten Armour-bearers for his Royal Guard for Defiling David's Ten Concubines N. B. Thus God Writ his Sin upon his Punishment that little Breath still left in him these Ten did beat out of his Body ver 15. So here 's Ten to Ten in both cases Mark Thirdly Joab's killing of Absalom contrary to the King's command some Condemn but others justifie and commend it Peter Martyr and Grotius do canvase this Controversie Pro and Con c. First Such as Condemn it Argue thus First The King was to be obeyed in his express command lest Civil Discipline be destroyed Secondly Though Joab feared there would be no safety to King or Kingdom if Absalom lived yet Events ought not to be heeded so much as the Justness of Matters Thirdly Though Absalom suffered justly yet Joab was not so much as an Ordinary Judge to pass Sentence in a Just manner much less to be the Executioner himself God Commands Judges to be set up and to Judge Justly Deut. 16.18 19. Fourthly Joab should have considered what a Cordolium an Heart break it would be to David who would only have his Son Live that he might Repent Fifthly Joab's fact taught the Souldiers to contemn the King's Commands which might have been of evil Consequence to ruine Royal Authority Sixthly As to the Civil War Joab might have done better and more advisedly had he only took Absalom prisoner and delivered him bound to David Seventhly Joab killed him out of spleen either because he had Burnt his Corn or rather because he had Cashiered Joab and made Amasa his General But Secondly Such as Justifie and Commend Joab's fact Argue First Joab looked not so much what the King had commanded by his Pers●nal Authority as what he ought to have commanded by his Legal Authority which required that justice should be executed
wit Adonijah The First is The foundation that Dying David laid in his Son Solomon for the removing of all obstructions to his Reign in the General and this David did in his Admonition to his Son v. 1 to v. 9. wherein Mark First David's Days drew night that he should dye A day is one of the shortest dates of time but long enough to decipher Man's Life by which is call'd but a Day then the Night of Death succeeds it Mark Secondly Grace like good Liquor ran fresh to the bottom in David's Divine Soul and had most lively actings in him when Nature was much decayed and almost dead going the way of all the Earth Heb. 9.27 Mark Thirdly The words of Dying Men are Living Oracles Therefore hath this Argument been oft used in Scripture-Record these last words of mine let them sink into your Souls as the Patriarch Jacob Gen. 48.21 and General Joshua Josh 23.14 and the Apostle Peter 2 Pet. 1.13 So David did to his Son behold I am a dying Man c. Mark Fourthly David when dying Admonishes his Son Solomon to make up his want of Age being then but twelve years old with manly prudence and fortitude as 1 Cor. 14.20 and do not praevaricate either through fear favour or flattery v. 2 3 4. do thou live by God's Law Deut. 17 18. which pure and perfect Rule he proposed to his Son saith Peter Martyr rather than his own example because himself had grosly failed assuring him that true piety would be his best policy and that if he would be but careful to keep the Condition God would surely perform his promise c. N. B. Notandum duo fuisse Davidi promissa c. saith Peter Martyr here God made two Promises to David 2 Sam. 7.12 First Absolutely That the Messiah should surely spring from him tho' his Sons might prove bad and the Second is Conditional to wit that the Kingdom of God would keep in his Family provided his posterity would prove truly pious and David therefore cautions his Son that Kings have many temptations from Parasites perswading them that they are above law and may live as they 〈◊〉 c. Therefore presseth him to keep God's Law as the Condition of the Covenant The Second Remark is This Holy Admonition of Dying David did stick fast in Solomon's Soul until his declining Age and put him presently upon couragious Exploits when David was dead and gone Solomon laid aside all childish Dispositions and began to Act like a Man at full Maturity with manly Courage against Adonijah from ver 13 to ver 25. Wherein Mark 1. Adonijah's Ambition was restless He desires to Marry Abishag the last Wife of the late King 't is supposed Joab and Abiathar advised this Ambitionist to attempt it that by her he might have another pull for the Kingdom as ver 22. Mark 2. Those two Arch-Rebels Counsel Adonijah to make his Application to Bathsheba knowing that a Woman is prone to Pity easylier deceived and prevalent with Men Bathsheba was startled at his appearance and well she might be so as knowing him a discontented Rebel and her self the chief Instrument that had suppressed his late Rebellion Yet He professing Peace to her she gave him Audience as well as Admission and Entrance ver 13 14. Mark 3. Adonijah's Harangue to her was Though the Kingdom was mine by right of Succession as the Eldest Son now alive Chap. 1.6 and chosen by the People too ver 25. but finding that it was thy Son 's from the Lord though I did foolishly dash against that Decree in saying I will be King yet now can I be content to want it so I may but have Abishag for my Wife and seeing I know a Mother may do much with a Son I pray thee prevail with the King to grant it ver 15 16 17. Mark 4. Bathsheba though a Wise Woman the Grand-Daughter of Achitophel as above was wheadled into a compliance with his plausible pretences This Story of his Love to Abishag saith Grotius did too easily captivate this Wise Woman's Judgement This Love-Tale so blinded her womanly Wit that she could not discern this Ambitionist's drift and design namely to supplant her Son Solomon out of the Throne hence was she too facile and forward to gratifie him ver 17 18. Mark 5. She Addresses to the King who received her with the due Veneration of a Son to a Mother bowing to Her and placing Her on a Throne upon his Right Hand then she told her Son He must needs grant her a small Petition c. so she call'd it not smelling the Rat though it was contrary to the Law Lev. 18.7 yet she might think it practicable because David had not known her so she begs for him ver 19 20 21. Mark 6. Sagacious Solomon saw the Depth of the Design and that the Hand of Joab was in the Plot yea and of Abiathar also even at the very first prospect of the Proposal which made him turn so short upon his Mother to whom he had dutifully promised I will not say thee nay in any reasonable Request c. But this Request Solomon in his prodigious Prudence God had given Him saw through this Project that it was not so much for Abishag as for the Kingdom and therefore saith Ask for him the Kingdom also ver 22. for that is it he gapeth after and to patch his crack'd Title to the Crown He would marry the late King's Concubine as 2 Sam. 3.7 and 12.8 and 16.21 who was probably now grown Gracious with the great ones at Court c. ver 22 23. The Third Remark is Solomon being now satisfied that a new Conspiracy was in Hatching by Adonijah Abiathar and Joab against Him falls immediately upon a vigorous Prosecution of the Plotting Conspirators Whether be saw this new Villany in its Embryo by any secret Instinct of God's Spirit as some suppose or by Information of Prudent and Faithful Friends is uncertain However He takes this for an Indication and the first overt-Act of Treason against him ver 24 25. Solomon having pardon'd his former palpable Treason only upon his good Behaviour Chap. 1.52 And now this new over presumptuous Act reviving his former Guilt he is that Day executed because delaies be dangerous The Fourth Remark is Abiathar's Punishment by Death for his High Treason is mitigated and remitted into a bare Banishment ver 26 27. His Crime had been publick and open before in conspiring with Adonijah Chap. 1.7 9. And now again he had been dabbling Elbow-deep in a new Conspiracy as Wise Solomon well perceived ver 22. here therefore was He judged and not without a double desert and demerit saith Peter Martyr Solomon first deposeth him from his Office of High Priesthood and then banish'd him from Jerusalem where the High-Priest was always resident both as Chief of the Sanhedrim Ruler over the Priests and a Counsellour to the King unto his Field in Anathoth Josh 21.18 There to lead a
from Rehoboam and 2. gave him up to his young Counsellors Folly 3. alienating the hearts of his People from him 4 This God did moreover to shew his Divine Truth in his Threatnings to punish Solomon's Idolatry Chap. 11.11 God brings to pass what he had thre ●●ed 1 Sam. 15.29 by the Insolency of his Son 5. And to vindicate likewise the Honour of his Prophet by whom he had foretold this sad Rent that Ahijah might not be found a false Witness as 2 Kings 9.36 and 10.10 and in other cases 6. There is no evil in the City which the Lord hath not done Am. 3.6 as an Act of Justice in God to punish sin with sin in the unjust actions of Men. N. B. God is the supream and most righteous Judge and ordered all those disorders of Rehoboam's roughness of the People's petulancy of Jeroboam's Plot and of the young Councellor's rash Councel to his own glorious ends and purposes by his over-ruling Providence in all these Occurrences As sin is a punishment of sin so 't is an act of Justice in God to make use of it All those aforesaid sinners acted freely according to the choice of their own depraved wills yet all their sins do unwittingly meet together to accomplish the just Decrees of God N B. Dr. Hall saith Excellently here all these aforesaid Sinners might have done otherwise for any force that was offered to their wills yet they all would no more do otherwise as they did than if there had been no praedetermination in Heaven concerning it that God may be magnified in his Wisdom and Justice while Man wittingly perisheth in his own folly Hos 13.9 Secondly The Remarks upon Jeroboam as First Now Jeroboam strikes while the Iron was hot and blows up the People now under a general disrelish of Rehoboam's roughness into a general defection from him and as general a Rebellion against him crying out What portion have we in David c. v. 16. N. B. 'T is a wonder those seditious mouths durst mention David in such defiance one would have thought that the very name of David whom God raised up to do so much good for Israel might have been able enough to Conjure down that Devil of Phrenzy and Fury which now had taken possession of them and to contain them within the due bounds of Loyal obedience but alas all those good turns that David had done for them and for their Fathers before them were so soon forgotten as that twice here they named David in contempt and add that absurd title to it the Son of Jess an opprobrious Language which they had learnt from Saul the Cast-away 1 Sam. 22.7 and from Sheba that Arch-Rebell 2 Sam. 20.1 tho' the Holy Ghost maketh an honourable mention of this Title 2 Sam. 23.1 Psal 72.20 Acts 13.22 and Isa 11.1 10. the Root of Jess out of which Christ sprouted Tho' David had done them no wrong yet thus venomously they spit out their malice against David and against his House saying See to thy own House David and we will see to ours c. N. B. Then the Ten Tribes went away to their Tents and to their Idols too as Mr. Broughton upon Daniel observeth from the words Ohalchem and Elohehem that so signifie And some suppose this mutiny was managed by the rude multitude at Jeroboam's instigation wholly resolving to assume the Crown to himself The Second Remark is Jeroboam having thus politickly gained the Ten Tribes to himself v. 16.19 the Tribe of Judah only stuck cordially to Rehoboam and with them that part of the Tribe of Simeon that were mingled with them and part of Benjamin whose dwellings were within the confines of Judah yea and the Levites and others of the other Tribes who set their hearts to seek the Lord in his holy Temple 2 Chron. 