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A85769 The throne of David, or An exposition of the second of Samuell wherein is set downe the pattern of a pious and prudent Prince, and a clear type of of [sic] the Prince of Princes Christ Iesus the sonne of David and his spirituall kingdome by William Guild D.D. and minister of Gods word at King-Edward in Scotland. Guild, William, 1586-1657. 1659 (1659) Wing G2212; Thomason E984_8; ESTC R207805 271,425 357

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sent it back on a cart drawn by beasts which seems to be the fault of the Levi●s who gave themselves too much herein to their own ease And David and all who were with him exprest great Spirituall joy in the performance of this Religious enterprise but because though it was bonum yet not bene performed therefore their joy is turned quickly into matter of grief and mourning by the sudden death of Vzzah without warrant for taking hold of the Arke when it seemed to stumble and fall being shaken by the oxen that bore it which as it greeved David so it greatly feared him to bring the Arke at that time any further to his own house at Sion and therefore carried it aside to the house of Obed-Edom where it remained three moneths during which time David hearing that the Lord had blessed the house of Obed-Edom his fear thereby being removed he was encouraged to attempt of new the perfecting of what he formerly intended and to bring from thence the Arke to his own house in Sion which accordingly he performed with all ●olemnity and expressions of joy and gladnesse and offering of sacrifices to the Lord. OBSERVATIONS 1. DAvid now being established in his Kingdome enjoying peace he applies his minde to the establishment of the Lords Arke and promoteing of his worship a worthy pattern to all Princes and Magistrates of imitation which whosoever have followed have prospered as on the contrary who have done otherwise they have been justly punished For who honours God them he will honour and who dispises him shall be dispised 2. Hence we see the errour of such who think that the care and reformation of Religion belongs not to Magistrates or laiks as they call them Princes being custodes utriusque tabulae and this having been ever the practise of the Godly Kings of Iudah who as their power was from God so they exercised it for God as the Godly Emperors did so in like manner 3. This purpose of his touching the Ark and religion he puts to execution by convocating the chiefe men of Israel of every estate consulting and concluding with them that by common consent and concurrance the same may be the better and more solemnly done every one assisting according to his calling but especially the chiefe part of this action belonging to the Levites where we have the example of a prudent King and of a Godly Councell and Parliament As we see was followed after by Constantine in the Councell of Nice Theodosius in Chalcedon In that of Ephesus likewise and Constantinople and in those religious Princes Edward the sixth and Queen Elizabeth of England 4. Vers 2. We see that the Ark which was a signe and symbole of Gods presence is called by the name of God himselfe the Lord of hostes which may serve to the comfort of his own and terrour of his enemies as in sacramentall speeches the name of the thing signified is given to the signe as has been said so that it is a wrong and vaine reasoning of the Papists to argue from these words this is my body that therefore the bread is turned in the substance of Christs body 5. Vers 3. The manner of carrying the Ark is by Oxen on new cart wherein we see two errours of the Levites 1. They leave the Word and ordinance of God which commanded that it should be carried upon the Levites shoulders And 2. They follow the example of the Philistines their sending back the Ark upon a new cart drawn by beasts which they do partly for celerity and partly for their own ease Where 1. we may see what is the rule in reformation or setting up of religion that it should not be by warrantable example or practise of others but by the direction and warrant of Gods Word 2. We may see what is the bane and ruine of religion when men give themselves to ease and the burthen of the Ministry is committed to lasie ignorant and unworthy beasts 6. Vers 5. The Ark is conveyed with musick of sundry sorts and great rejoycing which shewes 1. That the prospering of religion and advancement of all lawfull courses for the flourishing and establishing thereof should be the matter of our greatest rejoycing And 2. That musick and the art thereof is lawfull in the Church of God for praising of the Lord in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs 7. David is specially and first here named as ringleader in this holy exercise which shewes the duty of all Godly Magistrates and others in Prime place to go before Gods people in a good and Godly example of piety and religious exercises according as is said regis ad exemplum c. And not to be defective herein or givers of evill example as many do now a dayes 8. Vers 6. In the midst of this joy intervenes a sad and tragicall accident which obstructs the same by Vzza'hs unwarrantable laying hold on the Ark when it was shaken by the Oxen that bare it and his being suddenly striken dead for his errour by the Ark of God Where we see 1. How soon may our rejoycing or joy in this life be changed into matter of griefe and mourning such is the vicissitude whereunto we are here subject unto till we come to that fulness of joy Psal 16. 11. Which we shall only without interruption enjoy in the heavens 2. We see that Vzzah's good intention in holding up the Ark ●rom falling when it was shaken by the Oxen wanting a warrant and distrusting as it were Gods own care of his Ark makes not his action acceptable nor freeth him from errour ●nd punishment Neither will the good pretended intentions of my in the manner of Gods worship or other unwarrantable actions be an excuse unto them or free them from guilt and punishment as we see in the example of Nadab and Abthu and all will worship Col. 2. 23. 3. Where so good a man as Vzzah was so severely punished for such a small seeming errour as it might be called what may those expect who boldly commit grosse and scandalous sinnes without any remorse or amendment of life 9. Vers 7. Where it is said that for this fact of Vzzah though upon a good intention the anger of the Lord was kindled against him and he smote him for his errour c. We see that sinne and errour kindles Gods wrath and looses his hand of justice unto punishment therefore how watchfull and loath we should be to sinne as we would be loath and feare to kindle Gods anger against our selves and thereby to procure his judgments 10. Where it is said that God smote him and he died by the Arke we see that in the Lords hand is life and death and how suddenly he may inflict the same especially when we provoke his wrath and therefore we should eschew sinne the wages whereof is death and feare God as our Saviour exhorts us Who when he has killed the body can cast both soule and body in hell fire
evidently may be seen O happy gain therefore is godlinesse and blessed conquest is the savour left unto posterity which the Lord hath promised 5. Amongst the punishments that he wisheth to befall unto Joab and his house he imprecateth blood twise either that the hand of God do it by a bloody issue or that the hand of man shed it by the edge of the sword Where we see that like sins crave alike punishments frequently as I have done therefore so hath the Lord rewarded me saith Adonibezeh thus the firy lust of Sodom was purged by fire Kain feareth killing because he had killed Pharaohs males of his Land are destroyed because he destroyed Israels males he shed their blood and his waters are plagued with blood and as he drowned them so is he and his hoste drowned So Saul killed the Lords Priests with the sword and so is he killed by the same And David as he had abused the bed of Vriah so is his bed abused by his Son Absolom even as Job if he where guilty wisheth the same retribution Job 31. 9 10. And our saviour declareth That with what measure we measure to others with the same it shall be measured to us again See also Revel 16. 6. 6. These visitations we see are imprecated and were to be inflicted for sinne to learn us what fruit that bitter coloquintida bringeth forth and when any kind of temporall judgement or visitation cometh to acknowledge that it is our sinnes that hath procured the same And therefore by true repentance as the nearest way to have them taken away to turne unto God that he who hath wounded may make whole again Not that all troubles come for sinne some being trialls onely for exercise as these which did befall unto holy Job being both honourable as not inflicted for iniquity and profitable as tending to the stirring up manifestation and greater grouth and strengthning of Gods graces in the elect to the glory of Gods mercy and confusion of Satans malice And such are seldome now adays so few being such as holy Job who may say that their sins hath not procured their chastisment some again are dishonourable as inflicted for sin but yet profitable as tending to conversion like those afflictions whereby David was reduced home and the poor prodigall And such are all the sanctified corrections of the Lords chosen And last of all some are both dishonourable being for sin and improfitable because they tend not to conversion but rather finall eversion such as Sodoms overthrow Pharaohs drowning and the like The former two sorts being in love God dealing with the elect either as a goldsmith with the fine gold or as a Father with the Child But this last which is properly called a punishment being in wrath as the Axe in the hand of the just Judge or executioner to punish the malefactor and cut down the evil Tree 7. In the method that David useth before that by these imprecations he will shew his detestation of the fact in that first he purgeth himself to be altogether guiltlesse of the same We observe that it is the duty of a rebuker or of one who would seem to be a detester of any wickednesse in others first to labour to be free thereof himself turpe enim doctori cum culpa redarguit ipsum Thus Iudah ought to have been free himself of that fault which so severely he would have punished in Tamar and David in pronouncing that sentence against the man who took his neighbours one sheep unto Nathan ought to have been carefull that he had not been pointed at himself to be the man Thou therefore that preachest a man should not steal doest thou steal thou that fayest a man should not commit adultery doest thou commit adultery And thou that abhorrest Idols committest thou sacriledges Rom. 2. 21. 8. Vers 31. David commandeth Ioab with the people to solemnize a publicke lamentation for Abner and by a custome then used to expresse their grief which is injoyned to Ioab either as a part of punishment that he is forced to lament him whom in his rage he had slain and for the greater detestation of the fact as Moses caused the people to drink of the water whereupon the pouder of their Calf was strawed or else hereby to bring Joab to a deeper consideration of his sin seeing the great lamentation that the whole people that were guiltlesse thereof altogether made for the same and therefore much more should he lament grievously his fact David then in requiring him with mourngin and tokens of repentance to celebrat this funerall wherein if he dissembled the fault was his own doth herein as Princes and Magistrates ought and may do in the outward exercises of Gods worship and Religion to compell their subjects to give their bodily presence as we may see in the examples of Asa Josiah Hezekiah and other godly Kings of Judah wherein if there be Hypocrisy the blame resteth upon the dissembled themselves and their condemnation with that guest that was compelled unto the wedding and wanted the wedding garment abides them 9. In Davids mourning for Abner we see here the nature of the godly not rejoycing but compassionating the evil of their very Enemies even as Iob protesteth the like of himself If I rejoyced at the destruction of him that hated me saith he or was moved to joy when evil came upon him neither suffered I my mouth to sinne by wishing a curse to his soul And according as the Lord commandeth Be not thou glad when thy Enemy falleth and let not thy heart rejoyce when he stumbleth This David did likewise shew at the death of his perfecutor Saul And went about all the day mourning when his Enemies were visited and this is the surest badge of a true Christian whose heart is so free from malice that they love their very adversaries 10. In that David doth all those duties to a foe giving him the honour of buriall and that in so famous a place and in so solemne a manner as that he himself will follow the beer We see not onely the humility of the godly wherein they imitate Christ dimitting themselves in duties towards their very inferiours but also that their practise is usually to recompence evil with good according to that precept of our saviour Mat. 5. 44. And as the Lord by Salomon commandeth If he that hate thee be hungry give him bread to eat and if he be thirsty give him water to drink for so thou shalt lay coales upon his head and the Lord shall recompence thee This recompence gave Ioseph to his Brethren in feeding them and their families in the Land of Goshen David unto Saul and here unto Abner not remembring his former injuries and our saviour in healing the ear of Malchus who came against him and praying for those that cruelly did Crucicy him 11. In all this behaviour of Davids he sheweth that no wayes he alloweth this sin of
