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A42016 The exposition continued upon the nineteen last chapters of the prophet Ezekiel with many useful observations thereupon delivered in several lectures in London / by William Greenhil. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1662 (1662) Wing G1857; ESTC R30318 513,585 860

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watchman nor the people set him to be one 1 Cor. 12.28 God hath set some in the Church first Apostles secondly Prophets thirdly Teachers after that miracles then gifts of healing helps government diversitie of tongues In the Political state men may make what Offices and Officers they please but in the Ecclesiastick State it s not so Man must not meddle God only is the Authour of all Offices in the Church extraordinary or ordinary and no man ought to come into any of them without Commission and Direction from God true Ministers are to be call'd by the Church according to Gods will and not by the will of a State The making of Ministers is Church-work and not State-work Fourthly Observe Those that are called to office by men or God in State or Church they are watchmen They must have eyes in their heads lift up their eyes and look about them most diligently and conscientiously least any mischief come to the one or the other They are to be men of understanding especially the spiritual watchman his lips must preserve knowledge Mal. 2.7 He is set to watch sleepinesse and drowsinesse do not become him there is great danger therein Math 13.25 While men slept the enemy came and sowed tares Whilest the watchmen slept the Devill and his Instruments took the opportunity and advantage to sow Tares Errour Heresies and Damnable Doctrines Isa 56.10 you may see what watchmen the Lord had in Isaiahs time His watchmen are blind they are all ignorant they are all dumb Dogs they cannot bark sleeping lying down loving to s●umber The State and Church watchmen were such therefore idolatry murder oppression and profanesse abounded amongst them they sought themselves and their ease not the State or Churches good Watchmen should not be for themselves but for the publique good enduring any hardship rather then the Publique should be endangered they must not shrink at wind or weather but bare the cold of the night and the heat of the day watching alwayes Isa 21.11 Watchman what of the night watchman what of the night The watchman was at his work in the night as well as in the day Fifthly Observe God hath a special care of his Church and People being exposed to many dangers I have set thee a watchman unto the house of Israel Where watchmen are dangers are supposed There be Church-Robbers abroad that would rob it of the Scriptures of Ordinances Officers of Christ and of Heaven it selfe There be those who would bring in damnable Heresies as of old 2 Pet. 1.1 Yea the Church is apt of it self to breed Vipers Acts 20.30 Thorns Bryars Weeds Nettles do grow up in Gods Gardens What Errours Heresies Blasphemies are not revived in our dayes Are they not grown up to that height and strength as to threaten and indanger the foundation If ever the Church is as a Lilly among Thorns as a Lamb among Wolves and Lyons that seek to tare in peices and devoure it is now Truth goeth with a scratch't face every where and is so scratched and disfigured that many know her not she hath many enemies few friends and cannot dwell quiet in Sion it self erroneous Opinions are ready to assault her in her own house there is need therefore of watchmen to discover and prevent dangers and God hath manifested his care of his Church and Truth that he hath given watchmen for the preservation of them and left it upon Record that himself is the watchman of his Vineyard Isa 27.3 Least any hurt it I will keep it night and day The fire of Contention the floods of Iniquity and winds of strange Doctrine cannot harm Gods Vineyard he is the Keeper thereof Sixthly Observe What Gifts or Graces soever Prophets and men in Ecclesiastical places have they must depend upon God for more and receive from him before they give out to others No Prophet no Apostle ever had such a sufficiency of light knowledge or grace as to stand in need of no more God had set Ezekiel to be a watchman to the house of Israel he had heard much from God the Spirit entred into him he had eaten the rowle and yet he must attend the Lord therefore thou shalt hear the word at my mouth even therefore because he was Gods Prophet he was to hear the word at his mouth not to trust to what he had not to give out of his own but constantly to look unto the Lord to hearken what he would say and then what he said to make that known unto others Gods Prophets Gods Ministers must speak his words deliver his message There is a Majesty an Efficacy in his words which are not in the words of men Heb. 4.12 The words of false Prophets were chaffe without virtue but the words of true Prophets were wheat full of vertue for they were the words of God Jer 23.28 Seventhly Observe That as its the duty of watchmen to foresee danger so to forewarn the people of it The State-watchman ought to do both and so the Church-watchman The one when he sees the sword to come is to blow the Trumpet and warn the people that they secure their lives the other when he sees mens lives are wicked tending to the destruction of their souls when he sees Errour Heresies coming to infect and indanger the souls of men he is to blow the Trumpet of the Lord and to warn them that they take heed of the one and desist from the other Isa 58.1 Cry aloud spare not lift up thy voyce like a Trumpet and shew my people their transgressions and the house of Jacob their sins Isaiah was a watchman to the house of Jacob and he fore-saw they were in danger of being ruin'd and carryed into captivity and what must he do in this case be silent no Cry aloud make them to hear spare not thy lungs thy strength lift up thy voice like a Trumpet louder and louder make all the house of Jacob to hear it and shew my people their transgressions present unto them the Nature and danger of them let them not rest or sleep but tell them of their sins in publique in private sollicit importune them to cease from their evil wayes and to secure their souls It 's not enough for a spiritual watchman to warn his people once or twice in a year of the dangerous evils their sins will bring upon them but he must do it frequently constantly this warning must be dayly let the persons be of what rank soever if they live in wayes of wickednesse which may hazard their souls the watchman must tell them of their sins and danger admonish them seriously reprove them sharply and threaten them with death eternal if they persevere in their wayes Eightly Observe That Prophets Ministers and Watchmen in Sion are to act in the name and authority of God Thou shalt warn them from me They must let them know that God hath sent them that they speak from him not from themselves not their own words and this
