Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n aaron_n fire_n likely_a 30 3 11.2840 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A55363 Annotations upon the Holy Bible. Vol. I wherein the sacred text is inserted, and various readings annex'd, together with parallel scriptures, the more difficult terms in each verse are explained, seeming contradictions reconciled, questions and doubts resolved, and the whole text opened / by the late reverend and learned divine Mr. Matthew Poole. Poole, Matthew, 1624-1679. 1683 (1683) Wing P2820; ESTC R39678 6,571,344 1,258

There are 18 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the congregation to minister unto them a i. e. In their stead and for their good So they were the servants both of God and of the Church which was an high dignity though not sufficient for their ambitious minds 10 And he hath brought thee near to him and all thy brethren the sons of Levi with thee and seek ye the priesthood also b There being at this time but very few Priests and the profits and priviledges belonging to them being many and great they thought it but fit and reasonable that they or some of the chief of them should be admitted to a share in their work and advantages 11 For which cause both thou and all thy company are gathered together against the LORD c Whose minister and chosen servant Aaron is You strike at God through Aarons sides Compare 1 Sam. 8. 7. Luk. 10. 16. Ioh. 13. 20. and what is Aaron that ye murmure against him 12 And Moses sent to call Dathan and Abiram d To treat with them and give them as he had done Korah and his company a timely admonition the sons of Eliab which said e Unto the messengers sent to them by Moses We will not come up f To Moses his Tabernacle whither the people used to go up for judgment Men are said in Scripture phrase to go up to places of judgment See Deut. 25. 7. Ruth 4. 1. Ezra 10. 7 8. But because they would not now go up therefore they went down quick into the pit ver 33. 13 Is it a small thing that thou hast brought us up out of a land that floweth with milk and honey g i. e. Out of Egypt a place indeed of great plenty b●… to them a place of torment and intolerable slavery They invidiously and scoffingly use the same words wherewith God by Moses commended the land of Canaan to kill us in the wilderness 〈◊〉 make thy self altogether a prince over us 14 Moreover thou hast not brought us into a land that floweth with milk and honey or given us inheritance of fields and vineyards wilt thou † Heb. ●…re out put out the eyes of these men h i. e. Of those who are confederate with us and of all the people who are of our mind Whilst thou make them blind or perswade them that they are blind and that they do not see what is visible to all that have eyes to wit that thou hast deceived them and broken thy faith and promise given to them or wilst thou lead them about like blind men whither thou pleasest one time towards Canaan another time toward Egypt again we will not come up i We will not obey thy summons nor own thy authority 15 And Moses was very wroth k Not so much for his own sake for he had learnt to bear indignities Numb 12. as for Gods sake who was highly dishonoured blasphemed and provoked by these speeches and carriages in which case he ought to be angry as Christ was Mark 3. 5. and said unto the LORD * Gen. 4. 4 5. Respect not thou their offering l i. e. Accept not their incense which they are now going to offer but shew some eminent dislike of it He calls it their offering though it was offered by Korah and his companions because it was offered in the name and by the consent of all the conspiratours for the decision of the present controversie between them and Moses I * Acts 20. 33. have not taken one ass m i. e. Not any thing of the smallest value as an ass was See 1 Sam. 12. 3. from them neither have I hurt one of them n I have never injured them nor used my power to defraud or oppress them as I might have done but which is here implied I have done them many good offices but no hurt therefore their crime is inexcusable because without any cause or provocation on my part 16 And Moses said unto Korah Be thou and all thy company before the LORD o Not in the Tabernacle which was not capable of so many person severally offering incense but at the door of the Tabernacle ver 18. which place is oft said to be before the Lord as Exod. 29. 42. Levit. 1. 11. c. where they might now lawfully offer it by Moses his direction upon this extraordinary occasion and necessity because this work could not be done in that place which alone was allowed for the offering up of incense not onely for its smallness but also because none but Priests might enter to do this work Here also the people who were to be instructed by this experiment might see the proof and success of it thou and they and Aaron to morrow 17 And take every man his censer and put incense in them and bring ye before the LORD every man his censer two hundred and fifty censers thou also and Aaron each of you his censer 18 And they took every man his censer p Which they could easily make in a sleight manner which would suffice for the present purpose and put fire in them q Taken from the Altar which stood in that place Levit. 1. 3 5. for Aaron might not use other fire Levit. 10. 1. And it is likely the remembrance of the death of Nadab and Abihu deterred them from offering any strange fire and laid incense thereon and stood in the door of the tabernacle of the congregation with Moses and Aaron 19 And Korah gathered all the congregation r That they might be witnesses of the event and upon their success which they doubted not of might fall upon Moses and Aaron with popular rage and destroy them And it seems by this that the people were generally incensed against Moses and inclined to Korahs side against them unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation and the glory of the LORD appeared s In the cloud which then shone with greater brightness and Majesty as a token of Gods approach and presence See Exod. 16. 7 10. Levit. 9. 6 23. Numb 20. 6. unto all the congregation 20 And the LORD spake unto Moses and unto Aaron saying 21 * Gen. 19. 1●… 22. Jer. ●… ●… Rev. 18. ●… Separate your selves from among this congregation ‖ To wit Korah and his 250 men and the people whom he ●…athered against Moses and Aaron ver 19. that I may consume them in a moment 22 And they fell upon their faces and said O God * chap. 2●… ●… Job 12. 2●… Eccl. 12. ●… Isa. 57. 1●… Zach. 12. ●… Heb. 12. ●… the God of the spirits t i. e. Of souls as the word spirit in Scripture is oft used as Psal. 31. 5. and 77. 3. Prov. 17. 22. Eccl. 12. 7. Luk. 23. 46. Act. 7. 59. And this is no empty title here but very emphatical and argumentative thus Thou art the maker of spirits Zach. 12. 1. destroy not thy own workmanship
they have imagined to do 7. Go to let us m i. e. The blessed Trinity See Gen. 1. 26. go down and there confound their Language n By making them forget their former Language and by putting into their minds several Languages not a distinct Language into each person but into each Family or rather into each Nation that they may not † Heb. hear understand one anothers speech o And thereby be disenabled from that mutual commerce which was altogether necessary for the carrying on of that work 8. So the LORD scattered them abroad from thence upon the face of all the Earth p Thus they brought upon themselves the very thing they seared and that more speedily and more mischievously to themselves For now they were not only divided in place but in Language too and so were unfitted for those Consederacies and Correspondencies which they mainly designed and for the mutual Comfort and Help of one another which otherwise they might in good measure have enjoyed And they left off to build the City 9. Therefore is the Name of it called ‖ That is confusion Babel because the LORD did there confound the Language of all the Earth and from thence did the LORD scatter them abroad upon the face of all the Earth 10. * Chap. 10. 32. 1 Chron. 1. 17. These are the Generations of Shem q Not all of them as appears both from the next verse and from the former Chapter but of those who were the seminary of the Church and the Progenitors of Christ. Shem was an hundred years old and begat Arphaxad two years after the Flood 11. And Shem lived after he begat Arphaxad five hundred years r So that he lived almost all the time of Abraham which was a singular blessing both to himself who hereby saw his Children of the tenth Generation and to the Church of God which by this means enjoyed the Counsel and Conduct of so great a Patriarch and begat Sons and Daughters 12. And Arphaxad lived five and thirty years and begat Salah 13. And Arphaxad lived after he begat Salah four hundred and three years and begat Sons and Daughters 14. And Salah lived thirty years and begat Eber. 15. And Salah lived after he begat Eber four hundred and three years and begat Sons and Daughters 16. * 1 Chro. 1. 19. And Eber lived four and thirty years and begat * called Luk. 3. 35. Phalec Peleg 17. And Eber lived after he begat Peleg four hundred and thirty years s So that he was the longest liv'd of all the Patriarchs which were born after the Flood and begat Sons and Daughters 18. And Peleg lived thirty years and begat Reu. 19. And Peleg lived after he begat Reu two hundred and nine years and begat Sons and Daughters 20. And Reu lived two and thirty years and begat * Luk 3. 35. Saruch Serug 21. And Reu lived after he begat Serug two hundred and seven years and begat Sons and Daughters 22. And Serug lived thirty years and begat Nahor 23. And Serug lived after he begat Nahor two hundred years and begat Sons and Daughters 24. And Nahor t The first Patriarch who fell to Idolatry lived nine and twenty years and begat * Luk. 3. 34. Thara Terah 25. And Nahor lived after he begat Terah an hundred and nineteen years and begat Sons and Daughters 26. And Terah lived seventy years and * Josh. 24. 2. 1 Chro. 1. 26. begat u i. e. Began to beget as Gen. 5. 32 Abram x Who is first named in order of Dignity for which cause Shem is put before Ham and Iapheth and Moses before Aaron not in order of time which seems to be this Haran probably was the eldest because Nahor married his Daughters Nahor the second and Abram certainly was the youngest because Terah Abrams Father lived two hundred and five years ver 32. and Abram after his Fathers Death Acts 7. 4. went out of Haran when he was seventy five years old Gen. 12. 4 5. therefore he was not begotten in Terahs seventieth year when Terah began to beget his Sons as here is said but in his one hundred and thirtieth year and so there remains seventy five years precisely to Abrams departure And Sarai Harans Daughter was but ten years younger than Abram Gen. 17. 17. and therefore Haran was Abrams Elder Brother Nahor and Haran 27. Now these are the Generations of Terah Terah begat Abram Nahor and Haran And Haran begat Lot 28. And Haran died before his Father Terah y i. e. In the presence and during the Life of his Father in the Land of his Nativity in Ur of the Caldees 29. And Abram and Nahor took them Wives The Name of Abrams Wife was Sarai and the Name of Nahors Wife Milcah the Daughter of Haran z Such Marriages of Uncles and Nieces being permitted then Exod. 6. 20. as in the beginning of the World the Marriages of Brethren and Sisters were though afterwards the Church being very much enlarged they were severely forbidden Levit 18. 12 14. the Father of Milcah and the Father of Iscah a Who is either Sarai as the Jews and many others think or rather another person For 1. Why should Moses express Sarai thus darkly and doubtfully Had he meant her he would have added after Iscah this is Sarai according to his manner in like cases Gen. 14. 2 7. and 35. 6. He elsewhere calleth her the Daughter not of his Brother as he should have done had she been Iscah but of his Father by another Mother 30. But Sarai was barren she had no child b See Gen. 16. 1 2. and 18. 11 12. 31. And Terah took Abram his Son c See Ios. 24. 2. Nehem. 9. 7. 1 Chron. 1. 26. Being informed by his Son of the command of God he did not despise it because it came to him by the hands of his inferiour but chearfully obeyeth it and therefore he is so honourably mentioned as the Head and Governour of the Action and Lot the Son of Haran his sons son and Sarai his daughter in law his Son Abrams wife and they went forth with them † i. e. Terab and Abram went with Lot and Sar●…i as their Heads and Guides from * Neh. 9. 7. Act. 7. 4. Ur of the Caldees to go into the Land of Canaan and they came unto Haran d Called Charran Act. 7. 4. and by the Romans Carrae a place in Mesopotamia strictly so called in the way to Canaan and near to it well known by Crassus his defeat there See Gen. 24. 10. and 28. 10. and 29. 4. and dwelt e Or rested or abode being detained there for a season peradventure by Terab's disease which begun there for the next verse tells us of his death there 32. And the days of Terah were two hundred and five years and Terah died in Haran CHAP. XII 1.
