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A17640 A commentary vpon the prophecie of Isaiah. By Mr. Iohn Caluin. Whereunto are added foure tables ... Translated out of French into English: by C.C.; Commentarii in Isaiam prophetam. English Calvin, Jean, 1509-1564.; Cotton, Clement. 1609 (1609) STC 4396; ESTC S107143 1,440,654 706

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blessednesse but wait for the last day which shall be the time of their resurrection wherein all things shall be fully restored And mee thinkes Isaiah meant to say so But may some say Quest Doe not the iust inioy peace in this present life For the fruite of faith is that wee possesse our soules in patience Luk. 21.19 Rom. 5.1 I answere Ans that albeit faith begets peace in our hearts yet notwithstanding wee are tossed to an fro with many waues and are neuer so secure and quiet in this life as when the Lord drawes vs home to himselfe The death of the iust then you see brings them to a sweete rest and peace because the same is precious in Gods sight Psalm 116.15 But the death of the wicked is ful of horror From this place also we may gather that our soules are immortall for were they without any sense as some brainelesse ones haue dreamed then could they not bee said to enioy any peace They are in peace and rest then because they liue in Christ Vers 3. But you witches children come hither the seed of the adulterer and of the whore HAuing spoken of the happie and peaceable death of the faithfull The cursed life and death of the wicked opposed to the blessed life and end of the godly he inueighs with exceeding vehemencie against the wicked who for all this ceased not to leade a leaud and lasciuious life without taking the death of the righteous to heart For as he hath affirmed that the faithfull are in peace so contrariwise he denounceth an vnreconciliable warre against the other Nay which more is he hath shewed that death to Gods seruants is an hiding place which defends them from the whirlewinds haile and other tempests that afterwards the obstinate contemners may bee laid open to all sorts of calamities For we must note here the opposition betweene the faithfull which walke before God and the wicked who cease not obstinately to resist him The former after death shall haue peace the latter shall bee vexed whilest they liue and after death shall feele horrible torments He summons them before Gods iudgement seate because they thought to escape by their sophistications But he shewes that they shall gaine nothing thereby because they shal be drawne before the same whether they will or no. For as they had made their hearts ouer hard so was it needfull that they should be pricked with the sharper launcers doubtlesse the Prophet could not vse too much seueritie as well to awaken their drowsinesse as to beate downe their pride Who knowes not with how great ouerweening the Iewes insult in regard of their race The Prophets therefore are vsually wont to crush this their arrogancie and hie mindednes by affirming that they were none of Abrahams children in respect they behaued themselues as bastards and such as were degenerate This is the cause why our Prophet termes them the seed of the adulterer and of the whore With which also Ezechiel reprocheth them in Chap. 16.3 saying Thy father was an Amorite and thy mother an Hittite And the like phrases of speech are vsed in many other places Hosea 1.2 Thus then hee brings their intollerable pride downe to the ground and in despite of their teeth drawes them foorth into the light that they should not thinke they could escape the tribunall seate of God Vers 4. On whom haue yee iested vpon whom haue ye gaped and thrust out your tongues Are not yee rebellious children and a false seede Hypocrites vnmasked in this and the verses following THe Prophet shewes that the Iewes haue no occasion at all to glorie so much vnder pretence of their linage or stocke seeing they derided the Prophets of God Now they thought it was but with men with whom they had to deale when they reiected the word And so at this day wee see how impudently the wicked despise the doctrine of their saluation and scorne the Ministers of it and yet in the meane while couer themselues vnder a vaine shew of religion This is the reason then wherefore the Prophet presseth them so neere and reprooues them so sharply As if he should say When you thrust out your tongues on this manner against God and scorne his word doe ye thinke you haue to deale with a mortal man For these words on vvhom signifies that they sought out euasions and pretences to cloake their impietie withall For the vngodly will not acknowledge that they rebell against God no they thinke foule scorne any man should so iudge of them but yet they must bee brought out into the light and conuinced of their wickednesse And seeing there is a God they must be told that they make open warre vpon him in resisting or in reiecting his word and in esteeming no better thereof then of a fable To open the mouth and to thrust out the tongue is heere taken in one signification vnlesse that vnder these two phrases the Prophet meant the better to discouer their impudencie namely in that they thought it not enough only to reiect the Lord but they must also deride him For the inward contempt of the heart caused them to vtter forth such manifest scoffes and blasphemies so as they were not touched at all with any feare of dishonoring themselues Lastly he concludes that they are rebellious children a lying seed and therefore hath iust cause to esteeme them the sonnes of an vvhere for such a contempt could not be found in the children of Ahraham By this we learne how the wicked ought to be handled and with what seueritie they are to be reproued that they may haue no cause left them whereby to flatter themselues and the more they despise whatsoeuer is propounded vnto them in the name of God the more ought we to discouer and to manifest in all mens sight their impieties so full of sacriledge Vers 5. Inflamed with Idols vnder euery greene tree and sacrificing the children in the valleyes vnder the tops of the rocks OThers translate Who take pleasure in consolation But our Prophet takes a similitude vsed in many places of the Scriptures and very fitting to the circumstance of this place For the Lord is wont to compare lust wherewith poore and miserable Idolaters are furiously transported and inflamed to the loue of brothels for they keepe no measure at all neither will they suffer any to restraine them from their follie Now Idolatrie in Gods sight is a most hatefull kind of whoredome As touching the Hebrue word Elim some translate it Gods others okes we may take it in whether sense we will for there will be no great difference and all the expositors agree that the Prophet condemnes Idolatrie I contend not then about the words though it be very likely that one thing is repe●ted twice according to the custome of the Hebrues and yet it may be vnder an ambiguous word he alludes to their gods Sacrificing children Heere he presseth the Iewes neerer and shewes that they are none