have life or no but life is propounded and offered unto them and where that is promised there is a wide door of mercy opened God is troubled at it that sinners forsake mercy and embrace it not Why will ye dye Why will ye not turn from your evill wayes unto me the living God Am I so ill a God Have I dealt so unkindly with you as that you will not come unto me testifie against me tell me wherein Like that in Micah 6.3 O my people what have I done unto thee and wherein have I wearyed thee testifie against me If there be any such thing lye in the way I am ready to remove it Fifthly Observe The nature of true repentance lyeth in turning Turn ye turn ye God at first made man upright with his face towards himself but he sought out inventions and turn'd away from God to the creature which was a madnesse to leave an universal everlasting and satisfying good for a particular fading and an unsatisfying good this madness is in the hearts of all men Eccl 9.3 till they come to repenting turning again unto God and setting him in his right posture to behold the Lord. This turning must be from his evil wayes Turn ye from your evill wayes and from all of them Ezek. 14.6 Chap. 18.21.31 Else it s no turning if the heart be towards any one sin lust creature or evill way it s not turn'd his back is towards God and not his face he prefers a creature a lust before God Sixthly Observe Sinners are the Authours of their own destruction Why will ye dye They went on in their idolatry profaness oppressions pollutions of Sabbaths c. and so brought judgement upon themselves 2 Chron 36.16 They mocked the Messengers of God despised his word and misused his Prophets untill the wrath of the Lord arose against his people till there was no remedy therefore he brought upon them the King of the Chaldaeans who slew their young men with the sword in the house of the Sanctuary and had no compassion on the young man or maiden c. So in Christs dayes he would have kept Jerusalem from destruction but Jerusalem her self would not she brought it upon her selfe Matth. 23.37 The Corinthians abuse of the Supper brought judgement upon them 1 Cor. 11.30 And the false Teachers brought swift destruction upon themselves 2 Pet. 1.1 Verses 12 13 14 15 16. Therefore thou son of man say unto the children of thy people The righteousnesse of the righteous shall not deliver him in the day of his transgression as for the wickednesse of the wicked he shall not fall thereby in the day that he turneth from his wickednesse neither shall the righteous be able to live for his righteousnesse in the day that he sinneth When I shall say to the righteous that he shall surely live if he trust to his own righteousnesse and commit iniquity all his righteousnesse shall not be remembred but for his iniquity that he hath committed he shall dye for it Again when I say unto the wicked Thou shalt surely dye if he turn from his sin and do that which is lawfull and right If the wicked restore the pledge give again that he had robbed walk in the statutes of life without committing iniquity he shall surely live he shall not dye None of his sins that he hath committed shall be mentioned unto him he hath done that which is lawfull and right he shall surely live THese words do explain and confirm what God had said in the 11 vers and that by way of contraries 1. He sets a righteous man before them and bids the Prophet tell them That if a righteous man turn from his righteousnesse and become wicked his righteousnesse will not benefit him but his wickednesse will bring judgement upon him 2. He sets a wicked man before them and bids the Prophet tell them That if he turn from his wickednesse that shall not prejudice him he shall not fall thereby but he shall live Here is nothing in these verses of Gods decrees of life or death of salvation or condemnation and mens being under them It s said whilest they are righteous they are under the decree of life and salvation and when they cease from their righteousness they are under the decree of death and condemnation and so if a man be righteous one day and wicked another and that interchangeably all dayes of his life he doth daily passe from under one decree to another forward and backward I find no foundation in the words for such a conceit they hold out Gods dealings with men here in this world according to the conditions he finds them in if they be just and righteous he will bless them if they be unjust and wicked he will punish them the one shall live comfortably the other shall be cut off by some judgement here is nothing pointing at the decrees of God Vers 12. The righteousnesse of the righteous What righteous man is here meant the 15. verse informs us viz. a man legally righteous such a man as restores the pledge gives again what he hath robbed and walks in the statutes of life without committing iniquity If a wicked man did these things he was righteous it s therefore a righteousnesse of the Covenant of works not the righteousnesse of faith here spoken of a moral not a Gospel righteousnesse which the 13. verse is clear for calling it his own righteousnesse Shall not deliver him in the day of his transgression The word for transgression is Poshang which signifies sin scienter contumaciter commissum presumptuous and wilfull sin rebellion apostacy Sometimes it is taken for any sin or failing as Lament 1.22 Do unto them as thou hast done unto me for all my transgressions Jeremiah had no great sins against light he did not rebel against God his transgressions were such as are the ordinary failings of men so it s used Job 13.23 And the Septuagint hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the day he shall erre Let him have done never so much good and continued long in so doing that shall not deliver him in the day of his erring transgressing fayling Had Adam stood many dayes months years and then eat of the forbidden fruit all his righteousnesse would not have delivered him and so here under the Covenant of works there is no deliverance upon any failing But rather it notes here some grievous sin and way of wickednesse which exposes unto and hastens Gods judgements As for the wickednesse of the wicked he shall not fall thereby in the day that he turns from his wickednesse Let the wickednesse of the wicked be great of what kind soever against God and man idolatry profaness oppression c. it shall not bring destruction upon him make him to fall and perish when he repents of it turns fom it and walks in those wayes that are contrary thereunto then his former sins shall not be imputed to him nor the judgements deserv'd
is likelyest to make way for the message they bring of what kind soever Here the Prophet was to warn them to tell them of their sins and the danger of them and who would not receive an admonition from God when it comes in his name backed with his authority when God in it seeks our good the freedom of us from death and damnation the bringing of us unto glory and salvation and especially when the soul of the watchman lyeth at stake for the sinner if he do not admonish the sinner Can any sinner be so obstinate as not to consider relent and return when God shall send one in his name unto him and the Prophet shall say Sir I come from God unto you and my life is at stake for you if I tell you not of your sins I am a lost man give me leave therefore to deal plainly with you you are covetous unclean proud froward ignorant unbelieving having a form of Godl nesse without the power and unlesse you take another course and serve the living God otherwise the you do you will perish soul and body eternally but if y●u will hearken I will shew you the good and right way the way everlasting which will make you blessed for ever When a watchman comes and deals thus with a sinner hath he cause to be angry No he hath cause to fall down and say Of a truth God is in you and with you I thank you for your counsell and seasonable admonitions and