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A11649 Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, the booke of the Psalmes, and the Song of Songs, or, Canticles VVherein the Hebrevv vvords and sentences, are compared with, and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions, and other records and monuments of the Hebrewes: but chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures, Moses his words, lawes and ordinances, the sacrifices, and other legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of Israel, are explained. With an advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew text, and allegation of the Rabbines in these annotations. As also tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the annotations upon each severall booke. By Henry Ainsworth.; Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, and the booke of the Psalmes Ainsworth, Henry, 1571-1622? 1627 (1627) STC 219; ESTC S106799 2,398,875 1,194

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as the Apostle calleth the spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12. 23. the spirits of the Fathers which were returned to God who gave them as Eccles. 12. 7. shall one man sinne in Greeke if one man hath sinned as if they should say All have not sinned why wilt thou be wroth with all Vpon this intercession the Lord spareth the people that would depart from the rebells verse 24. Verse 24. the tabernacle this seemeth to bee put for tabernacles or dwellings the Greeke translateth it the congregation so in vers 27. where the Greeke also keepeth the word Tabernacle which in vers 26. is called Tents Vers. 25. the elders the Greeke addeth all the elders went after him in Greeke went with him that is accompanied him Verse 26. these wicked men in Greeke these hard men the originall word properly signifieth restlesse turbulent and such as for their sinnes are worthy to be condemned see the notes on Psal. 1. 1. touch not any thing because as they themselves so all things of theirs were uncleane and execrable and therefore to perish with them vers 32. Verse 27. came out and stood Heb. came out standing which the Greeke explaineth came out and stood and these two phrases are one as where it is said that Iesus blessed and breaking gave to the disciples Mat. 14. 19. the other Evangelists explaine it he blessed and brake and gave Luke 9. 16. Mark 6. 41. so Saying unto them Matth. 21. 2. is And saith unto them Mark 11. 2. This their standing up argueth their boldnesse in so bad a cause for standing up is a gesture denoting courage Iob 33. 5. and 41. 10. 1 Sam. 17. 8. 16. Thus Pride went before destruction and an haughty spirit before a fall as Prov. 16. 18. Verse 28. all these workes both the former in appointing Aaron to the Priest-hood and the Levites in stead of the first-borne and these latter in appointing Korah and his company to bring their censers with incense c. of mine owne heart which the Chaldee explaineth of mine owne will the Greeke of my selfe For things devised of ones owne heart are noted for evill 1 King 12. 33. Ezek. 13. 17. Vers. 29. as all men die their ordinarie naturall death which the Greeke translateth after the death of all men Verse 30. create a new thing Hebr. create a creature that is doe a new and wonderfull worke to kill them with such a death as never man died before them Of this word create see the notes on Gen. 1. 1. it is applied here to a strange and extraordinarie worke of judgment as in Esai 45. 7. God is said to create evill and in Exod. 34. 10. to create marvels and in Esai 48. 6. 7. new and ●idden things God would create And as evill so good things which are new and strange are said to be created of God Esa. 65. 18. alive living haile and sound not consumed with sicknesse as ordinarily men are before death and buriall unto hell into the grave or state of death see the notes on Gen. 37. 35. To this iudgement the Prophet hath reference praying against his enemies L●t them goe downe alive to hell Psal. 55. 16. Verse 32. swallowed up them to wit Dathan and Abiram as in Psal. 106. 17. The earth opened and swallowed up Dathan and covered over the congregation of Abiram So David prayed against his enemies swallow them up o Lord Psal. 55. 10. their houses that is housholds as the Chaldee expoundeth it the men of their houses appertained unto Korah The Greeke translateth and all the men that were with Kore and the Chaldee the men that pertained to Korah But the sonnes of Korah are to be excepted for they either not partaking with or forsaking their Fathers sinne died not see Num. 26. 21. And whereas mention was made of On the sonne of Reuben in verse 1. but not here nor any where of his death neither in verse 12. of his calling or refusall to come up it is to be thought that either he repented upon Moses reproofe and so was spared from destruction or if not so he is implied among the rest though not named in particular their substance or their goods which the Greeke translateth their cattell and so the originall word implieth as in 1 Chron. 27. 31. 2 Chron. 31. 3. and 35. 7. See the notes on Gen. 12. 5. And not their cattell onely but all their other goods even their tents were swallowed into the earth Deut. 11. 6. Here wee may behold the truth of that Proverbe Riches profit not in the day of wrath but iustice delivereth from death Prov. 11. 4. Vers. 33. closed upon them or covered over them so there was no hope left for their recoverie Against such judgement David prayeth Let not the gulse swallow me neither let the pit shut her mouth upon me Psal. 69. 16. Vers. 34. at the voice of them at their crie or noise which they made when they perished So in Ier. 49. 21. At the voice or noise of their fall the earth is moved c. and I made the nations to shake at the noise of his fall Ezek. 31. 16. Lest the earth swallow us an unperfect speech through feare such as is often used in dangers as in Psal. 38. 17. Rom. 11. 21. Thus the present judgement terrified them and When the scorner is punished the simple is made wise Prov. 21. 11. Vers. 35. devoured or did eat the 250. men They sinned in burning incense which belonged to the Priests onely and with burning they were punished like the judgement on Aarons sonnes that transgressed also therein Levit. 10. 1 2. Of this David singeth A fire burned in their congregation a flame burnt up the wicked Psal. 106. 