11 1●.16 and 15.9 but Rehoboam could not content himself with these few he therefore sends his Tribute-Master Adoram to promise them ease of their Taxes when it was too late after himself had threatned to make them ten fold more heavy v. 18 Herein also Rehoboam was ill-advised seeing the sight of such an Officer he might well think would the rather enrage the rude rabble the mutinous multitude were guided more by rage than by right who having rejected Rehoboam's Person and Majesty did with greater disdain renounce his message and Messenger When Adoram all too late would coax the People with good words they answered him with stones wherewith they stoned him to death and had Rehoboam been in Adoram's cloaths he himself had fared no better for those stones were thrown at him in his Officer the Messenger suffers for his Master and the Master suffers in his Messenger as 2 Sam. 10.3 4 5 6. 'T was now high time for Rehoboam to betake himself to his Chariot and make Jerusalem his Sanctuary against this Conspiracy at Shechem and well it was he got so well away thither Remark the Third Rehoboam having recovered a refuge by an hasty flight in Jerusalem takes a new step of over-hasty Advice to reduce the Rebells into Allegiance by force of Arms c. v. 19 20 21. but was Countermanded by the Lord who sent his Prophet to prohibit him c. v. 22 23 24. Mark 1. This was Rebellion and no better in Israel tho' Rehoboam had acted like a fool towards them and tho' it was according to the determined Counsel of God and what God had foretold yet because Israel acted not here with any design of fulfilling God's Will but only to gratifie their own Rebellious dispositions therefore is it most justly stiled a Rebellion v. 19 20. Mark 2. Judah and Benjamin still stick fast to their Loyalty the Example of a general Rebellion cannot make them Disloyal to the House of David God will reserve a Remnant free from and uncorrupted with the common Contagion An hundred and fourscore thousand of them are ready to force Israel to their due Fidelity and to their denyed Subjection v. 21. Mark 3. God suddenly sends his Prophet Shemaiah to forbid the Battel v. 22 23.24 saying this thing is from me c. As this Rebellion was an Act of Sin so it was from those Rebels but as it was a punishment for Solomon's Apostasy Chap. 11.11 so it was from God who challenges it here for his own work so Rehoboam desists c. not doring to fight against God his Maker tho' he durst against the Multitude c. Remark the Fourth is When Jeroboam had craftily contrived to get himself made King over Israel by the Election of the People v. 20. then he fortified Shechem the City of his Conspiracy and Built Penuel beyond Jordan to be a Bulwark there v. 25. For this fault God blames them They have set up Kings but not by me c. H●s 8.4 Israel there is worthily reproved for setting up this Vsurper tho' they follow'd the will of God's Decree yet did they not do it in obedience to God's Precept but as hurried
hired to Perfidiousness therein the Prophet told him he had done foolishly Asa's Fourth Frailty was His being wroth with the Lord's Prophet for his plain-dealing and faithfulness 2 Chron. 16.10 which might better have become an Ahah a Joash or an Herod all bad Men than such a good King as was Asa what was Hanani but God's Herald from Heaven to denounce War against him for these his sins upon Earth here Repentance was his Duty but Rage and Choler was his Sin N. B. And as Dr. Hall saith well it had been more meet that the water of godly sorrow had been found in his eyes gushing out with tears than such sparkles of fire and fury flaming forth at them upon this innocent Seer His Holy Grandfather David did not so with Nathan the Prophet in the like case of heavy tidings 2 Sam. 12.4 5 6 c. yet Asa imprisons the Prophet for delivering God's Message only His Fifth Blemish is Asa in the latter end of his long Reign is stricken with the Gout 2. Chron. 16.12 as he had laid up the good Prophet by the heels in Prison even so doth God lay him up by the heels in his Bed He should therefore have sought to the Lord principally who had Imprisoned him and with whom he had solemnly Covenanted to own for his yet 't is said of him He sought to the Physicians and not to the Lord tho' his Name Asa Hebr. signifies a Physician to mind him of Jehovah Rophekah the Almighty Healer Exod. 15.26 No wonder then that his gouty seet serv'd to carry him to his grave No doubt but before he dyed he repented of this and his other sins see 2 Chron. 15.17 and 20.32 where 't is said for his heart was perfect with God all his days c. The latter part of this Fifteenth Chapter gives an account of the two Kings of Israel contemporary with those of Judah First Nadah Reigned in the Second year of Asa even while his Father Jeroboam is alive saith Dr. Lightfoot for God smote Jeroboam with some sad Diseases that he could not Rule the Kingdom 2 Chron. 13.20 This made him resign his Crown to his Son before his death as some suppose c. Remark the Second Before he had Reigned two full Years Baasha slew him as appears from ver 28 and 33. The Lord seeing the Son as wicked as the Father saw it high time to cut him off according to the Threatning Chap. 14.10 c. for his own Sins as well as for his Father's Remark the Third Baasha traiterously slew him in his Army as he was besieging Gibbethon which the Philistines had taken from Israel but the Slaughter of the King prevented the Recovery of this Right Josh 19.44 and 21.23 therefore the Siege was renewed to recover it Chap. 16.15 Remark the Fourth It may well be supposed that this Murtherer of Nadab Baasha did cast his dead Body to be devour'd by the Dogs or Fowls as the Prophet Ahijah had fore-threatned Chap. 14.7 10 11. saith Menochius The next King of Israel was Baasha who placed himself in the Throne as soon as he had Murther'd Nadab ver 29 30 to 34. concerning this King Remark the First Baasha destroys all Jeroboam's House and Jeroboam himself was alive this Year saith Dr. Lightfoot and if he escaped the Sword of Baasha yet died he not long before Baasha destroyed his Family Remark the Second Though Baasha in all these Murthers did but aim to gratifie his own Ambition and Cruel Disposition to establish himself upon the Throne more firmly and without Emulation yet God wisely ordered Baasha's wicked both Intentions and Actions to bring to pass his own righteous and glorious Ends. God over-ruled his Pride and Malice to accomplish his own Counsel and Prediction N.B. Thus the Devil and all his Imps and Instruments are made to do God's Will not only while they are doing their own but oft sore against their own Wills Thus wise Physicians use Leeches which aim only at sucking of Blood for Cure of their Patients c. Remark the Third Though this Baasha was God's Instrument to punish the Wickedness of a wicked Father Jeroboam and of his wicked Son Nadab yet neither did he aim at any Obedience to God in those Executions of God's Justice nor was he reclaimed at all thereby from the same wicked Ways ver 34. Remark the Fourth Those very Means and Methods of Wickedness whereby Jeroboam thought to have established the Kingdom to himself and to his House namely by setting up Idolatry became indeed the true Cause of their utter Ruine Baasha is imployed in executing this divine Vengeance yet the same Sin which was the true procuring Cause of all this Mischief and Misery to Jeroboam's House he still retained in himself Remark the Fifth Baasha now settled in his Kingdom begins to bustle and disturb good Asa with Inroads into Judah though he saw such a mighty Presence of God with him in his Victory over a Million of the Ethiopian Army yet will he still be an Enemy to him God punishing Asa by Baasha for his harshness to Judah as well as to Hanani Tyrannizing over the People as well as over the Prophet in his declining Days 2 Chron. 16.10 1 Kings CHAP. XVI THIS Chapter contains the History of Five Kings of Israel Baasha Elah Zimri Omri and Ahab The General Remarks are First Good Asa notwithstanding his many Miscarriages which were not inconsistent with his Uprightness Imperfections being to be found in the most refin'd Soul did out-live not only Jeroboam and his Son Nadab but also this his worst Rival and Troubler Baasha though he Reigned over Israel twenty and four Years Chap. 15.33 for Asa's Forty and one Years of his Reign expired not until the Fourth Year of Ahab wherein Jehosaphat succeeded his Father Asa after his Death 1 Kings 22.41 42. So that while Asa held the Throne of Judah he saw many Changes in the Throne of Israel The Second General Remark is the Holy Penman of this Sacred History in the Book of Kings giveth a large Narrative of Asa's Life c. altogether Chap. 15. from ver 9 to 24. because many Kings did Reign over Israel during Asa's long Reign Asa began his Reign in the Twentieth Year of Jeroboam the first King of Israel divided from Judah and he continued to the time of the Eighth King of Israel Asa's great Work of Reformation required it and God gave him a great continuance in his Kingdom wherein to accomplish it The Third General Remark Asa wanted not God's Fatherly Chastisements for his declining from his former Goodness for beside his Gout in his Feet because he did not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 walk uprightly in God's way Gal. 2.14 He had continual Wars and Troubles after his alteration into Acts of Vnbelief Passion against the Prophet and Oppression of the People c. which troubles we have an account of Chap. 15. both the Rise of them ver 16 17 18. and the Removal
who excited Joash to call the Priests to an account and to call him among the rest because he could not so well prevail with them to be more diligent in promoting this publick Work Others make this Apology for Jehoiada that he was now grown very old it being in the Three and twentieth Year of King Joash ver 6. King Jebu dying the Year before and leaving the Kingdom of Israel to his Son Jehoaaz At this time 't is said expresly that Jehoiada was grown very old 2 Chron. 24.15 which might be the cause of his Remissness ver 6. his Generation-work being now in a manner done and therefore Joash took new and other measures for carrying on more effectually his Temple-work Remark the Sixth When Joash saw the Mony the Priests collected abroad in the Country was converted to other Uses and not to the right end for Repairing the Temple the King commands the Priests to gather no more Poll-Mony but orders old Jehoiada to set up a Chest like our poor Man's Box besides the Altar of Burnt offering 2 Kings 12.8 9. 2 Chron. 24.8 and this means did prove effectual for much Money was put into the Chest both Trespass-mony for omission of good and Sin-mony for commission of evil saith Tostatus This was put into such Officers Hands as dealt faithfully The Fabrick was perfectly finish'd by them ver 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 and 2 Chron. 24.10 to 13. yea and new Vessels ver 14. instead of those Athaliah's sacrilegious Sons had stoln away ver 7. Remark the Seventh Jehoiada lived the Supporter both of Church and State until he was an Hundred and thirty Years old and then died 2 Chron. 