that takes thy children and dasheth them against the stones Vers 19. And Babel the glorie of kingdomes and the beautie and pride of the Chaldeans shall be as the destruction of God in Sodome and Gomorah ISaiah meant to cōclude his prophesie touching the ruin of the Babylonians in a briefe maner in this place although he addes some amplifications to confirme his speech touching the full rooting of them out For the Prophets speake in such sort of the punishments of the wicked that they leaue them no hope of mercie wherewith they might comfort themselues But as touching the faithfull although it seemes now and then that they should be chastened too seuerely yet are they susteined with this assurance that the Lord will haue pitie vpon them and will not vtterlie destroy them Whence we ought to gather that we must not alwaies iudge according to the outward appearance For we shall many times thinke that the children of God are vtterlie vndone whose saluatio● notwithstanding is neere yea euen in the midst of death it selfe In Sodome and Gomorah Sodome and Gomorah This example is oft alledged by the Prophets to the end wee might know that howsoeuer all chastisements be not equall yet notwithstāding in as much as God is vnpartiall in his iudgements the memorable example which he shewed thereof in the destruction of Sodom appertaines to all reprobates Gen. 19.24 so as those who harden themselues in their sinnes with the like obstinacie shall be no lesse punished then they were And they distinguish betweene the punishments of the elect and reprobates in such wise that still God left some seed to the Israelites but to the wicked none as we haue seene in the first Chapter Chap. 1.9 If the Lord saith he had not left vs a seed we had bin as Sodome and as Gomorah But he pursues the reprobate with all seueritie and therefore the Prophets threaten them with the very same ruine which happened to the Sodomites that is to say an vtter destruction without all hope of recouerie He saith it is the ouerthrow of God to the end wee should not thinke it came to passe by chance or by the will of men For euen as the fire fell not vpon Sodome Gomorah from heauen at randome so Babylon also was not destroyed by haphazard but by the iust vengeance of God Which being alwaies like vnto himselfe did execute his iust iudgement against them and will still doe the same against all reprobates euen vnto the end Whereas Babylon is called the glorie and bright beauty of Kingdomes No glory can withstand Gods almightie power this is added for amplifications sake to teach vs that God cannot bee hindered from performing his worke by any glorie or excellencie whatsoeuer that hee should not vtterly roote out the wicked For in regard that this destruction was incredible therefore so much the more did an excellent example of Gods mightie power appeare in the confusion of it Vers 20. It shall not be * Or sit vpon inhabited for euer neither shall it be dwelled in from generation to generation neither shall the Arabian pitch his tents there neither shall the sheepheards make their foldes there BY the word To sit hee signifies a firme estate as if he should say Neuer looke that Babel shall be restored any more For all these phrases of speech tend to one and the same end namely the Babylonians shall be so destroyed that their ruine shall be perpetuall This also he further amplifies when he addes that the destruction shall be so great that the verie Arabians shall disdaine to pitch their tents there and the sheepheards their foldes Now wee may well say that this place was become wonderfull desert and inhabitable seeing these vagabonds made no reckoning of it for this nation of the Arabians in verie deed Arabians vagabonds and theeues did nothing else but trot vp and downe and had no setled abiding For hauing left their owne Countrie because it was barren and therefore is called the desert Arabia for of that wee speake and being giuen to nourish cattell and to hunting they frisked it hither thither and abode in the midst of the fields especially in places of best pasture Thence it came that the Greekes called them by a name which signifieth dwellers in tents The region of Babylon was wonderfull fruitfull before this destruction by reason whereof this change was so much the more terrible and as it were prodigious whether in regard that it lost the first fruitfulnesse or that all abhorred the sight of it because of the continuall calamities wherewith it was wasted Certaine it is the Prophet declares it shal come to passe that not only the buildings shall be broken downe but that the land also shall be accursed Vers 21. But Ziim shall lodge there and their houses shall be full of Ohim Ostriches shall dwell there and the Satyres shall dance there HE goes on in describing a desert place and alludes to that he said before to wit that Babylon should be vnhabited I cannot well tell how this word Ziim should be translated in regard the opinions of the expositours are so diuers who agree no more in this then they doe about sundry names of beasts and hearbs The vse of these things continued not alwaies and the Iewes being ignorant themselues haue not the knowledge of them although some amongst them are not ashamed to brag of their skill in physicke and yet notwithstanding are ignorant not onely of the nature of plants but of beasts also Whereas some are of opinion that Ziim was a wild beast others that it should be a bird and some others a fourefooted beast herein there is no great difference For mine owne part I make no question but the Prophet meant in this place to speake either of wild beasts which cannot be tamed or of birds which make their nests in forrests farre remote from men And there will be no inconuenience in it if we expound that which followes of Satyres or Fairies which the Frenchmen according to the diuersities of regions in one place call Hobgoblins Robin good fellowes and Bugbeares in an other For as Satan abuseth men by diuers impostures so also he allots diuers names to euery one of these It is certaine that the word Ziim is sometimes taken in the Scripture for wicked spirits for it comes of Ziiah which signifies drinesse or desert as Iim comes of Aiam which signifies feare For in as much as the diuell workes strange illusions by Fairies and Satyres therefore the names thereof are attributed vnto him The Prophets drift is to shew that there should be such desolation that the place should not onely be forsaken of men but the euill spirits also should worke their illusions there for by the solitarinesse of the place they take occasion to terrifie those which passe thereby And looke how theeues and enemies shew themselues more cruell when they come out of some obscure place
his father worshipped Iosh 24.2 But he redeemed him often besides that to wit when he was in danger in Egypt and in Gerar Gen. 12.17 20.14 Also when he discomfited the Kings Gen. 14.16 Lastly when God granted him issue euen at the time when hee was past power to beget any Gen. 21.2 For albeit the Prophet had a speciall respect to Gods adoption when he commanded him to goe out of his fathers house yet vnder this redemption he comprehends also all the benefits which God bestowed vpon him for we see that Abraham was not redeemed onely once that is from extrem dangers and perils of death Now if the Lord raised vp his Church in the onely person of Abraham and that in such a time as he had lost all strength to beget any children to conserue the same after him will not the Lord preserue it for the time to come when in mans iudgement it was as good as forlorne A singular consolation What a miserable waste was there of the Church at the comming of Christ How many enemies were there which opposed the same Yet did he set vp this his kingdome in despite of them all the Church florished and made all the world to wonder at the glorie of it Let vs not doubt then but that the Lord will in his due time