the matter 10 And he said Now also let it be according unto your words he with whom it is found shall be my servant and ye shall be blameless f Thus he moderates the conditions which they proposed exempting the innocent and exchanging the deserved and offered death of the nocent into slavery 11 Then they speedily took down every man his sack to the ground and opened every man his sack 12 And he searched and began at the eldest g To take off all their suspicion of his fraud and left at the youngest and the cup h He found doubtless the money there but he accused them not about that matter both because they had an answer ready to that charge from his own mouth chap. 43. 23. and because the greater crime the stealing of the cup which Ioseph so much prized and used might seem to extinguish the less or at least cause him to neglect it was found in Benjamins sack 13 Then they rent their clothes and laded every man his asse and returned to the City i Being afraid and ashamed to go to their father without Benjamin concerning whom they had received so severe a charge and made such solemn promises and imprecations 14 And Judah and his brethren came to Josephs house for he was yet there and they fell before him on the ground 15 And Joseph said unto them What deed is this that ye have done wot ye not that such a man as I can certainly ‖ Or make trial divine 16 And Judah k Who speaks in the cause as being one of the eldest and a person of most gravity and discretion and readiness of speech and most eminently concerned for his brother said What shall we say unto my Lord what shall we speak or how shall we clear our selves God hath found out the iniquity l viz. This iniquity of which it seems some of us are guilty and God hath discovered it Or iniquity may be put for iniquities whether we are guilty of this fact or not we are certainly guilty of many other sins for which God is now punishing us to whose providence we therefore willingly submit of thy servants behold we are my Lords servants both we and he also with whom the cup is found 17 And he said God forbid that I should do so but the man in whose hand the cup is found he shall be my servant and as for you get you up in peace unto your father 18 Then Judah came near unto him m Made a little nearer approach to him that he might present his humble petiti●… to him and said O my Lord let thy servant I pray thee speak a word in my Lords ears n In thy hearing For this phrase doth not necessarily imply that he whispered in his ears as appears from Numb 14. 28. Deut. 32. 44. Iudg. 17. 2. and let not thy anger burn against thy servant for thou art even as Pharaoh o As thou representest his person so thou art invested with his Majesty and Authority and therefore thy word is a law thou canst do with us what thou pleasest either spare or punish us and therefore we do justly deprecate thine anger and most humbly intreat thy favourable audience and princely compassion to us 19 My Lord asked his servants saying have ye a father or a brother 20 And we said unto ray Lord we have a father an old man and a child of his old age a little one p So they call him comparatively to themselves who were much elder and withal to signifie the reason why he came not with them because he was young and tender and unfit for such a journey and his brother is dead and he alone is left of his mother and his father loveth him 21 And thou saidest unto thy servants Bring him down unto me that I may set mine eyes upon him q i. e. See him with my own eyes and thereby be satisfied of the truth of what you say Compare Gen. 42. 15 16. Elsewhere this phrase signifies to shew favour to a person as Ier. 39. 12. and 40. 4. But though that was Iosephs intention as yet he was minded to conceal it from them 22 And we said unto my Lord The lad cannot leave his father for if he should leave his father his father would die 23 And thou saidest unto thy servants * Chap. 43. 3. except your youngest brother come down with you you shall see my face no more r Quest. Why would Ioseph expose his father to the hazard of his life in parting with his dear child Answ. Ioseph supposed that to be but a pretence and might fear lest his brethren had disposed of Benjamin as they did of him and therefore could not bring him forth And as for his father the experience which he had of his continuance in life and health after the supposed untimely death of Ioseph gave him good assurance that his parting with Benjamin for a season and that under the care and charge of his brethren was not likely to make any dangerous impression upon him 24 And it came to pass when we came up unto thy servant my father we told him the words of my Lord. 25 And * Chap. 43. 2. our father said Go again and buy us a little food 26 And we said we cannot go down if our youngest brother be with us then will we go down for we may not see the mans face except our youngest brother be with us 27 And thy servant my father said unto us Ye know that my wife s He calleth her so by way of eminency as Gen. 46. 19. because she onely was his wife by design and choice whereas Leah was put upon him by fraud and might have been refused by him if he had so pleased and the other two were given to him by Rachel and Leah bare me two sons 28 And the one went out from me and I said * Chap. 37. 33. surely he is torn in pieces and I saw him not since 29 And if ye take this also from me and mischief befall him ye shall bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to the grave 30 Now therefore when I come to thy servant my father and the lad be not with us seeing that his life is bound up in the lads life t The death of the Child which upon this occasion he will firmly believe will unavoidably procure his death also 31 It shall come to pass when he seeth that the lad is not with us that he will die and thy servants shall bring down the gray hairs of thy servant our father with sorrow to the grave 32 For thy servant became surety for the lad unto my father saying * Chap. 43. 9. If I bring him not unto thee then I shall bear the blame to my father for ever 33 Now therefore I pray thee let thy servant abide in stead of the lad u Partly in
of the sacrifice in their hands as we find Exod. 29. 24. by that right putting them into their office and sanctifie them that they may minister unto me in the priests office 42 And thou shalt make them linen breeches to cover † Heb. flesh ●… their nakedness their nakedness from the loins even unto the thighs g Including both Compare Exod. 20. 26. they shall † Heb. ●…e reach 43 And they shall be upon Aaron and upon his sons when they come in unto the tabernacle of the congregation or when they come near unto the altar to minister in the holy place that they bear not iniquity and die It shall be a statute for ever unto him and his seed after him CHAP. XXIX 1 AND this is the thing that thou shalt do unto them to hallow them to minister unto me in the priests office * Lev. 8. 1 ●… Take one young bullock and two rams without blemish a See Exod. 12. 5. Mal. 1. 13 14. 2 And * Lev. 6. 20. unleavened b To shew that the Priests should be and that Christ really was free from all malice and hypocrisie both which are compared to leaven Luk. 12. 1. 1 Cor. 5. 8. and that all the services offered to God by the Priests were to be pure and unmixed bread and cakes unleavened tempered with oyl and wafers unleavened anointed with oil of wheaten flower shalt thou make them 3 And thou shalt put them into one basket and bring them c To the door of the Tabernacle as it follows ver 4. in the basket with the bullock and the two rams 4 And Aaron and his sons thou shalt bring unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation and shalt wash them with water d Taken out of that laver Exod. 30. 18. This signified the universal pollution of all men and the absolute need they have of washing especially when they are to draw nigh to God And this outward washing was onely typical of their spiritual washing by the blood and spirit of Christ in order to their acceptance with God 5 And thou shalt take the garments and put upon Aaron the coat and the robe of the ephod and the ephod and the breast-plate and gird him with * chap. 28. the curious girdle of the ephod e Not about the loins but about the paps or breast as Christ and his ministers are represented Rev. 1. 13. The linnen breeches are here omitted because they were put on privately before they came to the door of the Tabernacle where the other things were put on 6 And thou shalt put the mitre upon his head and put the holy crown f i. e. The plate of gold chap. 28. 36. as appears by comparing Lev. 8. 9. upon the mitre 7 Then shalt thou take the anointing * chap. 〈◊〉 oyl and pour it upon his head and anoint him g Which signified the gifts and graces of the holy ghost wherewith Christ was and the Priests ought to be replenished See Isa. 61. 1. 1 Ioh. 2. 27. But here ariseth a difficulty for this anointing is sometimes spoken of as peculiar to the High-priest as Lev. 21. 10. sometimes as common to all the Priests Exod. 30. 30. and 40. 14 15. which may be thus reconciled The oil was sprinkled upon all the Priests and their right ears thumbs and toes and their garments ver 20 21. Lev. 8. 30. but it was poured out upon the head onely of the High-priest Psa. 133. 2. who herein was a type of Christ who was anointed above his fellows Psal. 45. 7. Heb. 1. 9. 8 And thou shalt bring his sons and put coats upon them 9 And thou shalt gird them with girdles Aaron and his sons and † Heb. bind put the bonnets on them and the priests office shall be theirs for a perpetual statute h So long as the Iewish Pedagogy and Policy lasts and thou shalt † Heb. fill the hand of * chap. 28. 41. consecrate Aaron and his sons 10 And thou shalt cause a bullock to be brought before the tabernacle of the congregation and * Lev. 1. 4. Aaron and his sons shall put their hands upon the head of the bullock i To signify that they offered it for themselves and for their own sins which the offerer performing this rite was to confess Lev. 16. 21. that they acknowledged themselves to deserve that death which was inflicted upon this innocent creature for their sakes and to testify their faith in the future sacrifice of Christ upon whom their sins were to be laid and by whose blood they were expiated and that they humbly begged Gods mercy in pardoning their sins and accepting them to and in their holy office 11 And thou k Moses who though no Priest yet for this time and occasion was called by God to this work shalt kill the bullock before the LORD by the door of the tabernacle of the congregation 12 And thou shalt take of the bloud of the bullock and put it upon * chap. 27. 2. and 30. 2. the horns of the altar l Not of incense as some would have it but of the burnt-offerings as may appear 1. because it was that altar at the bottom whereof the bloud was to be poured as it is here expressed but that was not done at the altar of Incense as is evident and confessed Compare Lev. 16. 18 c. 2. it was that altar upon which the parts of the sacrifices were burnt as it here follows ver 13. for there is no distinction here between the two altars It is true in the following sin-offerings of the Priests the blood was put upon the horns of the altar of incense Lev. 4. 7. But it must be considered 1. that the blood was not poured out at the bottom of that altar 2. because Aaron and his sons were not yet compleat Priests but private persons and therefore did this at the same altar which the people used in their sin offerings Lev. 4. 25 30. with thy finger and pour all the blood beside the bottom of the altar 13 And thou shalt take all the fat that covereth the inwards and ‖ It seemeth by anatomy and the Hebrew Doctors to be the midriff the caul that is above the liver and the two kidneys and the fat that is upon them m The parts which in all sacrifices were burned unto God Lev. 3. 3. and 4. 10. to signify either the mortification of their inward and most beloved lusts or the dedication of the best of all sacrifices and of their inward and best parts to God and his service and burn them upon the altar 14 But the flesh of the bullock and his skin and his dung shalt thou burn with fire without the camp it is a sin-offering n To wit for the high-priest as is plain from the whole context and therefore ought to be burnt by that law Lev.
