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A11649 Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, the booke of the Psalmes, and the Song of Songs, or, Canticles VVherein the Hebrevv vvords and sentences, are compared with, and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions, and other records and monuments of the Hebrewes: but chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures, Moses his words, lawes and ordinances, the sacrifices, and other legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of Israel, are explained. With an advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew text, and allegation of the Rabbines in these annotations. As also tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the annotations upon each severall booke. By Henry Ainsworth.; Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, and the booke of the Psalmes Ainsworth, Henry, 1571-1622? 1627 (1627) STC 219; ESTC S106799 2,398,875 1,194

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sorrowes of this age were great as the very name of Enos testifieth and the history following in Gen. 6. confirmeth for impiety crept into the Church by unlawfull mariages with Kains seed and religion and manners were much corrupted Gen. 6. 2. 11. The Hebrew Doctors describe it thus In the dayes of Enos the sons of Adam erred with great error and the counsell of the wisemen of that age became brutish and Enos him-selfe was one of them that erred and their error was this They said for as much as God hath created these stars and sphaeres to governe the world and set them on high and imparted honor unto them and they are ministers that minister before him it is meet that men should land and glorifie and give them honor For this is the wil of God that we magnifie and honor whomsoever he magnifieth and honoreth even as a King would have them honored that stand before him and this is the honour of the King himselfe When this thing was come up into their heart they began to build Temples unto stars and to offer sacrifice unto them and to laud and glorifie them with words and to worship before them that they might in their evill opinion obtaine favour of the Creator And this was the root of Idolatry c. And in process of time there stood up false Prophets among the sons of Adam which said that God had commanded said unto them worship such a star or all the stars and doe sacrifice unto them thus and thus and build a Temple for it and make an image of it that all the people women and children may worship it he shewed them the image which he had feyned out of his owne heart and said it was the image of such a starre which was made knowne unto him by prophesie and they began after this manner to make images in Temples and under trees and on tops of mountaines and hils and assembled together and worshipped them c. And this thing was spred through all the world to serve images with services different one from another and to sacrifice unto and worship them So in tract of time the glorious and fearfull name of God was forgotten out of the mouth of all living and out of their knowledge and they acknowledged him not And there was found no people of the earth that knew ought save images of wood and stone and Temples of stone which they had beene trained up from their childhood to worship and to serve and to sweare by their names And the wise men that were among them as the Priests and such like thought there was no God save the stars and sphares for whose sake and in whose likenesse they had made these images but as for the Rocke everlasting there was no man that acknowledged him or knew him save a few persons in the world is Enoch Mathusala Noe Sem and Eber. And in this way did the world walk and converse till the pillar of the world to weet Abraham our father was born Maim in Misn. tom 1. treat of Idolatry c. 1. S. 1. 2. 3. That the heavens and stars were of old worshipped both Moses and the Prophets after him shew Deut. 4. 19. Am. 5. 26. 2. Kin. 21. 3. 5. And as the heathen Philosophers counted the heaven a living body Arist. de c●l l. 2 c. 2 so did the wisest of the Hebrew Rabbins All the stars and al the sphaers have soules knowledg understanding are living things and stand acknowledge him who said and the world was every one according to his greatnesse and according to his dignity lauding and glorifying him that formed them even as the Angels And as they know the holy God so they know themselves and know the Angels which are above them and the knowledge that the Starres and Sphaeres have is lesse then the knowledge of the Angels and greater then the knowledge of the sonnes of men saith Maimony in Iesudei hatorah chap. 3. S. 9. Vpon this perswasion men might the easier be drawne to the worship of them If we understand Moses here otherwise Then began men to call upon the name of the Lord then it may be meant of more publick worship now erected then before or of publick preaching in the name of the Lord to call the wicked to repentance or of calling themselves by the name of the Lord as in Gen. 6. 2. the faithfull are called the sonnes of God Onkelos the Chaldee Paraphrast translateth then beganne men to pray But the Chaldee in the Masorites bible saith Then in his dayes the sonnes of men left off from praying or became prophane so that they prayed not in the name of the Lord. CHAP. V. 1 The genealogie of the tenne first Patriarchs of the world 3 Of Adam 6 Seth 9 Enos 12 Kainan 15 Maleleel 18 Iared 21 Enoch who walked with God was taken away without death 25 Mathusala 28 Lamech 32 and Noe. THis is the booke of the generations of Adam in the day God created Adam in the likenesse of God made he him Male and female created hee them and blessed them and called their name Adam in the day they were created And Adam lived a hundred and thirty yeeres and begat a sonne in his likenesse in his image and called his name Seth. And the dayes of Adam were after he had begotten Seth eight hundred yeeres and hee begat sonnes and daughters And all the dayes of Adam which he lived were nine hundred yeeres and thirty yeeres and he dyed And Seth lived a hundred yeeres and five yeeres and begat Enos And Seth lived after he begat Enos eight hundred yeeres and seven yeeres and begat sonnes and daughters And all the dayes of Seth were nine hundred yeeres and twelve yeeres and hee died And Enos lived ninety yeeres and begat Kainan And Enos lived after hee begat Kainan eight hundred yeeres and fifteene yeeres and begat sonnes and daughters And all the daies of Enos were nine hundred yeeres and five yeeres and hee died And Kainan lived seventy yeeres and begat Maleleel And Kainan lived after he begat Maleleel eight hundred yeeres and fortie yeeres and begat sonnes and daughters And all the dayes of Kainan were nine hundred yeeres and ten yeeres and he died And Maleleel lived sixtie yeeres and five yeeres and begat Iared And Maleleel lived after he begat Iared eight hundred yeeres and thirty yeeres and begat sons and daughters And al the dayes of Maleleel were eight hundred yeeres and ninety and five yeeres and he died And Iared lived a hundred yeeres and sixtie and two yeeres begat Enoch And Iared lived after he begat Enoch eight hundred yeeres and begat sons and daughters And al the daies of Iared were nine hundred yeres sixty and two yeres and he dyed And Enoch lived sixty and five yeres and begat Methusala And Enoch walked with God after hee begat Methusala three hundred yeeres and begat sonnes and daughters And all the daies of
sounds or voices meaneth to proclaime publish or declare 〈◊〉 the Greeke here translateth it so after and in ●zr 1. 1. They caused the trompet to passe throughout all the borders of Israel saith Maim in Iobel ch 10. sect 10. the trompet or the cor●●t see ●ev 23 24. The trompet of the Iubilee and of the beginning of the yeer is one in every respect Maim in Iobel ch 10. sect 11. and Talmud in Rosh hasshanath chap. 3. of loud-sound or of alarme as is Englished in Numb 10. 5. See the notes on Lev. 23. 14. It is commanded to blow with the trompet in the tenth day of Tisri that is Sebtember in the yeere of Iubile and this commandement is given to the Synedrion first as it is written And thou shalt cause to sound c. and every particular person is bound to blow as it is written yee shall cause the trompet to sound c. Maimony ibidem ch 13. sect 10. This blowing with trompets figured the preaching of the Gospel Luk. 4. 18. 19. as is shewed also on Levit. 23. day of Atonements or of expiation which was the Fasting day when the whole Church every yeere afflicted their soules and the high priest made atonement for them in the most holy place Lev. 16. ch 23. 27. And though the yeere began tenne dayes before the first of the moneth yet as our spirituall bondage was not done away but by the atonemēt made through the death of Christ Heb. 2. 14. 15. so neither was the type hereof performed in Israel till the day of Atonement The Hebrewes say From the beginning of the yeere untill the day of Atonement the servants were not released unto their owne houses nor from being in servitude to their masters Neither were the fields returned to their owners but the servants did eate and drinke and rejoyce weare crownes or garlands upon their heads When the day of Atonement came the Magistrates the Synedrion blew the trompet the servants were released to their owne houses and the lands returned to their owners Maimony in Iobel ch 10. sect 14. Vers. 10. the yeere of fiftie yeeres an Hebrew Phrase meaning the yeere even the fiftieth yeere so that they misse which count every nine and fortieth yeere to be the Iubile that was the seventh seven the ordinarie Sabbath and yeere of Rest and the yeere following was the Iubile even the fiftieth so two holy yeeres came came together Thus the Hebrew canons declare it The yeere of Iubile commeth not in the count of the yeeres of the seven but the nine and fourtieth yeere is the Release and the fiftieth yeere the Iubile and the one and fifteth yeere beginneth the sixe yeeres of the Seven following and so in every Iubile Maimony in Iobel ch 10. sect 7. And againe The nine and fortieth yeere it selfe is the yeere of Release and after it is the Iubile in the fiftieth yeer R. Menachem on Lev. 25. proclaime libertie for Hebrew servants from their Masters Ier. 34. 8. 9. Such as went not out at the seventh yeere of their servitude but were bored through the eare to serve for ever went out at the Iubile for then their ever was at an end as is noted on Exod. 21. 2. 6. as after followeth in this chap. v. 39. 40. 41. Wherefore the other legal ordinances which are commanded to be kept for ever had also their end at the Iubile of the Gospel as the Apostle sheweth Heb. 9. 9. 10. 11. Colos. 2. 14. 16. 17. And the Iewes which urge the obseruation of them may be answered from their owne writers It is a knowne thing that this word legnolam For ever is sometime spoken of a time determined as Hee shall serve him for ever Exod. 21. 6. that is to say unto the ever of the Iubilee And sometime it is spoken of length of dayes without knowledge of their limit but yet they have a limit and an end as Let King David live for ever 1 King 1. 31. And sometimes it is spoken of a time which hath none end as The Lord shall reigne for ever and aye Psal. 10. 16. saith R. Menachem on Lev. 25. This yeere of liberty figured the yeere of grace by Christ who dying in the last Iubile that ever the land had did deliver them who through feare of death were all their life time subject to bondage Heb. 2. 