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A35538 An exposition with practical observations continued upon the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, fortieth, forty-first, and forty-second, being the five last, chapters of the book of Job being the substance of fifty-two lectures or meditations / by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1653 (1653) Wing C777; ESTC R19353 930,090 1,092

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about to frame and O how many how exceeding many or innumerable are they yet God saw not onely some or many but every one of them It was said by one of the Ancients upon this place Profundum m●ris deu● ingredit●r qu●ndo visitare mentes etiam press●● sceleribus non dedignatur Greg. l. 29. c. 7 God goes to the depth of the sea as often as he goeth into the depth of mans heart and beholds what is there And there ●e beholds not onely the great but small beasts as the Psalmist calls the fish of the sea that is not onely great but small lusts and foolish imaginations the huge multitudes and shoals of vain thoughts which swim and play in that wide sea of mans heart are distinctly seen and as distinctly judged as if but one were there Thirdly From the scope of this place note That seeing we cannot search into the depth of the sea it should stay our curiosity in searching into and stay us from discontent when we cannot find the depth of Gods Counsels concerning us and of his Providences towards us There is a dutiful search into the Works of God David speaks of it Psal 111.2 The works of the Lord are great sought out of all those that have pleasure in them They are sought out that is they who have pleasure in them do and will endeavour soberly to search them out as much as may be but let all take heed of searching them wantonly or presumptuously that is either to satisfie their curiosity or with an opinion that they can reach the depth of them The Lord would have us satisfie our selves in the ignorance or rather nescience of those natural things which he hath not made known to us Surely then which is as hath been said the scope of this Chapter we should be satisfied though we in some cases know not nor can perceive the reason of Gods providential dealings either towa●ds particular persons and families or his Church in general Will any wise or sober man vex and disquiet himself will he be angry and pettish because he knows not all the secrets of the ear●h and sea as some say Aristotle the Philosopher was to death and drowning because he could not find out the reason why the sea in one place ebbed and slowed seven times in one day Why then should we be impatient because the reason of Gods proceedings with the sons of men or of the strange ebbings and slowings of things in the sea of this world is secreted and hidden f●om us And therefore when we are not able to enter into the springs of this sea nor to walk in the search of this depth let it not trouble us but humble us as it did Job to whom the Lord put these questions and proceeded to put more and more hard questions if harder can be in the next words Vers 17. Have the gates of death been opened or revealed unto thee Or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow of death Here is another strange question Who among the living hath had the gates of death opened to him O● hath viewed the doors of the shadow of death We read often in Scripture of the gates of death Psal 9.13 Num illius profunda quae verè dixirim mortis regiam c. rimatus es Bez. Psal 107.18 and which is all one of the gates of the grave Isa 38.10 but who knows what these gates are yet we may say something towards the clearing of this question A gate in strict sense is that by which we are admitted into any place and so the gates of death are That whatsoever it is by which we enter into death or go into the black hall of the grave Again The gates of death are any great and eminent danger Then we may be said to be at the gates of death when our lives are in great hazard to be lost either by the violence of enemies or by any violent sickness In the former sense David spake in way of supplication Psal 9.13 Have mercy on me O Lord consider my trouble which I suffer of them that hate me thou that liftest me up from the gates of death that is from deadly danger In the latter he spake by way of narration in his elegant description of the sick Psal 107.18 Their soul abhorreth all manner of meat and they draw near unto the gates of death that is they are ready to die or sick unto death And thus said King Hezekiah upon his sick-bed and as he thought a little before upon his death-bed Isa 38.10 I shall go to the gates of the grave I am deprived of the residue of my years that is of those years which I might have reckoned upon as mine according to the common account of mans life or the usual course of nature These are the more general gates of death and about these all agree But there are several opinions what should be specially intended by the gates of death in this place Portae mortis sunt causae corruptionis quantum advirtutes corporum ●●lestium Aquin. in loc First One riseth very high saying that by the gates of death we are to understand the visible heavens because the heavenly bodies send down sometimes malignant influences which have a mighty power to corrupt the bodies of men here below so causing death to carry them away Thus he imagins death issuing out of the clouds as out of opened gates upon men on earth But that 's a far fetcht interpretation Secondly O●hers go to the utmost contrary point and say by the gates of death we are to understand Hell The Papists give a description of several receptacles for souls departed under the earth they make at least three distinctions First Limbus Patrum The place where they affi●m the souls of the Fathers were before Christ came in the flesh and had accomplished the work of our redemption here on earth Secondly Purgatory the place where the souls of all that die not in mortal sin as they distinguish are reserved to be purged by temporary punishments before they can get to heaven Thirdly The lowest of all is that which we call Hell the place of the damned whither all go say they and we too who die in sin without repentance This place of torment some take for the gates of death But seeing the Lord is here speaking of natural things not of moral actions not of the consequents of them rewards and punishments therefore though we may truly call Hell the gates or power of death yet that notion as well as the former is altogether heterogeneal in this Text. Thirdly Several expound the gates of death in connection with the former verse for the depth or bottom of the sea where many dead carcases lie rotting all such as are cast away by shipwracks or die at sea being usually thrown into the deep and therefore at last the sea shall give up her dead as well as the earth Fourthly The gates of death
