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

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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
If any Man think to War against the Justice of God with ten Thousand supposed good Works Gods Justice will War against that Man with twenty Thousand really bad Works and overcome him Whoever dare come riding to Christ upon the Dromedary of good Works Christ will say to such I know ye not depart from me ye Workers of Iniquity Math. 7.23 and so be sent empty away 'T is best coming to Christ as Abigail to David saying Let thy Hand-maid be a Servant to wash the Feet of thy Servants this is more meet than to be made thy Queen 1 Sam. 25.41 or as Mephibosheth said to him Will my Lord look upon such a dead Dog as I am 2 Sam. 9.8 The Third Reason to prove the Insufficiency of Moral Righteousness for Mans Salvation is because as Mans first sinning lay beyond him and without him in Adam so Man's full satisfying of Gods Justice for his sinning lies beyond and without him in Christ The first Adam brought all Mankind into Captivity to sin to misery and to Death it self as he was the publick Person and Representative of the whole Race just as a Parliament Man represents his whole Country for which he acts in the grand Counsel of the Nation and so whatever he doth is looked upon as done by them all Thus also the Scripture speaketh as by one Man sin entred into the World and Death by sin and so Death passed upon all Men because all have sinned to wit in Adam Rom. 5.12 Therefore no Man no not the most Refined Moral Man can become his own Redeemer out of this Captivity This is the Work appointed by God for the second Adam whom Jacob calls his Redeeming Angel Gen. 48.16 the Lord Jesus is the other publick Person who Represents likewise all that are chosen in him and delivers them from Wrath to come 1 Thess 1.10 and this is the principal Scope of the Apostle's Arguing in his comparing those two publick Persons the two Adams together shewing at large how the whole Malady of Mankind came by the first Adam and the whole Remedy came by the Second Rom. 5.14 to the end And again the same Apostle argueth to the same purpose saying Since by man came Death by man came also the Resurrection of the Dead For as in Adam all Dye even so in Christ all that are united to him and found in him Phil. 3.9 shall be made alive 1 Cor. 15.21 22. Thus it plainly appeareth by these and many more Scriptures too long to relate that our Blessed Mediator is the only Redeemer of Mankind and that it is impossible for the best of Men to redeem themselves c. Many more Arguments and Reasons might be added to Demonstrate this great Truth which I shall only name As Fourthly The great Doctrine of Repentance ought to be Preached unto all Men both to those that are merely Moral though attained to the highest Degree of Philosophical Morality such as sundry Pagans Cato Seneca Plato c. did shine within the Eyes of the World as well as to those who are notoriously defective in their Morals and are exceeding gross in their ways of Immorality Now these latter are easilyer convinced and reduced to Repentance than the former having no Reed of his own Righteousness to lean upon I have in my Ministry found it hard work to unbottom a mere Moralist c. And it may be added Fifthly That our Lord hath commanded every Man to pray Forgive us our Sins Luke 11.4 which are call'd our Debts unto Divine Justice Mat. 6.9 12. now seeing All men have sinned both Jew and Gentile Rom. 3.9 23 There is no man that sinneth not 1 Kin. 8.46 no not the most Moral man in the World If any say so they deceive themselves and the truth is not in them c. 1. John 1.8 9 10. Who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from my sin Prov. 20.9 some indeed as the Pharisee Luke 18.11 and the Young Man Mat. 19.20 may say so proudly but there is none that can-say so truly save the sinless Son of God John 8.46 which of you convinceth me of sin Pilate his Judge saith I find in him no fault at all John 18.38 he was like Man in all things sin only excepted Hebr. 4.15 1 Pet. 2.22 Where is boasting then Rom. 3.27 seeing all Men are sinners and have need of a Saviour to purchase a Pardon for their sins No Moral Righteousness can save fallen Mankind c. N. B. Note well This is an Observation worthy of all Acceptation that all the Holy Prophets of the Lord yea and the Holy Lord himself were slain by the Jews who made their boast of the Law Rom. 2.23 chiefly because they all unanimously taught that Mans Salvation must be looked for by the free grace of God in Christ and not by the Law of Works c. Thus having done with the Priest in the Parable the Second Physician of no value was the Levite Luke 10.32 where it is said he passed by this sad Object also what is meant by this Levite there be various glosses as well as upon the Priest here omitting all others I mention but that one which interprets this Priest to be Angels and this Levite to be Men and though both Angels and Men behold this Miserable Man dismounted stripped and wounded c. yet neither of the two hath either Will or Power to help him c. but the soundest Sense in my Sentiments is that of Formal Holiness which carries a Correspondency to the Ceremonies of the Levitical Law and which cannot save a Soul out of the State of Sin Enquiry the Frst what is this Formal Holiness signified by the Levite Answer 'T is an outward profession of Religion without the inward power thereof Such a formal professor this Levite seems to be who was more for the Cerenony than for the Substance of Religion Possibly he as well as the Priest might fear Legal Pollution for the Ceremonial Law forbad such to touch the Dead Levit. 11.8 Deut. 14.8 not only the Dead Carcase of unclean Creatures but also the Dead Body of a Man slain in the Field as he might suppose this Man to be Numb 19.16 but the Legal strictness and niceness of this Levite was an Iniquity for the Man was but half Dead therefore to shew Mercy in saving the Life of the Man was his Indispensable Duty by Gods Law Love thy Neighbour as thy self in doing all Offices of Love for him in Distress Isa 58 6 7. whereas he was one that David complaining of such Fail Friends as standing aloof and afar off in stead of helping c. Ps 38.11 Enquiry the Second How may this Formal Levite who hath only the Form and not the Power 2 Tim. 3.5 be discovered Answer By these few following Characters as 1 he is one that is more zealous for the Ceremony than for the Substance of Gods Law whereas Ceremonial Duties should always give place to
swallowed Hook and all They did as they were Taught Matth. 28.11 12 13 14 15. Now follow the several Appearances of Christ himself which is the 6th and the most infallible Testimony of the Truth of Christ's Resurrection CHAP. XXXVII Of Christ 's Ten Appearances THE Sundry Appearances of Christ himself are reckoned by the Learned after a several sort Some late Learned Criticks and Chronologers do reduce them into the more narrow number of Seven that Sabbatical number the better to make them comport with all the seven Numbers aforesaid to wit Christ's seven last Words his seven last Wonders and the seven last Signs of his Triumph But the common computation hereof among the most Authentick Commentators both Antien● and Modern is that Py●hagorical Number of Ten which is the number of perfection as well as seven is so accounted and no doubt but our Lord gave the most perfect Number of his Personal Appearances betwixt his Resurrection and Ascension which interval and space of time consisted of four Tens and forty Days and wherein he appeared Ten several times accordingly to his Apostles c. for their further and fuller confirmation of the Truth of his Resurrection The First Appearance of Christ as all Solid Writers unanimously say was to Mary Magdalen this is positively affirmed by that Infallible Evangelist Mark Mark 16. ● which is also as infallibly confirmed by the Evangelist John Joh. 20.2.14.16 Indeed the Jesuit Maldonate hath the confidence to contradict both those Evangelists as if the Infallibility of the Church of Rome far exceeded the Infallibility of the word of God saying that Christ's first Appearance was to his Mother Mary the Blessed Virgin