His family as Gen. 7. 1. to wit the Priests and Levites See Numb 1. 49. 7 And he shall take the two goats and present them before the LORD at the door of the tabernacle of the congregation 8 And Aaron shall cast lots upon the two goats one lot for the LORD m For the Lords use and service by way of sacrifice Both this and the other Goat typified Christ this in his death and passion for us that in his Resurrection for our deliverance and the other lot for the † Heb. Azazel scape-goat 9 And Aaron shall bring the goat upon which the LORDS lot † Heb. went up fell n So the lot is said to fall Ionah 1. 7. Act. 1. ●…6 Heb. went up to wit out of the vessel into which the lots were put and out of which they were brought up and offer him fo●… a sin-offering 10 But the goat on which the lot fell to be the scape-goat shall be presented alive before the LORD to make an atonement with him o In manner hereafter expressed ver 21. 22. and to let him go for a scape-goat into the wilderness 11 And Aaron shall bring the bullock p Mentioned in general ver 6. The ceremonies whereof are here particularly described This was a differing bullock or heifer from that Numb 19. as appears by comparing the places of the sin offering which is for himself and shall make an atonement for himself and for his house and shall kill the bullock of the sin offering which is for himself 12 And he shall take a censer full of burning coals of fire from off the altar q To wit of burnt-offering where the fire was alwayes burning and whence fire was taken for such uses as these before the LORD and his hands full of sweet incense r Of which see Exod. 30. 34 35 38. beaten small and bring it within the vail s i. e. Into the Holy of holie●… ver 2. 13 And he shall put the incense upon the fire t Which was in the censer ver 12. before the LORD that the cloud of the incense may cover the mercy-seat that is upon the testimony that he die not u For so gross an errour committed in the highest acts of worship and that by an High-Priest whose knowledge and function was a great aggravation to his sin 14 And * Heb. 9. 13. and 10. 4. he shall take of the blood of the bullock and * chap. 4. 6. sprinkle it with his finger upon the mercy-seat x To teach us that God is mercifull to sinners onely through and for the blood of Christ. eastward y i. e. With his face east-ward or upon the eastern part of it towards the people who were in the court which lay east-ward from the Holy of holies which was the most western part of the Tabernacle This signified that the High-priest in this act represented the people and that God accepted it on their behalf and before the mercy-seat z On the ground shall he sprinkle of the blood with his finger seven times 15 Then shall he kill a Either this was done before he entred into the Holy of holies though it be mentioned after such trans-placings of passages being not unusual or rather he went out of the Holy of holies and killed it and then returned thither again with its blood and this agrees best with the text nor are transpositions to be allowed without necessity And whereas the High-priest is said to be allowed to enter into that place but once in a year that is to be understood but one day in a year though there seems to have been occasion of going in and coming out more than once upon that day the goat of the sin-offering that is for the people and bring his blood within the vail and do with that blood as he did with the blood of the bullock and sprinkle it upon the mercy-seat and before the mercy-seat 16 And he shall make an atonement for the holy place b Of which see below ver 19 20. and Exod. 29. 36. Lev. 8. 15. Heb. 9. 13. because of the uncleannesses of the children of Israel c For though the people did not enter into that place yet their sins entred thither and would hinder the effects of the High-priests mediation on their behalf if God was not reconciled to them and because of their transgressions in all their sins and so shall he do for the tabernacle of the congregation that † Heb. dwelleth remaineth among them in the midst of their uncleannesses d Encompassed with their sins being in the midst of a sinfull people who defile not themselves onely but also Gods Sanctuary as God complains Ezek. 23. 38 39. 17 * Luk. 1. 10. And there shall be no man in the tabernacle † Heb. of meeting Exod. 29. 42. of the congregation e i. e. In the holy place where the Priests and Levites were at other times This was commanded for the greater reverence to the Divine Maiesty then in a more special manner appearing and that none of them might cast an eye into the Holy of holies as the High-priest went in or came out when he goeth in to make an atonement in the holy place untill he come out and have made an atonement for himself and for his houshold and for all the congregation of Israel 18 And he shall go out unto the altar f To wit the altar of incense where the blood of sacrifices was to be put Levit. 4. 4. and particularly the blood of the sin-offerings offered upon this day of atonement Exod. 30. 10. and which is most truly and properly said to be before the Lord i. e before the place where God in special manner dwelt to wit the Holy of holies Some understand it of the altar of burnt-offerings because he is said to go out to it But that going out relates not to the Tabernacle but to the Holy of holie●… into which he was said to go in ver 17. Add to this that this 〈◊〉 which is atoned by the High-priest seems to be in that place where he onely might now come and therefore in the Holy place called here the Tabernacle from which all other priests were for this day excluded whereas the altar of burnt-offerings was without the Holy place or Tabernacle to wit at the door of it and in the court of the Priests that is before the LORD and make an atonement for it and shall take of the blood of the bullock and of the blood of the goat and put it upon the horns of the altar round about 19 And he shall sprinkle of the blood upon it with his finger seven times g To signify its perfect cleansing seven being a number of perfection and our perfect reconciliation by the blood of Christ here represented and cleanse it and hallow it from the uncleannesses of the
devoted which shall be devoted of men y Not by men as some would elude it but of men for it i●… manifest both from this and the foregoing verses that men here are not the persons devoting but devoted Quest. Was it then lawful for any man or men thus to devote another person to the Lord and in pursuance of such vow to put him to death Ans. This was unquestionably lawful and a duty in some cases when persons have been devoted to destruction either by Gods sentence as Idolaters Exod. 22. 20. Deut. 23. 15. the Canaanites Deut. 20. 1●… the Amalekites Deut. 25. 19. 1 Sam. 15. 3 26. Benhadad 1 King 20. 42. or by men in pursuance of such a sentence of God as Numb 21. 2 3. and 31. 17. or for any crime of an high nature as Iudg. 21. 5. Ios. 7. 15. But this is not to be generally understood as some have taken it as if a Iew might by vertue of this Text devote his child or his servant to the Lord and thereby oblige himself to put them to death which peradventure was Iepthe's errour For this is expresly limited to all that a man hath or which is his i. e. which he hath a power over But the Iews had no power over the lives of their children or servants but were directly forbidden to take them away by that great command thou shalt do no murder And seeing he that killed his servant casually by a blow with a rod was surely to be punished as is said Exod. 21. 20. it could not be lawful wilfully and intentionally to take away his life upon pretence of any such vow as this But for the Canaanites Amalekites c. God the undoubted Lord of all mens lives gave to the Israelites a power over their persons and lives and a command to put them to death And this verse may have a special respect to them or such as them And although the general subject of this and the former verse be one and the same yet there are two remarkable differences to this purpose The verb is active ver 28. and the agent there expressed that a man shall devote but it is passive ver 29 and the agent undetermined which shall be devoted to wit by God or men in conformity to Gods revealed will 2. The devored person or thing is onely to be sold or redeemed and said to be most holy ver 28. but here it is to be put to death and this belongs onely to men and those such as either were or should be devoted in manner now expressed shall be redeemed but shall surely be put to death 30 And * Gen. 28. 22. Num. 18. 21 24. Mal. 3. 8. 10. all the tithe of the land z There are divers sorts of Tithes but this seems to be understood onely of the ordinary and yearly tithes belonging to the Levites c. as the very expression intimates and the addition of the fifth part in case of redemption thereof implies whether of the seed of the land or of the fruit of the tree is the LORDS it is holy unto the LORD 31 And if a man will at all redeem ought of his tithes he shall add thereto the fifth part thereof 32 And concerning the tithe of the herd or of the flock even of whatsoever passeth under the rod ‖ Either 1. the tithers rod it being the manner of the Iews in tithing to cause all their cattel to pass through some gate or narrow passage where the tenth was marked by a person appointed for that purpose and reserved for the Priest Or 2. the shepherds rod under which the herds and flocks passed and by which they were governed and numbred See Ier. 33. 13. Ezek. 20. 37. the tenth shall be holy unto the LORD 33 He shall not search whether it be good or bad neither shall he change it and if he change it at all then both it and the change thereof shall be holy it shall not be redeemed 34 These are the commandments which the LORD commanded Moses for the children of Israel in Mount Sinai ANNOTATIONS ON NUMBERS The ARGUMENT THis Book giveth us an History of almost forty years travel of the children of Israel through the Wilderness where we have an account of their journeys and what happened to them therein with their Government and how they were managed thereby Called Numbers by reason of the several Numbrings of the people as at the offerings of the Princes and at their several journeys c. But especially two One Chap. 1. Out of which the Priests and Levites were excepted but numbred by themselves viz. in the second year after they were come out of Egypt in the first month whereof the Passeover was instituted with the order about the Tabernacle both of the Levites and People and their several marches encampings and manner of pitching their Tents the Priest's maintenance and establishment by the miraculous budding of Aarons rod with the several impediments in their marches both among themselves by several murmurings seditions and conspiracies and from their enemies viz. the Edomites Canaanites over whom having obtained a victory and afterwards murmuring they were stung with fiery Serpents and cured by the brazen one Amorites whose Kings Sihon and Og they overcame and slew and Moabites where by the allurements of Balaam who was hired by Balak to curse Israel they joyned themselves to Baal-peor and are plagued for it that openly opposed them The other chief numbring is in Chap. 26. where they are found almost as many as the first though among them were none of the first numbring according to what God had threatned Chap. 14. save Moses Joshua and Caleb by reason of their desire to return back into Egypt upon the discouraging report of ten of those twelve that Moses sent to spy out the Land whereupon they were forced to wander above 38 years in the wilderness where he gave them several Laws Civil Ecclesiastical and Military as also particular directions about women's inheriting occasioned by the case of Zelophehad's daughters and concerning vows And then brings them back to the borders of Canaan where after divers victories obtained against their enemies they were directed how the Land of Canaan was to be divided among the Tribes and what portion the Levites were to have among them together with six cities of Refuge set apart for the Man-slayer At length Aaron being dead and Eleazar placed in his stead and Moses also having received the sentence of Death doth by God's appointment deliver up the people unto the charge and conduct of Joshua CHAP. I. 1 AND the LORD spake unto Moses in the wilderness of Sinai a Where now they had been a full year or near it as may be gathered by comparing this place with Exod. 19. 1. and 40. 17. and other places in the tabernacle b From the mercy-seat of the congregation on the first day of the second month in the second year after they
the LORD in the wilderness of Sinai and they had no children and Eleazar and Ithamar ministred in the priests office in the sight of Aaron d In the time of Aarons life as this phrase is taken N●…ab ●… 4. See also Psal. 72. 5 17. and under their fathers inspection and direction and as their fathers servants or ministers in the Priests-office for servants are oft described by this phrase of being or standing or 〈◊〉 in the sight or 〈◊〉 of their master their father 5 And the LORD spake unto Moses saying 6 Bring the tribe of Levi near and present them e Offer them to the Lord for his special service This was promised to them before and now actually conferred upon them before Aaron the priest that they may minister unto him 7 And they shall keep his charge f i. e. Aarons charge or those things which are committed principally to Aarons care and oversight and under him and his direction to the Levites and the charge of the whole congregation g i. e. Of all the sacrifices and services which were due to the Lord from all the people and because all the people could not and might not perform them or at least diverse of them in their own persons therefore they were to be performed by some particular persons in their name and stead formerly by the first-born Numb 8. 16. and now by the Levites See Numb 1. 53. and 16. 9. before the tabernacle h Emphatically not within the Tabernacle for the care of these things within the holy place was appropriated to the Priests as the care of the most holy place was peculiar to the High-priest of the congregation to do the service of the tabernacle 8 And they shall keep all the instruments of the tabernacle of the congregation and the charge of the children of Israel i Those things which all the children of Israel are in their several places and stations obliged to take care of though not in their persons yet by others in their stead to do the service of the tabernacle 9 And * chap. 8. 19. thou shalt give the Levites unto Aaron and to his sons they are † Heb. 〈◊〉 give●… wholly given unto him k To attend upon him and observe his orders and case him of part of his burden in things hereafter mentioned out of the children of Israel 10 And thou shalt appoint Aaron and his sons and they shall wait on their priests office l In their own persons not by the Levites and the stranger m i. e. Every one who is of another family than Aarons yea though he be a Levite See Numb 1. 53. and 16. 40. that cometh nigh n To wit to execute any part of the Priest office shall be put to death 11 And the LORD spake unto Moses saying 12 And I behold * chap. 8. 16 and 18. 6. I have taken the Levites from among the children of Israel instead of all the first-born n Who were Gods propriety by right of Redemption Exod. 13. 