18. Vers. 37. unto Eleazar Chazkuni here observeth that God would not have Aaron to bee defiled by going among the dead because he was one of them that offered vers 17. out of the burning that is as the Greeke well explaineth it from among those that are burnt So in Num. 21. 1. captivitie is for a company of captives and in 2 King 24. 14. Povertie for a company of poore people and many the like the fire which is in the censers vers 7. The Greeke saith the strange fire as Lev. 10. 1. yonder in Greeke there which Sol. Iarchi expoundeth on the earth out of the censers others out of the court of the Sanctuarie By casting away the fire the Lord signifieth the rejecting of their service as profane So in Rev. 8. 5. the Angell tooke the censer and filled it with fire of the Altar and cast it into the earth and there were voices and thunderings c. Which being compared with vers 3 4. seemeth to teach likewise a rejecting of the service of Antichristians which abuse and despise Christs mediation and therefore it is turned unto them to judgement Vers. 38. sinners against their soules Sinners are here often used for notorious wicked persons as Destroy the sinners
of man who is heire of all things Hebr. 1. 2. restoreth our losse and will cause the remnant of the people even who-soever overcommeth to inherit all things Zach. 8. 12. Rev. 21. 7. though unto man living here in sorrowes we yet see not all things subdued Hebr. 2. 8. Vers. 8. Sheepe and oxen or Flockes and herds the flocke comprehending both sheepe and goats Levit. 1. 10. Vers. 9. The fowle that is fowles or birds one is used for many or all so the Hebrew often speaketh of other things as ship for ships 1 King 10. 22. with 2 Chron. 9. 21. speare for speares 2 King 11. 10. with 2 Chro. 23. 9. So Psal. 20. 8. and 34. 8. of the heavens that is of the aire for all this Outspred or firmament spred over the face of the earth God called Heavens Gen. 1. 17. the place also above where the Sunne and starres are be called heavens Gen. 1. 17. and the highest place where the Angels dwell and God himselfe is said to sit in is likewise called heaven Matth. 5. 9. and 24. 36. and by the Apostle named the third heaven 2 Cor. 12. 2. So other Scriptures mention the birds of heaven Matth. 13. 32. the winds of heaven Dan. 7. 2. the clouds of heaven Dan. 7. 13. the dew of heaven Dan. 4. 12 c. The Hebrew name Shamajim hath the forme of the duall number but the Evangelists expresse it indifferently by the singular or plurall as where one saith your reward is great in the heavens Mat. 5. 12. another saith it is much in heaven Luk. 6. 23. PSAL. IX David praiseth God for executing of judgement 12 He inciteth others to praise him 14 He prayeth that he may have cause to praise him 16 The judgements that shall come upon the wicked To the Master of the Musicke upon Muth labben a Psalme of David I Will confesse Iehovah with all my heart I will tell all thy marvellous workes I will rejoyce and shew gladnesse in thee I will sing Psalme to thy name O most high When mine enemies turned backward they stumbled and perished from thy face For thou hast done my judgement and my doome hast sitten on the throne judge of justice Thou hast rebuked the heathens hast brought to perdition the wicked one their name thou hast wiped out for ever and aye The desolations of the enemie are wholly ended to perpetuitie and the cities thou hast pulled up perished is the memoriall of them of them And Iehovah shall sit for ever he hath prepared his throne for judgement And he will judge the world with justice will judge the peoples with righteousnesses And Iehovah will be an high refuge for the oppressed an high refuge at times in distresse And they that know thy name wil trust in thee for thou for sakest not them that seeke thee Iehovah Sing Psalme to Iehovah that dwelleth in Sion shew forth among the peoples his doings For he that seeketh out blouds remembreth them forgetteth not the crie of the meeke afflicted Be gracious to me Iehovah see mine affliction from my haters lifting up mee from the gates of death That I may tell all thy praises in the gates of the daughter of Sion may be glad in thy salvation The heathens are sunke downe in the corrupting pit that they made in the net that they hid caught is their foot Knowne is Iehovah judgement hee hath done in the worke of his hands insnared is the wicked one Meditation Selah The wicked shall turne into hell all the heathens that forget God For not to perpetuitie forgotten shall be the needie one nor the expectation of the poore afflicted ones perish for aye Rise up Iehovah let not sory man be strong let the heathens be judged before thy face Put thou Iehovah a feare in them let the heathens know that they be sory men Selah Annotations VPon Muth labben This if it be referred to the musicke seemeth to be a kinde of tune like that we call the Counter-tenour Otherwise it may be read For the death of Labben but who he was is uncertaine some thinke it was Goliath the Chaldee saith for the death of the Sonne It seemeth to me as the former Psalme was of the propagation of Christs kingdome so this is of the destruction of Antichrists Vers. 2. marvellous works or wonderfull things miracles The originall word signifieth high and hidden such as mans power cannot performe nor reason reach unto and therefore are admired Vers. 3. in thee the Chaldee saith in thy word Vers. 4. when my enemies turned This may be taken for a summe of his praise for deliverances past or in faith for like to come and may be read when my foes turne backe they shall stumble and perish from thy face from before thee because of thy presence that is for feare of thee and shut out from thy face or presence So after Psal. 68. 2 3 9. So the Apostle speaketh of the wickeds perdition from the face of the Lord 2 Thess. 1. 9. Vers. 5. done my judgement that is given sentence and executed according to the right of my cause See Psal. 7. 9. The Chaldee expoundeth it my vengeance sitten on the throne or set thee downe on the throne the seat of judgement or tribunall This noteth both kingly authority Psal. 132. 11 12. and the acting or executing of the same 2 Chron. 18. 18. Isay 6. 1. Dan. 7. 9. Rev. 20. 11. Vers. 6. hast rebuked with rough and severe words but this when God doth it commonly importeth confusion as being to his enemies and therfore joyned with the curse Psalm 119. 21. and 68. 