This he doth daringly affirm but cannot by any convincing Scriptures confirm acknowledging that no such thing is written in the word yet would he have it to be believed that it was so because as he Magisterially saith it was but meet and decent that our Lord in point of Duty should do so Here a Sawcy Jesuit undertakes to Instruct Holy Jesus who was the Wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1.24 an High point of Humane Manners obliging Christ to pay his Respect and Homage to this Mary in the first place and not to Mary Magdalen though Mark expresly assert it out of whom he had cast seven Devils Mark 16.9 This is the Impudency of the Babylonish Whore to obtrude upon the Church their unwritten Verieties as the Catholicks or rather Cacolicks call them equalling their feigning Traditions with the Authority of the Scripture of Truth among those Fops as do Jurare in verba Magistri and can believe the Dreams and Fancies of some Old Doting Fryar What is this but to make Man's Addle Brain the Basis and Foundation of Faith and not the word of God which in Truth they have turned into an idle Romance with the Trash and Trumpery of their unscriptural Traditions imposed as Articles of their Creed upon the too Childishly credulous who are given up to believe Lies 2 Thess 2.10.11 Amongst which this here is not one of their least Lies The Rhomist Jesuits are more Ingenious in this point though base and bad enough in others ingenuously confessing in their Second Annotation upon Mar. 16.1 that this Mary Magdalen had the Honour to see Jesus first after his Resurrection because say they she Merited it for bestowing so costly an Ointment upon him while he was alive John 12.3 and Mark 14.3 and sought to Anoint him with the like Ointment when he was Dead but not one word do we Read in any of the Evangelists of Christs appearing either first or at all to his Mother Mary We may indeed well wonder at this that he should not make his first Appearance if not to the Noblest or Holiest of Men yet to the Noblest or Holiest of Women such as were Royal Queens or Honourable Countesses or to such as were Eminent for Holiness if not for Honour as was undoubtedly his own Dear Mother the Holiest of Women-kind No it must not be to any-such for Honour or for Holiness but it must be to this Mary who had been a non-such for Ignominy and Iniquity God loves to walk in a way of his own and by himself This Honour done to her who had been so great a Sinner St. Mark Relateth this more at large than the other Evangelists do though in other Histori●● passages he bemostly more brief than the other three Nich. Gorran though of the Dominical Order yet gives more Scriptural Sentiments upon this point than Superstitious Maldonate doth from his blind Devotion to the Virgin Mary For this Learned Friar renders five Reasons why our Lord appeared first to Mary Magdalen in his comment upon Mar. 16.9 the first is because she loved more Ardently Luke 7.47 she had greatest love to Christ because he had forgiven her greatest Sins We read not that the Virgin Mary did wash Christ's Feet with her Tears as this great sinner did ver 44. for though she call Christ her Saviour so needed the forgiveness of some sins Luke 1.46 yet were her sins but little to this Mary's who had been but a light Huswife His Second Reason is that Christ might shew hereby he came into the World to save sinners not the Righteous though there be none such no not one but in conceit only Matth. 9.13 c. His third is that it might be declared how Publicans and Harlots do sooner enter into the Kingdom of Heaven than Proud Pharisees or Civil Justiciaries Matth. 21.31 which is a great shame to be left behind by such As 't is Storied of the Cadar so Christ kills the quick in conceit but quickens those that are Dead in sin His Fourth is that as a Woman was the first Minister of our Perdition our Great Grandmother Eve was the first that brought Death into the World so a Woman must be the first Messenger of our Salvation Mary Magdalen that Apostolorum Apostolissima as one calls her must be the first Preacher and Publisher of Christ's Resurrection John 20.16.18 His Fifth is 't was a Comment on that Scripture where sin abounded there grace hath abounded much more c. Rom. 5.20 and that to none of other sorts of sinners any Room for Desperation should be left To those five Reasons of Gorran other five Reasons may be added why Christ appeared first to Mary Magdalen As 1. Because though she had been formerly a very great sinner yet now through grace she was become as great a Repenter her Sorrowing now was suitable and proportionable to her sinning heretofore What was said of Manasseh that as he had sinned greatly in Defying God in Murdering Men and in Worshipping Devils so he Humbled himself greatly 2 Chron. 33.12 The same may be said of this Magdalen insomuch that some report of her how this prodigious Penitent did after Christ's Resurrection and Ascension Retire into Gallia Narbonensi● where she spent Thirty years in weeping for her former sins However 't is great question among
the Body of Man before the Fall should have so much Beauty Lustre Splendour and Glory put upon it no doubt but when it came first out of Gods Mint it was a most curious silver piece and shone most gloriously hence Christ compares faln Man to the lost groat Luk. 15.8 9. As no Metal is better than Silver but Gold so no Creature was better than Man but Angels Man was made but a little lower than Angels Psal 8.5 before he became to be besmeared with sin his Body did even while naked undoubtedly glitter with a Divine glory being cloathed with a Royal Robe of Majesty and having upon him the Imperial Crown this gave Man Dominion over all Creatures Gen. 1.26 28. The Image and Superscription of God upon this Silver-piece did shine forth so splendidly that it put an awful reverence upon all Creatures towards Man who then had a most Beautiful Body every way suitable to his Divine Soul Hence the Fathers call'd Man in the state of Innocency The Cedar of Paradise the Picture of Heaven the glory of the Earth the Ruler of the World and Gods own delight The Glory and Beauty of Mans Body which was made by a Counsel called even the Master-piece of the works of Gods Head and Hands was no doubt say Divines like the Body of the Sun in the firmament Judg. 5 31. and like the Body of Christ in his Transfiguration when his Face shone as the Sun Matth. 17.2 and well might it do so for he is the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 And that Derivative Glimpse of Divine Glory put upon Moses in the Mount which caused his face to shine so as affrighted the people from beholding it Exod. 34.29 30. may well mind us what a Primitive Beam of Beauty the Body of Man had before the Fall God did not make Man in the likeness of the Goodliest Creatures but in the similitude of God himself and therefore he could not be without some Reflexive Rays of Royalty and Majesty even from top to toe when all his Members were Weapons of Righteousness unto God Rom. 6.13 Such a dazling Angelical glory had the Proto-Martyr Stephen put upon him as the Mediator Moses had before him so that his Face was as it had been the face of an Angel Act. 6.15 As there was a Visible glory in the Body of the second Adam Job 1.14 They saw his glory exceeding all the glories of the Sons of Men and becoming him who was the Son of God so without all peradventure there was a visible glory in the Body of the first Adam though inferiour to that of the second because of his Hypostatical union Col. 2.9 seeing he is call'd also the Son of God Luk. 3.38 Having no Father as Christ had none but God himself The Image of God was fixed upon Adams Body as well as upon his Soul whereby all the Beasts of the Field all the Fowls of the Air and all the Fishes in the Sea became subject to him and to that glory he was invested with Psal 8.5 6 7 8. and therefore as a sign of his Soveraignty and of their subjection they are all brought to him to receive their Names according to their Natures from him as from their Lord and Master Gen. 2.19 6ly That the Body of Man should be made in some sense Immortal The state of Innocency had this kind of Immortality It was not impossible for Adam to dye and it was