Ioab though importing his quietnesse by ding him of such a foe that troubled him and commodity likewise having thereby the more easy accesse unto the rest of the Kingdome but altogether abhorreth it far unlike to the Pythonesse Masters Act. 16. Or Demetrius the silver smith Act. 19. Who fearing the losse of their gain resisted the Gospel Even as sundry now a dayes will not forsake the errours of Papistry because pardons p●rgatory and suchlike are lucrative Doctrines Thus Pharaoh will not let● Israel go albeit God hath commanded because it is against his commodity and if they go he will have the cattel and sheep to remain And Ahab though against conscience and equity will have Naboths Vineyard because it is fruitfull and commodious Even so sacriledge must be so universally practised because though a sin it is very gainfull But what if a man gain the whole World if he loose his own soul saith our Master Christ 12. Vers 34. In Davids regrating the treacherous form of Abners death and commending his courage we see the very wicked have their own good parts and many excellent naturall gifts wherewith God hath indued them for their greater conviction when they abuse the same and whereunto otherwise is due their own praise As we may see in the examples of the ingenious ●inding out of arts in the posterity of Kain Goliahs strength Sauls talnesse Absoloms beauty Achitophels wisdome Asahels swiftnesse and such like And that the godly hath ever been accustomed omitting the evils of their very private Enemies to speak the best of all men not like the curious spiers of the more in their neighbours eye and sluggish neglecters of the beame in their owne or like that uncleane spirit delighting to record the turpitude of others and accuse man to man as he doth man to God 13. Vers 35. In the peoples coming to refresh David with meat as we see the loving and tender care of subjects towards their Princes worthy of imitation so in his answer again and protestation we see what true fasting is not an abstaining towit after a Popish and ridiculous form from grosser and some more common sorts of meat or flesh and in the mean while feeding on such more delicate rare and pampering dainties but as David did here from all manner of food till the evening 14. Vers 36. The success of his purgation is set down that as he wished so were the people satisfied and all Israel did surely acknowledge that it did not proceed any way from the King so to kill Abner Where we observe what happy issue the Lord giveth unto upright dealing David useth the ordinary meanes of clearing himselfe on the one part and the Lord who had the peoples hearts in his hands perswadeth them inwardly and assuredly by these meanes that David was altogether innocent and so the perill of insurrection upon any contrary suspition or detestation of the fact is quite taken away and happily prevented Let us labour then to have a good cause and lawfully with wisdome to prosecute the same referring the event to God which certainly shall be prosperous 15. In Davids sparing of Joab notwithstanding of the odiousness and evidence of the fact fearing Joabs greatness and the arme of flesh having Gods warrant of his law his frequent promises and assured protection also a good cause and happy beginnings already in the contrary we see the weakness of Gods Saints oftimes and how by carnall feare they are dash't in execution of their callings and wave in that assured confidence they ought to have in Gods doings and relying upon his own assistance and powerfull protection for as Jehosaphat saith in that exhortation of his unto the Judges of Judah take heed what you do for yee execute not the Judgments of man but of the Lord and he will be with you in the cause and Judgment wherefore let the feare of the Lord be upon you It is he then on whom men ought to relye and him they should feare who can cast soul and body into hell fire Wherefore the oversight of Magistrates their respits reprivings and remissions for blood are like odious and capitall crimes which can have no allowance by this unlawfull example and that because in the morall law of God and judiciall concerning the punishment of the prevarication thereof there is not permitted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or arbitrium but whatsoever God commandeth in the Lawes of his Word is stricti juris and may not be dispensed withall albeit in the constitutions of men that it be otherwaies 16. As in this sparing of Joab we see the weakness of the saints as is said so likewise we see the cause why many wicked men go free of ordinary punishment and what abuse is of Justice in this latter age even the worldly grandure of these gyants and fat kine of Bashan till the wind of Gods wrath shake bare the tops of these tall Cedars of Lebanon and cast them up by the root at last as David sayeth here The Lord shall reward the evill doer according to his wickedness and this is the hope of the oppressed and patience of the Saints II SAM Chap 4. from the 1. verse to the 8. IN the first verse of the former Chapter the generall proposition of the third and fourth Chapters was laid to be the history of the Civill warres between the houses of Saul and David the end whereof was that Sauls house decayed and the others waxed stronger This was confirmed by six arguments in the last Chapter and now in this Chapter we have the seventh importing the full and finall decay of the house of Saul and Davids advancement thereby For at this time there were but two males lawfully descended of Saul who could be contesters with David in the challenge of the Crowne Ishboseth Sauls sonne and Mephiboseth Jonathans sonne● for as for the sonnes of Rispah they were borne of concubinage and therefore according to the custome they received no inheritance but only a portion of goods as Abraham provided for the Children of Keturah now of these two Ishboseth is impotent in mind and unworthy murthered by his servants of that same tribe with him and Mephiboseth is impotent in body and lamed by a fall which he got by his nurse and so not only young but crooked and unable to travell in the office of a King and therefore the house of Saul being thus totally decayed all Israel were forced to offer themselves to David Then in this present Chapter we have in generall the last and extreame decay of Sauls house by the misfortune of these two fornamed This generall hath three particulars the first containeth the decay of Ishbo●eth unto the 8. Vers The second is the inability of Mephiboseth interjected in the 4. Vers The third is the justice and piety of David in revenging of Ishboseths death and burying his head till the 12 and last Vers In the decay of Ishboseth we have three things
2. 22 23. 14. Vers 10 11. In Nathans denunciation of punishment for Davids sinne We see that sinne draweth ever punishment as we see in our first parents first world Sodome Egypt and infinite other examples Scripturall and prophane histories And therefore sinne may be compared to these Locusts Revel 9. 7 8. Which had mens faces and the alluring haire of women but Scorpion tailes vers 10. With stings that did both hurt and torment or like that little book Revel 10. 10. Which was sweet in the mouth like hony but bitter in the belly Therefore let none who sinne dreame of impunity how long suffering soever the Lords patience be to suffer them for a while but in the end resolve if they eate the sower grapes that their teeth shall be set on edge At farthest in that place where there is weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth 15. Judgment here is denounced against David a King from the Lord as the inflicter Which shewes that albeit Kings and great men may escape punishment by men in respect of their place and power yet they shall not escape at the hands of God as we see in the examples of Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar Saul Herode and others A notable example we have hereof in our own Chronicles Bachavan 〈◊〉 5. which is this The nobility of Scotland having consulted to depose King Fer●uhard for the detestable cruel●ies he had committed by Colmanus Bishop of Northumberland they were diswaded who told them that the punishment of Kings belonged to God and that he ere it were long would take vengeance of his wickedness which accordingly came to pass for the King after a few daies being a hunting happened to be bitten by a wolfe and falling in a fever such a putrefaction ensued in his body that out of every part thereof issued such abundance of lice and vermine which made him loathsome to all so that languishing in this Consumption he sent for Colman to whom he exprest his remorse for his wicked life and would needs be carried to the nex fields wrapped in sackcloth where after humble confession he was absolved and so ended his life shortly after his absolution 16. In Nathans denuncing the sword against Davids house and the defiling of ●his Wives as he had killed Vriah with the sword and defiled his Wife we see how oftimes by Law of talion the Lord punishes sinne as he did Pharaoh Adonibezek and as we see Job 31. 10. So that a man may read his sinne in his punishment As David might here and as we see performed Revel 16. 6. 17. Vers 11. Whereas the Lord sayes I will raise up evill against thee meaning the evill of punishment this teaches us in all punishments corrections or tryalls as Job did and David in the cursing of Shimei Chap. 16. 11. To look up to the hand of God and acknowledge that comes from him as we see Gods people did Hos 6. 1. And therefore to returne to him and humble ourselves under his hand 18. Whereas also the Lord sayes to David I will raise up evill against thee out of thine own house We see that the saddest punishments are these which are domesticke and so most neer unto us and affects us most as David shewes Chap. 16. 11. And as we see in Sinacherib King of Assyrias punishment 2 King 19. 37. 19. Vers 12. The Lord sayes what David did secretly should be punished publickly which shewes that it is vain to commit sinne in secret thereby to hide the same for what is done secretly in sinning shall be made publicke by the Justice of God in the punishing God being thereby glorified in the manifestation of his omniscience and Justice as has been seen in the discovery and punishment of many secret murthers adulteries incests and such like hatefull crimes But specially such sinnes are are hid and secretly committed if they be not discovered and punished here in the day of the generall judgement they shall be discovered and punished then Psal 50. 21. II. SAM Chap. 12. from the 13. vers to the end FOllows now after Nathans Message and his accusation of David and denunciation against him 1. Davids penitent confession in few words but weighty which at more length is amplified in all the circumstances thereof in the 51. penitentiall Psalme which may 〈◊〉 as a commentary upon this text 2. Is subjoyned Nathans absolution or declaration that God had remitted his sin wherein as Psal 32. 1. The blessedness of man consists and that he should not dye towit that death which his sin deserved and which the Apostle Rom. 6. 23. declareth to be the wages of sin Howbeit the Child that was borne unto him of that adulterous procreation it should dye the temporall death because by that deed he had given great occasion to the Lords Enemies to blaspheme which by the Childes death in the scandall thereof would the sooner be forget nor by the life thereof if it continued whereupon ensueth the performance of what Nathan herein had foretold 1. By the Lords strinking of the Child with sicknesse and thereafter Vers 18. With death during which time of the Childs sickness Davids behaviour is set down towit his humiliation by prayer and fasting and lying on the Earth doubtles confessing his great guiltinesse provocation in the begetting of that Child and as Vers 22. intreating the Lord if it were his will to be gracious to him that the Child might live but when he heard by the servants of his house Vers 19. That the Child was dead then he changes his behaviour arised from the Earth washes and annoints himself changes his apparell And 1. goes to the house of God and worships and then comes to his own house and refreshes himself by meat the reason of which both his former carriage while the Child was sick and of his contrary carriage after the Childs death he gives unto his servants who asked him the reason thereof and this he donh Vers 22. and 23. After which Vers 24. and 25. is set down Davids comforting of Bathsheba now his Wife and his begetting upon here a Son whom she boor to him and he called his name Solomon whom the Lord loved and in testimony thereof he sent by his Prophet Nathan and he called his nam J●dediah which is by interpretation the beloved of the Lord. After all which is set down a new document of the Lords favour to David in giving him a notable victory over his Enemies the Ammonites by the expugnation of there chief and royall City Rabbah which so long had been beseiged and at last the chief part whereof which was the City of Waters or where their Water was without which the other could not long hold out was taken in by Joab who hereupon sent to David to come in Person himself with his forces to take the honour of the Victory and full in taking thereof which David accordingly does where he is crowned with there Kings Crown weying a Talent of gold
