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A85667 An exposition continued upon the sixt, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. Delivered in severall lectures in London, By William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1649 (1649) Wing G1854; Thomason E577_1; ESTC R206361 436,404 591

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〈◊〉 The Hebrew is an instrument of contrition or dissipation Prov. 25.18 It s translated a Maul an instrument to bear out a mans brains The Sept. renders the word here an Axe it may be interpreted a sword or any weapon that sufficeth to kill a man with Observ 1. That there is power efficacy in the calls and commands of God When he said Cause them have charge over the City to draw neare you see it here fulfil'd Behold six men came Ezekiel cald told them the mind of God but there was not power in him to bring these slaughter-Angels before the Lord Divine provide● eacted the secret vertue of the Lord did it There is power in commands of God and when that goeth along with his word it produceth any effects his word and power brought the flood upon the world at first and will bring the fire on it at last 2. When God is against a City he sets Angels against it also Here were 6. Angels that appeared at his call for the destruction of the City those who before hee had appointed to preserve it now he calls forth to destroy it Sin makes God our enemy and when he is out with us who can be friends to us If the King frown the Nobles and Courtiers will doe it also While God is our friend Angels are and all other creatures 1 Cor. 3.21 Paul saith to the Corinthians All things are yours your servants your friends for your good and why yee are Christs his friends his servants if they had been enemies to Christ all things had been enemies to them what the wise man saith of any man Prov. 16.7 When a mans wayes please the Lord he maketh his enemies to be at peace with him It s true of any City when they please God hee makes their enemies to be at peace with them Babylon was ever an enemie to Sion but never harm'd Sion till Sion had offended or lost her God and when Cities have provok'd God against them he makes their friends their enemies and their enemies enmity unto them Have not we kindled divine wrath by our sins caused him to deale in fury to set Angels and men against us are they not abroad with slaughter-weapons Jerusalem improv'd not the sword of Justice the Magistrates were neglective of punishing Delinquents of righting the wrongs of the oppressed and therefore God put a sword into the hands of Angels and Chaldeans to destroy both Magistrate and Subject Let us take heede how wee make God our enemy by all meanes make him your friend Job 5.23 Stones and beasts will be at league at peace with you compare it with Deut. 32.13 Isa 11.6 7 8. 3. At what gate men drive God away at the same gate they let judgement in At what doore men let in sinne at the same doore they let in wrath the destroying Angels came from the North to the North-gate there was the Idoll of Jealousie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iniquity judgment Ch. 8.3 by the brazen Altar this way came in Idolatry this way God was driven from them and this way came the Angels came the Chaldeans to be avenged on them they sinn'd Northward and from thence came their judgement At that gate was the great concourse of people there they worshipped the Image of Jealousie and that way came in the greatest evill they ever had the Prophets oft mention the Northern evill Jer. 1.14 Out of the North an evill shall breake forth upon all the land Ch. 4.6 I will bring evill from the North a great destruction And Chap. 6.1.22 23.10.22 A great commotion out of the North to make the Cities of Judah desolate and a denne of dragons Judgement came to that gate they sin'd at sin lay behinde the doore call'd for and let in the enemie Gen. 4.7 God told Cain if he did not well sinne lay at the doore That is punishment judgement lay at the doore and would quickly come in at that door sin had opened Rom. 5.12 By sin death entered Sin opened a doore it brake open Gods command and so let in death and all judgments beneath death Ahaziah sends to Baalzebub the god of Ekron about his recovery being sick this so offended God that an answer was returned him that therefore he should not come down from his bed but should surely dye 2 Kings 9.4 Gideons Ephod was a snare to him his house Judg. 8.27 4. When God comes against a people he will surround them with judgements at all the chiefe gates there should be Angels Chaldean forces so that if they would flye to the gates of any of the streets to the gate of Ephraim to the corner-gate the old gate or fish-gate the dung-gate or common-gate or other gates whatsoever they should find Angels with destroying weapons in their hands And see themselves so beset with judgem n●s that there should be no escaping they might runne from street to street from gate to gate and hope to get away but