possible for him not to dye A thing is said to be Immortal in four senses 1. Essentially Thus God is onely Immortal 2. Ex dono Creationis by the power of the Creation as the Angels and the Souls of Men. 3. Ex Hypothesi upon condition onely as Adams Body had been Immortal if he had stood in his Innocency This Innocency would have embalm'd his living Body better than all the Spices of Egypt could embalm a dead one Manna that was of it self Corruptible Exod. 16.20 21. lasted long and kept sweet many hundred years when laid up according to Gods Command in the golden pot v. 33. Hebr. 9.4 Obedience to God did not onely save it sweet on the Sabbath day but for some Centuries after as their garments lasted forty years Deut. 29.5 so mans Body might have lasted a thousand years in the way of Obedience yea and have never dyed Some say that the Tree of life was to be his constant food which should not onely be a Symbol of life but also a Supporter of it in an Immortal so far as innocent state that Tree would have so preserv'd his Radical Moisture and Natural Heat in an equal temper as well as in a lasting supply that Adams Body should never have had either wrinkle or Hoary Hairs but he should have lived in youthful vigour and in a happy vivacity for a thousand years upon earth and then without either anguish or sickness or pains of Death have been translated from Earth to Heaven the Reliques of this Natural Immortality made Adam live 930 years and Methusalem 960. However this is certain that the wages of sin is death Rom. 6.23 The body of Man without sin could not have turned into Corruption Death entred into the world by sin Rom. 5.12 before he had sinned there was Temperamentum ad pondus such an equal Temperature of Qualities and the humours in him had such an happy harmony that they could neither breed Distempers nor bring Death but as soon as he had eaten forbidden fruit he came down to a condition of Mortality Gen. 2.17 Adam dyed not that day but lived 930 years after yet then and thereby was his Body made liable to such Diseases and dangers as might deliver him up to Death 4. Something is said to be Immortal Ex dono novae Creationis by the power of the Resurrection So the Bodies of the Saints raised up by the power of God are thereby preserved in mansions of glory for evermore The Body which is at Death sown in Corruption shall be raised in Incorruption 1 Corinth 15.42 it is sown in Dishonour it shall be raised in Glory v. 43. having the glory of the Soul transparent in it as we see the colour of the wine in the glass so the glory of the Soul shall be seen in the Body and this glory shall be a Corporeal glory according to the Maxim Quicquid recipitur recipitur ad modum recipientis non recepti Every thing received is in the thing receiving or receiver according to the nature of the thing receiving and not of the thing received Thus the body being a Corporeal thing receiveth glory from the Soul after a Corporeal manner yea the body it self shall be made a glorified body it shall be conform'd to the glorifyed body of Christ as to the standard Phil. 3.21 the Terrestrial body shall at the Resurrection be made a Celestial 1 Cor. 15.40 or a Spiritual body v. 44. it shall be more like a Spirit than a Body So Diaphanous and transparent saith
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
And as for the latter he prays that God would not shew any sign of accepting the Offering of those presumptuous Levites the two hundred and fifty that intruded into the Priest's Office which God did by sending fire from Heaven to consume the Oblation Then Moses committed the deciding of the Controversie to God himself So 2. The Divine Correction follows the Humane of Moses from ver 16 to 35. No sooner had those Intruders taken their Censers which they had ready provided upon their first Combination to thrust themselves into the Priest's Office and prepared to offer but presently the Glory of the Lord shining in the Cloud over the Sanctuary appeared unto Moses and Aaron standing on one side and these two hundred and fifty on the other side who most impudently stood stouting it out in defiance of God and making an open profession of their gross profaneness in the sight of the Sun ver 17 18 19. They declared their sin as Sodom Isa 3.9 there was no need of digging to find it out as a thing hid Jer. 2.34 for they set it as it were upon the cliff of the Rock Ezek. 24.7 The Rock of Ages now resolves to ruine them commands the credulous of the Congregation whom Korah had wheadled in to countenance his Conspiracy to withdraw from all familiarity with the Rebels ver 20 21 24 26. Moses denounces their Doom to be extraordinary ingageth the honour of his Office upon a Miracle to be wrought by God ver 29 30 c. for the utter Ruine of those presumptuous Rebels and that presently to be done as he had declared ver 5. in the very view of many hundred thousands of People who were all generally over-ready to comply with Korah's Conspiracy and to favour his Attempt he persuading them that God would favour it also His design being to introduce an equal popularity could not want many favourers among the common People yet those that would depart from the society of those sinners ver 24 26 27. were spared at Moses's Mediation for them praying The God of the spirits of all flesh as Zech. 12.1 Heb. 12.9 Job 12.10 Act. 17.25 El Elohei Haruchoth c. All this People have not sinned like Korah the principal Incendiary who hath inflamed so many into this hot Rebellion Thou Lord knows hearts Numb 27.16 that the People have not sinned out of malice but are only coaxed in by Korah 't is convenient for thy Glory to distinguish betwixt the greater and the lesser Sinners c. Thus Moses intercedes ver 22. and the Lord accepts of his Intercession for all those that would save themselves from that untoward Generation Act. 2.40 Rev. 18.4 In the next place follows the Execution of this Divine Correction The Conspirators all perish they and theirs Dathan Abiram and their Accomplices by the opening of the Earth under them ver 31 32 33. and Korah with his Company by fire from Heaven ver 35. This must needs be an undoubted evidence of God's concurrence with the Ministry of Moses and that he had not out of any private affection to his Brother Aaron preferr'd him to the Priesthood and therewithal it was an undoubted Assurance of the Divine Truth of Moses's Writings in the Pentateuch N.B. Moses here had no sooner spoke the word but God made it good by his deed dictum factum at once avouching Moses and Aaron's Authority and Integrity and avenging his own and their Cause in the just and miraculous punishment of the Rebels notorious Impiety Dathan Abiram c. stood impudently in their Tent-doors out-facing Moses and scorning the Judgment threatned ver 27. then they and their whole housholds went down into Sheol a great Grave of God's own making not into Hell as the Papists say for how could their Tents and Goods go down thither Yea their little Infants were not excepted who tho' not guilty of their Parents sin had sin enough in their Nature to deserve the shortning of their Lives and while God in Justice kill'd their Bodies he might in mercy save their Souls Yet their Parents were punished in their deaths in whose well led lives their memory might have flourished but Korah and his two hundred and fifty were kill'd by fire out of the shining Cloud as they sinn'd by fire as Levit. 10.1 2. Psal 106.18 but Kōrah's Children were not kill'd Numb 26.10 11. for either they consented not to their Father's Rebellion or they repented at the warning given by Moses Numb 16.5 their Genealogy is reckoned 1 Chron. 