manifest his power both in auenging himselfe vpō the enemies of his Church which oppresse it and in restoring of her to her first beautie When he saith Iaacob shall not be confounded we often see that the faithful are constrained to hang downe their heads with shame as Ieremie witnesseth I will put my mouth in the dust Lament 3.29 Also Micha Mich. 7.16 saith The time is come in which the wise shall put their hands vpon their mouth and licke the dust for when the Lord corrects his people so sharplie the faithfull must needes bee confounded therewith But the Prophet afterward shewes that this shall not indure for euer Let vs not dispaire then in aduersitie for albeit the wicked make vs their laughing stockes and lade vs with all the indignities in the world Harken to this O thou troubled soule and know it for thy selfe Iob. 5.27 yet will the Lord in the end draw vs out of this shame and confusion of face Yet the Lord therewithall shewes that this fauor belongs not vnto such proud ones who either are obstinate or oppose their hard heads against Gods blowes that hee laies vpon them but that it onely belongs vnto the humble who are bowed with shame walking humbly with their heads bowed downe But may some obiect Obiect how can it bee said that Iacob shall not be confounded seeing he was dead long before it seemes hee attributes some feeling to the dead and then they know what we doe in this world thence the Papists argue that the dead know all that we doe I answer Ans there is here the faining of a person which is often found in the Scriptures in which sense Ieremy saith That a voice was heard in Ramah Rachel weeping for her children and would not be comforted for them because they were not Ier. 31.15 For in that place he sets forth the destructiō of the Tribe of Beniamin by the lamentation of Rachel which was the grandmother as it were So Isaiah brings in Iaacob couered with shame and confusion in regard of the vices and wickednesses of his posteritie For as a wise sonne is the glory of his father so a foole is an heauinesse to his mother Prou. 10.1 Although mothers doe cocker their children most yet are they ashamed when they see them offend How much more fathers then Simile whose loue being guided by discretion are chiefly carefull for the well ordering and instructing of their children Must they not needs be much more grieued in seeing them wax wicked and dissolute But the Prophet meant here to touch the people to the quicke in setting Iaacob their father before them who being adorned with such rare graces of God was now dishonoured by his successors so as if himselfe had been present to haue seene them it would haue constrained him to blush for shame He therefore taxeth the vnthankfulnesse of the people who in stead of honouring dishonored their father Vers 23. * Or for whē he shall se● c. But when hee seeth his children the worke of mine hands in the middest of him they shall sanctifie my name and sanctifie the holie one of Iaacob and shall feare the God of Israel THe particle Chi is here to bee read in its proper signification to wit For because the Prophet giues a reason why the shame of Israel should be taken away that is he should haue children raised vp vnto him againe as it were from death to life In that the Lord cals them the worke of his hands I nothing doubt but he therein meant to expresse the admirable worke of their redemption for he makes those new men as it were whom hee adopt● and ioines vnto him for his children as it is said Psal 102.19 The people that shall be created shall praise the Lord in which place the holie Ghost doth in like manner speake of the restauration of the Church See chap. 4● 7 For there is no mention heere of that vniuersall creation of mankind vnder which all good and bad are comprehended as wee haue often said but he now brings vs to the knowledge of his power to the end we should not iudg● of the saluation of the Church by viewing her present estate Here therefore wee must note diuers oppositions first betweene the deformitie of the Church and her beautie or excellencie betweene glory and shame secondly betweene the people of God and other nations thirdly betweene the worke of Gods hands and the worke of men for the Church can no way be reestablished but by the onely hand of God fourthly betweene her florishing estate and that miserable waste by which she was pittifully rent in sunder before For he calles the middest of her a perfect restauration by which the people shall be so reunited and ioyned together that she shall not only possesse the borders of the land but the middest and the chiefe place thereof also Lastly he shewes what the end of our redemption is The end of our redemption noted whē he saith That they shal sanctifie his name for we are all created to the end Gods goodnes may be magnified amongst vs. But because the most part of men doe shun this end God hath chosen his Church in which his praises do sound and continue as it is said in the Psalme 65.2 Praise waiteth for thee ô God in Zion Praise waiteth for the Lord but it is in Zion Now because many sheep in the flock grow corrupt the Prophet assignes this office to the faithfull whom God miraculouslie had preserued Moreouer because the hypocrites honour God with their lips and are farre from him in their hearts as we haue
vpon the assured accomplishment of it Vers 12. Heare yee mee yee stubborne hearted that are farre from iustice The rebellious nature of the Iewes described HE sharply rebukes the Iewes againe who would neither giue credence vnto God nor receiue any consolations at all in their aduersities This was a galling reprehension which no doubt went very neere the quicke but they well deserued it in regard neither threatning nor promise of God were it neuer so sweete and amiable was auaileable to tame them These two epithetes which he heere vseth are to be noted whereby hee giues vs to vnderstand that the afflicted and miserable shut vp the passage of Gods helpe from them by their owne rebellion For by their murmurings and grudgings they shake off the feare of God and in thus doing rush themselues headlong into such desperate courses that they make open war vpon him Now he speakes to the Iewes who were readie to burst with malice and pride notwithstanding afflictions oppressed them to the vtmost And thus hauing shaken off the feare of God they fell into opē raging which I would to God many among vs were not guiltie of who wax worse by their calamities Thus then they would accept of no remedie nor medicine at al to cure their euils If any would haue the word iustice to bee taken heere for Gods succor as in the verse following I leaue it free for them so to doe for it is no strange thing to see the obstinate who repell God and reiect his grace to bee vnable to rest vpon his sweete promises or not to suffer that any should doe them good albeit helpe bee offered them Vers 13. I will bring neere my iustice it shall not be farre off and my saluation shall not tarry for I will giue saluation in Zion and my glorie vnto Israel An oppositiō betweene the iniustice of man and the iustice of God IF any had rather retaine that which I was saying to wit that such as are farre from iustice and vncapeable of Gods grace are here called to repentance the sense will bee all one but if wee say that the Iewes were farre from iustice in regard they were giuen vp to a dissolute behauiour as men past grace then there is an apt opposition betweene the iustice of God and the iustice of men Although the Iewes