Jer. 11.11 I will bring evill upon them which they shall not be able to escape Their hearts heads hands heels shall not availe them to an e●c●pe if they fight or flye if they intreat God or man seeke secretly to steale away it 's in vaine they shall not be able to ●scape 5. When God is upon acts of Justice and calls for Angels or any creatures at his command they come and willingly contribute what power they have to damnifie and destroy his enemies every one came here with a slaughter-weapon in his hand the creatures are ready to execute vengeance upon their fellow-creatures whan the glorious Creator being offended cals for it Isa 37.36 An Angell at Gods appointment went forth and slew 185000. He had his slaughter-weapon ready and acted like an Angell slaying so many in one night It 's said of Angels Psalm 103.20 that they excell in strength that they doe the commandments of the Lord hearkning unto the voyce of his word If he doe once speak they heart yea they put forth their great strength and doe that strongly they are sent about One man among them was cloathed with linnen Who this one man should be is questionable Some make him to be an Angell and the grounds they goe upon are these 1. He is cloathed with linnen in which kind of garment Angels were wont to appeare Acts 1.10 Luke 24.4 John 20.12 2. In the end of this Chapter this man saith I have done as thou commandedst me which respect an Angel rather then Christ who being equall from the Father receives not commands from him Angels being his servants and ministring spirits are fittest to receive commands For the first of these arguments it 's true that Angels have appeared oft in white linnen and shining garments but not they alone Rev. 4.4 The 24. Elders were cloathed with white linnen And Chap. 9.7 A great multitude stood before the throne and the lamb cloath'd in white robes And Christ in his transfiguration had his
my Text and that is spare in my Text is pitty here And Deut. 7.16 Thine eye shall have no pitty upon them The Heb. is the same word thou shalt not spare upon them spare to execute vengeance upon them so that they are used promiscuously one interprets the other an eye not sparing is to shew no mercy no pitty That in 1 Sam. 24 10. clears it when some bade David kill Saul when he cut off the skirt of his garment saith he but mine eye spared thee that is had pitty on thee and I kil'd thee not if mine eye had not spared thee I had killed thee without pitty without mercy Jer. 21.7 He shall not spare them neither have pitty nor have mercy lo jachum velo jachmol velo jerachem the two first words are in my Text and they are both interpreted by the last not to spare not to pittie is to have no mercy what ever motives be thereunto Slay utterly olde and young In the Heb. it 's the old man the young man the maiden and little child all in the singular number which is put for the plurall Q. Here a great question is moveable how it stands with the justice of God to give charge for the destruction of little children which were innocent A. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for little children some take to be meant of such as could play in the streets and were under 20. years Gen. 47.12 Joseph nourished his Father and his brethren and all his Fathers houshold with bread according to their families 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the little ones Ad os parvuli they were not sucking children but such as could run up and down that Joseph nourished now if the little children be taken for such they might be guilty of great sins as the children that mocked the Prophet and so deserve death But take little children for such as have not committed actuall sinne even babes new born in the womb of which sort many perished in the flood and many in Sodome such God may cut off without impeachment of his justice 1. He hath an absolute dominion over his creatures hee is the potter and we are the clay if he make the vessell hee may break the vessell shall he not doe with his own as he please hee gives life to babes and he may take it from them when and how he pleases 2. They were defiled with originall sin and deserved death the wages of sinne be it originall or actuall is death and it matters not whether a naturall or a violent death therefore he forbade Jeremie to take a wife to have sonnes and daughters in Jerusalem and as for those sonnes and daughters should be borne there they and their fathers and mothers should be consumed by the sword and by famine Jer. 16.2 3 4. 