them down O Job canst thou do thus or do thou thus Tread down the wicked in their place And as it followeth in the next verse to the same effect Verse 13. Hide them in the dust together and bind their faces in secret That is Bring them to utter destruction to condign punishment even to death Some expound hiding in the dust by laying in dungeons and filthy prisons Secondly Others say to hide in the dust notes death or to lay them in their graves Dust thou art said God to Adam Gen. 3.19 and to dust thou shalt return That is thou shalt die and be put in thy grave which possibly is called the dust of death Psal 22.15 Hide them in the dust of the earth let them appear no more above ground to trouble thee or others Hide them in the dust Together That is either First All at a time Thus the Lord can do he can destroy all the wicked at once at one time in one hour Or Secondly Together that is in one place God can gather the wicked all together and so make an end of them together both as to time and place Yet I conceive neither of these are here intended for God doth not usually destroy the wicked all at one time nor all in one place he hath several times and stages to act his providences in and upon so that to hide them in the dust together is but this to hide them alike to put them all into the same condition at one time or other in one place or other that they may be able to do no more mischief And bind their faces in secret That 's the last expression shewing what God doth and what he bid Job do Bind their faces in secret There may be a twofold interpretation of these words either First In allusion to men condemned whose faces use to be covered a Sentence of death being pronounced and passed upon them they were as it were hid from the light of the living Thus as soon as Ahasuerus the King had passed sentence against Haman they covered his face Esth 7.8 or Secondly This covering their faces may be an allusion to actually dead men whose faces if they die among men especially among friends are alwayes bound up and decently covered When Christ called Lazarus out of the grave the Text saith John 11.44 He came forth his face being bound about with a napkin So then to bind their faces in secret is as if it had been said bring them to death or put them to death Thus the Lord calls Job to that in three particulars which himself will certainly do First To Tread down the wicked Secondly To Hide them in the dust together Thirdly To Bind their faces in secret The Notes which I shall give from these words will be grounded upon that three-fold interpretation of the word wicked And First As the wicked are taken for the same with the proud in the former verse Observe Proud men are wicked men Behold saith the Prophet Mal. 4.1 The day of the Lord shall burn as an oven and all the proud and all that do wickedly shall be stubble The proud ●●d they that do wickedly go together The proud do wickedly and are therefore deservedly numbred among the wicked Pride is the first of those seven things which are an abomination to the Lord Prov. 6.16 17. There are six things that the Lord hates yea seven are abomination to him A proud look that 's first and if a proud look then certainly a proud heart and a proud spirit Proud persons have not onely a chief but the first place by name among those whom the Lord abominates And in that black Catalogue of eighteen sorts of wicked ones that shall trouble the world in the latter dayes the proud are not the last nor the least 2 Tim. 3.2 3 4 5. In the last dayes perilous times shall come why what shall make them so The reason follows For men shall be lovers of their own selves covetous boasters proud Now though the proud man comes in the fourth place by name yet he is in the first place as to influence for what is the reason why men over-love themselves is it not because they are proud and have too high thoughts of themselves David Psal 119.21 sheweth the wickedness of proud men or that proud men are extreamly wicked while he saith to and of God Thou hast rebuked the proud that are cursed which do erre from thy Commandements The proud are such as continually wander out of the wayes of truth and holinesse Pride will not let us keep Commandements 't is the humble soul which keeps them and therefore pride may be called the breach of all the Commandements and if so proud men must needs be the very first-born of the wicked and therefore David saith of them that they are not onely under the rebuke of God but under his curse which is the peculiar portion and punishment of the wicked And what the way of proud men is both in doing and speaking the same David tells us Psal 75.45 I said unto the fools deal not foolishly and to the wicked lift not up the horn lift not up your horn on high speak not with a stiffe neck that is be not proud Wicked men lift up their horn and tongue they cannot but shew their pride in word and deed The Devil is the wicked one Matth. 13.19 The high-way ground having received the seed 't is said the wicked one that is the Devil cometh and catcheth it away And when the world is said to lie in wickedness or in the wicked one 1 John 5.19 The meaning is the Devil over-rules the carnal world Now as the Devil is the wicked one so he is the proud one also Pride was that wickededness for which God trod him down and his wickedness still continueth in tempting men to or in puffing them up with pride It is the businesse of the wicked one the Devil to make men proud because he knows pride will make them wicked and do wickedly Pride hardeneth the mind as Daniel saith it did Nebuchadnezar Chap. 5.20 Now what wickednesse is there which a hardened mind will not attempt to do Pride put Herod upon seeking the bloud of Christ who came to save and wash sinners with his blood Proud men are very wicked as they despise other men a proud man thinks no man so good as himself or himself too good for all other men Some proud men are so wicked that they despise even God himself The proud man lifts up himself against the Word of God slights the promises regards not the threatnings of God his heart is lifted up against the Commandements of God nor doth he value the comforts of God he neglects the Ordinances of God nor doth he reverence the Providences of God He that doth or is ready to do all this is surely a despiser of God himself How wicked a man is he whose heart is lifted up both against God and man
