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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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4. and not faint Luke 13.24 Rom. 15.30 till we obtain Benjamins Portion in sitting down at our Brother Josephs or Jesus's Elbow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strife earnestly not for the Cup till we spill the Wine 4. As Jacob buys that which he could not win a Spiritual Priviledge with Temporal Pottage so if we either by strife purchase or suite can attain to true Spiritual Blessings we are happy 5. On the other hand the Profane as Esau are despisers of Grace Gen. 25.34 parts with their Patrimony without regret or remorse and that for trifles Worldly things are no better than a Mass of L●ntile-Pottage a right Son of Adam who sold his own and his Posterities happiness for a Morsel of Meat pretending danger of Death v. 32. whereas 't was more the greediness of his Natural Appetite and the greatness of his Carnal Passion and Affection so priz'd present profit before as he thought an empty Priviledge limiting it to this Life only as Job 21.13 Thus Sensualists sell their Souls for a thing of nought as Amos 2.6 whereas Christ who best knew the worth of a Soul as he alone went to the price of a Soul saith 't is more worth than a World Mat. 16.26 Godly Naboth was of a better mind saying God forbid a should sell away my Inheritance 1 Kin. 21.3 and indeed God had forbid him Levit. 25.23 Numb 36.7 Ezek. 46.18 so he fearing God in that corrupt age would rather be made a Martyr than break Gods Law the Selling of his Inheritance had been the purchasing of Sin and Disobedience but a good Man is bid to sell all that be may purchase not Sin but Christ that Pearl of great Price Mat. 13.45 as Jacob here parts with a part of his Pottage to an Hungry Hunter whom a little will not suffice in a time of Famine to purchase the Primogeniture which was a figure of Divine Adoption Jacob having bought the Birth right had a way made so gain the Blessing also in the getting whereof there be many eminent remarks or remarkable means whereby he got it As 1. Isaac's Blindness did concur towards it 'T is some wonder how Isaac came to be Blind so soon with Old Age seeing he lived above Forty years after this Gen. 35.28 29. being now but an Hundred Thirty seven years Old the very Age that his Brother Ishmael died at Gen. 25.17 which put him the more to mind his own End and to make his Patriarchal Will before he died though he lived long even Forty three years after How he came to be Blind so soon yet live so long is much marvell'd at seeing the same did not befal any of the other Patriarchs yet is he noted to be more Continent and Temperate than any of them having but one Wife Gen. 24.67 We may not think that Isaac's Blindness was caused by the Smoak of the Sacrifices that Esau's Wives Offered to their Idols as the Rabbies say or that it was an extraordinary Judgment of God upon him as hath been upon great Sinners as acts 13.11 c. but his Old Age being now an Hundred Thirty seven years old was incident to this as to other Infirmities Eccles 12.2 3 4 c. it being of it self a Disease and the Sink of all Diseases Yet this was ordered by a Divine Hand upon him at this time not because as Christ saith This Man had finned or his Parents but that the Works of God might be made manifest in him John 9.3 For God then sent this Blindness upon Isaac that by this means the Blessing might be as it ought by the Oracle conferr'd upon Jacob which Isaac with his Eye-sight would not have done This may be strong Consolation that our good God doth marvellously dispose of the Infirmities and Calamities of bis Servants in the best way of Subserviency to his own Glory Oh what mad work had Isaac made had he not been blind he would for his part have brought Destruction upon the World for as much as he wish'd to Bless Esau who upon any occasion would have sold the Blessing as he had done the Birth-right and besides being very wicked by despising this as he had the other he would have brought the wrath and curse of God upon the whole Earth Therefore Isaac's Blindness of Eyes seeing he had such Blindness of Affection to his prophane Son was a great Blessing and let us say with the Apostle All things work together for the good of the Children of God Rom. 8.28 The second Remark is The Expectation of his own death Isaac saith I am Old and I know not the day of my Death Gen. 27.2 no more doth any though never so young as soon saith the Proverb goes the Lambs Skin to the Market as that of the Old Sheep and the Hebrew saying is There be as many young Skulls in Golgotha as old Young men may die for none have or can make any Agreement with the Grave or any Covenant with Death Isa 28.15 18. but old Men must die 'T is the Grand Statute of Heaven Heb. 9.27 Senex quasi Seminex an old Man is half dead yea now at fifty years old we are accounted three parts dead this Lesson we may learn from our Fingers end the Dimensions whereof demonstrate this to us beginning at the end of the Little Finger representing our Childhood rising up a little higher to the end of the Ring-finger which betokens our Youth from it to the top of the Middle Finger which is the highest point of an elevated Hand and so most aptly represents our Middle Age when we come to our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Heighth of Stature and Strength then begins our declining Age from thence to the end of our Fore-finger which amounts to a little Fall but from thence to the end of the Thumb there is a great Fall to shew when Man goes down in his Old Age he falls fast and far and breaks as we say with a witness now if our very Fingers end do read us such a Divine Lecture of Mortality Oh that we could take it our and have it perfect as we say on our Fingers end Oh that there were such an Heart in us Deut. 5.29 só wise as to consider our latter end Deut. 32.29 Death to the Young is in insidus lyes in Ambush for them and is ready at all times to fall on if the Lord of Hosts give but the word but as to Old Men Death is prae Januis stands before their Door and is ready to step in over the Threshold to strike c. Hence cometh that saying That Old Men have pedem in cymba Charontis one Foot in the Grave already and the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Old Man is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a looking toward the Ground Decrepit Age goes stooping and groveling as groaning for the Grave It doth not only expect death but oft sollicites it Though we find not Isaac do the latter
to 11. and 〈◊〉 latter from ver 11 to 18. which begins with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Day after As Christ had the Day before recovered a young Man from the Poi●● of Death so did ●e the very next Day after raise up another young man from Death it self First Of 〈◊〉 First of these Miracles The Remarks hereupon are First Though Christ's first Sermon recorded in Scripture Preach'd on the Mount and his last when leaving the World be the longest and liveliest Sermons of all others that the Evangelists relate yet without all peradventure Christ Preached many other Times and many Hours together beside those in Gospel Record and though many mighty Miracles to the number of thirty four or fifty sever be Registred by the Holy-Spirit's Pen-men yet no doubt many more than are writt●● were done by him who went about doing good Acts 10.38 As his Oracles so his ●●racles are no more of them written than might suffice to make us Believe and 〈◊〉 through his Name Though all that ever Christ spake and did was Divine and o●● served to be Chronicled yet the Beloved Disciple saith If every one were Written 〈◊〉 World could no● contain them c. John 21.25 20.30 31. where too much is said that enough may be believed as is done in all Scripture Hyperboles c. The Second Remark is As Moses confirmed his Oracles of the Old Law which 〈◊〉 given him from Mount Sinai by working Miracles So did the Messias when he ●●d delivered the New-Law-Oracles from this Mount-Capernaum Yet the latter Miracles were better than the former for wheras one of Moses's Miracles was a turning ●ates into Blood signifying that the Old-Law was a severe and grievous ministration But one of the Messiah's Miracles yea the first of them was a turning Water into Wine to signifie that his New-Law was to be a Sweet and a Gracious Dispensation the Gospel of Peace is as the most Generous Wine in chearing the Hearts of the Sons and Daughters of Men. Besides Moses's Miracles were only for the benefit of the Jews but the Messiah's were for the Advantage of the Gentiles also as well as for the Jews This is most conspicuous here for as the second Miracle was wrought for a Jewish-Widdow so the first was for a Gentile-Captain c. The Third Remark is This Roman Proselyte was admirable upon many accoun●● As 1. He was a Soldier and such are generally fierce froward indocible and go●less Creatures 2. A Commander having an hundred Men under his Command and therefore is call'd a Centurion enough to make him Haughty and Huffing 3. He was the Master of a Family too having Servants as well as Souldiers under him 4. And but a Gentile or Heathen yet had so far affected the Jews Religion as to build a Synagogue in Capernaum for it Now having heard the Words and seen the Works of Christ believeth on him for the Messiah beggeth of him his Servant's Cure and all this in a most humble manner acknowledging first Christ's worthiness and then his own unworthiness both together Who can but wonder to behold him a Soldier a Captain a Master an Heathen a lover of the Jews a builder of the Synagogue yet Humble Any one of these Titles yea the least of them make many men proud but none of them nor all of them made him so because he greatly and strongly believed in Christ The Fourth Remark is There is some variation of this story in Mat. 8. Luke 7. yet no contradiction for Matthew saith Augustin doth only relate it compendiously How the Centurion came to Christ without mentioning those Elders of the Jews by whose mediation he came this was reserved for Luke to relate wherewith he supplied those circumstances that were wanting and Chrysostom saith that Luke's design was to illustrate two things 1. The Flattery of the Jews to Jesus And 2. That Men in distress do sometimes use one means for their relief and sometimes another the Jews finding the Centurion desirous to go to Christ hinder him undertaking to go and speak for him yet coming conceal'd his Faith but urg'd his Merit for his good Deeds but because Christ would not have so great a faith concealed he stirr'd him up to send more faithful Messengers who fully declared I am not worthy that thou shouldst come under my Roof c. as Luke writes yet as Christ was coming he came in person to meet him and spake to him the same words himself as Matthew writes Thus the two Evangelists are reconciled The Fifth Remark is 'T is the nature of true Humility in gracious Souls to have exceeding low thoughts of themselves when others have exceeding high thoughts of them Thus it was here in this humble Centurion The flattering Jews give an high Character of him to Christ saying that he was worthy for whom thou shalt do this for he loved our Nation and built us a Synagogue Luke 7.2 4. yet when he came to Christ he gave a contrary Character of himself saying Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldest come under my Roof ver 6. But he speaks not one word of his building the Jews a Synagogue for expecting to obtain a special favour from Christ all his Rhetorick was lowliness knowing that nothing is more prevalent than humility with God The Sixth Remark is As this Centurion was a good first-table Man in his humility to God so was he a good second table Man in his fidelity to his Servant He was not only a good man absolutely but also a good Master relatively as appeareth both by his going to Christ for his sick Servant N.B. which is a duty incumbent upon all Masters for theirs and by his saying to him Lord my Servant lyeth at home c. Mat. 8.6 He had not thrown his sick Servant out of his house or cast him into a by corner to sink or swim for any care his Master would take of him no nor lest he him to himself to seek for his curing by his own care and at his own charges but this good Man and good Master made his Servant's sickness as his own by sympathy and himself undertakes the care and cost for his Servant's Recovery Many Parents came to Christ for their Children but this one Master only is Recorded as an Example to all Masters that sought Christ and Cure for his Servants good The Seventh Remark is 't is wonderful condescension that Christ the Lord of Lords and King of Kings Rev. 19.16 should stoop so low as to vouchsafe a visit to a poor Servant and restore him to health thereby There is Dignatio stupenda in our Lord's words I will come and heal him Mat. 8.7 If Elizabeth John Baptist's Mother could say whence is this to me that the Mother of my Lord should come to me c. Luke 1.43 44. looking upon this visit as a marvellous favour how much more must it be looked upon as a more stupendous condescending in our Lord himself though
of his youthful Vigour and Vanity Or Naim Hebrew signifies the moving of them for thus the whole City was mightily moved at this mighty Miracle Luke 7.16 The Third Remark is A Young Man may be a Dead-Man This Widow's Son is call'd a Dead-man Luke 7.12 and a Young-man ver 14. assoon goes the Lambs-skin to the Market saith the Proverb as the Old Sheep Senibus mors in Januis Adolescentibus in insidiis Saith B●rnard Death seizeth upon old men yet lyes lurking as in an Ambushment for the youngest As the Old must dye so the Young may Dye Our Drecrepit Age both Expects Death and Sollicits it but Vigorous Youth looks strangely upon that Grim Sergeant sent of God to Arrest it so soon The Fourth Remark is 'T is no new device or novelty to have burying places without the City 't is said here when Christ came to Naim he meets Men with a Dead Man carried out of the City ver 12. for they might not as holding it unhealthful and unwholesome to Bury within the Walls open Graves and Interr Corps in the City Therefore N. B. Note well Let not any Survivers murmur at the Burying of their near and dear Relations in the Suburbs of this City seeing it was so here and the Resurrection will find them any where The Fifth Remark is 'T is no untrodden path for an only Son to dye as well as an only Husband This good Woman as the sequel demonstrates loses first her only Husband therefore is she call'd a Widow and now as if the loss of her Head were not great enough she must lose her only Son who might have been to her what Obed was to Naomai a restorer of her Life and a hourisher of her Old Age Ruth 4.15 This her only Branch must be lopped off from the Tree also then murmur not at such strokes c. The Sixth Remark is Yet Christ's Compassion is toward such as are under such severe strokes 'T is said v. 13. When the Lord saw her he had Compassion on her and said weep not All this and more was done upon Christ's own accord from his Free-Grace and Unrequested This Widow did neither beseech his Bowels to Pity her nor his Power to Raise her Son Christ had and hath still a most tender Heart and will pity and provide more for his Praying People than they ask of him The Seventh Remark is As Christ touched the Bier and spake to the Dead Arise whereby the Dead-man was raised to Life and Restored to his Mother ver 14 15. N. B. Note well So a word of Christ's Mouth and a touch with his Hand shall suffice to revive the Slain Witnesses and to restore them to the Church their Mother Oh that God may thus visit his People and be Glorified as ver 16. However it shall be enough at the last Day to Raise up all the Dead John 5.29 1 Thes 4.13 c. The Eighth Remark is Sometimes Christ commanded secresie in his working Miracles as Mark 5.43 Luke 8.56 but five Persons were Witnesses of Jairus's Daughters being raised to life c. but this and that of Lazarus was done openly in the sight of the multitude without charge of Privacy as in Capernaum where Christ had been laughed to scorn and had newly denounced a Curse against that City but there were no such causes here All is done in open view Solomon saith Every thing is Beautiful in the right Season So are all Christ's Acts doing all well Mark 7.37 CHAP. XV. NOW follow many more matchless Miracles whereby the Lord backed his Divine Oracles and Doctrine of Truth The first and next now to be gloss'd upon is Christ's Casting out of the Deaf and Dumb Devil Mat. 12. from ver 22 to 46. Mark 7.32 with 9.17.11.17 Luke 11. from ver 14 to 27. This is illustrated by many Remarks The First is Both Matthew and Mark do introduce this Miracle by premising a general account of an Ambulatory Hospital following Christ from all parts Great Multitudes followed him from place to place Mat. 12.15 yea some of Esau's Posterity Idumeans as well as Jews throng to touch Christ Mark 3.7 8 9 10. and he healed the Diseases and Plagues of all that came to him and cast out Devils Mat. 8.16 12 1● to which is added When the unclean Spirits saw him they fall down before him crying Thou art the Son of God Mark 3.11 The matter was well amended since Satan's first onset upon Christ in the Wilderness c. Where he then doubted saying If thou be the Son of God Mat. 4.3 6. The same Power can change his note to us The Second Remark is As Devils truckled to Christ's Power in his own Person so they did to that wherewith he impowered his Apostles whom he gradually gathered to be with him to see his Glory John 1.14 39 c. to be Witnesses of his Works Acts 10.39 41. And to learn as his Auditors the Doctrine of the Gospel that they were to Preach N. B. Note well So that the very Apostles themselves did not at their first mission into the Ministry Preach by the Spirit but what they had heard about a Twelve-month from the Mouth of their Master When Christ had Called and Chosen them to the number of twelve answerable to the twelve Tribes of Israel and throughly instructed them both for Praying and Preaching work He gives them not only a free Mission Mark 3.13 but also a free Commission both for curing Diseases and for casting out Devils Mat. 10.1 6 8. Mark 3.14 15. Luke 6.12 c. with 10 17. 9.1 Satan falls as Lightning from Heaven before them Luke 10.18 and that Serpent hurts them not Mark 16.18 Nor can he finally or totally hurt either Christ's Ministers or Believers that are his Members The Third Remark is Simon the Pharisee Invites Christ to a Feast Luke 7.36 It was fit he should feast sometimes that fared so hard mostly He is call'd Simon the Leper Mat. 26.6 Mark 14.3 whom Christ had healed of his Leprosie and who therefore entertains his Healer in way of Thankfulness to a Dinner and Christ's foregoing Words The Son of Man is come Eating and Drinking c. Luke 7.34 might possibly induce him to make this Invitation as haply Christ's others words Come to me all ye that are weary and heavy laden Mat. 11.28 might invite the Woman-Sinner to prostrate her self at Christ's-feet c. leaning on his left Elbow at Meat Luke 7.37 38. This was Mary Magdalen out of whom Christ had cast seven Devils and became a consort with a Court-Lady Joanna c. who had been healed by Christ also Luke 8.2 3. The self same Mary that was Sister to Lazarus John 12.2 3. Mark 15.40 16.1 Luke 24.10 Where we may not imagine Lazarus's Sister must neglect to be about the Burial Seeing Christ foretold that she should do that Office John 12.7 This Mary the Antients say was Married to a Noble Person of