might not goe with the King for the forenamed reasons he makes offer of his Sonne Chimham to go with him he to do to him what he thought good Which offer David doth kindely accept and promiseth that whatsoever he would ask of him he would do for him And so having blessed Barzillai he dismisses him home again and so goes on in his journey to Gilgall a famous place in the territory of Benjamin neer to Jericho accompained with Chimham the tribe of Judah and the halfe of the people of Israel The second action is between the ten tribes of Israel and the tribe of Judah the men of Israel complaining to David of the men of Judah That they had stolen him away and brought him and his houshold and men over Iordan and so despised them whose advice should been first had in bringing back their King To whom the men of Iudah answer that they were first in that action 1. Because the King was neer of kinne unto him being of that tribe and therefore collecting that they where causesly angry at them for that cause 2. They shew that it was not for any benefit or reward that they expected or had for this their being first in his conduct To whom these of Israell reply especially concerning that right by kindred to David which the men of Judah pretended affirming that their right to him was greater as having ten parts in him because they were ten tribes whereas they were but one whereby arises such a contention between them in bitter speeches that it occasioned the rebellion of Sheba in the next Chapter and in which contention it is said That the words of the men of Judah were fiercer then the men of Israell OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 33. IN Davids kinde remembrance of Barzillais favour and bounty to him when he was in distresse and in the gracious offer that he now makes unto him for the same We see the praise worthy vertue of gratitude commendable in all persons as the contrary vice is odious and especially in Princes for which we see the thenth leper who was healed by Christ and came back to give him thanks so commended as likewise Pharaoh his gratitude to Joseph in giving Goshen to his Father and friends to whom his successor proved so ungratefull thereafter and was plagued in like manner Davids gratitude to the King of Ammon ungrately requited which was the cause of the Ammonites utter ruine likewise Eliahs gratitude to the Widdow of Sareptah Elisha's to the Woman of Shunem Davids also to the posterity of Jonathan and our Saviours promise That a cup of cold water shall not be given to one of his which shall want its reward as he also shewes at the last day how it shall be said When I was hungry ye fed me not c. Inherit therefore the Kingdome prepared for you before the beginning of the World Which should teach us to be thankfull both to God as we see Psal 103. 2. And to men who have deserved well of us 2. Barzillai is said to have been a very rich and great man and in Davids distresse both helps and hazards with him Whereby we observe the right use of riches and a great estate towit when occasion calls for it both to help and hazard in a good cause wherein either Church or Commonwealth or both have their interest and not to mispend upon pride ryot or superfluities farre lesse to use their greatnesse or bestow their goods for persecuting Gods Church and opposing his cause As we see that Roman Antichrist and his followers which are the hornes of the beast doe Revel 17 12 13. 3. Vers 34. Barzillai speaks of the shortnesse of his life and Vers 37. Of his death and buriall teaching all thereby especially the aged in the midst of their greatnesse and prosperity to be mindefull ever of these things which made Joseph of Arimathea to have his tombe into his garden which made Moses also to teach Gods people Psal 90. 12. to pray Teach us Lord to number our dayes that we may apply our hearts unto Wisdome This was Jobs waiting Job 14. 14. All the dayes of his appointed time till his change should come and which like practice counting every day the day of our death account and entring into eternity if it were ours daily it would further our mortification of sinne and prevent falling therein where as while men with the rich fool being in health and strength promised to themselves long life they lull their souls in security put off repentance and amendement of life and are snatcht away by death unawares and presented to judgement 4. This remembrance of the shortnesse of his life of death and buriall weanes Barzillai from regarding worldly or court delights and from high offered promotion so that he becomes dead to the World in affection before he be dead in the World in condition Which in like manner should teach us how to wean our hearts from regarding any worldly pleasures or profit honour or advancement and specially not to hunt after the same by unlawfull meanes as many do by seriously considering how short momentary an a time we have to enjoy the same how uncertain also the honour of death is and that we must leave all when we go to the grave and are presented to judgment 5. V. 41. When David had made an end of the troubles raised by Absoloms rebellion by the victory which he had obtained over him now followes a new trouble by the division dissention that fell out between the tribe of Judah the other ten tribes of Israel So that we see as is said of old age Eccl. 12. 3. That the cloud returne after raine so in this life the Godly may expect trouble after trouble as one wave followeth in the neck of another or as Jobs messengers of evill newes came one after another 6. We see here also Satans pollicy to hinder a good work which was an unanimous and peaceable reduction of David by raising a dissention between the tribes of Judah and Israel who were of one stock of one religion under one King and fellow members of one Commonwealth And which hath ever been Satans practise since he made the first division between God and our first parents as we see in that attempt of dissention between Abraham and Lot Cain and Abell Saul and David Korah and Moses Israel and the Ephramites Judg. 12. Israel and the Benjamites Judg. 21. Israel and Judah here and Paul and Barnabas Act. 15. ●9 And in the Schismes that he hath ever stirred up in the Christian Church and still does to hinder the Gospell and make the greater way to the propagating of his damnable errours 7. We see here likewise in this dissention from whence it and all other the like proceeds to wit from envy jealousy and pride for precedence and preheminence as Salomon speaketh saying by pride cometh contention which was the cause of of Joabs killing of Abner and thereafter
which signifies the removing of all impediments and facilitating his enterprises In making his feet swift to pursue and fall upon his enemies and having over taken them to get the victory over them and to be set above them 4. That he he taught his hands to fight which signifies his skill in military affaires and how to use his weapon 5. That with skill he had also given him strength of body requisite for warre So that a bow of steel was broken by his Armes 6. That he had given him the shield of his salvation whereby he signifies his surety from the weapons or darts of his Enemies and subjoynes that the Lords greatnesse of power was the cause of his greatnesse by Victories 7. That he inlarged his steps under him so that his feet did not slip whereby he signifies his prosperous successe in all his marchings 8. He sets down the consequences of all the former in the execution and practise thereof in persuing his Enemies destroying them consuming them and deadly wounding them that they could not rise but were fallen under his feet so that the Lord had given the necks of his Enemies who would not lie under the yoke of his obedience unto him for that end that he might destroy them and when they were in this extremity when they looked for help from man they were disappointed for there was none to save then and when they sought help from God he did not answer them and thus being helplesse he compares them to most vile things and shewes that he did beat them as small as dust and did stamp them as myre the in street and disperse them as they spread dung on the ground And thereafter he amplifies yet more the Lords goodnesse to him From the 44. verse to the 50. In that this Lord had not onely delivered him from the strivings of the people who were his own subjects but also that he had subdued under him the Nations that were round about him as the Syrians Ammonites and Philistims c. Wherefore Vers 47. he bursts forth in a Patheticke doxologie for the Lords deliverance of him from all his Enemies and his advancement over them and last by way of conclusion From the 50. vers to the end He resolves to be thankfull to the Lord while he lives which he doth upon two reasons the one is ab antecedentibus implied in the particle therefore that is for all the before rehearsed benefits the other is à consequentibus because he will shew mercy to his anointed and to his seed for ever Wherein David is a cleer type of Jesus Christ who is called the Sonne of David whom the Lord anoynted with the oile of gladnesse above his fellowes as his name Christ imports and who has subdued all his and our Enemies sinne Satan Hell Death and the Grave and Triumphed over them on the Tree of the Crosse and led captivite captive to whom also the Lord has given the Nations and the heathen for an inheritance as Psal 2. 8. And the uttermost parts of the Earth for a possession by the conversion of the gentiles to the profession of Christianity and embracing of the Gospell OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 21. IN true piety or sanctification we see that integrity or uprightnesse of heart and outward practise thereof in our lives which is cleannesse of hands should ever go together and not the voyce of Jacob and the hands of Esau or an hypocriticall and simulate shew of Godlinesse denying the power thereof and not joyning the practise which is to have leaves like the Figtree which Christ cursed or a name that they live but are dead like the Church of Sardis Revel 3. 2. 2. David had said before Vers that the Lord favoured and had delight in him wherefore he subjoynes as an evidence thereof the grace of sanctification Thereby shewing that this is the only true evidence of the Lords love towit grace and sanctification and by no other thing can it be known seeing worldly prosperity is rather the portion of the wicked in this life as we see Psal 73. And in the examples of the rich fool and glutton than the lot of the Godly to whom God gives the gifts of his right hand and for whom he has appointed the inheritance as Abraham did for Isaac and the birthright with the blessing which Isaac gave to Jacob. 3. We see that although the Godly merit not by any condignity of their works or Persons yet that piety and Godlinesse wants not its own reward ratione pacti because God has promised the same thereunto and therefore it is just with him to perform and onely of meer mercy as we see Psal 62. 12. and Hose 10. 12. Where we are willed to sow in righteousnesse and reap in mercy Therefore sayes Paul 2 Tim. 1. 16 17. concerning Onesiphorus who had refreshed him oftimes in his bonds The Lord grant that he may find mercy of the Lord in that day towit of death and his account the wages of sinne being death but life everlasting being the free gift of God Rom. 6. 23. And therefore called an inheritance Jam. 2. 5. Which comes to Children not by their own purchase but which is given them by their Father Which recompensing therefore of sinceer holinesse and practicall piety should be a great encouragement to the Godly to persevere therein and abound in good works in which as the way which leads to that heavenly Kingdome we are exhorted to walk Eph. 2. 10. And to abound therein and bring forth much fruit Joh. 15. 2. 4. Vers 22. Davids keeping the wayes of God and not departing wickedly from him or his statutes We see not onely the Godlies care of ordering their conversation aright but likewise wherein true Godlinesse consists which is as Isa 1. 16. To cease to do evill or not to depart from Gods commandments and to learn to do well or to keep his wayes as we see also Psal 34. 14. and Amos 5. 15. Where we are commanded to hate evill and love good that is to eschew sinne not onely in action and to do good but also to hate the one and love the other in our affection 5. We see here likewise the difference between the sinning of the Godly and of the wicked the Godly sinne daily and therefore are taught to crave daily forgiveness but this their sinning is but through frailty and by sins which we call Quotidianae incursionis but they are not as the sinnes of the wicked are of presumption by departing wickedly from God with delight making a trade of sinne and sinning against both knowledge and conscience 6. Vers 23. David sayes That the Lords judgements were alwayes before him Whereby we observe that the right way how to eschew sinne is to hold Gods Word or his statutes called here his judgments ever before our eyes a the directory of our life and conversation as David did here and which he hid also in his heart that he might not sinne