then were farre from iustice and had cast off all studie of pietie yet God affirmes that his iustice is neere As if he should say I must confesse incredulitie is a maine let and hinderance yet shall it not hinder me in the end from manifesting the force of my truth What though some did not beleeue saith Paul shall their vnbeliefe make the truth of God without effect God forbid Rom. 3.3 Yea let God bee true and euerie man a lier And to say the truth if he did not ouercome mens stubbornnesse by his goodnesse wee should incontinently perish For which of vs receiues the bounty of God or his grace when hee offers the same as wee ought Why God withdrawes his fauour from vs for a time Doth hee withdraw his mercy or his truth from vs It is for no other cause but for that we be farre from iustice Contrariwise though we resist him yet he drawes neere vnto vs that he may manifest his iustice albeit we be vtterly vnworthy of it Yet he doth this in such wise as the wicked receiue no fruit at all by it For the Prophet comprehends not those cursed apostataes as if this saluation promised belonged vnto them but onely affirmes that God hath meanes ready to make his iustice appeare But heere it is needfull for vs to consider in what state this people stood to whom this speech was directed They were all in a manner tainted with the sinne of infidelitie and those that rested vpon the promises were but very few All are gone out of the way euen the elect sometimes shewed themselues but too obstinate so as they seemed to be no lesse infected with this contagion then the rest He taxeth them all in generall then as well to conuince the reprobates as to gall the elect and to bring them into the right way But he chiefly sets himselfe against the rebels as I haue said who obstinately and stubbornly reiected all hope of grace And my saluation Heereby it appeares what he meant by the word Iustice to wit the help and succour of God promised in fit and due season to his people He takes iustice and saluation then for one and the same thing because it is an excellent testimony of Gods iustice when he conserues and protects his distressed ones It is not added superfluously that it shall not be far off and shall not tarrie Note Gods great clemency for heerein he expresseth Gods exceeding great mercie in that he will finish the course of his iustice albeit the people should resist the same And vvill put The letter Vau is heere put for a particle of rendring the cause thus For I vvill put Now this is a confirmation of the former sentence as if hee should say Seeing the Lord hath once determined to saue Ierusalem shee cannot be disappointed of such a benefit He ioines his glory with the saluation of the faithfull as also Saint Paul takes the word glory Gods glory and our saluatiō lincked together for mercy Eph. 1.6 and 3.16 For then Gods glory shines fully when he drawes his children out of the bands of death and sets them at libertie because hee will haue the saluation of his Church and his iustice to be conioyned with an indissoluble knot THE XLVII CHAPTER Vers 1. Come downe and sit in the dust O Virgin daughter Babel sit on the ground there is no throne O daughter of the Chaldeans for thou shalt no more be called Tender and delicate Gods decree put in execution NOw Isaiah sets that downe at large which hee mentioned before touching Gods counsell and the execution thereof For hee speakes heere in plaine termes of Babylons fall Babylons fall because there was little or no hope that the people should euer returne as long as the Babylonicall Monarchie florished He therefore conioined these two things together to wit the ouerthrow of this Monarchy and the peoples deliuerance which should insue For the statelinesse of this Citie was vnto the poore Iewes as a deepe graue in which they were buried but when the Lord opened it then the peoples first life was as it were restored to them afresh In that hee commands her to come downe it hath greater weight in it then if he had directly threatned she should come downe for thus he speakes with authoritie as if he were alreadie set in a throne of iudgement for he spake nothing but what he had warrant from God to deliuer and therefore hee boldly pronounceth what should happen And this commission wee see the Lord gaue to Ieremiah Behold I haue set thee this day ouer kingdomes and nations
and execrable impieties That we then may escape this horrible iudgement of God let euery one search and try his owne waies and a far off let vs espie the wrath of God lest being ouertaken at vnawares wee be suddenly ouerwhelmed therewith THE LVII CHAPTER Vers 1. The righteous perisheth and no man considereth in heart and mercifull men are taken away and no man vnderstandeth that the righteous is taken away from the euill to come The Prophet continues on his a●gument still ISaiah prosecutes his argument still For hauing shewed how securely hypocrits repose themselues in their pleasures and with what impudencie they despise Gods word he further complaines that they consider not the workes of the Lord for we are placed in this world as vpon a spacious Theatre to behold the acts of our God Neither is there any of his works how meane soeuer they appeare in our eies that we should lightly esteeme but ought rather diligently and attentiuely to obserue and consider them Now among other testimonies of his prouidence the Lord sets before vs the death of the faithfull and of approued men whom hee takes out of this vvorld when he is purposed seuerely to chastise and correct his people But no man laies it to heart neither imagines that such matters should be forerunners of imminent destruction namely that the good are gathered to God and laid vp in safetie that they may not be wrapped vp with others in so many common miseries The summe is that the wicked greatly deceiue themselues in thinking that the prolonging of their liues should bee the onely happinesse that can befall them and that for this cause they should take themselues to be in better case then the faithfull who die sooner then they For as they are glued to the world so vnder this pretence doe they harden their owne hearts that as they suppose God fauours them exceedingly in suffering them to bee safe and sound whilest others die If by men of mercy you vnderstand the charitable and pitifull then this epithete must be diligently noted for thereby the Prophet shewes what the true righteousnesse of Gods children is whereas hypocrites place their righteousnesse in things of no value Now there is no vertue more pleasing vnto God then liberalitie whereby wee manifest our righteousnesse and discouer vnto all an heart void of guile But mercifull men may as well be taken in the passiue signification namely for such to whom the Lord shewes mercie for this maner of speech is common enough among the Hebrewes Neither is it from the purpose to say that the grace of God should be priuily opposed to the peruerse and sinister iudgements of men who are wont to condemne such as die 〈◊〉 the flower of their youth And yet seeing the Prophet in many places adornes the children of God with this title of being mercifull and liberall I see no inconuenience if as I haue said we make it a true definition of righteousnesse By this it appeares that then the Lord gathered a great number of good men out of the world vnto himself whose death prognosticated some horrible calamitie yet that the Iewes regarded not such forewarnings Nay which is worst of all they tooke occasion thereby to ouerflow