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A64467 The reconciler of the Bible inlarged wherein above three thousand seeming contradictions throughout the Old and New Testament are fully and plainly reconciled ... / by J.T. and T.M. ... Thaddaeus, Joannes, fl. 1630.; T. M. 1662 (1662) Wing T831_VARIANT; ESTC R33916 334,239 278

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hear and grant though not just in the same mode and time another thing to hear and presently give a supply in the same manner and method 1051. Joh. 11.50 Caiphas a wicked man prophesied by the instinct of the Spirit Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sons of God The gifts of Gods Spirit are of Sanctification and Salvation and those are proper to the elect children of God or gifts of administration which are common to good and bad men amongst which is the gift of Prophesie * Joh. 11.50 That one man should dye c. Rom. 8.14 The gifts of God are one thing the graces of God are another Caiphas though a wicked man might have this gift given or by a thorough consideration of the Scriptures might know that one man was to dye and yet this hinders not but that only the Sons of God should have the graces of the Spirit * 1052. Joh. 12.25 He that hateth his life in this world shall keep it unto eternal life 1 Joh. He that loveth wickedness hateth his own soul Hatred is not here taken properly for so man never yet hated his own flesh but hating is taken for less loving i. e. He that less loveth his life than trouble for the Gospel while he lives here shall keep his soul to eternal life though he may suffer the loss of his external life Hatred in the second place is taken for the effects of hatred He that loveth wickedness effecteth that to his soul which a man that hateth him would do that is he punisheth his own soul 1053. Joh. 12.27 Father save me from this hour Phil. 2.8 He became obedient unto death Christ feeling the sins of the world lying upon him feared death as he was man and desired rather to live than dye if that might have been granted without detriment to Gods glory and our salvation but because it was not possible that that Cup should pass from him he submitted himself to his Fathers will and said Therefore came I unto this hour 1054. Joh. 12.30 Now shall the Prime of this world be cast out Eph. 6.12 We have yet war with the Prince of this world That casting out was out of the hearts of the faithful whom though the devil do tempt and oppose many waies yet he cannot vanquish them but is cast out Also Christ respects the casting out of the devil whilst both Jews and Gentiles amongst whom the devil reigned were called to the grace of Christ by his coming * Joh. 12.30 with Eph. 6.12 Satan is cast out while the darkness of Ceremonies neglecting the Substance and the Idolatry that was amongst Jews and Gentiles was cast out and Christ by the preaching of the Gospel was exalted 2. Satan is cast out of the hearts of Gods people when he hath not his Regal and full sway in the heart but by the power of Gods grace he is mastered though satan as a tyrant even in them may strive and make onsets against the grace of God so that he being cast out as to his reigning yet not as to his tempting and striving warring against the hearts of Gods children which the latter place speaks of * 1055. Joh. 12.50 And I know that his Commandment is life 2 Cor. 3.7 The Law is the ministration of death The Commandment of God is that which either may be accounted Legal or Evangelical The former place intends Evangelical Commands i. e. such commands as were given by Christ or concerning Christ The latter is meant of Legal Commands without reference to Christ or else without the ministration of the Spirit * 1056. Joh. 13.1 Loving his own in the world he loved them to the end Hos 1.9 For you are not my people and I will not be your God Hos 9.17 My God will cast them away c. Gods People are his own first in a general or National way so are they which make an external profession of the Lord and are in outward covenant with him as the Jews these may have the external signs and impresses of Gods love and these turning away from the Lord the Lord will turn from them Secondly Gods own Elect or chosen forth of others which he once setting his love upon he loves to the end The former place is meant of his Elect. 1057. Joh. 13.27 After the sop satan entred into him Ver. 2. And supper being ended the devil having now put into the heart of Judas Iscariot The first place is of total possession when after so many admonitions from Christ and so many humane favours received Judas yet continued in his purpose of betraying Christ he is delivered to satan to be ruled so that he could think on nothing that was sound and good * 1058. Joh 13.27 Do quickly God commands no sin These are not the words of exhortation or command but spoken Ironically as if he should say Well take thy course and do what thou wilt make haste man * 1059. Joh. 13.29 Judas had the bag Mat. 10.9 Provide neither gold nor silver nor brass in your purse The latter place speaks of Christs Command upon a peculiar and particular occasion not upon the account of all times and that temporary command expired with that expedition But Christ having a purse-bearer constantly as Judas was shews that it is lawful to have and use money for our necessaries 1060. Joh. 13.34 A new Commandment I give unto you that you love one the other Mat. 22.27 This was the greatest Commandment in the Old Testament to love God and our Neighbour It is called a new Commandment not by reason of the substance but because Christ renewed it and the singular affection of love which Christ requires in his followers As he loved them and gave himself for them so he would that they should love one the other with singular affection * Joh. 13.34 with Mat. 22.37 It was an old command as to the substance of the command but a new command as to the circumstances Christ commanding it in a new manner it is not now Love your Neighbour as your self but As I have loved you The Gospel or Testament whereof this is a part is new the Spirit works it in out new hearts 1061. Ioh. 14.3 I go to prepare a place Mat. 25.34 Inherit the Kingdom prepared from the beginning of the world The place was predestinated from the beginning of the world but now by Christ it was particularly designed and fitted by the Ascension of Christ actually for the Godly 1062. Ioh. 14.4 Whither I go ye know and the way ye know Ver. 5. We know not They did know inchoatively and imperfectly but because they know not that they did know the cause was their rudeness and forgetfulness of Christs words * Joh. 14.4 wi h 5. The Disciples knew that Christ was to go to heaven but they were not so thoroughly instructed what heaven was or that he would go then thither Possibly they might imagine him to speak of
God would not suffer bastards to be admitted to publick offices for the disgrace of their births and the honour of Matrimony lest the Common-wealth should grow contemptible by such but that exclusion is not to be taken for a punishment but an affliction which God in the next life will reward with more glory if they be pious and penitent 241. Deut. 23.6 Thou shalt make no peace with the Ammonites and Moabites Rom. 12.18 If it be possible as much as lyeth in you live peaceably with all men Those Nations did not onely lay snares for the Israelites temporall life but also for their eternall life we so farre as we are able and where piety is not indangered must hold and embrace peace with all men 242. Deut. 23.15 Thou shalt not deliver to his master the servant which is escaped from his master unto thee Philemon verse 13. Paul sent Onesimus who was fled from his Master to his Master again The fugitive servant was not to be sent back to his angry master who was ready to kill him There was a difference amongst the servants of the Jews for he that was to serve seaven years if he ran away after he had served six years he was not to be sent back to his Master but the Gentiles were bond-servants all their lives 243. Deut. 24.1 If a man have taken a wife and married her and she find no favour in his eyes because he hath found some uncleannesse in her let him write her a Bill of divorcement and give it in her hand 1 Cor. 7.15 and send her out of his house Matth. 5.32 Chap. 19.7 Whosoever shall put away his wife saving for the cause of fornication causeth her to commit adultery and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth adultery The Law of divorcement of wives was nothing but a concession of Moses for the hardnesse of the hearts of the Jews and the danger of the lives of the women Christ abrogated that custome by the divine Law and a precept from the beginning and corrected the false glosses upon the Divine Law Mal. 2.6 * Deut. 24.1 with Mat. 19.8 The latter place saith Moses suffered it the former doth not say Moses commanded it If we read it as some say it may be read thus And He hath written her a Bill of divorcement and given it c. and sent c. and she hath departed and gone and been another mans wife so that he bids them not to put her away but forbids to take her again after she had been married to another or if men will say Moses commanded it it was by a politicall Law not by a morall Law or the Law of nature 244. Deut. 24.2 She that was sent away from her husband might marry another husband Rom. 7.3 Whilst her husband liveth she shall be called an adulteress if she be married to another man Divorce by a bill of divorcement doth not dissolve matrimony therefore they that are unlawfully parted must not attempt second marriages because they that are once married are made one body Gen. 5.1 1 Cor. 15.35 245. Deut. 24.16 The children shall not be put to death for the parents Rom. 5.12 By one man sin entred into the world The innocent children are not punished for the sinnes of their fathers but in Adam we all sinned and we are dayly polluted with many actuall transgressions 246. Deut. 25.3 Forty stripes he may have given him and not exceed 2 Cor. 11.24 I received of the Jews five times forty stripes save one The Jews to seem more merciful subducted one stripe 247. Deut. 25.4 Jos Ant. l. 4. c. 8. Thou shalt not musle the Ox which treadeth out the corn 1 Cor. 9.9 Doth God take care for Oxen The former place doth not properly appertain to Oxen but it is a figurative speech In the latter the Apostle speaks tropologically of the Ministers of the Church as if he would say if God take care for Oxen then much more doth he care for men and the Ministers of his Church * Deut. 25.4 with 1 Cor. 9.9 It is certain God takes care for Oxen by his generall providence for by this he provides for all creatures The second place is therefore not simply and so to be understood as if God had no provision for bruit beasts but to be understood comparatively he rather takes care for men and those men which labour in his word and so he argues à minori ad majus he that provideth for Oxen will much more provide for Ministers but God provides for Oxen therefore for Ministers * 248. Deut. 25.5 If brethren dwell together and one of them die and have no child c. Lev. 18.16 Thou shalt not uncover the nakednesse of thy brothers wife There are severall ways of interpreting this former Scripture By Brother may be understood the next kinsman for so the word may signifie and so 't is not a naturall Brother but some other in the kindred who might marry or yet it may be meant of a naturall Brother for where