Son are dead so that both the King thy persecutour and Enemy and Jonathan though thy friend yet apparent Heir between thee and the Kingdome are both out of the way and therefore this last news may asswage the grief of the former the slaughter to wit of thy Countrymen and People a crafty flatterer indeed The King also as a prudent Prince not facile to credit rumours inquires once and again the certainty he answers that he speaks as an ejewitnesse that which he saw and he affirmes the thing which he asked and to seal up the truth of his speechs he makes a reall exhibition of the royall ornaments of the crown and bracelet whereby he concludes with himself liberally to be rewarded of David Concerning the matter of his report and verity thereof there are divers opinions amongst the learned some thinking it a manifest lie made to gain favour thanks and reward in respect that it seems directly contradictory to the verity of the forme of Sauls death 1 Sam. 31. and 1 Chron. 10. Others as sundry of the Rabbins and Josephus holdes the opinion that he spake truly granting as is said in the forenamed places that Saul runne himself upon his owne sword and of that wound especially he dyed and that the Archers had formerly hit him and wounded him likewise but that immediatly not dyeing of these wounds especially by this last given by himself not entring so deep into his body as he speaks himself nam detinuit mè haec ocellata chlamys v. 9. And life being as yet within him as he also in the same verse testifies therefore he desires this Amalekite to stand upon him as being formerly fallen and to kill him outright which he performs and thereby altogether is made to give up the ghost After that David hath tryed and found it to be of truth that Saul and Jonathan are dead with great heavinesse and regret doth he receive this news and with great mourning and fasting he bewails Saul Jonathan and the People which mourning is upon two respects the one naturall the other godly and spirituall this first was the sorrow 1. for the King his Father in Law and Lord 2. for Jonathan his faithfull friend prevented by immaturity of violent death before he could get occasion of acquitting his former favours and 3. for his People his dearest kinsmen and of one country with him The spirituall is the apprehension of Gods wrath thus punishing Church and Commonwealth for sin and making his People to fall so before their Enemies whereby the honour of the name of God would be reproached and blasphemed amongst the heathen The reward of this messenger is death by orderly processe first David accuses how durst thou put thy hand on the Lords anointed Next he convicts him by his own confession which uncoactedly given and not enforced by torture is by all Laws holden pro confesso then he condemneth and commandeth execution upon good reasons the crime was capitall the party confessed David was a Judge in Siklag and the title by the death of Saul is increased to the Kingdome OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 1. BEfore David had newly gotten a notable Victory over his Enemies the Amalekites and recovered the prey of Ziklag and now the Lord takes Saul his persecutor also out of the way and makes the news thereof speedily to be brought unto him by whose death he is promoted unto the Kingdome so that the Lord heaps good things upon his chosen and renewes his benefits to the godly who rely upon him and in patience possesseth there souls witnesse Jacob and a cloud of others that may be brought out of Scripture 2. That Victory over the Amalekites was not without a preceding heavy disaster and this news containes likewise a sad theame Jonathan his trusty friend and the Lords People his dear Countrymen over whom he was to reigne was likewise overthrown with Saul in battle thus temper 's the Lord the Cup that he gives his owne comfort with the crosse and the mixture of some tartnesse with his sweetest morsels least they should overcloy us or we too much delight in them therefore with extraordinary Revelations Paul must have some buffetings of Satan least he should be puft up above measure and least we should put our felicity in them here or not thankfully with Job be content when he takes them back from us again our sweetest roses must have there sharp prickels 3. God stirreth up an Amalekite vers 8. an infidell in Religion an adversary to Israel and particular Enemy to David to become his favourer and with all diligence to carry this message whereupon we collect the generall that when the Church of God or any members thereof hath been in greatest adversities amongst forrain Enemies then God hath moved the hearts of there very adversaries to be there best friends Examples Abraham with Abimelech the Patriarches with the first Pharoah Moses preserved by the Daughter and brought up in the court David with the King of Gath and Moab of the Prophets of God in Achabs time fed by the governours of his house Obadiah Daniel the 3. Children Ezra Nehemiah Ester Mordecai and sundry others Then let us not fear the losse or want of friends the Lord who framed the heart hath the hearts of Kings and private men in his hands which he will turne as he did the heart of Esau in an instant to the comfort of such as depend with David upon his protection and providence 4. Vers 2. This messinger is a pattern of a cunning Hypocrite crafty flatterer brought up in the Atheist Schools of prophane courts temporizing in Religion and in matters of state composing his ingenie gesture manners and speech to the perfiting of that altogether which he thought should please the Prince upon the respect of his own advantage without all care of conscience Such an intelligencer was Doeg unto Saul such are may courtiers about Princes and great men now adayes few Mordecaies Nehemiah's or Daniels being promoted or few Ebed-melech's or Obadiah's to be found in courts 5. In his first report of the fall of Prince and People in Battle we see what is the miserable estate of a People under a wicked King oftimes they imitate his example as is said Regis ad exemplum c. and are punished with him yea he is punished in the person's and body of his subjects witnesse 70000 of Israel falling by Pestilence for the presumption of Davids numbring of the people and there Saul for going to the witch of Endor not onely dyeth himself alone but the people of the Lord are overthrown with him on the contrary O happy people that hath a godly Prince 6. Vers 10. Saul dyeth by the edge of the sword even by that same death which he had intended against David and yet David is alive thus is it verified that the wicked dig a pit for the godly but they themselves shall fall therein and the souls of the Lords chosen shall
of all desire he had of Sauls death by any indirect means confirming so his innocency so frequently before attested to Saul himself and the integrity of his heart 16. It is not Lawfull then we perceive to any one subject for what cause soever to put violent hands on their Lawfull Prince supream Magistrate for if he be evill it is for our sins therefore returne to God by unsained repentance and pray for him then he will either remove or reform him in his good time and if he command things unlawfull let us obey rather God then man and eschew his unjust wrath so far as we can but if God call us to suffering therein let our care be that we suffer not for evil doing and yeeld patiently and constantly to the Lords calling never in all this lifting up our hand against the Lords anointed nor resisting by violence but according to Davids example in all his behaviour towards this wicked King Saul conforming our selves and according to the rule prescribed unto us in the word of God Rom. 13. 17. Last of all we see how wonderfully the wicked are disappointed of their purposes this Amalekite looked for favour thanks and benefit but by wickednesse and an unjust fact to attaine thereto especially at the hands of a godly man was the wrong way therefore he is justly rewarded according to his desert by death thus Satan ever blindes deceives the wicked like Laban making them to serve for one thing promised but changing their wages and giving them another thing in performance You shall be like God said he unto Eve but the contrary was found true and Pharaoh thought that he wrought wisely by burdens and bondage to waste Israel redact them to a few number but they increased the more and when he had essayed all means he proved the fool notwithstanding making his Land to be plagued his first borne slain and himselfs with his people drowned 11. Also we see the wicked are the cause of there own perdition and a guilty conscience snares it self therefore doth David conclude thy blood be upon thy own head for thy own mouth hath confessed c. II. SAM Chap. 1. from the 17. verse to the end WE shew in the Preface before the Chapter that the generall subject of this Book is the History of the reign of David begun at the death of Saul while the institution of Salomon The utilitie declares itself in the particulars as in the confirmation of faith by the infallible performance of Gods promise to David in the raising of his Kingdome albeit after great troubles and in the example of life and manners as in the patience piety righteous government magnanimity in adversity prudence in prosperity and others his vertues and albeit as man feeble and subject to infirmities and falls yet rising again by true and earnest repentance But because Davids Kingdome is the type of Christs Kingdome in the comparison we have the chief utility to be remarked that as the one rose triumphed and dilated it selfe in great amplitude after the cross so hath the other and shall inlarge it selfe more and more to the confusion of Antichrist and all adversary power in the revelation of the time decreed Let thegodly only imitate David in his constancy patience piety and fortitude till Gods decreed time come Rev. 18. 2. As for the generall subject of the first Chapter and first part thereof with the three parts whereinto it was subdivided we have also treated of the same which was the report the triall of the report and the reward of the reporter now followeth the second part of the Chapter from the 17 vers to the end containing Davids disposition upon the report and in generall the text saith that he composed a lamentation upon the miseries of this battle and especially upon the death of Saul and Jonathan This lamentation is proponed as we speak cicloeidos circular waies or by circumductions of periods and sentences and amplified according to Davids manner poetically and therefore hath a difficult reduction to a certain order or method Yet all that is diffusedly spoken here may be reduced to two heads the one is the lamentation for the calamities fallen upon all Israel taken from the events of the battle from the 17. vers to the 22. The second is the speciall lamentation for Saul and Jonathan taken from the commendation of their virtues from the 22. vers to the 27. wherein is added the conclusion poetically set down and by way of Threnodie In the first period we have the title or inscription of this funerall oration called the lamentation of David for Saul and Jonathan It was the custome of all Ages that the friends and favourers lamented the defunct as in the examples of the Patriarch's Abraham lamented Sarah Jacob Rachel and Joseph whom he thought to have been dead so his sonnes with the Egyptians lamented him in Abel-mizraim Israel lamented Moses and Aaron Joshua and Samuel Jeremiah by his Threnodies lamented the death of Josias so in the Gospell Mary lamented Lazarus her brother yea our Saviour wept also the disciples lamented Christ the godly lamented Stephen and the ancients had anniversary lamentings for the Martyrs in the primitive Church with recordation of their deaths constancy and conrage for the imitation of others who should be likewise called to seale the truth by their sufferings and with regret of the Churches want of such excellent and painfull Men and holy patterns of life without any invocation of their names which corruption as Augustine testifies was not in his daies crept into the Church of God nomina enim martyrum apud nos inquit comm●morantur non invocantur answering the objection of the heathen de pluralitate deorum which by the honouring of the Martyrs memories they would have the Christians likewise guilty of As for the causes of this lamentation or twofold respect thereof the same hath been already spoken of in the explication of the 12. verse In the second period it is said that David proposes this lamentation that thereby Israel should learne to shoot in the bow as is written in the book of Justice which sentence because it appeared not to agree with the purpose therefore the Hebrewes excluded this verse by parenthesis out of the lamentation yet considering aright we shall find this period to agree well with the inscription as the recents resolve David proponing this lamentation to be a warning to Israel to learne the exercise of Archery because by that forme of armour especially as is evident 1 Sam. 31. 3. the Philistims had slaine Saul and overcome the Lords people and whom herein in time coming he would have to match their enemies in the military skill of using that sort of armour By the book of Jasher or righteous is to be understood most probably the book of the common Lawes which then was written for the formall proceeding in Judgment and warfaire containing the art and