with the greater freedome in all licentiousnesse thinking all should goe well with them when they suruiued the best men Now this doctrine is very fitting for all ages times For for the most part it comes to passe that God takes the good out of this world when hee is purposed sharply to punish the sinnes of the wicked Why so Surely as hee hath a tender care ouer those that be his so he puls them often times as brands out of the fire hauing compassion on them to the end that such as shall suruiue them may therein perceiue a token of Gods wrath And yet this is not a perpetuall law seeing the elect are often wrapped vp in the temporall iudgements with the wicked Notwithstanding the taking of them away first is a thing so ordinary that it seldome falles out otherwise whereof in our time we haue a famous example in the death of Martin Luther Martin Luthers death who was taken out of this world a little before Germany was pitifully wasted with that furious warre which many yeeres before he had foretold whilest hee thundered against the contempt of the Gospell against the villanies and foule enormities which then ouerflowed in euery place Often he entreated the Lord to take him out of this life before he should see those horrible iudgements which he had threatned the apprehension whereof made him to quake for feare and this request he obtained of the Lord. Soone after his death a sudden and vnexpected war began to inuade and miserablie to afflict Germanie euen then when they suspected nothing lesse And examples hereof also we haue dailie And doubtlesse if men did well consider of them they would not flatter themselues so much in their iniquities as they doe But I haue thought it good to recite this in particular not onely because it hath happened within these few yeeres but also that it might be the more apparant in regard it fell out according to that which so excellent a Preacher of the Gospell and a Prophet of God had foretold We therefore ought diligently to obserue the worke of the Lord as well in the liues as in the death of the iust but most of all in their death Whereby the Lord calles them to the enioying of a better life that so they may bee deliuered from those miseries into which the wicked must at length be plunged Vers 2. Peace shall come they shall rest in their beds euerie one that walketh before him The state of the faithfull after their death THe Prophet here describes what the state of the faithful is after death For the wicked who thinke there is no life after this do iudge that good men are perished because they can apprehend nothing in death but ruine and perdition Jsaiah therefore saith that such a peace shall come as is more desireable then a thousand liues that are replenished with troubles As if hee compared the good to crased souldiers who are permitted quietly to take their ease Simile He addes the similitude of sleepe to shew that they shall bee set free and deliuered from all disquietnesse and care as if they safely and sweetly slept in their beds Whereas he addes euery one that walkes I referre not whosoeuer to the word peace as some expound it Namelie that peace shall goe before the faithfull as if it led them the way But I think he therein notes out the faithfull As if hee should say Whosoeuer walkes before God he shall haue peace And therefore when the righteous doe die they after the enduring of many troubles are called to peace and rest as hauing finished their course Now they rest in their beds in regard they doe not yet inioy full and perfect glorie and
and hee put on the garments of vengeance for clothing and was clad with zeale as with a cloake THe Prophet armes the Lord at all points If God put himselfe in armes to fight he must needs ca●rie away the victorie not onely to confirme the faith of the godlie but also to strip all men of all confidence in their owne vertue For the summe comes to this that nothing shall be wanting vnto God neither for discomfiting nor for bearing away the victorie ouer his enemies Why so Because that of his righteousnesse power grace and exceeding affection towards his Church he will make armour of proofe And this we are to note with no lesse diligence then the doctrine of the former verse For albeit we confesse that God is almightie yet doth not that satisfie vs but wee will bee seeking out of other helpes Our minds are alwaies giuen to infidelitie so as they are wonderfully hampered and glued fast to outward meanes To correct this vice our Prophet sets before vs this liuely description As if he should say know ye that God hath all the safegards of your saluation readie so that nothing shall bee wanting vnto him for your deliuerance and for your returne home againe doe your enemies what they can There is no neede then why you should tremble at all Besides wee are verie easilie carried away to thinke that wee bring some of our owne vnto God And thus wee attribute part of his praise to our selues which should wholly be reserued vnto him Whereas hee clothes the Lord with vengeance and indignation as a cloke it appertaines vnto the enemies against whom God riseth vp in wrath for the zeale hee beares to his people The more then that Satan indeuors and with might and maine plots our ouerthrow the more will the zeale of the Lord of hostes bee inflamed and will arise with his admirable and omnipotent power to relieue vs. Although this worrier of mankind then and all the reprobates with him cease not day nor night how to oppose all the impediments they can to hinder our saluation yea and that they breake forth into open rage to roote vs out yet will our God scatter all their plots by his onely power Vers 18. As to make recompence as to requite the furie of the aduersaries with a recompence to his enemies hee will fully repay the Ilands HEe confirmes the conclusion of the former verse A confirmation of the former conclusion For heere hee shewes what that vengeance is wherewith hee clothed the Lord namely that he is readie to render the like vnto his enemies But the reason why the Prophet armes the Lord thus readie with indignation to execute his vengeance is to be noted to wit because the deliuerance of his Church is ioined with the ruine of the wicked It is needfull therefore that God should be armed to meete those enemies which would worke our destruction Vse Hence let vs consider how infinite that loue of God towards vs is when he beares vs such an affection as to hate those that hate vs and to protest that he will requite the furie of our aduersaries So exceedinglie doth he loue his little flock that he esteemes it more then all the world besides This is the cause then wherefore he testifies that he will repay the Ilands that is to say the nations beyond the seas farre remote from them for for the deliuerance of his people he ouerthrew such mightie Monarks as seemed inuincible Vers 19. So shall they feare the name of the Lord from the West and his glorie from the rising of the Sunne for the enemie shall come as a flood but the spirit of the Lord shall chase him away God will make the Churches deliuerance glorious in the sight of the whole world NOw hee testifies that this deliuerance shall bee so glorious and magnificent that all the world shall wonder thereat and shall speake honourably of it and afterwards being smitten with astonishment shall giue glory vnto God But it is vncertaine whether he means this of the conuersion of the Gentiles or of the terrour by which the Lord would bring downe his enemies For mine owne part I rather incline