31. and 76. 7. and 18. 16. Zach. 3. 2. So else-where he saith at the rebuke of thy face they perish Psalm 80. 17. wiped out or wiped away as with the hand And this wiping out the name noteth an utter abolishing with great wrath Deut. 9. 14. and 29. 20. Psal. 109. 13. for ever and aye or for ever and yet or to eternitie and perpetuity The Hebrew Ghned yet is added to eternity or ever to increase the durance of it and to note all eternities Psal. 10. 16. and 21. 5. and 104. 5. and 145. 1 2. taken from Moses Exod. 15. 18. Vers. 7. The desolations which the enemie made in spoiling our land or the desolate places which the enemie builded for himselfe as in Iob 3. 14. great men are said to build themselves desolate places of the enemie So the Greeke turned it We may also reade it O enemie the desolations are quite ended which thou madest or are they ended to perpetuitie or to victory that is so as it continueth for ever Ever or Eternity hath the name Ghnolam in Hebrew of being hid and so unknowne perpetuitie Net sach is so named of prevailing and getting victory by perpetuall durance Hereupon that speech of the Prophet he hath swallowed up death to perpetuity or victorious aye I say 25. 8. is translated by the Apostle Death is swallowed up to
that is Contention where they strove with the Lord Numb 20. 13. See Psal. 95. 8. evill was Gods displeasure towards Moses who uttering his anger was for it deprived of comming into the land of Canaan Num. 20. 12. Deut. 3. 25 26. Vers. 34. the peoples the heathens in Canaan as is noted Iud. 1. 21. 27 29 30 31 33. though God commanded them Exod. 23. 32 33. Vers. 36. idols or images named in Hebrew of the curious labour spent in framing and serving them Ier. 10. 9. Isa. 44 9 12 13 15. or of sorrowes that they bring to such as worship them Psal. 16. 4. sometime they are called gods 2 Sam. 5. 21. compared with 1 Chro. 14. 12. a snare a scandall as the Greeke saith whereby they fell into miseries Iudg. 2. 12 13 14 15. Exod. 23. 33. Vers. 37. devils the Idols forementioned whereby deuils are worshipped and not God as 1 Cor. 10. 19 20. Rev. 9. 20. 2 Chron. 11. 15. Deut. 32. 17. Lev. 17. 7. Devils here are called Shedim Wasters in opposition to Shaddas God Almighty Psal. 68. 15. Vers. 38. with blouds that is with bloud-shed as the Chaldee expounds it with finnes of murder Vers. 39. whored committed spirituall whordome that is idolatry see Psal. 73. 27. Iudg. 2. 17. Ezek. 23. 7 37. Vers. 42. their haters the heathens round about as was prophesied Levit. 26. 17. and fulfilled Iudg. 3. 8 14. and 4. 2. and 6. 1. and 10. 7 8 9. and 13. 1. Vers. 43. Many times by Ehud Barak Gedeon Iephtah Samson c. Iud. 3. and 4. and 7. and 11. and 15. Nehem. 9. 28 30. by their counsell that is purposely and advisedly as 1 Chronicles 12. 19. Vers. 46. gave them that is procured mercy or favour towards them Vers. 47. from the heathens among whom divers Israelites were scattered by reason of their often troubles at home So 1 Chron. 16. 35 36. to glory that we may glory or commend our selves The fifth Booke PSAL. CVII The Psalmist exhorteth the redeemed in praising God to observe his manifold providence 4 over travellers 10 over captives 17 over sicke men 23 over sea men 33 and in divers varieties of life COnfesse ye to Iehovah for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Let the redeemed of Iehovah say it whom he hath redeemed from the hand of the distresser And gathered them out of the lands from East and from West from North and from the sea They wandred in the wildernesse in the desart without way they found not a dwelling Citie Hungry and also thirstie their soule was overwhelmed in them And they cried unto Iehovah in their distresse he rid them free out of their anguishes And he led them in a right way for to come unto a dwelling Citie Let them confesse to Iehovah his mercie and his marvellous works to the sonnes of Adam For he hath satisfied the thirsty soule and filled the hungry soule with good They that sit in darknesse and the shadow of death bound in affliction and iron Because they turned rebellious against the Words of God and despised the counsell of the most high And hee humbled their heart with molestation they stumbled down and there was no helper And they cried unto Iehovah in their distresse he saved them out of their anguishes Hee brought them forth from darknesse and shadow of death and brake their bands Let them confesse to Iehovah his mercy and his marvellous works to the sonnes of Adam For he hath broken the doores of brasse and hewed asunder the barres of iron Fooles for the way of their trespasse and for their iniquities are afflicted Their soule abhorreth all meat and they approach to the gates of death And they cry unto Iehovah in their distresse he saveth them out of their anguishes Hee sendeth his word and healeth them and delivereth from their corruptions Let them confesse to Iehovah his mercy and his marvellous workes to the sons of Adam And let them sacrifice the sacrifices of confession and tell his works with shouting They that goe downe to the sea in ships that doe their labour in the many waters They doe see the workes of Iehovah and his marvellous acts in the deepe For hee saith and raiseth up the stormy wind and it lifteth up the waves thereof They mount up to the Heavens they goe downe to the deeps their soule in evill melteth away They reele and stagger like a drunken man and all their wisdome is swallowed up And they cry unto Iehovah in their distresse and he bringeth them out from their anguishes He setteth the storme to a silent calme and the waves thereof are quiet And they rejoyce because they are stilled and hee leads them unto the haven of their desire Let them confesse to Iehovah his mercy and his marvellous workes to the sonnes of Adam And let them exalt him in the Church of the people and praise him in the sitting of the Elders He putteth rivers to a wildernesse and issues of waters to a thirstinesse A land of fruit to saltnesse for the evill of them that dwell therin He putteth the wildernesse to a poole of waters and the land of drought to issues of waters And seateth there the hungry and they firmely prepare a dwelling Citie And sow the fields and plant Vineyards and they yeeld fruitfull revenue And hee blesseth them and they are multiplied greatly and their cattle hee diminisheth not And they are diminished and bowed down by restraint evill and sorrow He powreth contempt on bounteous Princes and maketh them erre in deformed wildernesse without way And raiseth up the needy from afflicting poverty and putteth his families as a flocke The righteous shall see and rejoyce and all injurious evill stop her mouth Who is wise and will observe these things and they shall understand the mercies of Iehovah Annotations THe fifth booke see Psal. 42 1. Vers. 2. whom he hath or that he hath redeemed them of the distresser or of distresse Vers. 3. the sea that is the south where the red sea was situate from Iudea as the Chaldee explaineth it the southerne sea for the maine sea was westward Ios. 23. 