Liquor the Blood of Saints here also N.B. 'T was not sufficient to Rage in Judaea only but he will pursue them also six days Journey into Syria and his Outrage is aggravated herein that he spareth not the weaker Sex who are usually spar'd in such cases if they profess'd themselves Christians And it appeareth that the High Priest and that Council were no less outragious than he in putting a Sword into such a Mad-man's hand No less than the Destruction of the Church of Christ every where is designed by its Enemies both They and Saul hunt for Christians Lives The second Remark is Oh what an eminent Monument of Divine Mercy doth this Blood-thirsty Brute remain upon Scripture Record 1 Tim. 1.13 14 16. that a Pharisee a Persecutor of the first Magnitude and so malicious a Murderer should become a Christian an excellent Preacher of Christ and such an eminent Apostle N.B. Here a Wolf is changed into a Lamb Oh what cannot Omnipotency do out of his Free Grace Persecuting Saul is made a Praying and a Preaching Paul The Sacred Scriptures do largely relate what a notorious Villain this same Saul had been before his Conversion that none might despond or despair of the Free Grace of God so they have but hearts given them earnestly and sincerely to seek it This Man when converted doth as it were Pennance in a white Sheet confessing that he had been the chief of Sinners primus quo nullus prior aut pejor yet the Grace of Christ abounded to an overflow towards him as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 1.14 signifies Preaching ever this great Grace This introduceth Saul's Conversion so wonderful a work of God's Free Grace as is almost without a parallel in the Sacred Record N.B. As it was once said of the Old Testament Saul in derision Is Saul also among the Prophets 1 Sam. 10 11. and 19 24. Tho' the first was spoken for a Wonder yet the latter was uttered in a Jear importing all was surely well when such a Bloody Tyrant was so tyed up manacled maugre all his malice and madness So the same may be said of this New Testament Saul even with admiration Yea this latter is the greater Wonder of the two for the old Saul in his seeking Asses did but find a Temporal Kingdom but this young Saul while he was pursuing Death strangely stumbles upon Everlasting Life N.B. Oh marvelous Metamorphosis far beyond all Ovid's Pagan Dreams Here 's not only a Wolf turned into a Lamb but here 's a Monster of Nature changed into a Miracle of Grace Here 's a Child of Wrath become a Vessel of Mercy and a Son of Perdition an Heir of Salvation The former Saul had the Spirit of Prophecy come upon him which made him another man 1 Sam. 10.6 9. and 10. but this was for the time only who spake only as Balaam's Ass did for the Gift soon left him again he was not turned into a new Spiritual Man However this made many amazed that there should be Anser inter Olores Corvus inter Musas as the Latine's Proverb is suitable to that of the Hebrews A Goose among the Swans a Crow among the Muses a Rustick Saul among the Divine Prophets N.B. But there was more matter of Amazement at the change of this latter Saul Acts 9.21 who of a Cursed Tare was turned into Blessed Wheat and had a real Transmutation a thorough Transmentation and an Abiding work upon him Saul the Persecutor was turned into Paul the Preacher The power of that Chymist is worthily praised who can most curiously not only Refine the fine Gold from its Dross but also extract pure Gold out of drossy Copper How much more is the great God to be magnified who changes Dross and base Metal into the most Refined Gold 'T is only the God of Nature that hath the true Philosopher's Stone and can change the Nature of created Beings the bad into good and the old depraved Nature into that which is new and truly Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Such a great change as this of Saul into Paul was an unaccountable matter and therefore might truly cause Amazement But the Father saith Ex quovis ligno fit Mercurius cum Digitus Dei sit Statuarius The Omnipotent God can of crooked Timber make straight Pillars in his Temple He can of very Stones raise up Children to Abraham Matth. 3.9 Nothing is too hard for that God in whose hand Saul's heart was Gen. 18.14 Job 42.2 c. This so Famous a Conversion of Saul stands Recorded in many remarkable circumstances As 1. The Time when 2. The Place where 3. The Manner how 4. The Witnesses thereof 5. The Concomitants and 6. The Consequents of it 1. The Time when it was while in the very Act of his outragious Persecution 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Adulteress was John 8.4 in the very nick of his highest Rebellion against Christ Acts 9.1 2. This Furioso Saul had got his Fatal Commission out of the High-Commission-Court of the High Priest who was as full of Fury as he so needed God's Bridle rather than Saul's Spur for in this whole Book of the Acts of the Apostles in all the over-busie oppositions stirred up against the Gospel we do find the Priests not only the busiest men but also as it is related all along Acts 7.1 and 9.1 and 23 2 c. They seem to be the only Men that were the principal Persecutors Though they were indeed mostly concerned in that cursed work because they looked upon it as belonging to their Function and Interest to look after the prevention of this growing evil of the Gospel as they prophanely mis-judged it Yet had they no distinct power from the Sanhedrim save only as a part thereof This is testified by Saul himself who best knew from whom he had those killing Commissions saying that he received his Letters of Life and Death not only from the High-Priest but from all the Estate of the Elders also Acts 22.5 N B. Notwithstanding this the Sacred Story pitcheth upon the Priests as a parcel of profligate persons who principally prompted on and promoted this Persecution Saul being thus furnished with Authority fetches a compass to fire out all the Christians at Damascus and no doubt this Wolf was worrying them all the way he went with his heart no doubt but Satan suggested many a murdering thought into his mischievous mind Here this Grand Informer this principal Apparitor like a Spanish Inquisitor or rather the great Apostle of that Hellish High-Priest who yet became through Grace the true and heavenly High-Priest's Apostle passeth end-ways almost an hundred and sixty Miles from Jerusalem and within sight of Damascus at Noon-time of the day was the Time of his Call N.B. The second is the Place where it was when he was come near to Damascus Acts 9.3 The Hebrew name of that place Damesec signifies a bagg of Blood so it was called because the Rabbins
be totally destroyed by the Deluge upon occasion and by the way only as the Relation thereof had an unavoidable connexion with the History of the Church and rendring it more compleat and conspicuous without any constant and contiguous course of its succession yea and the famous foundations of great Kingdoms such as of Assyria Egypt Greece c. together with the admirable atchievements of their puissant potentates are all passed over in silence though they be subjects which seem more meriting to be mention'd while other concerns of the Church which in appearance are of far less moment are so distinctly described as Jacobs pilling of the Rods c. that by the force of fancy with cogitations at the Sheeps conceptions but chiefly by the Blessing of God the Holy Patriarch might be enriched and churlish Laban impoverished Gen. 30.38 and Ruths Gleaning in Boaz field c. Ruth 2.3 where that vertuous Woman stooped to a mean yet honest employment which God made a remarkable step to her very high preferment so as though a Moabitess Damsel to become the great Grand-Mother of the Grand-Messiah yea and many such seemingly small matters of other Children of the Church are exactly set down in the sacred Register as matters of great importance as if God were like the Master of a family who doth not with so much delight regard his common fields abroad as he doth his dear family at home the speeches gestures and actions of his little ones he diligently and delightfully observeth so doth the great housholder God in his houshold of Faith he regardeth rewardeth and recordeth all the Motions Desires and Endeavours as well as Performances of his own Children within the Church even all the Hairs of their Head are numbred by him Mat. 10.30 c. while the famous exploits and conquests of Great Men who are not also Good Men that are without in the World are wholly neglected in Scripture Story The 3. Circumstance is the Age of life that Enoch lived the years that he lived in this lower World were exactly answerable to the days of a year to wit 365. As the number of so many days make up one compleat solar year so the like number of so many years made up this one Patriarchs life He was of the shortest life among all the Patriarchs living only so many years as there be days in the year each day for a year according to the prophetick computations and though Enoch was the shortest liver of all the six Patriarchs that were before him who all but one lived above nine hundred years yet this was recompenc'd to him in his Son Methuselah the next Patriarch who was the longest liver of them all and not only so but 't was more recompenc'd to himself for their time on Earth was his time in Heaven what he wanted in the Silver of a life natural he had it well paid him in the Gold of a life eternal so that not only the shortness of the Fathers life was made up in the long life of his Son but also God took him from a worse place to plant him into a better his translation was but Transplantation as it were out of Gods Kitchin-Garden into his heavenly Paradise Thus we see here on Earth those Northern Plants which are transplanted out of their cold Climate into a warmer Southern Soil find no Detriment but Advantage thereby and thrive the better How much more was it no loss but gain to Enoch to be translated out of the Veil of Tears this Wilderness of the World into Gods Garden of Coelestial Pleasures Yea further it was not only more for his own Benefit to be one of Gods Lilies gathered up by him Cant. 6.2 to be transplanted into Paradise but it was also more for the other Patriarchs comfort both against the Fears of Death and the frailties of life while they did survive him seeing in Enoch however the Death of Abel might discourage them they had a most evident demonstration that there was a reward for the Righteous Psal 58.11 and that it was not any lost labour to walk with God It appeareth in the best computations of Chronology that Adam died in the 308 year of Enoch's Life and in the 243 year of his Son Methuselah yea and in the 56 year of his Grand Child Lamech's Life so that Adam lived to see Lamech the ninth Generation who was the Father of Noah the tenth Patriarch before the Flood then the next after Adam's Death God ordered Enoch's Translation that those two great Truths might be taught thereby 1. Mortality by the former And 2. Immortality by the latter and 't is very remarkable that as no fewer than eight Patriarchs were alive as living Witnesses of Adams Death so no fewer than seven Patriarchs surviv'd to be living Witnesses of Enoch's Translation If it be asked how came men to be so long lived then that 365 years of Enoch was accounted but a short life I answer The Antediluvian Patriarchs or Fathers before the Flood had very long lives 1. From the good pleasure of God that mankind might be the sooner propagated that Arts and Sciences might be the better learnt and that the knowledge and worship of God might be the further transmitted even to their remotest Posterity 2. From a stronger constitution of Body 3. From their great temperance for some say they abstained both from Wine and Flesh Now plures pereunt gulá quam gladio Gluttony or Intemperance kills more than the Sword 4. From the vigorous Vertue of the Earth which then brought forth more wholsom fruit for after the Salt waters of the Sea in Noahs flood had overflown the Earth the saltness thereof had made it more barren and the growth out of it less nourishing 5. From the benign Aspect of the Stars which have a great Influence upon Mens Bodies 6. From that excellent Skill that Adam had from his Creation whereby he knew the nature of all things and communicated this to his Posterity for preserving their health for as Solomon he knew all things Notwithstanding this their Universal knowledge of natural things and their vast experience in an healthful improvement of those things yet none of those Patriarchs no not Methuselah himself lived out a thousand years which is a number of perfection that all of them might know the perfect state is not attainable here below there is another over curious reason mentioned by Irenaeus lib. 5. Adver Haeres That a thousand years are said to be but one day with God 2 Pet. 3.8 And but as Yesterday to him Psal 90.4 And because God would make his word good In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt die therefore not only Adam but all the other Patriarchs died within the thousand years so they all died in the first day as none of them lived out to begin a second thousand which would have been the beginning of a second day there seems more wit in this reason than weight and worth but a
more solid reason of their dying within that term is rather to shew that the life of man though it be never so long yet in respect of Eternity is very short and not a day but a magnum nihil Mine age saith David my World Heb. That is my abode in the World is as nothing Psal 39.5 Punctum est quod vivimus puncto minus 't is but a point and less than a point so though never so long yet far off from perfection 'T is but a small space of time that the longest liver hath on Earth compar'd with Eternity in Heaven The Phrase and he died is added at the end of all those ancient Patriarchs to shew how unalterable was that grand Stature of Heaven Thou shalt die the Death Gen. 2.17 And 't is appointed unto all men once to die Heb. 9.27 So that the youngest and strongest should be mindful of their mortality learning to die daily as Paul did 1 Cor. 15.31 And to make death familiar to us at Bed and Board for as young as we and as strong as we do daily drop down into the dust The Proverb saith assoon goes the Lambs Skin to the Market as that of the old Sheep 'T is a witty and yet a worthy saying That while Death was but a young Archer newly come into the World and unexperienced he could not hit the mark for many hundred years Hence it was that those Primitive Patriarchs most of the Ten lived nine hundred years why Death then could not hit them with his Killing Dart any sooner but now he is become a better Marks-man and can strike down right Dead within the term of one hundred nay at seventy years Psal 90.10 which number is there stated as the term of Man's Life few exceed it and fewer attain to it As mens wickedness increased so the length of their lives decreased even in Mose's time who was the Pen-man of that 90th Psalm as the title telleth Yea Death learns to hit the mark sooner now for mens lives are daily shortened and Generations are fast justled out of their Beings to give place for others Eccles 1.4 The Stage of the Earth still standing in its place while the Actors upon it are often changed that so the World may come the sooner to its End and though there be some singular Examples of a longer life yet in the general 't is observ'd that more Die before they be Ten years old since Death became such a cunning Archer than there be that live above Sixty Yea some of Mankind there be whom Death sends out of the World as soon as Life hath led them into the World whose short passage is ab Utero ad Urnam from the Grave of the Womb to the Womb of the Grave There is but a little inter-space 'twixt their lying in the Womb and being laid in their Tomb Living in the former but Dead in the latter Besides how many die in their youth while their bones are full of marrow and their veins full of blood They perish in the midst of their way Psal 2.12 like the Jay pruning her self on the Tree Death shoots his Arrow and down they tumble while they hope in themselves to see many fair Summers The 4th Circumstance concerning Enoch's Appearance is the Function Capacity and Condition wherein he Appeared This is twofold 1. Publick as a Prophet of God and a Preacher of Gods Word or Will 2. Private as a Professor and a Practiser of Godliness both in the Form and in the Power of it in his walking with God 1. Of the first he appeared in the Quality both of a Prophet and of a Preacher both were publick Functions 1. Of a Prophet The Apostle Jude expresly mentioneth Enochs Prophecy Judes Ep. v. 14 15. How Jude came to this is uncertain There be two opinions concerning it the 1. is that the Apostle Jude had these two verses out of a book call'd the Prophecy of Enoch whereof Origen Tertullian Jerom Augustin Bede c. make mention That there was such a Book called by that name in those primitive times of the Fathers is not denied but all the doubt lieth 1. Whether Enoch was its Author Or 2. Whether Jude quoted those his two verses out of that Book considering 1. Because none of the Prophets either Moses Samuel or those after them in the Old Testament quotes any such book as those of Moses are by after-prophets 2. Because no such book is mentioned to be kept either in Moses Tabernacle or in Solomons Temple as the Tables of the Testimony were in the Ark of the Covenant 3. Because the Old Testament Church had no such book among all their Canonical Scriptures before their Babylonish Captivity 4. Because had there been such a book Moses could not have concealed it seeing the Creation of the World the History of all the primitive Patriarchs from Adam to himself were so distinctly revealed to him and had there been any such book in a true being he could not be ignorant of it but would have mentioned it as he doth all other things from the beginning Especially in his History of Enoch 5. Because if Enoch had indeed writ such a book then Moses had not been the first writer which all learned Authors both Protestant and Popish do acknowledge and which the words of our Lord Beginning at Moses he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself Luk. 24.27 do import for had Enoch writ a book before Moses Christ would have begun at Enoch and not at Moses 6. Because neither Philo nor Josephus two learned writers of the Jewish antiquities do make mention of such a book of Enoch now they both being curious observers and careful preservers of all memorable Monuments would undoubtedly have discovered such a precious treasure as could not but be in all generations of the Jews most highly valued both for the Reverend Antiquity and Eminent Piety of the Author as likewise for the sublime excellency of the matter There be indeed other various sentiments about this Enochs Prophecy some say he wrote it upon Pillars of Stone or brick that neither of those two grand destructions of the World which he foresaw by Water and by Fire might destroy it others say that he wrote it in a book which is lost as many other Books mentioned in Scripture as the book of the Wars of the Lord Numb 21.14 the Book of Jashar Josh 10.13 With many others of Nathan Semeiah Gad Ahiah Haddo Hanani c. Named in the Chronicles c. Others say that this book was preserved in Noahs Ark from the Floud or if it were lost yet was it restored by Noah thereunto inspired This was the opinion of Tertullian But all those are uncertain Conjectures having no confirmation from Scripture yea rather are a contradiction to it as it maketh Moses the first writer in the World Herewithal these following considerations introducing the 2d Opinion are worth due observation As 1.