12. and to whom the administration of holy things was formerly committed which now was taken away from them either because they had forfeited this priviledge by joyning with the rest of their brethren in the idolatrous worship of the calf or because they were to be mainly concerned in the distribution and management of the inheritances which now they were going to possess and therefore could not be at leisure to attend upon the service of the Sanctua●…y Which made it fit that this work should be committed to other hands And God would not commit it to some other persons in each Tribe which might be an occasion of Idolatry confusion division and contempt of sacred things but to one distinct Tribe which might be intirely devoted to that service and particularly to the Tribe of Levi partly out of his respect to Moses and Aaron branches of this Tribe partly as a recompence of their zeal for God and against Idolaters See Exod. 32. 25 29. Deut. 33. 9. and partly because it was the smallest of the Tribes and therefore most likely to find both employment in and maintenance for the work that openeth the matrix among the children of Israel therefore the Levites shall be mine 13 Because * Exod. 13. 2. Lev. 27. 26. chap. 8. 16. Luk. 2. 23. all the first-born are mine * Exod. 13. 12 15. for on the day that I smote all the first-born in the land of Egypt I hallowed unto me all the first-born in Israel both man and beast mine they shall be I am the LORD o Who may appoint whom I please for my service 14 And the LORD spake unto Moses in the wilderness of Sinai saying 15 Number the children of Levi after the house of their fathers by their families every male from a month old p Because at that time the first-born in whose stead the Levites came Numb 8. 16. were offered to God Luk. 2. 22. and to be redeemed Numb 18. 16. And from that time the Levites were consecrated to God and were as soon as they were capable to be instructed in their work Elsewhere they are numbred from twenty five years old when they were entred as novices to part of their work Numb 8. 24. and from thirty years old when they were compleatly admitted to their whole office and upward shalt thou number them 16 And Moses numbred them according to the † Heb. mouth word of the LORD as he was commanded 17 * Gen. 46. 11. Exod. 6. 16. chap. 26. 57. 1 Chron. 6. 1 2. and 23. 6. And these were the sons of Levi by their names Gershon and Kohath and Merari 18 And these are the names of the sons of Gershon by their families Libni and Shimei 19 And the sons of Kohath by their families Amram and Izhar Hebron and Uzziel 20 And the sons of Merari by their families Mahli and Mushi these are the families of the Levites according to the house of their fathers 21 Of Gershon was the family of the Libnite and the family of the Shimite these are the families of the Gershonite 22 Those that were numbred of them according to the number of all the males from a month old and upward even those that were numbred of them were seven thousand and five hundred 23 The families of the Gershonite shall pitch behind the tabernacle westward 24 And the chief of the house of the father of the Gershonite shall be Eliasaph the son of Lael 25 And the charge of the sons of Gershon in the tabernacle of the congregation shall be the * Exod. 25. 9. tabernacle q Not the boards which belonged to Merari ver 36. but the ten curtains mentioned Exod. 26. 1. and the * Exod. 26. 1. tent r To wit the curtains of goats hair * Exod. 26. 7. 14. the covering thereof s i. e. The coverings of
the day that the LORD commanded Moses and henceforward among your generations 24 Then it shall be if ought be committed by ignorance † Heb from the without the knowledge of the congregation that all the congregation shall offer one young bullock for a burnt-offering r In Lev. 4. the bullock is for a sin-offering here it is for a burnt-offering either because they are different laws as hath been said or because here is added a new penalty to breed the greater caution and diligence in the Israelites who had given many instances and now a fresh and eminent instance of their heedlesness in observing the commands of God and so besides that bullock for a sin-offering which he leaves to be gathered out of Levit. 4. 14. he now requires another bullock for a burnt-offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD with his meat-offering and his drink-offering according to the ‖ Or Ordi●… manner and one kid of the goats for a sin offering 25 And the priest shall make an atonement for all the congregation of the children of Israel and it shall be forgiven them for it is ignorance and they shall bring their offering a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD and their sin offering before the LORD for their ignorance 26 And it shall be forgiven all the congregation of the children of Israel and the stranger that sojourneth among them seeing all the people were in ignorance 27 * Lev. 4. 〈◊〉 And if any soul sin through ignorance then he shall bring a she-goat of the first year for a sin offering 28 And the priest shall make an atonement for the soul that sinneth ignorantly when he sinneth by ignorance before the LORD to make an atonement for him and it shall be forgiven him 29 Ye shall have one law for him that † Heb. d●… sinneth through ignorance both for him that is born amongst the children of Israel and for the stranger that sojourneth among them 30 But the soul that doth ought s Understand such things as ought not to be done and things relating to the worship of God † Heb. 〈◊〉 high hand presumptuously t Heb. with an high or lifted up hand i. e. knowingly wilfully boldly resolvedly deliberately designedly So this phrase is elsewhere used See Exod. 14. 8. Lev. 26. 21. Numb 33. 3. Iob 15. 26. Psal. 19. 13. whether he be born in the land or a stranger the same reproacheth the LORD u i. e. He sets God at defiance and exposeth him to contempt as if he were unworthy of any regard and unable to punish transgressors and that soul shall be cut off from among his people 31 Because he hath despised the word of the LORD and hath broken his commandment that soul shall utterly be cut off his iniquity shall be upon him x i. e. The punishment shall be confined to himself and not fall upon the congregation as it will do if they neglect to cut him off 32 And while the children of Israel were in the wilderness they found a man that gathered sticks on the sabbath day y This seems to be added as an example of a presumptuous sin for as the law of the sabbath was plain and positive so this transgression of it must needs be a known and wilful sin 33 And they that found him gathering sticks brought him unto Moses and Aaron and unto all the congregation z i. e. To the Rulers of the congregation who as they represented and governed the congregation are called by the name of the congregation 34 And they a i. e. Moses and Aaron and the 70 Rulers last mentioned put him * Lev. 24. 〈◊〉 in ward because it was not declared what should be done unto him b i. e. In what manner he was to be cut off or by what kind of death he was to die which therefore God here particularly determines otherwise it was known in general that sabbath-breakers were to be put to death from Exod. 31. 14. and 35. 2. 35 And the LORD said unto Moses * Exod. 31 〈◊〉 The man shall be surely put to death all the congregation shall stone him with stones without the camp 36 And all the congregation brought him without the camp and stoned him with stones as the LORD commanded Moses 37 And the LORD spake unto Moses saying 38 Speak unto the children of Israel and bid * Deut. 22. 12. Mat. 23. 5. them that they make them fringes b These were certain threds or ends of their garments standing out a little further than the rest of their garments left there for this use in the † Heb. wings borders c i. e. in the four borders or quarters as it is Deut. 22. 12. Heb. wings which is oft used for borders or ends as Ruth 3. 9. 1 Sam. 15. 27. and 24. 5 c. of their garments d i. e. Of their upper garment or that wherewith they covered themselves as is expressed Deut. 22. 12. This was practised by the Pharisees in Christs time who are noted for making their borders larger than ordinary Mat. 23. 5. and by Christ himself as may be gathered from Luk. 8. 44. throughout their generations and that they put upon the fringe of the borders a ribband e To make it more obvious to the sight and consequently more serviceable to the use here mentioned Or of a purple colour as the Iewish writers agree whose opinion is the more considerable because it was matter of constant practise among them of blue f. 39 And it shall be unto you for a fringe g It i. e. the ribband shall be unto you i. e. shall serve you for the fringe to wit to render it more visible and notorious by its certain and remarkable and distinct colour whereas the fringe without this was of the same piece and colour with the garment and therefore less observable Or it i. e. the ribband shall be in your fringes or put to your fringes fastened to them that ye may look upon it and remember h That by looking upon it you may remember that your eye may affect your mind and heart all the commandments of the LORD and do them and that ye seek not i Or inquire not for other rules or ways of serving me than I have prescribed you after your own heart and your own eyes k i. e. Neither after the devices and inventions of your own minds or hearts as Nadab and Abihu did when they offered strange fire and as you now did when you pretended to serve and please me by going up the hill and towards Canaan without and against my command nor after the examples or inventions of others which your eyes see as you did when you were set upon worshipping a calf after the manner of Egypt after which ye use to go a whoring l i. e. To depart from me and to prefer your
this being no matter of religious priviledge but of common right and agreeable to the Law of nature and practise of wise heathens and for the sojourner among them that every one that killeth any person unawares may flee thither 16 * 〈◊〉 12 14. And if he smite him with an instrument of iron n Wittingly and wilfully though not with premeditated ma lice or design as appears by comparing this with ver 20 21 22 23. so that he die o To wit suddenly not so if he walked abroad afterward Exod. 21. 19 20. he is a murderer the murderer shall surely be put to death p Yea though he were fled into the City of refuge 17 And if he smite him † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with throwing a stone q Heb. with the stone of 〈◊〉 hand i. e. cast by the hand and that knowingly as appears by ver 23. wherewith he may die and he die he is a murderer the murderer shall surely be put to death 18 Or if he smite him with an hand-weapon of wood wherewith he may die and he die he is a murderer the murderer shall surely be put to death 19 The revenger of blood himself shall slay the murderer r Either 1. By himself as the following words shew so it is onely a permission that he may do it without offence to God or danger to himself Or 2. By the Magistrate from whom 〈◊〉 shall demand justice so it is a command as may appear by comparing this with ver 31. and Deut. 19. 12 13. when he meeteth him he shall slay him 20 But * Deut. 19. 11. if he thrust him of hatred or hurl at him by laying of wait that he die t Through sudden passion or provocation Or by 〈◊〉 or unawares 21 Or in enmity smite him with his hand that he die he that smote him shall surely be put to death for he is a murderer the revenger of blood shall slay the murderer when he meeteth him 22 But if he thrust him suddenly s * Exod. 21 1●… without enmity or have cast upon him any thing without laying of wait 23 Or with any stone wherewith a man may die seeing him not and cast it upon him that he die and was not his enemy neither sought his harm 24 Then u If the man slayer flee to the city of refuge the congregation shall judge between the slayer and the revenger of blood according to these judgments 25 And the congregation shall deliver the slayer out of the hand of the revenger of blood and the congregation shall restore him to the city of his refuge whither he was fled and he shall abide in it x Be confined to it partly to shew the hatefulness of wilful murder in Gods account by so severe a punishment as this in many cases might prove inflicted upon the very appearance of it and partly for the security of the manslayer least the presence of such a person and his conversation among the kindred of the deceased might occasion reproach and blood-shed unto the death of the high priest y Partly because the publick grief for the loss of so publick a person was likely to asswage the private griefs and passions of men the rather because by this example they were minded of their own mortality and thereby withheld from taking vengeance and principally to shew that the death of Christ the true High-Priest whom the others did evidently and eminently represent and typifie is the onely mean whereby sins are pardoned and sinners are set at liberty * Exod. 29. ●… Lev. 4. 3. and 21. 10. which was anointed with holy oyl 26 But if the slayer shall at any time come without the border of his city of refuge whither he was fled 27 And the revenger of blood find him without the borders of the city of his refuge and the revenger of blood kill the slayer he † Heb. 〈◊〉 bl●…d shall be to 〈◊〉 shall not be guilty of blood z i. e. Not liable to punishment from men though no●… free from guilt before God because he ki●…s an innocent person as appears from Deut. 19. 10. This God ordained to oblige the man-slayer to abide in his city of refuge See ver 22. 28 Because he should have remained in the city of his refuge until the death of the high priest but after the death of the high priest the slayer shall return into the land of his possession 29 So these things shall be for a statute of judgment unto you throughout your generations in all your dwellings 30 Whoso killeth any person the murderer shall be put to death by the * Deut. 17. 6. and 19. 15. Mat. 18. 16. 2 Cor. 13. 1. Heb. 10. 28. mouth of witnesses but one witness shall not testifie against any person to cause him to die a No Judge shall condemn any man to death upon a single testimony 31 Moreover ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer b No intercession nor ransome shall be accepted to save his life or procure him a pardon which is † Heb. faulty to die guilty of death but he shall be surely put to death 32 And ye shall take no satisfaction for him that is fled to the city of his refuge that he should come again to dwell in the land untill the death of the priest c Whereby God would signifie the absolute and indispensable necessity of Christs death to expiate sin and to redeem the sinner 33 So ye shall not pollute the land wherein ye are for blood it * Mic. 4. 11. defileth the land and † Heb. there can be no expiation for the land the land cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein but by the blood of him that sheddeth it d These words are added as a reason not of the last Law ver 32. for in that case the land was cleansed without the blood of the man-slayer but of the Law next foregoing that verse 31. in which case it holds and the sense is if you shall spare the murderer or take any satisfaction for him you do together with your selves involve your Land and People in guilt and will certainly bring down Gods vengeance upon your selves and them 34 Defile not therefore the land which ye shall inherit e Be not cruel to your own Land by making it a den of murderers wherein I dwell for I the LORD dwell among the children of Israel CHAP. XXXVI 1 AND the chief fathers of the families a Who had the care and management of the publick affairs of that Tribe committed to them of the children of Gilead the son of Machir the son of Manasseh of the families of the sons of Joseph came near and spake before Moses and before the princes the chief fathers of the children of Israel 2 And they said * chap. 26. 55. the LORD commanded