as here when Abner and Ishboseth are making all their power against David even then they are divided a sunder and David is freed from danger and in our own time when that high enterprise of subverting Church and commonwealth Prince and people by gunpowder was contrived and brought to the point of execution within this land then the Lord mightily discovered and disappointed the same to the confusion of the enemies his Churches comfort and praise of his name for ever as he had-dispersed also and disappointed that Spanish invincible armado of Spaine in 88 before 2. As in the time of the highest machinations of the wicked being combined together the Lord bringeth all their counsells to nought so we see that God maketh their dissentions amongst themselves being divided to tend to the peace and quietness of his Church thus God made the incursion of the Philistines upon Sauls borders an occasion for him to retire from compassing David in the wilderness of Maon to defend his land thus likewise did the Lord put a hook in the nostrills of Sinacherib and made the invasion of the King of Egypt an occasion for him to returne from Jerusalem and persuit of good King Hez●kiah so Pauls delivery is occasioned by a dissention amongst his accusers And here Ishboseths accusation of Abner is made to be an occasion of variance for the peace of David Let us ever rely then upon our provident and powerfull God who can draw light out of darknesse sweetnesse out of the strong as Sampsons ridle saith and peace out of discord and who hath infinit means to comfort his own Church with and hath all hearts in his hands to turne them what way he pleaseth 3. In the variance of these two we see there is no solid and constant friendship amongst the wicked for that which is in God is onely like unto him immutable and sure and worthy of the name of amity the other being more properly conspiracies as they are called Psalm 2. Which God shall dissolve and undo a clear example whereof we have in that league between Abimelech and the men of Sechem between whom notwithstanding the Lord sent an evil Spirit of variance that the blood of Gideons Sonnes might be revenged whereof both were guilty Let us not therefore make such friendship as is spoken of in the 50. Psalm 18. Nor be like Sampsons foxes tyed together or Simeon and Levi Brethren in evil but let our friendship be in God and our concurrance be to holy duties 4. Vers 7. Saul leaves behind him Rizpah a concubine who is here the occasion of all this trouble between Ishboseth and Abner where we may see the Scorpions taile of sinne stings the posterity of a man oftimes when he lyeth in ashes witnesse the immediate former example of base Abimelech begotten in whoredome who after his Fathers death is reserved as it were to be the burrean of his 70. lawfull begotten Brethren 5. We perceive that albeit reprehensions be lawfull in nature yet they should be prudently and timorously used otherwise they may import more hur than profit as we see here in Ishboseths example this moved the preacher to say a word spoken in due season is like aples of gold with pictures of silver Therefore let our reprehensions be after due tryall spoken in love observing the necessary circumstances of time place and person c. And uttered to that end that we may winne our Brother from his sinne to God 6. Vers 8. In Abner we see how impatient the wicked are at the rebuke of sinne that they altogether misregarding God and authority cannot be appeased till they be avenged on them who reprove them this is our corrupt nature till we be reformed by grace and that strong man who rageth within us being loath to depart till he be cast out by that stronger Jesus Then rebukes shall be unto us like sweet ointment and pretious balme this naturall hatred to be reformad wee see in Pharaoh Ahab Jeroboam Herod and many others of all ranks 2 Chron. 36. 14 15. 7. In the ambitious recitall of his high deservings Abner sheweth here that the wicked for wordly benefits would be winked at in the commission of sinne else no longer shall the river of their bounty flow then the fountain of wholesome admonition beginne to be opened and in all things they shall willingly hear till you come to their Herodias but there you loose them Let Gods servants then be free of them that they may be faithfull with them 8. Also in upbraiding to Ishboseth ingratitude let us learn never to expect sure amity nor upright thankfulnesse at the hands of men whom we would benefit with the detriment of our own conscience as Abner did here Ishboseth But be persuaded th●t thereby we shall make ourselves vile in their accompt and their favour which we have so hunted after with misregard of God conscience the Lord shall in the end turn into detestation of us accepting of the deed tending to their commodity but hating the doer thereof with an evil conscience Let us then approve our selves above all and in all to our gratious God who will both praise and reward his own 9. In Abners threatning we see the nature of high exalted and ambitious courtiers who would have their Princes to serve their appetites else in discontentednesse they will not regard to hazard if they can the estate and condition both of King and Kingdome 10. Also we may behold the admirable presumption and boldnesse of dust and ashes against the omnipotent creator when man is not indued with grace which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fight against Gods known ordinance and to resist his manifested decree albeit the same be confirmed by his oath therefore saith Abner as the Lord hath sworn not considering that the pot is in the hand of the potter ever to do there with as it pleaseth him best Let this teach us therefore the duty of humility considering what we are both by nature and corruption dust towit and repyning clay voyde not onely of will or performance of good but highly rebellious and stubborne in evil against God till grace doth renew us 11. Vers 11. In Ishboseths timorousnesse and pusillanimity we see where the fear of God is not there worldly fear soon dasheth and occupieth the minde but where Gods fear is and the maintenance of a good cause there is true courage and wonderfull holy boldnesse This made Eliah bid Obadiah go tell his Master Abab that he was there and would shew himself unto him albeit through all Kingdomes about he had straitely sought for him this made Job likewise in his greatest calamity to say though mine adversary would write a book against me would not I take it upon my shoulder and bind it as a crown unto me I would tell him the number of my goings and go unto him as a Prince This made the Apostles in like manner answer
inducement to lust as it proved to Lot therefore who would eschew lust let them eschew ebriety II. SAM Chap. 11. from the 14. verse to the end OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 14. DAvid now sends a letter with Vriah to Joab to set him in the front of the battle that he might be killed Where we see as has been said that from one sin he falls in another and in the last as the worst of all whereby we observe 1. The nature of sin that it never goes alone but is like a chain one link whereof is tyed to another 2. That Satan where he may once get in a foot will never rest till he get in his whole body And 3. we see that oftimes God punishes sin by sin and man by his own iniquity till there cup be full and then followes judgment as we see in Pharaoh and others 2. Vriah carries with him the letter to Joab which was his own destruction and so does the wicked carry in the bosome of their own breast there dittay and accusation of their own guilty conscience before God in the day of their account which in like-manner is their owne destruction 3. David began to cover his sin by subtilty and fraud and now he comes from fraud to force and cruelty Thus doth Satan himself act first as an insinuating and subtile Serpent and who can transforme himself into an Angel of light to deceive and hereby if he cannot prevail he turnes a bloody Dragon by open persecution as we see Revel 12. And thus to do he teaches others whom he misleads as he did Pharaoh and in this place David 4. Hereby likewise we see that in the best of men their are the seeds and a naturall inclination to the grossest sins all the imaginations of the heart being onely evill continually which should serve to keep us humble and watchfull and to be earnest with God by prayer for grace and strength to resist the temptations of the Divell that we be not insnared to commsit sins which otherwise we would seem to abhorre in others 5. We see as in this so that adultery and unlawfull lusts is the chief argument of all tragicall Histories almost as we may see in the examples of the first World Sodom Sechem Israel with the Moabitish Women in the desart the warres between Israel and Benjamin Sampson and here in the example of David omitting prophane Histories as the destruction of Troy Thebes Carthage and others which teaches us that whoredome is not so light a sin as carnall men take it to be who call it but a trick of yo●th or the like seeing we see it punished with such sad judgements here and excluding from the Kingdome of Heaven hereafter 1 Cor. 6 9. Revel 22. 15. 6. Vers 16. As David directed Joab so he obeyed this wicked direction of the King and so becomes guilty likewise of the innocent blood of Vriah which was avenged on him 1 King 2. 28. Which should teach us not to obey the unjust commandments of superiours but as Peter said Act. 5. 29. We ought to obey rather God than man and to give unto God that which is Gods and then to Cesar that which is Cesars Honour also is pretended to Vriah but death is meant so doth Satan in his temptations 7. V. 17. Vriah an innocent man suffers and is killed whereupon we observe that it is not ever the will of God to give temporall deliverance from the cruelty of Tyrants or of Enemies as we see in the examples of the Prophets Apostles and Martyrs the reason is that thereby God will be glorified in their constant integrity good example of the like may be left behind them God may have just matter to punish Tyranny and cruelty the innocent sufferers may be translated to a better life in glory 8. We see in this fact first of uncleanesses next of Davids subtilty and last of cruelty whereunto he was instigated by Satan the properties of the Divell that he is an unclean Spirit full of subtilty and cruelty and that he makes them who obey him to take on his image and to be like himself 9. Vers 26. Batsheba mournes for her Husband when she hears of his death as for a Worldly losse but we reade not that she mourned for her sinne that procured his death which shews that many will be more grieved for any Worldly losse or crosse then for that which should grieve them most the offence of God the killing of their own souls and the losse of a heavenly Kingdome her sinne then was more worthy of her sorrow then her losse 10. Vers 27. Where it is said that the thing which David had done displeased the Lord which should teach us the like disposition to be ever displeased with sinne in any person whatsoever and to hate the same it being Satans image but not to hate the person who is created to the image of God as the Lord hated not Davids person but his sinfull action Therefore Paul affirmes That the end of excommunication the last of discipline should be to the destruction of sinne but that the soule may be pre●erved in the day of the Lord. Last consider that God had neversuffered so deare a Saint so fouly to fall if he had not meant to make him an example to all neither to presume that they may not sinne grosly nor to despaire if they sinne when they see David so to have fallen and so to have risen II SAM Chap 12. from the 1. verse to the 13. IN the preceding Chapter was the Tragicall history of Davids fall to be evited and fled and in this Chapter is the happy history of Davids rising by repentance to be imitated and followed This Chapter had these parts 1. The Lords commission to David by his Prophet Nathan to the 13. vers 2. Davids penitent confession and Nathans absolution of him in the name of the Lord from his sinne howsoever because by his uncleane fact he had given occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme the Child that was borne to him should die vers 13 14. 3. The sickness and death of the Child as Nathan had foretold with his deportment in the time of the Childs sickness and after the death thereof together with the reasons thereof which he gives to the Elders of his house 4. From the 24. vers to the 26. Davids comforting of his wife Bathsheba concerning the Child that was dead and the Lords giving unto him another sonne by her who was beloved of God whose name was Jedidiah by direction from God to Nathan and by Nathan to David And 5. Davids taking in of Rabbah of the Ammonites and the tortering of the people thereof and all other their Cities and then his victorious returne to Jerusalem From the 26. vers to the end First then we see that the first actor in Davids repentance is God his commission to Nathan and not that David seeks to God first by any act of his free