to the first exposition namely that to the vtmost parts of the earth Gods name shall be glorious and fully renowned so as the Gentiles shall not onely bee amazed but shall also vvorship and serue him in true repentance The expositors agree not about the rendring of the cause which followes But the true sense as I suppose is That the violence of the enemie shall be so great that as a flood spoiles and carries all away before is vvith the force thereof so shall he seeme to teare vp and beare avvay But the Lord will forthwith cause him to recoile and to vanish away It is an amplification then of Gods power who in an instant breakes in sunder all the terrible power and furious rage of his enemies so as their violence being turned backward it falles to nothing Quest But some may aske of what deliuerance the Prophet here speakes I answer Ans as I haue done in another place that these promises must not be restrained as they are wont to be to one deliuerance only For the Iewes referre it to the deliuerance out of Babylon and the Christians only to Christ Now I ioine them both together that so we may comprehend the whole time frō the peoples returne with that which followed vnto the comming of Christ for this prophesie was neuer fulfilled but in him neither can that which is here said agree to any other then to him only because Gods glorie was not manifested before to all the world nor the enemie so put to flight that they gathered not their forces together againe vntill Christ came and triumphed admirablie hauing obteined conquest ouer Satan sinne death Vers 20. And the redeemer shall come vnto Zion and vnto them that turne from iniquitie in Iaakob saith the Lord. HE againe confirmes that which he said before namely A second confirm●tion touching the redemption of the Church that the people should be deliuered and that God would be the only author of so great a benefit For this cause then he bids the people to be of good comfort in this exile in regard it should not be perpetuall afterwards he placeth the hope of their deliuerance in God only to the end their thoughts might not rest in any thing but vpon the promises Vnder the word Zion he meanes as heretofore the prisoners and banished for albeit they were scattered farre off from their countrie yet was the Temple still to remaine planted as it were in their hearts But lest the bastard children of Abraham should indifferentlie applie this vnto themselues with the heires of promise he forthwith shewes who they be to whom this deliuerance To whom this deliuerance appertaines shall come namely to such as shall be truly conuerted vnto the Lord. And yet it is very certaine
And they shall build houses and inhabit them and they shall plant vineyards and eate the fruite of them 22. They shall not build and another inhabit they shall not plant and another eate for as the daies of the tree are the daies of my people and mine elect shall * Or shall continue the worke c. in old age enioy the worke of their hands IN these two verses hee puts them in mind of the blessings contained in the law namely that such as serued God should inhabit the houses they had built and should eate the fruites of their trees Leuit. 20.10 As on the contrarie the rebellious should bee driuen out of their houses to giue place vnto strangers neither should they gather the fruite which they had planted Deut. 28.30 From this curse saith Isaiah shall the Lord deliuer you to the end you may enioy your substance Now thc Prophet sets before them the things appertaining to this life present and from thence borrowes similitudes thereby teaching vs how to ascend vp higher and to apprehend and lay hold of the blessed and endles life For we must not sticke fast glued to these transitorie things but rather vse them as steppes and staires to scale the heauens Temporall blessings ought to bee as ladders by which wee may ascend to the enioying of eternall benefits that being rapt vp thither wee may possesse the eternall and immortall benefits It is also good reason that the enioying of these blessings whereof the vnbeleeuers depriued themselues should bee promised to the regenerated Church which rested whollie vpon the only free fauour and good pleasure of her God Where it is added According to the daies of a tree some thinke eternall life should be here promised as if men should then enioy the tree of life But this deuice is vtterly friuolous and too farre remote from the Prophets meaning Neither can I sufficientlie maruell at the expositors who vexe themselues so much about the interpretation of this place seeing our Prophet speakes not onely of life but of the quiet estate thereof also As if hee should say You shall plant vines and liue of the fruite of them neither shal you depart out of this world till you haue enioyed them both you and your childrens children He takes a similitude from a tree in respect that before hee had spoken of planting of vines Therefore hee now promiseth they shall peaceablie enioy their houses and vines without being any more annoied either by enemies or theeues So as this tranquillitie should bee no lesse durable then the life of a tree The worke is continued or is made perpetuall when it hath good successe otherwise men should trauell a long time for nothing if God did not blesse their labour because the enemie would rob or spoile that which men haue begun so as they should not be able to enioy the fruits of their hands The worke is continued therefore not onelie when it hath some good progresse but when it is come to perfection Hence let vs note that we cannot so much as enioy our goods nor haue any true rest No true rest to them that are out of Christs kingdome vnlesse we be in the kingdome of Christ who is the only heire of the world and stand ingrafted by faith in his bodie I grant the wicked may enioy the benefits of this life present but therewithall they shall be in continuall anguish and the worme of an euill conscience shall continually gnaw them so as euen their very abundance shall bee their bane and destruction For onely faith causeth vs to apprehend the things which belong to the blessed life those then that are destitute of faith can bee no members of Christ Those that are destitute of faith no members of Christ Vers 23. They shall not labour in vaine nor bring foorth in feare for they are the seed of the blessed of the Lord and their * Or of-spring buds with them THe Prophet reckons vp here other kinds of blessings which God promiseth to the Kingdome of Christ For albeit God had continued to blesse his people alwaies yet were those blessings after a sort withheld till Christs comming in whom there was to be seene full and perfect felicitie The sum is that both Iewes and Gentiles should bee euery way happie vnder the kingdome of Christ Now as it is a signe of Gods wrath and curse when we receiue no fruit at all of our labour so on the contrarie it is a testimonie of his blessing when wee enioy the fruites of our trauels For this cause hee shewes how the Iewes being returned home from their captiuitie to enioy a true and full deliuerance shall not labour in vaine neither shall their works be fuitlesse The law threatnes the death of friends warres losse of goods and anguish of minde Leuit. 