6.22 38. They were singers in the House of God ver 32. and of them came Samuel ver 33. Thus Children by Repentance cut off the Intail of a Curse from sinful Parents c. Lastly The Consequents of this Conspiracy and of God's Correction of the Conspirators which are twofold First A monument and lasting memorial of God's Judgments upon those presumptuous Sinners against their own Souls and of his Vindication of the Innocency of his most faithful Servants is appointed by the Lord that Israel might be warned there by and that none hereafter should dare to sin so presumptuously ver 37 38 39 40 Wherein 1. Eleazar is bid to take up the Censers of those sinners now slain and to scatter the fire out into an unclean place to shew that the Lord rejected their service as profane Aaron must not do this because he was one of the right Offerers ver 17. and must not be polluted by stepping among the dead but Eleazar as a confirmation of his succeeding him in the Priesthood must do it 2. Those Censers must not be converted to common use because they were consecrated not only as they had been offered up to the Lord as Vessels of the holy Ministry but more especially as now God sanctified them to be beaten out into broad Plates to make a covering for the Brazen Altar and so to be a lasting holy sign of this Rebellious sin c. 3. Hereby Israel must be minded that sin is the Soul's Poison as it was in those Sinners against their own Souls and such are all such as spend the span of this transitory Life after the ways of their own hearts and thereby perish for ever Alas how heartily do sinners feed upon this Poison as the Maid in Pliny did upon Spiders and the Turkish Gally-slaves upon Opium as Bread 4. This Monument and Memorial was to make Israel remember the Transgression of those Sinners God cannot abide to be forgotten and they are worthily made Examples that will not be warned to take them Alterius perditio tua fit cautio And Foelix quem facium aliena pericula cautum N.B. The second Captain deservedly perish'd by fire who took no warning by the so perishing of the first 2 King 1.10 11. as being more impudent and obstinate than the former the third was wiser ver 13. 5. Not only the Israelites in general but also all the Levites in particular save Aaron's Sons only are counted strangers in
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
Beasts to satisfie their Lusts c. Thus here 't is said Israel bowed down to their Gods ver 2. call'd shame Hos 9.10 These two Sins met together in one Act as oft do Vice and Impudence The Seventh Remark is Men may go far towards Heaven and have many deliverances in their way yet fall foully into heinous Sins to provoke God so as to make them fall short of Heaven Oh stand and wonder that Israel should be thus left of God to themselves in sinning those two heinous Sins when upon the very borders of Canaan their Preservation for forty Years was but a Reservation for this present and worst Judgment Thus those double Sinners of Israel Idolaters and Adulterers whom God had guided through the Wilderness for forty Years who had seen God's wonderful Works all along and felt his Punishments both for their own and their Fathers Sins and who were delivered from many Enemies round about and now ready to enter the Promised Land a Type of the heavenly Canaan yet now abiding in Abel-Shittim their last Station they provoked the Lord to anger ver 3. and the Plague broke in upon them Psal 106.29 which cut them off and so prevented them of entring Canaan Heb. 3.16 17 18 19. The Eighth Remark is Man 's sinful self is his worst Enemy Though the Devil be the greatest yet our own wicked Hearts are the worst Adversary Neither Balaam nor his Master Beelzebub could by any means bring Israel under the Wrath and Curse of God hitherto by any Inchantments or otherwise yet when the Temptation of Satan met with and drew out the Corruption of those wicked Israelites through the Pestilent Counsel of Balaam then did they take Fire and fell into those aforesaid soul Sins which by their own default brought them both under the Wrath and Curse of God by their own Corruption The second Part now follows namely the Removing of this Impediment or stumbling block which was twofold 1. Either mediately by Man is Justice excecuted And 2. Immediately by God himself in the Plague 1. The principal Men that were Ring-leaders in the Transgression were in the General sentenced to be hanged by the Judges of Israel who had not defiled themselves 2. Zimri a Captain in particular was slain by Phinehas The First Remark from hence is Though Moab and Midian with their Daughters were the main beginners of this abominable Mischief yet God first beginneth to punish and purge his Church for God begins at his Sanctuary Ezek. 9.6 and his Judgments must begin at the House of God 1 Pet. 4.17 notwithstanding they do not end there The Midianites must not expect to pass unpunished for God gives Order to destroy them ver 17. and Chap. 31.2 the Reasons why they and not the Moabites do follow upon ver 17. for they were chief in the Mischief The Second Remark is The greatest Grandees of the World ought not to be exempted from the stroke of Justice for 't is said here to the Judges of Israel Hang up those Heads or Princes of the People ver 5. their greatness and Grandeur shall not bear them out or protect them Potentes potenter torquebuntur Chief Men shall have chief Torments They shall die the accursed Death as Hanging was Deut. 21.23 those dissolute Chieftains brought this curse upon themselves and as they had sinned publickly so they suffered publickly before the Lord in the Face of the Sun so for ever to be remembred Mic. 6.5 The Third Remark is When Impartial Justice is executed upon Sinners gentle or simple to the Extirpation of Sin out of Church and State then the fierce anger of the Lord is turned away from that People God is a God of such pure Eyes as he cannot look upon Sin but he must loath it He cannot behold it but he must punish it Hab. 1.13 and to do Justice and Judgment without partiality is more acceptable to the Lord than Sacrifice Prov. 21.3 Especially upon Delinquent Princes who Sin with a thousand Hands as they are publick looking-glasses for People to dress themselves by Regis ad exemplum totus componitur Orbis The Fourth Remark from ver 6. Prince Zimri had surely hatch'd his Heart over with the highest Impudence of Hell who was so brazen-Browed as not to be Content with the common People to commit Fornication without the Camp or Tents of Israel but he Bo va Jak●èb el Achau eth hammidianith Hebr. brought his Whore Chozbi into the Camp among his Brethren not only to incite them to the like lustful Lasciviousness but also daringly to outface God himself who walk'd in the midst of the Camp Deut. 23.14 with his notorious Fornication void of all shame to be seen in the Act both by God and Men. The Fifth Remark is Zimri's wicked Act is aggravated also with other notorious Circumstances that he a Prince who should have shewn a better Pattern to the People dared to commit this lewd filthiness among his People while they were bewailing the sad Judgment of the Pestilence now raging among them ver 6. so that his sinning with such an high Hand shewed his Contempt not only of Moses and the Congregation but of God himself and his Judgments and so of all Religion yea and with a profligate purpose as some say to stir up the People to an open Rebellion The Sixth Remark is The extraordinary Motion that came upon Phinehas to perform that Heroick Act of executing Justice upon those filthy Sinners in the sight of Moses and of the Congregation weeping for the Sin and Punishment in the matter of Baal peor ver 3. they were taken as the Adulteress Joh. 8.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in ipso furandi Actu in the very Act of Theft This Fact of Phinehas ver 1. who was but a Priest's Son and no ordinary Magistrate and not proceeding judicially with those Malefactors but thrusting a Prince of Israel and a Princess of Midian through their Bodies with his Javelin so suddenly giving them no Time for Repentance may seem blame-worthy in the Eyes of Men but this was done by no private Authority of Phinehas but either by the appointment of Moses ver 5. in whose sight the Sin was committed ver 6. or by an extraordinary Motion of the Holy Spirit as Ehud's Case was in the slaying of Eglon and therefore not to be made any Rule of Practice c. The Seventh Remark is That this famous Fact of Phinehas his Justice in slaying those two infamous Sinners even in the midst of the flagrancy of both their Lusts might not be misjudged by any Man afterwards therefore God himself both justifieth and rewardeth it here ver 11 12 13. as an Holy Work done by the Motion of his Holy Spirit and for a farther Divine Testimony of the Vindication of Phinehas's Fact God withdrew his destroying Plague upon it from the People ver 8. The Eighth Remark is Twenty and four thousand died notwithstanding before the Plague was stayed namely all the