through the grace of God I will improve them and turn to that God who is so gracious and would have sinners come to the knowledge of the truth and be saved Ninthly Observe The Lord knowes who are wicked When I say to the wicked man The world calls them wicked who are righteous and those righteous who are wicked but it is not so with the Lord he knows who is an hypocrite who is covetous who is a lyar a formalist an enemy to grace and holinesse Known unto the Lord are all his works Acts 15.18 And he knoweth who are his 2 Tim 2.19 and who are not his there is not one Goat in the world but the Lord knows him not a Wolfe or Lyon but he takes notice of them he knew the house of Israel better then Ezekiel who dwelt amongst them whom he said was wicked was so indeed It matters not much what the world saith of men it call'd Paul a Babler Acts 17.18 An Heretick Acts 24.14 A Pestilent Fellow vers 5. But what said God of him Acts 9.15 He is a chosen Vessel unto me to bear my name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel Jobs friends and the Devil said Job was an hypocrite but God said He was a perfect man fearing God and eschewing evill Job 1.1 That men are what God who cannot lye who cannot be deceived pronounces them to be if he in his word do call a ●an for an hypocrite an unbeliever covetous proud c. he is so Tenthly Observe The Power of life and death is in the hand of the Lord. When I say unto the wicked O wicked man thou shalt surely dye God hath authority over the lives of men and can pronounce a sentence of death upon them at his pleasure He Commission'd Saul to smite Amalek to slay man and woman infant and suckling Oxe and Sheep Camel and Asse 1 Sam. 15.3 Wh●n Ahab let Benhadad go a man that God had appointed to destruction therefore saith he Thy life shall go for his and thy people for his people 1 Kings 20.42 The power of life and death God challengeth to himself Deut. 32.39 I kill and I make alive I wound I heal neither is there any that can deliver out of mine hand By this argument he proves himself to be God and it s none but God that kills or gives life Psal 68.20 Vnto God the Lord belong the issues from death The Hebrew is Lammaneth Totzaoth Exitus ad mortem the goings out to death its God that turns the key and le ts out the breath it s he puts a period to the life of the Creature would any live let them fear the Lord and depart from evill for The fear of the Lord prolongeth dayes Prov 10.27 Moses uses this argument to perswade them to love obey and cleave to the Lord He is thy life and length of thy dayes Deut. 30.20 Men have their lives from God and he draws the thread of them out to what length he please and therefore men should love fear obey and cleave to that God if they do not he will cut the thread of their lives asunder Prov. 10.27 The years of the wicked shall be shortned by one sicknesse judgement or other their dayes and years shall be shortned of what they might have been Eleventhly Observe Those watchmen that are unfaithfull in their places and do not tell the people of their sins and danger their account will be dreadful If thou doe not speak to warn the wicked from his way his bloud will I require at thy hand If a politicall watchman be unfaithful so that a man perish by the sword without warning his bloud lyeth upon the watchmans head and if the Ecclesiastical watchman be unfaithful and do not warn the wicked upon what pretence soever the bloud of that wicked man dying in his sins will be required of the watchman it lyes upon his head and he must answer for it the case of this latter watchman will be more dangerous then of the former because the one is to answer for the life of a man the other for the soul of a man which is of great price Let lazy sleepy perfidious watchmen look to it they suffer men to perish through their default and their bloud lives souls stand ingaged for the s●me Twelfthly Observe The failing of the watchman will not excuse or priviledge the wicked man If thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his way that wicked man shall dye in his iniquity Though he be not told that he is in a wrong way though he pretend ignorance that will not serve turn he shall dye in his iniquity warn'd or unwarn'd the watchman hath not done his duty what then must this exempt the wicked man from punishment No he hath not done his duty he should have minded studyed the Law of God walked according to that and have made it a Lamp unto his feet and a light unto his paths Psal 119.105 But his neglect of his duty and ignorance rather will aggravate then extenuate his fault the Law was near unto him and he might have known what was forbidden and so have avoided the same Thirteenthly Observe Those that regard not the warning of the watchmen they bring certain destruction upon themselves Whosoever hears the sound of the Trumpet and takes not warning his bloud shall be upon his own head If the enemy cut off that man he himself is guilty of his own death not the political
desire love delight in a thing as Gen 34.19 Shechem delighted in Dinah he desired her loved her and took delight in her Chophetz notes the highest delight content that can be taken Psal 16.3 in whom is Col Cheph-Zi all my delight that is my greatest delight Now here it s said God hath not pleasure in the death of the wicked This is not an absolute negative denying God wholly to have delight in death or in the death of sinful wicked man or of any sinfull man for God took delight in the destruction of Pharoah and his Hoast in the red Sea which Moses shews saying Exod 15.1 He hath triumphed gloriously the Horse and his Rider hath he thrown into the Sea God sent Saul to smite Amaleck utterly to destroy him and all his when Agag was spared with the best of the sheep and oxen was he not wrath with him 1 Sam. 15.3.11.23 When Jehu cut off Ahabs house what said the Lord Because thou hast done well in executing that which is right in my eyes and hast done unto the house of Ahab according to all that was in mine heart thy children of the fourth Generation shall sit on the Throne of Israel 2 Kings 10.30 The destruction of Ahabs house was pleasing to God he commended he rewarded it And that God takes no pleasure in the destruction of a sinfull wicked man is contrary to these Texts Deut. 28.63 Prov. 1.26 27. Isa 1.24 Jer 14.12 The words they are not to be taken as an absolute negative but comparatively thus I have pleasure in the turning of the wicked from his wayes rather then in his death or its more pleasing to me that a wicked man should turn and live then that he should continue and dye Such an expression is that in 1 Cor. 1.17 Christ sent me not to baptize but to preach the Gospell Not absolutely not to baptize but rather to preach then to baptize he had more pleasure in my preaching then in my baptizing and so here Let me not live if I have so much pleasure in the death of a sinner as in his turning from his sin By Death here some understand eternall Death and it cannot be otherwise saith Quistorpius for he speaks of that death which may be avoided by repentance and turning to God but temporal death cannot be avoided either by the penitent or impenitent But to him that well considers this place it will appear that here it s spoken of a temporal and violent death for vers 3. He speaks of the sword coming upon a Land They were at this time either straitly besiedged or newly taken by Nebuchadnezzars forces and complain'd that their