as the Waters in the Red Sea did on each side Israel Exod. 14.22 but this is no better than proud presumption to imagine a Miracle without warrant from Scripture seeing that concerning Israel is recorded but this concerning Enoch Paradise to be thus secured is not so much as darkly intimated Besides if it had been so then Noah needed not to build an Ark the eight persons with all the Cattel might have been secured there with Enoch who would have made them nine persons saved contrary to a Pet. 3.20 4. Others of them say That Paradise might be preserved in the Waters as was the Olive-Tree whereof the Dove pluck'd a Branch suppose this true yet Enoch must have been Drowned for Trees have not Breath as Man hath 'T is said every thing that had Breath Died Gen. 7.22 there is not par ratio 't is no right arguing from the preservation of a Tree which is breathless to the preservation of a man who Breatheth 5. 'T is said of Elijahs Translation twice as before that he went up into Heaven 2 Kin. 2.1 11. this cannot be Paradise below the same may be said also of Enoch The third Branch is what of Enoch was Translated whether his Soul only or his Body also Answer No doubt but God took up his Body as well as his Soul from Earth to Heaven and from this Life to a better without any separation of his Soul from his Body This brings me to the second Remarkable and the second Enquiry about if to wit his Advantage attending this high Priviledge He did not see death Heb. 11.5 He tasted not of that bitter Cup. Indeed his Translation was as Calvin calls it a kind of extraordinary death yet came he not under 1. The expectation of Death by either Disease or Decay much less 2. Under the power and dominion of Death by parting his Soul from his Body but it was with him as it shall be with those that are alive at Christs coming Behold saith the Apostle I shew you a Mystery This was likely one of those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wordless words that he heard in his Rapture 2 Cor. 12.4 and therefore unknown till then to any Morial We shall not all die but we shall all be changed 1 Cor. 15.51 We shall have Spiritual Bodies v. 44. And a Building of God not made with hands with which House we desire to be clothed upon c. 2 Cor. 5.1 2. And the same Apostle to the Thessalonians saith more plainly Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the Clouds to meet the Lord in the Air 1 Thes 4.17 Paul thus speaketh of himself as of one alive at Christs coming because we should daily expect it and even hasten unto it as 2 Pet. 3.12 And he intimateth there that the Clouds are the Chariots and Waggons which our Joseph our Jesus will send for us at that time to carry us up to Heaven as the Patriarch Joseph the Lord of the Land did for his Fathers Family down to Egypt Gen. 45.27 And such a Chariot carried up Christ himself into Heaven Act. 1.9 Thus Enoch was taken up in a Whirlwind as in a Waggon as the best Hebrew Doctors do affirm however 't is plain Elijah was so And in the very Act of their Translation both their Mortality was so swallow'd up of Life and Immortality and their Corruption did put on Incorruption in such an unconceivable way as those that shall be changed and caught up at Christs coming That neither of them felt the Sting of Death no more than the Victory of the Grave he saw not Death This is taken Literally or Mystically 1. Literally as here and Luke 2.26 Simeon saw not Death until he had seen the Son of God 2. Mystically John 8.51 If a Man keep my sayings he shall not see death Death is Threefold 1. Temporal 2. Spiritual 3. Eternal In the former of these Death is taken Literally in the two latter Mystically The Holy Scripture uses three words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adjoining to Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used Heb. 11.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 8.51 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in v. 52. Mat. 16.28 and Mark 9.1 c. to be dead in sin a frequent Phrase in Scripture or to die in sin as John 8.21 relates to Death Spiritual This is an heavy Doom and the very next door to damnation 't is a sad thing to die in a Ditch or Dungeon but 't is far sadder to die this death Spiritual to Die in Sin but the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tast Imports that Saints only Tast of Death they do but sip of that bitter Cup which for tasting of that forbidden fruit in Paradise they should have been swilling and swallowing down for ever This sinners who die in their sins do they do not only swallow it but are swallow'd up of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for ever which when that is added as Joh. 8.51 52. relates to Death Eternal Saints do die but sinners are kill'd with Death Rev. 2.23 A good man is said agrotare Vitaliter mori Vitaliter his sickness and death is in order to life he hath hope in his death Prov. 14.32 Death to him is as the Valley of Achor a Door of Hope Hos 2.15 as an entrance into the Heavenly Canaan But to evil Men Death is a Trap-door to let them down into Hell that Region of Darkness and Torment When Death comes with a Writ of Habeas Corpus and the Devil with a Writ of Habeas Animam c. 't is therefore a wonder that they go not raving and roaring out of the World Our Enoch had exemption from all those three Deaths Hereupon Chrysostom wonders that Enoch should pass safely through the Prince of the Air 's Territories unmolested the Devil not daring to cast so much as one Stone at his Mud-wall as he rode along in his Chariot as Elijah did into Heaven Assuredly God did gather him up in a moment being his Conduct and Convoy all along clothing him with the qualities of a glorify'd Body without either sickness pain or perishing of his fleshly Body he had neither Disease nor Death 1. He saw not Death Temporal nor 2. Death Spiritual which is Threefold 1. Of Sin Rom. 6.2 2. Of the Law Gal. 2.19 3. Of the VVorld which is Twofold 1. Active wherein the World is dead to us Phil. 3.8 2. Passive wherein we are dead to the World Mat. 10.22 Both these are held out in Paul's words The World is Crucified unto me and I am Crucified to the World Gal. 6.14 Christ kills two at once there Paul to the World and the World to Paul It was but a dead thing to him and he was as dead a thing to it Enoch saw not this Spiritual Death in sin for he received Testtmony concerning himself and we concerning him that he pleased God Heb. 11.5 3. He saw not Death Eternal the place
of the Execution whereof is Hell not Heaven where Eternal Life is happily enjoyed Thus 't is said God took him not the Devil to himself up into Heaven he did not cast him away with a Depart thou Cursed that the Devil might take him to himself and down to Hell but with a Come thou Blessed enter thou into thy Masters joy Mat. 25.21 23 30 Objection 1. How then did Enoch pay that Debt which is due to Nature How are those Scriptures fulfill'd which say What Man is there that sees not death Psal 89.48 and Death passeth upon all Men Rom. 5.12 and in Adam all die 1 Cor. 15.22 And 't is the Grand Statute of the Parliament of Heaven that hath appointed all Men once to die Heb. 9.27 and all dust must be turned to dust Gen. 3.19 Eccles 12.7 9. Answer 1. There is no General Rule but it admits of some particular Exception as every Grammarian knoweth The Supream Maker of that Law may dispense where and when he pleaseth with his own Law being above not under it Death was then but newly imposed as the Wage of Sin Gen. 3.17 19. The first Removeals of the three first Godly Men out of the World are very Remarkable as soon as Death was inflicted the punishment of sin after the Fall The First that died was Abel who died a violent death by the hands of his bloody Brother so he as it were swam to Heaven in his own Blood The Second that died was Adam who died a natural death He was like a Shock of Corn fully ripe to be reaped with the Sithe of Death shock'd up and carry'd into the Barn for the Masters use Job 5.26 He died in a full Age or in a good old Age Gen. 25.8 He was as willing to die as ever he had been to Dine or to rise up from Table after a full Meal But the third that was removed out of the World 't was not by a Temporal Death either Natural or Violent but by a glorious Translation Abel was hurried in-in the Jaws of Death violently and Enoch was hurried from the Jaws of Death as violently to despight of the Serpents Seed Cain's Posterity who bare as much Enmity to Enoch as Cain did to Abel Herein God shewed that as the Imposition of that Law or Curse of Death was from God so a Dispensation concerning that Law might come from him also 'T is the Supream Soveraignty of God to revoke and repeal his own Statutes when his unsearchable Wisdom judgeth it expedient for his own Glory and his Creatures Good All those fore quoted Scriptures in this Objection speak indeed of the general course of Nature now a particular Exception doth not infringe much less nullifie an Universal Order for to the Lord God belong Issues from death Psal 68.20 Christ hath the Keys of Death Revel 1.18 that is Dominion over it and the Disposal of it he can redeem from Death whom he pleaseth Hosea 13.14 for he hath destroyed death Heb. 2.14 Answer 2. The Scripture it self maketh some clear Exception from the general Rule The Apostle Paul saith in two places All shall not die but some shall be changed 1 Cor. 15.51 52. and 1 Thes 4.15 Now there is much difference betwixt Death and Translation for Death is an Act of weakness Paul calls it a sowing in weakness 1 Cor. 15.43 but Translation is an Act of power In the former there is a change as relating to the Body from better to worse A living Dog is better than a dead Lion saith Solomon Ecoles 9.4 But in the latter there is a change from worse to better in respect of the Body yet in this latter change there is that which is Equivalent to Death which is a putting off of all the frailties of this Life Thus God in the very Act of Translation took down Enoch's old House and whereas some God suffers to lye long in the Grave as the Primitive Patriarchs do sleep there from the beginning almost of the World to the end of it the general Resurrection yet God at that instant of time Built Enoch's House new again without any Root of bitterness or Seed of evil 2 Cor. 5.1 2 4. There was a sudden change of Enoch's Corporeal Qualities without either sorrow of Heart or sense of Pain As in his Translation there was a Cessation to wit from his Natural Life and so it was a kind of Natural Death before a Spiritual Body was given to him So in a moment in the twinckling of an Eye 1 Cor. 15.52 He passed through all those Stations that countervail the State of Death Resurrection and Ascension The third Enquiry is concerning the Effect and Consequence of his Translation to wit he was not found that is not on Earth for God took him to the same place whither he took Elijah which is expresly said into Heaven 2 Kings 2.1 11. for fifty Men did seek Elijah after his Rapture but found him not on Earth v. 17. And the same Phrase the Apostle useth concerning this our Enoch he was not found Heb. 11.5 Those whom the Lord takes up into Heaven may not be found either on Mountains or in Valleys on Earth God never le ts fall his prey as Birds of prey may sometime do none can pluck them out of his hand John 10.29 Our Enoch was not found that is in his old Estate and thus it is with every Saint who is translated from darkness to light c. He ceases to be what he hath been he is not found in the old Man or in sinful self 't is not he that now lives but Christ that liveth in him Gal. 2.20 for in him that is in his Flesh dwelleth no manner of thing that is good Rom. 7.18 Thus there is the Spiritual Translation of a Christian Col. 1.13 Acts 26.18 as well as the Corporal Translation of Enoch and both are accomplished by that Translating Grace of Faith By Faith Enoch was and so the Christian is Translated Heb. 11.5 yea and after both there is a non inventus a not finding The Mystery of the one putting off Earthly qualities and putting on Heavenly so centring in God is taught in the History of the other Enoch's local Translation The fourth Enquiry is The Ground of All to wit because he was a pleaser of God that is he gave God good content as a Walker with God of which I have spoke before Enoch was a Walker with God though he saw Abel slain for so doing This he did not only by Faith but by a strong Faith yea he Walked with God in despight of the World without distraction from the World and without digression into Vice for he set God always before him and walk'd rancounter to all the World which then wallow'd in wickedness It was then fill'd with Violence and Enoch defended the true Religion from their Violence so he as well as Abel did highly provoke them yet God suffer'd him not to fall into the hands of those Sons
him 1 Cor. 4.3 And hereupon he durst not think either better or worse of himself for the flatterings or slanderings of men Mans day as the Apostle calls it or Judgment is like the Sun which makes the day making uncertain Shadows longer in the Morning but shorter at Noon yet man may not think himself taller or shorter by his Shadow and though Paul had his due praise in all the Churches of Christ yet durst he not be puffed up by their praise no more than dejected by the others dispraise for he knew himself a chosen Vessel yet but an Earthen Vessel that had some Cracks and Flaws in it hence he appeals to the Infallible Tryer to wit God 1 Cor. 4.4.7 2 Cor. 10.18 Well knowing a man may be Man-proof who is not God-proof Thus Peter also did Joh. 21.15.16 17. So then 2. God who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heart-knower Acts 1.24 is the truest Tryer of man who tryed Abraham here Satan can make his Conjecture and man may give his guess yet both be fallible 't is the Royalty of the great God to be only Infallible for he knoweth our thoughts 1 Cor. 3.20 And seeth them while afar off Psal 139.2 Mat. 9.4 He knows what is in man John 2.25 Deus intimior intimo nostro God is more inward with us than we are with our selves as the Gardiner knows what flowers he shall have at the Spring because all the Roots in his Garden are well known of him so God knowing our hearts knows also all the creatures of our hearts Heb. 4.12 13. Every artificer knoweth his own work within as well as without and thence knoweth what his work will do how much more the chief Architect God 2. The Patient or Tryed is twofold also 1. Mens Persons 2. Mens Works both good and bad The third part of the Earth must be Tryed in the Fire as Metals are and pass through it if good Zech. 13.9 Yea all the World at the last day 2 Pet. 3.7.10.12 2 Thes 1.7 8 9. Then shall the persons as well as the works of wicked men be burned but for good men some of their works which are not according to the Pattern in the Mount shall be burnt but their persons shall be saved yet so as by Fire 1 Cor. 3.14 15. Like those persons which escape in a manner naked out of the Fire when the City was burnt saving only some Cash or Jewels but losing all their lumber Thus many prayers which were but the cries of the creature and not the breathings of Gods Spirit and many duties performed only in the form without the power may be lost in that day as no better than so much lumber but before this last day we may not think it strange that we meet with Tryals yea Fiery Tryals in our day as 1 Pet. 4.12 We must not be amazed when brought into a maze as if some new thing had hapned to us for 't is no untrodden path we have many Presidents the great Friends and Favourites of Heaven have passed before us through the Fire Psal 66 12. Isa 31.9 Mal. 3.2 Lam. 1.13 1 Pet. 1.7 And in the ten Persecutions and ever since to the Marian days and we have many Prophecies that we shall be tryed by Fire 1 Cor. 3. ●3 c. I will bring saith God the third part through the Fire Zech. 13.9 Few they were but not faultless They must therefore pass through the Fire that there they may be purged and leave their dreggs and dross behind them what Fire is to Gold the File to Iron the Fan to Wheat the Sope to Cloaths and Salt to Flesh that is Tribulation when sanctified to a gracious Soul yet this is our comfort he goeth with them into the Fire as Dan. 3.28 and plucks them out as Brands out of the Fire Zech. 3.3 He carries them through Fire and Water Isa 43.2 and Psal 66.12 This is all the hurt he doth them 't is not to ruine but to refine them to hide pride from them Job 33.19 c. God hereby divides the sin which he hateth from the Son which he loveth for by this the iniquity of Jacob is purged and this is all the Fruit the taking away of their sin which they may very well spare and never hurt themselves Isa 27.9 That when God hath tryed them they may come out as Gold Job 23.10 Upon this account Gods people fall into many Temptations Jam. 1.2 They fall they go not gradually into them Step by Step but are precipitated hurryed headlong and plunged into them not into one of them or a few of them but into manifold Temptations Alas what may befal us or what Tryals yea what Fiery Tryals we may fall into we know not God may prove us yet to do us good at the latter end Deut. 8.16 The good Lord make us Faithful to Death Rev. 2.10 3. The means whereby God Tryeth Man are fourfold 1 By Prosperity which oft proves too strong Wine for Weak Brains Prov. 1.32 Destroying fools Such as God suffers to prosper in their sin an heavy Judgment this is call'd Gods laying a stumbling block before them Ezek. 3.20 And because the wicked have not changes therefore they fear not God Psal 55.19 Thus God proved Israel by prosperity Deut. 8.2 And when Jesurun waxed fat he kicked against God Deut. 32.15 As Pliny saith of the young Asses Colt pullus lacte materno saturatus matrem suis Regratulatur calcibus When filled with its Dams Milk gives her a kick with his heels to let her know he is but an Ass in his unkind regratulations Alas the most fatted Cattel are but most fitted for the Shambles whereas good men learn with Paul to abound and to be in want Phil. 4.11 And 't was David's great honour that the prosperity of a Court life while he was a courtier in quelling Sauls Phrenzy by his exquisite Musick did not put his mouth out of tast for his retired simplicity he could go from the Court to his Sheepfold until Goliah came to defie the God of Israel 'T is a good heart that frames to all conditions See more of this in my Hearts Treachery or Mirror Chap. 7. 2. By Adversity behold I will melt them and try them Jer. 9.7 'T is a Metaphor taken from Metalists God will cast them into the fiery crucibles of affliction he is the Master Founder and will melt away their dross c. Their Dilecta Delicta or Darling sins if they be not Reprobate Silver Jer. 6.30 Impurgeable Inexpiable and Incorrigible then all 's consumed and nothing remaineth Deus est sapiens nummularius nummum fictum non recipiet saith Bernard God is too wise a money-changer and will not be put off with counterfeit Coin that Metal which will not abide the Fire is Refuse and Reprobate as fire tryeth the Truth of Metals so do Battels the courage of Souldiers Suitable to this is the saying of Paul to Timothy Thou therefore endure hardness as
as he tempted David to for he had Saul fast to him in the state of sin and where he can but secure with the Bonds of iniquity a sinful state he matters not and indeed there is no need for sinful Actions Men in that state will tempt themselves they need not Satan for a Tempter 't was otherwise with David escaped out of the horrible Pit of that sinful state Psal 40.2 and seeing Satan cannot hinder him from Heaven he will hurt him all he can in his way he will send him halting thither as Jacob did to Canaan by tempting him to sinful Actions and so indeed he did 2 Sam. 12.4 where the Tempter is the Traveller a great Traveller is he Job 1.7 and Mat. 12.43 and 1 Chron. 21.1 And thus also such heinous Incest was committed in the Church of Corinth as was hardly heard of among the Heathen 1 Cor. 5.1 and that for the Reason abovesaid 'T is said Israel or Jacob heard of this heinous act Gen. 35.22 and no doubt but to the great saddening of his gracious Soul The Greek Version addeth to Israel heard it and it appeared evil in his sight but the Hebrew hath nothing save Vaishmang Ishrael Israel heard yet an empty space is left at the end of the Line with this mark O to move consideration which intimates in our Language and Letters that this sad disaster made Jacob cry O or Oh bad and woe is me Undoubtedly that pause in the Original doth shew Jacob's great astonishment at such sad Tydings Jacob had something to qualifie his former calamities as that 1. Of Dinah's deflouring which was indeed a great grief to him but so much the less as she was more Innocent seeing as Gods Charity doth judge Deut. 22.25 26 27. she was abused by force But this Incest of Reuben and Bilhah was a sin of greater grief to him because of greater guilt in them insomuch as 't is probable both parties were consenting to the sin this therefore must be of greater grief to the Father not yet well waded out of the Salt Water of his late loss of Rachel and of greater shame to the whole Family than the Rape of his Daughter could be And 2. As to the Death of his dear Wife Jacob had something to allay his sorrow in that For 1. There was indeed a Cross in it but there was as we may well enough suppose no Sin in is 2. Though great sorrow might seize upon Jacob's Soul for this sad loss yet his heavy Heart had here undoubtedly an happy vent Expletur Lachrymis egeriturque dolor As Hinds by calving so do men by weeping cast out their sorrows Job 39.3 God gave no such prohibition to Jacob as he did after to Ezeckiel yea neither shalt thou mourn or weep for the Death of thy Dear Wife Ezek. 24.16 which might he have done might have been of some ease and relief to him Ovid saith Est quaedam flere voluptas Jacob in bewailing his dead Consort had some allay of his sadness if not as the Poet saith some pleasure therein but we find that upon this sad disaster of Incest Jacob's sorrows were suffocated 't was upon hearing of it a silent sorrow he heard and held his peace Curae leves loquuntur ingentes stupent His sorrows were too great to be uttered either at his Mouth or Eyes the sad tidings amazed him into a silence and stupefaction 3. As Jacob gave his Dead Rachel his Tears so he gave her a Tomb both which are the dues of the Dead and as Buntingus saith a most stately Tomb made of Twelve Marble Stones not below the Mausolean Monuments or the Egyptian Pyramids which is more than we read was done either for Sarah or Rebekah c. this might give some satisfaction to Jacob's sorrow Besides 4. The recording of Rachels Death in the Sacred Scripture which was an Honour not vouchsafed either to Rebekah Jacob's Mother or to Leah his Wife the Deaths whereof we find not expressed in that Divine Register now may it be but granted that Jacob by his Prophetick Spirit foresaw both that the latter would be omitted in the Holy writ and yet the former would be committed to record therein for a perpetual reverend remembrance of his right dear Rachel This also might be another sweet alleviation of his great grief for her Death and this might somewhat dulcify his Sorrows but the registring of Reuben's Incest therein would be a lasting Remembrancer of that grievous affliction that happen'd to him in his own house and therefore this Calamity caused Jacob to grieve more greatly than he did for the loss of Rachel This notorious and filthy fact of Reuben being Jacobs Eldest Son from whom therefore he expected his first and his best comfort whereof he desired a double portion from him as he reserved a double portion for him was committed at Migdal-Edar which in the Hebrew signifies the Tower of the Flock which was the Bethlemites Watch-Tower for their Shepherds watching their Flocks feeding upon the Fat Pastures there and where the Angel appeared to the Shepherds long after this to tell them the glad tidings of Jacob's Shilo's Birth at this very Bethlehem about a thousand paces or a Mile from this Tower Luke 2.8 9. the former being as a Type and Prophesie of this latter Here it was that as the Shepherds watched for the safety and good of their Flocks so Satan watched for mischief and evil to Jacob's Family At this very Tower it was that the Devil that roaring Lion walkt about to devour the very Bell-weather dux gregis ipse caper of Jacob's Humane Flock his Son and Heir 1 Pet. 5.8 where he finding Reuben a warm youth at the least now twenty two years old flushes him up into a Flame of Lusting after his Fathers Wife for so is Bilhah called Gen. 37.2 and hurries him headlong to uncover his Fathers Nakedness Levit. 18.7 which though it be but a single Act yet is a double sin as it is a guilty offence against Father and Mother which two are one Flesh and so unnatural an evil as is scarce heard on among the Heathen 1 Cor. 5.1 This was a foul fault in so fair a Family then the fairest excepting his Fathers of all Families in the World which did befal this Holy Patriarch through the Tempters malice to discredit Religion and to scandalize the Church of God This therefore calls loud upon all Religious Families to a due Christian watchfulness against this watchful Adversary lest the Devil do evil to them and cause such evil to be done in them as may cause the Name of God to be Blasphemed amongst the Gentiles as he did in Jacob's here and after in David's Family 2 Sam. 12.14 We may not therefore be secure but as we are admonished hereby walk humbly in the fear of God and watch heartily against the Devils Tentations and fleshly Corruptions lest Folly be found acted in Israel as here The Hebrews indeed the better to Patronize