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
which they desired to over homeward they cryed Sibboleth and could not pro●ounce the Word with its Aspiration so their Dialect discover'd them and expos'd them to the Slaughter N. B. Jephtah might have offered many Hebrew words that had sh double in them a Shomesh the Sun Shelishah Three or Sha●shelch a Chain c. in signification but the word proposed was Shiboleth because saith Dr. Lightfoot of the present occasion for the word signifies a Stream and the Ephraimites denying themselves to be of Ephraim having a wicked Principle of Liberty to Lye rather than to Die are required to call the Stream which they would have Waded thorough to Mount Ephraim by the right name and they could not name it aright with a breathing Pronounciation like the French that cannot pronounce Aspirates but call Third a Tird Therefore seeing those Fuguives a Name they had branded Jephtah with could not breath a-right are slain and must breath no more c. N. B. Not●well How many discover themselves to be Naughty by their Lisping Language in Religious Matters speaking the language of Ashdod Nehm 13.24 Their Speech doth bewray them as Matth. 26.73 By our words we shall be justified or condemned c. Matth. 12.36.37 The Third Remark upon the second part of this Twelfth Chapter is The Successors of Jephtah who after his two famous Victories Foreign and Domestick in his six Years of Judgeship then died and was succeeded First By Ibzan ver 7 8.9 10. He Judged Israel Seven years in peaceable times as did his two Successors after him and therefore nothing of special note acted against Forreign or Domeslick Enemies is Recorded of them in the time of their Judgeship save only that this Judge Ibzan was Renowned both for the Number and for the Equality of the number of his Sons and Daughters having Thirty of each whereby he linked himself into a large Affinity and so was much strengthened in his Government According to the Duty of a good Father he sent his Daughters out of his Family abroad where he had found fit Matches for them all and he took Thirty Daughters out of other Families to be Wives for his Thirty Sons and so to live with them in their Father's Family And N. B. Thus on both hands the Husband went not to the Wife but the Wife ment to the Husband as to her Lord and Head N. B. And thus likewise the Man misseth his Rib so maketh out to recover it and the Woman made of the Rib taken out of Man's side inclineth to be in her old place again under the Man's Arm or Wing therefore an Husband is call'd a Rest for the Woman Ruth 3.1 And hence arises that Natural Propensity in most People to a Marriage Vnion both in Males and in Females of Mankind in all Ages c. Secondly The next Successor was Edon of whom nothing is recorded save that he Judged Israel Ten Years ver 11 12. maintaining the purity of God's true Worship and administring Justice among the People in those peaceable times and therefore is he thought worthy to be reckon'd among the Judges not Dying in his Iniquity for not having done good among his People Ezek. 18.18 N. B. Only Samson's Birth is supposed to be about the beginning of Elon's Judgeship God then being about to raise up a Remedy against Israel's Malady by the Oppressing Philistines whose Forty Years Oppression of Israel probably began about this time And Thirdly After Ibzan the Tenth Judge and after Elon the Eleventh Judge succeeds Abdon the Twelth Judge who Judged Israel Eight Years ver 13 14 15. where he hath a most Renowned Character for his Numerous Sons and Nephews the Noble Number of Seventy N. B. Enow to make up a whole Sanhedrim and himself the Judge These are all said to ride upon Seventy Ass-Colts to set forth their Gallantry and Grandeur which at least argueth that this Abdon was a Man both of a vast Estate and of a most high Honour in whom the Ephraimites himself being of Ephraim began to recover themselves from that low Estate into which they had been reduced by Jephtah c. So Joseph's Glory shone forth again in him as it had done in Joshua c. Judges CHAP. XIII JUdges the Thirteenth holds forth the Nutivity of Samson in the Circumstances Antecedents and Consequents First The Antecedents affords those Remarks As First The Angel's Apparition the first and second time The first time was when God had again sold Israel for their new Apostacy and Idolatry into the hands of the Philistines for Forty Years ver 1. N. B. There be two Opinions when those Forty Years began Some say First That they began about the Fifth Year of Ibzan because 't is said here that Israel was under the power of the Philistines at Samson's Birth ver 5. So that the first Twenty Years is supposed to begin soon after Jephtah's Death and the great Slaughter that Jephtah had made upon Ephraim which Tribe was look'd upon as the Chief Bulwork of Israel might well encourage the Philistines to make Incursions into their Countrey of Cannan and give the computation of the first Twenty Years Oppressing Israel and then the second Twenty is the exact term of Samson's Judgeship Judg. 15.20 But. The Second Opinion begins the first Twenty of the Forty at Samson's first Year and carries on the second Twenty downward to those that succeeded him as Eli and Samuel and that for those Reasons N. B. The First is These over-Numbers are always computed under the following Judges who delivered the People from their Oppressions The Second Reason is This Apostacy of Israel which caused God to deliver them into the Philistines hands must be after the Death of Abdon seeing 't is set down so expresly in the Text that after his Death Israel sinned again c. ver 1. The Third Reason is It doth not appear that Israel fell into Idolatry during the three last Judges but lived in a profound Peace as above for we read not either of any Oppressions by their Enemies or of any Deliverances from their Oppressors in any of these Therelast Judges times The Last Reason is It is plainly apparent that Israel was under the Oppression of the Philistines a great part of that time wherein Eli Judged Israel even until after his Death that Samuel succeeded him 1 Sam. 7.9 10 11 12. Whether of those Two Opinions be most certain I shall not determine but leave it to the Judicious Reader N. B. However this I dare confidently affirm That the Sin of Israel whenever it began to break forth to cause this Calamity by the Philistines was a most grievous Eye-sore to a most Gracious God who had now deliver'd them out of the hands of their Oppressours five several times already under the Government of the Judges If any sin be an Eye-sore to that God who is of pure Eyes and cannot behold Iniquity Hab. 1.13 who cannot look upon it but he must loath it who
Apostatiz'd Vzziah's unsoundness is described 2 Chron 26.5 he sought God while he took for his Tutor that holy Seer Zachariah whom Hierome calls the Son of Zachariah the Son of Jehoiada whom Joash stoned As long as Uzziah sought the Lord God made him to prosper ver 6 7. to ver 16. But when he was strong God marvelously helping him until he was mounted up to the very Pinacle of Power by his Victories abroad ver 7 8. and by his Grandure at home with his Mathematical Engines c. ver 9 10 15. his Pride now budded to his Downfal Remark the Third When God had handed this Vzziah thus high then began he to fall and to serve God as we say a slippery Trick Ambition and Avarice saith Gattaker became the accompanying pests of his power Hitherto this Hypocrite had only God's Person in admiration as 't is said Jude ver 16. for his own advantage when he had what he would then starts he aside like a broken bow Hos 7.16 as Rehoboam had done before him 2 Chron. 