sins were upon them provoking God to destroy them that they pin'd away and there was no hope for them of life though they should repent them of their iniquities this God answers unto and tells them if they turn from their evill wayes there is hope they shall live for repentance prevents and removes judgements that are destructive The Ninivites by their repentance prevented the destruction of themselves and their City at Davids repentance the plague was stayed Ahabs humbling himself prevented Gods bringing the evill in his dayes So that its true of natural death that cannot be avoided by penitency or impenitency but a violent death may a death by sword by famine by plague by wild beasts may 2 Chro 7.14 If my people which are called by my name shall humble themselves pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked wayes then will I hear from Heaven and will forgive their sin and w●ll heal their Land Had he spoken of eternall death it had been no answer to the Jews objection Lavater tells us that by Death is meant Malum and by Life Bonum Men by their sins bring sad calamities and judgements upon themselves they cause God to punish them with variety of evills which he hath no pleasure in nor they cause to complain of Lament 3.33 39. He had rather they should turn from their sins and live comfortably But that the wicked turn from his way and live The word for wicked is Rashang which the Septuagint renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the irreligious lewd ungodly man here wicked wicked in opinions wicked in practice troublesome to God and man running the wrong way The word for way signi ies a path which leads from place to place and men walk in it Metaphorically it s applyed to the customes manners actions religions and lives of men Jer. 16.2 Pro 1.19 Prov 21.2 of this before Chap. 16.61 The sense lyeth thus As I live I delight not in the death of the wicked but if the wicked turn from his way and live or shall live that is according to what I have prescribed in my word I shall delight in this or thus If he turn from his sinfull way that he may live and live comfortably I shall delight in it Turn ye turn ye from your evill wayes Here is an earnest exhortation of them unto repentance setting out the mercy and goodnesse of God who was ready and willing to pardon them upon their turning from their evil wayes The doubling of the word notes the earnest and reall intention of God in it The sum and substance of the words is to shew that if sinners repent of their former wickednesse he will forgive them and take pleasure in them Turn ye turn ye from your evill wayes If ye pine away under my judgements the fault is yours you turn not from your idolatries oppressions perjuries and profanations of my Sabbaths and Ordinances these are wayes of death but if ye would hearken to my wayes and turn unto them they are wayes of life Of turning hath been spoken Chap. 14.6 The Septuagint is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Turn you by turning turn throughly from your evill wayes For why will ye dye O house of Israel Ye are the Nation I took and brought out of Egypt by a strong hand Deut 4.34 Ye are the people that entred into Covenant with me avouched me to be your God Deut. 26.17 and I you to be my peculiar people vers 18. ye are they upon whom I have bestowed great priviledges holy Ordinances to whom I have shewed mercy and truth Ps 76.1 2. Ps 98.3 ye are the people I have taken most delight in of all people under Heaven whom I have most honoured done most for and made the greatest promises unto Jer. 31.33 34. Chap 33.8.14 Why therefore have you left me and my wayes and fallen into wayes of death why do you wound and stab your selves if you have no regard to me yet pity your selves cease from those wayes will be your death Why will ye dye O house of Israel Is it not better to live in my wayes then to dye in your own First Observe The guilt and punishment of sin are heavy and consuming things Our transgressions and our sins are upon us and we pine away in them Guilt alone is
a great burden A stone saith Solomon Prov 27.3 is heavy and the sand weighty but a fools wrath is heavier then them both and guilt is heavier then them all A wounded spirit who can bear Prov. 18.14 What is guilt then with punishment but a consuming a devouring thing When David had sinned and Gods hand was upon him what saith he Psal 38.3 There is no soundnesse in my flesh because of thine anger neither is there any rest in my bones because of my sin Mine iniquities are gone over my head● as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me v. 4. I am feeble and soar broken I have roared by reason of the disquietnesse of my heart v. 8. Gods hand and his own guilt did eat up his spirit and bring him to the gates of death this made him to say Psal 39.11 When thou with rebukes dost correct man for iniquity thou makest his beauty to consume away like a moth The word for beauty notes that is desireable in man whatever is desireable that melts away when God doth visit man for sin A little touch of a mans hand crusheth the wings and hazards the life of the moth a little touch of Gods hand where guilt is marrs the beauty strength and desireables of man Secondly Observe Sinners under sad judgements are apt to despond yea to despair If our transgressions and our sins be upon us and we pine away in them how should we then live They had greatly sinned against God stood it out against his Prophets threatning judgements and now the judgments were come upon them their hearts sunk within them and they conclude there is no mercy for them our sins are great Gods judgments heavy upon us he is resolved now upon our destruction and what course soever we shall take all is in vain What these said in Judaea the like said they in Babylon Ezek. 37.11 Our bones are dryed and our hope is lost we are cut off for our parts We are like the bones in a Grave that have all the marrow dryed out of them or like a branch of a Tree cut off and all the sap dryed out of it there is no hope we should ever live go to Jerusalem and grow there again into a Church or State Not only the wicked but even a Godly man may be in a desponding yea a desparing condition as David himself Psal 31.22 I said in my hast I am cut off from before thine eyes Thou wilt never look upon or favour me more So Asaph Psal 77.7 Will the Lord cast off for ever will he be favourable no more is his mercy clean gone for ever doth his promise fail for evermore hath he forgotten to be gracious c. What sad expostulations were these of a good man Thirdly Observe The cavills objections and unbelief of sinners put God unto his oath As I live saith the Lord it s not so as you fancy I have told you that if you turn from your evill ways you shall live that I have no pleasure in the death of a sinner Ezek 18.21 22 23 27 28 31 32. But ye believe not my word ye cavill against it and say ye shall pine away in your sins that what course soever ye take ye shall not live Men are backward to believe the word of God and deal worse with God then with man they will give credit to an honest man upon his word but not to God yea how many do believe the Devils suggestions and delusions who is the father of lyes and will not believe the word of God and what a harsh thing is it that men will not attribute so much to God as to the Devil Eve took the Devils bare word in Paradice she put not him to his oath when he said ye shall