Or rather 2. As an evidence of Gods gracious answer to Moses his prayers and of his reconciliation to the people notwithstanding their late and great provocation For saith he after this they proceeded by Gods guidance in their journeys some eminent stages whereof he names for all and though Aaron dyed in one of them yet God made up that breach and Eleazar came in his place and ministred as Priest one branch of which office was to intercede for the people Then saith he God brought them from the barren parts of the wilderness to a land of rivers of waters v. 7. a pleasant and fruitful soil Then he adds God separated the Levites c. v. 8. from Beeroth of the children of Jaakan to * Num. 33. 3●… Mosera d Obj. This place seems directly contrary to that Numb 33. 31. where their journey is quite contrary to this even from Moseroth to Bene-jaakan This indeed is a great difficulty and prophane wits take occasion to cavil And if a satisfactory answer be not yet given to it by interpreters it ought not therefore to be concluded unanswerable because many things formerly thought unanswerable have been since fully cleared and therefore the like may be presumed concerning other doubts yet remaining And it were much more reasonable to acknowledge here a transposition of the words through the Scribes mistake than upon such a pretence to reject the divine Authority of those sacred books which hath been confirmed by such irresistable Arguments But there is no need of these general pleas seeing particular answers are and may be given to this difficulty sufficient to satisfie modest and impartial enquirers Ans. 1. The places here mentioned are differing from those Numb 33. it being very frequent in Scripture for divers persons and places to be called by the same names and yet the names are not wholly the same for there it is Bene-jaakan and here Beeroth bene-jaakan or Beeroth of the children of Iaakan there Moseroth here Moserah there Hor-hagidgad here Gudgodah there Iotbathah here Iotbath If the places were the same it may justly seem strange why Moses should so industriously make a change in every one of the names And therefore these may be other stations which being omitted in Numb 33. are supplyed here it being usual in sacred Scripture to supply the defects of one place out of another Answ. 2. Admitting these two places to be the same with those Numb 33. 31. yet the journeys are divers They went from Beeroth of the children of Iaacan to Mosera which is omitted in Numbers and therefore here supplyed and then back again from Moserah or Moseroth to Bene-jaakan as is there said for which return there might then be some sufficient reason though now unknown to us as the reasons of many such like things are or God might order it so for his own pleasure and it is not impossible he might do it for this reason that by this seeming contradiction as well as some others he might in just judgment do what he threatned to the Iews Ier. 6. 21. even lay stumbling blocks before prophane and proud wits and give them that occasion of deceiving and ruining themselves which they so greedily seek and gladly embrace which is the reason given by some of the antients why God hath left so many difficulties in Scripture Ans. 3. The words may be otherwise rendred from Beeroth of the children of Iaakan and from Moserah where the order of the places is not observed as was noted before of the order of time v. 1. because it was nothing to the purpose here and because that might be easily fetched from Numb 33. where those journeys are more particularly and exactly described For the conjunction and that may be here wanting and to be supplyed as it is Exod. 6. 23. 1 Sam. 4. 7. Psal. 133. 3. Isa. 63. 11. Hab. 3. 11. And the preposition from is easily supplyed from the foregoing words as is most usual Nor seems there to be any more reason to render it to Moserah than from Moserah seeing the Hebrew letter He in the end is made a part of the proper name and therefore is not local * Num. 20. ●… there Aaron died e Qu. How it is true when Aaron dyed not in Moserah but in Mount Hor Numb 33. 37. Ans. 1. Moserah may be a differing place from Moseroth and that may be the name of a Town or Region in which Mount Hor was or to which it belonged Or the same mountain in respect of divers parts and opposite sides of it might be called by divers names here Moserah and there Hor. And it is possible they might go several journeys and pass to divers stations and by fetching a compass which they oft did in their Wilderness travels come to the other side of the same Mountain Ans. 2. The Hebrew particle soham may here note the time and not the place of Aarons death and may be rendred then as it is taken Gen. 49. 24. Psal. 14. 5. Eccles. 3. 17. Zephan 1. 14. And then is not to be taken precisely but with some latitude as it is oft used in Scripture that is about that time after a few removes more as the words at that time v. 8. must necessarily be understood and there he was buryed and Eleazar his son ministred in the priests office in his stead 7 * Num. 33. 32 ●… From thence e Either 1. From that place and that either from Mosera●… last mentioned or from Bene-jaakan for relatives many times in Scripture belong to the remoter antecedent Or 2. From that time for this particle sometimes notes not place but time as 2 King 2. 21. Isa. 65. 20. So the meaning is At or about that time as it is v. 8. which being considered may serve to clear the great difficulty discoursed upon the last verse concerning the seeming contradiction of this place and Numb 33. 31 32. they journeyed unto Gudgodah and from Gudgodah to Jotbath a land of rivers of waters 8 At that time f About that time i. e. when I was come down from the mount as was said v. 5. For these words manifestly look to that verse the 6 and 7. verses being put in by way of parenthesis as was said before Or if it relate to the words immediately foregoing this may be meant of a second separation of them upon Aarons Death and having mentioned the separation of Eleazar to the Office of the high Priest in his Fathers stead v. 6. he now repeats it that the Levites who were his as they had been his Fathers Servants were separated as before or were confirmed in their office * 〈◊〉 3. 6. 〈◊〉 8. 14. the LORD separated the tribe of Levi to bear the ark of the covenant of the LORD to stand before the LORD g A phrase used concerning the Prophets 1 King 17. 1. and 18. 15. this being the posture of Ministers Hence the Angels are said to
Or her Troubler or Vexer or Enemy for so her Envy or Jealously made her though so nearly related Compare Gen. 29. 30. Levit. 18. 18. also ‡ Heb. 〈◊〉 her provoked her sore for to make her fret m Against her Husband or against God or within her self because the LORD had shut up her womb 7 And as he did so n i. e. Either as o●… as he went and carried them with him to Worship or as Elkanah expressed peculiar kindness to Hannah as was said v. 5. year by year o i. e. Every year at the days or times mentioned v. 3. ‖ Or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 time that 〈◊〉 c. Heb. from her going 〈◊〉 when she went up to the house of the LORD p This Circumstance is Noted First As the occasion of the Contention because at such times they were forced to more Society with one another by the Way and in their Lodgings whereas at Home they had distinct Appartments where they might be asunder and then her Husbands extraordinary Love and Kindness was shewed to Hannah whereby Peninnah was the more exasperated then also Hannah Prayed earnestly for a Child which hitherto she had done in vain and this possibly she reproached her with Secondly As the aggravation of her Sin that when she came to Worship God and to offer Sacrifices when she should have been reconciled even to her Enemies Matth. 5. 23 24. she did quarrel with so near a Relation so she provoked her therefore she wept and did not eat q Either little or rather nothing at all as being overwhelmed with Grief and therefore unfit to Eat of that Sacred Food according to Deut. 12. 7. 8 Then said Elkanah her husband to her Hannah why weepest thou and why eatest thou not and why is thy heart grieved am not I * 〈◊〉 ●… 15. better to thee than ten sons r Oughtest thou not to value my Hearty Love to thee more than the having of as many Sons as Penninah hath She would willingly change Conditions with thee 9 ¶ So Hannah rose up after they s i. e. Elkanah and his Company except Hannah Or She for though at first she eat nothing yet upon her Husbands Invitation and Encouragement she might eat afterwards though the former may seem more probable had eaten in Shiloh and after they had drunk now Eli the priest sat upon a seat t Or Throne for it is manifest it was raised higher than ordinary chap. 4. 18. Here he might sit either as the Judge or rather as High-Priest to hear and answer such as came to him for Advice and to Inspect and Direct the Worship of God as need was by a post of the temple u i. e. Of the Tabernacle which is called the Temple here and chap. 3. 3. and 2 Sam. 22. 7. Psal. 27. 6. as on the contrary the Temple is called the Tabernacle Ier. 10. 20. Lament 2. 6. And although this Tabernacle was but a Tent yet it was supported by Boards and Posts and especially at the entrance by which Eli sate even by the entrance into the outward Court otherwise he could not have seen Hannah See more on chap. 3. 15. of the LORD 10 And she was ‡ Heb. bitter o●… 〈◊〉 in bitterness x i. e. Oppressed with Grief as that Phrase is used Iob 7. 11. and 10. 1. Ruth 1. 20. of soul and prayed unto the LORD and wept sore 11 And she vowed a vow y Knowing that her Husband would willingly consent to it otherwise she had not power to do it and said O LORD of hosts if thou wilt indeed look on z To wit favourably so as to remove it the affliction a i. e. The Barrenness and Reproach which attends it of thine hand-maid and remember me and not forget thine hand-maid but wilt give unto thine hand-maid ‡ Heb. seed of men a man-child then I will give him unto the LORD b i. e. Consecrate him to Gods Service in his Temple as far as in me lies for if he had any Blemish she might not do it all the days of his life c Not only from his 25th to his 50th Year as all the Levites and so he himself were obliged by God Numb 4. 2. and 8. 24. but for his whole time Which is still to be understood with a reservation of Gods right which her Vow must give place to as indeed it did for God called him to be a Prophet and a General of the Army and a Judge and * ●… Numb 6. 5. Judg. 13. 5. there shall no rasor come upon his head d i. e. He shall be a perpetual Nazarite for under this one Rule as the Chief all the rest are contained as elsewhere the whole Mosaical Law is understood under the Title of Circumcision 12 And it came to pass as she ‡ Heb. multiplied to pray continued praying e Heb. multiplied to pray By which it appears that she said much more than is here expressed And the like you are to judge of the Prayers and Sermons of other holy Persons Recorded in Scripture which gives us only the sum and substance of them Which consideration may help us much in the understanding of some passages of the Bible before the LORD that Eli marked her mouth f i. e. The motion of her lips as it follows 13 Now Hannah she spake in her heart only her lips moved but her voice was not heard g Partly to avoid the suspition of vain-glory partly because she would not have others acquainted with her Barrenness which was matter of reproach and partly because she would not disturb others who at this Solemn Feast were probably imployed there in the same work therefore Eli ‡ Heb. accounted her for drunken So Gr. thought she had been drunken h Because of the multitude of her words and those uncouth Gestures and Motions of her Face and Body which the vehemency of her Passion and her fervency in Prayer caused in her as it doth frequently in others and because she was but newly come from a Feast wherein the manner was to Eat and Drink liberally though not to excess which he knew very well both from the general Custom of that Season and from the time of the day 14 And Eli said unto her How long wilt thou be drunken put away thy wine from thee i Come not before the Lord in thy drunkenness but go and sleep it but and Repent of this thy Sin 15 And Hannah answered and said No my lord I am a woman k In whom Drunkenness is most abominable so that the Romans punished it with Death Therefore judge me not so severely ‡ Heb. hard of spirit of a sorrowful spirit l And therefore not likely to give up my self to Drink and Jollity and far from that merry temper which Drunkards have I am Drunk with Affliction not with Wine as is said
Parenthesis to signifie That David did not so give up himself to Lamentation as to neglect his great business the care of the Commonwealth which now lay upon him but took particular care to fortifie them against such further Losses and Calamities as he bewails in the following Song and by his example and this counsel to instruct the People that they should not give up themselves to sorrow and despondency for their great and general Loss but should raise up their Spirits and betake themselves to Action he bade them s David being now Actually King upon Saul's Death takes his Power upon him and gives forth his Commands teach the children of Judah t These he more particularly teacheth because they were the Chief and now the Royal Tribe and likely to be the great Bulwark to all Israel against the Philistines upon whose Land they bordered and withal to be the most friendly and true to him and to his Interest the use of the bow u i. e. The use of their Arms which are all Synecdochically expressed under the name of the bow which then was one of the chief Weapons and for the dextrous use whereof Ionathan is commended in the following Song which may be one reason why he now gives forth this Order that so they might strive to imitate Ionathan in his Military Skill and to excel in it as he did behold it is written x Not the following Song as many think for that is written here and therefore it was needless to refer us to another Book for it but this foregoing counsel and course which David took to repair the last Loss which is here mentioned but briefly and in general terms but as it seems more largely and particularly described in the Book of Iasher of which See on Iosh. 10. 13. * Josh. 10. 13. in the book ‖ Or of the upright of Jasher 19 The beauty of Israel y Their Flower and Glory Saul and Ionathan and their Army consisting of young and Valiant Men. is slain upon the high places z Heb. upon thy high places i. e. Those which belong to thee O Land of Israel how are the mighty fallen a How strangely how suddenly how dreadfully and universally 20 * Mic. 1. 10. Tell it not in Gath b This is not a Precept but a Poetical wish whereby he doth not so much desire that this might not be done which he knew to be vain and impossible as express his great sorrow because it was and would be done to the great dishonour of God and of his People publish it not in the streets of Askelon lest the daughters c He mentions these because it was the custome of Women in those times and places to celebrate those Victories which their Men obtained with Triumphant Songs and Dances as Exod. 15. Iudg. 11. 34. 1 Sam. 18. 