12.1 then began Vzziah to abuse his great power in Acts of Pride and Presumption his Prosperity had intoxicated him Prov. 1.32 he profanely invades the Priests sacred Office ver 16. as if he aspir'd to be Jack of all Trades for 't is said he was a Warrior a Sheep-master and a lover of Husbandry c. ver 10. and now the King will play the Priest also Remark the Fourth Vzziah is rebuked for his Arrogancy and Impudency in taking the golden Censure in order to burn Incense ver 17 18 19 c. Mark 1. God's High-Priest rebukes him telling him That Kings ought not to usurp an Office that appertains not to them N. B. This teaches Ministers must be Men of Courage to withstand the Torrent of Vices and not spare the greatest if need as Nathan did not spare David and John Baptist Herod c. Mark 2. Vzziah was wroth with the Priests as Asa had been with the Prophet 2 Chron. 16.10 both looking upon it as too sawcy an Affront for Subjects to withstand their Sovereigns though modestly managed and not by force Mark 3. Vzziah's wrath against the Priests did the more incense God's wrath against him God smote him with Leprosie taking his Servants part against him as Num. 12.10 Mark 4. When God had thus spit in his Face he needed no thrusting out by Violence but hastens out of his own voluntary will for fear of a farther mischief saith Grotius And no wonder if he were affrighted out seeing as Josephus c. say that terrible Earthquake c. Amos 1.1 Zech. 14.5 fell out at that very time Remark the Fifth The following punishment of his presumptuous Usurpation was two-fold First in his Life and Second at his Death Mark 1. God's Law saith A stranger that approaches the Priest's Office shall be put to Death Numb 3.10 and 18.7 Now is Leprous Uzziah little better than dead for he was not only excluded from all Temple-service but also from all humane Society ver 21. Mark 2. God would have this Leprosie to be incurable that he might live and die so Osiander observes excellently from hence That Vzziah by coveting and compassing the Honour of the Priesthood doth lose his Royal Dignity yea the Privilege of every private Person that were not Lepers who might be admitted into the Temple to God's Worship from which he had wilfully excluded himself ver 20 21. Mark 3. Nor was this all the Punishment he had pull'd upon his own Head by his Presumption in his life-time for by pressing farther into God's House than he should He deprived himself of that Liberty which before He had nor may He live in the City but only in the Suburbs and when He died He must not have that honourable Funeral as the Kings His Fore-Fathers had for they said He is a Leper ver 23. N. B. Here 1. the Note of a learned Commentator saying Let Day-preachers look to it and learn Wisdom from this just Judgment of God upon Vzziah for Usurping what belong'd not to him N. B. His Leprosie is said to arise as a Vapour out of the stirred Ashes of the Incense-Altar ver 19. Thus God wrote his Sin upon his Punishment N. B. And though such presumptuous Persons be not presently punish'd some mens Sins go before to Judgment and some follow after 1 Tim. 5.24 yet know God will maintain his own Order ordained by himself both in Church and State and sooner or later will take an Order with such as violate his Ordination Alterius perditio tua fit cantio Vzziah here is Recorded for our Caution not for our Imitation N. B. 2. Learn hence a cogent Argument against the Arminian Notion of a true Believer's total and final Fall here is an exemplification As Vzziah while he lived thus excluded from Church and State by his Leprosie had indeed lost his jus Aptitudinale his Right of Capacity for his Crown and Kingdom but he did not lose his Jus Haereditarium or Hereditary Right for his Son Jotham was only his Vice-Roy managing all State-Matters in his Father's Name until his Death So a Believer by falling into an Act of Sin loseth his present fitness for Heaven but still his Hereditary Right is not lost thereby as David by his foul sin had not sin'd away his Right to Salvation he had only lost the present Joy of Salvation which he so earnestly begs of God to restore to him Psal 51.12 But mark more of this in my Antidote against Arminianism in their five grand Points Remark the Sixth There had been Prophets before this time continually but none left their Prophecies in writing behind them yet now ariseth a company of Prophets that do so For Vzziah Reigned 52 Years in which long Reign we read of First Isaiah the Prophet's writing the Acts of Uzziah 2 Chron. 26.22 which Junius saith he did partly in the Book of Kings and partly in his own Prophecy as Isa 6.1 c. where he saw the Glory of Christ in the Temple John 12.41 and filling the Temple with smoak to betoken the burning of it because the Jews began more and more at that time to fall into a state of Obduration whereof Isaiah treats in his five first Chapters especially Isa 1.10 and 5.1 2 3. c. and again Isa 14.29 the Prophet saith Out of the Serpent's Root shall come forth a Cockatrice and his Fruit shall be a fiery flying Serpent the Sence is The Philistims rejoiced at Vzziah's Death because he had sorely smote them 2 Chron. 26.6 7. but now was become a broken Rod yet the Prophet Prophesies that Hezekiah should arise out of that Root and be as a Serpent to sting them worse than ever his Grandfather had done The Second Prophet in the days of Vzziah was Hosea Chap. 1.1 timed as Isa 1.1 whose expression was Blood touches blood Hos 4.2 which relates to the Murder of Zocharias the Son of Jehoiada whereby they made their measure
cadere aut non cadere 't was possible to fall or not to fall This makes all those that are nigh their Father Ps 148 14. to become Princes in all Lands Ps 45.16 Isa 49.23 N. B. Note well 3. Oh what bottomless and boundless Bowels of Divine Love do yearn here over lost and naked Man when our Heavenly Father cries here bring forth the best Robe as if he had said if I had one Blessing better than another he shall have it who thinks himself less than the least of them Gen. 32.10 Moses saw the People naked and cries for Vengeance Exod. 32.25 26. but our Messiah here called for the best Robe c. N. B. Note well 4. The Dimensions or Quantity of this Royal Robe which are three Longitude Latitude and Profundity 't is a long broad and thick Robe 1. 't is long even down to the foot as Revel 1 13 not like those that reached to the Buttocks only 2 Sam. 10.4 Alas as the feet of Christ's Mystical body stands in need of washing John 13.10 So they have need of covering with Christ's Skirts that the nakedness of so much as a little Toe appear not Rev. 16 15. As Shem and Japhet are highly commanded for taking a Garment upon their shoulders and going backward to cover their Fathers Nakedness c. Gen. 9.23 So and much more than so did our Redeemer commend his love to naked Mankind when he went backward from that glory he had before with the Father John 17.5 to come down and cover our nakedness The shaddow of the Firmament Sun went backward ten Degrees upon Ahaz's Dyal as a Token of Hezekiahs Recovery from sickness Isa 38.7 8. and accordingly the shadow of the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 went backward more than ten Thousand Degrees for a sign of Mankinds Recovery from Death The 2. Dimension it was a large wide or broad Robe as broad as Gods Commandment against which Man sinneth was broad that is exceeding broad Ps 119.96 and this Robe is as broad as Mans sin is against Gods broad Commandment Though Mans sin be so broad as to reach from Earth to Heaven upward yet this Robe of Christs Righteousness is higher than the Heavens Hebr. 7.26 and though Mans sin reach from Eas● to West in a traverse Line and Circumference flatward yet this Robe is broader than it Ps 103.11.12 13. Petcata non Redeunt in Justisicatis saith the Mazim in Divinity as the East is so far remote from the West that these two can never meet together so long as the World lasteth even so the pardoned fins of Justified Persons can never return upon them any more Isa 43.25 Alas our Righteousness is a covering that is narrower than to wrap our selves in it Isa 28.20 't is but a fig-leaf Apron covering Gen. 3.7 which slenderly enough doth but cover the nakedness of the lower part of the body only and not comparable to those lasting Coats of skins wherewith the Lord Clothed our first Parents Gen. 3.21 which signified both the fleece and the skin of the Lamb of God and which covereth the whole Man There is plenteous Redemption in Chrise Ps 130.7 The Salve and Plaster is broad enough for the Sore it covers the broad Commandment of God which breaths out Curses where it is not covered as the Mercy-Seat covered the Cursing-Tables of the Law Exod. 25.21 This Robe is like the precious Oyntment that was upon Aarons Head and ran down to his Feet anointing the very skirts of his Garments Ps 133.2 yea this Robe is broad enough to cover the sins not only of the worst of sinners such as of Manasseh in the Old Testament and off Mary Magdaden in the New● but also to cover the sins of all Nations hereupon Christ said go ye into the World and Preach the Gospel unto every Humane Creature Mark 16.15 into all Nations Matth. 