might declare himself in Leviathan Hence note The parts powers and comely proportions of the creature clearly evidence the excellencies of God The Lord chiefly proclaimed his own name when he proclaimed the name of Leviathan Rom. 1.20 The invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead The unseen God hath made all things that he may be seen in them When he makes a Comment upon his own works why is it but that he may make a Comment upon himself and expound his own glory in them And as the excellencies of the Lord are seen in the works of creation so in the works of providence and he hath therefore made so many declarations of them to us that his power wisdom and justice may shine through them to us Psal 75.1 That thy name is neer thy wondrous works declare And he said to Pharaoh Exod. 9.16 For this cause have I raised thee up for to shew in thee my power and that my name may be declared throughout all the earth All that the Lord doth to or in the creature is to get himself a name and a glory therefore let us give God the glory of his power wisdom and goodness in all his works Negare Pagaganus Christum potest negare Deum omnipotentem non potest August ser 139. de Temp. It was the saying of one of the Ancients A Pagan may deny that there is a Christ but a Pagan cannot deny Almighty God A Pagan may deny Christ for that 's meerly matter of faith but sense will lead a Pagan to believe there is a God or some omnipotent power that hath wrought all these things If we see a stream that assures us there is a Spring or Fountain if we see a goodly Palace built that assures us it had a builder a maker And if the stream be full what is the fountain If the Palace built be great and magnificent how great how magnificent was the builder Every house as the Author to the Hebrews said upon another occasion Chap. 3.4 is builded by some man but he that built all things is God Fourthly Seeing the Lord is pleased to read such a natural Phylosophy Lecture upon this creature we may take this Observation from it God would have man know the parts and powers of the creatures Why doth the Lord in this book speak at large of them and of their powers but that we may take notice of them and understand them or that we should search and study them What the Psalmist speaks concerning the works of providence is true of the Lords works in nature Psal 111.2 The works of the Lord are great And vers 4. He hath made his wonderful works to be remembred that is that they should be spoken of and memoriz'd And therefore having said at the beginning of the second verse The works of the Lord are great he adds in the close of it Sought out of all them that have pleasure therein His work is honourable and glorious c. The works of God are to be searched to the bottom though their bottom cannot be found by all those that have pleasure and delight either in God or in his works and they therefore search them out also because they encrease and better their knowledge of God the Creator by encreasing and bettering their knowledge about the creature From the whole verse we may infer First If God will not conceal the parts the power and comliness of his creatures then let not us conceal the power the glory and the excellency of God Yea let us with heart and tongue declare the glorious perfections of God how holy how just how wise how merciful how patient and long-suffering a God he is When God makes the creature known to us he would much more have us know himself and make him known Davids heart was set upon this duty Psal 9.14 Thou hast lifted me up from the gates of death that I may shew forth all thy praise in the gates of the daughter of Sion As if he had said This O Lord was thy design in lifting me up from the gates of death that is from deadly dangers or killing diseases that I might declare thy praise in Sions gates or that I might declare how praise-worthy thou art to all who come into the gates of Sion And again Psal 118.17 I shall not die but live and declare the works of the Lord. In the 40th Psalm which is a Prophecy of Christ he speaks in the words of the Text vers 10. I have not hid thy righteousness within my heart I have declared thy faithfulness and thy salvation I have not concealed thy loving kindness and thy truth from the great congregation As the Lord saith here concerning Leviathan I will not conceal his parts so saith the Prophet I will not conceal his loving kindness and truth c. Which as it is most true of Christ whose work it was to do so as also the end of all his works so it sheweth what we ought to do and what should be the end of all our works not to conceal the righteousness and goodness of God but declare them in the great congregation And as Christ declared the glory of the Father so should we the glory of Christ We read the Church engaged in this As I shewed before Christ could not conceal the parts of the Church so the Church could not conceal the parts of Christ Cant. 5.9 There the question is put to the Church What is thy beloved more than another beloved that thou dost thus charge us The Church being asked this question will not conceal the parts nor the power nor the comely proportion of Christ her Beloved but gives a copious Narrative of his gracious excellencies vers 10. My Beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest among ten thousand his head is as most fine gold his locks are bushy and black as a Raven his eyes are as the eyes of Doves by the rivers of waters washed with milk and fitly set his cheeks are as a bed of spices as sweet flowers his lips like Lillies dropping sweet smelling myrrh his hands are as gold rings set with Beryle his belly is as bright Ivory overlaid with Saphyres his legs are as pillars of marble set upon sockets of fine gold his countenance is as Lebanon excellent as the Cedars his mouth is sweet yea he is altogether lovely This is my beloved and this is my friend O daughters of Jerusalem Thus as Christ concealed not the parts of the Church so the Church concealed not the parts the power and comely proportion of Christ And did we more consider who Christ is and what he is both in himself and unto us we should be more both in admiring within our selves and in reporting to others his parts his power and comely proportion Secondly If God hath not concealed the knowledge of his creatures from us if