24.15 It was doubtless a great Blessing to the Kingdom of Judah that he continued so long in it which was an extraordinary Age in those times for him to live up to And such an high Veneration the People had for him that they buried him among the Kings a very great Honour done to him at his Death because he had done so much good in his Life both in Repairing God's House and restoring God's Worship to be performed therein when so repair'd Yea and restoring the Kingdom to the House of David in the Preservation of Joash c. The Second Sort of Joash's Actions were his Illandable Actions Remark the First His not taking away the High Places ver 3. but this was while Jehoiada lived so not so bad as after his Death for Custom that Tyrant of three Letters Mos had so prevailed and riveted these high Places in the Hearts of a fond People that the former Kings of riper Years than Joash and more firmly settled on their Thrones and having greater power than Joash yet could not remove them no wonder then if Jehoiada was constrained to tolerate them upon which the People so notoriously doted insomuch that Jehoiada durst not advise the young King Joash to cross the Mobile in this Superstition they had so fondly espoused lest it should cause a Tumult and lest as a learned Expositor expresseth it the Multitude should mind more Commotioners than Commissioners and be more guided by Rage than by Right Violence and Obstinacy like two untamed Chariot-Horses hurrying forward their precipitant passionate Desires in a blindfold Career Therefore good Jehoiada was forced to forbear as 1 Kings 15.14 and the rather because the Matter was good the People Sacrificing to the Lord there and not to any Idol So the thing was warrantable but the place only was unwarrantable Deut. 12.11 13 14. Remark the Second But after Jehoiada's Death Joash permitted deplorable Idolatry to be restored in the Kingdom 2 Chron. 24.17 18. Those cursed Court-Parasites who had dissemblingly concealed their Idolatrous Minds all the days of Jehoiada came cringing to the King as soon as Jehoiada was dead and perswaded this Ambitionist that during his Tutor's Days he was a King without a Kingdom a Lord without a Lordship or Dominion no better than a Subject to his Subjects c. that he should do well to assume to himself his Royal Power and as Menochius Osiander c. say they desired him to shew his Royalty in granting Liberty to every Man to Worship God as he listed and where he best liked and not be tied to the Temple c. yea a Liberty to recal the Worship of Baal c. The King hearkned to them Grotius here quotes Curtius saying Flattery is more mischievous to Kings than an Enemy when they give Ear to it fair Words make facile Fools fain and Princes minds are easily altered for the worst thereby as Joash was here who was soon wheedl'd into base Apostasy c. Remark the Third No sooner had those Court-Parasites prevailed with Joash for a Liberty to Worship God in the old High places but presently they Worshipped Baal there ver 18 19. for which Wrath came down upon them by Hazael King of Syria 2 Kings 12.17 18. when Jehoiada was dead so great a loss to a Kingdom is the death of a Godly Governor and when Joash was relapsed into Idolatry Principium fervet medium tepet exitus alget was the Character of this Apostate So zealous was Joash at the first as to rebuke even good Jehoiada for his Remisness in Repairing the Temple as before he was too hot to hold he is now grown stone-cold for God and as hot for Idols when he had lost his Religion he lost his peace of the Kingdom for then the Lord let loose the King of Syria upon him as after c. Remark the Fourth Joash's Tyranny the Daughter of his Apostasy into Idolatry and that with Obstinacy Such was God's pity and patience towards his own people that he sent Prophets to protest against their back-slidings and to fore-signifie his future Judgments 2 Chron. 24.19 yea the Spirit of the Lord came upon Zechariah the Son of Jehoiada ver 20. who set himself in an higher Place that his Message from the Lord might be the better heard and he earnestly inveighed against the wicked ways of King Princes and People Hereupon all these three conspire against him Tyrants are Teachy tange montes fumigabunt Touch great Men-Mountains and they will smoake nothing but silken words will down with them the corrupt Courtiers taxed him as a Traytor to the King the King commands to stone him ver 21. who as they were stoning him cryed out Lord look upon it and require it ver 22. that is Make Inquisition for my innocent blood or it may be read saith Piscator c. The Lord will require and requite it So it is a Prophecy rather than a Prayer for 't is not probable so pious a Prophet would die with a desire of private Revenge contrary to Christ's Luke 23.34 and Stephen's practice Acts 7.60 unless it were to distinguish the severe Temper and Spirit of the Law from that sweet one of the Gospel Remark the Fifth God Answers Zachary's Prayer or Prophecy from ver 23. of 2 Chron. 24 to
Life its preheminence above the best of Lives 2. Miracles not imitable 3. Testistified by Josephus 53. His Moral acts to be imitated Vol. 4. Page 3 4 His Conception 6 8 9. Reasons of his Incarnation Vol. 4. Page 8 His low Condescension in his Humiliation Vol. 4. Page 10 His Birth of whom 12 13. Time when 14 15 16. The Place where 16 17. It s Manner 17 18. Manifestation 18 19. Circumcision 20 21. Presentation 23. Flight into Egypt 24. Return 25. His Occupation 28. His Travels 29. Baptism 30. Sympathy 48. His Persecution 49. Sermon on the Mount 54. Transfiguration 95 96 c. Compared to a Woman Vol. 4. Page 131 Christ's Apprehension Arraignment and Condemnation from 192 to 226. His Crucifixion its Circumstances from 226 to 252. His Prayer on the Cross 234. His temporary Sufferings a Satisfaction and why Vol. 4. Page 245 246 Christ's seven last words on the Cross Vol. 4. Page 247 248 249 Seven signs of Christ's Triumph Vol. 4. Page 250 to 253 Christ's Burial Vol. 4. Page 254 to 259 Christ's R●surrection Vol. 4. Page 260 to 276 Christ's Ten Appearances Vol. 4. Page 277 to 321 c. Christ's Ascension Vol. 4. Page 323 to 328 c. Church its parallel to a Ship 68. Disparity Vol. 4. Page 69 Conversion wonderful Vol. 4. Page 44 Conformity to him directed and commended Vol. 4. Page 5 6 D Damned Souls void of ease Vol. 4. Page 156 Dangers to be avoided Vol. 4. Page 78 Darkness at the Death of Christ why Vol. 4. Page 240 241 Deliverances convincing and confounding Vol. 4. Page 349 Devil his Impotence 31. Truckling to the Power of Christ 58. Tormented by Christ's approach Vol. 4. Page 71 Dependency on Divine Conduct Vol. 4. Page 401 Devotion evidenced by Family Duties Vol. 4. Page 382 Dissension the ground of deliverance Vol. 4. Page 472 Dispute against Christ by corrupt Church-men Vol. 4. Page 86 Docility the best gentility Vol. 4. Page 432 Diseases of Body the health of Soul 45. To be Dumb better than profane Vol. 4. Page 76 Dreams Natural and Diabolical ordered by God Vol. 4. Page 216 Duty to Parents to give way to Duty to God Vol. 4. Page 28 E A terrible Earthquake at Christ's Death Vol. 4. Page 242 The Eclipse of the Sun at the Death of Christ miraculous Vol. 4. Page 239 Elimas struck blind Vol. 4. Page 407 Enemies of the Church numerous Vol. 4. Page 473 Enoch's Prophecy Vol. 4. Page 508 An Ethiopian converted Vol. 4. Page 361 362 The Evil of Sin the greatest Vol. 4. Page 252 Eutychus raised Vol. 4. Page 453 Expounding before Sermon laudable Vol. 4. Page 410 Extremity the time of Deliverance Vol. 4. Page 488 F Faith must not doubt of Christ's Power or Will 45. Its Degrees discernable Vol. 4. Page 73 Faithfulness the best ground of Vnion and Communion Vol. 4. Page 424 Favour seldom single Vol. 4. Page 59 Fidelity to Servants a famous instance Vol. 4. Page 55 Formality what 118. It s Insufficiency Vol. 4. Page 119 Fraud and Force combining Vol. 4. Page 474 G God to be trusted not tempted Vol. 4. Page 43 God's goodness to such as fear him 383. His Soveraignty over his Servants Vol. 4. Page 397 Gospel not to be subdued Vol. 4. Page 51 Guilt exposeth to fear Vol. 4. Page 102 Grace its beauty 56. Ex●olled by Christ 56. And the Seal of it to go together Vol. 4. Page 392 Its Truth more regarded than Measure Vol. 4. Page 64 Grievances to be redressed Vol. 4. Page 428 H Happy is the Place where Christ is Vol. 4. Page 43 Healing of a poor Cripple Vol. 4. Page 48 49 The Heart is to conceive Christ 11. Compared to Soil 65. To give Birth to Christ Vol. 4. Page 12 13 Herod and Herodias's sin 40. their miserable Death Vol. 4. Page 41 Heaven and Hell described Vol. 4. Page 157 Hell filled with variety of Torments Vol. 4. Page 156 The High in Faith may be Low in Humility Vol. 4. Page 55 Hereticks are Wolves Vol. 4. Page 456 Humility its nature Vol. 4. Page 55 Hypocrites most for Ceremonies Vol. 4. Page 52 Sooner or later detected Vol. 4. Page 360 I Ignorance inexcusable Vol. 4. Page 330 Incredulity reproved Vol. 4. Page 104 Indifferencies require a single Eye Vol. 4. Page 421 Innocency maketh happy Vol. 4. Page 480 Insinuations to gain Attention lawful Vol. 4. Page 464 John Baptist's beheading Vol. 4. Page 40 Judas admitted to the Lord's Supper Vol. 4. Page 192 The general Judgment of the World its circumstances Vol. 4. Page 183 Divine Justice comes at last Vol. 4. Page 212 K Kingdom of Christ Vol. 4. Page 518 519 Knowing of Christ is from Revelation Vol. 4. Page 102 L Learning alone cannot learn us Gospel Vol. 4. Page 434 Learning at its height in Judea when Christ disputed the Doctors Vol. 4. Page 26 Legion of Devils in one Man Vol. 4. Page 70 Leprosie most prevalent in our Lord's time Vol. 4. Page 45 How we ought to Love Christ Vol. 4. Page 25 Luxury most in rich Cities Vol. 4. Page 438 Lyes charged on Christ Vol. 4. Page 201 202 M Man the Microcosm Vol. 4. Page 132 Man fallen is the lost Groat Vol. 4. Page 132 Marriage honoured by Christ Vol. 4. Page 33 The Apostles Married Vol. 4. Page 34 Means tho' weak may work much Vol. 4. Page 44 Mercy requireth Duty Vol. 4. Page 46 Meekness needful in Churches Vol. 4. Page 302 A Salvo of Mercy in the Church's Misery Vol. 4. Page 349 Mercy remembred in the midst of wrath Vol. 4. Page 408 Ministers shall lose nothing Vol. 4. Page 80 Mobile changeable Vol. 4. Page 413 Moses and Messiah on the Mount Vol. 4. Page 97 N Nicodemus his ignorance and timorousness Vol. 4. Page 37.38 Non-Conformity not to be wondred at Vol. 4. Page 86 Number 12 affected by God Vol. 4. Page 323 O Obedience to a general Precept may be Disobedience Vol. 4. Page 76 Obstacles removed in coming to be healed by Christ Vol. 4. Page 47 Obstinate ones sharply rebuked Vol. 4. Page 495 Obstructions to the Ministry to be removed Vol. 4. Page 494 Offence not to be causlesly taken or carelesly given Vol. 4. Page 87 Opposition to Satan a good work Vol. 4. Page 472 P Papist's New Gentiles Vol. 4. Page 512 Parables of the Sower 61 to Vol. 4. Page 65 Parable of the Sower Vol. 4. Page 61 62 Parable of the Man fallen among Thieves 111 to 123. Of the great Supper 123 124 Of building the Tower 125. Of the lost Sheep Groat and Son 125 to 148. Of Dives and Lazarus 149 to 158. Of the Ten Virgins 177. Of Pounds and Talents 178 to Vol. 4. Page 188 Seed Temporal and Spiritual their congruity 63. Their disparity Vol. 4. Page 64 Preachers to be tender Vol. 4. Page 78 Preaching a Means of Grace Vol. 4. Page 77 The Prayer of Faith prevalent Vol. 4. Page 75 427 Worldly Professors taken up with worldly things