estimate to 7000. French Crowns and rich in precious stones he gets also a rich spoil of the City and by severall tortures after he had punished the inhabitants of Rabhah and all the other Cities of the Ammonites he returned victorious and triumphant to Jerusalem But before we proceed to the observatious some questious or doubts are to be resolved 1. How was Davids sin remitted and yet the punishment thereof which was threatned vers 10. and 11. retained I answer when God remits the sin he remits the vindict which temporall chastisements are not to the godly because 1. they proceed from his love Heb. 12. 6. as also are in their nature medicinall corrasives And 3. their end or scope is their good and profite who are corrected Heb. 12. 10. That they may be made pertakers of his holinesse and consequently of eternall happinesse vers 14. And seeing of God in glory 2. How comes it to passe that David exercises such cruelty after his Victory against the Ammonites in all their Cities Which may be thought unbeseeming to so pious a Prince as David I answer that this was not without the speciall providence of God avenging himself by David on such wicked idolatres as those were 1 King 11. 5. And who had ever been capitall Enemies to his people rising up against them in the wildernesse and in their journey to Canaan Deut. 2. 18. As also rising up against them in the dayes of Jephtah Judg. 11. 32. And thereafter coming against Jabesh Gilead in the dayes of Saul and who would not make peace with them except all the Citizens would thrust out their right eyes 1 Sam. 11. 2. Thereafter doing such a barbarous indignity to the messengers of David and hyring the Syrians to joyn with them against oath and covenant and making warre against David for all these their wi●kednesse and provocations the Lord makes David now when their cup is full to recompence them according to their works and to be exemplar to others in their sharp punishment as they had been in their grosse sinning OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 13. UPon the Prophets reprehension and threatning David humbly confesses his sin Where we see the fruit of reprehension and the efficacy of Gods Spirit con●urring with the faitfull discharge of the Ministriall function towards sinners for their conversion as we see here in David and Act. 2. 23. and 37. Let Pastors then do their duty and leave the event to God Also we see what long and dead sleeps the holiest soul may take in sinne till God awake them out of that lethargy as David lay in neer nine moneths 2. We see the difference between the godly and the wicked● when they are admonished and rebuked for there sinnes the wicked either mock and despise rebuke threatnings as the first World did Noah and the wicked impenitent Jewes did the Lords Prophe●s that he sent unto them 2 Chron. 36. 16. Or else they fret and are inraged against them and abuse them as Ahab was inraged against Eliah and Herod against the Baptist but the godly to whom God mindes mercy and not judgement they receive the word of rebuke with meeknesse as David did here and confesse their sin resolving to mourn and mend as we see Hos 14. 2 3. Gods people are exhorted to do 3. We see here likewise in Davids confession a good example to be followed that he layes not his sin on others as Adam did nor denyes it as Cain nor extenuates it as Saul but freely acknowledges it and layes the blame onely upon himself saying I have sinned against the Lord and as he sayes Ps●l 51. 4. Against thee thee onely have I sinned and done this evil in thy s●ght 4. In Nathans reply saying The Lord hath also put away thy sinne c. We see here as also in the parable of the prodigall Son and as is said Psal 103. 8. Joel 2. 13. Jonas 4. 2. And Micah 7. 18. That he is slow to anger but ready to forgive and plentious in mercy yea who delights therein therefore no sooner doth David confesse but as soon by his Prophet doth he pronounce forgivenesse no sooner did the theef on the crosse pray for Christs remembrance of him when he came to his Kingdome but as readily did he answer and promised it to him which is a great comfort to all penitent sinners and that a bruised reed he will not breake nor a smoaking flax he will not quench Also that confession is the way to get pardon from God which is contrary before Earthly Judges Prov. 28. 1. 1 Joh. 1. 9. 5. Vers 14. Yet Nathan shewes David that the Childe that was borne to him should dye because he had given great occasion to the Enemies of the Lord to blaspheme whereby we see what advantage the scandalous sinnes of Professours give to the Enemies of the truth and what wicked and evill use they make thereof which should make all Professours of the truth to walke the the more circumspectly and holily Least through their sides the profession it self be wounded as well as their own souls and the Lords name blasphemed 6. In the death of the Childe which is threatned we see that the sinnes of parents are punished oftimes in the Persons of their Children according to that threatning Exod. 20. 6. They being as it were a part of their parents flesh of their flesh and bone of their bone which should make parents who would wish their Childrens welfare to feare God the more and to eschew sin and when sicknesse death or any disaster comes to their Children to examine themselves if their sins have been the cause thereof 7. Vers 15. It is said that according to Nathans prediction and threatning the Lord stroke the Childe with sicknesse where we see 1. That Gods threatnings shall assuredly be accomplished and therefore are not to be despised as those did of the first world and others 2 Chron. 36. 16. But made use of for our humiliation 2. That sicknesse is the Lords rod wherewith he striks either young or old and therefore when it comes we should look up to the hand that striks therewith kisse the rod by patient submission and bearing the same and by humble recourse to him who laid on the rod to seek to sanctify the same to us for our profite that we may say with David Psal 119. 71. It I was good for me that I was afflicted and to take off the same in his own good time 8. V. 16. David uses prayer and humilliation for the Childs recovery if it were the Lords will to be gracious unto him as he speaks Vers 22. Which teaches us that the onely way to avert and remove the Lords temporall judgements or any corporall visitation on our selves or ours is prayer and fasting and the humbling our selves before the Lord as we see we are exhorted Joel 2. Hos 6. 14. And was practised by David 2 Sam. 24. And here as also by the King of
like vices are to those who harbour them and thereby makes them become like those demoniaks in the Gospell before that Christ dispossest them and which shall vex them farre worse hereafter in eternall torment 6. Amnon likewise is sensible of the sickness of his body and growes leaner day by day but he was not sensible of the sickness of his soule and so are many more But we should pray to God that we may be as sensible of our spirituall sickness as we are of our corporall which should drive us to repentance and faith to Christ to heale our back-slidings as we see it promised Hos 14. 4. But the cause why we are not sensible of the soules sickness nor death thereof is the want of the life of grace which only makes the soule sensible of sinne 7. Where it is said that Tamar was a Virgine and Amnon thought it hard for him to do any thing unto her towit so long as she was carefully keeped as Virgins were accustomed to be from access and private company of men Which teaches that as sinne should be eschewed so all the occasions and provocations to sinne should likewise be avoided which when in the contrary they are neglected or as in this example of Tamars going to Amnons house through Davids simplicity afforded We see in this as also in D●nah's example Gen. 34. what the same through sinfull corruption and force of temptation produceth 8. Vers 3. It is said that Anmon had a friend named Jonadab but who really and truly was his greatest foe by his pernicious counsell which he gave him how to satisfy his incestuous lust with his owne sister so that he was rather a friend to his vice and a foe to his person or soule whereas a true friend whose friendship is grounded on God and vertue will be a foe to their friends vice by wholesome admonition and rebuke and a friend to their soules salvation therefore saies Solomon Prov 27. 6. Faithfull are the wounds of a friend but the kisses of an enemy are deceitfull and Prov. 28. 13. He that rebuketh a man afterwards shall find more favour then he that flattereth with his tongue 9. This Jonadab also is called a very subtile man a property whereof many do glory But their glorying is their shame for wit or subtilty without true wisdome the beginning whereof is the feare of God is but the Serpents property making men wise only to do evill as he did Amnon here and as Achitophel taught Absolon and as Pharaoh also spoke Exod. 1. 10. All which ended and tended to destruction therefore if we have any quickness of wit or qualities of mind beyond others let us beseech God to sanctify the same that they prove not a snare to us or others as Josephs cup was which was found in Benjamins sack or Vriah's letter which he carried with him to Joab in his owne bosome 10. Vers 6. Amnon as readily obayes Jonadabs wicked counsell to do evill as Jonadab was to give it whereby we see the corruption of nature ready like flax to take with fire and how soon youth especially who feares not God nor are not truly wise themselves are apt to follow rather evill counsell than good and flatterers advise nor reall and true friends to their own ruine and destruction as we see here and in Rehoboam 11. Vers 7. In Davids facility and consent to Amnons petition that Tamar might come to his house and dress him meat that so he might get opportunity to put his wicked intention and Jonadabs counsell to execution we see that the too great indulgence of Parents is the occasion of Childrens much sinning and in the end of their destruction as we see here in Amnon and the sonnes of Eli's which should be an admonition to Parents not be too indulgent to their Children but to bring them up in aw vertue correction and in the feare of God Also we see here that even Kings daughters in those times did not scorne to put their fingers to some works of house wifery as here in cooking of meate 12. Vers 9. Where Amnon commands that all men should go out of his chamber before he enterprised the fact We see that many think shame that men should see or know that which they neither feare nor are ashamed that God should see such is the deceitfulness and naturall Atheisme of the heart of man therefore the Scripture tell 's us That the foole hath said in his heart that there is no God an example also of this we see in Judah Gen. 38. 23. That unlawfull acts seek the shelter of secrecy 13. At last Vers 11. Amnon discovers his intention in his petition to his Father and requiring all to go out from him and having taken hold of Tamar he saies to her come lye with me my Sister which shewes the progress of sinne from lust in the heart to persuasion by Word and at last performance in the deed And how impudent the wicked become at last shaking off all modesty or shamefaceness as we see also in Potiphars wife Gen. 39. 7. As also as the proverb saies That time place and opportunity makes many whore and theefe and therefore for avoiding of sinne ought to be eschewed Likewise we see how unjustly do carnall men misplace their affections though they be of neerest relation where grace is not to restraine and direct them 14. Vers 12. Where Tamar saies to Amnon that no such thing ought to be done in Israel Which was the only Church of God and therefore whom holiness doth become as is said Psal 93. 5. We learne that our lives and actions ought to be sutable to our profession and seeing it is holy and the Church whereof we count our selves members is the holy Catholick Church and the head thereof is holy Therefore we should be holy as he is holy without which holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12. 14. 15. Next where she calles the sinne folly and in committing thereof that he should be as one of the fooles in Israel We see what sinners are esteeme of themselves as they please they are in Gods account and all truly Godly but fooles as they are oftimes styled in Scripture and especially in the Proverbs 18. 6. 23. 9. 26. 1. and else-where therefore the worldly wise man in the Gospell is called the rich foole and so they may because they forecast not nor provide for the time to come and preferre momentary sinfull pleasures or profit to everlasting and so makes a foolish and unwise choice 16. Vers 13. Where she saies Whither shall I cause my shame to go We see that sinne brings shame as we see in our first Parents and has brought many to shamefull deaths and to be shamefull spectacles which though they escape here they shall not escape before men and Angells hereafter 17. Vers 14. It is said notwithstanding all her arguments of disswasion he would not hearken to her but forced her and lay with her