14. 15. such as were the servants of sinne whom the Sonne making free they are free in deed Iohn 4. 34. 36. Of this time of grace Christ prophecying calleth it the yere of his redeemed Esay 63. 4. and the acceptable yeere of the LORD Esay 61. 2. And the Apostle exhorting us that we receive not the grace of God in vaine saith Behold now is the accepted time behold now is the day of salvation 2 Cor. 6. 1. 2. a Iubile in Hebrew Iobel which the Chaldee calleth Iobela the Greeke here interpreteth it a yeere of remission of signification In Ezek. 46. 17. it is called the yeere of libertie The Hebrewes some of them thinke it hath the name from the Arabike of a rammes horne whereof the Cornets sounded this yeere were made so the trompets of Iobelim in Ios. 6. 4. are in Chaldee expounded trompets of rams horne But the Hebrew word signifieth neither ram nor horn but hath the name of carying or leading-alōg Iob 10. 19. and 21. 32. Psal. 60. 11. whereupon Iuball is a streame or water course that runneth along and carieth things with it Ier. 17. 8. Esay 44. 4. And thus R. Menachem on Lev. 25. and the Zohar derive the name Iobel from Iubal Streame or water-course according to that phrase in Ier. 17. 8. It seemeth also to have the name of the long-sound of the trompet as in Exod. 19. 13. Iobel is the sound of the trompet and because this yeere was joyfull to servants and poore people of the joyfull shout which they made and sound of trompets the Latines have borrowed the word Iubile which is to make a joyfull shout And in mysterie the Iubile is so named as carying men to Christ by whose redemption all the faithfull have cause to shout and rejoyce When hee sounded the Trompet of his Gospel as God hath sent him to preach the Gospell to the poore to preach deliver a 〈…〉 to the captives and recovering of sight to the blinde to set at libertie them that are bruised to preach the acceptable yeere of the Lord. then he said This day is this scripture fulfilled in your eares and all bare him witnesse and wondred at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth Luk. 4. 18. 22. his possession his tenement meaning lands and houses which had beene sold and now must be returned to the first owners a figure of our restoring by Christ into Paradise the possession whereof Adam lost by sinne Gen. 3. Luk. 23. 43. So there were three things especiall unto this yeere the sounding of trompets the freedome of servants and the restoring of
of Israel to doe the Passeover And they did the Passeover in the first moneth in the fourteenth day of the moneth betweene the two evenings in the Wildernesse of Sinai according to all that Iehovah commanded Moses so did the sonnes of Israel And there were men who were uncleane by the soule of a man that they could not 〈◊〉 the Passeover in that day and they ca●● neere before Moses and before Aaron 〈◊〉 that day And those men said unto him Wee are uncleane by the soule of a man wherefore are we kept backe that wee 〈◊〉 not offer the oblation of Iehovah in his appointed season among the sonnes of Isra●● And Moses said unto them Stand still and I will heare what Iehovah will command concerning you And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto the sonnes of Israel saying Any man when he shall be uncleane by a soule or be in a journey a farre off of you or of your generations yet he shall doe the Passeover unto Iehovah In the second moneth in the fourteenth day betweene the two evenings they shall doe it with unleavened cakes and bitter herbs shall they eat it They shall not let ought remaine of it untill the morning and they shall not breake a bone thereof according to every statute of the Passeover they shall do it But the man that is cleane and is not in a journey and forbeareth to doo the Passeover even that soule shall be cut off from his peoples because he offered not the oblation of Iehovah in his appointed season that man shall beare his sinne And if a stranger shall so journe with you and will doe the Passeover unto Iehovah according to the statute of the Passeover and according to the judgement thereof so shall he doe ye shall have one statute both for the stranger and for the home-borne of the land And in the day that the Tabernacle was reared up the cloud covered the Tabernacle even the Tent of the Testimony and in the evening there was upon the Tabernacle as the appearance of fire untill the morning So it was continually the cloud covered it and the appearance of fire by night And when the cloud was taken up from off the Tent then after that the sonnes of Israel journeyed and in the place where the cloud abode there encamped the sonnes of Israel At the mouth of Iehovah the sonnes of Israel journeyed and at the mouth of Iehovah they encamped all the dayes that the cloud abode upon the Tabernacle they encamped And when the cloud tarried long upon the Tabernacle many dayes then the sonnes of Israel kept the charge of Iehovah and journied not And it was when the cloud was a few dayes upon the Tabernacle according to the mouth of Iehovah they encamped and according to the mouth of Iehovah they journeyed And it was when the cloud was from evening untill morning and the cloud was taken up in the morning then they journeyed either by day or by night when the cloud was taken up then they journeyed Or two dayes or a moneth or a yeare of dayes when the cloud tarried long upon the Tabernacle abiding upon it the sonnes of Israel encamped and journeyed not but when it was taken up they iourneyed At the mouth of Iehovah they encamped and at the mouth of Iehovah they journeyed they kept the charge of Iehovah at the mouth of Iehovah by the hand of Moses Annotations IN the first moneth This Commandement to keepe the Passeover was in time before the numbring and ordering of the tribes mentioned in the former part of this booke for that was commanded in the first day of the second moneth Num. 1. 1 2. Whereupon the Hebrewes as Sol. Iarchi here doe observe that there is no order of former and latter in the Law but things done after are sometimes ser before The reason why it is mentioned here is because of the second Passeover kept the 14 day of the second moneth verse 11. which was after the foresaid master after the dedication of the Altar ordination of the Levites And the cause why God commanded them to keepe the Passeover in the Wildernesse was for that by the first institution they were bound to keepe it when they were come into the land of Canaan Exod. 12. 25. and therefore without speciall warrant they would not have kept it in the desert neither kept they any mo● but this till they came into the land Ios. 5. Verse 3. doc the Passeover that is keepe offer or sacrifice the Passeover called in Hebrew Pesach in Greeke Pascha so named because the Lord when he smote all the first-borne in the houses of the Egyptians passed over the houses of the Israelites whose doore-posts were sprinkled with the lambs blood and slew not their first-borne Hereupon the Lord appointed a yearely feast in remembrance thereof which should continue till Christ came who is our Passeover or Paschal Lambe sacrificed for us in whom we keepe the feast in spirit and truth 1 Cor. 5. 7 8. See the annotations on Exod. 12. in his appointed season every fourteenth day of the first moneth as verse 3. which the Greeke here calleth the houre thereof and in verse 3. the season thereof and the Hebrewes explaine it though it be on the Sabbath So all the feasts in Israel were to be kept at the times appointed of God Levit. 23. 4 c. Therefore Ieroboam keeping the feast of Tabernacles in the eighth moneth which God had appointed in the seventh Levit. 23. 34. it is said to be the moneth which he had devised of his owne heart 1 Kings 12. 32. 33. Verse 3. betweene the two evenings that is in the afternoone Sol. Iarchi on Exod. 12. saith from the sixt houre which is at mid-day and upward it is called betweene the two evenings for that the Sunne declineth towards his going downe c. betweene the evening of the day and the evening of the night the evening of the day is in the beginning of the seventh houre and the evening of the night is when the night beginneth See the notes on Exod. 12. 6. where the houres of killing the Passeover are observed It figured the time of Christs comming in these last dayes Heb. 〈◊〉 1 2. as towards the evening of the world and the houre of his death which was the ninth houre that is three a clocke in the afternoone Matth. 27. 46-50 all the statutes that is all the rites and ordinances prescribed which the Greeke translateth the Law thereof So in Exod. 12. 43. where it is shewed who were to eat the Passeover the judgements this the Hebrewes referre to the unleavened cakes which were to be eaten with it and seven dayes after also to the putting away of Leaven c. Exod. 12. 8. 15 c. But here are to be accepted the speciall rites which belonged onely to the first Passeover in Egypt as the sprinkling of their posts with blood the eating of it standing c.
Mine eyes shall be on the faithfull of the land for to sit with me hee that walketh in the perfect way hee shall minister to me He shall not sit within my house that doth deceit hee that speaketh lies shall not be established before mine eies In the mornings I will suppresse all the wicked of the land for to cut off from the Citie of Iehovah all the workers of iniquity Annotations MErcy and judgement This may be meant of Davids owne administration howbeit the Chaldee understandeth it of Gods saying If thou dealest mercifully with me if thou dost judgement with me for all I will sing praise Vers. 3. doe wisely behave my seife prudently as David is said to doe 1 Sam. 18. 14. when wilt thou come namely to assist me in the performance hereof or when thou shalt come namely to call me unto an account of my life c. Vers. 3. of Belial that is mischievous or wicked word or thing See Psal. 41. 9. Vers. 4. know or acknowledge that is regard or approve so Psal. 1. 6. Vers. 5. hurteth with tongue that traduceth or as the Hebrew phrase is betongueth Hereupon a man of tongue is for a pratler or calumniator Psa. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 12. The Chaldee paraphraseth He that speaketh with a third or threefold tongue against has neighbour meaning a back-biter or calumniator which is said of the Hebrew Doctors to have a three sold tongue because hee hurteth three therewhich both himselfe by his sinne and his neighbour whom he backbi●eth and the receiver of his tale whom he corrupteth Hereupon is that saying of Ben Syrach A third tongue hath disguieted many Eeclus 28. 14. and a third tongue hath cast out vertuous women Ecclus. 28 15. meaning the back biter or tale-bearer See the Annotations on Levit. 19. 16. large or wide broad of heart meaning proud as Prov. 21. 4. So large of soule Prov. 28. 25. is proud in minde I cannot here the word heare or suffer is to be understood as is expressed Prov. 30 21. So Ioh. 31. 23. and in Greeke 1 Cor. 3. 2. Vers. 8. In the mornings that is every morning or early see Psal. 73. 