by the Cursed Jews to his blessed Body Gal. 5.24 4. When we have wounded it by the Sword of the Spirit even to Death then must we bury it as he was 5. We must rise again out of the Grave of Sin to serve God in Newness of Life so get gradually out of the Dungeon as Jeremy did Jer. 38.12 6. We must Ascend like him into Heaven in our Desires c. Phil. 3.20 Col. 3.1 Nor is it the Pattern of Christ that doth effect this only as the Socinians say but 't is also the Vertue and Power of Christ's Death and Resurrection c. that works all these Things effectually in his Called and Chosen not as an Exemplary Cause or as a Moral Cause by way of Meditation but as having a Force and Power Obtained by it and Issuing out of it Phil. 3.10 Even the Spirit that killeth sin and quickens the Soul to all Holy Practice N. B. To know Christ aright is a most excellent work and the worthiest part of Heavenly Wisdom Yea satisfactory and salutiferous to the Soul of Man Isa 53.11 Joh. 17.3 1 Cor. 2.2 Gal. 6.14 and Phil. 3 8. This Divine knowledge consists of lively Affection as well as of particular Application and a Notional Consideration 'T is the common Rule of expounding Scripture that works of knowledge imply Affection 'T is not enough to know Christ notionally The Devils do so nor must we barely know Him either as God or as Man or as a Jew of Judah's Tribe or as Judge of the World but especially as a Redeemer and as our Redeemer by whom all God's benefits both Temporal and Spiritual are convey'd to us and Received by us The Three grand benefits by Christ Are 1. His Merits Price and Ransom whereby we are Reconciled to God c. 2. His Vertue or Power of His Death and Resurrection Phil. 3.8 10. 3. His Example To which we should conform Simply and Absolutely without exception not so to that of the highest Saints who had sinful frailty as well as holy Graces c. The Second Thing after this Caution is the Counsel God's word gives us concerning this imitation of Christ N. B. In the daily Practice of true Piety both as to Inward and Outward Life all Christ's Actions are for our Instruction not All for our Imitation we may not Imitate the Works of Christ that were Miraculous nor such as were Personal and Proper to Him as Mediator The Ignorance of which hath carried some Impostors to Counterfeit themselves to be Christ Nor need we Indeavour to imitate Him in his Natural therefore unblamable Infirmities which had weakness in them but not Sin we are not to strive to be Hungry Weary Sleepy c. because He was sometimes so But we must imitate our Lord Jesus in all his imitable Graces and Actions both walking in Christ Col. 2.6 and walking as Christ 1 John 2.6 and following his steps preaching forth the praises of him that call'd us out of Darkness into his marvelous Light 1 Pet. 2.9 21. And though we cannot follow him Passibus Aequis taking such long strides as he did yet must we shew our Good-will Mark 14.8 Stretching and straining out our outmost as Paul did Phil. 3.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reaching forth his Head Hands and whole Body as do Runners in a Race to lay hold on the price proposed Conformity to Christ and Nonconformity to the World are both the certain commendable and comfortable Duties of every good Christian Rom. 8.29 and 12.2 The First is Conformity to Christ which may be inforced by these three Arguments 1. Seeing Christ condescended so low as to Conform Himself to us in taking our Humane Nature Attended with Hunger Weariness and all other Infirmities Sin only excepted Heb. 2.17 4.15 1 Pet. 2.22 c. How much more ought we to press after a partaking of his Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 that we may be Conformed to his Holy Image unto which we are Praedestinated Rom. 8.29 The 2. Argument is Seeing the Image of God favour from Him and Fellowship with Him be the Branches of Man's Antient Glory in the State of Innocency which the Subtle Serpent did Deceive us of in the Fall 'T is but rational and requisite that we put our selves forth to the utmost for recovering them by Conforming them to Christ that we may Gain again by the Second Adam All the Three Gifts lost by the First Adam And the Third Reason is Where there is no Conformity to Christ there can be no Salvation had The Means must not be separated from the End as Acts 27.30 Except these stay in the Ship ye cannot be saved So here except we be Holy we can never be Happy God hath chosen us in Christ before the Foundation of the World that we should be Holy Eph. 1.4 and without Holiness no man can see the Lord Heb. 12.14 Blessed are the pure in heart and life for They shall see God Mat. 5.8 We must purifie our selves as Christ is pure 1 John 3.3 And this Purity or Holiness is our Conformity to the Image of the Holy Child Jesus for undoubtedly God gave Christ to be a Samplar as well as He Gave Him to be a Saviour 'T is the mistake of the Arminians to put Christ to an Arbitration in their assigning Ninety Nine parts to Him in the work of Conversion and the Hundred part to Man contrary to Col. 3.11 where Christ is call'd All and in All. The whole of that Divine work flows from the Free Grace of Christ and not any part of it from the Free Will of Man and we have no Commission to bate one Ace in that point Yet the Errour of the Socinians is of a far grosser Brann In their Asserting Christ to be a Pattern only and not a Propitiation at all They suppose Him only a Samplar for our bare Imitation but no way a Saviour for our Sins Expiation Thus they quite exclude Christ from the Justification of the Penitent and Believing Sinner quite contrary to the whole Tenure of the Holy Scriptures and they make Christ no more than a Mere Martyr for all the Holy Martyrs were Patterns and Samplars of Sanctity both in their Sanctimonious Doings and Sufferings If Christ signify'd no more than a Samplar N. B. This Conformity to Christ is twofold The First is partly in this Life And the Second is partly in the Life to come 1. That in this Life we should all Learn of Him and from His Pious Pattern All those Works of Holiness which we find Recorded of Him such as these His Subjection to his Parents His Loving of his Brethren His Painfulness in his Calling His Perseverance in Prayer and many more of the like Nature We should strive what we can to Resemble Christ in his going about to do good Acts 10.38 In his fidelity for his function Heb. 3.1 2. In his Diligent and Patient Obedi●nce Heb. 12.2 3. In his Constancy of Profession 1 Tim. 6.13 In
hereby the more probable that the 99. must be meant of such Men as are truly and effectually called whom he leaves in sure hands under the safe Conduct of his Holy Spirit who shall abide with them for ever John 14.16 17. and lead them into all Truth John 16.13 c. In both those Opinions the World even this present Evil-World must be this Wilderness wherein though Christ turns his Back of those proud Pharisees to find out the lost Publicans yet he leaves the called to his Spirit for guiding them through a forlorn World so that none can be lost untill himself find out all his uncalled c. The Fourth Enquiry How is this lost Sheep found by Christ Answer Christ is called Gods chosen Servant Isa 42.1.4 Matth 12.18 20. Who was sent upon this very Errand to seek out and lave the lost Sheep of the House of Israel Matth. 15.24 c. and he will not fail till he find and till he bring forth Judgment unto Victory because he looks not upon it as his Duty only as he is Gods Servant but it is his Delight also as he is Gods Son Ps 40.8 It was Meat and Drink to him to work his Fathers Will John 4.34 He took pleasure to be among the Sons of Men Prov. 8.31 Yea and he is very pittifull Jam. 5.11 and knows how to have Compassion upon the Ignorant and upon them that are out of the Way c. Hebr. 5.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there signifies that he can bear any thing with Reason he is slow to Anger and will shew as much mercy as is meet still Travelling in the greatness of his Might Is 63.1 to seek out lost Souls How did he seek all places in the days of his Flesh upon Earth Luke 19.10 He goes to Samaria to find out the Samaritan Woman at Jacobs Well to Bethany to find Mary Magdalen to Jericho to find one Zacheus to Capernaum for finding the Centurion and thus he Travelled to many more places for the same purpose He went about doing good Acts 10.38 leaving no place unsought where any of his Lambs were lost he found some upon the Barren Mountains of pride Matth. 18.12 others he found caught in the Thicket as Abrahams Ram was Gen. 22.13 in the Thorns and Bryars of worldly Wealth yea others he found as it were buryed alive in the puddle or Clay of sinful pleasures All that the Father had given to him he would lose none John 6.37 39. not one of them could be lost John 17.12 as patient Jacob gave an Account of all that was lost to Laban Gen. 31.39 even so Christ to his Father and much more than so a None-such Shepherd Christ was more Patient than Jacob in enduring not only many-cold Nights but even the Agonies of Death for us may we not now say as they said John 11.36 Behold how he loved us His Philanthropy or love to Men Tit. 3.4 Luke 2.14 did much out shine his love to Angels for they fell from Heaven yet Christ did not catch hold as the Greek word Hebr. 2.16 signifies the Nature of Angels as he did the Nature of Man when it was even falling down to Hell among the Damned Devils ●o raise it up into Heavenly places Eph. 2.6 Christ went down to Hell to fetch us up to Heaven The Fifth Enquiry How is the lost Sheep when found brought home upon the Shoulders of the Shepherd Answer Is Twofold 1. To the Home here the place whether it is brought and that is Twofold the 1. is the Kingdom of Grace into which the Penitent Sinner is brought by the grace of Sanctification out of the Wilderness of Sin and 2. the Kingdom of glory into which that Penitent Soul is at the last brought by the grace of glorification which is the Transplanting of us as it were out of the Suburbs into the City from a State of Holiness to a State of Happiness 2. The manner how 't is brought home the Shepherd when he hath found his lost Sheep doth not chide it nor beat it nor push it home but he lovingly lays it upon his own Shoulders well knowing its Disability for returning and so brings it home to the Fold N. B. Note well 1. The infirmity of our feeble knees Hebr. 12.12 our own Clay Leggs cannot carry us to Heaven when left to our selves as Hezekiah was 2. Chron. 32.31 then we fall unless Everlasting Arms be underneath us Deut. 33.27 To hold up our goings in Gods paths Psal 17.5 A good Man may fall but he shall not be utterly cast down for the Lord upholds him with his Hand Ps 37.23 24. N. B. Note well 2. The tender love of our Lord to his lost Sheep not only in toiling himself so much to find us Nullum non movit lapidem he left no stone unturn'd up to find us out but also when found out to take us by the Arms and teach us to go and to pace Gods Precepts as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuagint signifies Hos 11.3 4. Like weaklimb'd Nurslings are supported by their Nurses Arm c. nor is this all our Lords love to us but he likewise bears his Lambs in his Bosom Isa 40.11 yea moreover as if all the aforesaid were still too little This good Shepherd lays his lost Lambs upon his own Shoulders as here wherein the High Priest under the Law was a Type of our Lord in bearing all the 12. Tribes of Israel upon his Shoulders Exod. 28.12.25.29 N. B. Note well 3. The safety of the Saints while they abide Hos 3.3 John 15.9 1 John 2.28 upon their Shepherds shoulders which are more strong than the shoulders of Samson Judg. 16.3 In his bearing away triumphantly the very gates of Death and Hell c. which are also so high that Satan himself though a Prince of the Air cannot reach them the Serpent may reach Christs Heel but he cannot Christs Head or Shoulders Gen. 3.15 Christ bears his Redeemed upon Eagles Wings Exod. 19.4 Deut. 32.11 12. N.B. Note well 4. Learn to love our Lord for his not disdaining to burden his Holy shoulders both with the sins and with the fouls of such worthless worms as we are and learn to lean upon him Isa 50.10 Cant. 8.5 and not upon thy own self Prov. 3.5 then thou needs not fear in an Evil Day Psal 49.5 N. B. Note well 5. Christ hath all the Furniture of a Shepherd not the Instruments of a foolish or Idol Shepherd Zech. 11.15 17. but of a Royal Shepherd called a Prince Ezek. 34.12 24. The Furniture Christ hath is 1. His Shepherds Scrip or Bagg out of which David took his small stones wherewith he smote Gosiah 1 Sam. 17 40 49. Thus Christ hurl'd three Scriptures as smooth stones at Satans head Mat. 4.4 7 10. and overthrew him 2. He hath his Shepherds rook or Staff whereby he drives on the Sloathful to mend their pace Prov. 4.12 1 Cor. 9.22 whereby he pulls back the unruly when disorderly and