of Heth. If Jacob take a wife of the daughters of Heth such as these which are of the daughters of the Land what good shall my life do me Better be out of the world than see my sons miscarry These two sights to see children suffering or to see them sinning are a pain not only to the eyes but to the hearts of parents But to see them First Prosperous in their way Secondly Pious keeping the way of the Lord to have and see such children and childrens Children to the third and fourth generation how delightful is this The Apostle John professed 3 Epist ver 4. I have no greater joy than to hear that my children walk in the truth He means his spiritual children those whom he had converted to the faith and begotten to Christ in the ministery of the Word O what a joy was it to that holy Apostles heart to see them walk answerably to the profession of the Gospel and his expectation Now as that was so great a joy to him that he had no greater so 't is an unspeakable joy when godly parents see their natural children spiritual and walking in the truth To see children new born to see them gracious and to see them prosperous also what a blessed sight is this And this was the sight doubtless which Job had he saw his children His sons and his sons sons to the fourth generation His blessedness as to all without him in this life was at the highest when he saw the prosperity of his children both in soul and body Thus Job was blessed every way he was blessed with riches blessed with long life blessed in the multiplication of his family he was blessed also in his death as appeareth in the next and last words of this Chapter and Book Vers 17. So Job died being old and full of days As Solomon said Eccles 12.13 Hear the conclusion of the whole matter Fear God and keep his commandements So I may say now Hear the conclusion of all men To fear God and keep his commandements is the consumating end of our lives but to dye is the consuming end of all our lives and to a good man 't is an entrance into eternal life Such and so Job died The Lord having spoken of his life is not silent about his death The story the holy story brings Job to his grave and that could not but be a blessed death which was the close of a gracious life So Job died Death is the separation of the soul from the body 't is the sleep of the body in the grave and th● rest of their souls in heaven who dye in the Lord. There is no difficulty in these words take a note or two from them First Death takes all sooner or latter Job lived a long time but he did not out-live death Mors ultima clausula vitae Mors ultima linea rerum he enjoyed an hundred and forty years prosperity in this world yet he left the world He lived long yet a day came when he could not live a day longer 'T is said of all the long livers Gen. 5. They died Adam lived nine hundred and thirty years and he died Seth lived nine hundred and twelve years and he died Methuselah the longest liver in this world lived nine hundred sixty and nine years and he died Here Job lived an hundred and forty and so he dyed David put the question of all men Psal 89.48 What man is he that liveth and shall not see death How great or how good how rich or how wise how strong or how valiant soever any man living is he must dye How long soever any man hath lived in this world he must dye for the world must dye there must be a dissolution of all things and therefore a dissolution of all men Psal 82.6 7. I said ye are gods but ye shall dye like men Kings and Princes who have the priviledge to be called gods have not the priviledge of God not to dye like men This is a common theam I intend not to stay upon it only let me tell you death will overtake us all sooner or later upon a double account First Because it is appointed Secondly Because it is deserved It is appointed unto men once to dye Heb. 9.27 and all men have deserved to dye to dye eternally and therefore much more to dye naturally Rom. 5.12 As by one man sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death past upon all men for that all have sinned Now seing the condition of all men is a dying condition receive these four cautions First Prepare for death There is no avoiding it at the long run therefore be ready to entertain it at last and because we may dye at any time be preparing for death at all times How miserable are they who are so old that they cannot live and yet so unprepared that they are afraid to dye Job died and we must If so Is it not our wisdome to prepare for death Secondly Submit quietly to the arrest of death There is no striving with the decrees of God Our death is under a divine appointment Eccles 8.8 There is no discharge in that war no priviledge to be pleaded no exemption no prescription Your strength cannot stand against the assaults of death your prudence and policy cannot find any way of escape from it nor can your piety or godliness deliver you out of the hands of natural death As there is no work nor devise nor knowledge in the grave whither we are going Eccles 9.10 so there is no knowledg no device no wisdom can keep us from going into the grave no not our graces Grace is as salt to the soul preserving it from moral corruption for ever But it cannot keep the body from natural corruption in this world Mors est nobis nimis domestica utpote quam in viscaribus nostris circumserim● Plutarch in Consol ad Apoll. because our graces in this world are mingled with corruption Death is domestical to us that is we have the seed of it within our selves we carry it daily in our bowels and in our bosomes therefore submit quietly to it for there is no avoiding it Thirdly Seing all must dye get that removed which is the troubler of a death-bed and the sting of death get that removed which makes death bitter get that removed which makes death the King of terrours so terrible that is sin This should be our study all the days of our life to get rid of sin to be dying to sin daily because we must dye at last and may dye for all that we know or can assure our selves any day we live 1 Cor. 13.56 The sting of death is sin Whensoever or in what way soever we dye it will be well with us if the sting of death be first pulled out and whensoever we dye after never so long a life it will be miserable if we dye in our sins as Christ told the Jews in