the purity of their own Original Parentage do palliate this eldest of their twelve Patriarchs Act saying Reuben did only cast out Bilhah's Bed out of Rachel's Tent where Jacob had placed it after Rachel's death but did not commit that shameful sin Answer 1. The word Vajisheab is rightly rendred concubuit he lay with her as 't is sensed in all other places of Scripture so that he cast himself rather into her Bed than cast it out of the Tent It must be granted that this abominable Act did cast Bilhah out of Jacob's Bed from whom he probably abstained ever after this Defilement as David did from his Defiled Concubines 2 Sam. 16.22 Answer 2. This Jewish Apology for their first Ancestor Reuben of their Twelve Tribes is the more improbable because Jacob's grief was so great at it as could not be expressed by words or signs as Ezek. 24.17 23. There is a Mourning that is smother'd within where no Expression thereof is visible without the Heart may bleed inwardly when neither the Mouth moans nor the Eyes weep outwardly as the Prophet Ezekiel so this Patriarch Jacob were no Stoicks but were both of them sensible of what they suffered yet their sorrows were too sad and big for these outward signs to utter as the Prophet was bid to be silent Hebr and forbid to cry Ezek 24.17 So this Patriarch held his peace when he heard of this Act though it was according as the Greek Version addeth evil in his sight so that his silent sorrow which is the sorest and saddest of all sorts of sorrows did plainly proclaim it to be a most sinful and filthy Fact Answ 3. This is yet made more manifest by the greatness of Jacob's Anger at this Act as well as Grief or Sorrow for it Though as some say Jacob dissembled his Displeasure for a season because Reuben was a fierce and furious Young man so might revenge himself of his old Father had he doom'd him to be punish'd for it as a Judge in a Court of Justice as Simeon and Levi had done to the Deflowrer of their own Sister Dinah c. therefore might he refrain or restrain his ill resentment of Reuben's capital Crime at present for fear of some greater mischief or it was pass'd over by the old Patriarch without any Punishment inflicted upon his sinning Son because as others imagine he saw the just hand of God in it to punish himself for his unlawful Polygamy Jacob reads his own Sin upon this Punishment God chastiz'd him with in the Sin of his Son therefore is the Punishment so like the Sin sometimes that a man may manifestly reflect saying Such a Sin was the Mother of such a Misery This made Jacob as it did David Dumb both as to his Deploration and Indignation and opened not his Month because God's Hand was in it Psal 39.9 However whether the Suspension of both those Patriarchs Passions was from the former or the latter Reason or from both yet may it probably enough be supposed ' that the good Father did most severely chide his bad Son for this foul Fact so Jacob did Judge it otherwise he would not when he had a fairer and fitter opportunity have dealt with that severity against this Son for this sin in his last Legacy and Patriarchal Testament Gen. 49.3 4. where he takes the forfeiture of his Birth-right by this Fact and disinherits him of all the Privileges thereof giving from him the Dignity 1. Of the Scepter to Judah 2. Of the Mitre to Levi to whom was devolved the Priesthood that belong'd to the first born and the double Portion of Inheritance to Joseph whose two Sons made two Tribes and that the greatest in Israel 1 Chron. 5.1.2 Hence therefore is this necessary consequence that this Fact of Reuben was not what the Hebrews feign a bare casting out of Bilhahs Bed out of Rachels Tent c. Had this been all that was done by Reuben that Son of seeing as his Name signifies had never been cast out of both the Dignity and double Portion due to the first-born Gen. 49.3 Deut. 27.17 by this Dying Patriarch And hence also Note 1. Reuben by his Repentance found Reception with God and was not rejected of God though thus polluted by Sin yea by such a Sin for which that Incestuous Member of the Corinthian-Church was solemnly Excommunicated 1 Cor. 5.1 c. yet Reuben repenting Gen. 37.30 is not only reckon'd after as a Patriarch Gen. 35.23 1 Chron. 5. c. but also is highly Flonoured Exod. 28.28.21.29 and Rev. 21.12 God is not off and on with his Elect. Their Badness alters not his Goodness 2. Note hence The Jews may not boast of the Merit of their Progenitors their Adoption is by Grace not by Debt Repentance restor'd them to Gods favour and so it may us Mercy not Merit gives both Penitence and Acceptance and God's Election cannot be interrupted in its course by any Sins of the Elect. 3. Note hence when scandalous Sins come to be committed in Religious Families we should as Jacob did here rather cover them with silent sorrow than publish them in Gath 2 Sam. 1.20 or disclose them with publick Reproach both to the scandal of the weak and to the scorn of the wicked yea to the dismal Detriment of Religion it self as if it could not be good because some that profess it do things which are bad yea so bad as not fit to be named 1 Cor. 5.1 This latter is cursed work Gen. 9.22.25 the former blessed v. 23.26 The Fifth Calamity that came upon Jacob after his Return to Canaan was the Death of his Dear Father Israel which Moses mentions with the Death of Deborah his Nurse and of Rachel his Wife all three special Friends Jacob Buries in Chap. 35. v. 8.19 and 29. Crosses as they are there reckoned come thick and threefold as we say upon him Though indeed Isaac's Death is there described only by a Prolepsis or in a way of Anticipation that Moses might make an entire and compleat Narrative of Jacob's History and not be compell'd to interrupt it by interlacing the History of Joseph as he pass'd along in it and pursued it to the end For upon a just Calculation and a right Computation of Time it appears that Isaac liveth 12 Years after his Grandchild Joseph was sold into Egypt though that be set down after his Grandfather's Death which was so long before yet Isaac's Death is related Gen. 35.29 and Joseph's Selling not till Gen. 37.36 when he was at 17 years old v. 2. then his Father Jacob was 108. who was born in Isaac's 60th year Gen. 25.26 and Joseph was 30 years old when he stood before Pharaoh Gen. 41.46 which was 13 years after he was Sold into Egypt so long his Service and Imprisonment lasted now when Joseph's Father Jacob was 108. his Grandfather Isaac must be 168. at the time of Joseph's Sale which must be about 13 years before Isaac's Death because 't is said
commodious place for pasture this is the more probable because it was the practice of the Patriarchs to seek out pastures for their Flocks till they found those that were fat pastures and good according to 1 Chron. 4.39 40. where these Patriarchs are spoke of v. 1. and 24. and ch 5.1 c. but when Reuben was gone saith he Judah espying those Arabian Merchants making towards them counsell'd his Brethren to sell Joseph to those Arabians assuring them that Joseph would die by that means and it would be better he should die among Strange●● afar off than among them in the midst of his Brethren who would hereby be acquitted from having any actual Hand in his Death This counsel of Judah which signifies praise God all his Brethren praised be God who ordered and over ruled all these matters unanimously commended and consented to it hereupon Joseph was drawn out of the Pit and Sold to those Merchants and hereby Judah deliver'd his Brother from this latter danger and death as Reuben had done from the former But when Reuben returned from seeking pasture being resolved to rescue Joseph without his Brethrens knowledge came by Night unto the Pit as Josephus saith and call'd upon Joseph with a loud voice but having no Answer he then thought that they had slain him in his absence whereupon he sadly bewail'd himself and reproved them with a most rigorous reprimand but understanding what they had done he was then satisfied Judah's Arguments prevailed with him as they had done before he return'd with the rest of his Brethren The sense of whose Arguments in the general was this Judah motions a middle way betwixt the two mischiefs that perplexed them and proposeth Gen. 37.26 27. Saying to them If you will sell him you not only free your selves from Blood-guiltiness whether Actually by Slaughter or Accessorily by Famine but you will get to your selves good gain in the price of him neither would this be all your advantage for besides by this means you will withdraw him from our Father to whom he did usually accuse us and with whom he was better beloved and more made of than us all yet further hereby we shall make him become a real Slave to those that Buy him and so disappoint his Dream'd of Dominion But more particularly observe here 1. That at this time of Judah's interposing for Joseph his Brethren were already resolved by Reuben's Reasons which no doubt God put him upon for Joseph's good not to ruine him with their own Outragious and Murdering Hands but to permit only his pining away and perishing in the Pit 2. Judah was here moved by the Spirit of God to deliver Joseph from this second Death as Reuben was to disappoint the first whereby he became so far inlightened as to account his casting Joseph into the Pit to which Reuben advised would be no better should they let him lye there but a slaying of him themselves 3. This excellent Illumination in Judah that dislik'd to be an Accessory in evil as well as principal was no thorough saving Humiliation which was wrought afterwards in Egypt by Joseph's roughness Gen. 42.7 21 22. and 43.8 9 18. and 44.13 16 to 34. and 45.1 c. for he still retained some hatred against his Brother Joseph insomuch as he gave Counsel to make a Bond-slave of his Brother which was as bad as Death If bare Banishment be as Lawyers term it a civil Death how much more is it when 't is a Banishment into Bondage seeing Liberty is oft preferr'd above Life so that Judah in proposing his Brother Joseph's perpetual Slavery acted more like one of the Devils Patriarchs as Cain is call'd by Tertullian for Hating and Murdering his Brother Abel than one of Gods Though Judah had here some Passion of Love and Compassion towards Joseph in designing to deliver him yet in Selling him as a Slave there was at least a pang and an Act if not an habit of hatred And according to the Apostles Rule he that hateth his Brother is not of God but of the Devil 1 John 3.10 and is not translated from death to life ver 14. Nay in downright terms is but a Murderer ver 15. And how far Judah's motion to sell him which indeed was better than to slay him was remotely at least a Murdering motion seeing this Selling him was but a passing over their power to put Joseph to Death into the Hands of those Arabians who might with more Colour of right have Murder'd him as their Slave than they might do as their Brother because they being Barbarians no better Behaviour could be expected from them than what was Barbarous toward their Bond slaves especially considering what God himself allow'd of among his own Israel during the time of their Rudeness and Pedagogy to wit If a Master corrected his Servant whom he bought so cruelly that he died upon it within a day the Master was not to be punish'd for his death and the reason is rendred because he was his Money Exod. 21.21 so the loss of his Servant being the loss of his Silver seem'd a sufficient punishment which he had inflicted upon himself though in truth that Servant did not owe his Life but only his Labour to his Master and the loss of his Life is not only the loss of a Servant to his Master but also the loss of a Member to the Body Politick or Commonwealth Yet Israel had this Divine allowance of Austerity towards such Bond-slaves out of those Nations which were decreed to be destroyed Deut. 7.2 and it need not to be doubted that those Arabians being Barbarians would be as austere and boisterous upon an Hebrew Bond-slave seeing he as Joseph here was their Money as Hebrew Masters might be in the like case to Canaanitish Captives all which evil Judah's even good motion expos'd Joseph unto yet this he ought not to have done nor his Brethren have consented to the doing of it seeing Joseph was their Brother to whom they all did owe Brotherly Love and their own Flesh from which they should not have hid themselves Isa 58.7 therefore better things were expected from them than to expose their own Brother and their own Flesh to the barbarous usage of those Blind and therefore Bloody Barbarians from whom no good no kindness nothing but a morose Carriage could be expected Their poor Brother who was of the same Nature yea and had the same Father in Nativity who was also capable of the same Grace and Glory with themselves and who had no way been injurious to any of their Persons save only to their sins Gen. 37.2 yet did they shut up their Bowels of Compassion towards this Joseph their Brother in his necessity and extremity for which they are deemed and doomed as Murderers l John 3.15 16 17. neither drawing out their inward Souls Isa 58.10 nor their outward Succours of this Worlds good to him but Murder'd him in their Hearts while they wish'd him out of the World when
nourishment for nourishment to the utmost penny the sweetest years the good old Patriarch had ever seen And this is the more Remarkable that Gods grant of addition to Jacob's Life was two years more than that granted to Hezekiah for that was only for fifteen years 2 Kings 20.6 but this to Jacob was for seventeen Whereas we are wont to reckon seven years for the Life of a Man as God granted more by one year than two lives to Hezekiah so he added to Jacob more than two lives even three years which is almost half of a third life and what it wanted in quantity or number it was supplied in quality or sweetness so God out-bade his hopes desires and deserts as he oft doth ours Gen. 48.11 I had not thought to see thy Face and now I see thy Seed too thus God shews us things not hoped for Isa 64.2 The third Remark is Jacob took care for his Burial and the place of it before his Sickness being sensible of some Summons to Death by the decay of Nature and learning to die daily as 1 Cor. 15.31 yet will not be Buried in Egypt though the Earth be the Lords and the fulness of it Psal 24.1 and though he was then conveniently seated there with his whole Family but Requests he might be Buried in Canaan not from any Superstitious conceit that one Countrey is holier than another and nearer Heaven but upon far graver grounds As 1. To testifie his Faith concerning the promised Land a Type of Heaven and the Doctrine of the Resurrection 2. To confirm his Family in the same Faith that they might live as Strangers in Egypt weaned from its Pleasures and Treasures and wait for their return to Canaan which God had promis'd to give them and which he though dead would not relinquish his right in lest he should seem to distrust God though yet he saw it not fulfilled 3. To declare his love to his Godly Ancestors above all vain Idolaters these latter Jacob never loved while living and therefore will not lye among them when dead But the former he judg'd it his Felicity to have Fellowship with both in Life and Death 4. Because Canaan not Egypt was the Countrey Christ the Worlds Redeemer was to lead his Life receive his Death be raised therein and from thence to Ascend into Heaven Jacob therefore desir'd to be Buried there where the Worlds Redemption was to be transacted where Christ must die and rise again that he might at length rise again with him Hence some of the Antients say that this Jacob and the other Patriarchs did Bodily Rise again with Christ because 't is said Mat. 27.52 53. The Graves were opened and many Bodies of Saints which slept arose c. to wit those Holy Patriarchs who before were kept bound in their Sepulchers till the very Heart-strings of Death now swallow'd up in Victory by Life Essential were quite broken even by the Death and Resurrection of the Lord of Life then were they inlarged to become Witnesses and Attendants of Christs Resurrection and who appearing were known to many in the City as Moses and Elias were known to the three Apostles in the Mount at Christs Transfiguration either by a special Revelation or by that Coelestial Illumination which will be much more in Heaven as Adam knew Eve in his state of Innocency Gen. 2.23 or lastly by the Familiar Conference wherein they might learn who they were betwixt Christ and them Mat. 17.3 But Modern Authors say they were such as were lately dead who were well remembred by those that were living supposed to be Simeon the Just Anna the Prophetess Zacharias Lazarus and others lately dead whose Bodies were not yet consumed as those of the Patriarchs were not only Buried so long before but also so far off as Makpelah Hebr. the double Cave was thirty Miles from Jerusalem We shall therefore leave it undecided whether Jacob requested to lye in that Land because he hoped as Lyranus affirms to be one of those which should Rise out of his Grave at Christs Resurrection and to accompany him in his Ascension into Heaven this seems something too curious though it seem more comely and more glorious both to the Patriarchs and to Christ The Jews add a fifth Reason why Jacob would not be Buried in Egypt because he foresaw the Dust of Egypt would be turned into Lice c. When Jacob did thus give order for his Burial Swearing his Son Joseph to observe the place of it this he did not as if he distrusted Jeseph's naked Promise but he requires an Oath Gen. 47.31 Because 1. He would have them all know it was no trifle he required but a weighty matter and of great moment for fortifying his Families Faith and for obliging them more firmly to expect their Return 2. That Jacob might die in full satisfaction and assurance that this thing he desired would be faithfully done knowing that the Sanction of a Sacred Oath would better outweigh opposition than a bare Promise 3. That Joseph might do it with less offence and envy to the King and his Courtiers for the carrying away of Jacob's Corps did seem to carry a kind of contempt with it The Egyptians might well object Is our Land good enough for you to live in while alive and is it too bad for you to lye in when dead Hereupon Joseph might have been otherwise perswaded and over-ruled by Pharaoh But this Oath answer'd all contrary objections for they that liked not to have their Land under-valued yet allowed that Joseph's holy Oath should be religiously observed therefore Joseph to procure this grant of the King urgeth this Oath which he made to his Father Gen. 50.6 with 4 5. ☞ Whence we learn that Oaths are both lawful and needful for Men are mutable even betwixt these two Holy Patriarchs the Son must be bound by an Oath to the Father though Joseph might otherwise have fulfilled Jacob's will yet was it not judg'd amiss to lay this Sacred Obligation upon him which was so reverenc'd among Heathens How may this condemn Christians both such as allow no Swearing at all though Paul call it the end of strife Heb. 6.16 and especially such as make no Conscience to keep Oaths when Sworn but Sport with them as Children do with their slips or as Monkeys with their Collars who slip them on for their Masters pleasure but off for their own both play at fast and loose according to their liking Pharaoh and the Egyptians will rise up in judgment against such Jesuitical Mock-Christians and God himself will in time take his vengeance upon them Yea and how Pharaoh's approving Joseph's Filial respect and obedience to his Fathers will condemneth such graceless Children who frequently contemn the Authority of their Parents and tear in pieces their last Wills and Testaments 'T is a notorious shame that so many Nominal Christians should be so far out-done by those poor Blind Heathens who had a reverence both for
piety to Parents and the Bond of an Oath as things prevalent with God proh pudor Oh shame to us After Jacob had Covenanted with Joseph about the place of his Burial that Distemper which Summon'd him to order it grew stronger upon his old decaying Body which had been much worn and weakned by many sore Travels and long toilsom Troubles Gen. 48.1 It was told Joseph Behold thy Father is sick which the Septuagint expresseth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 turbatur to shew how he had been toiled and turmoiled with many Crosses Calamities and Tryals all his Life all which this last fatal sickness was about to put an end to he became sick unto Death and therefore he prepareth for it before it came by making his Last Will and Testament which is Twofold 1. He constitutes whom he would have to be his Heirs in Gen. 48. 2. He confers his Patriarchal Blessing upon all his twelve Sons Gen. 49. This in the General From which we have these Remarkable Inferences 1. Gods love and Mans sickness may well consist together Jacob is sick and yet it was Jacob hath God loved Mal. 1.2 and Rom. 9.13 So Lazarus is sick yet Christ had this word sent him Behold he whom thou lovest is sick John 11.3 Augustine asketh Si Amatur quomodò Infirmatur If he be loved of God and of Christ how can he be laid down upon a Bed of Sickness Oh well enough may we say Afflictions are Christ's love-Tokens He saith As many as I love I rebuke and chasten Rev. 3.19 Prov. 3.12 Hebr. 12.6 Such as escape Affliction may well question their Adoption God had one Son Sine flagitio without Corruption but none Sine flagello without Correction The ground is displeased love and the End is fuller Embracements as here 2. God exempts not his Saints from Sickness nor from Death Though they be dead to sin Rom. 6.2 and are redeemed from Death Hos 13.14 yet not from Sickness unto Death which is as God's Chariot wherein he fetcheth his Children home to himself as Joseph did for Jacob Gen. 45.27 so God did in this Sickness send for him that they may live and reign with him in free Embracements and full Enjoyments in a better world 't is necessary that this tottering Tabernacle of Clay should molder down that a better House may be Erected for this do we groan earnestly 2 Cor. 5.1 2 c. that when the Earthly House is dissolved or taken down we may have an Heavenly one and so be freed from our back-burdens of Sin and Misery 3. Some Saints die soon and suddenly without much Sickness to usher in Death It was no more with Moses but only Go up and Die Deut. 31.49.50 He died Hebr. Gnal-pi Jehovah At the mouth of the Lord which we read According to the word of the Lord Deut. 34.5 as if God had taken away his life with a real sign of his love kill'd him with a Kiss and suck'd his Soul our of his Body into himself in a friendly Salutation This was in a manner equivalent to Righteous Elijah's Translation which two a blessed couple conferr'd with Christ upon Mount Tabor at his Transfiguration Matth. 17.3 c. and to that of Enoch's also Other Saints die of a long and lingring Sickness as did Jacob here and Elisha after 2 King 13.14 the best are subject to Sickness and Death and before they can come to the very Gates of Death they oft pass through a strait long flabby Lane of a lingring Sickness and all this in Mercy that they may become more weaned from the World better prepared for their Death Desirous to be dissolved to be with Christ and that they may have a more easie Departure out of the world for as a Member the more it is mortified the better is its cutting off endured so when the Body is weakned and wasted with much Sickness natural strength being worn away cannot make Resistence such die more easily The Divine Contemplation of Dr. Hall hereupon is richly worth Recording Happy is the man saith he who after due Preparation is passed through the Gates of Death ere he be aware and Happy is the Man who by the holy use of long Sickness is taught to see the Gates of Death afar off and addresseth for a resolute passage The one dies like Enoch and Elijah the other like Jacob and Elishah both Blessedly To which I add Some are hurried away to Heaven in a fiery Chariot of an Acute Feaver all on a sudden with the former others lye long under Chronical Diseases dying as it were by Inches as those that are Consumptive or be Famish'd with the latter Instances Now come we to the former part of Jacob's Last Will and Testament relating particularly to Joseph and his two Sons This Godly Patriarch being now sensible that the Sentence of Death was writ upon him as 2 Cor. 1.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Death's Donunciation he felt in himself well understood the double Duty of a Dying Man 1. To set his Heart in order 2. To set his house in order The former he had done already and now he addresseth himself to accomplish the latter in declaring the first part of his Will which was thus occasion'd No sooner did Joseph hear of his Father's fatal Sickness but he like a dutiful Son not lingring till he was sent for lays by all his Publick Affairs and immediately hastens to Visit his Dearest Parent not only to pay his last Respects and perform his last Offices of Piety to him but also to receive his Father's last Blessing which he preferr'd above all the Wealth of Egypt and all the Gold of Ophir from him And he carries with him his two Sons that they also might partake of the Patriarchal Blessing be entred by their Grandfather into the Catalogue of the Church and be bette● Confirmed in the Doctrine and Practice of true Piety 1. NB. This Practice is a Pattern to all Children of Godly Parents they should be more sollicitous to Inherit their Parents Graces than their Goods Dying Jacob was reviv'd at his Dear Joseph's approach the sight of him did corroborate his weak and comfort his sick Soul besides a Prophetick Spirit came upon him and did transport him above his decaying and dying Flesh Jacob reverently entertains Joseph as he was a Prince so begins his Oration to him Gen. 48.1 2 3. Reading a Divinity-Lecture out of his Kalendar and Catalogue of all God's gracious dealings with him and merciful Dispensations to him which he had carefully kept recounting and reckoning them up not by the Lump or by Whole-sale as it were but by Parcels and Particulars 2. NB. So ought every true Son and Daughter of Jacob to do Thus David did Psal 9.1 Shewing forth or Heb. Ciphering one by one all the marvellous Mercies of God towards him This Jacob did here v. 3 4 c. to testifie in what great Peace and Recumbency or Acquiescence in God's Promises he died 3. NB.