of himself or of the matter it self but rather in the Surmises of frail flesh saith Jerom Vere non Tardat Christus sed Respectu Infirmitatis nostrae N. B. Note well There be indeed promises of God that have a time prefixed as Gen. 15.13 and 18.10 and Jer. 25.11 But other Promises be Sealed yet not Dated having no time prefixed as that of Deliverance to David Psal 50.15 and the promise of Christs coming c. with whom a Thousand years is but as one day Ps 90.4 2 Pet. 3.8 yet comes unexpected Luke 12 40. Remark the 7th Our Lord delays his coming Luke 12.46 For glorious ends as 1. For gathering all his Elect 2. That the Mystery of Iniquity may be Ripened and Repealed 3. That all Prophecies may be Accomplished 4. To leave sinners excuse less giving them space to Repent in 2 Pet. 2.9 Rev. 2.21 Mora sponsi est opportunitas Resipiscendi Hilary 5. To exercise the Patience of the Saints and 6. To inflame the Desires of his Redeemed Crying come Lord Jesus come quickly Bemerah bejamenu Hebr. with Expedition and in our Day why Lord are thy Charets so long in coming as Judg. 5.28 Remark the 8th The Lord's supposed Lingring was the occasion of the Virgins slumbring and sleeping which may not be taken Conjunctively as if they did all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both slumber and sleep but Disjunctively the Wise slumber'd and the Foolish slept Remark the 9th There be three sorts of Sleep 1. Somnus Naturalis 2. Mortalis 3. Spiritualis 1. Some understand this of natural sleep saying the day of Judgment shall be at Midnight 1 Thess 5.2 But this cannot be for Midnight to us is Midday to our Antipodes 2. Others say 't is the Mortal sleep or sleep of Death so do Hilary Augustin and Chrysostom Sense it from Dan. 12.1 2. So Jairus's Daughter was Dead to Men but a sleep only to Christ but this cannot be the Sense for at the last Day all shall not be Dead but some shall be Alive 1 Thess 4.17 both Wise and Foolish so it cannot be the sleep of Death 3. It must therefore be meant of a Spiritual sleep the Wise Virgins slumbered in sins of Infirmity though they every day expect their Bridegroom yet are not every hour so watchful as they ought to be the Spirit is willing but the Flesh is weak Matth. 26.41 whereas the Foolish were fast a sleep in their sins of Security and Enormities This must be the sense for those Reasons Reason 1. Because all the parts of the Parable are Spiritual as Lamps Oyl c. The 2. Reason because the words in the Original are used in the Mystical Sense both by Divine and Profane Authors as Aliquando bonus Dormitat Homerus Homer himself may slip sometimes saith Horace and Mark 13.36 Gal. 5.14 1 Thess 5.6 c. Reason the 3d 'T is the Scope of the Parable to rowze up unto a Spiritual Watchfulness Add. Reason the 4th Our own smarting Experience testifies our aptness to Nod both in Credendis and Agendis in Faith and Manners Remark the 10th The difference betwixt these Virgins is not that some had sins and some had none for all have Spots but some are not the Spots of Gods Children Deut. 32.5 Therefore when the cry is made now by the sound of the Gospel as will be after by the Trumpet of the Archangel We must all examine our Selves 1 Cor. 11.28 Whether we be slumbring Saints or sleeping sinners they differ thus 1. Saints are sometimes overtaken with nodding at unawares Gal. 6.1 As David against his purpose Ps 119.106 and Peter Matth. 26.33 35. But sinners set themselves to sleep by lying down drawing the Curtains c. 't is his choice he deviseth Mischief on his Bed Ps 36.4 Mic. 2.1 c. 2. Saints Nodding at unawares are easily awaked with the least Noise yea their own Nodding oft awakens them the crowing of the Cook awakes out of slumber c. but sinners in a fast sleep loud Hollowing and violent Jogging scarce does it and they flye in the Face of those that awaken them 3. Saints awaked from slumbring rub their Eyes Rowze their Spirits shake themselves as Samson did Judg. 16 20. but sinners be willing to sleep still and will throw Bedstaves at those that Awake them so their choice is their Judgment Remark the 11th We must 1. Be Virgins for Purity of Profession without Spots 2. Wise Virgins having Wisdom from above Jam. 3. ●7 3. Watch unto Prayer 1 Pet. 4.7 4. If we Nod let the Heart be awake Cant. 5.3 And by Lamp-light as the Lion sleeps with his Eyes open then sleep we not the sleep of Death Ps 13.5 5. Get Christ our High Priest not only to snuff our Lamps with the Golden Snuffers Exod. 25.38 37.23 2 Chron. 4.22 But also to pour in fresh Oyl as the Olive-Tree Zech. 4.2.3 In every Ordinance Christ is the Rock that follows us as well as Israel 1 Cor. 10.4 That our Lamps may still be lighted 6. Hold on hold up and hold out to the end Matth. 24.13 Revel 2.10 3 12. Numb 36.7 12. Jerem. 32.7 Rehoboam turns Gold into Brass but Asa returns B●ass into Gold 2 Chron. 12.10 1 Kin. 15.15 Remark the 12th Comfort against final falling 1. The Wise may slumber but not fall fast a sleep as the Foolish 2. True Grace is Oil Multiplyed as 2 Kin. 4.24 upon which we live even to the last 3. Christs promise Jer. 32.38 40. John 10.28 29. and 14 16. 2 Thess 3.3 Tit. 1.1 Matth. 16.18 1 Cor. 1.8 9. 4. Christs Prayer Luk. 22 32. Hebr. 7.25 and 9 24. John 16.23 God hears him always John 11.42 and we Pray in his Name as Job Oh! That I may be as in Months of Old Job 29.2 5. Christs purchace of perseverance as well as of other Graces Eph. 1.3 We are begot by the Eternal Spirit and born of Immortal Seed 6. Christ cannot dye in Saints Rom. 6.9 10 11. If one dye then all may so Christ is left without Members an Head without a Body Jus aptitudinale may be lost but not Jus haereditarium we may lose our aptness for Heaven but not our Right to it or our Heritage of it The Parable of the Pounds and Talents Holy David saith I will incline mine Ear to a Parable to which he inviteth all Ranks of People Rich and Poor to give heed Ps 49.1 2 3 4. Accordingly let all sorts Sizes and Sexes Attend while I open this dark Saying the Scope whereof as Augustin saith is to put all Persons upon Working out their Salvation with Fear and Trembling Phil. 2.12 That every one may make the best Improvement of their Lords Goods whether Natural Civil or Spiritual Gifts of God to them according to their utmost Abilities in order thereunto Mat. 25.14 c. and Luke 19.12 c. In this Parable there be two parts first the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Materiale
necessary it is to compare all the four Evangelists together for compleating the whole Account of the Life and Death of our Dear Lord. And this Evangelist John assures us of this great Truth as being an Eye-witness of this double Witness in the blood and Water John 19.34 35. No more than what he saw with his Eyes doth the declare to us 1 John 1.3 He saw one of the Souldiers pierce the sides of Christ after he had given up the Ghost with a Spear and forthwith came there out Blood and Water which the same Author in his first Epistle calls the two things that bore Record or Testimony upon Earth This is he that came by Water and Blood not by Water only but by Blood also 1 John 5.6 Here was the foretold Fountain opened Zech 13 1● even the sides of our Saviour to wash away Man's sin and uncleanness The God of Nature hath in such Wisdom qualified the Natural Heat of Man's Heart that nor only the Lungs are so placed as to blow cool Air upon it but also it is Situated as in a Vessel of water called the Pericardium for the Farther cooling of it and this is a Received Rule among all Learned Naturalists that if this Pericardium or skin of water about the Heart be pierced it is impossible for the Heart which is the pr●mum vivens ultimum Moriens the first part that lives and the last that dies in Mankind should preserve life in it any longer So that this Wound the Souldier gave our Saviour in his side was a most manifest witness of the Death of Christ and as the Water and Blood did Represent the two Gospel-Sacraments Baptism and the Lord's Supper which did properly flow from the sides of Christ all the other five Mock-Sacraments in the Romish Church flowed only from the sides of Antichrist so they Resembled the two Grand Graces the Water had the Resemblance of the Grace of Sanctification and the Blood of the Grace of Justification These two Graces this beloved Disciple would not have divided each from other Therefore he saith that Christ came by both not by Water only but by blood also To shew that we are both Sanctified and Justified by the Death of our Dear Jesus the water of our Sanctifying grace washes us from the filth of sin and the Blood of Justifying Grace cleanseth and purgeth us from the guilt of sin And seeing we are but in part and not throughly Sanctified for there is ever some remaining Corruption uncleansed Joel 3.21 c. and 't is only carryed on gradually and as it were by Inches therefore the main matter of the Joy of our Salvation consisteth more in our being Justified because the grace of Justification is one gracious Act changing our State of Wrath at one instant into a State of Favour with God and spreading a Mantle as it were to cover out of God's sight the Multitude of our black sins past present and to come by the Red Robes of our Redeemers Righteousness imputed to us So that this blood and water hold forth both the imputed and the imparted Righteousness of Christ and what our Lord hath joyned together that let no Man put asunder No Man can be truly made partaker of that Righteousness which is imputed unless he have also that which is imparted our Sanctification is a blessed Evidence of our Justification We have not need of the blood only but of the water also And tho' this Apostle in 1 John 5.8 make three Witnesses on Earth the Spirit Water and Blood yet he saith these three agrees in one for Gods Spirit doth witness with our Spirits that we are truly Justified and Sanctified by Christ Rom. 8.15 16. And this is highly Remarkable that these Kill-Christ's can do nothing against him but as God had Decreed they may kill him and wound him when killed but the least bone in this Paschal Lambs Body they cannot break as it is written Exod. 12.46 Numb 9.12 No more can Satan or his Imps break the least bone of Christ's Mystical Body his Church Let us now take a general prospect of the Death of our Dear Redeemer and make some profitable Inferences from the Sundry Circumstances thereof The 1. Inference is Oh! What an heinous Evil an only Evil Ezek. 7.5 a very bitter thing Jer. 2.19 is sin that could by no possible means admit of any proportionable Expiation or Commensurate satisfaction for it but either by the Death of the Son of God the sinners Surety or by enduring the Eternal Flames of Hell in the sinners themselves every Man as well as the first Man Adam hath eaten the Forbidden Fruit of Sin and the Divine Doom for that Crime of High Treason against the Great God of Heaven the King of Kings is dreadfully Denounced in the open Court of the Holy Scriptures to wit that the Sinner shall surely Die either by himself or or by his Surety There is an infinite offence in every Act of sin as it is acted against the Authority of an Infinite God And should the sinner live for ever upon Earth he would sin for ever against Heaven therefore Eternal Torments are appointed for that Eternal principle of sinning in the faln sinner to satisfie Divine Justice And such suitable satisfaction thereunto the Highest and most Glorious of all the Created Angels in Heaven much less any Mortal Man or the Mightiest Monarch upon Earth could not possibly undertake to make No it must be only the only Son of God that could pay down the full price of our Redemption The 2. Inference is Oh! what a sad case is this that of all Impenitent Ones and Unbelievers who have no interest in the Death of this Son of God who Dyed as the Son of Man to satisfie the Justice of God from the sins of Men These cannot say that Christ dyed for us as Gal. 2.20 c. He gave his Life a Ransom for many Matth. 