not dye your eyes shall be opened and ye shall be as gods knowing good and evill She believed him presently But men will not take Gods bare word they put him to his oath As I live saith the Lord. It s a great thing for God to speak but more for him to swear he that made the world with a word is not believed upon his word he must take his oath upon it so that it stands God in more to be believed in the world then it did to make the world his single word sufficed for the one his oath was required for the other O beatos nos quorum causa Deus jurat O miserr imos si nec juranti Domino credimus Tertul Si non credimus promittenti Deo credamus juranti Deo Jerom And here appears the great goodnesse of God that for the good of man will please to take an oath O happy we for whose sake God swears O most unhappy we if we believe not God swearing Having therefore Gods word and oath let us believe firmly and stagger no more Fourthly Observe Sinners in what condition soever they be have no cause to despond or despaire of mercy so that they turn from their evill wayes Let them be great sinners old sinners sinners under judgements ready to be destroyed and cut off by the hands of enemies as these were yet if they turn from their sins there is hope of mercy for them For First God takes pleasure rather in their conversion and salvation then in their death and destruction I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked-turn from his way and live If a State say to a company of its Subjects who are Traytors and upon trayterous designs I have no pleasure in your wayes which lead unto death but my pleasure is that you turn from them and live is not here a large door of hope opened unto them whatever their Treasons be Secondly Least men being deeply guilty should suspect the reallity of God herein for guilt is full of jealousies the Lord sweares to it and that by his life which is the most unquestionable thing of all for none doubts whether he be the living God As I live saith the Lord I have no pleasure c. So that here is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods word and oath two sufficient bonds to secure it Thirdly Here is Gods command and earnest desire of their turning Turn ye turn ye from your evill wayes When a mans servant is abroad in some dangerous design and his Master commands him again and again to leave it off and come home to him or if the servant be in a deep water and the Master sees he will be drown'd if he come not back again he calls to him and commands him to return is not this an argument that he seeks his good and would have him safe Fourthly God sets the strongest arguments before them that can be thought of life and death If ye go on there is no hope of mercy you must dye if you will turn here is life ye shall live here is great mercy They are not left unto uncertainties whether they shall
them into forraign Lands Let all the world judge Vers 20. And when they entred unto the heathen whither they went they profaned my holy Name When the Jews came amongst the Heathen they profaned his holy name which is done two wayes either formaliter when mens own words or actions are profane prostituting the name of God to dishonour or occasionaliter when occasion is given to others by their words and actions to profane the holy Name of God as David by his sinfull action with Bathsheba gave occasion to the enemies of God to blaspheme 2 Sam 12.14 And this was the case here for the Babylonians said These are the people of the Lord and are gone forth out of his Land The Jews being under sad judgements of God should have learned righteousnesse but they being neither affected with the honour of God care of their salvation nor with fear of offending the heathens persevered in their wicked wayes and idolatrous practices Ezek 20.32 whereupon the Heathens said These are the people of the Lord. They boast of their God to be a holy omnipotent and faithfull God but you may know what their God is by their unholy practices had he been omnipotent as they say he would have kept them out of our hands but he could not which shews our gods are stronger than he or if he could he would not he was not faithfull unto his people as our gods are unto us They are gone forth out of his Land whereas we abide in ours had their God been such as ours are he would have protected them and prevented their casting out of his Land First Observe The wicked wayes of men especially those of bloud and idolatry are loathsome unto God Their way was before me as the uncleannesse of a removed woman that is extream loathsome All sin is defiling and so loathsome abominable unto God who is holy yea holinesse it self but murther and idolatry are most hatefull and most loathsome unto him Psal 5.6 The bloudy man is abhor'd of God and he lets him not live out halfe his dayes Psal 55.23 Jer 44.4 The Lord calls idolatry An abominable thing which he hates he hates and loaths it infinitely Secondly Observe Men by their own sinfull doings do bring evills mischief and destruction upon themselves When the house of Israel dwelt in their own Land they defiled it by their own way and by their doings wherefore I poured my fury upon them Had they not sinned nor walked in evil wayes they had not met with fury but because their wayes were wicked bloudy and idolatrous therefore they had fury and fury poured out abundantly their own evil doings brought destruction upon them Prov 11.5 The wicked shall fall by his own wickednesse Jer 2.19 Thine own wickednesse shall correct thee Jerusalems own sin was her ruine And David tells us how God will deal with wicked men Psal 94.23 He shall bring upon them their own iniquity and shall cut them off in their wickednesse It s ill work wicked ones are about they make Fetters for their own feet and build houses for to fall upon their own heads so mischievous is the nature of sin that it damnifies and destroyes the parents of it Thirdly Observe What judgements soever God brings upon sinners he is just and righteous in so doing God poured fury upon them he drave them out of their own Countrey he scattered them up and down among heathens whose language they understood not who were bitter and harsh towards them and all this was not more no not so much as their sins deserved According to their way and their doings I judged them saith the Lord I did them no wrong they had not any cause to complain of me the fault was their own Whatever Gods proceedings are with any Nation Family or Person he is righteous for Psa● 145.17 The Lord is righteous in all his wayes and holy in all his works there is no spot cleaves to his hand or any action thereof Fourthly Observe Its a grievous provoking thing when Gods people who professe his truth and worship give occasion to the enemies thereof to blaspheme and speak reproachfully The Jews being among the Babylonians spake and did such things as gave occasion to them to blaspheme When they entered unto the heathen they profaned my holy name This was a great grief and provocation of God that his people being afflicted for their sins yet should carry it so sinfully as to give them advantage of dishonouring God his Truths Worship and Servants Isa 52.5 God complains that his name was blasphemed continually every day The Babylonians watched the Jews and catched all advantages to profane the name of the Lord this was their daily language These are the people of the Lord and are gone forth out of his Land he could not or would