14. PSAL. CII The Prophet in his prayer complaineth of his miseries 13 He taketh comfort in the eternity and mercy of God 19 The record hereof is for posterity 24 He sustaineth his weaknesse by the unchangeablenesse of Christ. A praier for the poore afflicted when he shall be overwhelmed and shall powre forth his meditation before Iehovah IEhovah heare my praier and let my cry come unto thee Hide not thy face from me in the day of distresse upon me incline thine eare unto me in the day I cal make hasle answer me For my daies are consumed as smoke and my bones are burnt as an hearth Mine heart is smitten as grasse and withered that I forget to eat my bread For the voice of groning my bone cleaveth to my flesh I am like to a Pelican of the wildernesse I am as an Owle of the desarts I watch and am as a Sparrow solitary upon the house roofe All the day mine enemies doe reproach mee they that rage against me have sworne against me For I eat ashes as bread and mingle my drinkes with weeping Because of thine angry threat and thy fervent wrath for thou hast heaved me up and cast me downe My daies are as a shadow declined and I am withered as grasse And thou Iehovah sittest for ever and thy memoriall to generation and generation Thou wilt arise wilt have tender meroy upon Sion for the time to be gracious unto it for the appointed time is come For thy servants delight in the stones thereof and doe pitty the dust thereof And the heathens shall feare the name of Iehovah and all the Kings of the earth thy glory When Iehovah shall build up Sion shall appeare in his glory Shall turne unto the praier of the lowly and not despise their praier This shall be written for the generation after and the people created shall praise Iah For he hath looked downe from the height of his holinesse Iehovah from the heavens did behold the earth To heare the groaning of the prisoner to loose the sonnes of death To tell in Sion the name of Iehovah and his praise in Ierusalem When the peoples shall be gathered together the kingdomes to serve Iehovah Hee hath afflicted my strength in the way hee hath shortened my daies I said O my God take me not away in the midst of my days thy yeers are through generation of generations Afore time thou hast founded the earth and the heavens are the worke of thine hands They shall perish but thou shalt stand and they all shall wex old as a garment as a vesture shalt thou change them and they shall be changed But thou art the same and thy yeeres shall not be ended The sonnes of thy servants shall dwell and their seed shal be established before thee Annotations FOr the poore agreeing to his estate or of the poore overwhelmed with feares cares sorrowes c. see Psal. 61. 3. Vers. 4. as smoke or with the smoke vanishing in the aire so Psal. 37. 20. The Hebrew letters a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beth with and b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 caph as are one like another sometime put one for another as 2 Sam. 5. 24. with 1 Chron. 14. 15. an hearth the place whereon fire burneth Compare Iob 30. 30. Vers. 5. as grasse or as the herbs smitten with blasting Amos 4. 9. to eat my bread The Chaldee applieth this to the bread of the soule the Law of God Vers. 6. to my flesh that is my skin as Iob 19. 20. so elsewhere skin is put for flesh Iob 18. 13. See also Lam. 4. 8. V. 7. a Pelican a bird living in wilde desolate places Zeph. 2. 14. Esa. 34. 11. It seemeth to have the name in Hebrew of vomiting and to be that fowle which we call the shovelard which swalloweth shell-fishes and after vomiteth them to get the fish It was a bird uncleane by the law Levit. 11. 18. Some thinke it to be the bittour which maketh a loud and dolefull noise Compare Iob 30. 29. Vers. 9. rage against me or vaunt against or would make a foole of mee the Greeke saith that praise me meaning fainedly The word signifieth to lift up with praise and glory and also ingloriously to vaunt rage or be mad see Psal. 5. 6. and 75. 5. The word against is here to be understood as in Prov. 8. 35. he that sinneth against me An example of such raging madnesse see against Christ Luke 6. 11. Vers. 12. declined or stretched out as the shadow of the Sunne when it is neere downe which though it seeme longer yet soone passeth away So Psal. 109. 23. and 144. 4. Vers. 13. sittest that is continuest as the Greeke explaineth it for sitting and standing as after in vers 27. are often used for sure and setled abiding The Chaldee addeth
either sitting or lying but this night lying onely Then the table is brought againe before him and hee faith This Passeover which wee eat is in respect that the Lord passed over the houses of our fathers in Egypt Then holdeth hee up the bitter herbs in his hand and saith These bitter herbs which wee eat are in respect that the Egyptians made the lives of our fathers bitter in Egypt Then hee holdeth up the unlevened bread in his hand and saith This unlevened bread which wee eat is in respect that the dough of our fathers had not time to bee levened when the Lord appeared unto them and redeemed them out of the hand of the enemie and they baked unlevened cakes of the dough which they brought out of Egypt Exodus 12. 39. Then hee saith Therefore are wee bound to confesse to praise to laud to celebrate to glorifie to honour to extoll to magnifie and to ascribe victory unto him that did unto our fathers and unto us all these signes and brought us forth from servitude to freedome from sorrow to joy from darknesse to great light and wee say before him Halelujah Halelujah Praise O yee servants of the LORD c. unto the f●●●trocke to a fountaine of waters that is the hundred and thirteenth and to the end of the hundred and fourteenth Psalme Then they blesse the Lord which redeemed them and their fathers out of Egypt and hath brought them unto that night to eat unlevened bread therein and bitter herbs And hee blesseth GOD who createth the fruit of the vine and drinketh the second cup. After this hee blesseth for the washing of hands and washeth his hands the second time and taketh two cakes parteth one of them c. and blesseth GOD that bringeth bread out of the earth Because it is said the bread of affliction or of povertie Deuteronomie 16. 3. as it is the manner of the poore to have broken meat so heere is a broken part Afterwards hee wrappeth up of the unlevened bread and of the bitter herbs together and dippeth them in the ●auce and blesseth GOD which commanded to eat unlevened bread and bitter herbs and they eat Then hee blesseth GOD which commanded the eating of the sacrifice and hee eateth the flesh of the feast offring and againe blesseth GOD which commanded the eating of the Passeover and then hee 〈◊〉 of the body of the Passeover After this they ●it long at Supper and eat every one so much as he will and drinke as much as they will drinke Afterward he eateth of the flesh of the Passeover though it bee but so much as an olive and tasteth nothing at all after it that it may be the end of his supper and that the taste of the flesh of the Passeover may remaine in his mouth After this he lifteth up his hands and blesseth for the third cup of wine and drinketh it Then filleth hee the fourth cup and accomplisheth for it the Praise or Hymne and sayeth for it the blessing of the Song which is All thy workes praise thee O Lord c. Psalme 145. 10. and blesseth God that created the fruit of the vine and tasteth nothing at all after it all the night except water And hee may fill the fift cup saying for it the great Hymne the hundred thirty sixe Psalm Confesse ye to the Lord for hee is good for his mercie endureth for ever unto the end of that Psalme But he is not bound they say to that cup as to the foure former cups These things are shewed by Maimony in his treatise of Leven and unlevened bread chapter 8. where also hee noteth some differences at this time when having no Temple they can have no sacrifice neither kill the paschall Lambe but onely use the unlevened bread bitter herbs and wine in their private houses After in his Copie of the Haggadah or Narration of the Passeover hee sheweth what words they used at the breaking and delivering of the unlevened bread This is the bread of affliction which our fathers did eat in the land of Egypt whosoever is hungry let him come and eat whosoever hath neede let him come and keepe the Passeover c. These observations of the Iewes whiles their common-wealth stood and to this day may give light to some particulars in the Passeover that Christ kept as why they lay downe one leaning on anothers bosome Ioh. 13. 23. a signe of rest and security and stood not as at the first Passeover neither ●ate on high as wee use Why Christ rose from supper and washed and sate downe againe Iohn 13. 4. 5. 12. Why hee blessed or gave thankes for the bread apart and for the cup or wine apart Marke 14. 22. 23. and why it is said hee tooke the cup after supper Luke 22. 20. also concerning the Hymne which they sung at the end Matthew 26. 30. and why Paul calleth it the shewing forth of the Lords death 1 Corinthians 11. 26. as the Iewes usually called their Passeover Haggadah that is a Shewing or Declaration But specially we may observe how the bread which was of old a remembrance of their deliverance out of Egypt was sanctified by the Sonne of God to bee a remembrance of his death and of our redemption thereby from Sathan 1 Corinthians 11. 24. 25. 26. for which we have much more cause to praise honour and magnifie the Lord than the Hebrewes had for their temporary salvation Verse 9. raw That raw whereof the Law warneth us is flesh whereon the fire hath begunne to worke and it is roasted a little but not fit for man to eat as yet saith Maimony in Korban Pesach chapter 8. S. 6. It might figure a full and due preparation by the preaching of the Gospell and shewing forth of Christs death with an examination of our selues that wee eat not unworthily and so eat judgement to our selves 1 Corinthians 11. 26. 28. 29. sodden at all or any way sod Hebr. sodden sod in water The Iewes explaine it so generally neither to be sodden in water nor in any other liquor or juyce of fruits Neither roasted and afterward sodden nor perboyled and afterward roasted c. Yet they say it was lawfull to baste it with wine or oyle or any liquor except water also lawfull to dip the flesh when it was roasted in liquors or juyce of fruits Maimony in Korban Pesach chapter 8. S. 7. 8. At the Passeover which Christ did eat the Euangelists mention his dipping of a sop and giving it to Iudas Iohn 13. 26. In seething the water is mixed with the flesh the forbidding whereof seemeth to teach the simplicitie that should be in Christ that wee know nothing but Christ and him crucified 2 Corinthians 11. 3. 1 Corinthians 2. 2. with fire a figure both of Gods Spirit compared to fire Matthew 3. 11. through which Christ offred himselfe to God Heb. 9. 14. and of the fire of Gods wrath which Christ was to suffer whiles he was made a curse for us by