is Omni-present The Second Mystery in the History is as Jacob adopted Joseph's Children saying They shall be mine v. 5. and my Name shall be upon them v. 16. In like sort God adopteth all whom our Joseph our Jesus presents and represents as his Dear Children saying I will be a Father to them and they shall be my Sons and Daughters 2 Cor. 6.18 This is call'd a Royalty or Prerogative Joh. 1.12 which Nonnus Paraphraseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stiling it Heavenly Honour such as is amazing 1 Joh. 3.1 and good reason that worthless worms are hereby made higher than earthly Kings Psal 89.27 Thus also the Name of God and of Christ is put upon all his adopted Children hence they are call'd Godly and Christians They are call'd by his Name 2 Chron. 7.14 Jer. 14.9 Deut. 28.10 They are married to Christ Rom. 7.4 so have their husbands Name put upon them Isa 4.1 as Solomon's Wife was call'd the Shulamite Cant. 6.13 of Shalom Peace from whence was his Name Oh that we could take hold of the Skirt of that Jew Jehovah our Emanuel Zech. 8.23 saying Let us be call'd by thy Name to take away our Reproach Isa 4.1 Isa 63.19 Jer. 15.16 Deut. 28.10 would we but avouch the Lord for our God he would surely avouch us for his adopted Children Deut. 26.17 18. we should say to Christ as that Roman Lady said to her Husband Ubi tu Caius ibi ego Caia I will not only bear thy Name but will also live in thy Presence and thou shalt be a Covering of Eyes to me as Gen. 20.16 I will not be sick of a Pleurisie seeking any more than thy self I will be satisfied with thy favour Deut. 33.23 Psal 65.4 when thou tellest me where thou feedest Cant. 1.7 8. I will feed and lye down with thee Psal 23.1 2 3 4 5 6. There is a Cornu-Copia all good with thee The Third Mystery in this History is There may be Difference of Opinion for a time betwixt the Holiest Persons and Relations as betwixt Jacob and Joseph here The Father was contradicted by the Son when he saw him cross his hands to lay his right hand upon his younger Son as about to convey the strongest and most honourable Blessing by this sign of the stronger and more honourable Hand upon Ephraim Though Jacob guided his hands wittingly and wisely Gen. 48.14 yet this posture displeased Joseph saying not so my Father v. 17 18. suspecting it to be some Mistake of his Father from the Dimness of his Eyes v. 10 11. which might disenable him to discern the Elder from the Younger so though he was well pleas'd with his Father's Blessing yet being displeased with his symbolical Posture he endeavours to correct the supposed Error of his Fathers hands with his own whereby he run into a real and worse Error himself Though the Eyes of Jacob's Head were Darkened yet those of his Heart and Mind were inlightned with a Prophetick Spirit whereby he understood God's Mind more than Joseph did and therefore he refused both his Correction and Direction saying I know my Son I know v. 19. Thus we see here is a pair of Holy Prophets the Father and the Son divided and in contrary Disputes yet not about the Substance of the Blessing but about the Ceremonies and Circumstances of it wonder not then that Differences do happen now in the True Church and the Doctors thereof be oft Divided It ever hath been so as Here before Christ and as afterward after Christ Gal. 2.11 and Act. 15.39 It will be so for ever But mark the Differences are only in Points less Material and such as concern not the Foundation This Difference betwixt Jacob and Joseph was about a Matter of Ceremony Joseph though a great Prophet and Diviner insisted too much upon the Ceremonious part would have the right hand imposed on the elder Son and so falls into a double failure 1. In binding God's Grace to the Priority of Nature 2. In distiking the Divine Motion of Jacob's Prophetick Mind which thus guided his hand Thus this mighty Man of God who could before Divine all things now knoweth not that the workings of Grace are not according to the Order of Nature and that Divine Blessings go not by a Natural and Carnal Seniority but by a Spiritual and Eternal Election Rom. 9.7 8 11 12. Joseph saw not this now for God reveals not all things at all times to his Prophets as before NB. The quarrel about Ceremonies is Ancient even in Father Jacob's days 't was also in the very Cradle of the Christian Church Col. 2.8 c. Soon after what coil was about Easter-keeping even to Blows and Blood Augustine in the Fourth Century complains hereof worse far when Antichrist rose then Formality are up the Reality of God's Worship as Pharaoh's lean Kine did the fat so down to 'twixt Luther and Calvin c. The Heart-burnings 'twixt Ridley and Hooper about Cap and Surplice was ended in Body-burnings in the Marian Days Peter Martyr advised Queen Elizabeth not to carry the Gospel upon the Cart of needless Ceremonies Some call them Innocent but oh how mischievous have they ever been in separating chief Friends as Jacob and Joseph here and many more ever since the Lord stand up and step in to stem the Tide and stop the Torrent of such Quarrels in our own Times The Second Part of Jacob's Last Will differ'd from the First For 1. The first was private few persons probably being present at its making but this second was more Solemn and Publick being his last farewel to the World All his Sons must then be call'd together who at that time lived in distinct Places and Families 2. The former Will He made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when he was about to Die Hebr. 11.21 but this latter was made when he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word used v. 22. to express Joseph's being at the very point of Death So Jacob in Gen. 49. had just finish'd his course as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies and had finish'd the work God gave him to do in the World Joh. 17.4 after the first part Jacob said Behold I die Gen. 48.21 but after this second he died indeed he immediately gather'd up his feet and gave up the Ghost Gen. 49.33 3. The first concern'd only Joseph and his two Sons begot by him upon the Body of his Egyptian Wife 'T is somewhere said in Scripture that Jacob's Sons were of Cham which cannot be meant of his Twelve Sons for they were born to him before he came into Egypt but it must have Reference to those two whom he adopted there to be as much his proper Children as Reuben and Simeon Gen. 48.5 Now Joseph marrying an Egyptian Woman by whom he had those two Sons They were on the Mothers side the Sons of Cham so Jacob's Sons in this sense are said to be of Cham. Besides Judah also married the Daughter of Suah a Canaanitess Gen.
envied the vast numbers and multitude of Israel and would therefore have them cursed that thereby they might by his hands be diminished Numb 22.3 5 6. but Balaam here is over-ruled by Almighty God and constrained by force to utter a blessing for their farther Increase c. The fifth Remark is Yea Balaam is forced to pronounce a greater blessing upon Israel here ver 10. not only as they were a People happy in this life both for multitude and safety but also in their death too as they were a righteous People whose Righreousness should deliver them from the Curse of death Prov. 11.4 and not be killed by it as Jezebel's Children were Rev. 2.24 because the Israel of God have a Righteousness which is by Faith in Christ Phil. 3.9 therefore they shall not die as the wicked do whose expectation then perisheth Prov. 11.7 and their Hope upon a dying Bed is but as giving up the Ghost which is but cold comfort Job 11.20 The sixth Remark is As bad as this Soothsayer Balaam was yet was he not so bad as those brain-sick Notionists that dare deny the Immortality of the Soul of Man for herein he is Orthodox and not Heterodox in pronouncing the different state of the righteous and of the wicked after death Hereupon he prays Let me die the death of the Righteous c. ver 10. which would have been altogether a vain and superfluous Request had he believed that the Soul died with the Body if so the death of the righteous could not be better nor more desirable than the death of the wicked and the last End of the latter would be as good as the former The seventh Remark is Even wicked men may desire to die the death of the righteous tho' they never endeavour to live the life of the righteous Thus Balaam did as many do desire the End without the Means whereas the Means are ordained of God as well as the End Act. 13.48 and ought not nay cannot be separated There must be Holiness before there can be Happiness as Heb. 12.14 No seeing of God without holiness and the end of Faith is the Salvation of the Soul 1 Pet. 1.9 and the righteous have a blessed Reward after this life as their End in Heaven Matth. 5.12 c. The eighth Remark is Bare desires of an happy death will not do for such desires without endeavours after an holy life also are like Rachel who was beautiful but barren Therefore Men usually as they live so they die For Balaam here who lived the life of the wicked being a Servant of Satan in his Sorcery died the death of the wicked notwithstanding those specious desires after a better death wherein this Minister of Hell transformed himself into an Angel of Light and Minister of Righteousness yet his end was according to his works as the Apostle telleth us of all such 2 Cor. 11.15 for as he lived so he died among the Enemies of God by the Sword of Israel Numb 31.8 Thus far Balaam's first Attempt against Israel extendeth wherein the God of Israel over-powered him in this Attempt Now come we to Balaam's second Attempt wherein we have these three parts 1. The Occasion 2. The Advantages and 3. The Disappointment First The Occasion was Balak's expostulation with Balaam for acting quite contrary to his expectation which consists of Balak's Accusation and of Balaam's Apology and Answer to his Accusation ver 11 12. The first Remark is From Balak's accusing Balaam tho' Balak pretended great Devotion in serving God by his Altars and Sacrifices yet he intended only to serve himself upon God for he rested not in the Answer of God by Balaam but opposed his own will against God's will unjustly calling God's Friends his Enemies tho' they passed by his Borders in peace and now being crossed in his cursing and cursed Contrivances he hot only repines at God's blessing Israel but boldly blames Balaam for pronouncing it 〈◊〉 all which are discoveries of Balak's Hypocrisie Malice Pride and Prophaneness The second Remark is from Balaam's Answer unto Balak's Accusation v. 12. tho' Balaam wanted no will to Curse Israel for Balak's Wages yet he acknowledges God's restraint lay so strong upon him that he could not do what he would therefore he tamely takes and bears Balak's blame but still shifts it off from himself and lays it at the Lord's door for laying that compulsive necessity upon him and withall he pretends his own Care and Conscience in observing God's Command saying Otho Eshmor Ledabber must I not be careful to keep close to God's word only Thus those two Hypocrites mocked one with another thus Cato could say Potest Augur Augurem Videre non Ridere Can one Soothsayer see another and not laugh together to observe how they cheat the World with their Fortune-telling However the Lord that sitteth in Heaven looks and laughs and hath them all in derision Psal 2.4 The Third Remark is This was the occasion of the 2d Attempt wherein Balak failing in his first doth not desist but takes new measures here so unwearied are wicked men in their wicked Designs Oh what a shame is it for us to complain of weariness in the good ways of God! Mal. 1.13 Balak supposing that Balaam was affrighted with his prospect of so prodigious a multitude persuades him to a change of place where he might see only some part of the Camp of Israel and where he might sacrifice as before and fall to his Prayers or rather Charms that by his Fascinations or bewitching look on one part he might in their Name curse the whole Camp This was Balak's renewed method ver 13 14 15. The like Superstition and Folly in changing of Places we find Recorded afterwards in the silly Syrian's who being foiled by Israel on the Hills would fight with them again in the plains 1 King 20.20 23. As this was an old device of the Devil who taught Amalek when they could not cut off the whole Camp of Israel Exod. 17.12 c. to kill the hindmost of Israel even all that were feeble behind the Camp Deut. 25.17 18. So it was likewise afterwards the Policy of that Dragon who when He could not Devour the Church that had Eagles wings to escape with from him being wroth went to War with the Remnant of her Seed Rev. 12.7 13. The Fourth Remark is the success of this second Attempt namely a second Disappointment for Balak asks Balaam what word the Lord had put into his Mouth at this Time ver 16 17. and Balaam takes up his Parable the second Time ver 18. and instead of a Curse pronounces again the Blessing saying Rise up Balak to receive the Lord's Word with Reverence as Eglon did Judg. 3.20 Gen. 49.33 God is not as Man to repent c. of his absolute Decrees though He may do of his Conditional Promises ver 19. Thus Balaam doth reprove Balak of his gross mistake in endeavouring to reverse God's decreed Blessing upon
blessed be they that hear their joyful sound Psal 89.15 Elisha hath a Sword as well as Jehu and Hazael 1 Kings 19.17 God how 's down those strong holds by his Prophets Hos 6.5 as the Spettle which comes out of Man's Mouth slays Serpents so that which comes forth from the Mouths of God's faithful Ministers casts out Devils Fourthly Though the Walls of our corruptions stand all the six days of our Lives the Leprosie of Sin being incorporated therein Levit. 14.40 42.45 and though we do our endeavour which God requires by the Spirit of Sanctification that makes a Stone drop down now and then which assures the Victory Esth. 6.13 yet the foundation is not raced till the time of Death that ushers in our Eternal Sabbath then and not before will be the full accomplishment of our thorough Mortification c. Fifthly The grand Jericho Rome Antichristian we may be assured shall surely fall before our Jesus so surely as this antient Jericho did before this Joshua Compare the Literal and Mystical Babylon together as before Jerem. 51.8 63 64. with Revel 14.8 and 18.2.21 and it appears that the fall of the New Babylon shall be far greater than that of the old For in the fall of the old 1. It was but a weak Man that was employed but in the fall of the new a mighty Angel 2. There it was but an ordinary Stone but here 't is a great Mill-stone 3. There 't is only said to sink but here 't is thrown down with great violence 4. There 't is only into the River Euphrates but here 't is into the deep and wide Sea 5. There 't is said only Babylon shall not rise from the evil but here none of her Emoluments no nor her self shall be found any more at all Revel 18.14.21 22 23. a Mill-stone sunk into the bottom of the main Ocean can never be buoyed up again The tenth part of that Papal or Papagan City is fallen already Revel 11.13 a great part of Europe fell from the Pope since our first Reformers Luther Calvin c. were the Rams Horns that then sounded both loudly and lustily The Walls thereof are those Principalities and Powers which stand round about Rome to defend her and to make War with the Lamb for her Rev. 17.13 14. but the Lamb there overcomes them and her Flesh shall be burnt for a Whore when her Walls fall down at the feet of Jesus and yield up their Crowns and Scepters to him The Pope's Supremacy that great Luminary of the World who proudly and presumptuously assumes Authority to himself to Authorize Scriptures Doctrines Worship Government Council c. begins to darken and die it being denied in many Nations of Europe he must die abroad before he die at home and a total Eclipse come upon him He that was an Embryo only in the Apostle's days rose by degrees and the seven Vials of the Wrath of God wastes him by degrees he must die of a Consumption 2 Thess 2.8 and that is a lingring Death The Walls of Jericho did not fall flat down by any of the six days sounding c. but the Seventh Day compleated the fall So the six Vials poured forth upon this Mystical Jericho make her Walls to shake and cause many Stones to drop down out of the Wall The fifth Vial brings a darkness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Scotch Mist upon his Kingdom Rev. 16.10 yet 't is the seventh Vial which cannot be far off that must accomplish its final fall We live upon the six thousand Year of the World a thousand Years are but as one day with God 2 Pet. 3.8 then follows the Seventh or Sabbatical Year the great Jubilee that brings Joy to the Saints in saving Sion and in utter destroying Babylon It shall come to pass that at evening time it shall be light Zach. 14.7 either at the Evening of the World or at the Evening of Antichrist for his Evening will be Christ's Morning as Antipodes c Let Saints be daily walking about Babylon in God's way and diligently waiting yea unanimously patiently constantly and confidently yet silently too as those here Josh 6.10 and praying also fervently for Babylon's Downfal and for more faithful Ministers to blow the Rams Horns of the Gospel that they may sound out a sound of Joy as the Italian Reading here is distinguish'd from the sound of War which God would not have in Jericho's Assault but it must be the Triumph of Faith which is the Victory of the Church A cold Sweat is upon the Limbs of Antichrist already God hath confounded the Language of those Babel Builders so that they are divided among themselves and one Warring against another Locusts last but five Months Rev. 9.15 Oh for an hearty shout of Saints altogether in Christ this made Jericho's Walls tumble down Numb 14.9 Rev. 19.1 2 3 4 5. Sixthly and Lastly As Joshua by a Prophetick Spirit denounced a most Direful Curse upon the Man that durst undertake to Rebuild this cursed Jericho after so signal a destruction Josh 6. yet was there found a Man who durst Rebuild it 1 Kings 16.34 as if he would despitefully spit in the very face of God and even wrestle a fall with the Almighty Caligula that prophane Emperour dared his Jove to a Duel but this Man out did him in challenging the great Jehova This Hiel would do it Al Despito di Dio as that Blasphemous Pope said about having his Peacock in despight of God But did this Man prove too hard for God No. Job 9.4 1 Cor. 10.22 this bold Wretch paid dear for his daring Presumption He was punish'd with the Death of his two Sons the Eldest at laying the foundation and his Youngest at his setting up the Gates which was the last Work Hiel might Rebuild this City to curry favour with King Ahab his Fellow-contemner of God and his Prophets However he sought for a Name of a great Builder and Benefactor in Israel yet left his Name for a Curse as Isa 65.15 and destroy'd his Living House while he was building Dead Houses So our Joshua or Jesus hath a flying Roll that causeth the Curse to take hold of Sinners against both the Tables of the Law of God Zach. 5.3 4. Our own Chronicler Speed tells us How God's Hand was very heavy upon William the Conqueror in his Issue as here which was as he saith not for Rebuilding any Cursed Jericho but for his Depopulations in New Forest But if we descend lower to the two last Reigns 't is easily observable and they that run may read the like heavy hand of God upon the Royal Issue more especially in the latter and not unlike to this of Hiel in the Death of his two Sons which occasion'd that Witty Distich Kendal is gone and Cambridge is Riding Post Victims to Denham's now Revengeful Ghost The Death of the Duke of Kendal the Elder and of the Duke of Cambridge makes it run in Parellel Lines with the Effects