20.28 But for none such as these and therefore they are like unless they Repent and Believe to bear the Eternal Wrath of God yea and it may be of Man for a while too in themselves which our Dear Redeemer hath born upon the Cross for all True Penitent and Believing Persons The 3. Inference is Oh! how Hateful and Sinful Rom. 7.13 should sin be to every Soul that cost our Saviour so much unparallel'd Sufferings to satisfie for it surely could we but take a view of sin as it lay on our Saviour's Back with such weight as to squeeze out his very Hearts blood out of his Body we should then hate it with a perfect Hatred for Torturing him whom our Souls love Nature teacheth us to avoid that Wound which is hardest to Cure and most Mortal to Life therefore do we guard to our utmost our Heads and Hearts with holding our Hands betwixt them and the Blows And should not Grace teach us to avoid sin which makes the worst Wound in the World as it wounds the Soul and
at his Ascension captivated those that had held us in Captivity for 1. So God's Justice required Isa 33.1 2. So God's goodness had promised Isa 24.21 22. Rev. 13.10 And 3. So our Lord Christ hath fulfilled Col. 2.15 Saving his People to the uttermost Hebr. 7.25 from Sin Death Hell and the Devil who taketh Sinners alive and leadeth them Captive at his pleasure 2 Tim. 2.26 till Christ make a rescue Luke 11.21 22. Thus our Lord Ascended and rode up on high in a Glorious Cloud as in a Chariot of State to his Palace of rest and glory not only leading away a certain number of Captives Note namely those Saints as some interpret who had been held in the Captivity of Death whose bodies rose at Christ's Resurrection Matth. 27.52 and who now accompanied him in his Triumphant march into Heaven But also in a more general sense Captivating 1. Passively all the elect who had been Captives to Satan Sin the World Death and Hell Those their Captives Christ rescues out of their destroying hands and makes them blessed Captives to himself by changing their Miserable into an Holy and Happy Captivity whereby they are brought into the easy Yoke of Christ Matthew 11.29 30. and into the pleasant Obedience of the Gospel Prov. 3.17 2 Cor. 10.5 1 John 5.3 Or 2. Actively Captivating all the Temporal and Spiritual Enemies of his Church and Children who had been Captivated by them Satan had the Power of Death Heb. 2.14 Christ fought the Field with him on the Cross and there spoiled him Col. 2.14 And now Triumphs openly over him in his Ascension verse 15. So Christ Conquered the world John 16 33. And so he did Sin Death Hell c. From hence learn 1st That though the Devil reign still every where as the God of this present evil world which lyeth in wickedness wholly 2 Cor. 4.4 Gal. 1.4 1 John 5.19 Yet Christ hath captivated him hath him in a Chain 2 Pet. 2.4 Jude ver 6. Rev. 20.1 2. And will tread him down under our Feet shortly Ro. 16.20 As he hath done under his own Feet As this is decreed of God foretold and promised by God so in due time it shall certainly be accomplished by Christ yea and personally shall be applyed to every particular true believer 2dly That such as are sensible they are sold under sin c. Rom. 7.14 24. should improve this benefit by believing and not wilfully rot in prison lying still as the Devil's drudges there when Christ hath broke open the Prison-Doors and proclaimed liberty c. Isa 61.1.2 who can commiserate their case that will not come to Christ for life John 5.40 3dly Learn comfort here thou trembling Soul what Christ did here he did not for himself only but for the sake of all his Servants As Joshua first conquered the Kings and shut them up in a Cave then brought them forth and makes his Souldiers and Servants to tread upon their Necks Joshua 10.18 24. So our Jesus hath made his Saints more than Conquerors Rom. 8.37 Even Triumphers over all their Enemies 2 Cor. 2.14 Christ's Victory is our Victory he hath broke the Old Serpent's Head we are only exercised with his Tail-temptations and tho' Satan may bruise our Heel so as to make us halt yet ought we to go halting endways towards Heaven as Jacob went halting over the Plain of Penuel Gen. 32.31 We shall Reign with Christ if we suffer with him 2 Tim. 2.12 The 4th Reason of our Saviour's Ascension was to give gifts to Men. c. As the Psalmist saith Psal 68.18 and the Apostle Eph. 4.8 Only with a little Variation As 1st The Old Testament saith how Christ received gifts at his Ascension but the New that he gave them he only received that he might give those gifts for he had no need of them himself As he received them with one hand so he gave them with the other 2dly The Old Testament faith these gifts were for Men be Adam for such as were in Adam that he might repair the lost Image of God in them as it was in Adam before his fall But the New Testament saith these gifts were for his Church which are mentioned Eph. 4.11 Apostles Prophets Evangelists Pastors and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry and for the edifying of the Body of Christ c. These were the Gifts he bestowed upon the day of his Coronation and Solemn Inauguration into his Throne of Clory at his Triumphant Ascension These he received that he might give them looking upon it more honourable to give than to receive Acts 20.35 3dly The Old Testament adds even to the Rebellious for the best have been such till the Lord gave them better Hearts Rom. 4.5 5.6 8 10. Yea though they continue in their Rebellion yet may they share in common Gifts and external priviledges for the benefit of his People some such may receive common Grace which is Gratis data tho' not Gratum faciens graciously given of God but not making truly gracious to God And even the Rebellious may receive Restraining Grace that God may dwell among his Redeemed in his Religion and true Worship But those Rebels then lay down Arms and dare not fight against God any longer when once God comes to dwell among them c. Thus Christ did here as Kings at their Coronation commonly do in casting several pieces of Coin abroad to be picked up by the common people so here at his entrance into his heavenly Kingdom he scattered his Gifts among his Subjects and fills his Church with his goodness Hence learn we 1st That none ought to be proud of their Gifts seeing they are not our own but we may well say of them as the Young Man said of his Hatchet Alas Master it was but borrowed 2 Kings 6.5 This consideration may suffice to cut the Coxcomb of vain-glorious and self-ascribing or self-admiring Boasters What is it we have not Received c. 1 Cor. 4.7 To glory in our Gifts is as great folly as for the Groom to be proud of Riding upon his Master's pransing Palfrey the Actor at the Play-house of wearing his borrowed Gay cloaths or the Mudwall of the Sunshine that giveth it a lustre 2dly That none ought to plead Ignorance Inability c. This excuse cannot be current Coin for the Court of Heaven Men should rather go to Christ who gives gifts than persist in unfitness for Generation-work If any want Wisdom c. let him ask it of God who is the giver of all good Gifts James 1.5 6. They do worthily want that may be supplied by asking Yet ask not Matth. 7.7 The Tree of Life must be shaken then the Fruit which is above our heads though the Root in his Birth c. be below may fall down for us to gather 3dly This may incourage that in this great defect of Gospel-Ministers Christ can supply he hath gifts to give and the residue
the out-side but her heart within was not right with God but rotten having a foul Soul in a fair Body c. like the Apples of Sodom which Soli●us saith are beautiful to behold but crumbles with the least touch into stinking sulphurous Ashes Or like the Egyptian's Temples which were much beautified upon the outside of the Fabrick whereas within nothing could be found but some ugly Serpent or crooked Crocodile Or like the Jewish Sepulchres whose Entrance into those Vaults for Burial were gawdilly garnished when within were nothing but stinking Carcases Matth. 23.27 We may think the same of all painted Hypocrites who like Glo-worms seem to have both light and heat but by touching them neither thereof is in them It may be said of them as a grave Roman Senator said of a painted Embassador What Sincerity can we expect at this man's hands whose locks and looks and lips do lye fair Professors they may be but are foul Practisers yea even Atheistical in practice or practical Atheists Note No doubt but the Hypocrisie of this noble pair of Hypocrites Ananias and Saphira did spring from their Atheism in thinking to hide their sinful Sacrilege from the Omnisciency of the Holy Ghost which doth no less than pave a way unto that unpardonable sin of the Pharisees Matth. 