said to those in the parable that were hired at the eleventh hour Matth. 11.6 Why stand ye all the day idle They of the eleventh hour were persons possibly very busie and laborious as to their Civil Callings in the world but had stood idle all the day as to any spiritual work as to any work of grace they had not done God nor their poor souls one stroke of work all that while until they were called and the light of grace shined upon them Jesus Christ is the light which lightened the Gentiles and the glory of Israel Luke 2.32 And wheresoever he comes The people which sat in darkness see a great light and to them which sat in the valley of the shadow of death light springs up Matth. 4.16 And that a two-fold light First Light to be saved by Secondly Light to serve God or to do the work of God by Thirdly How comfortable is the light 'T is so comfortable that light and comfort are often put for the same thing God is the Lord aith David Psal 118.27 which hath shewed us light that is the light of counsel what to do and the light of comfort in what we do or after all our sufferings Light is not only a candle held to us to do our work by but it comforts and cheareth us in our work Eccl. 11.7 Light is sweet and a pleasant thing it is for the eyes to behold the Sun Hence that of David Psal 65.8 Thou makest the out-goings of the evening and morning to rejoyce that is thou makest men to rejoyce they are glad they rejoyce in or at the out-goings of the morning Man takes comfort at the first appearance of the light light refresheth him at its out-goings in the morning And at the evening men rejoyce too for then they go to their rest being wearied with the labour of the day Possunt exitus matutini v●spertini sumi pro hominibus qui h●bitant ubi exit dies ubi exit nox i. e. pro Orientalibus Occidentali●●● Or we may thus expound that Psalm Thou makest the out-goings of the morning and the evening to rejoyce That is thou makest men who live at the out-goings of the morning and at the out-goings of the evening to rejoyce As if it had been said thou makest the Eastern people and the Western people all people from East to West rejoyce And that which makes all people to rejoyce naturally is the rising of light with them in the East and the coming of light towards them in the West Thus we see what an excellent creature light is both as it hath a continually renewed rising in the morning of every day and as it had its first being in the morning of the world and both from the command of God Whence take these inferences First When we behold the morning coming forth by the command of God Let us consider who God is and what the beauty and purity the majesty and excellency of God are who is clothed with light and dwelleth in light yea who is light and in whom there is no darkness at all There is not any one creature which God doth so formally predicate of himself as this of light As God is love 1 John 4.8 so God is light 1 John 1.5 yet the light which shines to us the morning which God hath commanded for us is but darkness to God who hath commanded it Light it self is darkness compared with God yet 't is the clearest shadow the best resemblance of God in Nature Secondly As we should consider the excellency and beauty of God in the appearance of the morning so his goodness who hath made such a creature for us who hath also prepared so many vessels to hold it and hold it out or to dispence it to us 'T is God who hath made those great lights the Sun to rule the day and the Moon and Stars to rule the night Gen. 1.16 The day would be night to us if God had not prepared the Sun for though there were three days before the Sun was made yet now 't is the Sun which makes the day and the night would be nothing but darkness to us if God had not prepared the Moon and the Stars How great then is the goodness of God to man who hath made light for us and who thus conveys and dispenseth it to us according to our need both by day and by night Thirdly We should hence be minded to pay our debt of thankfulness to God every day History tells us that the ancient Rhodians or inhabitants of the Isle called Rhodes erected a mighty Colossus according to their heathenish superstition in honour of the Sun who once a day at least opened his face upon their Island though it were over-cast with clouds muffled up and vailed to all other parts of the world Though possibly we do not see the face of the Sun every day yet we enjoy the light and influences of it every day God hath commanded the Sun in the Firmament to attend us to be about us to comfort us every morning and shall we be unthankful If in a dark night a friend will but lend us a candle and a lanthorn we thank him What matter of thanks to God then should it be that he hath set up those candles those torches those lamps of light for our comfort and guidance continually Fourthly If God hath commanded the light so excellent a creature to serve us to be for our use then let us make use of the light to serve the Lord in and by let us make use of natural light that of the Sun in the air and of spiritual light that of Christ the Sun in the Gospel most of all Let us make use of natural light as to civil and of spiritual light as to holy ends and enjoyments let no beam of light shine to us in vain It is sinful not to make a good use of natural light 't is very sinful and dangerous not to make a good use of spiritual 't is condemnation to refuse ●pi●i●ual Gospel light and to love darkness rather than the light John 3.19 Fifthly Seeing the Lord ha h commanded the morning light for us then by way of retribution let us shine forth in obedience to his commands and be as the morning light to glorifie God Matth. 5.16 We that have light made for us should carry our selves like lights The Apostle either commends the Saints at Phillippi for shining or commands them to shine as lights in the world Phil. 2.15 The Text runs in the Indicative Mood by way of commendation Among whom ye shine The Margin hath it in the Imperative Mood by way of command Among wh●m sh●ne ye as lights in the world The Lord who hath commanded the Sun to ●ise for our light hath commanded us to rise and shine as lights and be as so many Suns of light in the firm●ment of the Church and in all places to which we come Therefore as