there were many Erothers who all died childlesse successively the surviving Brethren were to marry the Widdow if there were no son but a daughter there was a diff●rent course to be taken 249. Deut. 27.15 Cursed be the man that maketh a molten Image Rom 12.14 Blesse and curse not The former place must be understood to proceed from duty and zeal to the glory of God not our of desire to revenge So Moses and Paul did curse 1 Cor. 4.12 Let us follow the example of Christ who being reviled reviled not again when he suffered he threatened not lest he should seem desirous of revenge * 250. Deut. 29.2 You have seen all that the Lord hath done before your eyes Verse 4. Yet the Lord hath not given you eyes to see unto this day To see as the Israelites did that which the Lord did with their bodily eyes is one thing and to see the intent and purpose why the Lord did such things with the eys of their understanding is another They saw with their outward eyes but their hearts did not see and consider what the Lord had done * 251. Deut. 29.29 Secret things belong to God c. Psalm 25.14 The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him Things are secret either as they have relation to the subsequent issue which is hidden from all or else as they have relation to this or that person There are many things which the Lord keeps in his own bosome as not necessary for his children to know and there are other things which his wisedom thinks fit onely to reveale to persons fitly qualified for so great secrets and they are his own children The former place speaks of the secrets of Gods providence which are not fit to be discovered till they appear in their effects And the latter place speaks of such things as the Lord hides from the world in generall and thinks fit to discover onely to
a Tongue extant at this day partly consisting of Greek and partly of old Aegyptian is used for Saturn as Kircherus saith We know the Septuagint was writ in the Land of Aegypt at the instance of Ptolomeus Philadelphus where the Translators using Rephan the noted name for Saturne instead of Chiun altered the word and reteined the sense a liberty lawfully assumed by the most faithfull Interpreters And probably Saint Stephen spake to the Jewes in their own language But Saint Luke writing in Greek alledgeth his words according to the Septuagint Translation And whereas Saint Stephen addeth to worship them 't is but an amplification of the meaning which changeth not the sense at all onely shew the end of their making such a God Lastly One place nameth beyond Damascus The other beyond Babylon Saint Stephen onely more clearly Interprets what the Prophet meant for 2 Kings 16.9 Damascus was not far from thence 712. Amos 8.14 They shall fall and never rise up again 1 Cor. 11.22 We shall all rise The first place speaks of a resurrection from sinne to grace or from death to life which is denyed to impenitent sinners But the latter speaks of the generall resurrection of our bodies at the last day OBADIAH HIS PROPHESIE HE Prophesieth against the Idumeans He comforteth the Jews and promiseth grace and help to the people of God He prophesied in the year 3337. 713. OBad Vers 15. As thou hast done it shall be done unto thee Rev. 18.6 Double unto her double In both places is manifested the just revenge of God he is commanded to mix double for Babylon according to her works thereby to shew that the Kingdome of Antichrist shall be most miserably destroyed and trod down 714. Obad. Vers 21. And Saviours shall come upon Mount Sion Matth. 1.21 Jesus shall save his people from their sins The Prophet means ministeriall Saviours that is Jer. 3.18 1 Tim. 4.16 Jam. 5.20 Isa 53.11 Joh. 1.29 Eph. 1.7 the Apostles and other Ministers of the Church who do serve for the salvation of those that believe in Christ by the ministry of the word and not by the merit of their works and these turning sinners from their evill wayes do save their souls from death Christ Jesus is the onely Saviour who takes away the sins of the world in whom we have redemption by his blood and remission of our sinnes according to the riches of his grace nor is there salvation in any other Act. 4.12 JONAH HIS PROPHESIE THe sonne of Amittai of the Tribe of Zebulon He was sent to Nineveh the Metropolis of Assyria to Preach First when he refused he was cast into the Sea swallowed by a Fish and the third day he was cast on the Shoar then being sent again to Nineveh he was angry because God spared them upon their repentance therefore he was reprehended by God He prophesied in the year 3110. 715. JON. 1.3 Jonas rose up to flee unto Tharses from the presence of the Lord. Vers 9. I fear the Lord the God of Heaven who hath made the Sea and the dry Land Jonas would not flee from God so much as to escape his office by flying Vers 9. In the midst of the tempest he gives the Mariners an account of his Religion and of his flight confessing that for his disobedience that great tempest was sent 716. Jon. 1.10 Jonas fleeth to Tharsis from the presence of the Lord. Psal 139.7 Whither shall I go from thy Spirit or whither shall I flee from thy presence Jonas was not ignorant that no man could so flee from the face of the Lord but he thought that if he forsook the holy Land then all divine apparitions to him would cease and that God would then call some other man to the office he had laid upon him 717. Jon. 2.6 The earth with her barres was about me for ever Vers 10. The Fish cast Jonas on the dry Land Jonas thought in the belly of the Whale that he should remain there but God brought him forth and shewed thereby that he had power over life and death 718. Jon. 3.4 Yet forty dayes and Nineveh shall be overthrown Vers 10. God spared them The divine commination was conditionall if they repented not but because they did embrace the Word of God and detesting their wickednesse Jer. 10.7 8 9 10. they did turn to the Lord with all their hearts God spared them Of such God means speaking thus If I speak against a Kingdome or a Nation that I will root it out and that Nation repents of their evill wayes I will repent that I thought to do so to them 719. Jon. 3.4 Jonas foretold the overthrow of Nineveh and it was not performed Deut. 28.22 If a Prophet speak in the name of the Lord and that thing cometh not to passe the Lord hath not spoken it but the Prophet hath spoken it presumptuously That Sermon of Jonas was not so much a prophesie as a commination Moses speaks not of comminations and Prophesies which have a condition included but of such Prophesies as are absolute as Samuel foresaid to Saul that two men should meet him 720. Jon. 3.9 Who knows whether God will return and repent Mal. 3.6 I the Lord change not Numb 23.19 Jon. 1.7 Repentance and passions of men are attributed to God not properly but figuratively and by way of comparison and by Anthropopathy whilst God shews himself as a man repenting otherwise with God there is no change Jam. 1.17 721. Jon. 4.11 In Nineveh were more then sixscore thousand persons which partly by want of age and partly by simplicity did not know their right hand from their left Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is prone to evill from his youth Between the right and the left hand they did not know the difference who were yet so young as to be free from actuall sinnes and others in years that were simple and sincere MICAH HIS PROPHESIE THe Morasihite against the Kings the Judges the Priests and false Prophets in Judah and Israel He threatens perdition to impenitent sinners and promiseth salvation to the Saints which remained He prophesied in the year 3197. 723. MIcah 5.2 And thou Bethlehem Ephrata though thou be little amongst the thousands of Judah out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be Ruler in Israel Matth. 2.6 And thou Bethlehem in the Land of Judah art not the least amongst the Princes of Judah for out of thee shall come a Governour that shall rule my people Israel The Prophet calls it Bethlehem Ephrata and Matthew Bethlehem Judah for a difference from an other City so called in the Tribe of Zabulon It was indeed a little Town before Christs coming before Christ was born but afterwards it became a most noble City because the Messias was born there Matthew cites the place of the Prophet faithfully which the Pharisees had corrupted and sets down the words which the Pharisees speak unto Herod Micah 5.2 And thou Bethlehem
passively for experience which rejoyceth by patience in the latter place it is taken actively for trial and the effect of it that is tribulation for affliction trieth faith as fire doth gold 1196. Rom. 5.6 7. Christ died for us 1 Joh. 3.16 Because he that is Christ laid down his life for us and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren Col. 1.24 Christ dying for us a sacrifice and revenger paid our ransom for us John comparing the death of Christ for us and our death for the brethren doth it secundum quid for we dye not to redeem our brethren but to edifie them 1197. Rom. 5.8 God commendeth his love towards us in that when we were yet sinners Christ died for us Rom. 8.32 The Father spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all The Father and the Son did alwaies love us and have done all things for us Christ delivered himself for our sins into the power of the devil and because we were not to be redeemed by power but by righteousness Christ the Righteous died for us and so by righteousness he overcame the devil therefore because the devil had slain Christ it was necessary that he should release those that were captives Aug. de Trin. l. 13. c. 2. and the devil by the price paid was not made rich but ensnared 1198. Rom. 5.10 When we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son Joh. 15.13 No man hath greater love than this that a man lay down his life for his friends By nature we are Gods enemies by reason of sin but by grace we are reconciled to God by Christ who died for us and we are so made the dearest friends unto God 1199. Rom. 5.12 18. As by one man sin entred into the world and death by sin so death passed over all men Ver. 19 As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by one mans obedience many shall be made righteous The guilt of Adam is here compared with the grace of Christ because both have that descends on their followers Adam derives his guilt on all men by nature Christ derives his righteousness by grace on all that believe on him * Rom. 5.12 18. with 19. This term of Universality All must be restrained according to the nature of the subject as Adam transfused his Sin unto all which were his off-spring so Christ also justifieth all his that is all his which believe in him Besides the preheminence of the benefit consists not in the equality of the number that Christ should save as many as are lost in Adam for then there should be only an equality not a superiority Herein the Prerogative of grace is seen 1. In the excellency of the effect Life being more excellent than Death Righteousness than Sin 2. In the powerfulness of the Work it shews a greater power to save than to destroy 3. In the preheminence of the amplitude of grace we are justified not only from one but all kind of sins 1200. Rom. 5.20 The Law entred that sin might abound Chap. 7.12 The Law is holy and the Commandment holy just and good The Law increaseth sin not of it self and its own nature but by accident because it discovers sin and the poyson of it that we may know it for by the corruption of nature we are stirred up to strive against the Commandment yet the Law remains still in it self just and good 1201. Rom. 6.3 So many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death Acts 8.13 Simon Magus and other hypocrites were baptized yet they put not on Christ To be baptized into Christ is to put on Christ the Robes of his Righteousness and Holiness which Believers who are baptized do Hieron in Rom. 6. Simon Magus and hypocrites that are not faithful receive not the Spirit but water only in Baptism for there is a common Baptism to all that are baptized but not the vertue of Baptism that is grace Aug. in Psal 77. 