you and ye shall afflict your soules it is a statute for ever And the Priest whom he shall anoint and whose hand hee shall fill to administer-the Priests-office in his fathers stead he shal make-the-atonement and shall put-on the linnen garments the garments of holinesse And hee shall make-atonement for the Sanctuary of holinesse and for the Tent of the congregation and for the altar shall he make-atonement and for the Priests and for all the people of the Church shall he make-atonement And this shall be to you a statute for ever to make-atonement for the sonnes of Israel for all their sinns once in a yeere And he did as Iehovah commanded Moses Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the nine and twentieth section or Lecture of the Law see Gen. 6. 9. THe two sons Nadab and Abihu Lev. 10. 1. after whose death for transgressing Gods ordinances this Law here is given for the purging and reconciliation of the Church unto God one day in the yeere they offred to weet strange fire as the Gr. and Chaldee versions here annex and as Moses shewed before Lev. 10. 1. V. 2. speake unto Aaron God appointeth Moses to informe the Priest of his duty and to see that hee performed this service aright so in ages following there were appointed with the high priest elders of the elders of the Synedrion which did read before him and taught him the service of this day and the order of it as Maim recordeth in Misneh in Iom hakippurim or Day of atonement ch 1. sect 5. that he come not or as the Greek translateth it and let him not come Of this the Apostle sayth The Priests went alwayes into the first Tabernacle accomplishing the services but into the second went the high priest alone once in the yeere c. The holy Ghost this signifying that the way into the Holies was not yet manifested while as the first Tabernacle had yet a standing Which was a figure for the time then present in which were offred both gifts and sacrifices that could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience c. But Christ being come an high Priest of the good things to come by a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is not of this creation or building neither by the blood of Goats and bullocks but by his owne blood he entred in once into the Holies having found an eter 〈…〉 redemption Heb. 9. 6. 7. 8. 9. 11. 12. But now wee have libertie to enter into the Holies by the blood of Iesus by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the veile that is his flesh Heb. 10 19. 20. the Holy place Hebrew the holinesse which the Greeke translateth the Holy meaning the Holie of holies or most holy place which the Apostle therefore calleth Holies and sheweth it to be a figure of Heaven it selfe into which Christ our high Priest entred for us Heb. 9. 12. 24. that he dye not for presuming to do that which he is not commanded as his sonnes Levit. 10. I will appeare Targum Ionathan expoundeth it the glory of my Majestie or presence shall be reveiled upon the Covering-mercy-seat Compare this with Exod. 25. 22. Because Gods Maiestie dwelled there betweene the Cherubims therfore the Priest might not come there but by leave from God and with reverence And by this cloud hee meaneth the cloud of glory which should bee upon the Mercie-seat saith R Menachem on Lev. 16. It may be understood of the cloud the smoake of the incense whereof see v. 〈◊〉 Ver. 3. With this in Greeke Thus. a yongling Hebrew a son of the herd this was to be of the second yeere or a two yeerling bullock as is noted on Exod. 29. 1. And of that age was the Ramme after mentioned Observe that on this day he offred also the two Lambes for the daily sacrifice Numbers 28. 3. and one bullocke and seven Iambes for a Burnt-offring and an hee goat fot a Sinne offring besides that goat after mentioned in verse 5. as is expressed in Num. 29. 7. 8. 11. all which with other services the high priest him-selfe offred this day which on other dayes might be done by other priests The Hebrew canons lay them downe thus In the day of the Fast they offer the daily sacrifice in the morning and evening according to the order of every day And they offer more for that day a bullocke and a ramme and seven lambs all of them Burne-offrings And a goat for a Sin-offring which is eaten at evening Over and besides this they offer a Bullocke for a Sin-offring and that is burnt aram for a Burnt-offring and these both are for the high Priest And the Ram which is for the Congregation is spoken of in Lev. 16. and it is the Ram spoken of in the generall addition Num. 29. and it is called the peoples Ram. And further they bring for the Congregation two goat bucks the one is offred for sinne and is burnt the other is the goat sent away So all the beasts that are offred this day are found to be fifteene the two daily sacrifices and a bullocke and two rammes and seven lambes all of them Burnt-offrings and two goats for sinne the one done without and eaten at even the other done within and burnt and the high Priests bullocke for Sin and that is burnt The service of all these 15. beasts offred this day is not performed but by the high Priest onely And if it fall out to be the Sabbath day the sacrifice added for the Sabbath in Num. 28. 9. none doe offer it but the high Priest And so the other services of this day as the burning of the daily incense and the trimming of the lamps all is done by the high Priest c. Maimony in Iom hakippurim c. 1. s. 1. 2. The high Priest and his worke this day figured Christ and his worke of reconciling the Church unto God Heb. 9. 7. 8. 11. 12. and in that the high Priest performed all the services himself it signified how Christ should by himselfe purge our sins Heb. 1. 3. and shewed the weakenesse of the legall priesthood which served but untill the time of reformation and then should bee abolished Heb. 9. 10. and 8. 4. 5. 6. a burnt-offring these both were for the Priest himselfe as after in verse 11. 24. Therefore the other sacrifices are not here mentioned Ver. 4. holy Hebr of holinesse the Gr. casseth it a sanctified linnen Coat This and the rest were peculiar for this day and for the service of this day that is for making atonement the other service which was ordinary hee performed this day in his other priestly garments as appeareth by v. 23. 24. What the high priests eight ornaments were which he usually ware are noted on Ex. 28. 4 c. the four that were for this day are here expressed These the Hebrewes call his white
when he hath begun the act with his body they are both of them guiltie of death by the Magistrate or of cutting off or of beating or of chastisement Maimony in Issureibiah ch 1. sect 10. Vers. 21. of thy seed that is of any of thy children thy son or thy daughter as Moses expoundeth it in Deut. 18. 10. See also Lev. 20. 2. through the fire this word fire is after expressed in Deut. 18. 10. and in 2 Kings 11. 3. which another Prophet expoundeth burne in the fire 2 Chron. 28. 3. which was the abominable custome of the heathens so dedicating their children unto idols and Devils and the like abomination the Israelites committed in a valley neer to Ierusalem 2 Chron. 33. 6. Ierm 32. 35. which King Iosias abolished when he defiled Topheth which was in the valley of the sons of Hinnom that no man might make his sonne or his daughter to passe through the fire to Molech 2 King 23. 10. This sin is here forbidden amongst whordomes and incests because even it is spiritual whoredome as in Lev. 20. 5. it is called a going a wh●ring after Molech The manner of doing this wickednesse it not now certainly knowne but is thought to be done two waies some being burned to death othersome made to passe onely betweene two fires for a signe of consecration So of Achaz King of Iudah it is said he burnt his sons in the fire 2 Chron. 28. 3. and of the Iewes that they burnt their sons and their daughters in the fire Ierm 7. 31. and that they burnt their sonnes with fire for burnt offrings unto B●●l Ierm 19. 5. yea they sacrificed their sons and their daughters unto Devills and shed innocent blood the blood of their sonns and of their daughters whom they sacrificed unto the idols of Canaan Psal. 106. 37. 38. R. Bechai on Lev. 18 saith that the parents were perswaded that by this sacrifice the rest of their children should be delivered from death and that they themselves should prosper for it all daies of their life Of the manner of consecrating and not killing their children the Hebrewes write thus There was a great fire kindled and the father tooke some of his seed to deliver the same unto the Priests that served the fire and the same Priests gave the son unto his father after that hee was delivered into their hand to cause him to passe through the fire by his leave and the father of the son was he that made his sonne passe through the fire by the leave of the priests and hee led him through on his feet from one side to another in the midst of the flame but burned him not to Molech after the manner that they burned their sonnes and their daughters to other Idols but this service named Molech was by passing through onely Maimony treat of Idolatrie ch 6. sect 3. And for the manner of killing their children in the honor of Molech it is thus recorded in an Hebrew commentary called Ialkut upon ●erm 7. sol 61. col 4. Though all other houses of Idolatry were in Ierusalem yet Molechs house was without the city in a place apart How was Molech made It was an Image having the face of a Bullocke and hands spred abroad like a man that openeth his hands to receive somewhat Within it was hollow and for it there were seven chappels builded before which this image was set Who so off●●d a foule or dove went into the first chappell if he broght a Lambe he went into the second if a Ramme into the third if a calfe into the fourth if a bullock into the fi●t if an Oxe into the sixt and if he offred his son hee went into the seventh He kissea Molech as in Hos. 13. 2. Let the sacrificers of men kiss the calves The son was set before Molech and Molech having fire put under it was made burning hot Then the Priests taking the child put him into Molechs burning bands and to the end that the father might no heare the cry of the childe they did beat upon Tabers thereupon was the place called Tophet of Toph which is a Taber But of these things wee have no certainty save that the scriptures witnesse such impiety to have beene in Israel Molech the name of an Idol or Star which the Ammonites and other heathens worshipped called also Moloch Amos 5. 26. and Milcom 1 King 11. 5. 7. and was so named as being Melech King wherefore the Greeke translateth it Archon a Prince and is thought of some to be the star Saturne the highest of all the Planets unto which the Carthaginians are said to have sacrificed the best of their sonnes Diodor. Sicul. l. 20. and likewise the Phoenicians Euseb. praep Evang. lib. 4. Others thinke it was the Sunne which is as King and chiefe of all the Planets and whom the Phoenicians worshipped by the name of Be●l samen that is Lord of heaven as Sanchonjatho testifieth in Euseb. Evang. praep lib. 1. called in the holy Scriptures Baal And this seemeth probable for whereas in Tophet in the valley of the sons of Hinnom they used to make their children passe through the fire to Molech 2 King 23. 10. Ieremy saith they offred them unto Baal ●e●m 19. 5. compared with Ierm 7. 31. and Ier. 32. 35. So either it was a starre as the Prophet saith the starre of your God Amos 5. 26. or the multitude of stars as Stephen saith God gave them up to worship the host of heaven Act. 7. 42. which another Prophet confirmeth saying They shall spread them before the Sun and the Moone and all the host of heaven whom they have loved and whom they have served Ier. 8. 2. Of like sort were Adram melech and Anam-melech the Gods of Sepharvaim unto whom that people burnt their children in fire 2 King 17. 31. Of this Idoll Molech R. Solomon on Ierem. 7. 31. saith there was an Image of brasse set up in the valley of Hinnom neere Ierusalem after the forme before noted out of Ialkut not profane or not pollute not prostitute it is contrary to hallowing or sanctifying Lev. 22. 32. And as Gods name is profaned funday wayes Lev. 21. 6. and 19. 12. so in speciall by idolatry as when they applyed Gods name or word to the service of Molech forementioned or the like The Hebrew doctors among other things doe apply this unto the giving of ones life for the truth and religion of God saying Who so ever ought rather to be killed then to transgresse Gods law if he be killed for that he will not transgresse loe he sanctifieth the name of God and if it be before ten men of Israel loe he sanctifieth the Name publikely as did Daniel Ananias Misael Azarias c. Dan. 3. 6. And of such it is said in Ps. 44. for thy sake we are killed all the day c. But who soever ought to be killed rather then to transgresse and hee transgresseth rathen he will bee killed toe be