Stars Gen. 19.23 Neh. 4.21 Thus here canst thou cause Mazzaroth to rise and go forth Or canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth What 's that Some Interpreters conceive Sunt collectionis syderum quae usus obtinuit ut vocentur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi parva animalia alii vero dicunt signifi●are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sydereum canem Chrysost apud Orus Colligunt quidam hic Mazzaroth esse quod ibi dicebatur penetralia Austri Merc. Remotiora si● na Heb. separationes i. e. sidera à nobis qui sub polo arctico degimus ut Jobus separata sic autem vooantur sidera meridionalia quae oriuntur in principio aestatis Pisc that by Mazzaroth we are to understand those Constellations which Astronomers call the twelve Signes of the Zodiack which are expressed for learning sake by the fancied names of living creatures so that according to this interpretation the Suns appearance in or passage through those monthly signs is the bringing forth of Mazzaroth in his season But most generally they are taken for the Southern Stars and thought to be the same with those Chap. 9.9 Called the Chambers of the South and seeing the other three are named there it is not improbable that under this word the fourth is intended Master Broughton calls them far Stars in the South The letter of the Hebrew imports that and the Seventy derive it from a root ●hat signifies to separate or disperse because those Stars are far separated or are at a great distance from us who lye under the Northern Pole Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season that is canst thou make that Constellation appear in its proper time thou canst not Hence take these brief Notes The Stars of heaven are brought forth by special order and appointment As men are brought forth at such a time in such a place so are they by an order from God The Stars of heaven are not under any law of man on earth no nor of the Angels in heaven Psal 19.4 5. In them speaking of the heavens hath he that is the Lord set a Tabernacle for the Sun which is as a Bride groom coming out of his Chamber every morning to visit his Spouse the earth and rejoyceth as a strong man to run a race what is there spoken of the Sun is true of Mazzaroth and of all the Stars whether planted in the Northern or Southern in the Eastern or Western parts of heaven 'T is the Lord who brings them all forth and that in their season Note secondly The Stars of heaven have their seasons and keep their seasons They keep them punctually to a minute to a moment they know their times and they keep time they have their seasons of rising and their seasons of setting Psal 65.8 Thou makest the out-goings of Morning and Evening to rejoyce Some Stars go out in the Morning others go out in the Evening their times are various but they all keep their time Psal 104.19 The Sun knoweth its going down that is the time of its going down the place of its going down In this we may see what we should do or our own duty Let us come forth in our season The Stars are brought forth in theirs and shall not we happy are they that come forth and bring forth in their season To hit time is a mercy as well as a duty Paul indeed said of himself 1 Cor. 15.8 that he was an abortive or born out of due time An abortive in nature is one that comes into the world before the due time Paul as to his spiritual birth or new birth through grace was not nor can any one be new-born before the due time We may rather say that we are new-born too late than too soon or before our time Paul might say he had been too long a proud Pharisie a formal professor and at last a persecutor of those who professed the truth of the Gospel in truth and therefore in that sence Paul was not an abortive or born out of due time namely before his time But Paul might say so of himself that he was so First Because he was the last of the Apostles that was called The other Apostles were called by Christ while he lived here on earth Paul was called by Christ from heaven after his death and departure from the earth Secondly He was born like an abortive or those that come out of due time because of the violence and grievous pangs which accompanied his new-birth He was smitten from his horse to the ground and lay as one dead in his passage to his new-life Such was the suddenness and violence of his conversion that it was most like an abortion Thirdly The Apostle himself seems to give the reason in the next Verse we know abortives are usually very weak and imperfect children and less in body than those born in due time Now such was Saint Pauls humility so low was he in his own thoughts that he calls himself vers 9. the least of the Apostles not meet to be called an Apostle In all these or in any of these notions the Apostle Paul might say he was born out of due time yet both as to the truth and seasonableness of his conversion he was born in due time and in his full time Now as there is a due time a season for our spiritual birth so for our fruit-bearing in spirituals It is said of every godly man Psal 1.3 He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water that bringeth forth his fruit in his season that is seasonable fruit The Stars appear in their season and so should the fruits of every Gospel-professor If we should see Winter-stars in Summer and Summer-stars in Winter if the Sun should rise at Mid-night or go down at Mid-day how prodigious would that appearance and disappearance be if the Sun should not rise and set just at the time we look for him it would breed horror and put all men into an amazement But now the Lord brings forth Mazzaroth and all the Stars in their season O therefore let us look to our seasons we shall be reproved else by the Stars of heaven Mazzaroth will be a witness against us Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season Or canst thou guid Arcturus with his Sons A radice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 duxit placidè sensim sicut pastoroves Arcturus est stella insignis quae oritur in principio Autumni Hebraei putant esse septem stellas quae semper apparent in nostro hemisphaerio à congregatione sic dictas nam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est congregatio Merc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sive Cynosura supra alias stellas in apice caeli tanquam mater in alto supra filios suos sedens cum iis certissima ratione circumducitur Coc. Here 's a fourth question Canst thou guid The word signifies to guid or conduct gently softly canst thou guid them as a Shepheard guids his flock