4. and so is often used for the West Vers. 4. desart way Heb. desart of way meaning where no way was as vers 40. see also Esa. 43. 19. This estate figureth out mens dispersion among the peoples of the world Ezek. 20. 35 36. when men are without the law Rom. 2. 14. dwelling citie Heb. citie of habitation or seating so verse 7 36. that is no harbour or place of refreshing for wilde and venomous beasts onely haunted there Ier. 2. 6. Deut. 8. 15. Compare also Eccles. 10. 15. Gen. 21. 14 15 16. Vers. 5. overwhelmed fainted see Psal. 61. 3. Vers. 7. citie this the Chaldee expoundeth of Ierusalem Vers. 9. with good or good things as the Greeke explaineth it see Psal. 65. 5. Luk. 1. 53. Vers. 10. shadow of death that is terrible darknesse meaning hereby sore afflictions in body
of man is called in respect of himselfe an offence or fall because by it he fell from his good estate in respect of God it was disobedience as unto whom hereby he denyed subjection and renounced obedience Roman 5. 18. 19. Neither was it his owne sinne onely but the common sinne of us all his posterity which were then in his loynes for by this one mans disobedience many were made sinners Rom. 5. 19. and in Adam all dye 1 Cor. 15. 22. V. 7. naked both in body and soule which were bereaved of the image of God deprived of his glory subjected to inordinate lusts and thereupon to shame of which nakednes the Scriptures often speak as Ex. 32. 25. Ezek. 16. 22. Rev. 3. 17. 16. 15 Hos. 2. 3. 2 Cor. 5. 3. Sewed that is fastned together by twisting and platting the leaves and twigs for to gird about them fig leaves in Heb. leaf or branch as we english the word in Neh 8. 15. and as the Greek translateth it in Ier. 17. 8. This was to cover not to cure their filthy nakednes therfore in v. 10. they nevertheless do hide thēselves for shame The like naturall hypocrisie is elsewhere cōpared to the Spiders web Esay 59. 5. 6. And the ●igtree which had leaves no fruit was cursed of Christ and withered Mat. 21. 19. aprons named in Hebrew of girding about the loynes So Peter when he was naked girded a garment on him Ioh. 21. 7. And those parts of the body which serve for generation were then and still are most shamefull and studiously covered because sinne is become naturall and derived by generation Psalm 51. 7. Gen 5. 3. Therefore circumcision the signe of regeneration was also on that part of mans body Gen. 17. 11. Vers. 8. the voice of Iehovah this sometime signifieth any noise or sound Ezek. 1. 24. sometime the thunder Exod. 9. 28. 29. sometime Gods distinct voice like thunder as Ioh. 12. 27. 28. 29. walking this by the Greeke is referred to God walking it may also bee meant of the voice which is said to walke or goe on when it increaseth more and more Exod. 19. 19. the wind by the Greeke version this was the eventide So in the evening of the world at the last day the Lord shall descend from heaven with a showt with the voice of the Archangell and with the trumpet of God c. 1 Thes. 4. 16. hid themselves through conscience and feeling of their sinne and misery and for feare of Gods Majesty vers 10. Howbeit there is no darknesse nor shadow of death where the workes of iniquity may hide themselves Iob 34. 22. Amos 9. 3. Psalm 139. 7. 8. 9. Prov. 15. 3. Ier. 23. 24. from the face or the presence that is for feare of the Lords comming Vers. 10. feared or was afraid this feare was a terrour through feeling of Gods wrath for sinne as Israel also felt in themselves when they heard the voice of God at mount Sinai Ex. 20. 18. 19. 20. It was such as had torment with it which who so feareth is not perfect in love 1 Iohn 4. 18. and proceeded from the spirit of bondage Rom. 8. 15. Otherwise there is also a feare which proceedeth from the spirit of adoption and accordeth well with love and comfort 1 Pet. 1. 1. 17. Psalm 2. 11. and 147. 11. Ier. 32. 39. 40. Prov. 19. 23. This feare if Adam had kept he had eschewed evill Prov. 16. 6 am naked he dissembleth the maine cause which was his sinne pure nakednesse was Gods creature and he was naked before without feare or shame Gen. 2 25. Vers. 12. thou gavest Adams confession is mixed with excuses and further evils asking no mercy but charging the woman and God himselfe with the cause of his fall The foolishnesse of man perverteth his way and his heart fretteth against the Lord Prov. 19. 3. Vers. 13. what is this or For what that is Why hast thou done this Vers. 14. unto the serpent unto the beast and the devill which together were the meanes to draw into sinne vers 1. and therefore are joyned as one here 〈…〉 the punishment cursed this is contrary to blessed Deut. 28. 3. 16. and as to blesse is to say well 〈◊〉 my so to curse is to say evill so expounded by the holy Ghost as thou shalt not curse the Ruler Exod. 22. 28. which Paul citeth thus thou shalt not speake evill of the Ruler Act. 23. 5. And as Gods word is one with his deed so his curse is the powring out of evils upon the creatures for sinne unto their perdition Deut. 28. 20. c. So the fig-tree being cursed withered Mark 11. 21. the children cursed were torne of beasts 2 King 2. 24. And that the devill was implyed under this curse the Hebrew Doctors have acknowledged saying of God that hee brought those three and decreed against them the decrees of judgement and did ●ast Sammael the Devill his company out of his holy place out of heaven and cut off the feet of the serpent and cursed him c. Pirke R. Eliezer ch 14. So Peter saith God spared not the Angels that sinned but cast them downe to hell c. 2 Pet. 2. 4. And in Rev. 12. 7. 8. 9. speaking of a spirituall combat with the Devill in the Church it is said the Dragon fought and his Angels but they prevailed not neither was their place found any more in heaven and that great Dragon that old serpent called the Devil and Satan was cast out c As the Devill is cursed above all creatures Mat. 25. 