3. They are parts of their parents part of their family part of their substance and God may punish the sinning parent in his child as well as in his stock 4. Had they lived it 's likely they would have trod in their fathers steps and sinn'd those great sinnes they did like them in Jer. 7.18 Children gather wood and the fathers kindle the fire and the women knead the dough Neither doth God punish upon prevision of future sinne but takes them away from present and future pollution 5. God might notwithstanding this outward temporal judgment have mercie on their soules questionlesse many children dye more terrible deaths then by the sword and yet perish not eternally Come not neare any upon whom is the marke Q. If this marke were not a visible marke how should they know them and spare them A. The Lord knew who were his though men knew them not and it 's probable such is the rage of the wicked against the godly that if they had had a little distinguishing character from others they would the rather have fallen upon them and cut them off but the Lord ordered the judgement so and their spirits so that they came not neare them The mark was inward in the fore-heads of their consciences and providence watched and wrought for them without God might dart a feare into them disable them from doing the mark'd ones any hurt divert them to other families and persons and this manner of speech is more then if he had said doe not kill them they might doe much hurt to them yet not kill them but when he saith Come not neare them God doth make a fence about them and compasseth them with this command and his favour in it as with a shield against all evill and wrong This deliverance of the mark'd ones from the slaughter-men is a type of Gods preserving his in all great and generall calamities and especially of freeing his Elect ones from hell and the furies thereof The Chaldeans must not come-neare the mark'd ones to destroy them and Devils must not come neare those Christ hath sprinkled with his blood to ruine and destroy them They are freed from the power of Sathan and eternall death Begin at my Sanctuary This was the holy place the habitation of God where his worship was where he gave out gracious answers unto them yet here they must begin Why here 1. They trusted in the holinesse of this place Jer. 7.4.10 When they had sin'd grievously they thought that if they came and worshipped there all was well they were delivered and cried out the Temple of the Lord God would begin with their confidence 2. They had greatly polluted that holy place there was the Idoll of Jealousie there was the forme of every creeping thing and abhominable beast pourtraied upon the walls there were men offering incense to those Idols there was the filthy Idoll Tammuz and women weeping for it there were men with their backs towards God the Arke and worshipping the Sun Eastward there they put the branch to their nose great abhominations were gotten into the Temple they must therefore begin there 3. The sins of the Priests and Prophets who belonged to the Temple were exceeding great they were messengers of God to the people and mouths of the people to God and above others should have been cleane holy gracious free from the sins of the times they should have been exemplary unto others but if you observe the Scripture a little you shall find they were patterns of all impiety to the people they were ignorant blinde dumb drunken Isa 28.7.56.10.12 Unclean filthy strengthening the hands of the wicked Jer. 23.14 Covetous cruell Isa 56.11 Micah 3.5 Conceited of their owne abilities Jer. 8.8 Flatterers and dealt falsely with the people Jer. 6.13 14.27.15 They perverted the word of the Lord Jer. 23.36 They rejected his word Jer. 8.9 They prophecyed their own dreames Jer. 23.7 and put it upon God saying he saith v. 31. They ruled with rigour Ezek. 34.4 They reproached slandered and complain'd of the true Prophets stirring up enemies against them and seeking their liberties and lives Jer. 26.8 9.11
Some are so prophane and atheisticall that they thinke God sees regards not the things done here below Psal 94.5 6 7. They breake in pieces Gods people afflict his heritage slay murther widows and fatherlesse ones yet say the Lord shall neither see nor regard it And in Psal 10.11 He saith God hath forgotten he hideth his face and will never see it and not only Gods actuall seeing but his power of seeing and knowing things here is denyed Jab 22.13 How doth God know can he judge through the darke clouds Some have confidence to say God sees no sin in his children and others blush not to say he sees not the sins of and in the wicked and so God shall see no sin at all they make him an unseeing and unknowing God David cals this brutishnesse Ps 94.8 9 10 11. He that made the eye shall not bee see He that teacheth man knowledge shall not be know Yea saith he the Lord knoweth the thoughts of men and that their thoughts are vanity What is most remote from mans eye and knowledg that God knows exactly afar off Psal 139.2 And denounceth a woe to men of such thoughts and practises Isa 29.15 Woe to them that seeke deep to bide their counsell from the Lord and their workes are in the darke and they say who seeth us and who knoweth us God seeth them God knows them and pronounceth a dreadfull woe against them because mens lives doe proclaim that they believe not Gods Omnisciency therefore God professeth it openly Isa 66.18 I know their workes and their thoughts He had observ'd all within