not keep them out of our hands he is a weak unfaithfull unholy God and his people are like unto him When David gave occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme it brought forth sad effects or rather had sad consequents the death of the child and sword at his dore for ever 2 Sam 12. Those therefore who professe the true Religion should be exceeding carefull whereever they be come that they walk answerable to the Religion they profess that they avoid all sin and do good that so the name of God may be glorified and not profaned or blasphemed Fifthly Observe Heathens and heathenish spirits are glad of occasions and advantages against the true God his wayes and people The Babylonians said These are the people of the Lord and are gone forth out of his Land They were glad they had matter to insult and blaspheme what 's your God better then ours ye do the things we do and what is his Land better then this Land have not we Corn Wine and Oyl Milk and Honey as well and as much as you had in that Land why is Canaan so cryed up and Jerusalem so magnified our Assyria and our City Babylon are as good as excellent as they yea far beyond them Verses 21 22 23 24. But I had pity for mine holy Name which the house of Israel had profaned among the heathen whither they went Therefore say unto the house of Israel Thus saith the Lord God I do not this for your sakes O house of Israel but for mine holy Names sake which ye have profaned among the heathen whither ye went And I will sanctifie my great Name which was profaned among the heathen which ye have profaned in the midst of them and the heathen shall know that I am the Lord saith the Lord God when I shall be sanctified in you before their eyes For I will take you from among the heathen and gather you out of all Countreys and will bring you into your own Land THese verses contain the ground of the Jews restauration which is the fourth general part of the Chapter they being in captivity and sinning there greatly they caused the name
affliction he looked upon them and pitied them yea he made their enemies to pity them ver 46. In the book of Judges Chap. 10 16. you have a notable expression to this purpose it 's said there His soul grieved for the misery of Israel Tikzar naph 〈◊〉 abbreviata est anima ejus His soul was shortned When things are laid to heart they dry and shrink up a mans spirits God laid their misery so to heart that his soul was as it we●e shrunk up and shorten'd Seventhly Observe There is no state of affliction sin or death but God can and will raise his people out of the same O my pe●ple I will open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves Though they had layen 70 years in their graves God would open them When earth lies long undigg'd when graves continue long unopen'd it 's the harder to remove the earth and open the graves What difficulty soever there was in the way God would step over it and do the thing Job lay buried in the grave of Affliction a long season but at length God opened his grave and led him out Job 42.10 The Lord turned the captivity of Job David was in the grave of affliction but God raised him out of it Psal 40 2. He brought me up out of an horrible pit Elacu stupendo saith Munster Out of the miry clay that is out of the deepest and extremest misery Mary Magdalen lay in the grave of sin was in a state of spiritual death and Christ he quickned her he forgave her sins Luke 7.48 The Ephesians did among other Gentiles lie in their graves of sin they were shut up under unbelief that was a weighty grave-stone that kept them under but God rolled away that stone opened their graves and brought them forth Ephes 2.1 You that were dead in sins and trespasses hath he quickned Those a●e in a literal sense dead and in their graves God can open their graves and bring them forth also Lazarus had lain four dayes in his grave he was corrupted therein and stunk yet when Christ said Lazarus come forth the grave did open the dead man heard liv'd and came forth Joh. 11.43 44. The keys of life and death are in the hand of Christ be it a grave of affliction a grave of sin or a grave of the body Christ can turn the key open the grave and bring out thereof At last he will open the graves and bring fo●th all the dead bodies Eightly Observe Nothing in men moves God to put his Spirit into them These Jews were in a despairing condition they said Our bones are dryed our hope is lost we are cut off for our parts They dispair'd dishonour'd God highly thereby and deserv'd to be cut off and perish for ever but see how God dealt with them he promises to put his Spirit in them ver 14. The giving of his Spirit is an extraordinary mercy and he gives it freely Their goodness did not encline God to give nor their sin hinder him from giving Gods choisest gifts are freest as Christ the Spirit and Gospel they are the acts of His good pleasure Ninthly Observe Spiritual life and comfort are from the Spirits indwelling in men I shall put my Spirit in you and you shall live Then they shall live as they had never lived they should live Spiritually Comfortably Natural life in its kind hath an excellency but it 's far beneath a Spiritual life which is call'd the life of God Ephes 4 18. So the comforts of a Natural life may have some sweet and pretiousness in them but they are comfortless comforts to those of the Spirit and Spiritual life Men destitute of the Spirit are dead men and have but dead comforts Those have the Spirit are living-men and have living-comforts The Spirit is a Spirit of life and comfort and wherever it comes it makes men lively and comfortable Tenthly Observe When the people of God are gathered into Canaan they shall have rest there God would bring these Jews out of Babylon into their own Land which was Canaan and there they should rest there 's no rest in Babylon God is gathering his people out of Babylon dayly He saith unto them as it is in Micah 2.10 Arise ye and depart for this is not your rest He is drawing and driving them out of Babylonish and Antichristian conditions and bringing them into Sion where there is true rest though not perfect rest that will be in the Heavenly Canaan whither in due time we shall come Vers 15 16 17 18 19. 15. The Word of the Lord came again unto me saying 16. Moreover thou Son of man take thee one stick and write upon it For Judah and for the children of Israel his companions then take another stick and write upon it For Joseph the stick of Ephraim and for all the house of Israel his companions 17. And joyn them one to another into one stick and they shall become one in thine hand 18. And when the children of thy people shall speak unto thee saying Wilt thou not shew us what thou meanest by these 19. Say unto them Thus saith the Lord God Behold I will take the stick of Joseph which is in the hand of Ephraim and the Tribes of Israel his fellows and will put them with him even with the stick of Judah and make them one stick and they shall be one in mine hand THe Vision of the dry bones and Interpretation of them being ended here the Typical work of two Sticks and the uniting of them succeeds In the three first verses you have the Author of the Type and the Type it self in the two last direction what to say upon inquiry made after the meaning of the Type Vers 16. Moreover thou Son of man take thee one stick The Prophet before had a Vision here he hath a Command He must take a stick the Chaldee saith a Table the Septuagint a Rod the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lignum Wood. Wood or Stick is by a Metonymy of the matter put for a Table or Tally whereon something might be written So it was here he must write upon it For Judah and the children of Israel his companions These were the words to be written upon the Stick In the 17. of Numb v. 2. the Lo●d commanded Moses to take twelve rods according to the number of the Tribes and Princes and to write every mans name upon his rod. To this doth the Lord allude here commanding the Prophet to take a Stick or Rod and write upon it For Judah that is let Judah the royal and noble Tribe be signified thereby And the children of Israel by these the Tribe of Benjamin is meant which clave to the house of David and fell not from Rehoboam to Jeroboam 1 King 12.23 2 Chr. 11.12 as the other Tribes did This Tribe did wholly adhere to Judah and some also out of other Tribes did some out of Levi and some out of