1202. Rom. 6.12 Let not sin reign in your mortall body Chap. 3.12 There is none that doth good no not one The first place is to exhort us to mortifie sin in us in the Regenerate sin reigns not they are wholly dead to sin in Christ and partly in themselves they that are not Regenerate know indeed what they ought to do and know that of themselves they are unable to perform it 1203. Rom. 6.14 Ye are not under the Law but under grace Gal. 3.22 The Scripture hath concluded all under sin The first place is concerning the Regenerate who are not under the malediction dominion and rigid exaction of the Law The latter place is concerning all that are subject to sin for whom the Law is a Schoolmaster to Christ by the knowledge of our sins 1204. Rom. 6.18 You are become the servants of righteousness Ver. 20. You were free from righteousness In the former place is spoken of those who were converted and freed from the yoke of sin in the latter of those that are not yet converted who are free from righteousness and are not under the government of righteousness for carnal wisdom cannot be subject to the Law of God 1205. Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death Wisdom 2.24 By the envy of the devil death entred into the world The wages of sin is death because the Justice of God would have it so to punish mankind that was fallen by death the Author whereof was not God but it came into the world by the envy of the devil 1206. Rom. 7.6 Now we are delivered from the Law Mat. 5.17 I came not to destroy the Law We are delivered from the curse of the Law the rigour and provocation of it to sin also from the Law or death in which we were held but that takes not away the right use of the Law in respect of us 1207. Rom. 7.7 I had not known lust unless the Law had said Thou shalt not covet 1 Tim. 3.1 If a man desireth the Office of a Bishop he desireth a good work Concupiscence taken morally is either absolutely indifferent as to eat and drink or relatively to the Law and so good or bad as it is done contrary or according to the Law being ordinate or disordinate The latter place the Law condemns 1208. Rom. 7.8 Sin in me wrought in me all manner of concupiscence Jam. 1.15 When lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin Paul means actual concupiscence of corrupt nature James original concupiscence 1209. Rom. 7.9 I was alive without the Law once saith Paul Phil. 3.6 Touching the righteousness which is in the Law blameless Before his conversion Paul lived a Pharisee without any true knowledge of the divine Law ascribing to himself external righteousness which was hypocrisie 1210. Rom. 7.12 The Law is holy just and good 2 Cor. 3.7 It is the ministration of death The Law in it self in respect of the Author is good holy and just
The right of living is one thing the possession another Abraham had the right to the land and he had the possession but it was in his seed and posterity 69. Gen. 13.16 I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth 2 Sam. 24.9 And Joab gave up the summe of the number of the people unto the King The posterity of Abraham which were and are before the numbring David made cannot be numbred nor had David the compleat number of the people from Joab who gave the King a lesse number of the people than they were * 70. Gen. 14.13 And these were confederate with Abraham 2 Chron. 19. Shouldest thou help the ungodly and love them that help the Lord. The Law of God forbids leagues with Infidels and wicked men but not all leagues those are condemned only which are against true Religion Marriages or joyning in armes except in the case of publick necessity as Asa with Benadab Josaphat with Achab c. but such leagues as are concerning the defending of their Countrey preserving neighbourhood of not making inroads of pr●serving the publick peace or mutuall commerce where Religion is not hurt are not forbidden but are adjudged lawfull and necessary such a league was this of Abraham with the neighbouring Cananites * 71. Gen. 15.6 Whereby shall I know this Matth. 12.39 An evill and adulterous generation seeks after a sign It is one thing to ask a sing for the confirmation of temporall promises where the thing was obscure and altogether hid another thing to ask a sign to demonstrate a thing which might otherwise be known Abraham seeking a sign was a speciall motion of Gods Spirit which Christ condemns not for it hath been permitted to some by a peculiar favour as to Gideon and Hezekiah which they did not so much out of incredulity as out of a desire to be forfeited against humane infirmity or he asked this Question not so much doubting of the thing promised as desiring to know somewhat more particularly of the manner of performance Abraham might well seek a sign in a thing which he had no promise on before nor no footstep of the manner of the comming of it discovered there being many difficulties to encounter withall before it could be effected The Jews they might have sought the Scriptures and found so clear evidences that Jesus was the Christ that they need not seek any signes concerning him 72. Gen. 15.6 Abraham believed God and he counted it unto him for righteousnesse James 2.21 Abraham was justified by works Abraham before God was justified by faith and was declared to be just by his works before men offering up his son Isaac upon the Altar 73. Gen. 15.13 Thy seed shall be a stranger in a Land that is not theirs and shall serve them 400 years Exod. 12.40 Now the sojourning of the children of Israel who dwelt in Aegypt was 430 years In the Scripture the years are not alwayes precisely numbred the lesser number is omitted and here under the greater round number the lesse is comprehended * Gen. 15.13 with Exod. 12.40 In a great summe so small a number comes under no particular account as the 72 Interpreters are called the 70 and this account is not to begin lower than the giving of the promise to Abraham to the deliverance of the Israelites out of Aegypt and the giving of the Law were 430 years Exod. 12.40 Gal. 3.13 of which neither 405 nor 400 nor 430 was spent under the Egyptian persecution for though the account end with their parting thence it did not begin with their coming thither but so much of the time was run before Jacob's coming thither and so much after that peaceably passed on untill the death of Joseph so as some account the time of their rigid servitude to an 140 some to a 121 at the most the summe of 430 equally divided the one half spent before their going into Aegypt the other half in their abiding there 215 before their going into Aegypt reckoned thus from the promise given to Abraham to the birth of Isaac 25 from the birth of Isaac to the birth of Jacob 60 years from thence to their coming into Aegypt 130 in all 215 the other 215 thus 94 before the death of Levi 121 betwixt his death and their deliverance out of Aegypt Chrys hom 36. in Gen. 74. Gen. 15.15 Thou shalt go to thy Fathers in peace Joshua 24.2 Terah and his fathers served other Gods To go to his Fathers that is to die it is an Hebrew phrase Also by the name of Fathers here may be understood Adam Abel Noah c. to whom he went by faith * 75. Gen. 15.16 But in the fourth generation they shall come hither again 1 Chro. There are reckoned six in the Tribe of Judah from Abraham Isaac Jacob Judah Phares Hezron Chaleb so in the Tribe of Levi from Abraham to Moses are reckoned six from Abraham Isaac Jacob Levi Cahath Amram Moses Answ In the fourth generation that is in the 400 year 100 year to a generation or somewhat about this which for evennesse and rotundity is not reckoned Or Secondly By the fourth generation is meant the fourth geniture or birth of the Father and the Son so the fourth generation is to be reckoned from the descent of the sonnes of Jacob into Aegypt to their entrance into Canaan as in the Tribe of Judah from Judah to Phares from Phares to Hesron from Hesron to Caleb so in Levi Levi Cahath Amram Moses Thirdly It is one thing to begin the reckoning of four generations from the day that God made this promise to Abraham at which time Abraham had none at all and another thing to begin their account from the time that their servitude in a strange Nation which God foretold should determine before ever God promised the returning of any fourth generations he told Abraham they must first fojourne in a strange Land then in the fourth generation of them whom God brings out thence they shall return to this Land which account Moses set down Exod. 6.16 reckoning from Levi whose first generation was Coath the second was Amram the third Aaron the fourth Eliazar who divided the Land at the time God had foretold Abraham 76. Gen. 16.9 The Angel of the Lord said unto Hagar Return to thy Mistress Chap. 21.12 God commands Abraham to send Hagar away First Hagar flying of her own accord was commanded to return to her Mistresse Gal. 4.22 Chap. 31. then being thrust out by force she staid in the desert the Apostle expounds that figure and applies it to the Old and New Testament 77. Gen. 17.12 God appointed circumcision 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing Circumcision by divine institution in the Old Testament was a sacrament to the coming of Christ but in the New Testament it is nothing nor is profitable to our salvation we must therefore distinguish the times of the Old and New Testament 78. Gen. 18.25 Thou shalt not kill the righteous with the