6. of the Philistines rejoyce lest the daughters of the uncircumcised triumph 21 Ye mountains of Gilboa let there be no dew neither let there be rain upon you d This is no proper Imprecation which he had no reason to inflict upon those harmless Mountains but onely a passionate representation of the Horror which he conceived at this publick Loss which was such as if he thought every person or thing which contributed to it were fit to bear the tokens of Divine displeasure such as this is when the Earth wants the blessed and necessary Influences of Dew and Rain nor fields of ‡ Heb. heave-offerings offerings e i. e. Fruitful fields which may produce fair and goodly Fruits fit to be offered unto God for there the shield of the mighty f The Shields of the Valiant men of Israel ‡ Heb. was loathed so Gr. is vilely g Dishonourably for it was a great Reproach to any Soldier to cast away or lose his Shield cast away h To wit by themselves that they might flee more swiftly away as the Israelites did and Saul with the rest as is said 1 Sam. 31. 1 2. the shield of Saul as though he had not been anointed with oyl i As if he had been no more nor better than a common Soldier he was exposed to the same kind of Death and Reproach as they were 22 From the blood of the slain from the fat of the mighty the bow of Jonathan turned not back k To wit without Effect comp Isa. 45. 23. and 55. 11. Their Arrows shot from their Bows and their Swords did seldom miss and commonly pierced Fat and Flesh and Blood and reached even to the Heart and Bowels and the sword of Saul returned not empty l i. e. Not filled and glutted with Blood for the Sword is Metaphorically said to have a mouth which we Translate an edge and to devour 2 Sam. 2. 26. and 11. 25. Ier. 2. 30. and 46. 10. And this their former successfulness is here mentioned as an aggravation of their last infelicity 23 Saul and Jonathan were lovely and ‖ Or sweet pleasant m Amiable and obliging in their Carriage and Conversation both towards one another and towards their People for as for Saul's fierce behaviour towards Ionathan it was onely a sudden Passion by which his ordinary temper was not to be measured and for his carriage towards David 1 Sam. 20. 30 33. that was from that jealousie and Reason of State which usually engageth even good-natured and well-nurtured Princes to the same Hostilities in like cases But it is observable That David speaks not a word here of his Piety and other Vertues but onely commends him for those things which were truly in him A fit pattern for all Preachers in their Funeral Commendations in the●…r lives n and in their death they were not divided o Ionathan was not false to his Father as was reported but stuck close to him and as he lived so he died with him at the same time and in the same common and good Cause they were swifter than Eagles p Expeditious and nimble in Pursuing their Enemies and Executing their Designs which is a great commendation in a Prince and in a Soldier they were stronger than lions q In regard of their bodily Strength and the Courage of their Minds 24 Ye daughters of Israel r These he mentions partly because the Women then used to make Songs both of Triumph and of Lamentation as occasion required and partly because they usually are most delighted with the Ornaments of the Body here following weep over Saul who clothed you in scarlet s This he did partly because he procured them so much Peace as gave them opportunity of enriching themselves and partly because he took these things as spoils from the Enemies and clothed his own People with them Comp. Psal. 68. 12. with other delights who put on ornaments of gold upon your apparel 25 How are the mighty fallen in the midst of the battel O
servant Zimri captain of half his chariots h i. e. Of all his Military Chariots and the Men belonging to them the Chariots for carriage of necessary things being put into other and meaner hands conspired against him as he was in Tirzah drinking himself drunk in the house of Arza ‡ Heb. which was over c. steward of his house in Tirzah i Whilst his Forces were elsewhere imployed ver 15. which gave Zimri advantage to execute his Design 10 And Zimri went in and smote him and killed him in the twenty and seventh year of Asa king of Judah and reigned in his stead 11 ¶ And it came to pass when he began to reign assoon as he sat on his throne that he slew all the house of Baasha he left him * 1 Sam. 25. 22 not one that pisseth against a wall ‖ Or both his kinsmen and his friends neither of his kinsfolks k Heb. avengers to whom it belonged to Revenge his Death See Numb 35. 12. nor of his friends l His confidents and familiar Acquaintance such as were most likely to hinder his Settlement in the Throne and to Avenge their Friends Quarrel 12 Thus did Zimri destroy all the house of Baasha according to the word of the LORD which he spake against Baasha m i. e. Thus fulfilling God's Threatning but either without his knowledge o●… meerly for his own ends ‡ Heb. by the hand of c. by Jehu the prophet 13 For all the sins of Baasha and the sins of Elah his sons by which they sinned and by which they made Israel to sin in provoking the LORD God of Israel to anger with their vanities n i. e. Idols oft called vanities as Deut. 32. 21. 1 Sam. 12. 21. Ier. 14. 22. because they are but imaginary Deities and meer nothings 1 Cor. 8. 4. having nothing at all of a God in them and nothing of Power to do either good or hurt 14 Now the rest of the acts of Elah and all that he did are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel * See above 14. 19. 15 ¶ In the twenty and seventh year of Asa king of Judah did Zimri reign seven days in Tirzah and the people were encamped against Gibethon which belonged to the Philistines o Which had been Besieged before Chap. 15. 27. but it seems was then relieved or afterwards recovered by the Philistines taking the advantage of the Disorders and Contentions which were among their Enemies 16 And the people that were encamped heard say Zimri hath conspired and hath also slain the king wherefore all Israel made Omri the captain of the host king over Israel that day in the camp 17 And Omri went up from Gibbethon and all Israel with him and they besieged Tirzah 18 And it came to pass when Zimri saw that the city was taken that he went into the palace of the Kings house and burnt the kings house over him p Or and he burnt c. Either 1. Omri burnt it over Zimri for Pronouns sometimes respect more remote Nouns Or rather 2. Zimri to whom both the foregoing and following words apparently belong who burnt it upon himself that neither himself nor the Royal Palace and Treasures might come into the hands of his insulting Adversary with fire and died 19 For his sins q i. e. This befel him for his Sins which he sinned in doing evil in the sight of the LORD in walking in the way of Jeroboam r Which he might do either before his Reign in the whole course of his Life which is justly charged upon him because of his Impenitency or in the Seven days of his Reign in which he had time enough to publish his Intentions or Decrees about the continuance of the Worship of the Calves or to Sacrifice to them for his good Success either already obtained or further desired and in his sin which he did to make Israel sin 20 Now the rest of the acts of Zimri and his treason that he wrought are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel * See Chap. 14. 19. 21 ¶ Then were the people of Israel divided into two parts s Fell into a Civil War yet neither this nor any other of God's dreadful Judgments could win them to Repentance which is an evidence of their Prodigious Impiety and Incorrigibleness and how ripe they were for Ruine half of the people followed Tibni the son of Ginath to make him king t Disdaining that the Soldiers should Usurp such a Power over the whole Kingdom and half followed Omri u Because they approved the Person though not the manner of his Election 22 But the people that followed Omri prevailed x Partly because they had the Army on their side and principally by the appointment and judgment of God giving up the Israelites to him who was much the worst ver 25 26. against the people that followed Tibni the son of Ginath so Tibni died y A violent Death in the Battel and Omri reigned 23 ¶ In the thirty and one year of Asa king of Judah began Omri to reign over Israel twelve years z i. e. And he Reigned Twelve Years not from this 31 year of Asa for he died in his 38 year ver 29. but from the beginning of his Reign which was in Asa's 27 year ver 15 16 So he Reigned four years in a State of War with Tibni and Eight years peaceably six years reigned he in Tirzah 24 And he bought the hill Samaria of Shemer for two talents of silver and built a To wit the City and especially a Royal Palace because that at Tirzah was burnt ver 18. on the hill and called the name of the city which he built after the name of Shemer owner of the hill ‡ Heb. Shemeron * See Chap. 13. 32. Samaria 25 ¶ But * Mic. 6. 16. Omri wrought evil in the eyes of the LORD and did worse than all that were before him 26 For he walked in all the way of Jeroboam b i. e. Did not onely promote the Worship of the Calves as Ieroboam and all his Successors hitherto had done but did also imitate all Ieroboam's other sins which doubtless were many and great and peradventure he added this to the rest that together with the Calves he Worshipped Devils i. e. other Idols of the Heathens as may be thought from 1 Cor. 10. 20. 20. where his Worship of the Devils and of the Calves is distinguished Besides though he did no more for the substance of the Action than his Predecessors did yet he might justly and truly be said to do worse than they because he did it with greater Aggravations after so many terrible Examples of Divine Vengeance upon the Kings and People of Israel for that Sin or because he made seve●…er Laws concerning the Calf-Worship whence we
against the Holy Ghost That they might be guilty of many other hainous Crimes which God and the Prophet knew and were guilty of Idolatry which by Gods Law deserved death that the Idolatrous Parents were punished in their Children and that if any of these Children were more innocent and ignorant of what they said God might have Mercy upon their Souls and then this death was not a misery but a real blessing to them that they were taken away from that wicked and Idolatrous Education which was most likely to expose them not onely to Temporal but to an Eternal destruction in the Name of the LORD m Not from any carnal or revengeful passion but by the motion of Gods Spirit and by Gods command and commission as appears by Gods concurrence with him Which God did partly for the terror and caution of all other Idolaters and prophane persons who abounded in that place partly to vindicate the Honour and maintain the Authority of his Prophets and particularly of Elisha now especially in the beginning of his Sacred Ministry And this did beget such a confidence in Elisha that he durst venture to go into Bethel after this was done and such a terror in the Bethelites that they durst not avenge themselves of him and there came forth two she-bears n Possibly robbed of their Whelps and therefore more fierce Prov. 17. 12. Hos. 13. 8. but certainly acted by an extraordinary fury which God raised in them for this purpose out of the wood and tare forty and two children o This Hebrew word signifies not onely young Children but those also who are grown up to maturity as Gen. 32. 22. and 34. 4. and 37. 30. Ruth 1. 5. of them 25 And he went from thence to mount Carmel p Partly to decline the fury of the People of Bethel partly that he might retire himself from men and converse more freely with God and so fit himself more for the discharge of his employment and partly that he might visit the Sons of the Prophets who lived in that place or near it and from thence he returned to Samaria q By the direction of Gods Spirit for the service which he did chap. 3. 11 c. CHAP. III. NOw Jehoram the son of Ahab began to reign over Israel in Samaria the eighteenth year of Jehoshaphat king of Judah a Quest. How can this be true when Ahaziah Iehoram's predecessor who Reigned two Years began his Reign in Iehoshaphat's 17th Year 1 King 22. 51 Ans. Either Ahaziah Reigned the greatest part of two Years to wit of the 17th and 18th Years of Iehoshaphat parts of Years being oft called years in the computation of times both in Scripture and other Authors and Iehoram began his Reign towards the end of his 18th Year or Ahaziah Reigned part of this two Years with his Father and the rest after him and reigned twelve years 2 And he wrought evil in the sight of the LORD but not like his father and like his mother for he put away the ‡ Heb. 〈◊〉 image of Baal * 1 King 16. 31 32. that his father had made b Not from any principle of Conscience for that would have reached the Calves also but either because he was startled at the dreadful Judgments of God inflicted upon his Father and Brother for Baal-worship or because he needed Gods help to subdue the Moabites which he knew Baal could not do or to gratify Iehoshaphat whose help he meant to crave which he knew he should never obtain without this and for this reason it seems Iezabel was willing to connive at it as a trick of State 3 Nevertheless he cleaved unto the sins of Jeroboam c i. e. The worship of the Calves which all the Kings of Israel kept up as a Wall of partition between their Subjects and those of Iudah Thus he shews that his Religion was over-ruled by his Interest and Policy the son of Nebat which made Israel to sin he departed not therefrom 4 ¶ And Mesha king of Moab was a sheep-master d A man of great wealth which in those times and places consisted much in Cattel which enabled and emboldned him to Rebel against his Sovereign Lord. and rendred unto the king of Israel an hundred thousand lambs and an hundred thousand rams with the wool 5 But it came to pass when * Ahab was dead that the king of Moab rebelled e See of this ch 1. 1. It is here repeated to make way for the following Story Ahaziah did not attempt the recovery of Moab either because he was a man of a low spirit and courage or because his Sickness or the shortness of his Reign gave not opportunity for it against the king of Israel 6 ¶ And king Jehoram went out of Samaria f To some place appointed for the Rendezvous of his people the same time and numbred all Israel g To wit such as were fit for War 7 And he went and sent to Jehoshaphat the king of Judah saying The king of Moab hath rebelled against me wilt thou go with me against Moab to battel and he said I will go up I am as thou art my people as thy people and my horses as thy horses h Of which see on 1 King 22. 4. He joyns with him in this War partly because the War was very just in it self and convenient for Iehoshaphat both in the general that Rebels and Revolters should be chastised and suppressed lest the example should pass into his Dominions and the Edomites should be hereby encouraged to revolt from him as they did from his Son and in particular that the Moabites should be humbled who had with others Invaded his Land before this time 2 Chron. 20. 1. and might do so again if they were not brought low for which a fair opportunity was now offered to him and partly because Iehoram had reformed some things and Iehoshaphat hoped by this means to engage him to proceed further in that work 8 And he i Either Iehoshaphat or rather Ioram for the following answer may seem to be Iehoshaphat's said Which way shall we go up And he answered The way through the wilderness of Edom k Which though it was much the longer way yet they thought it best partly to secure the King or Vice-Roy of Edom of whom they might have some suspition from that passage 2 Chron. 20. 22. and to carry both him and his Soldiers along with them into the War both to get their assistance and to prevent them from making a War of diversion against Iudah whilst Iehoshaphat was engaged against Moab and partly that they might invade Moab on their weakest side and where they least expected them God also thus disposed their hearts to make way for the following miracle 9 So the king of Israel went and the king of Judah and the king of Edom l i. e. The Vice-Roy under Iehoshaphat 1 King 22. 47.