12.31 32. The second Remark concerning this Woman is how soon and suddenly did the Hope of this Hypocrite perish Job 8.13 She came to the Apostle's Convention about three hours after her Husband's death Acts 5.7 not only suspecting nothing and therefore made no inquiry but also expecting and heightened with hopes to find her Husband in the highest Honour among the Apostles for his Charity with the best to the Church But alas how soon her head full of hopes dwindled into an heart-full of Blanks her hope was not only as the giving up of the Ghost as Job 11.20 which is very cold comfort but also it ended in a plain real personal giving up the Ghost The third Remark is one sin makes way for begets and draws on another She had been privy to her Husband's Hypocrisie in mocking God with part for the whole Acts 5.2 From consenting to the sin she steps on to a cunning covering of it after verse 8. She had agreed with her Husband to commit the sin of Sacrilege and to cover it with telling a Lye about the price 'T is too common a crime in our time to cover sin with sin One sin draws on another as one Link in a Chain draws on another until the whole be drawn up till it end in perdition as here Her subjection to her Husband excused her not as she was partaker of his sin so must she of his punishment verse 10. The second Impediment of this growing Gospel-Church was external from professed Foes without as the first was internal from pretended Friends within the Church And this was the second Persecution which the Devil and his Instruments those pestilent Persecutors the Priests c. raised to suppress the Gospel sed veritas magna est pravalebat In this second Persecution and hinderance of the Church there is still more checker'd work of new Disturbance and of new Deliverance 1. The Disturbance was occasioned by the many mighty and marvelous Miracles wrought not only by the hands of the Apostles but also by the very shadow of Peter Acts 5.12 15 16. The light and lustre whereof did both terrifie the unsound and wonderfully incite the sincere to imbrace the Gospel which made a fresh vast Accession to the Church verse 13 14. All this did so inrage the Sa●●●ical Sanhedrim of the Priests c. the greatest part whereof were Saddaces who denied the Resurrection that out of their blind Hellish not Heaven-born Zeal they lay their wicked hands again upon the Apostles and cast them into the common Prison where their notorious Malefactor's were kept verse 17 18. This was the Disturbance designed by the Devil But 2dly There was deliverance wrought for them by an Angel who opened the Prison-doors verse 19. And having brought forth the Lord's Prisoners shut the Prison-doors insensibly again as appears verse 23. And the Reason or End why they were thus miraculously delivered is rendred verse 20. that they might publickly teach the People in the Temple which doing and obeying God rather than Man verse 21 25. became a new provocation to the Priests c. to summon them again before the Sanhedrim who accused them afresh both of Contumacy Novelty and Sedition v. 23 24 25 26 27 28. Thus after their first Disturbance by the Devil and their Deliverance from it by the Angel in this second Persecution they must even then meet with a fresh and a second Disturbance out of which they have a fresh and a second Deliverance at this time also which was wrought for them not by an Angel as before but by the marvelous means of two Men. 1. By the powerful Apology of Peter verse 29 to 33. And 2. By the grave Counsel of Gamaliel verse 34 to 40. after which are the Effects to the end The most eminent Remarks and Mysteries this famous History affordeth are these that follow 1. That Hypocrites are but Wens or rather Botches of the Church and may be taken off without any detriment to it It was so little a loss to the Church to lose Ananias and Sapphira by such a dreadful Doom and Judgment that it became a double gain to it not only in affrighting the Sanballat's and Tobiah's of this day from insinuating themselves into the Fellowship of the Church as they did in Ezra's day Ezra 4.1 2 3 c. Those Hypocritical Adversaries beholding this dismal Example against Hypocrites durst not joyn themselves to the Church verse 13. but also in stirring up the sound-hearted so much the more to become Christians indeed whereby the Church was greatly increased verse 14. Thus when those two Rotten Branches Ananias and Sapphira were cut off the Lord's Vine the Church flourished the better and that which might seem an hinderance to the Gospel became a great furtherance of it as it did Phil. 1.12 The second Remark is that the truly Godly may expect a succession of Trials and Troubles velut unda supervenit undae one wave of the Salt-Sea of Affliction closely pursues another and the following wave is mostly greater than the foregoing Like Job's Messengers not only treading upon the very heels one of another but also each latter bringing worse Tidings than the former the first beginning with the loss of his Cattel c. and the last with the loss of all his Children Thus Persecution which is the Evil Ghost that haunts the Good Gospel grows here upon this Church as well as Doggs it In the former Persecution the Apostles were only secured and Bail taken for their Appearance and upon their Answering for themselves they were soon dismissed with a few Threatnings only But now in this following Persecution they were cast into the Gaol
consummated when his Mediatory work endeth yet then it will not be consumed but only swallowed up by his Essential Kingdom which shall then comprehend it to all eternity his Mediatory Kingdom lasts until he hath made all his foes his footstool c. 1 Cor. 15.24 to 28. because he is both the Master the Maker of the Macrocosm or great World able to subdue all Phi. 3.21 The tenth Cordial is This King of Sion hath a true right and propriety to his fifth Kingdom even to all the Kingdoms and Common-wealths in the whole World 'T is told us in express words whose Right it is c. Ezek. 21.27 Now the Lord Christ hath a Royal Right hereunto by Three manner of means or ways as first by a Divine Eternal Ordination he was verily fore-ordained for this transcendent Royalty 1 Pet. 1.20 which word holds forth how careful our heavenly Father was to make all matters sure concerning Man's Redemption by the Messiah this great work was God's eternal purpose Eph. 3.11 and such a profound Mystery was in that work as made the holy Angels not only to admire it but also desirous to peep into it as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies 1 Pet. 1.12 and Eph. 3.10 Secondly Christ came to this Royal Right by his Father's free and gratuitous Donation The Father bids the Son Ask of me and I will give Thee the Heathen for thy Inheritance and the utmost parts of the Earth for thy Possession Psal 2.8 9. N.B. If all things were conveyed to Christ himself by way of Asking why then should we poor Christians expect any good thing without asking especially when he bids us Ask and ye shall have c. Matth. 7.7 8. Christ indeed had a Natural and Essential Kingdom as he was God co-equal with the Father Phil. 2.6 This he had not by way of asking but did enjoy it from all Eternity and shall hold it to all Eternity But his other the Mediatory Oecumenical and Dispensatory Kingdom Christ hath as a Donative and Gift upon that Eternal Covenant made betwixt the Father and the Son for his faithful fulfilling the great work of fallen Man's Mediator as his Rich Reward and this is that Kingdom which he will deliver up to the Father when the End of it is accomplished and then the Son as Man shall be subject that God may be all in all 1 Cor. 15.24 28. Thirdly Christ hath this Royal Right by way of special and peculiar Exaltation 'T is said Christ humbled himself c. wherefore God exalted him c. Phil. 2.8 9. the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies Christ did empty himself in his State of Humiliation passing through many little Death 's all his life long and at last underwent that cursed and painful Death on the Cross as to his Body and as if this had been too little his Soul also was sorrowful to the Death Matth. 26.38 Yea he humbled himself so low as to lay down his Body three days in the Grave c. Therefore God declares his Decree to give him Royal Honour Psal 2.6 7. and to exalt him so high as not only to be above the Grave in his Resurrection and above the Earth in his Ascension yea and above the Heavens also in seating him at his Right hand upon a Throne of Glory in the highest Heavens Beside all this God sets his King upon his holy Hill of Sion above all other Hills and advances his Son's Scepter above all worldly Scepters yea and dignifies him with a Name above every Name of Honour and Dignity both in Heaven on Earth and under the Earth Phil. 2.9 10.11 Then the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 which had lain long under a lasting Ecclipse breaks forth into its former Native Splendor and Glory The eleventh Cordial is This King of Sion who hath now a true Tittle to a Right Propriety in a fifth Kingdom will in due time become the full Possessor of it whereof he is ever the Right Proprietor and Owner So 't is said Vntil he come whose Right it is and I will give it him Ezek. 21.27 which intimateth there is a time appointed by the Father wherein he will give to his Son a plenary possession of all that he hath purchased a propriety in by his Death and to explain what this is we are told that Christ will take to himself his great Power and Reign overturning all that oppose and causing them to comply with this Conquerour then all the Kingdoms of the World shall become the Lord's and his Christ's Rev. 11.15 17. Christ indeed saith My Kingdom is not of this Worlb John 18.36 Yet is it in this World Christ is better call'd King of Nations than Tidal was Gen. 14.1 as well as he is call'd the King of Saints Rev. 15.3 For when any grievous Calamity was about to come upon the Church of God from any of her Evil Neighbours Jer. 12.14 to wit the cursed Nations that compassed her about as so many greedy Tygers Bears Boars Lions Leopards Wolves c. saith Luther then God sent his Prophets to comfort his Church against this coming Calamity with this soveraign Cordial of Christ's coming as a King to Relieve and Rescue her from those Ravenous Beasts by his Irresistible Power and Regal Authority There be many famous Instances hereof not only that great Text Zech. 9.9 and that also Ezek. 21.27 but likewise tho' many more might be mentioned I shall here add only one more namely that of Isa 9.6 7. at which time there was to come a most unparallel'd Calamity upon the Church Isa 7.17 18 19. and 9.1 Then to preponderate and out-weigh the perplexity of that matchless Misery the Prophet of God there doth comfort the Church not only with the Birth but also with the Kingdom of Christ saying the Goverment shall be upon his shoulders the Mighty God the Prince of Peace and of the Increase of his Kingdom there shall be no end Isa 9.6 7. The same may be observed in those two Prophets that followed Isaiah namely Ezekiel and Zechariah as above quoted all intimating the truth of Father Bernard's excellent notion Tamen Christus Rex est etiam in hoc Mundo scilicet in ordine ad Ecclesiam that is though his Kingdom be not of this World John 18.36 which wholly lyeth and walloweth in wickedness 1 John 5.19 and whose God is the Devil blinding their minds c. 2 Cor. 4.4 Yet Christ is King in this World in his ordering and over ruling all the Affairs of the World so far as they do relate to his Church in the World Thus Christ is call'd Lord of all Acts 10.36 If it be asked of all what 't is answered he is Lord of all persons of all things of all Kings of all Kingdoms he is Lord of his Church and he is Lord of the World and therefore he will not suffer his Church to be long wronged by the World Now in order that this