Papinius Thebaid 7. top of the mountaine Things that were very memorable and significative are often noted in Scripture to be done in mountaines as being conspicuous remarkable and implying high and heavenly mysteries So the Arke of Noe rested on mount Ararat Gen. 8. 4. Abraham sacrificed his sonne on mount Morijah Gen. 22. 2. c. as the Sonne of God was sacrificed on Calvary Luke 23. 33. The Law of Moses was given upon mount Sinai Exod. 19. the Law of Christ came from mount Sion Mic. 4. 1 2. and on a mountaine he preached the Gospell and expounded the Law Matth. 5. 1 c. Ezekiel in a vision was shewed the city called The Lord is there upon a very high mountaine Ezek. 42. c. and 48. 35. Iohn was also shewed the same citie upon a great and high mountaine Rev. 21. 10. c. Moses himselfe on the mountaine of Nebo viewed all the promised land and died there Deut. 34. 1. 5. and was with Christ when he was transfigured and spake of his death upon an high mountaine Mat. 17. 1 2 3. Luke 9. 30 31. and now he was with Aaron at his death and translation of the Priesthood from him unto Eleazar where he also beheld the end of the Leviticall Priesthood a farre off and so the translation of it and of the law thereof unto Christ whose day he desired Hebr. 7. 11 12. Vers. 29. saw that Aaron had given up the ghost seeing is here for perceiving by knowledge and understanding as by the relation of Moses and Eleazar as also that Aaron came not downe with them So Iakob saw that there was corne in Aegypt when he heard thereof Gen. 42. 1. Act. 7. 12. The people saw the voices Exod. 20. 18. and sundry the like Here also they might see the hand of God chastifing their sin upon Aaron who died now not only for his own transgression but for their sakes as Moses after speaketh of himselfe The Lord was wroth with me for your sakes Deut. 3. 26. yet in beholding his Priesthood continued in his son they might also behold Gods mercy towards them in Christ who should perfectly reconcile them unto God when the Priesthood of the Law which now began to die away should utterly be abolished they wept that is they mourned For publike persons the whole congregation mourned as here for Aaron so for the death of his sonnes Levit. 10. 6. and for the death of Moses Deut. 34. 8. thirty daies See the Annotations on Gen. 50. 10. Mourning for the dead is honourable and here the people mourne for Aaron thirty daies whom they had dishonoured by rebelling against him forty yeares So long also they wept for Moses Deut. 34. 8. and it is the lot of many of the servants of God to have more honour after their death than in their life As Mary the sister the prophetesse of Israel died in the first moneth vers 1. so Aaron the high Priest died in the first day of the fifth moneth in the fortieth yeare after their comming out of Aegypt when he was 123. yeares old Numb 33. 38 39. His buriall also though here omitted is spoken of in Deut. 10. 6. CHAP. XXI 1 The Canaanites fight with Israel and captive some of them but Israel by a vow obtaine helpe of God and destroy them and their cities 4 The people murmuring because of their wants in the way are plagued with fiery serpents 7 They repenting are healed by a brasen serpent 10 Sundry journeyes of the Israelites 16 Their song at Beer for water which God gave them 21 They requesting passage thorow the Amorites country are denied it 24 Israel vanquisheth them and Sihon their King and possesseth their cities 27 Proverbs or Prophesies of Sihons overthrow 33 Og King of Basan fighteth against Israel and is also vanquished and Israel possesseth his land ANd the Canaanite the King of Arad which dwelt in the South heard that Israel came the way of the spies and he fought against Israel and tooke captive of them a captivitie And Israel vowed a vow unto Iehovah and said If giving thou wilt give this people into my hand then I will utterly destroy their cities And Iehovah hearkened to the voice of Israel and gave up the Canaanite and they utterly destroyed them and their cities and he called the name of the place Hormah And they journeyed from mount Hor by the way of the red sea to compasse the land of Edom and the soule of the people was shortned because of the way And the people spake against God and against Moses Wherfore have ye brought us up out of Aegypt to die in the wildernesse for there is no bread neither is there water and our soule loatheth this light bread And Iehovah sent among the people fiery serpēts they bit the people much people of Israel died And the people came unto Moses and said We have sinned for we have spoken against Iehovah against thee Pray unto Iehovah that he take away the serpents from us Moses prayed for the people And Iehovah said unto Moses Make thee a fiery serpent and put it upon a pole and it shall be that every one that is bitten when hee looketh upon it shall live And Moses made a serpent of brasse and put it upon a pole and it was that if a serpent had bitten a man when he beheld the serpent of brasse he lived And the sonnes of Israel journeyed and encamped in Oboth And they journeyed from Oboth and encamped in Ije Abarim in the wildernesse which is before Moab toward the Sunne-rising From thence they journeyed and camped in the valley of Zared From thence they journeyed and camped on the other side of Arnō which is in the wildernesse which commeth out of the border of the Amorite for Arnon is the border of Moab betweene Moab and the Amorite Wherefore it is said in the booke of the warres of Iehovah Vaheb in a whirlewind and the brooks of Arnon And the streame of the brookes which declineth to the situation of Ar and leaneth upon the border of Moab And from thence to Beer that is the Well whereof Iehovah said unto Moses Gather together the people and I wil give them water Then sang Israel this song Spring up O Well answer ye unto it The Well the Princes digged it the Nobles of the people delved it with the Law-giver with their staves And from the wildernesse they journeyed to Mattanah And from Mattanah to Nahaliel and from Nahaliel to Bamoth And from Bamoth to the valley which is in the field of Moab the head of Pisgah and it looketh toward Ieshimon And Israel sent messengers unto Sihon King of the Amorites saying Let me passe thorow thy land we will not turne aside into field or into vineyard we will not drinke of the waters of the well we will go in the kings way untill we be past thy border And Sihon would not grant Israel to passe thorow his border
this song for you and teach it the sonnes of Israel put it in their mouthes that this song may be a witnesse for mee against the sonnes of Israel For I will bring them into the land which I sware unto their fathers that floweth with milke and honey and they shall eat and be filled and be fat and they will turne unto other gods and serve them and despightfully provoke me and breake my covenant And it shall be when many evils and distresses have found them that this song shall answer before them for a witnesse for it shall not be forgotten out of the mouth of their seed for I know their imagination which they doe this day before I have brought them in unto the land which I sware And Moses wrought this song in that day and taught it the sonnes of Israel And he charged Ioshua the sonne of Nun and said Be strong and couragious for thou shalt bring in the sonnes of Israel unto the land which I sware unto them and I will be with thee And it was when Moses had made an end of writing the words of this Law in a booke untill they were finished That Moses commanded the Levites which bare the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah saying Take this booke of the Law and put it in the side of the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah your God that it may be there for a witnesse against thee For I know thy rebellion and thy stiffe necke Behold while I am yet alive with you this day yee have beene rebellious against Iehovah and how much more after my death Gather together unto mee all the Elders of your Tribes and your Officers that I may speake in their eares these words and call the heavens and the earth to witnesse against them For I know that after my death corrupting yee will corrupt your selves and will turne aside from the way which I have commanded you and evill will befall you in the latter daies because yee will doe evill in the eyes of Iehovah to provoke him to anger through the worke of your hands And Moses spake in the eares of all the Church of Israel the words of this song untill they were ended Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the two and fiftieth Section or Lecture of the Law See the notes on Gen. 6. 9. And here Moses setteth the state of Israel in order before his death OLd Hebr. sonne of an hundred and twenty yeeres of which phrase see Gen. 5. 32. So long while Noe preached to the world building the Arke Gen. 6. 3 14. 1 Pet. 3. 19 20. Of these 120. yeeres Moses lived 40. in Pharaohs court in Egypt Acts 7. 20 23. forty in the land of Madian Acts 7. 29 30. Exod. 7. 7. and 40. yeeres he governed Israel I can no more goe out that is no more administer in my office see the Annotations on Num. 27. 17. This inability of Moses was not so much for his age for his eye was not dim nor his naturall moisture fled Deut. 34. 7. as for the ordinance of God next mentioned and Iehovah or for Iehovah hath said as is shewed in Num. 20. 12. Deut. 3. 25 26. And is often in stead of For as is noted on Gen. 12. 19. Or it may be taken as another reason why Moses might no longer governe them Vers. 3. Ioshua in Greeke Iesus who was substitute in Moses place Num. 27. 16 17 18. c. A figure of our Lord Iesus who by grace and truth bringeth us into Gods eternall rest after the ending of Moses Law Iohn 1. 17. Rom. 10. 4. Thus the people are comforted in respect of their sorrow for Moses death by promise of the Lords presence among them and Ioshuahs succeeding government under him Vers. 4. of the Amorite that is of the Amorites as the Greeke translateth by whose destruction before mentioned in Numb 21. 23. c. Deut. 2. and 3. Israel is encouraged against their other enemies the land that is the people of the land Vers. 5. commanded you which was to root them out and let none remaine Deut. 20. 16 17. Vers. 6. Be ye strong or Be confirmed Hold fast to wit your faith in God in Greeke Quit you like men which word Paul useth in 1 Cor. 16. 13. So after in vers 7. couragious or be hardy strong valiant in heart and carriage This word is applied to the heart in Psal. 27. 14. and armes in Prov. 31. 17. and signifieth an increase and stedfastnesse Prov. 24. 5. Ruth 1. 18. The like exhortation is often used as Ios. 10. 25. 1 Chron. 22. 13. 2 Chron. 32. 7. hee it is in Chaldee his Word it is So in vers 8. faile thee or let thee goe leave thee to thy selfe but will hold thee fast So vers 8. and Ios. 1. 