then enter but when the cloud was removed then he went into it 182. Numb 8.7 The Levites shall shave off all the hair of their flesh Lev. 19.27 You shall not round the corners of your heads nor shave your beards In the time of the Leviticall pacification they did shave the hair of their flesh Ezek. 44.22 but otherwise to cut the hair of their heads or shave their beards round was sorbade them by Moses 183. Numb 10.29 Hobab was Moses father in law Exod. 2.18 Raguel Chap. 3.1 4.18 18.5 Jethro Hobab because he was the sonne of Raguel is thought by some to be Moses kinsman in the Scripture oft-times persons have two or three names so the father in law of Moses had many names * 184. Numb 12.1 His wife who was an Aethiopian Exod. 2.10 She was a Midianite of Arabia Answ There was a double Aethiopia one West without Aegypt in Africa which is called Abasa the other East which is called Arabia which comprehends the Midianites and other people living toward the South 185. Numb 12.8 God spake with Moses mouth to mouth Exod. 33.20 Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time 1 Tim. 6.16 The divine essence is invisible and dwels in an unaccessible light that Moses in his morality saw not perfectly yet we piously believe that the Sonne of God taking on him the shape of a man as he was afterwards to be incarnate did speak with Moses familiarly 186. Numb 14.1 All the people with a 〈◊〉 voice murmured against Moses Verse 23. They shall not see the Land of promise except Caleb Joshua 14.1 The children of Israel possessed the land of Canaan which Eleazar the Priest and Joshua the sonne of Nun and the heads of the Fathers distributed to them Chap. 24.7 Whose eyes saw what the Lord had done in Aegypt 1 Cor. 10.5 Eleazar and Caleb and other faithfull people came into the Land of promise but those that murmured were destroyed in the wildernesse for with many of them God was not well pleased 187. Numb 15.38 Speak to the children of Israel that they make themselves fringes in the borders of their garments Mat. 23.5 Christ condemns the Pharisees for enlarging their phylacteries and their borders The abuse of a thing doth not take away the use of it God commanded the Israelites that so often as they should look upon their garments they should remember the Commandements of God and do them But the Pharisees abused this commandement of God boasting hypocritically of their long garments and fringes as though there had been some holinesse in them therefore their hypocrisice is deservedly reprehended * 188. Numb 16.29 If these men die the common death of all men c. Eccles 3.19 As one dyeth so dieth the other for they have all one breath It s one thing to speak of death according to the course of nature another thing to write of strange judgements above the course of nature according to the course of nature as the one dyeth so dyeth the other But this was a particular case of Corah Dathan c. which were to dye in a strange manner that the people might see the Lords sending of Moses 189. Numb 16.32 The earth opening her mouth devoured them all which belonged to Corah with their houses and substance Deut. 11.6 Psalm 106.17 26.32 When Corah perished all his sonnes perished not The sonnes of Corah which escaped alive were in the Tabernacle of the Lord when the sedition began because they consented not to the Levites in the sedition of their Father 190. Numb 18.16 The redemption of the first-born shall be from a moneth old for five shekels after the shekell of the Sanctuary Exod. 22.30 Thou shalt give me thy first-born and with Sheep and Oxen thou shalt do the like seven dayes it shall be with the dam on the eight thou shalt give it me The first-born of man and of clean beasts were consecrated unto God the eighth day but the unclean beasts were redeemed after one moneth A woman after she brought forth a male child must stay apart six weeks after a female twelve weeks in that time they were purged from their issue of blood 191. Numb 18.20 God said unto Aaron Thou shalt have no inheritance in the Land neither shalt thou have any part amongst the Israelites I am thy part Joshua 21.41 The 48 Cities of the Levites were within the possessions of the children of Israel The Levites had their habitation and food in those Cities with their families which Cities were as Schooles wherein they were instructed rightly in the Law and to perform their office in holy things as they should 192. Numb 20.11 At the stroak of Moses on the rock of flint the waters came out abundantly and the congregation drank and their beasts also Psalm 18.1 1 Cor. 10.4 They all drank the same spirituall drink for they drank of that spirituall Rock which followed them and that rock was Christ Moses relates historically the water that came out of the flint for the use of the people and their Cattle The Apostle speaks after a spirituall manner and saith that Christs b●nefits to us were prefigured thereby 193. Numb 20.18 21. Edom would not suffer the Israelites to passe through the land Deut. 9.29 Let me pass through thy land as the children of Esau did unto me Jude 11.18 The children of Esau denied to let the children of Israel passe through the publick way through their Cities and Villages the King of Edom suffered them to passe about by his borders and through by-wayes 194. Numb 20.28 Elcazar the high Priest was present at his fathers death Lev. 21.11 The high Priest shall not go in to any dead body nor defile himself for his Father or his Mother Eleazar was not yet the high Priest actually and this was a singular example Augustine That time that the high Priest did his office of high Priest it was forbidden him that he should not come to his Parents being dead * 195. Numb 20.29 In the mount Hor and yet Aaron is said to dye in Mosera and to be buried there Answ Hor and Mosera are the same places the Mountain was called Hor but the place adjoyning in which the Tents were fixed was called Mosera 196. Numb 21.9 Moses made a Serpent of brasse and put it up for a sign and when they that were bitten beheld it they were healed Exod. 20.4 Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven Image or any likenesse of any thing in heaven or earth God gave an especiall command of setting up the brasen serpent like to the fiery Serpents whose wounds and bites the Israelites could not endure that so looking on this they might be safe it was a figure of Christ crucified 197. Numb 22.12 God said to Balaam Thou shalt not go with them Verse 20. Rise and go with them Verse 35. Go with the men God would not that Balaam should go to curse the Israelites at last he
him as before 307. 1 Sam. 15.35 It repented the Lord that he had made Saul King Rom. 11.29 The gifts and graces of God are without repentance The Scripture speaking by anthropopathy after the manner of men affirmes that God repented because he knew Saul to be impenitent and that he should lose his Kingdome and his life also by the just judgment of God * 1 Sam. 15.35 with 1 Sam. 19.24 Answ He went not to see or visit him by way of office or friendship as formerly He prophesied before him when he was by himself which was not to visit him 308. 1 Sam. 16.1 Saul was rejected by God that he should no longer raign over Israel above ten years Acts 13.21 He gave them Saul the son of C is a King for forty years Saul after he was annointed raigned ten yeares Paul joyned the government of Saul and Samuel together 309. 1 Sam. 16.21 David stood before Saul and became his Armour-bearer Chap. 17.55 Saul seeing David go forth against the Philistines he said unto Abner Whose sonne is this young man Order is not alwayes observed in History before the duell with Goliah David was no approved Souldier but after that therefore it is Hysterosis that is put before which should follow after * 310. 1 Sam. 16.21 And David came to Saul and stood before him and he loved him greatly c. 1 Sam. 17.55 He said unto Abner the Captain of the Host Abner whose son is this youth Answ Some would have this Chapter dislocated and by an Hyst●rosis to be put after the sixteenth which ought to have been put after this if the other story would have suffered it This seventeenth Chapter speaks of David as a youth not exercised in armes or fit for fighting But the sixteenth Chapter speaks him to be strong and warlike and thus in other places of the Bible as Gen. 2. 5. Jo. 21. 15 c. there are the like dislocations Others say that David after his coming to Court had been some good time absent before this battle and so was forgotten of Saul a little time making a great change in growing youth and that Sauls memory was not altogether so strong as to remember those that were absent from him though he might those which were constantly with and before him Others say that he might know him in his person and yet more curiously enquire after his condition and parentage having promised to give him his Daughter and as for Abner being Captain of the Host he might be abroad in some Warlike expeditions when David was in Court and therefore now knew him not * 311. 1 Sam. 18.19 When Merab Sauls daughter c. with 2 Sam. 21.8 And the King took the five sons of Michal c. They are the naturall sonnes of Merab and the legall sonnes of Michal and therefore to bear doth onely signifie to bring up to feed and to nourish For thus the sonnes of Machir are said to be born on Josephs knees that is brought up Filiation is either naturall or legall naturall is by generation legall is adoption testified by education and bringing up and by succession in the Kingdome and in Levitation of which Deut. 25.5 by the Law of redemption 312. 1 Sam. 21.1 David came to Nob to Abimelech the Priest Mark 2.26 He went into the House of God in the dayes of Abiathar the Priest Abimelechs Father was Abiathar the Sonne doing the Priests office was in place of his Father who followed David and was in exile with him * 1 Sam. 21.1 with Mark 2.26 He is called Abiathar and there Abimelech Answ When these things came to passe Abiathar the sonne of Abimelech was present who was made High-Priest upon the murther of the Father or else you may conclude both Father and Sonne had two names 1 Cro. 15. 1 Cro. 18. where when David reigned its said Sadok and Abiathar were Priests and that Sadok and Abimelech were Priests 313. 1 Sam. 21.13 David changed his behaviour before Achish and fayned himself mad Eccl. 7.17 Be not foolish 1 Pet. 2.1 David fearing greatly counterfeited folly and by that dishonest meanes secured himself Joh. 14.5 314. 1 Sam. 26.10 Or his day shall come to dye Eccles 7.17 Why wilt thou die before thy time His dayes are determined the number of his moneths are with God thou hast appointed his bounds which he cannot pass Ecclesiastes warns us that we should not by intemperance and wickedness shorten our dayes for they that are put to death by mans reason might live longer * 315. 1 Sam. 28.11 The Woman said whom shall I bring up unto thee He said Samuel c. Rom. 4.17 God raised the dead To raise a vanishing specter or shadow is one thing and a living body is another To act a dead carcasse is one thing and to call the soul back into the body and the body from the earth is another The Devill might do the one but not the other * 316. 1 Sam. 28.13 I saw men as Gods Verse 14. An old man cometh up The Hebrews to shew the dignity of the person use the plurall number for the singular Exod. 32. these are thy gods speaking of the Calf And this may be seen in Sauls reply of what form or shape is he she then leaves the plurall for the singular an old man which shews he was but one 317. 1 Sam. 28.14 Samuel appeared to Saul after his death Rev. 14.13 For the dead rest from their labours He saw a shadow of Samuel but not true Samuel whose soul is in Gods hands and his body rests in peace had it been Samuel indeed he would not suffer Saul to worship him but would have reproved him for that he had fallen from God to look after Witches it was the Devill therefore in Samuels likenesse * 1 Sam. 29.3 David did not remain years onely four moneths Chap. 27. Answ 'T was Achish lye the better to set forth Davids fidelity or some say he did not lye but he spoke by disjunction or the words may be understood of his first flight when he did feigne himself mad * 1 Sam. 31.6 with 2 Sam. 1.4 Not all but many were slain diverse escaping Answ When the Text speaks of all being slain it speaks of all Sauls familiar Friends Courtiers Followers and Guards * 318. 2 Sam. 1.10 with 11. He reigned two years he reigned seven years Two years before War the War arose betwixt David and him and afterwards five years in trouble * 319. 2 Sam. 6.10 Obed-edom was a Levite How then was he of Gath a City of the Philistins He was said to be of Gath because of his habitation he and his Father were banished thither with David and Abiathar the High-Priest * 320. 2 Sam. 6.20 with Vers 14. 1 Cro. 15. He was naked or deprived of his Majesticall Ornaments and onely cloathed with a Linen Ephod as Priests use to be * 2 Sam. 6. ult Michal the daughter of Saul had no child