being seventy persons were with the great men of the city which brought them up 7 And it came to pass when the letter came to them that they took the kings sons and slew seventy persons Iehu justly required this because the Sovereign and most Righteous Lord of all mens lives commanded it but the Samaritans wickedly obeyed it because they destroye●… persons in a great measure innocent meerly out of slavish fear and without any knowledge of or regard to Gods command and put their heads in baskets and sent him them to Jezreel 8 ¶ And there came a messenger and told him saying They have brought the heads of the kings sons And he said Lay ye them in two heaps at the entring in of the gate n The place of Judicature to signify that this was an act of Justice and of Gods Righteous Judgment and the place of greatest concourse where people went out of the City and came into it and whither they resorted for Judgment and other occasions that all men might behold this dreadful spectacle of Divine vengeance upon Ahab's Family and thereby might justify Iehu's cause and proceedings until the morning 9 And it came to pass in the morning that he went out and stood and said to all the people o Either First To the promiscuous multitude met there to gaze upon this sad and strange spectacle So the sense is Be not you troubled nor affrighted with these unusual and dismal occurrences if any thing be amiss in these actions I do here publickly and solemnly acquit you as Righteous and Innocent do not you therefore fear any vengeance from God or men for it if there be any guilt it is in me and in those who cut off these heads Or Secondly To those who cut off and brought the heads for the same persons did both and were here present as Iehu commanded them v. 6. to them he speaks in the audience of all the people or by all the people may be meant all those who brought the Heads and were there waiting for Iehu according to his order So the Speech is in part Ironical to this purpose You are Righteous in your own eyes and you look upon me as a Traitor and Rebel and Murderer because I have risen against and slain my Master which I acknowledge I have done But if I am guilty you are not innocent and therefore cannot accuse me for I have killed one but you a great number This explication seems probable onely the Hebrew word ham being generally used of the common people may seem not so fitly to agree to these Rulers and great Men who had brought the Heads and that expression to all the people implies that Iehu did not direct his Speech to some particular persons but to the whole Body of the people then present whom he clears from all blame and to whom he appeals as Witnesses between him and these persons Ye be righteous behold I conspired against my master and slew him but ‡ Heb. an●… who slew all these 10 Know now that there shall fall unto the earth nothing of the word of the LORD which the LORD spake p But the truth is neither I nor they are to be blamed nor you that assisted and encouraged me herein for this is not mans work but Gods and done by his command concerning the house of Ahab for the LORD hath done that which he spake * 1 Kin. 21. 29 ‡ Heb. by the hand of by his servant Elijah q Whom he mentions rather than Elisha partly because Elijah was now dead and therefore his ●…me and memory was more Sacred than Elisha's who was yet alive this being the common humour and folly of Mankind to value and honour those that are dead whom they contemned whilst they lived and partly because Elijah's Prophecy was known and publick and famous when Elisha's was delivered in a corner and that not from his own mouth but by one of the Sons of the Prophets 11 So Jehu slew all that remained of the house of Ahab in Jezreel and all his great men r Whom he had advanced and made Great in Wealth or Honour and Quality who had been partners with him in his sins and who were likely to be avenged of his death and his ‖ Or acquaintance kinsfolks and his priests s His Domestick Priests which had waited upon Ahab and Iezabel in their Idolatrous services and were fed at the Kings Table Compare 1 King 18. 19. Or his chief officers of State as that word is sometimes used Of which see 2 Sam. 8. 18. compare with 1 Chron. 18. 17. Obj. These were included in his great men mentioned before Answ. Yet may they well be mentioned apart as a distinct and the most eminent sort of them until he left him none remaining t To wit in that place and Kingdom for he did leave some of the Royal Seed of Iudah Chap. 11. 1 2. 12 And he arose and departed and came to Samaria And as he was at the ‡ Heb. House of Shepherds binding sheep shearing house u Where they used to shear Sheep and then to Feast after their manner 1 Sam. 25. 36. 2 Sam. 13. 23. Or this may be the name of a Place Beth-heked of the shepherds or Beth-heked-rohim in the way 13 Jehu ‡ Heb. found met with the brethren x Not strictly so for they were killed before this 2 Chron. 21. 17. but his brethrens sons as they are called 2 Chron. 22. 8. or others of his near kinsmen such being oft called brethren in Scripture as Gen. 13. 8. of Ahaziah king of Judah and said Who are ye And they answered We are the brethren of Ahaziah and we go down ‡ Heb. to the peace of c. to salute the children of the king and the children of the queen 14 And he said Take them alive And they took them alive and slew them y Partly in compliance with God's Command Chap. 9. 8. for these were of the House of Ahab by the Mothers-side Chap. 8. 18. and partly that they might neither claim the Kingdom of Israel in Right of their Grandmother as they might well have done if God had not given it to Iehu nor Revenge the Deaths of their near Relations at the pit of the shearing-house z Where he intended to Bury them even two and forty men neither left he any of them 15 And when he was departed thence he ‡ lighted on Jehonadab the son of Rechab a A Kenite 1 Chron. 2. 55. and a man of singular Prudence and Piety as appears from this History and from Ier. 35. 6. coming Heb. found to meet him b To Congratulate with him for the Destruction of that wicked Family and to encourage and advise him to proceed in fulfilling the Will of God Revealed to him and he ‡ Heb. blessed saluted him c Iehu saluted Iehonadab and
had compassion on them and had respect unto them because of his covenant with Abraham Isaac and Jacob and would not destroy them neither cast he them from his ‡ Heb. 〈◊〉 presence f i. e. From the Land of Canaan to which the presence and publick and solemn Worship of God was confined as yet 24 So Hazael king of Syria died and Ben-hadad his son reigned in his stead 25 And Jehoash the son of Jehoahaz ‡ Heb. 〈◊〉 ed and ●…ook took again out of the hand of Ben-hadad the son of Hazael the cities which he had taken out of the hand of Jehoahaz his father by war three times did Joash beat him g According to the Prediction above v. 19. and recovered the cities of Israel CHAP. XIV IN the second year of Joash son of Jehoahaz king of Israel a i. e. After he began to Reign alone for he Reigned two or three Years with his Farther O●… which see on chap. 13. 10. reigned * 2 C●… 〈◊〉 Amaziah the son of Joash king of Judah 2 He was twenty and five years old when he began to reign and reigned twenty and nine years b To wit 14 Years with Ioash King of Israel who Reigned onely 16 Years chap. 13. 10. and 15 Years after the death of Ioash or with Ieroboam the Son of Ioash as is affirmed here ver 17. and 2 Chron. 25. 25. in Jerusalem and his mothers name was Jehoaddan of Jerusalem 3 And he did that which was right in the sight of the LORD c That which was in some sort agreeable to Gods Will. yet not like David his father d Not sincerely 2 Chron. 25. 2. he did according to all things as Joash his father did e i. e. For a time served God aright but afterwards fell to Idolatry 1 Chron. 25. 14. as Ioash had done 2 King 12. 3. 4 Howbeit f Though he did right c. for this Particle is to be joyned with those words the rest being to be closed with a Parenthesis the high places were not taken away as yet the people did sacrifice and burnt incense on the high places 5 ¶ And it came to pass assoon as the kingdom was confirmed in his hand that he slew his servants * Chap. 12 〈◊〉 which had slain the king his father Whereby it is implied that his Fathers Murderers had powerful Friends and Abetrors and that their Fact was in some sort approved by the generality of the People to whom Ioash had made himself hateful by his Apostacy to Idolatry and by his ingratitude to the House of Iehoiada 6 But the children of the murderer he slew not g Wherein he shewed some Faith and Courage that he would obey this Command of God though it was very hazardous to himself such persons being likely to seek revenge for their Fathers death according unto that which is written in the book of the law of Moses wherein the LORD commanded saying * Deut. 24. 〈◊〉 Ezek. 18 〈◊〉 The fathers shall not be put to death for the children nor the children be put to death for the fathers but every man shall be put to death for his own sin 7 He slew of Edom h i. e. Of the Edomites or the children of Seir as they are called 2 Chron. 25. ●… 1. either because they dwelt in Seir See Gen. 36. 8. or because these people were confederates And he invaded these People because they were Subjects to his Kingdom from which they had revolted in Ioram's days 2 King 8. 20. in the valley of salt i Which was the Land of Edom Of which see 2 Sam. 8. 13. Psal. 60. 2. ten thousand and took ‖ Selah k Or the rock the chief City of that part of Arabia called by other Authors Petra which signifies a rock because it was built upon a Rock ●… Chron. 25. 12 by war and called the Or the rock name of it Joktheel l Which signifies the obedience of God i. e. given him by God as a reward of his Obeidence to Gods Message by the Prophet 2 Chron. 25. 8 9. unto this day 8 ¶ Then Amaziah sent messengers to Jehoash the son of Jehoahaz son of Jehu king of Israel saying Come let us look one another in the face m Let us fight personally and with our Armies This challenge he sent partly upon the late and great in●…uries done by the Israelites to his people 2 Chron. 25. 10 13. and partly from self-confidence and a desire of advancing his Glory and Empire by his Arms. 9 And Jehoash the king of Israel sent to Amaziah king of Judah saying The thistle that was in Lebanon sent to the cedar that was in Lebanon n By the thistle a low and contemptible yet troublesome Shrub he understands Amaziah and by the cedar himself whom he intimates to be far stronger than he and out of his reach saying Give thy daughter to my son to wife o Let us make a match i. e. let us fight Onely he expresseth this Bloody work in a civil manner as Amaziah had done ver 8. and as Abner did 2 Sam. 2. 14. Or let thy Kingdom and mine be United under one King as formerly they were and let us decide it by a pitched Battel whether thou or I shall be that King Or as some expound it by affirming That it was great arrogancy and presumption for him to desire a Friendly League or Affinity with him he leaves him to guess how intolerable it was that he should undertake to wage War against him and there passed by a wild beast that was in Lebanon and trode down the thistle p And with no less ease shall my Soldiers tread down thee and thy Forces 10 Thou hast indeed smitten Edom and thine heart hath lifted thee up glory of this q Content thy self with that Glory and Success and let not thine Ambition betray thee to ruin and tarry ‡ 〈◊〉 at thy 〈◊〉 at home for why shouldest thou meddle to thy hurt that thou shouldest fall even thou and Judah with thee 11 But Amaziah would not hear r Because God blinded and hardned him to his destruction for his abominable and ridiculous Idolatry 2 Chron. 25. 10. therefore Jehoash king of Israel went up s To wit into the Kingdom of Iudah carrying the War into his Enemies Countrey and he and Amaziah king of Judah looked one another in the face at Beth-shemesh which belongeth to Judah t Which is added to distinguish it from that Bethshemesh in Issachar and another in Naphthali Ios. 19. 22 38. 12 And Judah ‡ Heb. was 〈◊〉 was put to the worse before Israel and they fled u Being unsatisfied in the ground and manner of the quarrel and discouraged by their Kings Idolatry and smitten by God with a spirit of fear every man to their tents 13 And Jehoash king of Israel took Amaziah