28.19 Therefore is it Recorded by Jonah how this Robe of Divine Mercy reached even to Nineveh it self which was a Pagan City built by a wicked brood of cursed Cham and Inhabited by as wicked a crew at that time when free grace found them N. B. Note well Though there be no Robe of Gospel-grace to cover the finally impenitent the thundering and the threatning Law is all and only their Due and Doom 1 Tim. 1.9 10. As against Righteous ones there is no Law so for such wicked ones there is no Gospel But if thou be one that Trembles at Gods Word and bethinks thy self 1 Kin. 10.47 and ver 17. here then God hath a look of love for thee Isa 66.2 though thou hast been one of the chiefest of sinners yet if truly penitent thou shalt find Mercy 1 Tim. 1.11 12 13 14 15. 'T is a Faithful saying Christ hath a piece of his Robe wherewith to cover thy naked Soul the Oyl of his grace runs down the skirts the very Toes of his Mystical Body thou may touch his Hem and be healed Mat. 9.20 21. The 3. Dimension of this Royal Robe is it is thick enough to keep that Soul warm which is Cloathed with it for how can any Soul be cold when it is cloathed with the Sun it self Revel 12.1 If any professor wax wanton and will be Summering too soon in the thin Garment of his own supposed Righteousness he will assuredly catch Cold and without Repentance fall into a Consumption and perish for ever but this profoundly thick Garment of Christs Righteousness can keep us from all danger of Cold Rain Winds and Tempests If we put on the Lord Jesus Christ Rom. 13.14 He will then be to us a Refuge from the Storm a shadow from the Heat as well as from the Cold when the blast of the Terrible ones is as a storm against our Walls Isa 25.4 In this Lord Jehovah is everlasting safety Isa 26.4 This God-man shall be our peace Mic. 5.5 and shall be our hiding-place from the wind and a Covert from the storm and as the shadow of a great Rock in a weary land Isa 32.2 yea this Robe is so thick that none of Satans fiery Darts can pierce through it when we are Armed with this Breast-plate of Righteousness and with the Shield of Faith c. Eph. 6.14 16. In this whole Armour of God then are we Cannon proof c. we may then trample under foot the Adder and the Dragon c. Ps 91.13 Such may take up Serpents or drink deadly Potions and shall not be damaged by them Mark 16.18 Nay yet higher This Robe is so thick that the wrath of the great God cannot penetrate it for there it stays sticks and is fully satisfied when the Travel of Christs Soul appeareth for Justification Isa 53.11 where an angry God sees the Door-posts of any Heart or House be sprinkled with the blood of the Paschal Lamb he then saith when I see the blood then I will pass over you and the Plague shall not break in to destroy you Exod. 12.7 13. And that House or
Draught thereof never Thirst any more after any of the Vanities of the World or Villanies of Sin 4. He Thirsted that we may Drink better Drink as we do daily c. The 6th Of the last words of Christ upon the Cross was It is Finished when Jesus therefore had received the Vinegar he said it is finished John 19.30 Then had he no more work to do or Suffer not to Descend into Hell either in Soul or in Body as some Romanists say As the Vinegar was the last bitter Dose he received from the wicked Hands of those Villains So the Receit thereof was the last bitter part of his Unparallel'd Passion The first time of their offering him Vinegar before he was Nailed to the Cross he received it not but only Tasted thereof and did not drink it up for he left the rest wherein his Redeemed must pledge him of the same bitter Cup filling up the measure of the Afflictions of Christ Col. 1.24 but here he drinks all off to shew that he took the whole Curse for Sin into himself so that now N.B. Note well our Sufferings by Afflictions for our Sinnings against God come not in the Nature of a Curse but of a Cure They are more Medicinal than Penal and there is rather a Spiritual Remedy than any Divine Vengeance now in them they come now all out of Divine Faithfulness as David saith I know that out of thy very Faithfulness thou O God doth Afflict me Psal 119.75 As if he had said Lord thou wouldst not be Faithful to my Soul unless thou hadst thus and thus Afflicted my Body The ground of our being Afflicted is now offended love and the end thereof is fuller Embracements Jer. 31 18.20 All our Sorrows and Sufferings as they come to us through the Sufferings of Christ as through a Colature Sile or Strainer they leave the Curse behind them there our Dear Redeemer drank up all that Vinegar leaving none of it for us it was our Saviour solely that fully satisfied God's Justice for Man's Sins by his Meritorious and Mediatory Sufferings and left not the least part thereof unsatisfied for us to satisfie by any Sufferings of ours The Lord looked upon the Travel of his Soul and was satisfied with all our Souls Isa 53.11 N. B. Note well So that if Inquiry be made what must be the Antecedent to this Relative It in this saying of our Dying Saviour it is finished the Answer in general must be that full Satisfaction to God's Justice for Man's sin was now fully satisfied when our Redeemer received this last bitter Potion of the Vinegar all the parts of his unparallel'd Passion were now Accomplished save only his commending his Spirit into his Father's Hands he had nothing now to do but to Die and to give up the Ghost N. B. Note well But more particularly what is said to be finished here must have a beginning and an Intervening midle as well as end or finishing Now the beginning of Christ's Passion was at the beginning of his Incarnation when he Divested himself of that Divine Glory which he had with the Father before the World was John 17.5 and puts on him the the Form of a Servant Phil. 2.6 7. in his Humane Nature and the Intervening Midle from his Cradle to his Cross was a continued Series of Suffering all his Life long both in the Private and in the Publick part thereof his whole life was indeed as is above said but a lingring Death he was designed by bloody Herod to Die so soon as he began to Live and this Diabolical design for Destroying him was carryed on uncessantly by the Scribes Pharisees and Priests even all his Days But now when his Hour was come for Finishing his Passion behold the Man how many little Deaths he endured in his Agony Buffetings Scourgings Mockings c. before he came to Die that worst of Deaths even the Death of the Cross N. B. Note well Behold how Commensurate was the Second Adam's Passion to the First Adam's Transgression Adam had sinned in Paradise the most pleasant place in the World and his sin consisted in seeing the loveliness of the forbidden Fruit in his Touching and Tasting it for the Eating of which he was Derided by God with an Holy Derision Gen. 3.22 't is an Ironical Irrision Man is become as one of us for his vain Affectation of Aspiring unto a Deity What God speaks there Laughing we all should always Read with Weeping for Hinc Illae lacrimae from hence sprung in all Misery and Mischief upon Mankind this foul Fact of his Eating Forbidden Fruit plainly opens Pandora's Box as the Poets feign from Moses's Pentateuch and pulled up the Sluce to let in an Inundation of Sin and Misery and all Evils to fly out upon us N. B. Note well Behold how the Circumstances of Christ's Suffering do wonderfully Correspond and carry an Accommodated contrary proportion proportionable in those points to Adam's sinning As 1. His place of sinning was the best place even Paradise so Christ's place of Suffering was the worst place in the World even Calvary call'd so from Calvus or Bald-pate 2 Kin. 2.23 24. This Calvary or Golgotha was a place of Skulls such as were Bald all