5. Heb. 13. 5. Vers. 7. strong and couragious or confirmed and strong as vers 6. Iosua being to beare the charge and toile of the people hath the same exhortation and promise in particular that was before unto all and it was in the eyes of all lest any after Moses death should deny his authority A like speech Davide made to Salomon 1 Chron. 28. 20. Vers. 8. he will be with thee the Chaldee paraphraseth his Word will be thy helpe Vers. 9. this Law in Greeke all the words of this Law in a booke which bare the Arke they had the chiefe charge to looke to the Arke and other holy things and though the Levites bare it as appeareth by Num. 3. 31. and 4. 15. and 10. 21. yet sometime the Priests themselves also bare it as when they passed over Iordan Ios. 3. 6 17. when they compassed Iericho Ios. 6. 12. So after in v. 25. Moses spake to the Levites the Elders the Magistrates as the Priests by teaching so the Elders by governing are to look that the Law of the Lord be observed Mal. 2. 7. Hos. 4. 6. Mich. 3. 1. 2 Chron. 19. 6 8 9 10. Vers. 10. of seven yeeres that is of every seventh yeere which was a yeere of release Deu. 15. 1. the solemnity or the set time as the Greeke and Chaldee translate it the time release of debts Deut. 15. 1 2 c. that being freed from worldly cares they might apply their mindes to Gods Law A figure of the yeere of grace and remission of our debts by Christ whereupon wee should give our selves to holinesse Luke 4. 18 19 21. Rom. 6. 10 11 12 13. Boothes or Tabernacles whereof see Lev. 23. Vers. 11. which he shall chuse to set his Arke and Tabernacle and so to place his name there Deut. 16. 2. thou shalt reade speaking to Israel generally and it was performed in speciall by the chiefest of them either the high Priest as Ezra the chiefe of them that returned from Babylon read it Nehem. 8. 1 2 3 c. or as the Hebrewes say the King himselfe when they had a King used to reade For this Commandement was to Ioshua
of man who is heire of all things Hebr. 1. 2. restoreth our losse and will cause the remnant of the people even who-soever overcommeth to inherit all things Zach. 8. 12. Rev. 21. 7. though unto man living here in sorrowes we yet see not all things subdued Hebr. 2. 8. Vers. 8. Sheepe and oxen or Flockes and herds the flocke comprehending both sheepe and goats Levit. 1. 10. Vers. 9. The fowle that is fowles or birds one is used for many or all so the Hebrew often speaketh of other things as ship for ships 1 King 10. 22. with 2 Chron. 9. 21. speare for speares 2 King 11. 10. with 2 Chro. 23. 9. So Psal. 20. 8. and 34. 8. of the heavens that is of the aire for all this Outspred or firmament spred over the face of the earth God called Heavens Gen. 1. 17. the place also above where the Sunne and starres are be called heavens Gen. 1. 17. and the highest place where the Angels dwell and God himselfe is said to sit in is likewise called heaven Matth. 5. 9. and 24. 36. and by the Apostle named the third heaven 2 Cor. 12. 2. So other Scriptures mention the birds of heaven Matth. 13. 32. the winds of heaven Dan. 7. 2. the clouds of heaven Dan. 7. 13. the dew of heaven Dan. 4. 12 c. The Hebrew name Shamajim hath the forme of the duall number but the Evangelists expresse it indifferently by the singular or plurall as where one saith your reward is great in the heavens Mat. 5. 12. another saith it is much in heaven Luk. 6. 23. PSAL. IX David praiseth God for executing of judgement 12 He inciteth others to praise him 14 He prayeth that he may have cause to praise him 16 The judgements that shall come upon the wicked To the Master of the Musicke upon Muth labben a Psalme of David I Will confesse Iehovah with all my heart I will tell all thy marvellous workes I will rejoyce and shew gladnesse in thee I will sing Psalme to thy name O most high When mine enemies turned backward they stumbled and perished from thy face For thou hast done my judgement and my doome hast sitten on the throne judge of justice Thou hast rebuked the heathens hast brought to perdition the wicked one their name thou hast wiped out for ever and aye The desolations of the enemie are wholly ended to perpetuitie and the cities thou hast pulled up perished is the memoriall of them of them And Iehovah shall sit for ever he hath prepared his throne for judgement And he will judge the world with justice will judge the peoples with righteousnesses And Iehovah will be an high refuge for the oppressed an high refuge at times in distresse And they that know thy name wil trust in thee for thou for sakest not them that seeke thee Iehovah Sing Psalme to Iehovah that dwelleth in Sion shew forth among the peoples his doings For he that seeketh out blouds remembreth them forgetteth not the crie of the meeke afflicted Be gracious to me Iehovah see mine affliction from my haters lifting up mee from the gates of death That I may tell all thy praises in the gates of the daughter of Sion may be glad in thy salvation The heathens are sunke downe in the corrupting pit that they made in the net that they hid caught is their foot Knowne is Iehovah judgement hee hath done in the worke of his hands insnared is the wicked one Meditation Selah The wicked shall turne into hell all the heathens that forget God For not to perpetuitie forgotten shall be the needie one nor the expectation of the poore afflicted ones perish for aye Rise up Iehovah let not sory man be strong let the heathens be judged before thy face Put thou Iehovah a feare in them let the heathens know that they be sory men Selah Annotations VPon Muth labben This if it be referred to the musicke seemeth to be a kinde of tune like that we call the Counter-tenour Otherwise it may be read For the death of Labben but who he was is uncertaine some thinke it was Goliath the Chaldee saith for the death of the Sonne It seemeth to me as the former Psalme was of the propagation of Christs kingdome so this is of the destruction of Antichrists Vers. 2. marvellous works or wonderfull things miracles The originall word signifieth high and hidden such as mans power cannot performe nor reason reach unto and therefore are admired Vers. 3. in thee the Chaldee saith in thy word Vers. 4. when my enemies turned This may be taken for a summe of his praise for deliverances past or in faith for like to come and may be read when my foes turne backe they shall stumble and perish from thy face from before thee because of thy presence that is for feare of thee and shut out from thy face or presence So after Psal. 68. 2 3 9. So the Apostle speaketh of the wickeds perdition from the face of the Lord 2 Thess. 1. 9. Vers. 5. done my judgement that is given sentence and executed according to the right of my cause See Psal. 7. 9. The Chaldee expoundeth it my vengeance sitten on the throne or set thee downe on the throne the seat of judgement or tribunall This noteth both kingly authority Psal. 132. 11 12. and the acting or executing of the same 2 Chron. 18. 18. Isay 6. 1. Dan. 7. 9. Rev. 20. 11. Vers. 6. hast rebuked with rough and severe words but this when God doth it commonly importeth confusion as being to his enemies and therfore joyned with the curse Psalm 119. 21. and 68. 31. and 76. 7. and 18. 16. Zach. 3. 2. So else-where he saith at the rebuke of thy face they perish Psalm 80. 17. wiped out or wiped away as with the hand And this wiping out the name noteth an utter abolishing with great wrath Deut. 9. 14. and 29. 20. Psal. 109. 13. for ever and aye or for ever and yet or to eternitie and perpetuity The Hebrew Ghned yet is added to eternity or ever to increase the durance of it and to note all eternities Psal. 10. 16. and 21. 5. and 104. 5. and 145. 1 2. taken from Moses Exod. 15. 18. Vers. 7. The desolations which the enemie made in spoiling our land or the desolate places which the enemie builded for himselfe as in Iob 3. 14. great men are said to build themselves desolate places of the enemie So the Greeke turned it We may also reade it O enemie the desolations are quite ended which thou madest or are they ended to perpetuitie or to victory that is so as it continueth for ever Ever or Eternity hath the name Ghnolam in Hebrew of being hid and so unknowne perpetuitie Net sach is so named of prevailing and getting victory by perpetuall durance Hereupon that speech of the Prophet he hath swallowed up death to perpetuity or victorious aye I say 25. 8. is translated by the Apostle Death is swallowed up to
victory that is for ever as the same word in Amos 8. 7. and Lam. 5. 20. is also turned into Greeke by the LXXij Interpreters Pulled up a similitude taken from trees applied here to the pulling downe of cities so planting and pulling up of a people are set one against another Ier. 24. 6. and 42. 10. and 45. 4. of them twise repeated for more vehemencie meaning all and every of them or with themselves their memory is gone the Greeke translateth their memoriall is perished with a sound Vers. 9. will judge or give doome unto Two severall words for judging are here used as before Psal. 7. 9. with righteousnesses that is all manner righteousnesse and equity or most righteously most equally See the like speech after Psalm 98. 9. and 96. 13. and often other where Vers. 10. an high refuge in Hebrew Misgab which is an exaltation that is an high place tower or fort to resist the enemie Jer. 48. 1. wherein men are protected and escape their foes invasion Deut. 2. 36. for the oppressed or to the beaten downe the poore is so called as being pownded or s●amped by the adversary So Psal. 10. 18. and 74. 21. at times or in seasons that is seasonably at all times when they be in distresse So Psal. 10. 1. Vers. 11. that know or that acknowledge thy name such are Gods people Esay 52. 6. and shall by him be delivered and advanced Psal. 91. 14. Vers. 12. dwelleth in Sion or sitteth in Sion The Chaldee saith hath placed his divine habitation or majestie in Sion Sitting is often used for dwelling as is noted Psal. 1. 1. The word in is many times omitted in Hebrew but necessarily to be understood as the text it selfe sheweth as beth house for bebeth in the house 2 King 14. 14. compared with 2 Chron. 25. 24. and 2 Chron. 26. 21. with 2 King 15. 5. and 2 Chron. 34. 30. with 2 King 23. 2. his doings his practises or wonted workes The originall word signifieth actions done naturally or purposely and studiously designes gests or exercises enterprised advisedly and prosecuted studiously of naturall disposition and inclination as Prov. 20. 11. 1 Sam. 25. 3. Vers. 13. seeketh out or requireth blouds that is God who followeth findeth out punisheth and avengeth bloudshed or murder according to the law Gen. 9. 5 6. See the Annotations there The Chaldee expoundeth it he that requireth the bloud of the innocent remembreth his just ones meeke afflicted The originall here hath a double reading Ghnanaj●m that is afflicted poore and Ghnanavim meeke modest lowly for affliction often causeth meeknesse Therefore also Ghnani that is afflicted is translated Praus Meeke Matth. 21. 5. from Zach. 9. 9. Vers. 14. from my haters that is which commeth upon me from them lifting up or ô lifter up exalter of me gates of death This noteth present perill and feare of death as being now neare at the very doore or gate thereof Gen. 4. 7. Iudg. 5. 8. It noteth also power strength and jurisdiction which death hath even reigning as the Apostle saith Rom. 5. 14. because Magistrates sate and judgements were executed at the gates of cities Deut. 22 15. Iob 31. 