the time of Iacob 435. JOb 1.1 He lived in the Land of Vz his name was Iob he was a perfect and an upright man and one that feared God and eschewed evill Psal 147.20 He hath not done so with any Nation Under the old Testament the publick worship of the true God was amongst the Israelites whither other Nations were admitted to come which God called by divers wayes to come unto him and he had amongst them some that served him sincerely as Iethro Moses father in Law the Gibeonites and Iob here so Rahab and Ruth * Iob 1.1 with Psalm 147.20 In all probability Iob was a sonne of Nahor Abrahams brother descended from him by his sonne Vz Gen. 22.21 and though he were not immediately descended from Isaac yet in regard he was of the same lineage and held the same Religion the latter place seems not to thwart Besides the latter place did not exclude the coming in of particular persons to the knowledge of the Lord for there were many Proselytes among the Iews 436. Job 1.6 Satan came amongst the sonnes of God 2 Peter 2.4 God spared not the Angels that sinned but cast them down to hell and delivered them unto chains of darknesse The coming of Satan amongst the sonnes of God was onely as an executioner of the commands and judgments of God * 437. Job 1.7 The Lord said Satan whence comest thou he answered from going to and from the earth Jude 6. Reserved in chains of darknesse unto the great day Although the world be the prison which God doth allow the Devill to walk up and down in till the day of Judgment yet he is reserved under chains in this world in a dark estate and condition He may walk up and down in this prison and yet be a prisoner * 438. Job 1.19 And behold there came a great wind out of the wildernesse John 3.8 Thou canst not tell whence it cometh When the Text tells you of the wind coming out of the wildernesse it intends not that the wildernesse was the originall place but that was the coast from which it blew at that time The latter place may purport that thou knowest not from what matter it cometh or the precise place of its generation though they might tell the place from whence this or that particular wind did blow in relation to the people of this or that place 439. Job 5.1 Call if there be any that will answer thee and to which of the Saints wilt thou turn Isa 63.16 Abraham knew us not Israel was ignorant of us Eliphaz teacheth Iob that there is flying to Saints in misery and that no man is unjustly punished by God but there is alwayes a just cause for it therefore saith he shew any of the Saints who being in such a calamity as thou art that was so without a cause as thou supposest thy self to be Isal 51.7 Rom. 7.20 440. Job 14.4 Who can bring a clean thing out of unclean Rom. 11.16 For if the first fruits he holy the lump is also holy All of us by originall sinne are conceived and born in sinne and sin dwels in us yet by Gods grace we are reckoned for holy which account passeth over all within the Covenant as we are 441. Job 14.5 His dayes are determined the number of his moneths are with thee thou hast appointed his bounds that he cannot passe Pov. 18.21 Life and death are in the power of the tongue Death and life of man are in the power of God who hath put bounds to his dayes Life and death is said after a sort to be in the power of the tongue because a wicked man may by slanders and detraction and contention hurt a man even to death 442. Job 14.6 14. Shall a man if he die live again 1 Cor. 15.22 In Christ shall all be made alive Job denyeth not the resurrection Dan. 12.2 but he saith rather that men shall rise not with bodies subject to death but such as shall live for ever but the wicked to eternall death * 443. Job 14.14 All the dayes of my appointed time c. Eccles 7.17 Be not over wicked why shouldst thou dye before thy time The time which we may live by nature or according to the composition of our bodies is one thing the time which God in his secret judgement sets down for us is another God appoints one man to live so long as his naturall composition can last and to this end he shall use these and these wayes and God appoints that this or that man if he take these or the other extravagant courses shall by a fall from his horse or by the hand of the Magistrate or the like come to a sudden and not naturall death 444. Job 19.25 In the last day I shall rise out of the earth Vers 26. And I shall be cloathed again with my skin and in my flesh shall I see God 1 Cor. 15.44 1 Cor. 15.44 It shall rise a spirituall body We shall rise with this nature and body that we now carry about us Matth. 22. and shall enjoy eternall felicity it is called a spirituall body by the Apostle not in respect of the substance but the qualities virtues and proprieties we shall have no need of meat drink or wedlock we shall be like the Angels Or a spirituall body a body free from carnall desires being wholely subject to and ruled by the Spirit 445. Job 19.17 Whom I shall see for my self and my eyes shall behold and not another Rev. 1.7 Every eye shall see him Job speaks confidently that in his flesh he should see God to his salvation 2 Cor. 13. 1 Ioh. 3.2 face to face as he is after this ordinary seeing by faith so shall the godly see God a gracious father the wicked shall see him as a just and a revenging judge * 446. Job 21.27 Behold I know your thoughts Jer. 17.9 10. Who can know it I the Lord know it One man is said to know anothers thoughts three wayes First By revelation from God Secondly By words of the mouth Thirdly By externall symptomes or actions And one man is said to know anothers thoughts these two latter waies probably not infallibly Job knew by the drift of their discourse what they in ended to make him confesse and this probably It s God onely which can infallibly tell what a man thinks without word or symptome 447. Iob 31.30 Neither have I suffered my mouth to sinne 1 John 1.10 If we say we have no sin we make God a lyar Job was not without sinne before God but his conscience did not accuse him of manifest sinne and wickednesse towards men 448. Job 42.10 The Lord gave Job twice as much as he had before Vers 13. He had seven sons and three daughters His faith of the resurrection is here commended because his children were not doubled 〈◊〉 onely were as many as before Ep. 120. cap. 10. 〈◊〉 Augustine for these did signifie that those
sinne because sin would displease him 474. Psal 32.3 When I kept silence my bones waxed old Vers 3. Through my roaring all the day long Silence respects the suppression of sins Crying the complaints and lamentations for grief of mind 475. Psal 32.10 Many sorrowes shall be to the wicked 73.5 The righteous are punished more than the wicked Punishments internall and sempiternall are for the wicked but externall and temporary are understood by the last place 476. Psal 34.5 They lookt unto him and were lightned 1 Tim. 6.16 He dwels in a light that no man can approach unto God is said to dwell in light not properly but metaphorically for by this his glory and manifest presence is understood 477. Psal 34.10 There is no lack to them that fear God 2. Tim. 3.12 All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution The Godly suffer no want in spirituall good but in corporall and temporall good yet their persecutions are good for them and are rewarded with eternall life 478 Psal 34.22 None that trust in the Lord shall be desolate Rom. 3.23 All have sinned and come short of the glory of God In the first place is understood delinquency to death and eternall destruction but they that believe in Christ their faults shall not be imputed to them unto death 479. Psal 35.6 Let their way be made slippery and dark and let the Angell of the Lord persecute them Mat. 5.44 Love your enemies In the first place are meant the incorrigible and obdurate enemies of Christ and his Gospell In the latter place those of whose conversion we have hope 480. Psal 36.8 Thou shalt preserve both man and beast O Lord. 1 Cor. 9.9 Doth God take care for Oxen Under the generall care of God are comprehended all creatures but under his speciall care Men for whose sake God hath made the beasts Ambrose saith God cares nor for beasts for themselves but for our sake for which he created all things and therefore his principall care is for us * 481. Psal 36.25 I never saw c. But many good men have perished by hunger Lazarus and Martyrs Res When God laid on the temporall punishment he supplied it with spirituall comforts and food Secondly David speaks of himself I have not seen if it happened it happened the seldomer 482. Psal 37.21 The wicked borrowes and payeth not again Luke 6.35 Lend looking for nothing again If the Debter be fallen into extreme want that he cannot pay we must not kill him or forsake him in his utmost necessity 483. Psal 37.25 I have been young and now am old yet saw I never the righteous forsaken nor his seed begging their bread Luke 16.20 Lazarus a beggar desired to be satisfied with the crumbs which fell from the rich mans Table Beggery is a punishment to the wicked but to the godly a fatherly punishment and it is found in the unlawfull begging of Monks sturdy obstinate and idle people which refuse to work but the lawfull begging is for the Members of Christ which are brought to extream poverty by banishment war fire water sickness c. * 484. Psal 37.25 with Luke 16.20 The former Text saith I never saw the righteous forsaken his seed begging It wants Nor in the Originall And it may as well be rendred The righteous forsaken and his seed i. e. both the righteous and his seed One may be forsaken as Lazarus but not both the righteous and the seed of that righteous person forsaken 485. Psal 40.7 Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not 1 Pet. 2.5 Ye as living stones are built up a spirituall house an holy Priesthood to offer up spirituall sacrifices unto God by Jesus Christ God would none of the sacrifices of the Jews which were offered without faith The Apostle speaks of the spirituall sacrifices of Christians as the oblation of our body a contrite heart giving of thanks works of charity which are acceptable sacrifices to God * 486. Psal 40.7 Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire Lev. 16. The Lord commanded c. God would not have sacrifice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they came from prophane persons without faith and charity Yet God desires sacrifice in respect of their end and institution as they prefigured Christ to come not as the Jews gloried in them and abused them to resist Christ nor as they were to remain in the Jewes opinion after Christ or as they might be conjoyned with Christ nor yet as they might imagine that he was to be served with the outward act and not having the inward power joyned with that outward act 487. Psal 40.9 Lo I come in the volume of the book it is written of me that I might do thy will O God Matth. 26.39 Father if it be possible let this cup passe from me yet not as I will but as thou wilt Christ that he might fulfill the will of his Father in redeeming mankind offered himself freely and though in the act he was sorrowfull as men are and would if it had been possible have escaped death without the detriment of mans salvation yet he submitted himselfe to his Fathers will * 488. Psal 43.1 Judg me O Lord. Psal 143.2 Enter not into Judgement with thy servant O Lord. Juding of a mans persons is one thing of a mans cause is another David desires God to manifest himself whether the cause which he was disputing with his enemies were just and whether his heart was upright in that matter in relation to them But when David comes to consider the difference betwixt God and him occasioned by his sinnes then he finds himself so faulty that he praies God to pardon him and not judg him for his sins were many 489. Psal 44.23 Awake why sleepest thou O Lord rise 121.4 The keeper of Israel sleepeth not So the godly being grievously afflicted speake after the manner of men not as if God slept or took no care of them but they crave of God that he would shew himself by his works of justice and mercy and would help them * Psal 44.23 with 121.4 In the former place he spake out of a sense of divine displeasure In the latter he spake out of a sense of Gods providence Affection makes Gods children think that to be which is not think that God sleeps when he doth not every moment in mesery being apprehended as the absence of a years mercy * Psal 44.23 with Psal 121.4 Sleeping is attributed to God by a Metaphor from men when they are on sleep they help not nor regard the danger of other And when God regarded not or helped not David as he apprehended he seemed to be as on sleep to him and his affaires though he did not apprehend God to be on sleep in himself or to others for if he had he could not have imagined so small a cry as his on earth could have raised him in Heaven 491. Psal 45.2 Thou art fairer than the children of men Isaiah 53.2 There was no comlinesse