41. so the cursed serpent is in Scripture a similitude of the most hurtfull venemous and hatefull beasts as Deut. 8. 15. Ier. 8. 17. Ps. 58. 5. Mat. 23. 33. thy belly or thy brest as the Greeke hath a twofold translation upon thy brest and belly meaning with great paine and difficulty For other creatures also goe on the belly Lev. 11. 42. but as Adams labour and Eves conception had paine and sorrow added to them vers 16. 17 so the serpents gate dust that is vile and uncleane meats noting also hereby basenesse of condition Mic. 7. 17. and hunger and penury which this beast should suffer above others which eate the herbs of the field Gen. 1. 30. This eating of dust is againe remembred in Esay 65. 25 where speech is of our Redemption from Satan by Christ which sheweth that these outward curses implyed further mysteries V. 15. enmity this is opposed to the amity and familiarity which had beene between the woman and the Serpent which God would breake And here beginneth the first promise of grace and life to Evah and mankind now dead in sinne and enemies to God Col. 2. 13. and 1. 21. For the amity of this world is enmity of God Iam. 4. 4. thy seed and her seed that is thy posterity and hers Seed is often used for children by the Serpents seed are meant not onely those venemous beasts which
if she be sicke to redeeme her if she be taken captive to bury her if she dye and to let her be nourished of his goods and to dwell in his house after he dye all the time of her widowhood that her children which shee hath by him be nourished of his goods after his death untill they be espoused that her male children which she hath by him be heires of her dowrie above their portion of inheritance which they have with their brethren And the foure things which she oweth are that the workes of her hands be his that her presence or attendance be upon him that he eat of all the fruits of her goods during her life and if she die while he live that he be her heire hee is before any man in inheriting that she hath Maimony treat of Wives chap. 12. Sect. 1. 2. 3. withdraw or keepe backe as the word signifieth in Numbers 9. 7. the Greeke translateth it defra●● which word Paul useth in speech of the like thing Defraud not one the other 1 Cor. 7. 5. Vers. 11. these three mentioned last in verse 10. or one of those three fore-mentioned touching her bethrothing to himselfe or to his sonne or her redeeming In this latter sense Maimony expoundeth it in his treat of Servants chap. 4. Sect. 9. freely or for nothing as verse 2. Vers. 12. that smiteth to wit wilfully as the next verse manifesteth See the notes on Gen. 9. 6. put to die or made to die that is killed by the Magistrate and the doubling of the word maketh the charge more strait for no ransome might be taken for the life of a wilfull murderer Numbers 35. 31. The Hebrew Doctors say Foure deaths were in Israel by the Iudges Stoning and Burning and Slaying with the sword and Strangling or Hanging Stoning was heavier than burning and burning heavier then killing with the sword and the sword heavier then strangling All that were to be stoned to death by the law were eighteene namely these 1 Hee that lieth with his owne mother 2 or with his fathers wife 3 or with his daughter in law 4 or with a betrothed maid 5 or with the male 6 or with any beast 7 The woman that lieth downe to a beast 8. The blasphemer 9 He that worshippeth on Idoll 10 or that giveth of his seed to Molech 11 He that hath a familiar spirit 12 and the Wizard Leviticus 20. 27. 13 The inticer to idolatrie Deuter. 13. 6. 14 and the withdrawer or thruster away to idolatrie Deuteronomie 13. 13. 15 The witch 16 The prophaner of the Sabbath 17 He that curseth his father or his mother 18 and there bellious some Deuter. 21. All that were to be burned were ten 1 The priests daughter that playeth the whore under her husband 2 and he that lieth with his daughter 3 or with his daughters daughter 4 or with his sons daughter 5 or with his wives daughter 6 or with her daughters daughter 7 or with her sonnes daughter 8 or with his mother in law 9 or with the mother of his mother in law 10 or with the mother of his father in law Who so lay with any of these whiles his wife lived was to be burned The killed with the sword were two 1 The murderer 2 and the drawne away to idols Deute●onomie 13 15. The strangled were sixe 1 He that lieth with another mans wife 2 Hee that smiteth his father or his mother 3 Hee that steales a soule of Israel 4 The Elder that rebelleth against the decree of the Senate Deuteronomie 17. 12. 5 The false Prophet 6 and he that prophesieth in the name of another god So there are ●ound in all which were to be slaine by the Magistrate thirty and sixe Maimony in Sanhedrin chap. 14. Sect. 1. 4. and chap. 15. Sect. 10. 13. Thalmud Bab. in Sanhedrin chap. 7. and 9. Likewise the Chaldee paraphrase on Ruth 1. 17. in the Masorites Bible saith Naomi said wee have foure judgements of death for malefactors Stoning with stones Burning with fire Killing with the sword and Hanging on tree Vers. 13. not l●en in wait not hunted as 1 Samuel 24. 12. The Greeke translateth not willing See this more explained in Num. 35. 22. 23. occasionally delivered or offered by chance an example whereof is set downe in Deut. 19. 5. The Greeke and Chaldee translate delivered a place in the land of Canaan the cities of refuge whereof see Num. 35. 6. c. before that there were not any vnlesse Gods Sanctuary and Altar in the wildernesse as may be conjectured by the verse here following and the practice of Ioab 1 Kin. 2. 28. Vers. 14. shall come presumptuously or shall deale proudly the Chaldee saith doe wickedly It meaneth wittingly wilfully and presumptuously from my in Chaldee from before my altar The Greeke addeth and flee unto the altar from my altar shalt thou take him c. But Thargum Ierusalemy expoundeth it thus though hee be the high priest who standeth and ministreth before me from thhnce shall yee take him and kill him Ioab fearing his life fled unto and caught hold on the hornes of the altar 1 King 28. and among the Heathens altars were places of refuge The wilde beast hath the Rocke for a refuge and seruants the altars of God saith Euripides in Supplic to die or unto death that is to put him to death as the Greeke and Chaldee translate Vers. 15. his father c. though he kill him not yet hee is to die for it as by comparison with the 12. verse appeareth So the Hebrew Doctors also expound it but with limitation for they teach if a childe smite father or mother and leave no print of the stripe on the flesh he is to be punished but not with death if hee leave an impression or skarre or that which is equivalent as when hee smiteth his father on the eare and maketh him deafe such a one is to be put to death as Maimony sheweth it treat of Rebels chap. 5. Sect. 5. 