26.22 Deut. 28.65 But God here on the contrary promiseth tranquillitie fertilitie peace and the fruit of our labours These blessings are well to be noted for there are few to be found who in taking paines fixe their eies vpon Gods blessing Few fixe their eies whilest they labour vpon Gods blessing so as to attribute all things vnto him or to bee perswaded that they doe but labour in vaine vnlesse the Lord giue good successe thereunto Psalm 127.1 Euen as then we are to expect all blessing from God onely so to him alone ought we to render the whole praise after wee haue receiued the same Some expound that which followes That the women shall not bring foorth in feare and that they were not to feare bearing of children in regard they should feele no paines therein We know this punishment was inflicted vpon the woman because of her sinne namely that shee should bring foorth in sorrow and should be in danger of death Gen. 3.16 Children are also begotten with feare and trembling when there are any rumors of warres and it is more likely that the Prophet alluded to this to wit that there should be such tranquillitie that men and women should haue no cause of feare at all For these words must be referred to fathers and mothers who are fearelesse in respect of their children in time of peace which they cannot but feare when any calamitie threatens vs. The reason that is added That they shall be the seed vvhich the Lord hath blessed agrees very well For whence arise feares terrors Whence feares and terrors arise and disquietnes of men but from Gods curse when this curse then shall bee remoued the Prophet hath good cause to affirme that the fathers with their of-spring shall bee freed from feares and distractions because being in Gods fauour they shall bee alwaies so secured from feares and dangers that they shall dwell in safetie And their of-spring with them This is contrarie to the priuation of children which is reckoned vp amongst the curses of God in Leuit. 16.22 And it is as much as if hee had said I will no more
the Iewes reiected this light to kindle one of their owne and in conclusion affirmes that they shall be consumed as with a fire by their owne light In this sort Christ reprocheth the Iewes for reioicing in Iohn Baptists light Iohn 5.33 Because they abused his person to darken nay rather to quench the glory of Christ For in opposing Iohns person against Christs to darken his glory what did they else but put out the light of God shining in a mortall man to kindle themselues another Which yet directed them not to walke in the right way but made them wander in by-paths wherein they had small cause to reioice In saying that they were compassed aboue with the sparks he taxeth their froward imaginations which harried them to and fro and therewithall derides their vanitie in that they ranne swiftlie and with great alacritie whither soeuer their deceiueable lusts led them VValke As if he should say You shall feele by experience how vaine and vanishing your light is when your vncertaine hopes haue failed you And thus by this so taunting a permission hee signifies that they shall both lose their time and their labour Others expound that the wicked kindle against themselues the fire of Gods wrath But the Prophet hath an higher drift neither doe I thinke that this exposition agrees to this place Of mine hand In regard the wicked being beguiled with a false confidence think themselues vtterly out of danger and doe boldly contemne all after claps by trusting in their light that is to say in the meanes wherewith they haue furnished themselues the Lord shewes that they shall lie downe in sorrow and that this shall proceede from his hand In a word that such as forsake the light of Gods word to seeke consolation elsewhere shall miserably perish THE LI. CHAPTER Vers 1. Heare mee yee that follow after righteousnesse and yee that seeke the Lord looke vnto the rocke whence yee are hewen and to the hole of the pit whence ye are digged A consolation or exhortation vnto patience NOw the Prophet exhorts the Iewes not to faint though they were few in number for they were so humbled and diminished that they seemed neere their vtter ruin euen as if they had been hopelesse of any posteritie to succeed them Hee therefore brings them to their originall to teach them that howsoeuer they were but a small handfull now yet God was able to increase multiply them Then he commands them to looke vnto their father Abraham who being but one man yet grew into a great number and God gaue him children as the starres in the firmament Gen. 15.5 and as the sand vpon the sea shore Gen. 22.17 Thence they might collect that if God in so small a space was able so admirably to multiply their fathers he was no lesse powerfull to make them increase heereafter seeing his power is no whit abated nor his will changed Looke to the rocke Some thinke that Abraham is heere called a rocke because hee was strong in faith as Saint Paul saith Rom. 4.19 Others alleadge a reason cleane contrarie to this similitude for they thinke Abraham is heere called a rocke or stone because he was vnfit to beget children and that Sara was called a caue because she was barren But all of them as I take it are deceiued for it is a plaine similitude taken from stones He saith then that they were hewen or digged out of Abraham and Sara as stones are hewen or digged out of a rocke or caue There was exceeding need that the faithfull should be vpheld by this admonition in the ruine of the whole nation God had promised as we said before that Abrahams seede should be as the starres Gen. 15.5 22.17 and as the sand This promise in outward appearance was abolished in the destruction of Ierusalem for then those that remained were like a small cluster of grapes that remaines after the vintage But in regard they had alreadie prooued how powerfull God was to create a great people of nothing the Prophet exhorts them to hope wel still that they may not bee taxed of vnthankfulnesse towards God And thus hee directs his speech properly to the faithfull who had much adoe to sustaine so sharpe temptations for hee speakes not to all in generall The Prophets alwaies make a distinction betweene the faithfull and the hypocrites but to those only that rested vpon the promises whom he calles followers of righteousnesse The Country was filled with vnbeleeuers and hypocrites who had for along time been apostataes from the exercise of pietie the more praise those deserued then who constantly followed a godly and a sincere course Where there is a desire of righteousnesse there God hath audience Note but where infidelitie raignes there is no place at all for the promises Thus then albeit they boasted they were Abrahams children yet all were not capable of this doctrine In the next place the Prophet shewes the way how to follow this iustice to wit in seeking the Lord for it must needes be that such as seeme to follow righteousnes and yet aime not at this marke doe erre in all the parts of their life These two things then to follow righteousnesse and to seeke the Lord must be ioined together Vers 2. Consider Abraham your father and Sara that bare you for I called him alone and blessed him and increased him The application of the former consolation THis application shews sufficiently whereunto the Prophets exhortation tended namely to confirme the peoples hearts in the hope of a better estate He saith he called him alone not onely because Abraham had no companions with him when he was called to forsake his Country but because the Lord suffered him to inhabit the land of Canaan without hauing issue till his old age so as he looked not to haue any at all And besides that Sarah his wife was also barren but at the last they had a sonne giuen them to comfort their old yeeres in their afflictions Which was no sooner giuen but it seemed that God had appointed him to the slaughter and yet for all this the Lord furnished him with a great number of children I told you ere while how necessary this consolation was for the Iewes which wee may also iudge by that wofull and miserable estate in which they then were as histories doe at large record It is also no lesse needfull for vs at this day Vse to vs. in regard of the scattering of the church that so our small number may no whit discourage vs. No wee are rather to hope that God wil one day multiply the same by means to vs vnknowne For we haue heere a manifest and an excellent example thereof in this blessing whereby wee see how the Lord in Abrahams old age weakens yea and out of death it selfe multiplied his of-spring Which promise appertaines not onely to the Iewes but to other nations and therefore his name is no more called Abram