in him he was despised and we esteemed him not In the first place is spoken of Christ exaltation and the glory of his Kingdome of which Solomon was a type not outwardly in the sight of men but inwardly and spiritually before God and the faithfull people In the latter of Christs humiliation and as carnall men judge of Christ * Psal 45.2 with Isaiah 53.2 The former speaks of Christ as he appeares to the soule broken and bruised and called home The latter of Christ as he appeared to the men of the world Jews and the wicked without any Majesty or Kingship The former as he shall appear in glory the latter as he appears in outward dispensations here below The comelinesse is rather relating to his Majesty than to his person though questionlesse which in it self was fair yet was through his troubles and sorrow beclouded and he seemed a man of sorrow 492. Psal 49.8 The Brother shall not redeem his Brother Heb. 2.12 Christ our Brother offered himself for the price of our Redemption Because men could not satisfie the Divine Law Christ God and Man our Brother and our Saviour by his obedience and suffering fulfilled the whole Law for us his satisfaction is our Redemption for our sinnes 1 Joh. 2.2 Rom. 20. and the sinnes of the whole world and he is the fulfilling of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that believeth * 493. Psal 49.12 He is like the beasts that perish Rom. 8.21 The creature it self also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God Beasts perish because when they die there is an end they have no resurrection The second place speaks of the renewing of the world after desolution thereof And whether by the creature he means the Heaven and the Earth with the rest of inanimate things or he intends the animate Besides he shews that they shall be no more subject to any such alteration and corruption as now when the beasts perish much lesse to serve for the object and instrument of sinne but every thing according as its capable shall be glorified and fully delivered from vanity and perishing * 494. Psal 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will hear thee Isa 65.25 And it shall come to passe that before they call I will answer When God saith he will answer before they call it hinders not but that when at other times they do call he will answer The latter promise in Isaiah doth not say that he will alwaies answer before they call but that sometime he will answer before they call i. e. he will deliver his people before they apprehend danger * 495. Psal 51.11 Cast me not away from thy presence c. Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Doubt If the Lord should take away his Spirit and cast his people out of his presence Then how comes he not to leave us Answ The words of David might be spoken by him in his desertion in which case a man may fear that which he is most sure to avoid His praying that God would not cast him off doth not necessarily imply a fear that God would do it but rather an hope and assurance that God would not do it As elsewhere we find him praying for that which God hath promised unto him and which he doubted not but God would performe 2 Sam. 26.27 The former place shews what David in justice might fear for his sinne The latter what God in mercy would grant for his Christ The former what David in his prayers did seek The latter what God in his promise did answer 496. Psal 95.11 Slay them not O Lord. Vers 13. Consume them in thy wrath First he praies that the enemies of God may be tollerated a while for example to others and led captive in triumph then when others are taught better by their example let them be destroyed That destruction if it may not be understood of their lives yet it may be of their power dignities and wealth that so being brought down they may not be able to hurt the Church or oppose themselves against God * Psal 59.11 with 13. Slay them not at once or suddenly let them rather have Cains punishment but yet consume them surely that so they may know themselves to be men and thou the God of Heaven * 497. Psal 60. title When Joab returned and smote of Aedem in the valley of Salt twelve thousand 1 Chron. 18.12 Abishai the sonne of Zeruiah slew of the Aedemites in the valley of Salt eighteen thousand 2 Sam. 8.13 And David gat him a name when he returned from smiteing of the Syrians in the valley of Salt eighteen thousand The victory is ascribed to David as Generalissimo to Joab and Abishai as two chief Commanders and so all three had their speciall Victories running into one They are called Aedomites in some places Syrians in another because both Syrians and Aedomites joyned together against David Joab and Abishai In one place its said eighteen thousand in another place twelve thousand probably either David or some of the three at first slew six thousand and then Joab returning with the rest he either giving the first onset or else doing some remarkable service is said to slay twelve thousand more and so in all eighteen thousand 498. Psal 60.3 O God thou hast cast us off Rom. 11.1 Hath God cast off his people God forbid David speaks of temporall casting off Paul of eternall 499. Psal 62.11 God spake once Heb. 1.1 God spake by divers manners to the Fathers and Prophets God speaks once not by number but by counsell nor doth he deliberate the second time but he speaks divers wayes with a voice or without a voice to men waking or sleeping by himself or by his Angels In the former place the certainty in the latter the manner of divine Revelation is understood * 500. Psal 68.18 Thou hast led captivity captive and thou hast received gifts for men Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he gave gifts to men Led captivity captive which may be interpreted either passively or actively Passively he took away from Satan Death and Hell all their captives changing their miserable captivity into an holy and happy captivity whereby they are brought into the obedience of the Gospel 2. Actively Christ hath captivated the world flesh and Devill Death and Hell which in severall kinds had before captivated mankind Received gifts and gave gifts i. e. receiving gave as the phrase is Exod. 25.2 and in divers others places taking is used for giving 1 Kings 3.24 17.10 Judg. 14 2. and giving is used for taking as Gen. 42.30 So as Christ received gifts at Gods hands in the Psalms and he did not keep these gifts or use them for himself but Saint Paul would have us to know that he gave us these spirituall gifts Thus the one shews the giver the other interprets to what end they were
sate at the right hand of God Chap. 14.22 This is my body Christ ascending and sitting at the right hand of God doth not take away the presence of his body in the holy Supper but confessing it Phil. 2.9 that he is exalted above all things into glory 935. Mar. 16.19 Christ sits at the right hand of God Eph. 1.20 Col. 3.1 Heb. 1.3 c. 8.1 1 Pet. 3.22 Act. 7.56 Steven saw Jesus standing at the right hand of God To sit is the part of the Judge to stand the part of him that fights and helps us saith Gregory Homil. de Ascens Domini Steven therefore being at the conflict with death saw him standing whom he had for to help him but Mark describes Christ sitting after his Resurrection for after the glory of his Ascension he shall come as Judge in the end of the World The Gospel of St. LUKE IT comprehends the Conception of John Baptist and Jesus Christ with their Nativity Life Vocation Sermons in special the Miracles of Christ his Passion Death Resurrection Apparition and Ascension into Heaven 936. LUK. 1.13 Zacharias prayer is heard ver 18. He believed not Although he had a conflict through the weakness of his faith of the special gift of so wonderful a Son yet he had a general faith concerning a Messias the Deliverer of the people from their disgrace and therefore his doubting did not exclude his prayers from being heard 937. Luk. 1.32 The Lord God shall give unto him the Throne of his Father David Joh. 18.36 My Kingdom is not of this world To sit in the Throne of David here is not to govern a temporal Kingdom as David did here on earth but a spiritual wherein Christ reigns by faith in the hearts of his followers and he rules over sin death and the devil 938. Luk. 1.33 And he shall reign over the House of Jacob for ever 1 Cor. 15.24 He shall deliver up the Kingdom to God the Father ver 28. He shall be subject unto him Christs Kingdom is eternal and without end not as Davids earthly Kingdom was for a few daies but it must be continued for ever in the Person of Christ and the faithful after a spiritual manner he shall deliver the Kingdom to the Father not that he shall no longer rule with the Father but because ●fter this world is ended he will fully joyn us to his Father and will govern his Church otherwise than it is now governed * Luk. 1.33 with 1 Cor. 15.24 28. There is a twofold Kingdom of Christ 1. Essential as God 2. Oeconomical as Mediator God and Man betwixt God and Man The first Kingdom is not here spoken of in either place And as for the second which he received from his Father he shall surrender it up again to his Father after he hath subdued sin and death and put all his enemies under his feet Christ governs his Kingdom his Church and people here by means and instruments as the Word Sacraments Ministers c. By Angels Men Ecclestastical or Politick opposing means for the suppressing his childrens adversaries Now he shall deliver this Mediatory rule when he hath fully reconciled all men to God and perfected his work to God the Father who will rule his Children in a new and hidden way without men or means nor mediatly but immediately by himself Christ shall still reign He shall reign over Israel for ever because he shall rule till Eternity come and after him there shall be no King for when Eternity comes he shall rule though in a new way 939. Luk. 1.36 Elizabeth Maries Cousin ver 5. She was of the daughters of Aaron Luk. 2.5 Mary was of the Tribe of Judah of the house of David In the Scripture they are