such thing upon her self but did mightily bewail that ensnaring Bondage 1 Cor. 7.25 35 37. which Verdict Paul gives as peculiar to those Primitive Persecutions of the Church under Bloody Nero for the better bearing of Distractions in those dismal Days Answer 4. is Nor doth all this give any Countenance much less any Confirmation to the Romish Nunneries in Popish Countries for as Capellus argues excellently we read of no Nunneries or Cloysters that were erected in the Jewish Church And beside what hath been said upon the case of Jephtah's Vow and upon the Apostle's Advice to the Virgins c. N. B. Though it was lawful for a Virgin under her Father's Power to Vow a Vow for the Afflicting of her Soul c. Yet must it be First With her Father's Consent Numb 30.4.13 Secondly Of things Lawful only as in denying her self in some things that Nature desired and may warrantably be received Thus the Rechabites Vowed against Wine Strong Drink c. Jerem. 35.8 9 10. And thus the Virgin might Vow to afflict her Soul which is one of the Instances of what she might Vow namely such Acts of Self-denial in abstaining from some Creature-Comforts such as otherwise she might lawfully live upon whereas to Vow Unlawful things and what are not warranted by God's Word a Vowing to do evil is an utter Abomination as Deut 23.18 Act. 23.14 c. And Thirdly She might Vow only such things as were possible as well as lawful and in her power either by the Constitution of her Natural Temper or by the Assistance of God's Grace promis'd to her And thus thinks Judicious Junius That Jephtah's Daughter did consent to her Father's Vow being content Se in perpetuùm quasi Nazaraeum futuram Domino to be separated as a perpetual Nazaritess unto the Lord and his Service c. N. B. But the Popish Vows of Virginity are Diametrically contrary to those Divine Truths and therefore their Vows of Continency hath this Curse of God upon them to breed all manner of Incontinency in both Sexes as our own Chronicles concerning Abbies and Monasteries do abundantly confirm To say nothing of their Clergy who are all under the same Vow of Continency yet is it too notoriously known that they turn all Towns and Cities into so many Sodom's where they dwell c. The Third Objection is If Jephtah 's Daughter was not Dead but only Devoted Why did the Daughters of Israel go yearly four Days every Year to lament her by a Custom or Ordinance ver 40. Answer 1. The Hebrew word Lethannoth is variously rendred either to lament and in this first sense they might take a just occasion of lamenting her perpetual Virginity as well as her Death for the former bare an Analogy and proportion to the latter it being a Civil Death as before is shewed and therefore to be lamented Answer 2. Worthy and weighty Weems saith Though the Septuagint render Lethannoth by reading it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to lament but the reason was saith he because they mistook its Derivation deriving it from Tanin a Dragon which makes a moanful mourning Mich. 1.8 Job 30.28 29 whereas the word Letannoth comes from Tanah narrare to Rehearse So Judg. 5.11 it should therefore be Translated ad colloquendum Pagnin and Arias Montanus do Translate it ad confabulandum cum câ So Kimchi which Junius followeth namely to talk with her that they might comfort her in her Solitary Life for which these Daughters of Israel might both lament her case and chear up her Spirit with the remembrance of that Glorious Victory which they celebrated with Triumphant Songs four times every Year with her to allay her Sorrows Objection the Fourth It was the Belief of the Ancients of that very Age that Jephtah did really slay and Sacrifice his Daughter for it is probably conceived that the Ancient Greek Poets used to steal Sacred Histories and turn them into their Poetical Fables and accordingly they framed from this very Scripture-Record their Story of Agamemnon 's Sacrificing his Daughter Iphigenia to pacifie the Gods N. B. Answer 1. It is granted That it was the practice of both the Greek and Latine Pagan Poets to steal their Stories out of the Scripture of truth as Homer his Description of Alcinous's Garden from Moses's Sacred Description of Paradise and Ovid likewise stole his lame description of Deucalion's Floud from Moses's Description of Noah's Deluge and sundry other such like N. B. Answer 2. It is granted also that there is some Congruity and seeming Parity betwixt the Name of Agamemnon's Daughter Iphigenia and Jephtah's Daughters Name especialy had the Sacred Scriptures given her that supposed Name of Jephtigenia which it doth not and therefore that Hypothesis or Supposition wants a firmer foundation to stand upon We have this Rule in Philosophy Strato Superstruitur and Vitruvius saith In solido extruendum est Vpon firm ground found the Building and our Lord better bids us build upon the Rock Now a Poetical Fiction seems too Sandy a Foundation to bottom a Theological Assertion upon N. B. Answer 3. Though it be granted that in many Circumstances there be a Congruity As First In Time they were Contemporary Secondly In Name they not absurdly Symbolize Thirdly In Personal Figure both were the only Daughters of two Chieftains and both were Virgins And Fourthly In their Fate both were Objects of a Paternal Vow And Fifthly In the Occasion thereof both were Vowed to a Deity when their Fathers went forth to wage War against their Enemies Thus far the Congruity may hold N. B. Yet the Disparity in the Issue of the Poetical Fiction spoils all as Argumentative to prove the point in hand that Jephtah did certainly Sacrifice his own only dear Daughter because Agamemnon did so to his Iphigenia For First It is denied that Agamemnon did so by Authors of unquestionable Honour and Credit who thus relate this Story Agamemnon having by chance slain a Stagg that belong'd to Diana she in Revenge rais'd a Dreadful Tempest upon the Grecian Ships that were at the Besieging and Blocking up of Troy The Devil's Oracle told them That Diana would not be appeas'd unless some of Agamemnon's Blood were Sacrificed to her In order hereunto crafty Vlysses got the Virgin away from her Mother by a Wile but when she was about to be Sacrificed Diana was moved with compassion sent her away privily into Taurica there to be one of her Priestess's and kindly sent them an Hind to be offered up in her stead with Acceptance so that the Storm ceased N. B. This is the Relation of the most Classick and Authentick Historians and in particular briefly Sir Walter Rawleigh one of great Reputation relateth it thus Calchas that Pagan Priest would indeed have had Agamemnon's Daughter Sacrificed to pacifie Diana but some think that the Goddess was pleased with an Hind c. N. B. But Secondly Suppose she were really Sacrificed which is improbable What Inference can be drawn from
born such therefore was he only set apart to attend upon this Work as some say however this is certain that the Ark abode here for Twenty Years v. 2. N. B. It was not carried to Shilo its former place because either that place was destroyed by the Philistines when they took the Ark Captive as is intimated Jer. 7.12 14. and 26.6 9. compared with this History or if Shilo was not destroyed yet was it abhorred by the Lord for the Abominations there committed by those prophane Priests the Sons of Eli. N. B. This Kiriath Jearim which signifies the City of the Woods was now become the place of the Arks Residence to which the Psalmist alludeth We heard of it at Ephratah or at Shiloh in Ephraim we found it in the Fields of the Wood or at Kiriath Jearim Psal 132.6 After it was lost to Shiloh it was found here where an Eleazar attendeth it when both the Lines of Eleazar and Ithamar are out of that Service the first Line failing in Jephtah's time as above and the latter now interrupted by the Death of Phinehas Eli's Son 1 Sam. 14.3 and this time was long e're Samuel could reclaim Israel from Idolatry they are lost to the Ark when it was not lost to them The Second Remark is The General Convention that Samuel call'd to Mispeh both for Reforming their lost Religion and for recovering their lost Liberty First Touching their Religion 't is a wonder that the Israelites should be so long insensible neither the late loss of the Ark nor the great Slaughter of their Army could bring them to a right sense of their sins as not for Twenty Years together never to lament after the Lord nor after his Ark now brought among them to Kiriath Jearim where they let it lay in an obscure place so near the Philistines N. B. And where indeed it lay all Samuel's Days until David fetch'd it up from thence 2 Sam. 6.2 which was Forty Years after Acts 13.21 and now was it Twenty Years before Samuel could bring Israel to this Solemn Repentance related here v. 2 3 4 5 6. They were so habituated and hardened in their Idolatry and sinful practices were so rooted in them that notwithstanding all Samuel's powerful Preaching so frequently among them they refused to return until God stop'd them in their Cursed Cariers by letting loose the Bands of the Philistines upon them and grievously to oppress them and thereby God made their Hearts generally more Malleable to the Hammer of his Word in the Hand of Samuel N. B. Then 't is said they universally Lamented after the Lord and after his Ark they had so long neglected cleaving so close to Baalim Ashtaroth until they were almost choaked with them so now are they willing to abandon them and to embrace the true Worship of God In order hereunto Israel is as it were Baptized and washed from the filth of their Idolatry This was done either 1. Figuratively by pouring forth whole Rivers of Tears out of their Eyes to testifie their excessive Sorrow for their sins as Psal 6.6 7 8. and 119.136 Jer. 9.1 Lam. 3.48 49. Or 2. They poured Water out before the Lord literally properly and really because 't is said they first drew it c. which was a Rite and Ceremony suitable to those times usual in their Legal Purifications c. N. B. Samuel struck with his Hammer while the Iron was hot 't is said he then Judged Israel in Mispah v. 6. that is he then reformed all Abuses against God and his Law and redressed all Injuries betwixt Man and Man so render'd them capable of the following Mercy The Third Remark is Secondly touching the Recovery of their Liberty from the Philistines Tyranny Samuel began at the right end in reforming Religion first and then restoring Civil Liberty which was thus obtained from the Lord. First The Lords of the Philistines who had formerly beheld with amazement the return of God's Ark against the course of Nature c. chap. 6.12 17. come forth with their Forces against Israel when they were Fasting and Praying at this General Convention which they look'd upon as the foundation of their Rebellion from under the Philistines Yoke of Oppression and on whom they designed to assault while unarmed that so they might blast the Bud of any Insurrection Secondly Israel hears of it and fears an Assault being Conscious to themselves of such heinous Impiety insomuch that as they durst not look Man in the Face in a Battle against the Philistines so nor much less durst they look God in the Face in a Prayer for their own Deliverance but they press upon Samuel to pray for them as Moses had done for their Fore-fathers then it was the cry Deliver us from the Egyptians now it was Deliver us from the Philistines v. 7 8. Thirdly Samuel in imitation of Divine Bounty doth more for Israel than they desired he not only prays for them which was all that they requested but he also Sacrifices for them to the Lord. N. B. He takes a Sucking Lamb c. v. 9. wherein Observe first It was a Lamb a Figure of Christ that spotless Lamb of God by whom we prevail over all our Spiritual Enemies as Israel did here over the Philistines and probably Samuel proposed it purposely to point out to the People that Peace and Salvation must only be expected from the Lamb of God Secondly It was no Magnificum Munus saith Mendoza no costly Sacrifice it was no fat Oxe but a Sucking Lamb even of all sorts of Lambs of the least and lowest price to shew that the Lord looks more at the Willingness of the Offerer than at the Worthiness of the Offering Thirdly it was a Sucking-Lamb Hebr. Teleh Chaleb a Lamb of Milk which the Vulgar falsly reads a fat Lamb but Sucking which it might be though it was more than eight Days old and so that Law Exod. 23.19 was not violated nor was that Law which commands the dividing of the parts c. Levit. 1.12 Though Samuel Offer'd up this whole Lamb perhaps with Tail Feet and Intrails for he had no time to put it into parts according to custom for Samson's former case was now become Samuel's The Philistines were upon him just ready to fall on v. 10. Fourthly It was a Sucking Lamb ready to be weaned and so it was taken off from the Ewe-Dam to teach Israel that they must be weaned from their former wickedness and become now a new People Dedicated to the Lord in all Holiness N. B. That Samuel did not transgress any Law of God appeareth in this that the Lord accepted his Offering and answered by fire from Heaven and though we are not told that fire from Heaven did fall upon Samuel's Sacrifice to consume it the usual Token of Divine acceptance yet did it fall foul upon Samuels and Israel's Enemies when God Thundered upon the Philistines wherewith he did not only fright them but fire them also with Spires of
4. Josiah slew the Priests ver 20. namely such as Jeroboam had made of the meanest of the People 1 King 12.31 saith Menochius and Grotius supposeth these Priests of the High Places resisted Josiah in his Reformation or if they did not their Vsurpation was Death by God's Law Numb 3.10 or they were the Priests of Baal 2 Chron. 34.4 where 't is said He broke down the Altars of Baalim for as Lavater well observeth when the Assyrians departed home with their Captives out of Israel Chap. 17. of 2 Kings many Israelites who had hid themselves in other Countreys returned home with their Priests and set up their old Idolatry again those therefore were the Priests whom Josiah found to whom he would shew no such Mercy as he had done to the Priests of Aaron's Line ver 8 9. but slew them and offer'd them up as Brute Victims saith Lavater upon their own Idolatrous Altars burning their Bones upon them whereby he did defile them as ver 16. Mark 5. Josiah rooted out moreover all the Wizards c ver 24. of which see Lev. 19.31 and 20 27. Numb 22.5 Deut. 18.11 and the Teraphims Images of Men such as Michol put into David's Bed 1 Sam. 19.13 by which the Heathens consulted Ezek. 21.21 and Answers were return'd by them Zech. 10.2 either by the subtlety of Satan or by the Forgery of the Priests And he destroyed also all other Monuments of Idolatry which he found in Judah as well as in Israel he did all he could possibly do to prevent that utter Devastation of his Countrey foretold by the Prophets but the Decree was even ready to bring forth Zeph. 2.2 and there was no reversing it Remark the Fourth Josiah's Celebration of the Passover ver 21 22. 2 Chron. 35. Mark 1. Sanctius saith here so soon as Josiah had abolish'd the false Worship forbidden by God's Law he now endeavours to set up the true worship of the Living God commanded by his Law which Hilkiah had found Chap. 22.8 and now had been read to them all Mark 2. The Passover was a most sacred and solemn Sacrament and Ordinance of God Exod. 12.1 c. and had been much and long neglected without which all their Sacrifices were accounted in vain for this Ordinance gave Vigour Virtue and Value to all others and no Israelite ought to want this Sacrament which was both a Monument of their Deliverance past and likewise a Type of the Messiah to come therefore did Josiah so zealously revive it Mark 3. Though this famous Passover be passed over after a Compendious Manner in 2 Kings 23.21 22 23. shewing only 1. The Time of it in the eighteenth Year of his Reign supposed to be immediately after his renewing the Covenant 2 Chron. 34.31 32. and 35.1 And 2. The Excellency of it exceeding all former Passovers for such Preparation Humiliation Detestation of Idolatry and Reformation of Religion c. but 't is more particularly described in 2 Chron. 35. from ver 1 to 18. 2 Chron. CHAP. XXXV with 2 Kin. CHAP. XXIII THIS Chapter with the latter end of 2 Kings 23. contains two Parts First The Pious Life of Josiah in the residue of his Days And Secondly His Violent and untimely Death after all his Goodness The first Part concerning his Pious Life is this Passover in particular Remarks upon it are First Josiah's Holy Instructions to the Priests and Levites c. Mark 1. The Time when he celebrated this publick Passover it was upon the fourteenth Day o● the first Month ver 1. which was the Day expresly enjoyned in the Law Exod. 12.2 6. and now he commanded the People to keep it as well as himself 2 Kings 23.21 for some suppose that when the Doors of the Temple had been shut 2 Chron. 28.24 the Holy Priests and the People had been constrained to keep the Passover and other Holy Feasts in Private but now he calls all in to Publick Worship Mark 2. He commanded the Priests to put the Ark in the House c. ver 2 3. Erpennius saith it had been removed out of the Temple either 1. In Ahaz's Time that it should not be there among his Idols but surely Hezekiah returned the Ark into its Place Or 2. In the Time of Manasseh c. or rather 3. In the Days of Josiha's wicked Father Amon to make way for some Idol in its Room And Piscator adds 't is no wonder the Ark was removed by some Idolatrous King when they durst remove other sacred Vessels 2 Kings 16.14 and cut them in pieces also 2 Chron. 28.24 and some say the removing of the Ark into its Place occasion'd the finding of Moses's Manuscript by Hilkiah Mark 3. He bids the Priests c. prepare themselves for the Passover ver 4.5 and their Brethren ver 6. by purifying and quickening them for performing so solemn a Service as was killing the Passover c. and Josiah himself excites them to their Duty by this Argument saith Vatablus saying Ye Priests are now freed from that Burden which lay upon your fore-fathers of carrying the Ark upon their Shoulders from Place to Place while it remained in the Tabernacle but now saith Josiah It shall not be a Burden to your Shoulders seeing 't is now seated in the Temple therefore now serve the Lord ver 3. so much the more as now freed from that burden in other Services in Sacrificing Singing c Remark the Second The Royal Actions of King Josiah at this Passover-Feast He gave thirty thousand Passover Offerings to the People ver 7. All of his own Substance By this Munificence saith Osiander the King supplied the wants of his poor People and Dr. Hall Notes the same here saying Rather than fail Josiah's Bounty shall supply to Judah Lambs for their Paschal Devotion N.B. No Alms is so acceptable as that whereby the Soul is furthered Kids are named here as well as Lambs for Lyra and Piscator say from Exod. 12.5 that in the want of a Lamb the Law allowed a Kid might be offered and the three thousand Bullocks he gave likewise to be offer'd up after the Lambs saith Piscator upon the several Days of that Feast of Vnleavened Bread which was another part of that great Solemnity Remark the Third The Liberality of the Princes at this Passover-Feast ver 8. in giving two thousand six hundred small Cattel and five hundred Oxen. N.B. Behold the Power of a Royal Pattern the Example of this good King moves those Princes to do as he did though they were Persons bad enough according to Zephany's Character of them Zeph. 3.3 yet these gave Liberally not only to the People as ver 7. but also to the Priests and Levites here that they might likewise rejoice with the People Remark the Fourth The Bounty also of the Superior-Priests unto the Inferior Levites ver 9 10 11 12. here 's another liberal Gift of five thousand small Cattel and five hundred Oxen So that the total summ given here by
of this Prayer for the Dead Lib. 3. Chap. 19. nor supposing Judas did so is this particular Example sufficient to establish a Doctrine no more than Zipporah's was to prove that Woman might administer Sacraments Exod. 4.25 or the single Example of Rhasis that one may lawfully kill himself N. B. 1. It follows then these Apocryphal Books were upon good grounds not received by the Church among those that were accounted Canonical and plainly of Divine Inspiration because most of them are justly suspected to be stuffed with vain Jewish Fables and not penned in a stile any way agreeable with the Majesty of God's Holy Spirit but far off from bearing the Character of those Scriptures divinely inspired Therefore the Author of this second Book of Maccabees not being inspired of God acknowledges his own Infirmity and desires Pardon for what he had done amiss Chap. 15.39 N. B. 2. Though the Apocrypha cannot prove any Point of the Christian Religion save so far as they consent with the Canonical to confirm the same or rather whereon they are grounded yet may they be read as the Works of Godly Men for the Instruction of Godly Manners as also for advancing our Knowledge of the History of the Jews in which Books is declared that God at all Times had a special Care of his Church never leaving her utterly destitute of means to confirm her in the Faith and Hope of the promised Messiah as likewise they declare the fulfilling of foretold Threatnings by the Prophets for her Exercise and for the Destruction of her Enemies Remark the Fourth in General Beside these Apocryphal Additions to the Canonical Scriptures Josephus the Jew is look'd upon by the Learned as the best of Hebrew Historians and the most curious Searcher of the Jewish Antiquities yet not without his foul Faults as hath been occasionally observ'd all along in this History of the Scriptures and therefore the Romanists especially Barclay by Name are justly blame-worthy for saving that the loss of the Holy Bible would be the lesser loss so Jofephus's Antiquities were but carefully preserved because the whole History of the Old and New Testament may be supplied out of that Josephus the Jew 'T is true Jerome calls Josephus the Greek Livy for the excellency of his History and reckons him in the Catalogue of the Ecclesiastical Authors because not only he was so kind to the Christians tho' himself was a Jew but also and more especially because he speaks so Highly and Honourably of Christ himself in Lib. 18 of his Antiquities therefore Jerom listed up his Name among the Writers of Ecclesiastical History saith Sixtus Senensis Bibl. lib. 4. He was certainly most Learned of all the Jews in his Time both in Greek and Hebrew saith Fuller Miscel lib. 2. cap. 3. and so say Spanhemius Dub. Evang. par 2. Dub. 2. and Vossius de Histor Graec. lib. 2. cap. 8. and Bodinus Method Hist c. but above all Cuneus's Character of him is most observable saying He is an Author worthy of all Praise and who next to the Holy Scriptures deserveth best of all other Authors to be believed And tho' he excells all others in Gravity yet he is not found altogether free from the Dotages of his Jewish Nation-Cuneus de Repub. Hebr. lib. 3. cap. 2 c. Josephus is taxed for this fault