of that which he had as Man but of that he had as Redeemer of men and obtained by his Sufferings and Resurrection In lecum● saith Maldonate It 's clear then Christ was not King over the Jews before his death because he had not his Power then and how he was their King afterward when he quickly left the World and went up into heaven I desire to learn 3. The Power and Laws here mentioned are Spirituall and refer to the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ viz. His Church as Teach all Nations and baptize them in the name c. These are Spiritual Laws and Ordinances proceeding from that power Christ had given him to gather out of all Nations those He had Redeemed by his death Here he appoints means for the gathering preserving and ruling his Church But this is not the Power our Prophet speaks of that is a Political Power such as David had and therefore it 's said He shall sit in the Throne of David his father Luke 1.29 Act. 2.30 David's Throne was an external visible political Throne Christ's Throne in Heaven his Throne in the hearts of Believers his Throne in the Church is not the Throne of David you may judge what kinde of Throne David's was by Jer. 13.13 Chap. 17.25 Chap. 22.4.30 1 King 2 12 24. When David Solomon and others sate in that Throne they put men to death and made Wars which Christ did not when he was here on earth Vers 25. And they shall dwell in the Land that I have given unto Jacob my servant wherein their Fathers have dwelt This is spoken of the ten Tribes together with Judah and Benjamin who should return from their Captivity and repossess the Land of Canaan That Judah and Benjamin did is clear from the Scriptures and gran●ed on all sides but that the ten Tribes returned is generally denyed and expected to this day to be made good The promise here is That the whole body of the Jews even the house of Judah and the house of Israel shall come thither and dwell there Jer. 3.18 In those dayes the house of Judah shall walk with the house of Israel and they shall come together out of the land of the North to the land that I have given for an inheritance to your fathers See Jer. 50.45 Ezek 9.13 Jer. 30.3 Let not man think because Christ hath said Mat. 23.38 Your house is left unto you desolate that therefore there is no hope of their returning to their Land for this is not spoken of the ten Tribes they were not there at Jerusalem and Revel 14.1 The Lamb stood on mount Sion with 144000 which were gathered out of all the Tribes of Israel and the time is coming when the Jews shall see Christ and say Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord Matth. 23. And they shall dwell therein even they and their children and their childrens children for ever Not only will God bring them into their Land but continue them and their's therein for ever The house of Judah after her return from Babylon continued in the Land of promise some 600 years For from the time of Cyrus Proclamation to Christ was 560 and about 40 years after the death of Christ was Jerusalem destroyed and the Jews wholly scattered These 600 years the house of Judah and her children injoyed but they fall short of what is promised here unto both houses viz. Inheriting of the Land for ever And my servant David shall be their Prince for ever David was dead long before Messiah the Lord Christ is pointed out by David who should be their Prince and rule them as David did David was meek and gentle in his Government 1 Chr. 28.2 Faithful and wise Psal 78.72 Righteous and just 2 Sam. 8.15 Such a King shall Christ be Psal 45.4 Isa 11.4 5. Jer. 23.5 And whereas David's Kingdom was for a time some 40 years the Kingdom of Christ shall have no end he shall be their Prince for ever All the Kings the Jews ever had reigned not 500 years it was about 493 but this Prince should exceed them all Luk. 1.33 First Observe There is a time wherein Christ must reign over the Jews they must be gathered into one body and Christ must be their King David my servant shall be King over them not only in a special way which hitherto he hath not been but also in a visible political way for he must sit in the Throne of David Hence it is that Christ said Luke 22.29 unto his Apostles I appoint unto you a Kingdom as my Father hath appointed unto me He doth not say He had a Kingdome but that a Kingdome was appointed them and such a Kingdom as should be visible for ver 30 it follows that they may eat and drink at my table in my Kingdom and sit on Thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel There is no Tables no Eating no Drinking no Tribes no Judging of them in heaven In Matth. 19.18 Christ speaks of twelve Thrones whereon the Apostles shall sit and rule the twelve Tribes of Israel together with himself being in the Throne of his Glory And when shall this be in the Regeneration when the Jews shall be regenerate when the time of restitution of all things shall be For the words should be rendred thus They which have followed me and there stop in the Regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the Throne of his Glory c. Then shall the twelve Tribes be there I be their King and you Judges or Rulers under me Grotius reads the words so and conceives them to be spoken of the Kingdom of Christ Whose Kingdom shall not be of Jews only but of Gentiles also they shall be under this King Psal 72.11 All Kings shall fall down before him all Nations shall serve him so that the Lord shall be King over all the earth Zech. 14.9 Secondly Observe There shall be no changes and alterations in the Kingdom of Christ by succession of Princes there they all shall have one Shepheard one Prince We see great changes in Kingdoms where they have King after King be it by Election or Succession When Rehoboam succeeded Solomon what tumults and stirs were then in the house of David so afterwards in the house of Joseph when Baasha and Jehu were chosen Kings There shall be no such thing here One Shepheard shall they have who shall Rule them with Righteousness and feed them with Knowledge Isa 40.11 He shall deal like a good Shepheard by them Ezek. 34.23 Thirdly Observe The Subjects of Christ's Kingdom shall be holy They shall walk in my Judgements and observe my Statutes and do them They who do the will of God they who keep his Laws they be innocent undefiled Psal 119.1 They are holy ones The 144000 which stood with the Lamb on Mount Sion were Virgins without guile without fault before the Throne of God Revel 14.1 4 5. Isa 60.21 Thy people shall be all righteous See Zach.