called Cousins though they are not at all of the same family so vulgarly Anna is affirmed to be the mother of Mary and the sister of Elizabeth 940. Luk. 1.44 The babe leaped in my womb for joy that is Iohn Baptist in the womb of his Mother when Mary came to her Joh. 1.31 I knew him not saith Iohn Christ was known to John before by internal and spiritual knowledge but John knew him externally and corporally in his baptism 941. Luk. 1.67 Zacharias prophesied being full of the Holy Ghost Joh. 7.39 The Holy Ghost was not yet because Christ was not yet glorified The first place is meant of the gift and Spirit of Prophesie the latter place is concerning the visible and wonderful effusion of gifts of the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles after Christs glorification 942. Luk. 2.11 There is born to you a Saviour in the City of David which is Christ the Lord. 1 Pet. 3.21 Baptism doth save us Subalternates do not disagree Christ makes his people safe from their sins principally as the efficient meritorious cause Baptism serves but instrumentally and not alwaies for it is not the want of Baptism but the contempt which conde●ns us 943. Luk. 2.33 His Father and mother marvelled at those things Mat. 1.8 Jesus according to his humanity had no Father Heb. 7.3 According to his Divinity had no Mother The Father of Jesus Christ Joseph was only so for his care but not really and naturally so for he was appointed by God to be a keeper of the Virgin Mary espoused to him and her Son and Christ being a little child gave him honour and reverence due to a Father The Virgin Mary was his natural Mother according to the flesh for he received his humane nature of her substance 944. Luk. 2.34 Simeon blessed him Heb. 7.7 The lesser is blessed of the better Simeon prayed well for Mary congratulating her concerning her happy and blessed Off-spring and by a Prophetick Spirit foreshewing the hard success she and her Son should have but he did not prefer himself before them 945. Luk. 3.7 The Baptist cals the Pharisees a generation of Vipers Mat. 5.22 He that saith to his brother Thou Fool shall be in danger of hell fire John Baptist calls them not so reproachfully out of an ill affection but from his Office because such were full of poyson and malice working the Viperous works of the devil the old Serpent So the Ministers of the Church must publickly complain of the sins of the people 946. Luk. 5.10 Fear not from henceforth thou shalt catch men Joh. 1.42 Andrew brought Simon his brother to Christ Simon is brought by Andrew to follow Christ and to profess the Gospel by a general call but Christ calls him by a special call to the Sacred Function about the matter of Fishing 947. Luk. 6.1 And it came to pass on the second Sabbath after the first that he went through the Corn fields Mat. 12.1 At that time Jesus went on the Sabbath day through the corn The Jews cal●ed the eight day of the great solemnity the second Sabbath after the fir●● for some of their Feasts lasted for eight daies and the first day with the eighth day were the most solemn and the intermediate
and to put them in mind of the consecration of the Temple which had been prophaned by Antiochus and was of the Hebrews called chamucho and by the Greeks Euraenia which signifieth renewing because the Temple had been new dedicated That Feast was kept in the Month Caslew which the November Moon corresponds with 1039. Joh. 10.28 My sheep shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand Chap. 13.18 Judas was chosen to be of Christs sheep and yet perished Election in the first place is meant to eternal life In the latter to an Office Judas was Christs sheep only by outward vocation and profession 1040. Joh. 10.29 My Father is greater Ver. 30. I and my Father are one Christ is equal to God the Father according to his Divine Nature less than the Father according to his Humane Nature and his Office of Mediatorship between God and Man * 1041. Joh. 10.30 I and my Father are one Joh. 14.28 My father is greater than I. They are one as to the Divinity of Christ Christ and God are one God so as to the Humanity of Christ and his Office of being an Advocate and Mediator a Servant and Messenger so the Father is greater than I. 1042. Joh. 10.32 Many good works have I shewed you from my Father chap. 14.10 The Father that dwelleth in me he doth the works In the former place Christ speaks not exclusively because the works of the Trinity outwardly are common to the three Persons There is no work of the Son which the Father doth not work in him In the latter ascribing operation to the Father he asserts that it is done by the authority and counsel of his Father so speaking of the manner and order of working he takes not away the unity of Essence Majesty and Power * 1043. Joh. 10.36 Whom the Father hath sanctified c. with Joh. 1.1 And the Word was God The Socinians would gather that Christ is the only begotten Son of God either by reason of the conception by the Holy Ghost or for the sanctification and sending into the world as the formal cause of his Deity and Filiation 'T is true by reason of his conception by the Holy Spirit the Son of God who in the beginning with God the Father was God and after made man but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without any mutation of the Deity or confusion of the same by his taking flesh Neither is his Mission the foundation of the Deity of the Son or of his Filiation but is founded in that and shews it a posteriori He could not be sanctified and sent into the world who was not coeternal with the Father which sent him * 1044. Joh. 10.36 Whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the world Joh. 17.19 I sanctifie my self God the Father sanctified the Humane Nature of Christ even from his first conception and from all contagion of sin made him full of the gifts of the Holy Ghost and consecrated him to the Divine Office of being Saviour of the world Yet Christ as God sanctified himself for the Father worketh and he wrought the same work in the Humane Nature 1045. Joh. 11.4 Lazarus sickness was not unto death Vers 14. Lazarus is dead The sickness of Lazarus by reason of the event was not unto death because Christ raised him again and saith that his death was but a sleep for we are not so early awaked from sleep as Christ called Lazarus out of his grave and he shall raise us all at the last day * Joh. 11.4 with 14. Lazarus sickness was not really in the event unto death though in appearance he was dead at the present In respect of Christ it was not unto death in respect of his friends he was dead Not unto death as death is a perpetual seperation of the soul from the body Christ purposing to reunite them shortly Lazarus was dead as to the present seperation of soul body * 1046. Joh. 11.15 I was not there mat 18.20 Where two or three be gathered together in my name I am in the midst of them Christ was not there by his Humane Presence which can be only in one place at once though his Divine Nature is in all places Christ may be present in a place and with a person in his humane shape and body as he was many times with the Jews and yet not present by his gracious influences and help Christ was present neither bodily nor by his help there In the latter place which is not meant of ordinary matters but of the Assembly and Meetings of Gods People about his Worship Christ is present there not by his bodily presence but by his gracious influence● and spiritual presence 1047. Joh. 11.25 He that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live Ver. 26. He that believeth in me shall never dye Death is temporal and eternal temporal in this world is corporal and spiritual Christ speaks of both in the former place Spiritual death is either of them who being dead have not Christs quickning Spirit and of this he speaks not here but of them that being quickned by Christs Spirit are dead to sin and the flesh in the latter is meant chiefly eternal death 1048. Joh. 11.26 Whosoever believeth in me shall never die Heb. 9.27 It is appointed for all men once to dye The faithful do not dye a spiritual and eternal death but natural death is common to all men 1049. Joh. 11.34 Where have you laid him Chap. 21.17 Thou knowest all things Christ enquired of Lazarus his grave not as if he were ignorant thereof but that he might stir up a desire in his sisters and those that were present to consider and to see the Miracle of the Resurrection So God said to Adam Gen. 3.9 Adam where art thou * Joh. 11.34 with Joh. 21.17 He that knew Lazarus to be dead knew where they had laid him he either speaks this as Man and so he acted when he wept or else he speaks it not as ignorant of it but as one who would draw them to go with him by asking that question he gave them an opportunity to follow him to see what he did and how he raised Lazarus * 1050. Joh. 11.42 And I knew that thou hearest me alwaies Psal 22.2 O my God I cry in the day time but thou hearest not There are several waies of hearing The King heareth his Subjects by way of Regality The Master his Scholar by way of docibility The Father heareth his child by way of natural affection God heareth Christ as a Father his Son alwaies that he asked any thing of God The second place speaks of David in the Letter and Christ in the Mystery he was heard alwaies of God though God did not alwaies seemingly attend to him but sometime forbear to give a present remedy according to his Petition as in his Passion Not that really and indeed he did ever shut his ears against his Prayers It is one thing to
Law and by our Law he ought to die They had a Law in jure not in facto A Law but it wanted the life Execution They might judge among themselves whether such a one were worthy death as they wrongfully judged Christ here but yet the Romans had given them a Law that they should not put their Laws in execution which concerned life And so by the Roman Law it was unlawful for them to put any man to death * 1083. Joh. 18.36 with Psa 71.28 Christs Kingdom is not of this worlds fashion nor of the fashion of the world nor of the Subjects of this world but it consists of Gods Children and it is set up in their heart There is the Kingdom of Christs power which he sheweth in the Protecting of the godly from the wicked in the destruction of his enemies and in the advancement of his name from one end of the earth to the other 1084. Joh. 19.9 Jesus answered not Pilate 1 Tim. 6.13 Christ Jesus before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession To Pilates question first Christ did not answer because he stood before him to suffer and not to plead or excuse at length he gave testimony to the Truth in words and deeds for his Passion and Death were a sufficient testimony and sealing of his Doctrine * 1085. Joh. 19.29 And they filled a spunge with vinegar and put it upon Hysop with Mar. 15. They put it on a reed And so Mat. 27. There was a vessel of Vinegar which upon such occasions usually stood there either as some say to shorten life or to ease the pain but the souldiers did wickedly mingle gall with some of it and offered it him to drink before he was lifted up upon the Cross which he refused and then after when he was upon the Cross they offered him Vinegar and he took it so Matthew and John agree As for the Hyssope some suppose it put about the Spunge so as the Spunge gave him Vinegar to his mouth and the Hyssope besprinkled his face with the Vinegar wherein it was dipped 1086. Joh. 20.1 Christ rose on the