by Luther Gen. 34. by Rivet on Exod. 2. and by Chamter c. that writing the Antiquities of his Nation with a design to have them published he describes them as Stately as he could and when he thought the Simplicity of the Scripture did not sufficiently set off the commendaetion of Matters done among the Hebrews he then indented and added many Matters of himself Therefore ought he to be Read with a great deal of Christian Care and Prudence N. B. There was another Jew of later Times who out of True Josephus wrote an Hebrew History under the False Name of Joseph Ben-Gorion above-named Translating Josephus out of Greek into Hebrew By this latter Mock-Joseph many of the Jews were deceived taking him for the True one because both were Priests Learned and Noble c. Geneb Chronol lib. 2. cap. 4. Remark the Fifth in General Tho' both the Apocrypha and Josephus as we have seen be but uncertain Guides to Conduct us through the Wilderness of this History of the Jews in this interspace of time when the Spirit of Prophecy was ceased from Recording the Memorials thereof yet have we a more sure word of Prophecy as 't is said 2 Pet. 1.21 c. even somewhat in the Old Testament which was of Divine Infallible Inspiration to wit the Book of Daniel who writes an History as well as a Prophecy of what assuredly came to pass Mark 1. As First Daniel saw the Vision of the four Monarchies call'd the four Mettal Kingdoms in Nebuchadnezzar's Dream Dan. 2. which troubled the World but especially the Church in the World from the first Rising of Nebuchadnezzar that Golden Head until the Coming of the Everlasting Kingdom of Christ in the Gospel N. B. Notewel Dan. the 7th which Prophecy is as a General Map of all the whole World his following Prophecies are as particular Tables of several Countries therein So in Ch. the 8th he had his Vision of the Persian Ram with a Golden Fleece and full of Flesh but Conquer'd by the Grecian Goat this introduceth some particular Passages relating to the History of the Jews Nehemiah had mentioned Jaduah or Jaddus Neh. 12.22 who was the very High-Priest of the Jews that met this Capering Goat Alexander the Great who was coming with an intent to Plunder Jerusalem in his way to War with the Ram but Jaddus meeting him in his Priestly Vestments for Glory and Beauty Exod. 28.2 did so Dazle him that his Fury melted into a strange Veneration more especially when Jaddus shewed him this Prophecy of Daniel that he should certainly Conquer Darius the Ram. Alexander hereby was much encourag'd in his Enterprize and not only offer'd Sacrifice to the True God according to the High-Priest's Direction but also granted much freedom and many favours to the Jews yea whatever they demanded of him Josephus's Antiquities lib. 11. cap. 8. N. B. This 8th Chapter of Daniel is a Notable Abridgment of all Great Alexander's Victories wherein his Pacification toward the Jews while he Warred against all the World are Included and looks more like an History than a Prophecy Mark 2. Daniel Prophetically declareth the History of the Jews distinctly after the Death of Great Alexander who was the Great Horn and broken by a Fever in the flower of his Youth which his Surfeiting and Drunkenness cast him into Dan. 8.8 under a little Horn which sprang up out of one of the four Potent Successors of Alexander ver 9. This was Antiochus Sirnamed Epiphanes Illustrious but Polybius call him Epimanes the Mad-man descended from Seleucus who succeeded Alexander in Syria one of his four Notable Captains and is call'd a
Little Horn because 1. He was much less than Alexander call'd the Notable and Great Horn ver 5 8. 2. Little because the youngest of his Brethren having nothing of Grandeur at the first save only born a Prince but without a Kingdom till he came to be an Vsurper 3. Little because being of a low Fortune he was sent a Pledge and Hostage to Rome by his Father Antiochus Magnus whom the Romans had Cudgel'd into a Complyance about the best part of his Kingdom of Syria And Little 4. because after his Father's Death he made his escape from Rome and seized upon the Crown of Syria Deposing Demetrius his Nephew and the Right Heir after this he grew from Little to Great yea greater and greater by pretending to be Protector to his young Nephew Ptolomeus Philometor he got into his hands the Kingdom of Egypt from which Crown when the Romans forced him he returned with great Rage to pour forth his Revenge upon the poor Jews who were less able than the Romans to Resist him and in plain terms He play'd the Devil amongst them ver 10 11 12 c. N. B Wherein this Epiphanes Famous as his flatterers styl'd him but rather Epimanes Infamous a Vile Person as the Angel named him Dan. 11.21 Acted the part of a Mad-man in three cases First In casting down some of the Stars of Heaven to the ground ver 10. that is those Godly Priests and Princes of the Jews called Stars because they shone in their Sphere of God's Church Militant Worshipping the God of Heaven whose Names were writ in Heaven as so many Citizens thereof Secondly He did not only cast them down but he also trampl'd upon them and stamp'd them under his Feet ver 10. these he prophaned and cruelly Murther'd them Such Shining Stars as these Rev. 1.10 Persecutors spight in all Ages is specially against Zech. 13.7 Thirdly He magnify'd himself in an Hostile manner against the Messiah who was Lord of the Temple and the Captain of the Jews Sufferings and Salvation Heb. 2.10 in taking all his Worship out of his Temple yea and Christ too as it were he cast out of his place setting up in his room Jupiter Olympus an Image of the Devil v. 11 12. and burnt the Books of the Law 1 Macc. 1. 47 59. N. B. How long this loss of the Daily Sacrifice and those sad Desolations should last was likewise declared to Daniel by the Palmony Hamadabber or Excellent Numberer the Man or Messiah ver 13 14 15 16 c. The Term told him was for 2300 Days that is for six Years three Months and twenty Days Reckoning 365 Days to a Year and adding the two Days of the the two Leap-Years therein to it this was not full seven Years from the beginning of Antiochus's Prophaning the Priesthood and Temple unto his Death that the Jews did suffer under him much less was it Seventy Years as formerly they had suffer'd in Babylon which must needs be a Comfort to the Church of the Jews when Daniel declared it from Christ to them How this Phophecy was fulfill'd see 1 Maccab. 1.12 13 14. and 4.52 and 2 Maccab. 4.12 This Vile Person Acted Vilely from first to last and such an Hell-hound was hardly heard of Mark 3. Daniel in his 9th Chapter receiveth a Prediction of what should befall the Jews from the Time of their Deliverance from Captivity until the Death of Christ Chap. 9.24 25 26 27. namely Seventy Weeks or Seventy times seven Years or four Hundred and Ninety Years from Cyrus's Proclamation to the Death of Christ This Interspace the Angel divideth into three Vnequal Parts the first is Seven Sevens or Forty nine Years to the finishing of Jerusalem's Walls c. The second is the Sixty two Sevens or four Hundred Thirty four Years from that time till the last Seven the Events of which are mention'd ver 26. The third is the last Seven in the latter part saith Dr. Lightfoot Christ Preached 26. The third is the last Seven in the latter part saith Dr. Lightfoot Christ Preached to wit three Years and an half and then was Crucified c. So that from the Decree of Cyrus to the Death of the Messias 't was just 490 Years N.B. I have consulted various Authors about this Term of Time as Alsted's Encuclop pa. 2974. and Dr. Willet on Daniel pag. 284. where he saith Daniel having had a Revelation of Christ who is call'd the Stone cut out of the Mountain without the hands of any Humane Help Dan. 2. Chap. and of the Son of Man's coming in the Clouds Chap. 7. pag. 283. therefore was he the more Inquisitive about the Times of Christ c. as likewise Pemble pag. in folio 353. and many other Antient and Modern Authors N.B. Many great Wits have been exercised about this Noble Prophecy Cornelius A Lapide speaks of one Learned Gentleman who run out of his Wits after many Years study upon it I find the Doctors are much divided about the beginning and ending of these Seventy Weeks 't is most probable they began at the out-going of Cyrus's Decree Dan. 9.25 and ended at Christ's Death tho' some say at the Destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans under Titus Vespatian but 't is better to Compute it as Above than to Dispute it without End N. B. However sure I am it may well be observed That the Jews after their Seventy Years Captivity have Seven Seventies of Years granted them wherein they enjoyed their own Countries shewing him how God's Mercies bear the same proportion to his punishing Judgments which Seven a complete Number beareth to an Vnit or One for their Seventy Years Bondage in Babylon was Recompenc'd by the Lord with Seven Seventies of Inlargement in their own Land beside that Mercy of Mercies here promised them even the Grace of the Messiah who in the last Seven Years of the Seventy confirmed the Convenant with many Elect Gentiles ver 27. N. B. But the Jews did so Degenerate and were so Infatuated into such a Sottish Superstition that they put to Death the Prince of Life Acts 3.15 and after that their Seditious Zealots as they call'd themselves committed such abominable Outrages as to sill the Temple with Dead Bodies of their own People as Josephus relateth then came the Time of Christ the King 's sending forth his Roman Armies Matth. 22.7 to Murder those that had Murder'd him and to burn their City and Temple and to put a period to all their Sacrifices and Services This is call'd Christ's Coming Mal. 3.1 2. John 21.22 Jam. 5.7 and therefore 't is said here Dan. 9.27 that Christ himself makes it Desolate for its overspreading Abominations now rendring this once Holy City not only the Slaughter-house of God's Saints but also of the World's Saviour for which foul Fact they are become the Scorn of the World and the Contempt of all Countries thereof N. B. 1. This Scripture doth so evidently demonstrate both the time of the Coming and
their Death as well as in their Life for as they both Lived so they both Dyed Qualis vita Mors finis ita an Holy Lif● hath an Happy Death so contra First Lazarus dyeth and he dyed in the Lord Rev. 14.13 He slept in Jesus 1 Thess 4.14 So his Death was Blessed being but as that Noble Charior which Joseph the Lord of the Land of Egypt sent to fetch his Father in to partake with him of his glory Gen. 45.27 So the Lord sent Death to this Miserable godly Man as a Waggon not only to carry him out of his present Misery but also to carry him home to his Fathers House where he might partake of future Felicity and endless Glory This Holy Beggar had the Holy Angels attending him at his Death he had been before in his Life Canibus Expositus a Companion of Dogs but now at his Death he is become Angelorum Socius an Associate of Angels who waited upon him at his dying Hour Angels may indeed wait upon wicked Men as that Angel did at the Pool of Bechesda John 5.2 3 4. We cannot suppose that every Person of that Multitude of Impotent folk were godly yet whosoever he was good or bad that first stepped into the Pool when the Waters thereof were moved he was straight-way healed by the Angel But this good Man had many Angels to meet him in his way of Dying as Jacob had Gen. 32.1 2. So his Death was to him only as another Mahanaim having Gods Host making a Lane being on each side to Succour his Soul with an easie passage out of his Body N. B. Note well Here was not one Angel only attending Dying Lazarus but many Angels all as it were striving which of them should be his bearers into a better World Thus he who had been licked by Dogs in his Life was now Honoured by Angels at his Death if it be asked What shall be done to the Man whom the King of Kings Delighteth to Honour as Esth 6.6 9 11. 'T is Answered he shall be Honoured with this double Honour 1. To be born upon the Wings of Prayer while he lives and 2. To be born upon the Wings of Angels when he Dyes Such Honour have all the Saints Psal 149.9 This is a greater Honour than that Honour of Hamans hammering out for himself of Riding upon the Kings Horse in Royal Robes c. as above Esth. 6. Yea 't is greater Honour than that of Amasis King of Egypt who would most Ambitiously have his own Royal Chariot to be drawn by four of his fellow Kings whom he had taken Captive in War in stead of Horses to hurry him about in State Oh! How great was this Honour done to a dying Saint that must have the Holy Angels come down from Heaven to Earth upon this Errand only Namely to carry Lazarus's Soul from Earth to Heaven as our Lord hath appointed them To be Ministring Spirits to the Heirs of Salvation Hebr. 1.14 This Office they account their Honour in Christ who Confirmed them as he Redeemed us that they might not fall as the Evil Angels did Secondly Dives so call'd dyed also and was buryed ver 22. This is all that is said of him leaving his Attendance at Death and his passage after Death to be gathered out of ver 23. where we find him in Hell a ploce of Torments which necessarily presupposeth that he was attended with Devils at his Death as Lazarus was with Angels at his 'T is said here the rich Man also dyed his Riches whereof he had boasted Ps 49.6 and wherein he had trusted Ps 52.7 Mark 10.24 during his life could not now deliver him from Death Prov. 11.4 Death is the end of all worldly glory Ps 49.10 'T is Appointed unto all Men once to dye Hebr. 9.27 None of his Skillfullest Physitians with their Constliest Cordials could Redeem him from being Artested by that grim Serjeant Death and when Dead he was Buried and possibly the whole Town attended him to his B●rying-place whereas poor Lazarus probably had but four Bearers of his Body and a few following the Bier c. though this rich Mans Body was undoubtedly born in great Pomp and Splendour to the Grave yet poor Lazarus's Soul was in a far more splendid State carryed up into glory Whereas no Funeral Solemnities not the choicest sweet purfumes could Cure much less save this Gluttons stinking Soul which 〈◊〉 certainly feized upon by Devils with greediness at its departure out of his Body who hurryed it away hastily to Hell the next news we hear of him is he that had been Clothed in Bysso in Silken Robes while he lived was now groaning in Abysso in that Bottomless pit whereinto those Devils had plunged him when he was dead The Lord let him live the longer to Repent in but he Repented not Revel 2.21 22. So now God bid the Devils to take him c. This brings in the Fourth Difference betwixt this Rich Man and the Beggar in their State after Death also As in life the Glutton had a State of Abundance and the Beggar a State of Indigence so after Death the former had a State of Misery and the latter a State of Glory of whom we are told that as Death came in Mercy to him for delivering him from the smarting Sores of his Body so the Angels Received his Pretious and Pious Soul that had been lodged in a putrified Carcase and not only conveyed it safely through the Air which is called the Devils Territories as he is Prince of the power of the Air Eph. 2.2 but also lodged it sweetly in Abrahams Bosom which Phrase is a Synonymon of Celestial Felicity N. B. Note well Glory is no where called the Bosom of Adam for he is noted in Scripture to be the first and great sinner who brought all manner of Misery and Death it self into the World Rom. 5.14 c. Whereas Abraham stands Dignified with the Title of the Father of the Faithfull c. Rom. 4.17 18. Hereupon all Believers who walk in the Steps of Abraham while they live Rom. 4.12 Hebr. 6.12 13. Are said to Lodge in the Bosom of Abraham when they dye as here Pious Lazarus is placed in Abraham's Bosom ver 22 23. Luke 16. because he had been a follower of Abraham in imitation of his Faith and Patience c. N. B. Note well Abrahams Bosom is a Metaphore either taken from Feasts whereat it is said the beloved Disciple leaned upon our Lords Bosom John 13.23 and 20 21. or from the manner of a kind Father who when his Child is weary with running about or hath met with a knock therein immediately takes up his Child and lays it in his Bosom for its Ease Cure and Comfort N. B. Note well this Honour have all the Saints Ps 149.9 That as the Palsy-Man was let down in his Couch through the Tiling of the House top into the midst of the lower Room before Jesus Luke 5.18 19. Even
in Europe in the general Acts 16. The Grand Remark hence before we descend to particulars in this The only wise God would not permit such a great evil as this dissension betwixt two such great Apostles to happen in the world unless he designed to produce some great good out of it for the greater promotion of his own Glory God's goodness appears here invincible in over-shooting the Devil in his own bow The Devil devis'd this division of Paul and Barnabas for evil even for the dissolution of the present Churches but God over-ruled it for good namely for the edification of many Churches and the inlargement of Christ's Kingdom for hereby many more places were by this very means made partakers of the blessing of the Gospel which for ought we know might otherwise have wanted it Therefore tho' the Devil do this evil and that mischief among us Murmur not at these things when he hath had his swing in causing the worse Sins God comes and turns all to the contrary for his own Glory as he did in Esthers day Esth 9.1 A more particular prospect of Holy Paul's Peregrination this second time from Antioch in company with Silas may thus as in a Scheme or Map be represented First He travelled into Asia the less Who having passed through Syria and Cilycia came to Derbe and Lystria in which latter he made his first Station Acts 15.41 and 16.1 and whose Actions therein were principally two First His Solemn Election of Timothy into the Office of a Gospel-Minister whom he intended to take along with him and to breed him up for his Successor in the Ministry after his death And the Second was His powerful propagation of the Doctrine of the Gospel of Christ there c. In the former of these two circumstances are most manifest 1. The Motive why And 2. The Manner how this Timothy came to be elected and adopted into the Ministry The Motive why was Timothy's Commendation both from his Parents and his Profession verse 1. and from the good report he had among the Brethren verse 2. And the Manner how was by Circumcising him c. that he might not become offensive to the Jewish Converts verse 3. In the latter Action namely His preaching the Gospel there is very considerable 1. The Object both the Real what he preached namely the Doctrine which accorded with the Decrees of that great Council at Jerusalem verse 4. and the personal Object to whom he preached namely to the Phrygians and Galatians verse 6. and to the Mysians v. 7. but not to those of that part of Asia Minor near Ephesus nor to the Bithynians for the Spirit of Jesus forbad them by a secret Revelation tho they essayed to pass thither 6 7. And together with this double object is the effect very observable verse 5. for Paul's passing thither brought a double blessing to these Churches namely 1. A firmer Confirmation of those that Believed before And 2. Another new Accession of a great many more Believers unto the Faith of the Gospel v. 5. Then Paul's second Station was in Troas of the lesser Asia and supposed to be the Relicts of that famous City of Troy verse 8. but here his stay now was very short for he was commanded to depart thence by an Angel that appeared to him like a man in a Macedonian habit verse 9. and so soon as God's will was manifested he disputeth not with the man but dispatcheth his duty with all readiness and alacrity v. 11. So he came to that famous City Philippi called so from Philip Great Alexander's Father the chief City of Macedonia verse 12. Thus Paul passed out of Asia into Europe to preach the Gospel The special Remarks upon Paul's second Journey into Asia are these First Oh what a priviledge is it for Children to have a good Mother and Grandmother as this young Timothy had who have many opportunities of dropping Divine Documents into their little Lemuel's Ears as being most conversant with their little ones far more than Fathers or Grandfathers can be Hereupon the Mothers of the Kings of Judah are constantly mentioned and as they were good or evil so were their Children Partus Sequitur Ventrem The birth commonly follows the belly Thus Athaljah taught her Son to do wickedly 2 Chron. 22.2 3. But Bathsheba taught her Son to be Religious c. Pro. 31.1 2 3 Timothy's Mother and Grandmother were both godly 2 Tim. 1.5 The second Remark is Paul pitcheth upon Timothy to call him into the Ministry as one designed for it from Heaven not only because of his excellent Education choice parts which bespoke him a most likely hopeful Instrument to be imployed in God's Vineyard but also because of some Remarkable prophecies and predictions which had been given out concerning him 1 Tim. 1.18 to wit some Divine Revelation that this young man should make most prodigious proof in the Gospel N.B. 'T is most probable that this was revealed by the Spirit to Paul who had been acquainted with Timothy from his childhood being so conversant with his Mother and Grandmother 2 Tim. 1.5 he had observed some small sparks of lively grace breaking forth in his minority and these he exhorts him verse 6. to blow up into a flame as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies there The third Remark is Though Paul were thus abundantly satisfied with Timothy 's fitness for the Ministry yet would he not ordain him thereunto without the Testimony of others concerning him both of his holy life and of his Knowledge of the Scripture wherein he did excell 2 Tim. 3.15 N. B. Which rule for ordination ought faithfully to be followed by all right Ordainers and not for Affection c. See Acts 16.2 The fourth Remark is Paul Circumcised Timothy because they knew that is the Jews in those quarters knew that his Father was a Greek tho' his Mother was a Jewesse yet according to the Doctrine of their Talmud the Mother could not cause her child to be circumcised without the consent of the Father therefore the Jews concluded that Timothy was not circumcised and thereupon was it now done that he might not offend the Jewish converts who were not yet persuaded that the Law of Circumcision was quite abrogated Yet would not Paul circumcise Titus Gal. 2.3 least he should harden the Jews and offend the Gentiles Thus became he all things to all men that he might save some 1 Cor. 9.22 yet became he not sin to any man in that for a Jew to be circumcised was no yieldance Paul circumcised Timothy as a Gentile for these words they all knew his Father was a Greek do demonstrate that Timothy was in their account reckoned for a Gentile because the Father's Authority in not circumcising him prevailed over his Mother's N.B. These indifferent things using or not using require a most single and singular eye which as Grotius saith Paul had above all the Apostles for the edification of the Church and for