6. Vers. 16. a man any of the sonnes of Israel saith the Greeke translation and also the Chaldee paraphrase And so doth Moses explaine this Law in Deut. 24. 7. a soule that is man woman or child of his brethren of the sonnes of Israel Vers. 17. curseth or speaketh evill to revileth useth light vile and reproachfull speech see Genesis 12. 3. put to die the holy Ghost in Matth. 15. 4. following the Greeke version translateth let him be ended with death that is killed This law is repeated in Levit. 20. 9. The Hebrew Doctors say that if he curse them either alive or dead hee is to be stoned to death for it But they restraine this to his next parents onely if he curse his grand-father they teach hee is not to be stoned but punished as for cursing anotherman Maimony treat of Rebels chap. 5. Sect. 1. 2. Vers. 18. fist so the Greeke translateth but the Chaldee is a clod of earth falleth that is lieth on
smell thereto and made it not hee is guilty of cutting-off but his doome is like all theirs that use or make profit of any of the sanctified things to wit unlawfully M●imony in treat of the holy Implements chap. 2. Sect. 9. 10. be cut off the Chaldee expoundeth it be destroied the Greeke saith the soule of that man shall perish from his people God by this judgment would keepe men from profaning and abusing the holy exercise of praier and doctrine of Christs mediation when the abuse even of the shadow hereof brought destruction upon the offenders CHAP. XXXI 1 Bezaleel and Aholiab are called and made meet for the worke of the Taberna●le and furniture thereof 12 The observation of the Sabbath is againe commanded 18 Moses receiveth the two Tables of the Law AND Iehovah spake unto Moses saying See I have called by name Bezaleel the son of Vri the son of Hur of the tribe of Iudah And I have filled him with the Spirit of God in wisedome and in understanding and in knowledge and in all workmanship To devise cunning-workes to worke in gold and in silver and in brasse And in ingraving of stone to fill and in carving of wood to worke in all workmanship And I behold I have given with him A holiab the son of Ahisamac of the tribe of Dan and in the heart of all wise hearted I have given wisedome that they may make all that I have commanded thee The Tent of the congregation and the Arke of the Testimonie and the Covering-mercie seat that is thereupon and all the vessels of the Tent. And the Table and the vessels thereof and the pure Candlesticke and all the vessels thereof and the Altar of incense And the Altar of burnt-offring all the vessels therof and the Laver and the foot thereof And the garments of ministery and the garments of holinesse for Aaron the priest and the garments of his sonnes to minister-in-thepriests office And the anointing oile and incense of sweet-spices for the holy place according to all that I have commanded thee shall they doe And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying And thou speake thou unto the sonnes of Israel saying Verily my Sabbat●s yee shall keepe for it is a signe betweene me and you throughout your generations to know that I am Iehovah that sanctifieth you And yee shall keepe the Sabbath for it is holinesse to you they that profane it every one shall bee put-to die the death for every one that doth any worke therein even that soule shall bee cut-off from amongst his peoples Six daies shall worke be done but in the seventh day is the Sabbath of Sabbathisme holinesse to Iehovah every one that doth any worke in the Sabbath day shall be put to die the death And the Sons of Israel shall keepe the Sabbath to observe the Sabbath throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant Betweene me and the Sonnes of Israel it shall be a signe for ever for in Six daies Iehovah made the heavens the earth and in the Seventh day he rested and was refreshed And he gave unto Moses when hee had made-an-end of speaking with him on mount Sinai two Tables of testimonie Tables of stone written with the finger of God Annotations BEzaleel in Greeke Beseleel by interpretation In the shadow of God he was the sonne of Vri the sonne of Hur the sonne of Caleb or Chelubai the sonne of Esron the sonne of Pharez the sonne of Iudah from whom he was the seventh generation as Enoch was the seventh from Adam and is here designed the master workman of the Lords Tabernacle See his genealogie in 1 Chron. 2. 5. 9. 18. 19. 20. Vers. 3. Spirit that is gifts of the Spirit such as are after mentioned So Paul openeth it in 1 Cor. 12. 4. 8. 11. see also Act. 2. 4. The Greeke expoundeth it a divine Spirit the Chaldee a Spirit from before the Lord. workmanship or Art Hebrew worke So verse 4. Vers. 4. devise cunning-workes such as were mentioned in Exodus 26. 1. c. see the notes there The Hebrew phrase is figurative to thinke thoughts which the Greek explaineth to thinke or minde and to make-artificially the Chaldee saith to teach artificers as it is in Exodus 35. 34. These three things in Bezaleel a calling a furnishing with gifts and a working or operation accordingly are necessarie in all the publike ministers of the Church So Paul mentioneth diversities or distributions 1 of gifts by the Spirit 2 of administrations or ministeries by the Lord Iesus and 3 of operations by God the Father 1 Cor. 12. 4. 5. 6. 〈◊〉 to worke or to doe to make but doing is often used for working as is noted on Exod. 5. 9. and so the Greek translateth it here also in verse 5. Vers. 5. ingraving or cutting The Hebrew word generally signifieth a studious and artificiall ingraving or cutting in stone in wood in yron in earth and then it is Englished ploughing or any other like handicraft to fill that is to set in the golden ouches as Exod. 28. 21. to worke or to make in all worke meaning cunning worke as is expressed in Exod. 35. 