first day of the week Mat. 12.40 The Son of Man shall be three daies and three nights in the heart of the earth untill the third day This is a Synecdochical computation of time for the least part of the day of the preparation is taken for a whole day and the beginning of the day after the Passeover or the Sabbath is taken also for a whol day Christ was three daies in the grave but it was incompleatly three daies so also he was two nights in the grave the night before being added to them 1087. Joh. 20.1 Mary Magdalen came early when it was yet dark unto the Sepulchre Mar. 16.2 Very early they came to the Sepulchre at the rising of the Sun When it was yet dark very early in the morning she went out of her house and the City waiting for the rest of the women with which afterwards she came to the Sepulchre at the Sun-rising 1088. Joh. 20.17 Touch me not Ver. 26. Reach hither thy finger Christ after the Resurrection would not be touched of Mary Magdalen who only sought him after a carnal way and thought of enjoying him no otherwise than she did formerly by his earthly presence amongst them But he commanded Thomas to touch him that his faith being confirmed he might be a more certain witnesse of Christs Resurrection Touch me not so as loving mothers touch their Sons that they have wanted that is touch me not to stay me For I am not yet ascended I am in haste and have not dispatched all I must I have now the business of being your Advocate to do and I must speedily about it But yet Thomas thou art an unbelieving man in this point and hast less faith than this woman touch thou me for confirming of thy Faith not to stay my Journey The ACTS of the APOSTLES LUKE the Evangelist describes either in general all the Acts of the Apostles or in special Peters Preachings Acts Visions Miracles Imprisonments the Conversion of Paul his Travels Disputations Miracles Bonds Imprisonments and the History of the Primitive Church after Christs Ascension from 26 years unto the 60 year from Christs Nativity 1089. ACTS 1.1 Of all things that Jesus began both to do and teach Luke wrote Joh. 21.25 There are also many other things which Jesus did the which if they should be written every one I suppose that even the world it self could not contain the books that should be written Luke in the first Book wrote of all things necessary for our salvation though not of all things but summarily concerning the conception of Jesus Christ his Nativity Life Passion Death Resurrection and Ascension into heaven August In John Tract 49. Christ did many things that are not written as John the Evangelist witnesseth but those things were chosen to be written which might suffice for the salvation of Beleevers * Act. 1.1 with Joh. 21.25 Of all things that is somthing of every thing which Jesus did the most material and chief things or all things which the Spirit of God suggested to be writtten or all things which were sufficient for the preaching of the Gospel and his he●rers The latter place tels us that there are many other things beside the principal matters which were not written though it denies not but the principal are written 1090. Act. 1.7 It is not for you to know the times or the seasons 1 Thes 5.1 Of the times and seasons brethren you have no need I write to you Times and seasons as they are in a general consideration is one thing and as they are taken for particular years or daies or seasons are another The Apostles must not be too curious to know the year or day when Christ will come or restore the Kingdom to Israel but yet the Apostle would not have them ignorant of this that there is a time when Christ will come again though he may conceale the particulars of it 1091. Acts 1.9 Whilst the Disciples beheld Christ was taken up and a cloud received him Joh. 3.13 No man hath ascended up into heaven but he that came down from heaven The body of Christ was taken up visibly on high where Christ was personally before according to his Divine Nature Acts 1.9 with Joh. 3.13 The former place speaks of Christs personal ascent into heaven as Man where he is to be reserved till his se-second coming It speaks not of his ascent as God for there he was as God yet the Person in which the Divine Nature was ascended visibly The latter place speaks of Christs being in heaven as God 1092. Acts 1.15 The number of names together were about an hundred and twenty 1 Cor. 15.6 After that he was seen of above five hundred brethren at once The number of an hundred and twenty must be restrained to the faithful there at Jerusalem the rest were out of this gathering in other places Luke
avoided Wells his Souls Progress Christ tempted the Devill Conquered Being a plain Exposition on the fourth Chapter of Saint Matthews Gospel By John Gumbleden Minister of the Gospel The Saints Society D. Stoughtons thirteen choice Sermons with his Body of Divini y The Reasons of the d●ssenting Brethren concerning the Presbyterian Government together with the answer of the Assembly of Divines The Doctrine of mans Redemption by Edward Holioke Of the doctrine of the Church of England sweetly harmonizing with the Confessions of Faith of all the Protestant Reformed Churches The Philosophicall Touchstone or Observations upon Sir Kenelme Digbye's Discourses of the nature of bodies and of the reasonable soule by Alexander Ross The Saints Triangles of dangers deliverances and duties by Nathaniel Whiting Minister of the Gospel The Confession of Faith of all the congregationall Churches of England agreed upon at the Savoy 1659. An History of Angels being a Treatise of our Communion and War with them By Henry Lawrance The Description of the Universal Quadrant c. By Tho. Stirrup Mathem The whole Art of Drawing Painting Limning and Etching collected out of the choisest Italian and Germane Authours by Alex. Brown Practitioner Large Octavo A Treatise of the Divine Promises By Edw. Leigh Esquire The Rights of the Crown of England as it is established by Law by Edward Bagshaw Esquire of the Inner-Temple Florus Anglicus with the Lively Effigies of all the Kings and Queens since the Conquest cut in brasse Evidences for Heaven containing infallible signs and reall demonstrations for Assurance of Salvation published by Edm. Calamy The Life and Reign of King Charls from his Birth to his Death by Lambert Wood. The Night-search the second part by H. Mill. A view of the Jewish Religion with their Rites Customs and Ceremonies Usefull instructions for these Evil times held forth in Twenty Two Sermons by Nicholas Lockyer Provost of Eaton Colledge The Nullity of Church-Censures or Excommunication not of Divine Institution but a meer humane Invention Writby the famous Tho. Erastus and never before Englished Merry Drollery in two parts being a Collection of Joviall Poems merry Songs and witty Drolleries intermixt with pleasant Catches Small Octavo Ed Waterhouse Esquire His Discourse of Piety and Charity Panacea or the Universall Medicine being a Discourse of the Admirable Nature and Virtues of Tobacco By Dr. Everard and Others A view and Defence of the Reformation of the Church of England very usefull in these times Mr. Pet. du Moulin his Antidote against Popery published on purpose to prevent the Delusions of the Priests and Jesuites who are now very busie among us Vinditiae Gratiae Sacramentalis duobus Tractatulis comprehensae 1. De efficaciâ Sacramentorum in genere 2. De efficaciâ Baptismi quantum ad parvulos quibus praefigitur Epistola Reverendissimi Patris Johannis Daven●●● 〈◊〉 Episcopi Sari●buriensis Dr. R. Record his Urinall of Physick Herberts Devotions or a Companion for a Christian containing Meditations and prayers usefull upon all occasions Rare verities or the Cabinet of Venus unlockt and her secrets laid open Extrancus Vapulans or the Observator rescued from the violent but vain assault of Haman Lestrange Esquire and the back-blows of D. Bernard an Irish Dean by P. Heyli● D. D. Ovid de Ponto in English The Loves of Clerrio and Lozio a Romance Mr. Knowles his Rudiment of the Hebrew Tongue A Book of Scheams or Figures of Heaven ready set for every four Minutes of times and very usefull for all Astrologers Florus Anglicus or an exact History of England from the Reign of William the Conquerour to the death of the Late King Lingua or the Combate of the Tongue and five Senses for Superiority a serious Comedy Acted by Oliver Cromwell the late Usurper The Spirits Touchstone being a clear discovery how a man may certainly know whether he be truly taught by the Spirit of God or not The poor mans Physician and Chyrurgion Physicall Rarities containing the most choice Receipts in Physick and Chyrurgery for the cure of all Diseases Incident to mans body By R W lliams To which is added the physical Mathematicks By Hermes Tris-Megistus The Idol of Clowns or the Relation of Wat Tiler's Rebellion The Raconian Catechism in English The life of that incomparable man Faustus Socinus Senensis described by a Polonian Knight The Golden Fleece or a Discourse of the cloathing of England Dr. Sibbs his Divine Meditations Vigerius Precepts of Idiotismes Grotij Poemata Three Books of M. Matthews Minister at Swansey in South-wales 1 The Messiah Magnified by the mouthes of Babes in America or Gai●● and Gamaliel a helpfull Father and his hopeful Son discoursing of the three most considerable points 1. The great want of Christ 2. The great worth that is in Christ 3. The good way that is chalkt out by Christ 2. The New Congregationall Church prov'd to be the old Christian Church by Scripture Reason and History 3 The Rending Church-member Regularly call'd back to Christ and his Church A physical Dictionary An exact History of the several changes of Government in England from the horrid Murther of King Charles the first to the happy Restauration of King Charles the second with the Renowned Actions of General Monck by J. D. Duodecim Dr. Smith's practice of physick Proverbs English French Dutch Italian and Spanish all Englished and Alphabettically digested The London Distiller or the whole Art of Distillations laid open Fryer Bacon his discovery of the miracles of Art Nature and Magick The Grammar War Posselius Apothegmes Fasciculus Florum Crashaw's Visions The Juniper Lecture Helvicus Colloquies The torments of hell shaken or a Discourse with many proofs shewing that there is not a punishment after this life for any to endure that shall never end by Samuel Richardson The understanding Christians duty often to commemorate the death and passion of our Lord and Saviour Jesus with the necessary preparatives thereunto The Christian Souldier his Combate with the three arch-enemies of mankind the world the flesh and the devil Seasonable advice to the Apprentices of the Honourable City of London touching their duty to God and their Masters Heinsius de Crepundiis The History of Russia or the Government of the Emperour of Muscovia with the manner and fashions of the people of that Countrey Drexeliu's school of Patience Drexelius his right Intention of every ones action A School or Nurture for Children or the Duty of Children to Parents very usefull for all that intend to bring up their children in the fear of God Viginti Quarto The New Testament The third part of the Bible Sir Richard Bakers Meditations and Prayers for every day of the Week All the Works of that great and glorious Monark and Martyr King Charles the first Collected into one Volume A Play The London Chanticlers a Comedy full of various and delightfull Mirth never before published FINIS