he the rather presseth upon him because the state of his Kingdom required it for it is plain that Hezekiah had not as yet any Son Manasseh his Heir and Successor not being born till three Years after this time by comparing this chap. 20. 6. with chap. 21. 1. for thou shalt die and not live c According to the course of Nature and of thy Disease which is mortal in its kind and will be so in effect if God doth not miraculously prevent it Such threatnings though absolutely expressed have oft times secret conditions which God reserves in his own Breast See Ionah 3. 4. 2 Th●…n he turned his face to the wall d Either because the Temple lay that way or rather that by turning his Face from the company he might intimate his desire of privacy and so might with more freedom and fervency pour out his Soul to God and prayed unto the LORD saying 3 I beseech thee O LORD remember now how I have walked before thee in truth e i. e. Sincerely with an honest mind as the following words explain it I have in some measure humane frailty excepted kept the condition which thou didst require 1 King 8. 25. and therefore do humbly beg of thee that the Promise made to David and to his Posterity upon that condition may not fail in my Person for as yet thou hast not given me a Son See on ver 1. I am not conscious to my self of any gross exorbitancies in the course of my life for which thou usest to shorten mens days and cut off my life in thy displeasure which by this sharp Message thou threatnest to do and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight and Hezekiah wept ‡ Heb. with a great weeping sore f Partly for that horror of death which is and was common to men especially in the times of the Old Testament when the Grace of God in Christ was not so fully manifested as now it is and principally for the distracted and miserable condition in which the Church and State were then likely to be left through the uncertainty of the Succession to the Crown and the great proneness of the People to backslide to their false worship and evil practises which he easily perceived and which he knew would bring far worse Calamities upon them if he were removed as afterwards it came to pass 4 And it came to pass afore Isaiah was gone out into the middle ‖ Or cit●… court g To wit of the Kings Palace of which see on 1 King 7. 8. Or into the middle city as it is in the Hebrew For some observe that there were three Cities or three parts of this City one called the city of David in Sion another 〈◊〉 led Iebus or Salem and a third which was betwixt these two parts and united them all into one City called Ierusalem This is noted to shew Gods great readiness to hear the sincere and fervent prayers of his Children that the word of the LORD came to him saying 5 Turn again and tell Hezekiah the captain of my people Thus saith the LORD the God of David thy father h I am mindful of my Promise made to David and his House and will make it good in thy Person I have heard thy prayer I have seen thy tears behold I will heal thee on the third day i Which shews that the cure was Miraculous thou shalt go up into the house of the LORD k To give me Solemn Praise for this Mercy Which proves the perfection of the cure 6 And I will add unto thy days fifteen years l Beyond what thou dost expect and beyond what thou wouldst do if I should leave thee to the force of thy Disease and I will deliver thee and this city out of the hand of the king of Assyria m This is added either first Because he might otherwise fear the Assyrians return to this City from which he was so shamefully repulsed Or Secondly Because this sickness happened before that great slaughter chap. 19. 35. Of which see the Notes on ver 1. and * Chap. 19. 34. I will defend this city for mine own sake n To vindicate my Glory against that insolent Blasphemer and for my servant Davids sake 7 And Isaiah said Take a lump of figs o Though the deliverance was certainly Promised yet means must be used and those suitable for this hath naturally a power of ripening and softning Boils or Sores though that power was altogether insufficient to produce so sudden and so compleat a Cure And they took and laid it on the boil Which seems to have been a Plague-sore and he recovered 8 ¶ And Hezekiah said p Or rather had said for it is evident this was said before his recovery though his recovery be mentioned before it such transpositions being frequent in Scripture unto Isaiah What shall be the sign q He asketh a sign not because he distrusted it but for the strengthning of his Faith which otherwise might be shaken by the greatness of his danger and by the contradiction between this and his former Message Compare Iudg. 6. 17 37 39. Isa. 7. 11. that the LORD will heal me and that I shall go up into the house of the LORD the third day 9 And Isaiah said This sign shalt thou have of the LORD that the LORD will do the thing that he hath spoken shall the shadow go forward ten degrees or go back ten degrees 10 And Hezekiah answered It is a light thing for the shadow to go down ten degrees r To wit in an instant for that course or motion of the Sun is natural for the kind of it though miraculous for the swiftness of it but the other would be both ways miraculous nay but let the shadow return backward ten degrees 11 And Isaiah the prophet cried unto the LORD s Being moved by Gods Spirits first to offer him this sign and then to pray for it and * Isa. 38. 8. he brought the shadow ten degrees backward t Quest. 1. What were these degrees Ans. Lines in the Dial but whether each of these Lines or Degrees noted an hour or half an hour or a quarter of an hour is uncertain and not very considerable in this case Quest. 2. What was it that went down Ans. Either First The Shadow alone went back without the Sun For God could so dispose of the Light of the Sun by interposing Clouds or other things so that the Shadow should fall onely upon those Lines and in that manner as God directed it And whereas the sun is said to have gone down that may be spoken according to appearance as other passages of Scripture are understood as when the Moon is called one of the great lights Gen. 1. though it be less than some of the Stars and when the sun is said to go down Jer. 15.
that time when multitudes were made Christs willing people by the preaching of the Apostles as we read Acts 2. 3. 4. 5 c. And for the second clause it is to be understood thus thou hast or as it is in the Hebrew to thee is the dew of thy youth or of thy childhood for the word jeled from which this is derived signifies sometimes a young man and sometimes a child or infant By youth or childhood he here seems to understand those young men or children which shall be born to the Messias who are called his children Heb. 2. 13. and his seed Isa. 53. 10. wherein possibly there might be an allusion to this dew Thus the abstract is here put for the concrete which is very frequent in the Hebrew Tongue as Circumcision and Uncircumcision are put for the circumcised and the uncircumcised c. And even in the Latine Tongue this very word youth is oft used for a young man or for a company of young men By the dew of youth he means youth or young men like dew the note of similitude being oft understood And this progeny of Christ is compared to the dew partly because of their great multitude being like drops of dew innumerable and covering the whole face of the earth see 2 Sam. 17. 12. and partly because of the strange manner of their generation which like that of the dew is done suddenly and secretly and not perceived till it be accomplished and to the admiration of those that behold it of which see Isa. 49. 21. Or 2. joyntly as one entire sentence The dew of thy youth i. e. Thy posterity which is like the dew as was noted and explained before is as the dew which may very well be understood out of the foregoing clause as the word feet is understood in like manner Psal. 18. 33. He maketh my feet like hinds feet of or from the womb of the morning it is like the morning dew as it is called both in Scripture as Hos. 6. 4. and in other Authors Not is it strange that a womb is ascribed to the morning seeing we read of the womb of the Sea and of the womb of the ●…oe and frost Job 38. 8 28 29. 4 The LORD hath sworn t Which he did not in the Aaronical Priesthood Heb. 7. 21. but did it here partly because the thing was new and strange and might seem incredible because God had already erected another and that an everlasting Priesthood Numb 25. 13. and given it to Aaron and his posterity for ever and therefore this needed all possible assurance and partly that this Priesthood might be established upon better promises as is said Heb. 8. 6. and made sure and irrevocable and such that God neither could nor would repent of it as it follows and therefore will not repent * Heb. 5. 6. 7. 17 21. Thou art u To wit by my order and constitution thou shalt be so and I do hereby make thee so a priest x As well as a King Those Offices which were divided before between two families are both united and invested in thee both being absolutely necessary for the discharge of thine Office and for the establishment of thy Kingdom which is of another kind than the Kingdoms of the World spiritual and heavenly and therefore needs such a King as is also a Minister of holy things This word plainly discovers that this Psalm cannot be understood of David as some of the Jews would have it but onely of the Messias And although this word Cohen be sometimes used of a Prince or great Person in the State as the Jews object yet it cannot be so understood here partly because it signifies a Priest in Gen. 14. 18. from whence this expression is borrowed partly because that word is never used of a Soveraign Prince or King such as the Jews confess the Messias to be but onely of inferiour Princes or Ministers of State as Gen. 41. 45. 2 Sam. 8. ult partly because such an inconsiderable assertion would never have been ushered in by so solemn an oath especially after far greater things had been said of him in the same kind v. 1 2 3. and partly because the Messias is called a Priest Zach. 6. 13. compare Ier. 20. 21. 35. 15 18. for ever y Not to be interrupted or translated to another person as the Priesthood of Aaron was upon the death of the Priest but to be continued to thee for ever after the order of Melchizedek z Or after the manner c. so as he was a Priest and also a King and both without any successor and without end in the sence intended Heb. 7. 3. 5 The Lord a Either 1. God the Father whose words and oath he last mentioned v. 4. So this is an Apostrophe of the Psalmist to Christ Thy God and Father is at thy right hand to wit to defend and assist thee as that phrase is used Psal. 16. 8. 109. 31. and elsewhere See the Notes on v. 1. And he to wit God the Father shall strike c. as it follows Although this latter clause may belong to the Messias and as in the former he spake to him so in this he speaketh of him such changes of persons being very frequent in this Book Or 2. God the Son or the Lord who is at thy right hand as was said before v. 1. shall strike c. So this is an Apostrophe to God the Father concerning his Son This seems best to agree with the following verses for it is evident that it is the same person who strikes thorow Kings and judgeth among the heathen and filleth c. And so this whole verse and those which follow speak of one person which seems most probable at thy right hand shall strike thorow kings b Shall mortally wound and destroy all those Kings and Potentates who are obstinate enemies to him and to his Church in the day of his wrath c In the day of battel when he shall contend with them and pour forth the flouds of his wrath upon them 6 He shall judge d Either 1. conquer and govern them or rather 2. condemn and punish them as it is explained in the following clauses and as this word is used Gen. 15. 14. Rom. 2. 1 2. 1 Pet. 4. 6. and elsewhere among the heathen he shall fill the places d Or the place of battel which is necessarily supposed in the fight and therefore may very well be understood with the dead bodies e Of his enemies slain by his hand and lying in the field in great numbers and heaps and that unburied to their greater infamy he shall wound the heads f Heb. the head Which may be understood either 1. of some one person and eminent adversary of Christ and of his Kingdom either the Devil by comparing this with Gen. 3. 15. Heb. 2. 14. who was indeed the Head or