33. Vers. 6. Aholiab in Greeke Eliab by interpretation The Tabernacle of the Father Hee is the second master-workman and of the tribe of Dan the handmaids sonne joyned with Beseleel as God usually joyneth two together in al weighty affairs See Exod. 4. 14. 15. and 6. 26. Matth. 10. 2. 3. Luk. 10. 1. Acts 13. 2. Hag. 1. 14. Vers. 7. vessels or instruments furniture implements So after Vers. 10. of ministerie veiles clothes coverings which served to wrap up the holy things in when the host removed as Num. 4. 5. 9. 11. 12. c. Of the Priests garments see Exod. 28. Vers. 13. Uerily or Notwithstanding the Greeke translateth it See Though the worke of the Tabernacle were studiously and speedily to be done yet God would not have any of it done on the Sabbath daies The Law of the Sabbath is very often repeated see Gen. 2. 2. Exod. 16. 23. c. and 20. 8. c. and 23. 12. and 35. 2. 3. to know that is that ye may know as the Greeke translateth The principall signification of the Sabbath was for grace and sanctitie which therefore the Lord often urgeth and blameth the breach of this day as the violating of his covenant See Neh. 9. 14. Ezek. 20. 12. 13. 16. 20. 21. Esay 58. 13. The true observation hereof is by faith in Christ Heb. 4. 3. 9. 10. 11. The Hebrew Doctors say The Sabbath and the precept against idolatrie each of these two is as weighty as all the other Commandements of the Law and the Sabbath is a signe betweene God and us for ever Therefore who so transgresseth the other Commandements he is generally a wicked Israelite but hee that openly profaneth the Sabbath is as an Idolater both of them as infidels in all their affaires Therefore the Prophet laudeth and saith Esay 56. 2. Blessed
is the man that doth this and the sonne of man that layeth hold on it that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it Maimony treat of the Sabbath chap. 30. Sect. 15. Vers. 14. that soule the Chaldee translateth that man shall be destroied This cutting off the Iewes understand to be untimely death by the hand of God when a man so violateth Gods Law as there are no witnesses whereby men should punish him See Gen. 17. 14. And of the Sabbath thus they write that for doing worke therein if a man doe it willingly and presumptuously he is guilty of cutting-off to perish by the hand of God and if there bee witnesses that see him he is to be stoned to death as was performed in Num. 15. 35. 36. and if he doe it of ignorance or errour he is bound to bring the sin offring appointed for the same according to the Law in Numb ●5 27. 30. Maimony in treat of the Sabbath chap. 1. Among the heathen Romanes their Flamins or Priests might see no work done on their holy daies but by a cryer gave men warning to the contrary and who so obeyed not was 〈…〉 ulcted and gave a beast for a sacrifice Albeit they might doe things whereof dammage would follow if they were omitted as to pull an oxe out of a ditch to underset an house ready to fall c. Macrob Saturn booke 1. chap. 16. Vers. 15. of Sabbathisme that is of cessation and rest See Exod. 16. 23. The Greeke translateth it a rest holy to the Lord. Vers. 16. to observe Hebrew to doe see the notes on Exod. 34. 22. Vers. 17. me the Chaldee translateth Betweene my Word and the sonnes of Israel that Word is Christ by whom the Sabbath is truely sanctified to his Church Hebrewes 4. From this Scripture the Hebrewes gather that onely Israel was charged with the sabbath day and not the nations of the world Talmud in Betsah chap. Iom tob So from Exod. 16. 29. Yet thus also they say It is unlawfull to speake to an Infidel to doe any worke for us on the Sabbath day although he be not charged to keepe the Sabbath and although he be spoken to before the Sabbath Maimony treat of the Sabbath chap. 6. Sect. 1. Howbeit this opinion of theirs seemeth not agreeable to Gods will for the Sabbath was to be kept before the Law was given at mount Sinai Exod. 16. 23. even from the Creation Gen. 2. 2. 3. therefore it was given to all the world was refreshed the Greeke and Chaldee doe translate hee ceased and rested This is spoken of God after the manner of men who are refreshed by rest from their workes Of such manner speeches see what is noted on Genesis 6. 6. Vers. 18. of stone that so the record of them might remaine for ever Iob 19. 24. These Tables were the worke of God even as the writing was the writing of God Exod. 32. 16. and these being broken in peeces Exod. 32. 19 two other tables of stone like them were hewed out by Moses but written againe by the Lord Exod. 34. 1. 4. After this Christ by the Spirit of God writeth his Law not in Tables of stone but in fleshly Tables of the hear● 2 Cor. 3. 3. and these fleshly tables are also the work of God as he saith I will take the stonie heart out of their bodies and I will give them an heart of flesh Ezek. 11. 19. The Minde and the Heart are the spirituall tables Heb. 8. 10. in the one such things are written as men should know and beleeve in the other such as should be done or omitted The first Tables which God made signified the stonic hearts which all men have by nature now corrupted in which notwithstanding God hath left his Law written so that they doe by nature the things of the Law and shew the worke of the Law written in their hearts Rom. 2. 14. 15. though still they continue hard and stonie and their sinfull nature is not changed The second tables of stone signified the heart of the Iewes hewed and polished by Moses and his legall ministerie in whose heart God also wrote his Law wherein they rested and made their boast of God and knew his will and had the information of knowledge and of the truth in the Law Rom. 1. 17. 18. 20. Howbeit their heart continued stonie and unchanged so that they which taught others taught not themselves neither could they stedfastly looke on Moses face nor see the end of that which i● abolished but their mindes were blinded and even to this day a veile is laid upon their heart Rom. 2. 21. 2 Cor. 3. 7. 13. 14. 15. The third which are tables of flesh is the worke of Christ by his Spirit giving us new hearts and writing his Lawes in them 2 Cor. 3. 3. Ezek. 36. 26. Heb. 8. 10. These things both of the weakenesse of Moses ministerie and of the grace of Christ the ancient Hebrew Doctors acknowledged as in their glosse upon Song 1. 1. Let him kisse me c. there mentioning that request of the people in Exod. 20. 