the Hair being rotted off a stinking place for our Sweet Saviour to Suffer in 2. As Adam sinned by seeing the lovely look of the Forbidden Fruit Gen. 3.6 So our Saviour suffered by seeing this sad Spectacle of such an Heap of Bald Skulls No doubt but his Tender Heart was much Afflicted with beholding so doleful a sight seeing such a Slaughter of Men was all made by sin 3. As Adam finned in pleasant Touching so Christ to Expiate Adam's sin was not only touched with our Infirmities Heb. 2.17 4 15. but also had the Torturing Touches of the wicked one 1 John 5.18 in his Torments upon the Cross 4. As Adam sinned in his sweet Tasting so did Christ Tast not only of the Vinegar mingled with Gall but Drank up the Second Dose thereof yea and Tasted the bitterness of Death for every Man Jew and Gentile Heb. 2.9.5 As Adam was derided for vainly affecting a Deity so Christ was mocked for saying truly he was the Son of God c. And he was mocked for many other Crimes yet doth he challenge his mockers to convince him of any sin John 8.46 besides 6. The second Adam Died in the same Day of the Week and at the same Hour of the Day as is noted before to bring Life into the World that the first Adam sinned and brought Death into it thereby The 7th and last of the seven last words or sayings of our Blessed Saviour upon the Cr●●s was Father into thy Hands I commend my Spirit Luke 23.46 This was the las● of all our Saviour's Sayings for immediately after he had so said while he was yet living under his six Hours Torments upon the Cross and having a power to lay down his Life when himself pleased John
of Murder And they took Vengeance call'd here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same with Nemesis to be a Goddess the daughter of Jove as Hesiod said that is of Jehovah and sat upon his Throne the seat of Justice c. Those rude notions were found even in the fall●n Nature without the light of the holy Scripture that notorious Miscreants and Murderers tho' they escape for a time yet are liable to the heavy stroke of Divine vengeance as those Barbarians look'd upon Paul as some Murderer because they saw him in chains and now the Viper must dispatch him in a way of Justice N.B. All this shews that even blind Nature her self will not be blinded nor blind-folded so far as to a total expunging of that mighty Maxim out of man's mind namely that though wicked men may be as wicked as they will and harden their own hearts for a time against all fear of punishment from a Sin-revenging God yet vengeance will overtake them at last therefore did those Barbarians look when Paul should have swollen with the Viper's venom fallen down dead among them verse 6. This their Expectation made the miracle of Paul's preservation the more manifest Tho' this people had some right but still rude notions of Divine vengeance yet were they under a three fold Mistake 1. In confining the punishments of wicked men wholly to this Life 2. In judging of Mens states by outward Events And 3. In being too hasly in censuring before they saw the final issue Hereupon arose their rash Judgment upon Paul according to the common custom of the world which judge all that they see afflicted to be notoriously wicked N.B. But oh How the God of Nature had chained up Nature and muzzl'd up the mouth of this Venemous Beast from biting Paul as God had done the Lions from devouring Daniel in the Den of Lions Paul shakes the Viper off into the fire from whence it came without any harm was then burnt in it When the Barbarians saw this Miraculous deliverance then deem'd they him a God whom they had deem'd a Devil The sixth Remark is The most wise God would never permit any evil to be unless he knew how to produce some great good out of every evil As here this Viper came not by chance upon Paul's hand but it was directed thither by a secret Divine Providence for making Paul the poor contemptible Prisoner still more famous as a Prophet of God upon the Land as before he had been upon the Sea in foretelling what would befal them by that direful Storm N.B. When all the spectators behold Paul shake the venemous Beast from off his hand into the fire and that with so much confidence and without the least detriment they must rationally be very much moved with Admiraration observing how the natural property of that venemous Viper was so marvelously restrained by an invisible over-ruling power of God for Paul's preservation Hereby God magnified his Minister of the Gospel performing the promises recorded Mark 16.18 and Luke 10.19 and Psal 91.13 even according to the literal sense of them No Serpent could hurt him because saith Oecumenius sin had not softened his flesh to make it penetrable to the Viper's teeth or rather because Natural Agents cannot act or exert their Natural Powers without the concourse and concurrence of supernatural Providence And this new Miracle in suspending the Divine Concourse God was pleased to work both for the confirmation of Paul's Authority of a Prophet among his own shipwrack'd Companions and also for the better preparation of those poor Barbarians to receive the Gospel by Paul's Preaching to them N.B. Thus as the skilful Apothecary doth make out of the Flesh of this very venemous Beast the Viper that most wholsom Theriacle which we for shortness call Treacle so named from this very name Therion here Acts 28.4 Even so and much more than so doth the Lord here make this Soveraign Treacle aforesaid out of this very Viper which fastened upon Paul's hands If sorry Man can extract an excellent Antidote out of the rankest Poison how much more can the most wise God draw forth the greatest good out of the greatest evil as he did out of the Fall of the first Adam and out of the Death of the second Adam c. If Man had not sinned God had not died c. N.B. And would to God we could learn to shake off Satan's Temptations from off our hearts as Paul did this Viper from off his hands never to return more as is the common Opinion that after this Miracle this Malta was ever freed from all poysonous Creatures as is our Ireland c. No venemous Animal can live upon Irish Earth or in Irish Air c. However let us thus shake off all slanders cast on us thus or at least make Treacle a good use of them The seventh Remark is God will honour his Gospel and the Ministers of it in despite of evil men who despise both it and them As God moved those Barbarians to change their minds when they saw Paul's first Miracle of shaking off the Viper without harm from her venom which is alway deadly especially in those Hot Countreys and to repute him such a God as Hercules was who killed a Serpent in his Cradle and whom the Inhabitants of this Malta worshipp'd N.B. Thus Paul had been Deified before for his Miracle of healing a Cripple Acts 14.11 tho' there they soon changed their minds quite contrary to those here in stoning him after for a Devil in the shape of a Man Those Islanders were of a better Behaviour tho' Barbarians toward him which they largely testified at his farewel from them verse 10. as well as while he abode amongst them for the three Winter Months in Malta in which time and place he wrought more Miracles and was honoured with more Honours beside that Honour of the People Publius the publick Magistrate of Malta set over the Island by the Romans must honour Paul with Entertainment and for his sake all his shipwrack'd Companions he thought it not below him but rather an honour to himself to treat a Reputed God from whom he might expect probably some favour for his Aged Father who was then grievously tormented with the Gripes the Tormina or Torture whereof had forced the Old Man into a Fever therefore doth Publius not only prepare Room enough in his Pallace for harbouring Paul and two hundred seventy six persons with him who all even the Captain whose Prisoner he was fared better for him but he also brings Paul to pray for his sick Father who was through God's hearing his prayer perfectly cured thereby verse 7 8. Nor was this all the Honour which God graced his Servant Paul with in this second Miracle also but he must work more Miracles for the People as well as for their Prince in his Old Father verse 9. The eighth Remark is God's care and providence over his pious and painful Servants