fill of them he fills the hungry with good things Psal 81.10 Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it God hath much respect to fill us with outward good things but much more to fill us with spi●i●ual good things open thy mouth wide and raise up thy desires after the things of heaven growth in grace encrease in faith and love in patience and holiness and I will fill it He that fills the appetite of the young Lions with natural food will fill the appetite of his Servants with spiritual food which is best of all they shall be abundantly satisfied with the goodness of his house and he will make them drink of the river of his pleasures Psal 36.8 He that fills the appetite of the young Lions will not send hungry souls away emp●y We may rest in much assurance that God will deal well with us both for soul and body while he questions Job whether he would do that which himself only doth Wilt thou hunt the prey for the Lion or f●ll the appetite of the young Lions Vers 40. When they couch in their dens and abide in the covert to lye in wait This Verse gives a further discription of the Lion whether young or old Before we had them hunting abroad in the fields here we have them couching in their dens and abiding in their covert When they couch in their dens This couching or bowing down in their dens may be upon a three-fold account and so there is a three-fold interpretation of the words First Some taking the Lion for the old Lion and the young Lions for such as are very young interpret this couching as proceeding from weakness they couch in their dens as not being able to go abroad Secondly Others say they c●uch in their dens only for rest and ease having tired themselves in hunting for their prey 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deprimit gestus hominis insidiantis alicui Drus Thirdly That they couch in their dens upon design to catch their prey thus the latter part of the Verse seems to carry it where 't is said they lyè in wait So then this couching in their dens is either from necessity as not being able to go forth or it is a couching in policy which I rather pitch upon They couch in their dens As if they were asleep as if they minded nothing but their ease yet even then they are busily minding how to catch their prey As if the Lord had said Hast thou O Job taught the Lion that art and cunning to lye couchant in his den that he may steal upon beasts passant and surprize them unawares They couch in their dens And abide in the covert to lye in wait The word rendred Covert signifieth a Tabernacle or Tent in which men abode for a time and is therefore here opposed as some conceive to the Lions dens or houses spoken of in the beginning of the verse Beasts say they are aware of Lions dens and so avoid them but they may pass unawares by the coverts and thickets where they lye in ambush But I suppose we need not be thus critical in distinguishing between dens and coverts both words may signifie the same place and thing or at least in both places Lions do the same thing Lye in wait It is said of the Lord himself Jerem. 25.38 he hath forsaken his covert as a Lion The meaning of the Prophet was to shew the Lords purpose to come forth and tear and rend his enemies by some sore judgment as a young Lion that rangeth about for his prey We read a little before at the 34th verse of the howling of the shepherds that is of the rulers and governours and of the cry of the principal of the flock that is of the wealthiest among the people When the Lion came forth of his covert there was a howling and a cry made why so the Lion came forth to destroy both sheep and shepherds Thus the Lord comes forth even as a young Lion full of wrath and fury to destroy the wicked He is sometimes like a Lion couching in his den and abiding in his covert but he doth it as the Lion To lye in wait This expression may have a twofold allusion First To Fowlers and Hunters who in some cases keep out of sight that they may with the more advantage take birds or beasts in their sna●es and toils For in vain saith Solomon Prov. 1.17 the net is spread in the sight of any bird Secondly To Souldiers who lye in ambush to surprize their enemy Thus do Lions They saith the Text couch in their dens and abide in the covert to lye in wait Here First Taking that interpretation of the words which supposeth the Lion lying down in his den through age and weakness Observe The strongest creatures are tamed an● weakened by age The Lion is the strongest among beasts yet he cannot always range in the fields and hunt for prey he must come to his den and keep house there 'T is so with men how strong soever they have been yet old age necessitates them at last to keep house and home All must submit to time and yield to those infirmities which old age inevitably bring upon us Time is called Tempus e●a● rerum The eater of things 'T is so also of persons that great eater will eat out the strength of the eater himself that is the Lion as Sampson called him in his riddle proposed to the Philistines Judg. 14.14 Time reduceth our strength to weakness our life to death Time confines us first to our chambers then to our beds and then to our graves The Lion must give over his hunting and couch in his den Secondly Taking the Lion as politickly abiding in covert and waiting for his prey Observe As the Lord gives much strength so much craft to some creatures There are creatures of little strength which have much craft others have little craft but much strength in some both meet together and among them we may number the Lion he is a crafty one as well as a strong one he hath his covert there he waits for his prey We may parallel men with beasts in this regard among them some are strong but not crafty others are crafty but not strong and not a few are both Such David compared to a Lion Psal 10.4 8 9. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seek after God What will he seek after then the 8th and 9th verses tell us He sitteth in the lurking places of the villages in the secret places doth he murder the innocent his eyes are privily set against the poor he lieth in wait secretly as a Lion in his den he lyeth in wait to catch the poor he doth catch the poor when he draweth him into his net He croucheth and humbleth himself that the poor may fall by his strong ones Thus the subtle practices of a wicked man are set forth by the subtlety of the Lion He coucheth and croucheth