as many do yet he doth the former He lived in a due and daily expectation of Death and 't was the care of this Blessed Patriarch and so it should be ours to leave a Blessing behind him He here looks upon it as the last Act of a Fathers Office and his sweetest farewel to the World this pattern should be our practice we should seek the Salvation of our Children while we live and say something of weight worth and warmth that may stick by them when we die as that holy Man of God Mr. Robert Bolton upon his dying Bed charg'd his Children not to meet him in an Unregenerate Estate at the Day of Judgment The words of dying Saints are living Oracles In doing thus when we are laid in our Graves we leave a stock behind us which still not only abides but also improves and will go forward by way of increase until time shall be no more ☞ Inference hence is The uncertainty of the Day of Death as it made Isaac so it should make us wife in two Cases 1. In making sure work as to our selves for a better World 2. In leaving a Blessing behind us to others that survive us especially our Relations in this present evil World Hezekiah set his House and his Heart in order Thus this Holy Patriarch did being prepared for his own departing and for his Lords coming Mark 13.5 And his making of his Last as he thought Patriarchal Will and Testament made him not as the Vulgar Errour now is to die the sooner for he lived after this as is said before above Forty years The Third Remark or Remarkable means whereby Jacob got the Blessing is the Well grounded Affection of his Mother towards him 'T is some blemish to Holy Isaac and blot in his Escutcheon that he was Blind in his Affections as well as in his Senses misplacing his love contrary to Gods Oracle for his own Carnal ends because he did eat of Esau 's Venison Gen 25.28 he not only loved but overloved him and his fond love would have fix'd the Blessing upon the wrong object to have cross'd Gods Promise the Elder shall serve the Younger had he not been prevented by Gods Providence 'T is a shame for a Saint to be a slave to his Appetite and to be brought under the power of any created Comfort 1 Cor. 6.12 He is an Epicure that studies to please his own Carnal Palat more than Gods Coelestial Pallace However this Infirmity in Isaac served as a soil to set off and illustrate the Divine Adoption which Esau's cunning Insinuations into his Fathers affections by pleasing his Fleshly Palate and putting Venison into his Mouth could not counter work for Jacob was as great a Favourite with his Mother Rebekah as Esau was with his Father Isaac Wherein more Grace appears in the Woman as likewise in Manoah's Wife Samson's Mother than in the Man for Rebekah's Love was grounded upon Gods Oracle but Isaac's was in opposition to it Isaac loved whom God hated she loved whom God loved Mal. 1.2 3 Isaac could not be Ignorant of the Oracle Gen. 25.22 23. yet might misinterpret it not of their Persons but of their Posterity Bernardus non videt omnia and this misconstruction of it might mislead him in this Action either his Carnal Affection made him not understand or forget the Divine Oracle or it transported him into a purpose to pronounce the Blessing contrary to it because he fondly wish'd it so but Rebekah saw farther than Isaac understanding Gods Oracle aright both concerning their Persons and Posterity and therefore overhearing what Isaac had said to Esau she projects with her best beloved Jacob how to procure for him the Patriarchal Blessing aggrecable to Gods Oracle though contrary to her Husbands Will and Intention I have here thought upon that Vulgar Proverb to wit Children sometimes had better want their Father with the Stock than the Mother with the Rock c. which seems to have more significancy in it as it holds a concurrency with two Scriptures The First is Levit 19.3 the only Scripture which placeth the Mother before the Father saying thus Fear every Man his Mother and his Father the Reason of this priority of place given here to the Mother must be because she hath bought this Right hand place at a very dear price every Child is a Jabez to the Mother she breeds him brings him forth and brings him up with Sorrow 1 Chron. 4.9 little do Children consider how near they come to be Parricides or Murderers of their own Mothers you should remember how oft your Mothers had sick Fits and it may be some Swoonings for you at or after your conception while you were in their Wombs and what Dolours and Dangers such as wherein Death way-lays many Mothers have attended them when they brought you into the World Oh what pangs and throws have you cost your Mothers in their Travailing work a work indeed too hard for a mere Creature and therefore it requires the Voice of God to help it forward Psal 29.9 with Job 39.3 and Psal 71.6 Many Mothers have such hard Labour that they must needs be very near to a going out of the VVorld before ye their Children can be brought into the VVorld and oh what care and pains how many defiled hands how many broken sleeps c. do ye cost them to bring you up in the World Oh remember ye are certain Cares but uncertain Comforts our Lord upon the Cross left a good Pattern in taking care for his Mothers Life at his own Death Joh. 19.26 All Mothers may call their Sons Benoni's Sons of Sorrow as Rachel did her Son Gen. 35.18 and therefore they should give all due respect and reverence to them The Second Scripture wherewith that Proverb aforesaid hath a consonancy is Prov. 1.8 where Solomon saith My Son hear the Instruction of thy Father and forsake not the Law of thy Mother where the Wise Man would by a seasonable caution correct the too frequent folly of many Children who by being so familiar with their Mothers do mostly contemn them according to that old Adage Too much familiarity breeds contempt thus this Prophane Esau made no matter of his Mother not only in not consulting with her who had the Oracle Gen. 25.23 for obtaining the Blessing but also in saying after The days of Mourning for my Father are at hand and then will I slay my Brother Jacob Gen. 27.41 he resolved with himself to stand in no awe of his aged Mother though surviving hereupon Solomon makes the bond of Obedience most strict and strong where Disobedience is most likely to break out calling upon Children to hearken unto the Words of a Father as an Instruction but to the Words of a Mother as a Law the former Persuades only but the latter Commands for every Law carries an authority in it yet this is not said to lessen the Fathers Power for they are all Cursed that set light by either Father
a quarrel from repulses of sin as this Harlot doth here who should rather have loved than hated Joseph for saving her Soul from guilt She should rather have taken this as an occasion of thankfulness Thus David did when he was restrained by Abigail from his Bloody purpose against Nabal c. 1 Sam. 25.32 33. NB. 3. T is better to lose any thing than Innocency Joseph here chuseth rather to let go his Garment than his Conscience My Righteousness saith Job I hold fast and will not let it go Job 27.6 Jacob would let Flocks and Herds go yea his Wives and Children go yet would he not let his Christ go Gen. 32.26 and so his Son Joseph here would let his Garment go but he would not let his Godliness go Some may wonder here why good Joseph would let his Garment go upon a double account 1. He being a lusty though not a lustful young Man of twenty seven years of Age so strong enough to strive with her a Woman and could have either out-pull'd her or recover'd it again out of her Hands in case it were a loose Garment and so might soon slip from her 2. Joseph likewise being not only a lusty but also a prudent young Man could not but Prognosticate what an evil use this Harlot now incensed by her disappointment would make of his Garment left in her Hand c. To such I Answer It must be granted that Joseph was able and could have rescued his Garment but he was not wining nor would he do so for these Reasons 1. His Reverence he did owe to his Mistriss as he was her Servant might make him hold off his Hands from her 2. An Holy Jealousie Joseph might have of his own deceitful Heart might make him forbear that he might neither touch her nor be touched by her fearing he would be tainted with the touch of this Woman for Solomon saith he that toucheth his Neighbours much more his Masters Wife shall not be innocent Prov. 6.29 He durst not trust his Hand to touch such hot Coals ver 27 28. for that would have been to tempt the Tempter and to lead himselt into Temptation He that would not be with her alone Gen 39.10 would not much less touch her when alone 3. Joseph's solid Judgment might suddenly suggest to him that the best Expedient and most present Remedy against the Temptations of Lust is not any presumptuous contending with them but rather a speedy conveying of himself from them When Lust is in its Flame rampant and raging as it was in this Woman 't is certainly safer to fly from it than to fight with it in this case one pair of flight Heels as saith the Proverb is worth two pair of fighting Hands He that trusts his own Heart then is but a Fool Prov. 28.26 4. To which may be added his Sanctity was such as to love his Coat the less because her carnal Hands had handled it and that not with a vertuous but with a vicious contact and chast Joseph was one of those who hated the very Garments spotted with the Flesh his own as well as others Jude 23. so left he the Garment defiled with the Defiler And though infamy and other misery he was sure to suffer hereby yet will he rather pass through bad report than be driven either from his Duty or from his integrity 2. Cor. 6.8 He chuseth not iniquity rather than affliction Job 36.21 but chose suffering rather than sinning Thus the Primitive Christians chose rather to be cast ad Leones quàm ad Lenones to Lions without than to be left to Lusts within as Tertullian phraseth it Thus because we will not comply to drink the Cup of Romes Fornication therefore the Harlot hates us accuses us to the Prince and casts some of us into Prison Let loose Garments go but not fix'd Godliness go Thus this good Soul Joseph goes in a right and straight Line to God and dare not fetch a compass especially a sinful one to prevent a bad Report A good Name is too dear bought when 't is purchas'd with a bad Conscience Joseph will not do evil that good may come of it Rom. 3.8 Neither will he give over being good though thereupon evil do ensue He dare not play away his Innocency to prevent Infamy but as is aforesaid parts with his Garment rather than with his Godliness though he foresaw she with whom he left it would make no good but a very bad use of it and accordingly it proved His Blackmoor Mistriss first loved him for his Beauty then lusted after him in Amorous Embracements to lye with him which when he refused she upon this disappointment hated him much more than ever she loved him 'T is the Guise and Custom of Women quicquid volunt valdè volunt what they do desire they are usually hurried Headlong with a mighty Torrent of Desires which when it meets with an Obstruction or unexpected Diversion then it rageth and foameth out as Land Floods into contrary Passions especially wicked Women who upon provocation of frustrated Affections are like the troubl'd Sea do cast out Mire and Dirt and cannot rest Isa 57.20 21 And therefore 't is the Character of a Whorish Woman according to Mantuan Aut te Ardenter Amat aut te Capitaliter odit Their inordinate Love or Lust doth degenerate into deadly hatred as it did in this cursed Curtizan who having villanouslly courted this Chast Joseph to Unchastity with her doth now Cloak her villany under Joseph's Coat she had catched and both therein and therewith as Solomon saith hunted for his precious Life Prov. 6.26 in falsly accusing him to her Husband upon this was the third Arrow shot at poor Joseph out of the Bow of his Masters Indignation which might in all probability have shot Joseph to death however it shot him into Prison One would think the Coats Joseph wore had some strange evil Fate attending them His first Coat we read of he parted with against his will for he was unable to retain it against the strength of his ten Brethren who all join'd Hands to strip him of it when he was but a youth of seventeen years of Age and the youngest of ten That Coat was shewed to deceive his Father in whom it caused great sorrow for him Gen. 37.32 and this second Coat that is here mentioned he left with his will and out of choice and judgment for he was twenty seven year old now so had attained great strength and 't was only a weak Woman who now devested him whom he could more easily have mastered than the ten Men aforesaid 'T was therefore his choice to leave it rather than a better thing This Coat is likewise shewed by his Mistriss as that was by his Brethren to deceive his Master in whom it kindled great wrath against him Oh costly Coats were they both The former caused much sorrow to his Father and the latter much sorrow to himself At the sight of this
be angry had all been true that his Wife told him A Man commonly Consults the death of him who hath abused his Wife and he can accept of no Ransom to save the Adulterer So saith Solomon concerning the rage of Jealousie and its rejecting all Ransoms Prov. 6.34 35. This Relation of the Wife being believed by the Husband when 't was not only affirmed by Words and Tear as saith Josephus but also confirmed by the Coat shewed 't is a wonder that Potiphar being a Martial Man and Master of the Slaughter Men as is before noted did not hereupon make a Slaughter of Joseph and presently put him to Death That this was not done could not arise from the former respect that Potiphar bare to Joseph for this most of all must aggravate the Crime The more Respect the more Rage for such a Roguish Requital It must therefore be ascribed to God and to God only who knew Joseph's Innocency 'T was the power of Gods Providence that manacld this Court-Marshal's Hands when so incensed against Joseph for so Capital a Crime Natural Agents cannot Act without the leave of Supernatural Providence Fire may blaze but it shall not burn unless God bid it do so Exod. 3.3 Dan. 3.21 22. ☜ Oh then what sufficient security have Innocent ones under God's Power and Favour against both Angry Men and enraged Devils yet though Joseph was not slaughter'd here he was cast into Prison Gen. 39.20 yea into a Dungeon Gen. 40.15 and where he had hard Treatment as David tells us Psal 105.18 He was so laden with Fetters there that the Iron entred into his Soul that is did eat into his Flesh and all by means of this whorish woman of whom Ambrose observeth well that because she was such a Slut she quite lost the Name of Joseph's Mistriss so she is no where called though she was so yet Potiphar is honoured with the title of Joseph's Master and Joseph acknowledged himself his Servant but he would not be stiled her Servant especially in the service of Sin to whom he did owe no such Service wherefore she is not dignify'd with a Name by Moses as Joseph's Master is whom the Holy Ghost calleth Potiphar but no Name is vouchsafed to his Mistriss like the Rich Glutton in Luke Ch. 16.19 not once named as Lazarus is though poor and little set by of Men yet God knew him as he did Moses Exod. 33.12 by Name whereas the Names both of that Rich Man and of this Rude and lend Woman were writ only on the Earth Jer. 17.13 not in Heaven Luk. 10.20 nor in the sacred Record easily cancell'd Rot above ground and left only for a reproach This clamorous and strenuous Strumpet is only stiled Potiphar's Wife and She and She but not at all is she once named by any proper Name or once called Joseph's Mistriss So the Whore of Babylon should not be honoured with the title of Church for though an Harlot be a Woman yet not a true Woman so Rome is not a true but a false Church and 't is very remarkable also that while she thus clamours and Declaims against Joseph and accuseth him of filthiness she likewise accuseth her Husband of Foolishness saying the Hebrew Servant so she stiled him in scorn as the Jews call'd Christ a Nazarite in contempt Joh. 19.19 and 1.46 and his followers Galileans Mark 14.70 and Act. 2.7 whom thou broughtest and broughtest unto us c. Gen. 49.17 In which words she implicitly lays the blame upon her Lord just as Adam did in the first Sin saying the woman whom thou gavest me Gen. 3.12 wherein he devolves the Sin upon God himself implying If thou hadst not given me a Woman I should not thus have sinned So here her words import the same fault in Potiphar intimating If thou hadst not bought and brought this Hebrew such an affront would not have been offered me so that some part of the Crime she imputes to her Lords foolishness as the other part to his Servants filthiness and without doubt her design in thus transmitting the fault upon her Husband was to stir him up the more for acquitting himself the better to fall foul upon poor Joseph with the greatest Rigour and Severity But surely Potiphar was too credulous of his Wives words and tears as Josephus saith omitting the further and fuller inquiry into the Fact Credulity is a Note of Folly Prov. 14.15 The simple believeth every word This wanton woman with her words and weeping could draw Potiphar any way with a wet finger and perswade him to any thing Especially in a case of Jealousie which cast a mist before his mind and made him too light of Belief so as to condemn the man rashly before he had examin'd the matter throughly Philo well observeth that when she shew'd Joseph's Coat had not her Husband been blinded he might have more rationally suspected it to bean Evidence of his Wifes Violence to his Servant rather than a sign of his to her Epicharmus's Rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be not light of beli●f had been of good use here for setting the Saddle upon the right Beast in his due Administration of Justice Potiphar doth not truly try before he did throughly trust he should have lookd twice before he had leapd once an impartial Examination of both Parties might have prevented His unjust Condemnation of the wholly innocent Party 'T is equally a Crime to be over-credulous as to be over-censorious both these two ways Potiphar offended 1. In being over-credulous to his Flattering yet Faithless wife And 2. In being over-censorious of his false-impeached yet Faithful Servant He was Judge in the Cause and should have lent both his Ears to hear the Defendant as well as the Plaintiff yet as if he had but one Ear for the latter the former is Cast before his Cause was ever heard and then cast into Prison where we must leave him until the time that his word came Psal 105.19 his liberate or delivering word In the mean while he had 2. some mitigation of his Malady which at last usher'd in his high Exaltation Section the 7th Josephus relateth how this Judge Potiphar most highly commended his Wifes Chastity and Loyalty whereof he had now so clear a witness but poor Joseph he Condemned for a most ungrateful wretch forgetting all his Masters Kindnesses conferr'd upon him and for a most notorious Whore master that would have ravishd the Judges Wife and his own Mistriss therefore he though never heard what he could say for himself in the Judges Judgment deserv'd the most direful Doom that could be denounced against him Hereupon he is Doomed into a Dungeon so the place of his Imprisonment is expresly explained Gen. 40.15 and 41.14 Until his Sentence of Death or Day of Execution The Hebrew word Sohar Gen. 39.20 signifies the Round-house or Round-Tower of Sahar round Cant. 7.2 perhaps from the grinding Mills which the Prisoners were forced to turn round as Judg. 16.21 yet Bor in