and follow 3. Vers 18. c. In Shimei sueing for pardon We see 1. Humiliation 2. Acknowledgement and confession of his sinne 3. Seeking of remission And 4. making amends by a contrary course of being the first of the house of Joseph to meet the King David and conduct him to Jerusalem all which ought to be in penitent sinners sueing for pardon from Christ the Sonne of David towit 1. Sincere humiliation 2. A serious sense and acknowledgment of our ●innes by confession 3. An earnest begging with the Prodigall and Publican of pardon and remission wherein mans felicity consists Psal 32. The last in amendment of our lives and walking hereafter in a contrary course to our former walking in wickednesse 4. Vers 21. In Abishai we see an example of private and cruell vindict such as was in Simeon and Levi in Davids servants who would have slain Saul and in Christs owne Disciples who would had fire come down from Heaven upon Samaria and Peter in smiting off Malchus eare whereas good Jacob Godly David and our saviour Christ were farre from this carnall and cruell disposition and therefore to be therein followed as the former is to be fled For learn of me sayes he for I am humble and meek 5. Vers 22. David sayes What had he to do with the Sonnes of Zerviah that they should be adversaries to him the word in the originall being Satan because of their instigation to ill Counsell for which cause also Peter was called so by our Saviour and bidden Go behinde him Whereby we see what they are who give evill Counsell and how such are to be esteemed towit even as so many Satans who was the first that gave evill Counsell to our first parents which brought death on them and all their posterity 6. David gives this as a reason of his clemency towards Shimei Do not I know this day sayes he that I am King over Israell Which shewes unto us the good use that Princes and great men should make of their power and authority not to be the more cruell or for oppression of their inferiours but rather to shew their elemency even to offenders Herein imitating him with whose name they participate and to use their power to the good and comfort of Gods Church and people 7. Vers 23. David promises to penitent seeming Shimei that he should not dye and sweares unto him but farre more mercyfull is our Saviour the Sonne of David to all true penitent sinners who has promised pardon to all such and sealed the remission of sinnes by his Sacraments and sworne also by himself That as be lives he desires not the death of a sinner but rather that he convert and live 8. Vers 27. Mephibosheth a true and loyall friend and subject to David who had shewn such sympathy with David in his affliction as he had neither drest his feet trimmed his beard nor washen his cloathes till David should return in peace yet is falsly slandered in the contrary as an affecter of the Kingdome himself Whereby we observe that the most Godly and innocent persons whosoever cannot escape the scourge of the tongue and injust calumnies as we see in Shimei's upbraiding David Chap. 16. 8. With the blood of Saul and his house and usurping his Kingdome and as wee see in the calumniating of Eliah as a troubler of Israel and our blessed saviour as a Wine bibber and an Enemy to Caesar 9. Vers 28. Mephibosheth to procure Davids favour undervalues and dejects himself and all his fathers house as dead men and extoll's Davids gracious benefits and bounty bestowed upon him which indeed is the best way that we can take to obtain the favour of God who is King of Kings and to ingratiate ourselves in his sight towit by casting down ourselves at his feet professing our vile and wretched condition with the poor Publican and acknowledging the Lords bounty and mercyfull dealing with us and with Mephibosheth humbly submitting our selves in all things to his good will and pleasure 10 Vers 29. In Davids perseverance of giving any part of Mephibosheths Land to a deceitfull Ziba now after right information to which Ziba being present could not reply We see infirmity in the best of men and that judges or Magistrates upon better tryall and information should reforme their judgements and as equity requires recall their unjust decrees and rectify the same as we see Ahasuerus did Esther 8. And not to do as Herod did in the matter of the Baptist or as Pilate said concerning Christ What I have written I have written and would not alter the same Nor yet to do as David herein did 11. We see also that Mephibosheth acquiesceth in Davids decree and grudgeth not as he had done him wrong because he had taken nothing from him but that which formerly he had freely given him even so should we acquiesce in Gods dealing with us and submit to his wise dispensation when he takes from us any temporall benefit as health wealth or Children and the like which of his free favour he hath formerly given unto us which was Jobs practice when he said The Lord hath given the Lord hath taken blessed be the name of the Lord. For as the Apostle speaketh What have we which we have not received II. SAM Chap. 16. from the 31. vers to the end FOllowes now 1. The action between David and Barzillai And 2. the dissention between the ten tribes of Israel and the tribe of Judah In the action between David and Barzillai We have 1. how he is described 1. From his country that he was a Gileadite 2. From his age that he was 80. years old 3. From his estate or condition that he was a very great man 4. From his actions testifying his great love to David 1. Coming from Rogelim to conduct David over Jordan 2. From his former bounty and liberality to David who had provided him sustenance when he lay at Mahanaim For which kindnesse shewn to David like a thankefull Prince he invites Barzillai to go with him to Jerusalem where he would retain and entertain him nobly in his court which courteous kinde offer Barzillai notwithstanding modestly refuseth Upon these reasons 1. From the brevity of his life in the enjoying such a benefit 2. From his great age being 80. years old and so more fit for a private and retired condition which that age requireth then a Kings court 3. From the decay of his senses and their faculty whereby he could not be capable of court delights as of delicate meates or drink or of pleasant Musick And 4. that as the court could be no benefit to him so he should be but a burden to the King therefore he offers to go a little way over Jordan with David counting himself unworthy of such a reward as was offered and desires that with Davids good leave and favour he might returne to his own City and be buried in the grave of his parents and seeing himself
whom there is no shaddow of change 15. Amasa is directed to assemble all Judah to David in three dayes Which shewes that in suppressing of sudden insurrections there is need of speed and the least delay in rebellion is dangerous and may prove irrecoverable 16. Vers 9. How friendly doth Joab salute Amasa with his tongue how kindly kisses he him with his lippes but how cruelly killes he him with his hand as he had done to Abner before Whereby we see that there is no enmity so dangerous as that which comes like Jails to Sicera Jud●s to Christ and Joabs here to Amasa masked with love for open hostility calls us to our guard but there is no fence against a trusted treachery Thus soiritually dealeth the world with our soules it kisses us and stabbs us at once if it did not embrace us with one hand it could not murther us with the other the evill of whose temptation like Joab his sword we advert not more then Amasa took heed to Joabs sword God deliver us therefore from our trust therein and we shall be the safer from the danger thereof 17. The cause of this treacherous murther in Joab was his pride not enduring that any should be put in his roome and his envy at Amasa's preferment though so neer in kinne unto him Which shewes unto us what dangerous and damnable vices pride and envy are and what bad fruits the same doth produce as we see they did before in the murther of Abner And as pride doth here in bursting all bands to God King Country and kindred 18. Amasa likewise now being in peace and preserment and expecting no harm receives that reward which he should have received in warre when he was following Absolom and leader of his Army God then the righteous judge of the world we see has his own times of punishing though magistrates forbeare And God is just in all his waies though man be unjust Neither let any who sinne and are on evill courses dreame of impunity but that at one time or other they shall smart for their guiltiness and oftimes when they least suspect danger 19. Amasa is innocent of the crime of seeking Joabs place for which he is murthered by him yet he is guilty before God for his siding with Absolom Whereupon we collect that oftimes men suffer innocently for some crimes that are laid to their charge and in respect of the persons who are their pursuers yet in Gods judgment they are justly punished for other sins wherein either they have been spared or else has not been noted to the world as many at the hour of their death execution publickely have acknowledged With should teach all men to flie sinne though never so secretly committed or by men past by and where impiety is not to expect impunity at one time or other 20. Vers 10. It is said That Amasa took no heed to the sword that was in Joabs hand wherewith he killed him and so foresaw not his danger which shewes that God blinds the eyes of the wisest and benum's their judgments when he is to cut the pillars of their standing and the thred of their lives according to the proverb hos dementat quos Jupiter vult perdere 21. Joab was not punished by David for the like muthering of Abner as he did now of Amasa therefore he committeth this new offence and pollutes the Land with blood again the guiltinesse whereof for this toleration did lie upon the royall throne which should teach all Magistrates to use the sword aright which God hath put in their hands impartially and without respect of persons otherwise what further sinne is committed by their impunity of the former they become guilty thereof and may expect divine punishment for the same 22. After the death of Amasa Joab with Abishai persue after Sheba a traitour to his King while as himself is a traitour to his friend a publicke person imployed by his King in a publicke service in the very execution thereof and who was both innocent expecting no such thing and cousen german with Joab whereby we see how ready some are to censure condemne and punish that in another whereof themselves are guilty as we see Gen. 38. In Judah and that no bands of nature can ty to duties where grace is wanting 23. Vers 12. The people passing by when they saw Amasa lying in the high way killed they stood still Which shewes us that the death of great men draw many eyes upon it and many censures of it whether they be in Church or Commonwealth therefore their life should be so ordered as their death may justly be bemoaned as Samuell was 1 Sam. 25. 1. 24. Joabs man seeing this removes Amasa out of the high way and covers him not regarding so much the losse as the eye-sore of Israell Thus wicked politicians care not so much for the committing of wickednesse as the notice thereof therefore if murthers oppressions thefts whoredomes be smothered and hid from the knowledge of men their Atheist blind and obdured hearts care not for the omniscient knowledge of the Almighty who has power both of soul body to cast into Hell fire whence it is said by the Psalmist The fool hath said in his heart that there is no God 25. Amasa being thus removed out of the way the people follow bloody Joab in persuit of rebellious Sheba Vers 13. Their leader being wicked and evill but the cause which they chiefly followed being good It is to the cause then which we ought to look and not censure the cause or judge thereof by persons or their personall faults who maintain the same but separating the precious from the vile and distinguishing between the one and the other Let us adhear to the cause or to that which is good whether Doctrine forme of government or other and leave the persons for their faults to God and them who has power to punish them 26. Vers 15. Sheba being persued betakes himself to Abell a fenced City as David had said Vers 6. To escape taking which notwithstanding of intended safety did prove his ruin God so disappointing the projects and practises of wicked men that he makes their glory to turn to their shame and turneth their wisdome like Achitophells into folly and that wherein they place their confidence and safety to tend to their destruction O happy then is he who is directed by God who puts his whole confidence onely in him and makes him to be onely his sunne and his shield Psal 84. 11. 27. Vers 16. For preservation of the City onely a wise Woman appears and parlies with Joab Whereby we observe that God useth weak instruments oftimes to effectuate great purposes that the glory may be his own and the good redound to others as we see in Deborah Jaill Judith this wise Woman here and many others and that Gods graces as wisdome and the like are not tyed to any one sex but are free to all on whom