and without therefore they should be consum'd Gods eye is upon all our wayes and works let us every day do as God did review them and see that they be good 6. God in his judgments will proceed with sinners according to their ways and deserts Job 34.10 11 12. Elihu proves there that God will not doe wickedly nor pervert judgement and why for the worke of a man shall be rendered unto him and cause every man to find according to his wayes God is most just therefore takes notice of all thoughts counsels projects attempts and actions that so he may deal answerably with men Jer. 32.19 His eyes are open upon all the wayes of the sons of men to give every one according to his wayes That in Revel 18.6 seemes to crosse this truth when God will judge Babylon shee must have double punishment her cup must be doubled God doth not command here that Babylon should be twice punished for the same sin that were not according to the rules of Divine Justice Double here hath reference to Babylons dealings with the Church She did greatly afflict Sion and now God would have Babylon to have double afflion to that Babylon did injustly in oppressing Sion Sion should do righteously in destroying Babylon and observe the word double render unto her double according to her works If she have twice as many strokes judgments twice as much blood shed as Sion had its according to her workes she deserves it and nothing can be too much for her therefore Jer. 51.49 As Babylon hath caused the slain of Israel to fall so at Babylon shall fall the slaine of all the earth The Babylonian Empire was a little world to Israel and cal'd it's selfe the universall Empire and Babylon said shee was the Queen and the only City of all others Isa 47.7 8. The golden City Isa 14.4 But now when God would punish Babylon for her bloodinesse against Sion not only should Babylon's chldren that dwell in her be destroyed but all her Subjects in her great Territories should be slain for her sake Alapid understands it of Rome heathnish or together with her which sets out the greatnesse of her punishment su●table to her deserts and is well cal'd double for the death of one Israelite deserves the death of two Babylonians 7. They that will not know God in the way of his mercies they shall know him in the way of his judgments God had walked in paths of mercy amongst this people many years and they minded not God honoured him not in the middest of mercies but fed according to their pastures and forgat God therefore he brought heavy judgments upon them and saith They shall know that I am the Lord. This phrase is used above 50. times in this Prophet and assures us that God will be known and that amidst his enemies and with an experimentall knowledge for that is the meaning of the words not a literal and brain knowledg Isa 26.11 When thy hand is lifted up they will not see But they shall see They will not see to fear to repent but they shall see that is have experience of the strength of his hand to their shame and destruction The phrase of knowing I am the Lord sometimes refers to mercies as Exod. 6.6 7. God would bring them out from the burthens and bondage of Aegypt take them for his people then they should know him to be the Lord. So in Exod. 16.12 1 Kings 20.28 God would give them Manna deliver up enemies into their hands And they should know c. That is have experience of his mercy truth and loving kindnesse Sometimes and mostly it refers to Divine judgment especially in this our Prophet God would bring in the Chaldeans with the sword and those grievous calamities attend it and they should know that he was the Lord that is they should have reall experience of his Authority and power over them they should feele the bitter fruits of his displeasure in them CHAP. VIII VERSE 1. And it came to passe in the sixth yeare in the sixth moneth in the fifth day of the moneth as I sate in mine house and the Elders of Judah sate before mee that the hand of the Lord God fell there upon mee IN this and the three next Chapters you have the grievous sinnes and answerable punishments of the Jewes at Jerusalem laid downe with some other things considerable This eighth Chapter hath three things in it 1. An Introduction to a new Vision vers 1. 2. The Vision it selfe from the beginning of vers 2. to the end of vers 17. 3. A Declaration of Gods severe dealings with them vers 18. In the Introduction to this Vision you have these particulars 1. The time exactly set downe when it was in the 6. yeare the 6. moneth the 5. day 2. The place where it was As he sate in his house 3. The persons before whom it was The Elders of Judah sate before me 4. The cause of it The hand of the LORD fell there upon mee For the time It was now the sixth yeare of Jehoiachins cptivity and in the sixth moneth The Jewes first month is Nisan the second Jiar the third Sivan the fourth Thamuz the fifth Ab and the sixth Elul and answereth to that is called August The fifth day of this moneth had hee this vision which Junius saith was the Sabbath