21. Amos 5. 10 15. So in other Scriptures the gates of death and of hell denote their perill strength and horrour Psal. 107. 18. Isay 38. 10. Matth. 16. 18. Iob 38. 17. Vers. 15. gates of the daughter of Sion these are opposed to the former gates of death and mean the publike places where Gods people came together at Sion gates where God sate vers 12. and which he loved most Psal. 87. 2. The daughter of Sion signifieth the Church or Congregation there gathered as also the Chaldee Paraphrase here sheweth translating it the congregation of Sion for every chiefe citie was counted as a mother 2 Sam. 20. 19. whereupon the Apostle calleth Ierusalem the mother of us all Gal. 4. 26. the villages that were neere and pertained unto such cities are called daughters Ios. 15. 45. 2 Chron. 13. 19. Psal. 48. 12. and the inhabitants there seated or assemblies of people resorting thither are likewise named daughters as being bred borne nourished there and subiect therto Such speeches are often in the Scripture as daughter of Ierusalem Lam. 2. 19. daughter of Sion Mat. 21. 5. from Zach. 9. 9. daughter of my people Ier. 4. 11. daughter of Tirus Psalm 45. 13. daughter of Babel Psal. 137. 8. and the like Vers. 17. Iudgement hee hath done or by the judgement that he hath executed his hands or his palmes the wickeds owne hands called the palmes or hollowes for the secret manner of working So Psal. 7. 4. Meditation Selah meaning that this is a matter of deepe meditation worthy to be well minded and spoken or sung with earnest consideration alwaies Some retaine the Hebrew word Higgajon Selah for that it may import a kinde of Song or tune as the Greeke turneth it being found in this forme onely here and in Psal. 92. 4. The Chaldee interpreteth it the just shall joyfully shout for ever Vers. 18. into hell into hell it selfe for the word into is in effect twice put in the Hebrew for more vehemencie forget God the Chaldee addeth that forget the feare of God Vers. 19. needy one two names are here given to the poore Aebjon needy and desirous which importeth want of things needfull to be supplied by liberalitie Psal. 132. 15. and 112. 9. Ghnani poore afflicted which need helpe and deliverance from vexation as before vers 13. yet this precise difference is not alwaies observed in Scripture perish for aye that is shall never perish Here the word not set in the beginning serveth for a deniall of all that followeth shall not be forgotten shall not perish or be lost So in Job 30. 20 25. and 31. 20. And the Chaldee here repeateth the word not for more plainnesse Contrary to this is the wickeds hope and expectation which shall perish Prov. 10. 28. Job 8. 13. and 11. 20. be strong or strengthen confirme and harden himselfe and so prevaile This is fitly opposed both to the name and nature of man which is infirme sorrowfull and mortall Vers. 21. Put a feare in them The originall morah used in this place onely seemeth to be put for Mora which is Feare or Terrour Psal. 76. 12. these two Hebrew letters being often put one for another as Amon Ier. 52. 15. for Hamon 2 King 25. 11. Shinna 2 King 25. 29. for Shinnab Ier. 52. 33. Or according to the Letters it may come of Horah to teach and signifie a law or doctrine and this the Greeke favoureth translating set a lawgiver or teacher over them sory men in Hebrew Aenosh the proper name of Adams nephew Gen. 4. 26. signifying Sorowfull and is after commonly given to every man for his dolefull state and mortalitie Psal. 8. 5. and here collectively is the name of mankinde PSAL. X. 1 The Prophet complaineth to God of the outrage of the wicked against God
the generation next after let his name be wiped out Let the iniquitie of his fathers bee remembred of Iehovah and the sinne of his mother bee not wiped out Let them bee before Iehovah continually and hee cut off the memory of them from the earth Because that hee remembred not to doe mercy but persecuted the poore afflicted and needy man and the smitten in heart to slay him And hee loved cursing and let it come unto him and he delighted not in blessing and let it bee farre from him And he cloathed himselfe with cursing as his raiment and let it enter as waters into his inward part and as oile into his bones Let it bee to him as a garment wherewith hee may cover himselfe and for a girdle wherewith hee may gird himselfe continually This be the worke of mine adversaries from Iehovah and of them that speake evill against my soule And thou Iehovih Lord doe with mee for thy Name sake for good is thy mercy deliver thou me For I am poore afflicted and needy and mine heart is wounded within me As a shadow when it declineth I am gone away I am tossed as the Grashopper My knees are feeble through fasting and my flesh is leane for fatnesse And I was a reproach to them they saw mee they shaked their head Helpe thou me Iehovah my God save me according to thy mercy And let them know that this is thine hand thou Iehovah hast done it Let them curse and doe thou blesse rise they up and be abashed and let thy servant rejoyce Let mine adversaries be cloathed with ignominie and let them cover themselves with their shame as with a cloke I will confesse Iehovah vehemently with my mouth and in the midst of many will I praise him For he will stand at the right hand of the needy to save him from them that judge his soule Annotations OF my praise that is which art praised of me as Psal. 22. 4. or which praisest and justifiest mee against the calumnies of mine enemies 2 Cor. 10. 18. Rom. 2. 29. Numb 12. 7 8. cease not or bee not silent see Psalme 28. 1. of diceit that is the deceitfull men as the Greeke explaineth it so pride for proud person Psalme 36. 12. are or have opened to wit themselves Vers. 4. and I prayer to wit I made or give my selfe to prayer as the Greeke and Chaldee saith I prayed or I am a man of prayer So I peace Psal. 120. 7. See also 1 Cor. 14. 33. Vers. 6. Set in office or Make visiter or over-seer see verse 8. the wicked one the devill as 1 Ioh. 2. 13 14. and 3. 12. and 5. 18. or generally wicked rulers the adversary in Hebrew Satan in Greeke the Devill who is an adversary to mankind 1 Pet. 5. 8. Rev. 12. 9. at his right hand to resist and overcome him Zach. 3. 1. and this is spoken of all his foes as of one man or of some one speciall as Doeg enemy to David 1 Sam. 22. 9 c. Iudas to Christ Ioh. 13. 2. But God is at the right hand of the poore vers 31. Psal. 16. 8. Vers. 7. wicked that is as the Greeke saith condemned See the Notes on Psal. 1. 1. to sinne that is turned to sinne and so abominable Prov. 28. 9. and 15. 8. Vers. 8. his office or charge visitation bishoprick Episcopée and this is applied to Iudas whose office was derived to Matthias Act. 1. 16 20 26. A Bishop and bishops charge so called of visitation is a common name to all overseers and offices Numb 4. 16. and 31. 14. Ezek. 44. 11. 2 King 11. 15. 2 Chron. 34. 12 17. Nehem. 11. 9. Vers. 9. fatherlesse or orphans and this is a curse of the law Exod. 22. 24. Ier. 18. 21. Vers. 10. wander rogue about as vagabonds Gen. 4. 12. Vers. 11. the Creditor he to whom he is indebted or the extortioner let him seise on all his goods his labour goods gotten by his labour Vers. 13. posteritie or his last end see Psal. 37. 37. to cutting off or appointed to be cut off to perdition or to destruction as the Greeke explaineth The verbe active is of passive signification as Psal. 32. 9. and 36. 3. Vers. 15. memory or memoriall Psal. 34. 17. Iob 18. 17. Vers. 16. smitten with griefe that is sorrowfull or as the Greeke saith pricked in heart So verse 22. See Psal. 102. 5. and 34. 19. Vers. 17. let it come or it shall come and so after Vers. 18. his raiment or a mantell let it enter or it entred It may be understood of his delight in cursing which pleased him as water and oile or of the efficacy of the curse that should pierce his owne bowels and bones as Num. 5. 22. Vers. 20. the worke that is the wage or reward due for his worke so Lev. 19. 13. Isa. 49. 4. Iob 7. 2. Ezek. 29. 20. Vers. 21. Iehovih the Name of God see Psal. 68. 21. doe to wit mercy as the next words shew and is expressed Psal. 18. 51. See also Psal. 103. 9. where the word anger is omitted Vers. 23. I am gone or am made to goe or depart namely towards my grave as Psal. 58. 9. See also Psal. 102. 12. 1 Chron. 17. 11. tossed as the grashopper or shaken off as the Locust which hath no nest or biding place but is driven to and fro being a fearefull creature Nahum 3. 17. Iob 39. 23. or which is carried away with the wind Exodus 10. 1● Vers. 24. feeble or loosened so that I am ready to stumble and fall So Paul calleth them loose or feeble knees Heb. 12. 12. from Isa. 35. 3. for fatnesse or for oile that is for want of fat or oile as for the fruits is for want of the fruits Lam. 4. 9. for five is for want of five Gen. 18. 28. for fornication 1 Cor. 7. 2. is for to avoid fornication Or we may turne it without fat for the Hebrew min sometime signifieth without Iob 21. 9. Vers. 25. shaked or wagged a signe of scorne Psal. 22. 8. Vers. 27. thine hand that is thy handy worke Vers. 28. rise they up to wit against me as the Greeke explaineth it and be they abashed as disappointed of their purpose Vers. 30. of many or of the mighties of great men as the Chaldee saith of wise men but the Greeke translateth of many Vers. 31. at the right hand to assist contrary to Satan verse 6. that judge that is condemne and persecute him to death PSAL. CX David prophesieth of Christs Kingdome 4 his eternall Priesthood 5 his Conquest 7 and his Passion A Psalme of David IEhovah assuredly said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand untill I put thine enemies the footstoole of thy feet Iehovah will send out of Sion the rod of thy strength rule thou in the middes of thine enemies Thy people shall be voluntaries in the day of thy power in the beauties of holinesse of the wombe of the early morning