Shepherds who watch over their flocks and when they are persued by wilde beasts protect them and deliver them from them as David did the the sheep of his Father from the Paw of the Lyon and Beare the great and good Shepherd of our souls being so to all the sheep of his flock as we see Psal 23. 4. And of which number never a one shall perish 4. He calleth God his Shield as he is so called Psal 84. 11. And as he said to Abraham Gen. 15. 1. Under whose shelter he was safe and under the coverture whereof likewise laying hold by faith thereon We are safe from all the fiery darts of the Divell Eph. 6. 16. 5. David calleth God The Horne of his salvation a Metaphor from horned beasts whose hornes are their ornaments and whereby they both defend themselves as also pusheth their Enemies even so the Lord is the ornament of the soul and who not onely is our defence but also the pusher and destroyer of all our Enemies especially which are spirituall 6. He calles him his Tower by which he understands that it is he who is his eminent refuge and who exalted him to be King and from a low degree raised him to an eminent place such as Towers are as also by his many Victories had exalted him as one in a Tower above all his Enemies who he had laid low and subdued to him 7. David calles God his Refuge a Metaphor from the City of refuge in the Jewish Nation to which the offender had his recourse for safety from his persuer and avenger of blood and to whom likewise when we have offended must have our recourse for salvation from the persuit of justice and the wrath of the Father and righteous Judge of the whole World 8. He calleth God his Saviour as he is properly and indeed not onely from bodily Enemies and all outward evills or dangers but he saves his people from their sinnes as the Angell said Matth. 1. 21. And consequently from all the evills that sinne hath brought on mankinde especially death everlasting and changing the nature of all other things that are evills of their own nature and making them work together for their good as Rom. 1. 28. shewes and to turne to their best as the hatred and selling of Josephs Brethren did unto him From which acknowledgment of Gods goodnesse to him and deliverance of him he gathers two conclusions 1. That therefore he will trust in him and so make use of his by gone experience for the time to come as he did when he encountred with Goliah And 2. that as by prayer and calling upon God he had formerly found favour and deliverance from his Enemies so he would therefore continue upon these two grounds 1. Because the Lord is worthy to be praised for his deliverances which he giveth and therefore worthy to be prayed unto and that deliverance be still sought from him as we are taught to do Psal 50. 15. 2. Because of the good that he should reap thereby which is safety from all his Enemies Thirdly The confirmation of the proposition is taken from four arguments 1. From his extreame and desperatelike miseries from the 5. verse to the 7. 2. From three degrees of Gods benefits to him the one the hearing of his prayers in his adversity the other in the wonderfull testification of his presence to his comfort and destruction of his Enemies from the 7. verse to the 17. And the third is from the work of his deliverance from the 17. verse to the 21. First then he sets forth his miseries ranking them in four sorts or expressions 1. The waves of death compassed me 2. The floods of ungodly men made me afraid 3. The sorrowes of Hell or as some translate the grave compassed me about And 4. The snares of death prevented me By the waves of death meaning his frequent and deadly like dangers wherein he was and which as one wave followes on the back of another did in like manner follow one after another and assault him so that one danger of death was no sooner past especially in Sauls time but another followed in the place thereof Next by the floods of ungodly men is understood the multitude of his wicked Enemies and their furious rage which like spouts of waters did terrify him 3. By the sorrowes of Hell is meant such as might bring one to despaire and pit of destruction And 4. by the snares of death is understood such snares as craftily were laid for his life and did threaten assuredly death unto him Whereof the giving unto him Michal Sauls Daughter was one 1 Sam. 18. 21. And his imployment of David for a dowry to get him a hundred foreskins of the Phili●tims that he might fall by their hands and having thus described his miseries severall dangers wherein he was he amplifies the same in most pithy and patheticke words they compast me they terrified me they inclosed me about and they prevented me and so as he used an aggravating of words to set forth Gods goodnesse towards him so in the same manner doth he amplify his own dangers and misery Hereafter he recounts again the Lords mercies and benefits towards him by their degrees the first whereof he makes to be the Lords hearing of his prayer which by the word crying he shewes was earnest and by saying He called on the Lord in his distresse and cryed he shewes that the same was frequent The second degree is taken from the arguments of Gods presence whereby he declares the same to the comfort of David and the Godly and to the terrour and confusion of his and their Enemies and this he doth in a Poeticke and Patheticke manner the force whereof is that as God by the sudden impressions in the Elements declares his power and presence so by many evidences he likewise declares the same in delivering his own from dangers and bringing on their Enemies dreadfull destruction so that when we see or hear these meteors they may serve as books of instruction to teach us the mighty Majesty and power of God for the protection of his own and overthrow of their Enemies and the manifestation of his love to the one and of his wrath against the other exprest by an Allegoricall manner of speech and as by a fearfull tempest and storm raised against them The third degree of his confirmation of the proposition is from the work of the Lords deliverance of him as is said of the Godly many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord deliver's them out of them all And this he propones under the similitude 1. Of one that was ready to drown and perish in a River of waters whereby troubles are meant according to the Phrase that is usuall in Scripture out of which he acknowledgeth his deliverance was from above that is from Heaven when all earthly hope or help failed and therefore that as Pharaoh Daughter preserved Moses by drawing him out of the
Likewise we see that the Ark brings death and destruction to Vzzah but as after blessing to Obededom even so the right use or abuse of the Word and Sacraments brings the like to the right users or abusers thereof And we should feare with a prophane heart and hands to come and touch that holy Sacrament that is called Christs body and blood as the Ark was called the Lord of hostes 10. Vers 8. This sad accident produces in David 1. Grief or displeasure that the Lord had been so offended and made such a breach upon Vzzah And 2. Feare to bring the Ark of God at that time to his house at Sion Where we see 1. Davids Godly griefe that God should have been grieved at that which Vzzah unwarrantably had done against the Law which did inhibite that the Levites should otherwise carry the Ark but upon their own shoulders and not touch it otherwise but only by bearing it by the instruments and barres appointed for that purpose 2. That God should have been moved by their not taking heed to his ordinance and sinning thereby to have smitten Vzzah by so sudden and unexpected death which shewes 1. The griefe that Godly men have at the offence of God which is exprest Ezek. 9. 4. Jer. 9. 1. and Psal 119. 136. And 2. The sympathy that they have with others who for their errours are justly punished or chastised by the hand of God as fellow feeling members of one body And 3. How by the punishments of others they are instructed and feare to commit any like offence whereby Gods anger may be kindled against themselves 11. Whereas in remembrance of that punishment inflicted on Vzzah he called the name of the place Perez-Vzzah or the breach of Vzzah We see that not only the testimonies of the Lords mercy towards the Godly and their deliverances should be remembred but likewise the testimonies of his justice towards offenders The first to tye us to his obedience as by love cords the other to terrify us from offending his divine Majesty as we see Psal 119. 120. 12. Vers 11. This feare that David had of carrying the Ark at that time to his own house makes him to carry it aside to the house of Obed-Edom a Gittite where it remained three months during all which time the house of Obed-Edom was blessed To teach us that where religion and the Word of God and Sacraments gets footing there is and will be the blessing of the Lord as when Jacob was with Laban Joseph in Potiphars house and the widdow of Zarephath for her sustaining of Eliah Much more also is that soule blessed where Christ himselfe is suborned or his poore members 13. Vers 12. and 1 Chron. 15. 25. Where upon the report of the Lords blessing Obed-Edoms house because of the Ark. David of new againe enterpriseth the bringing of the Ark unto his house in Sion We see that good purposes should never be left off altogether although they find some rubs and impediments ●ast in the way through the policy of Satan or mens obstructions 14. One maine cause of this renewed enterprise is the report of the Lords blessing of the house of Obed-Edom not that David envyed the same but that he was desirous to be partaker of this blessing of the Lord by harbouring the Ark in like manner in his own house at Sion Which shewes the disposition of the truly Godly like Iacob they will wrestle for the blessing of God and will endeavour by all meanes and above all things to have the Lord to blesse themselves and their families and have the light of his countenance to shine upon them as Psal 4. 6. As also we see that it is good to be in a Godly family for there is the blessing of God 15. Vers 13. In the carrying of the Ark now this second time from the house of Obed-Edom to the Citie of David we see the former errour amended that the Levites bore the same as the Law commanded and therefore it had the better success Where we see that it is a token of great wisdome and grace to consider wherein any errour has been for which God has been angry and punished a land or persons and when they have found out 〈◊〉 same as Achan● fault was to redress the same as is done here 16. It is said likewise that when they that bare the Ark towit the Levites had gone six paces David sacrificed Oxen and Fatlings being mindfull of the Lords anger that burst forth in a temporall judgment against Vzzah for his errour that the Lord by these legall Sacrifices might be appeased if any like errour or provocation ignorantly should fal out in this second bearing of the Ark from the house of Obed-Edom as we see the like practise of Job 1. 5. Which teaches us to be still in feare to offend God in the meanest measure or manner and by a watchfull care so farre as in us lyes to prevent his displeasure 17. Vers 14. David also danced before the Ark girded with a linnen Ephod white being the colour of joy and linnen being light for use Which fact of his was extraordinary and therefore not to be imitated His dancing being a signe of the great joy of his heart upon this extrarodinary action of bringing the Ark from the house of Obed-Edom to his own house and this linnen Ephod not being a priestly or leviticall vesture but a covering of his royall under-apparell made of linnen like to an Ephod to witness his humility as we see Vers 22. And that he thought no disgrace in the Ephod as many do the office of the Ministry Whence we see also that with spirituall rejoycing and with humility the performance of religious duties should be but not from extraordinary outward practises to argue for the like ordinary performances that by Davids dancing before the Ark immodest lascivious dancing should be authorized which is for exciting of lust or other sinfull ends as that dancing was of Herodias daughter 18. The joy and rejoycing that is made by the King and people at the bringing up of the Ark shewes us what is and should be the right cause of the Godlies rejoycing even the establishing of Gods true religion from the highest to the lowest and not in things unstable and transitory as Nebuchadnezzar's storring was and the rich foole of the Gospell but let him that rejoyceth rejoyce in the Lord for there is nothing but this wherein we may not rejoyce either unme●sureably or unseasonably but in spirituall joy we can neither be out of time nor measure II SAM Chap 6. from the 17. verse to the end FOllowes now the fixing and establishment of the Ark in his place at Sion which David had prepared for it his sacrificing to the Lord and his blessing of his people and royall beneficence towards them after the performance whereof when he came into his house to bless his houshold likewise He finds a new matter of griefe and indignation