knowledge of the best things as is here necessarily implied Remark 3. The Problems she proved Solomon with more than probably were propounded concerning the things of God for she and divers other Heathens had some knowledge of the Being Nature and Worship of God wherein they were generally at a great loss yet endeavoured to understand c. N. B. Her Riddles or hard Questions were such as she could not elsewhere get any satisfactory solution unto save only from that incomparable Wisdom she heard Solomon had therefore is she more praise-worthy than Plato Pythagoras and others who went into Remote Countries only to learn Philosophy but she came from far to learn true Divinity which is imported in those words Leshem Jehovah concerning the Name of the Lord ver 1. demonstrating that she did acknowledge the true God Baronius saith she was of that Countrey where she might learn the Prophecy of Balaam touching the Messiah's Birth and hearing of Solomon's Wisdom concerning the two Harlots c. came to know whether this were not He whom Balaam predicted c. Remark 4. Peter Martyr's Inference hence is excellent saying The common Contemners of God's Word are branded here who lazily loiter and linger and oft-times will not rouze themselves out of their Beds of Idleness to hear God's Word purely and powerfully Preached and our Saviour alledgeth Her as an Instance to the same purpose Mat. 12.42 Luk. 11.31 taking it very ill as well he might that men came not so far to hear him who was greater than Solomon but much more ill from those wretched Jews who prized not the Wisdom of the Son of God tho' it was brought home to their doors Remark 5. When Solomon had answered not only all her Theological but also her Political and her Physical Philosophical Questions then did this Arabian Queen stand astonished c. ver 3 4 5. being struck with an Extasie of deep Admiration but so soon as she could recover her self she brake forth both into good words and into good deeds also As 1. Her good words ver 6 7 8 9. saying Common fame which commonly makes matters more than they are hath in this thy case fallen far short of the truth tho' even that which was reported seemed incredible Her Eyes were now ravished with the Rarities of his Structures and with the beauty and order of all his Royal Concerns as well as her Ears which had been only tickled before with bare Reports at a great distance but now are more abundantly gratified with hearing his Matchless and None-such Answers to all her profound Problems and Aenigmatical Enquiries When both her personal Seeing and Hearing had confirmed her in Believing then she blesseth God for so loving Israel as to bestow such a None-such King to Rule them Tho she lived among the Heathen yet was she convinced that such a King as Solomon was given of God as Prov. 8.15 16. and therefore doth she praise God for him Then 2. As to her deeds She gave Solomon and 120 Talents of Gold with all other the choicest Commodities of her Countrey ver 10. all which she doth freely part with to purchase Divine Knowledge Yea in a word she was so taken with Solomon's Wisdom that she could have been content to have made an exchange of her own Throne for Solomon's Footstool seeing his Servants so happy in him How much more happy are we in Christ's Court where we may continually behold his face greater than Solomon Psal 17.15 Remark 6. The great Grandeur and prodigious Pomp and Opulency is next described in form and matter of Solomon ' Wealth and Glory As 1. After his Royal Bounty to this Queen of Sheba and her Return home with her Desires fully satisfied ver 13. We are told how Solomon's Navy brought him in yearly 666 Talents of Gold ver 14. which amounts to two millions and more of our Money 2. His vast Revenues by Tribute Custome c. from Inland and Outland Commodities c. ver 15. and a Monopoly of Yarn and Horses ver 28 29. 3. His adorning the Temple and his Palace with Almug-trees and Instruments of Musick ver 12. with Targets and Shields of Gold v. 16 17. and with a goodly Golden Throne ver 18 19 20. and with drinking Vessels all of Gold ver 21. 4. His plenty of Gold so that comparatively Gold was nothing accounted of in his day as it is in other Lands and in our days wherein Money beareth the Mastery and is the Monarch of this lower World few Medes matter is not as Isa 13.17 among us tho' 't is not currant Coin in the other World ver 21.27 So that Solomon's Reign was a Type of that New Jerusalem where Gold and Silver are nothing set by N. B. Would to God every Pot and Bowl in our Jerusalem had Holiness to the Lord writ upon them as 't is prophesied Zech. 14.20 This is better than the finest Gold even the Gold of Godliness Psal 19.10 Prov. 16.16 c. Silver in Solomon's day was look'd on like Stones in the Street which every passenger tramples upon and treads under foot N. B. God placed all things under Man's feet Psal 8.6 't is the Devil that advanceth them and placeth them in Man's heart Eccles 3.11 Those Metals may be good Servants like Fire and Water but they are exceeding bad Masters c. The second part of this Chapter shews how all the Kings of the Earth came to complement and to court King Solomon ver 24. as the Queen of Sheba had done before them The same is said in chap. 4.34 but the Distinct History of none of those Kings is Recorded any where save only of that famous Queen because her Example far excell'd all others yet some say at a venture that All the Kings of the Earth came and did their Homage to him as to the Absolute Monarch of the World and that they tendred themselves and their Kingdoms to Solomon to be Ruled by him However 't is expresly said They all brought Presents to him c. ver 25. who out-shined all Crowned Heads in all other Lands both for his Throne ver 20. and for his Wealth and Wisdom ver 23. He might have a Parallel for Wealth alone tho' very Hardly but he was without any Parallel for his Wealth and Wisdom conjunct Few be wise and wealthy too c. N.B. 1. Pray that all the Kings of the Earth may seek unto our Lord and Saviour for Wisdom as they did here unto King Solomon c. N.B. 2. How many make such Voyages thus far with Solomon for his Apes Parrots and Peacocks namely are taken up with Fancies and fine Notions but miss the main the Pearl of Price and the true Treasure ver 22. 1 Kings CHAP. XI THIS Chapter contains 1. Solomon's Sins 2. His Punishments by God's Justice for them And lastly Solomon's Death The Remark in general upon the whole before we come to the Three parts is this That no earthly Felicity tho'
raised up to its Zenith or highest point and pitch yet through Humane Infirmity in the faln Estate is not durable but hath its declensions and as P. Martyr noteth ought not to have any confidence placed in it the Wheel of Providence in ordering worldly affairs when at its highest point of Exaltation then begins to decline downward N.B. The glory of all Kingdoms as in the four grand Monarchies of the World hath its Times and its Turns Solomon here is a clear Specimen hereof whom the Lord exalted to the highest Eminencies and Perfections that this lower World could afford him yet God suffered him to fall so foully that he like another Adam in his Paradise-Happiness might exemplifie this great Truth that there is no constancy in the compleatest worldly Felicity and nothing here below is to be trusted to but all is vanity save only the Kingdom which is not of this World c. N.B. Behold here a Star of the first magnitude fall from Heaven a None-such Saint into scarce None-such Sins another Lucifer c. Isa 14.12 c. The particular Remarks upon the first part namely Solomon's Sins are 1. The Occasion of his foul fall from this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or highest degree of earthly Excellency was his love of Women ver 1 2 3 4. This is one of Satan's Baits which hath put a monstrous But at the Doors of the best of men who were but men at the best as in those famous Examples upon Scripture-Record N. B. 1. In that of Adam the Innocentest Man that ever was in the World yet was he made Nocent and undone by a Woman which was given to him for a Comforter and not for a Counsellor much less for a Controuler Therefore God in his first Sentence against Adam expresseth this as the cause Because thou hast obeyed the Voice of thy Wife c. Gen. 3.17 2. In that of Sampson the strongest Man that ever was in the World who by his prodigious strength slew his Thousands of Men laying them heaps upon heaps yet so weak he became in the hands of a Woman that in fine he lost his Strength his Eyes and his God also And 3. In this of Solomon the wisest Man that ever was in the World yet how foully did he fall by his exorbitant love of fair Ladies c. The 2d Remark is The Time when this lustful Devil took possession of Solomon's Soul and prevailed so far over him that himself after his Repentance calleth it a bitterness beyond that of Death Eccles 7.26 As if he had said I had better have been buried alive than thus to have miscarried to the great dishonour of God and gross detriment of Israel This he did in his old Age c. ver 4. N.B. Solomon having now Reign'd about 36 years as Dr. Lightfoot computeth it and being about 20 years old when he began to Reign when his Son Rehoboam was one year old chap. 14.21 was not now sixty years old So that in truth he did but now begin to be an old Man yet might it have been well expected that the Elder be was the Wiser he should have been Job 32.7 having had so long Communion with God and Experience of his goodness which might have made him Better Beside his body had been long despumed and one would think well-nigh drained dry upon his many Wives and Concubines which he multiplied both for his Lust and for his Pride and Magnificence looking upon it as a point of Honour c. However his Age here is an Aggravation of his sin seeing his lust now was as monstrous as to behold green Apples upon leafless Trees that look gray or white with Snow in Winter Gray Hairs and green Hearts can never have a comely and commendable Agreement Whenever the time was both Piscator and Junius reckon from it to the Ruine of Solomon's Temple of Jerusalem and of the Kingdom of the Jews 390 years according to Ezek. 4.5 Solomon's sin here was the beginning of all the mischiefs that followed after N. B. Note well with P. Martyr here This teacheth that no Age is free from Temptation there is such weakness and wickedness even in the best and wisest of Men that if left to themselves they may foully fall While Solomon was young he was wholly taken up with his framing famous Fabricks with Executing Justice among his Subjects and with writing sundry excellent Books but now beginning to grow old he indulg'd himself in Amorous Imbracements c. therefore should we watch in all Ages old and young The 3d. Remark is Solomon's Sin It was the Sin of Idolatry that Land-desolating Sin into which David never fell tho' he greatly sinned otherwise ver 5 6 7 8. where his sin is marked to be manifold As 1. In Doting upon so many Wives c. His Father contented himself with six Wives 2 Sam. 3.3 4.5 but his Son will have seven hundred Wives and three hundred Concubines ver 3. here 2. His marrying so many Idolatrous Strangers contrary to the Law of God 3. In suffering them to set up their Idolatrous Worship in God's Land and to practise it 4. In appointing Places for their Idols 5. In raising heavy Taxes upon his Subjects whereof Complaint is made by them in the next Chapter to maintain the Idolatrous Priests and Worship of his Wives c. 6. In conforming himself to their Desires in worshiping their Idols Venus Bacchus and other Pagan Idols with them in his own person say Lavater and Serrarius yea and compelling his Hebrews to worship them also And 't is said here ver 4. that his Wives turned away his heart after other Gods For after he had once gratified his Mistresses of Moab the rest of his Idolatrous Women wished him to do the like favour for them and he out of a Complaisant Humour being left of God to himself did unlike himself comply with them unwisely for wise Solomon to do as P. Martyr observeth The Fourth Remark is No wonder if the Lord were Angry v. 9 10 11 12 13. The Effect of his Complicated Sin and so oft twisted Transgression Though Solomon was Jedidiah God's beloved Darling Wherein Mark 1. God's Chastizements of his own Children as the ground is grieved Love so the end is fuller and freer Embracements The Antinomian Notion is here condemned that saith God is never Angry with his People fall they never so foully no not with a Fatherly Anger This is contradicted here and Isa 57.17 and 1 Cor. 11.30 Mark 2. When the Heart is won the whole Man is won in that hidden Man of the Heart 1 Pet. 3.4 When Solomon's Heart was turned aside from God then took he this Liberty to Sin thus grievously 't was a wicked Heart of Vnbelief that was the grand ground of his great Sin and set him upon departing from the Living God to Dead Idols Heb. 3.12 Mark 3. God's great Favour in appearing twice to Solomon after an extraordinary manner was a great Aggravation