but Abraham Gen. 17.5 Vers 3. Surely the Lord shall comfort Zion hee shall comfort all her desolations and hee shall make her desert like * Or a place of pleasure Eden and her wildernesse like the garden of the Lord ioy and gladnesse shall be found therein praise and the voice of singing THe Prophet shewes that the example propounded in Abrahams person After darknesse light agrees to all ages For as the Lord created so great a stocke out of one man in a moment so will hee replenish his Church by extraordinarie and vnknowne meanes not for once onely but as oft as in the worlds account she is become a widow and barren And thus after S. Paul hath spoken of Abrahams faith and commended the excellencie of it he applies the same doctrine to euery one of vs in particular Rom. 4.24 Where he addes and shall comfort all her ruines it may be thus expounded The Church must be very low b ough● before she is fit to receiue comfort The Lord will comfort his Church not onely whilest shee florisheth but euen when she shal be brought to desolation and solitarinesse And it was necessary indeed that she should be wasled and deformed euen to the vtmost before shee could rightly taste the helpe whereof hee heere speakes Whereas it followes that her desert shall be as a place of pleasure the Prophet hath respect to that place of Moses where he shewes how man at the beginning was put into the garden of Eden Gen. 2.15 The Garden of Eden a place of pleas●re Gen. 3.23 that is to say into a place of pleasure whence by his owne fault he was banished Now we which are depriued of this benefit and blessing which God bestowed vpon our first father are also scattered vpon the face of the earth and depriued of these pleasures Wherefore when many desolations befall vs and that wee see the order of nature ouerturned and nothing to bee perceiued but miserable wastes and scatterings let vs acknowledge that this is the iust punishment of our infidelitie and of the rest of our horrible iniquities Let vs also remember the sentence pronounced against our father Adam A good meditation for vs in the Churches desolation or rather against his whole posteritie which as we are to do in the whole course of our liues so then principallie when wee see the desolations and wracks of the Church For the earth which otherwise of it selfe vvould abound vvith all sorts of pleasures is now brought into a vvildernes by our fault and the Church which euery where florished is destroyed and laid waste Now in the next place the Prophet addes ioy and gladnes wherby he signifies that there shal be such a wonderfull change that the Church shall mourne nor lament no more for whilest she was oppressed vnder so heauie a bondage there was nothing heard but sighs and grones but being restored she shall reioyce and sing praises vnto God Heere then we are admonished to praise and blesse the name of God after we haue tasted of his liberalitie Psal 14.7 Vers 4. Hearken ye vnto me my people and giue eare vnto me my people for a law shall proceed from me and I will bring forth my iudgement for the light of * Or peoples the people Our slow attention causes God to d●uble his exhortation See verse 1. IT is not without cause that the Lord so often calles for audience for wee haue too wofull experience how dull wee are of hearing and chiefly in aduersitie When wee stand in greatest need of consolation then by our impatiencie and faint-heartednes we put it farre from vs. Wherefore it stands euery one of vs in hand to pluck vp our spirits especiallie when aduersities do pinch vs to the quick that by this meanes wee may rouze vp and awaken our spirits and banish all slothfulnes to receiue cōsort Such an attention thē is heere required as may confirme our hearts in patience till the time of grace be come And thus the Lords meaning is that he will reigne againe and restore his Church to her first estate in which he will haue his name called vpon Albeit the word Law signifies as much as the Edict which the Lord will publish when he is determined to gather together his scattered Church How God wil raigne in his Church yet therewithall he shewes by what meanes he will reigne to wit by his law and by the doctrine thereof And thus we see that where the doctrine of the law is reiected there God reignes not that is to say there men acknowledge him not By Iudgement he meanes the rule of a well ordered gouernment by which he will restore his kingdome He saith that this Iudgement shall be for the light of peoples because miserable men by nature are drawne out of darknes when God begins to raigne and are then enlightened by the doctrine of the word The verb J vvill bring forth is diuerslie translated by the Interpreters because the Hebrue word Raga hath diuers significations for sometimes it signifies to cut and to open sometimes to rest Some then expound I will cause to rest that is to say I will make firme and this sense agrees not ill Many among the Iewes vnderstand it otherwise but I will not trouble the reader with their harsh and intricate expositions I rather willinglie receiue this translation I will bring forth or cause to come forth that is to say I will manifest my iudgement for this I thinke sutes best with the former member Now we know that the Hebrues are wont to vse many repetitions And therefore albeit the Lord repeates one thing twice yet the sense is but one and the same For where he said that a law should proceed from him now he promiseth to bring forth or to manifest his iudgement Vers 5. My righteousnes is neere my saluation goeth forth and mine armes shal iudge the people the Iles shall wait for me and shall trust vnto mine arme HEE confirmes the former doctrine A confirmation of the former doctrine The righteousnes of the Lord hath relation vnto men who haue experience that he is iust When the people were oppressed vnder so sore a bondage they had good cause to think they were iustlie chastised for their sinnes But they might wonder they were thus left and forsaken that Gods worship was dissolued and his holy name blasphemed by the prophane vngodly who committed many outrages against him without punishment That he might giue them some consolation then Isaiah promiseth that God will shortly assist them that so his truth and righteousnes may be published throughout the whole world But by the word Iustice he meanes not that recompence which he giues to euery one but that faithfulnes of the Lord who protects his Saints and bestowes many graces vpon them and keeps his promise touching their deliuerance in not suffring them to be ouerwhelmed This appeares yet better to be so by