as he lives King Benhadad being taken in war sent to King Ahab and submitted to him as a servant that he might have his life 1 Kings 20.32 Qui jure belli occidi potuit non duram subit conditionem si paratam mortem cum longa servitute commutat Sanct. Thy servant Benhadad saith I pray thee let me live But this Leviathan is so stout that he will not ask his life of any man nor will he serve any for an hour much less for ever Will he make a covenant with thee wilt thou take him for thy servant for ever That is will he become thy servant by covenant or thy covenant-servant Covenants bind servants to duty There are two things in a servants covenant First it obligeth him to work Secondly it assureth him of a reward Gods covenant with us assures us of mercy I will be to you a God I will pardon your sins I will do you good and then it requires duty You shall be to me a people you shall walk humbly and uprightly before me you shall serve me for ever Wilt thou take Leviathan to serve thee For ever But are any servants or shall any except God himself be served for ever why then saith the Lord Wilt thou take him for thy servant for ever Some are taken servants only for a year some for seven years others for life They who are servants for life are and may be called our servants for ever so that when the Lord saith Wilt thou take him for thy servant for ever the meaning is will he be thy servant as long as he liveth And indeed the life of a beast may well be called his for ever forasmuch as he hath no life after this life nor being after death The word rendred for ever comes from a root in the Hebrew which signifieth to hide or to be hidden because Eternity which is for ever in strict sense is altogether hidden and without end and if for ever be taken only for a long time indefinitely that 's a hidden thing too who knows when a long time will end if no end be assigned to it The life of man is his for ever in this world for how short soever it is no man knows the end of it and so to him it is a hidden thing In this sense also the life of a beast is a hidden thing as to the natural end of it and so his for ever Wilt thou take him to be thy servant for ever or Will he be thy everlasting servant Hence note All the creatures were made for mans service and were once his servants And therefore when creatures will not serve us especially when they rise against us we should remember as our fall in Adam so our own failings in the service of God The unserviceableness of the creature to us is a fruit and an effect of our unserviceableness and disobedience to God That word of God Gen. 1.28 which I may call the charter of mans Lordship over the creature reached Leviathan himself And God blessed them and God said be fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the Sea c. that includes dominion over the Leviathan The Apostle James also Chap. 3.7 speaks of mans dominion over the fish of the Sea Every kind of beasts and of birds and of serpents and of things in the Sea is tamed and hath been tamed of mankind Man was originally invested with a power to tame not only things on earth but things in the Sea even the mighty Leviathan And when the Lord after the flood restored the world and renewed mans charter he put in this among the rest of his grants the subjection of the fish of the Sea Gen. 9.1 2. And God blessed Noah and his sons and said be fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth and the fear of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast of the earth and upon every fowl of the air and upon all that moveth upon the earth and upon all the fishes of the Sea into your hand they are delivered The very fish of the Sea shall fear and reverence you But as we quite forfeited the priviledge of the first charter by the first general fall so our after personal falls have doubtless much abated the priviledges of this renewed charter When we break commandements we weaken our interest in and lose the benefit of promises and priviledges Man by falling from the commands of God lost his command of the creatures 1. Imperium sui 2. Imperium suum or man by sin lost First the command of himself and then his command over the creatures Sin hinders our present enjoyments and will unless repented of by us and pardoned by God cut us off from our future hopes We should behold and bewail it as a part of that great curse fallen upon us by the sin of Adam and our own personal sins that many creatures refuse to serve us Will Leviathan saith God to Job make a covenant with thee will he be thy servant for ever That 's the fourth particular mentioned in the third and fourth verses wherein the unsubmissiveness and stiffness of this Leviathan is set forth he will not make supplications he will not speak soft words neither will he be thy covenant-servant for ever And as he is not for mans work so not for his sport Vers 5. Wilt thou play with him as with a bird wilt thou bind him for thy maidens Or as Mr. Broughton renders this latter clause Wilt thou tye him for thy young girles This verse holds out a further evidence of the stoutness of Leviathan Some creatures though they will not work yet they will play and make you sport but Leviathan is so stout that he will neither do you any work nor make you any sport Wilt thou play with him as with a bird The word signifies any small bird especially a Sparrow with which children use to play Leviathan will not play with man nor is he to be made a play or to be sported with When the Philistines had put out Sampsons eyes who was once as terrible to them as a Leviathan they called for him to make them sport and the Text saith Judg. 16.25 He made them sport though they quickly found he was not a man to be sported with We say proverbially 'T is ill jesting with edge-tools I may say 'T is ill sporting with Leviathan The vulgar Latine translation saith Numquid illudes ei ficut avi Vulg. Wilt thou cozen or ensnare him as a bird Canst thou entangle him as a little bird with lime-twigs or entice him into thy net and then make sport with him Leviathan is a great player and very game-some but he will not play at any game with us nor can we play at any game with him but Hazzard That he is very gamesom when and where he pleaseth the Psalmist tells us speaking of the great and wide