Gate which was one read broad Here were two Thresholds the lower and upper which the Grecians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the foot goeth over and that the head goeth under and they were very broad each a reed or 6. cubits broad and were to adorn and strengthen the Gate Christ is the Gate and Door of the Church his humane and divine natures are the ornament and strength thereof Vers 7. Very little chambers In this vers and the 10 12 13 16 17 21 29 33 36 38 44 45 46 verses of this Chapter you read of Chambers In middoth it 's said the Chambers were one above another and so it 's evident they were Ch. 41.6 OEcolampad saith they were Domunculae vel Mansiunculae in usum Templi factae they were little Lodgings made for the use of those served in the Temple Their number was great In some of them those that either kept the Temple or ministred dwelt in others were laid up those things pertained to the service of the Temple In the Chambers they laid the Meat-offerings the Frankincense and the Vessels and the Tythes of the Corne the New Wine and the Oyle which was commanded to be given to the Levites and the Singers and the Porters and the Offerings of the Priests Neh. 13.5 the Tythes were laid up in Treasuries and Store-houses of the Courts or in the Chambers thereof Mal. 3.10 Ezek. 42.13 14. The use of the Chambers North-ward and Southward is said to be for the Priests They be holy Chambers where the Priests who approach unto the Lord shall eat the most holy things there shall they lay the most holy things and the Meat-offerings and the Sin-offerings and the Trespass-offerings for the place is holy When the Priests enter therein then shall they not go out of the holy place into the outer court but there shall they lay their garments wherein they minister for they are holy and shall put on other garments and shall approach to those things which are for the people These Chambers may represent unto us 1. The Mansions which are in heaven Joh. 14.2 In my Fathers house are many Mansions saith Christ he shew'd Ezekiel these Chambers in this Visional-temple and he told his disciples of those caelestial Mansions which he would prepare for them 2. That intertainment rest and comfort the Saints injoy and shall have in the Church under Christ If a man come to his friend's house and he have never a Chamber for his repose it 's poor intertainment cold comfort and little ease if he must lye on the ground but if he have variety of Chambers and Beds for him his intertainment rest and comfort will be good he shall not need to fear wind or weather when men come to the New Jerusalem and are Citizens thereof they shall have good accommodation sweet rest and sound comfort There shall be no voice of weeping or crying Isa 65.19 There shall be no tears no death no sorrow no crying no pain Rev. 21.4 In the world is tribulation but in Christ is peace in Sion is peace under the New Jerusalem the Divels shall be bound up and there will be great peace and spiritual comfort in aboundance 3. These Chambers less and greater may note out the several Congregations or Churches of the Gospel-times be they little or great all which are in the Church of Christ as these Chambers were in this Visional-temple Vers 8. He measured also the Porch of the Gate within one reed The Thresholds and the Porch were all of one measure viz 6 cubits and a hands breadth The word for Porch here is Vlam and in the 10. v. is rendred Posts it signifies both Porches were for the dignity of the house and commodation of strangers Vers 9. Then measured he the Porch of the Gate eight cubits and the Posts therein two cubits In the verse before it 's said The Porch was one reed that is 6. cubits and here we find the measure of it 8. cubits In the former vers he spake of the bredth here of the length of it The Posts were the Pillars artificially placed on the one side and on the other The Porch of the Gate was inward It was within the Wall looking towards the house it self Vers 10. And the little Chambers of the Gate East-ward were three on this side and three on that side they three were of one measure and the Posts had one measure on this side and on that side The Eastern-gate as it had it's Porch and Pillars on each side of it so it had it 's 3. Chambers on each side of it and they were uniform as the Posts or Pillars were Vers 11. And he measured the breadth of the Entry of the Gate 10. Cubits and the length of the Gate 13. cubits The Hebrew word for Entry is Pethach and rendred a Door vers 13. and so it 's mostly taken in Scripture If by Entry be meant the Door how is it said that its 10. cubits in breadth when the Door is never wider then the threshold which in the 6. and 7. vers is said to be but one reed broad or 6. cubits Either it was some other Door or the Posts to which the Door was fasten'd and shut to were added to the measure If we hold to the word Entry it may be the breadth of the space between the outward Gate and the inward The length of the Gate 13. cubits Length here is the height of the Gate it was 13. cubits high Vers 12. The space also before the little Chambers was one cubit and the space one cubit on that side c. There was gebul a border or space of a cubit on each side of the Chambers and yet before them and the Chambers on each side were alike 6. cubits a piece Vers 13. He measured then the Gate from the Roof of the one little Chamber to the Roof of another the breadth was 25. cubits door against door These Chambers were not continued nor contigual there was the space of 5. cubits between them and of 25. cubits in that breadth was between them as they stood opposite one to another Vers 14. He made also Posts of 60. cubits even unto the Post of the Court round about the Gate Posts of this length some think incredible and therefore divide these cubits between the Posts on each side the Porch which reach up unto the Posts of the outward Court making them 30. cubits a piece Some make these Posts of 60. cubits to be the Cloister which being supported by Posts was 60. cubits long Vers 15. From the face of the Gate of the entrance unto c. From one Gate to the other were 50. cubits and the Porch of the Inner-gate 10. cubits We are to make progress in the Temple and not to stand still Vers 16. Of the Windows There were several Windows in this Structure which was presented to our Prophet as appears vers 16 22 25 29 33