his greatnesse or majestie in speciall mercie towards his owne people and against their enemies which is the fourth argument of his praise Compare Deut. 3. 24. and 9. 26. and 32. 3. Ex. 15. 16. 1 Chro. 17. 19. Luke 1. 46 49 58. Act. 2. 11. Psal. 79. 11. and 145. 3. 6. Majesty hath the name of greatnesse and is applied to the greatest state of Polities or Common-weales which is to be minded here Vers. 4. flute or dance Psal. 149. 3. Virginals or stringed instruments this word is not else-where in Scripture Organ or the Organon as the Greeke translateth it the Hebrew name signifieth a lovely or delightfull instrument it is one of the ancientest of the world invented by Iubal Gen. 4. 21. and an instrument of joy Iob 21. 12. 30. 31. well sounding Cymbals Hebr. Cymbals of hearing that is easie or delightfull to be heard which the Greeke translateth well sounding The Cymbals were of metall as bels and have their name of their shrill tinckling sound loud sounding or joyfully sounding or tinckling as 1 Cor. 13. 1. Hebr. Cymbals of shouting sound Vers. 6. all breath or every breath that is every thing that hath breath this word is used for the breath that God inspired into man Gen. 2. 7. and so for mans minde or immortall soule Isa. 57. 16. and usually is applied to man and to the breath of God Psal. 18. 16. but in Gen. 7. 22. it seemeth to be spoken of all living things Compare Rev. 5. 13. where every creature which is in heaven and on the earth and under the earth and such as are in the sea and all that are in them were heard saying Vnto him that sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lamb be blessing and honour and glory and power for ever and ever Amen The end of the Booke of Psalmes A TABLE DIRECTING TO SOME principall things observed in the Annotations of the Psalmes A ABashing what it signifieth Psal. 6. 11. Aedom described Psal. 60. 10. Aegypt Psal. 68. 32. the plagues of Aegypt described Psal. 78. 44 c. and 105 28 c. Aethiopia Psal. 68. 32. Almighty Shaddai how God is so called Psalm 68. 15. Alone diversly taken Psal. 4. 9. Amalek Psal. 83. 8. Amen what it signifieth Psal. 41. 14. Ammonites Psal. 83. 8. Angels Psal. 68. 18. and 104. 4. And in stead of For Psalm 1. 3. and 7. 10. and 55. 13. And for but Psal. 55. 14. And for that Psal. 43. 4. and 49. 10. And a signe of passion Psal. 2. 6. and 115. 3. Anger outward as wrath inward Psal. 2. 5. Arrowes what they meane Psal. 18. 15. and 45. 6. Asaph who he was Psal. 50. 1. B BElial what it meaneth Psalm 18. 5. and 41. 9. Baal what it signifieth and how it is turned into Bosheth Psal. 106. 28. Bands signes of subjection Psal. 2. 3. Babel described Psal. 1. 37. 1. Being for continuing Psal. 64. 8. Blessed a title given to God Psal. 68. 36. Blessing diversly used Psal. 3. 9. O Blessed or Happy how it differeth from the former Psal. 1. 1. Blouds and man of blouds what they meane Psal. 5. 7. and 51. 16. Bounteous Princes Psal. 47. 10. Bounteous reward Psal. 13. 6. Bread for all food Psal. 78. 20. Brookes what they are and of what use Psalm 1. 3. Burnt offering what it was Psal. 20. 4. C CAptivity for captives Psal. 14. 7. and 68. 19. Cedar-tree described Psal. 29. 5. Cherub Cherubims what they were Psalm 18. 11. Christ or Anointed Psal. 2. 2. Commanding diversly used Psal. 42. 9. Condemne as guilty Psal. 5. 11. Confession diversly used Psal. 6. 6. and 32. 5. and 50. 14. Corrupt not a title of some Psalmes Psal. 57. 1. Corruption Psal. 16. 10. Corrupting ditch or pit wherefore so called Psal. 7. 16. Covenant what it signifieth Psal. 25. 10. Striking covenant Psal. 50. 5. Covetous or gain-thirsty whereof it is named Psal. 10. 3. Courts of Gods house Psal. 65. 5. Cursing Psal. 10. 7. D DAughter for Congregation Psal. 9. 15. Daughters for Villages Psal. 48. 12. David put for Christ Psal. 18. 50. 40. 1. 89. 4. Day for time of affliction Psal. 37. 13. 18. Deceit whereof named Psal. 5. 7. Decree or Statute what it meaneth Psal. 2. 7. Degrees what they meane Psal. 120. 1. Devils whereof they are named Psal. 106. 37. Doing for yeelding fruit Psal. 1. 3. E EDom described Psal. 60. 10. Egypt Misraim Psal. 68. 32. F FAce for anger Ps. 21. 10. Face for grace Psal. 27. 8. and 42. 6. Faithfull what it meaneth Psal. 19. 8. False vanity Psal. 12. 3. Falsly denie Psal. 18. 45. Favourable acceptation Psal. 5. 13. Feare for God Psal. 76. 12. Feare for Gods worship c. Psal. 19. 10. for walking in his waies Psal. 34. 10. and 128. 1. Feeding what it meaneth Psal. 23. 1. Finding diversly used Psal. 36. 3. and 116. 3. and 132. 5. and 46. 2. First-borne ministers of God Psalm 78. 51. the Chiefe over others Psal. 89. 28. Fooles vaine-glorious Psal. 5. 6. Foole Nabal Psal. 14. 1. Foole Aevil Psal. 38. 6. Foole unconstant Psal. 49. 11. Forgiving what it meaneth Psal 25. 18. G GAtes of death Psal. 9. 14. Gates of the daughter of Sion Psal. 9. 15. Gates of justice Psal. 118. 19. Gathering diversly used Psal. 26. 9. Generation what it meaneth Psal. 12. 8. Girding what it meaneth Psal. 76. 11. Giving for putting setting c. Psal. 4. 8. and 8. 2. Giving for granting suffering Psal. 16. 10. Gladnesse gladsomnesse outward as joy is inward Psal. 2. 11. Glorious majesty Psal. 8. 2. Glorie or Honour whereof it is named Psal. 3. 4. 85. 10. Glorie for the tongue Psal. 16. 9. Glorying or praising ones selfe Psal. 34. 3. God Elohim what it meaneth Psal. 3. 3. God El Psal. 5. 5. Gods for Angels Psal. 8. 6. and 97. 7. Gods for Magistrates Psal. 82. 1 6. Gods name added to things for excellency Psalm 36. 7. The living God Psal. 42. 3. Gospell or Evangelie whereof it is named Psalm 40. 10. Gracious Saint what it meaneth Psal. 4 4. H HAlelu-jah Psal. 104. 35. and 135. 1. Harpe Psal. 33. 2. Heavens what they are Psal. 8. 9. Hell what it meaneth Psal. 16. 10. Heritage Heire Inheritance what they meane Psal. 2. 8. Hiding the face what it siguifieth Psal. 13. 2. High refuge what it is Psal. 9. 10. Hopefully wait Psal. 31. 25. Horne for power glory Psal. 18. 3. and 75. 5 11. Hosts or Sabbath Gods title Psal. 24. 12. House whereof it is named Psal. 5. 8. Hypocrites why so called Psal. 35. 16. I IAakob what it meaneth Psal. 14. 7. Iah the name of God Psal. 68. 5. Idols whereof they are named Psal. 106. 36. Iehovah the name of God and Christ opened Psa. 83. 19. and 97. 1. Iehovih or God Psal. 68. 21. Ierusalem described Psal. 51. 20. Iles for Gentiles Psal. 97. 1. In often noteth the cause of a thing Psal. 31. 2. In for of Psal. 87. 3.
and he hath a sister from fornication loe this is a nakednesse that is forbidden unto him as it is written Borne at home or borne abroad Maimony in Issurei biah chap. 2. sect 2. So in Targum ●onathan it is expounded whom thy father hath begotten of another woman or of thy mother or whom thy mother hath borne by thy father or by an other man Verse 10. daughters daughter and so other of further descent how much more then his next daughter though shee be not named The Hebrewes say Who so companieth with a woman by way of fornication and begetteth a daughter of her that daughter is a nakednesse forbidden him in the name of his daughter And although hit be not said in the Law Thou shalt not uncover thy daughters nakednesse for as much as it forbiddeth the daughters daughter it keepeth silence concerning the daughter which yet is forbidden by the Law and not by the Scribes onely Maimony in Issureibiah chap. 2. sect 6. thy nakednesse that is borne of thy nakednesse Vers. 11. begotten or the generation or kin of thy father This some doe understand a kin to thy father by mariage with her mother and no● begotten of his body but the Greeke translateth it Homo patria begotten of the same father and the Chaldee expoundeth it likewise The Hebrew doctors also explaine it The daughter of his fathers wife which is his sister by his father she is a nakednesse unlawfull for him But if his father mary a wife and shee hath a daughter by another man that daughter is lawfull for him for she is not Moledeth begotten of his father But is he not guilty concerning her by the name of his sister And why is it said the daughter of thy fathers wife to make him guilty concerning her in this respect also Therefore ●e that companieth with his sister which is his fathers daughter in mariage is double guilty once by the name of Thy sisters nakednesse and againe by the name of The nakednesse of thy fathers wives daughter But if his father have forced a woman or inticed her and begotten a daughter of her and the sonne company with her he is not guilty but by the name of his sister onely for the daughter of a forced woman is not the daughter of his fathers wife Maimony in Issure● 〈◊〉 chap. 2. sect 3. 4. V. 12. fathers sister thy aunt by thy fathers side Vers. 13. mothers sister thy aunt by the mothers side Of these the Hebrewes say His mothers sister whether it be her sister by her father or her sister by her mother whether in maried estate or in fornication loe she is a nakednesse forbidden unto him by the name of his mothers sister And so the fathers sister whether by mother or father in mariage or in fornication she is forbidden him by the name of his fathers sister Maimony in Issureibiah chap. 2. sect 5. Vers. 14. fathers brother meaning his wife as the next words shew called his nakednesse because man and wife are one flesh Matth. 19. 6. So in verse 16. So the notes on verse 8. not approach in Greeke not goe in that is not lye with her see the notes on verse 6. thine aunt the Chaldee explaineth it thy fathers brothers wife Vers. 15. daughter-in-law that is thy sonnes wife as it is after explained The Hebrew name Callab elsewhere signifieth a spouse or bride here it is the sonnes wife touching whom see what is noted on verse 8. Vers. 16. brothers wife except when the brother deceaseth without children then the next brother marieth her Deut. 25. 5. See the notes on verse 8. Vers. 17. or her Hebr. and her but and is often used for or as is noted on Genes 13. 8. Of these lawes the Hebrewes write thus When a man marieth a woman there are sixe women of her kinne unlawfull for him for ever whether his wife live with him or be divorsed whether she be alive or after her death and they are those her mother and her mothers mother and her fathers mother and her daughter and her daughters daughter and her sonnes daughter And if he lie with any one of them whiles his wife liveth both of them are to be burned Levit. 20. 14. Maimony in ●ss●re●biah chap. 2. sect 7. wickednesse in Hebrew Zimmah which properly signifieth a wicked thought or purpose but is applied also to wicked acts and particularly to unlawfull copulations the Chaldee here translateth it counsell or purpose of sinnes the Greeke an impietie or impious act and in Levit. 20. 14. an unlawfull-act Vers. 18. a woman or a wife unto her sister which the Chaldee translateth with her sister Which word sister may be understood of any other woman as brother is often used for any other man Gen. 26. 31. and 19. 7. then the law here forbiddeth to take any moe wives then one which the reason following seemeth to confirme The Hebrewes understand it of her next sister in blood whether she be her sister by the mother or her sister by the father whether in way of mariage or in fornication Maimony in Iss●re●biah chap. 2. sect 9. to vexe her or vexing her or for an adversarie as Penin●ah is called the adversarie or vexer of Anna the other wife of Elkanah 1 Sam. 1. 6. whereby it is probable that the sister forementioned is any other wife and the Greeke here and there translateth a like Antizelos an 〈◊〉 or envier For when one man hath two wives they are ready to envie and vexe one another see Gen. 4. 19. 23. and 30. 15. in her life or whiles she is alive as the Greek explaineth it Vers. 19 a woman or a wife even from his own wife every man was to abstain during this her uncleannesse See Levit. 12. and 15. chapters separ 〈…〉 that is so long as she is separated for the uncleannesse of her monthly fluors whereof see Lev. 15. 19. They that transgressed this Law presumptuously were to be cut-off Levit. 20 18. and for transgression thereof in Israel the prophet proclaimeth Ezek. 22. 10. And by the Hebrew doctors this uncleannesse was as the residue of all the nakednesses forementioned who so uncovereth her nakednesse so deserveth to be cut off Maimony in Issureibiah ch 4. sect 1. Vers. 20. not give thy copulation for seed or of seed that is not lye fleshly with her not comit adultery which the Hebrew expresseth here by the lying or bed unto seed and in Leviticus 19. 20. the lying or bed of seed and so the Greeke translateth it here The phrase meaneth carnall copulation and not onely when it is unto ess●sion of seed but any other uncleannesse The Hebrew cannons distinguish betweene the beginning of this act which they call the uncovering of nakednesse and the accomplishment thereof And in all these cop●lations spoken of whether be hath uncovered her nakednesse beginning the act with his body or hath accomplished it yea though it be not to the effusio of seed c.