19. Speake thou with us c. they say Moses taught them the Law and whatsoever they learned they forgat againe Then they came unto Moses and said O that God would shew him-selfe againe and kisse us with the kisses of his mouth that his doctrine might be fastened in our hearts Moses said unto them This cannot be done now but it shall be in the dayes of Christ as it is written Ier. 31. 33. I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts Midrash Cant. 1. 1. finger which signifieth Gods Spirit as I with the finger of God cast our divels Luk. 11. 20. which is expounded the Spirit of God in Matth. 12. 28. That which was written was according unto all the words which the Lord spake with Israel in the mount out of the midst of fire Exod. 20. Deut. 9. 10. CHAP. XXXII 1 The people in the absence of Moses cause Aaron to make a Calfe 6 They sacrifice thereunto 7 God certifieth Moses of their sinne 10 and his purpose to consume them therefore 11 Moses intreateth for the people 14 The Lord repenteth concerning the evill against them 15 Moses commeth down with the Tables 19 and upon sight of their sinne hee breaketh them 20 He destroyeth the Calfe 22 Aarons excuse for himselfe 25 Moses causeth the Idolaters to be slaine 28 The Levites are the executioners 31 Moses prayeth that either the sinne of Israel be forgiven or himselfe to be blotted out of the Booke of God 34 God spareth the people for the present but after plagueth them AND the people saw that Moses delayed to come down out of the mountaine and the people gathered themselves together unto Aaron and said unto him Rise-up make gods for us which may goe before us because this Moses the man which brought us up out of the land of Egypt we know not what is become of
feast daies they might doe such worke as pertained to the dressing 〈◊〉 meat and drink Exod. 12. 16. but ●n the Sabb●●● and day of Atonement they might not doe any such Ex. 16. 23. Lev. 16. 29. See after on v. 7. The Hebrewes say The ceasing from work on the seve●e day is commanded Exod. 34. 21. and who so doth 〈◊〉 therein disanulleth a commandement and trans 〈…〉 seth against a prohibition Exod. 20. 10. And if 〈…〉 work willingly presumptuously he is guilty of 〈◊〉 off and if there be witnesses and proofe of it he is to ●●stoned And if he doe it ignorantly hee is bound to bring the Sin-offring appointed of God Lev. 4. Mai●●●● 1. treat of the Sabbath c. 1. s. 1. to I●hovah ●o his honour and service not to any work w 〈…〉 pleasure of our owne Esay 58. 13. Therefore also moe sacrifices were to be offe●ed on the Sabbath then on other daies Num. 28. 3. 9. 10. The Cha●dee translateth before the Lord. your dwellings the other feasts were especially to bee kept before the Sanctuarie of the Lord whither all the men of Israel were to assemble Ex. 23. 14. 17. Deut. 16. 〈◊〉 6. 16. but the Sabbaths were to be sanctified in all places where they dwelt in the Synagogue 〈…〉 in every citie Act. 15. 21. V. 4. convocations of holinesse the Gr. translateth Feasts to the Lord called holy that is holy by calling orproclamation Hereupon the Hebr. say As we are commanded in honour the Sabbath and delight 〈◊〉 so all good dayes that is festivities as it is 〈◊〉 in Esay 58. 13. THE HOLIE day OF THE LORD HONOVRABLE and of all good d 〈…〉 is said a CONVOCATION OF HOLINES Maimony tom 1. in Iem to● ch 6. sect 16. V. 5. first moneth called Abib and Nisan which was made the first upon their comming out of Egypt see Exod. 12 2. and 13. 3. 4. So in Ta●g●m lonathan it is here said In the moneth of N 〈…〉 〈◊〉 the 14. day c. the two evenings that is in the afternoone as is opened on Exod. 72. 6. So all the forenoone of the fourteenth day of Abib the day wherein they killed the Paschal lambes was 〈…〉 full to worke in at noone they left off and beg●● their rest The Hebrew canons say It is 〈…〉 full to doe worke on the evenings of the festivall days from the time of the evening sacrifice and 〈◊〉 even as on the evenings of the Sabbaths And 〈◊〉 so doth worke in them shall never see a signe of 〈◊〉 sing And he is to be re●●ked ●nd m●●e to 〈◊〉 by force though he is not for it to bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 excommunicated except in the evening 〈…〉 over after mid-day for who so d●th work 〈…〉 ter mid-day is to bee sco●rged or excomm 〈…〉 ●ith the Ni●d●i if he be not scourged For the fourteenth day of Nisan or A●i● is not like the other e 〈…〉 of festivall dayes because in it are the feast and the killing of the sacrifice In the 14 of Nisan it is 〈◊〉 unlawfull to doe worke save after the midst of the day and forward for that is the time of killing the sacrifice M●im●ny in Iom tob chap. 8. sect 17. 18. the Passeover Targum Ionathan explaineth it the time of killing the Passeover to the name of the Lord. The Passeover was a yeerely feast in remembrance of their deliverance out of Egypt when God passed over the houses of Israel and killed not their first borne see Exod. 12. It figured our redemption by Christ who is our Passeover or Paschal lambe sacrificed for us in remembrance wherof we are commanded also spiritually to keepe the feast with the unlevened-cakes of sincerity and truth 1 Cor. 5. 7. 8. Vers. 6. of unlevened-cakes a feast adjoyned to the Passeover Exod. 12. 15. and 13. 6. the rites hereof are opened there the sacrifices peculiar to this feast are set downe in Num. 28. 19. 25. The signification was to teach us holinesse of life from the time of our redemption unto the end of our dayes which seven dayes mystically figured as is shewed on Exod. 12. 15. Chazkuni on Levit. 23. saith The evening of the first good day and that might is called the Passeover according as they imploy themselves about the oblation which is called the Passeover But the residue of the feast from the first night and forw●rd is called the feast of unlevened cakes Verse 7. servile worke Hebr. worke of service or of se●vilenesse or laborious as ploughing sowing weaving or any the like but worke about meat or drinke which they should use the same day might be done Exod. 12. 16. And the like law was for all other festivall dayes vers 8. 21. 25. 35. 36. save on atonement day verse 28. then no worke might be done So besides the Sabbath which was every seventh day there were seven holy dayes in the yeere in sixe whereof they might doe no servile worke and in the seventh no worke at all Those sixe were the first and the seventh of the feast of unlevened cakes the day of Pentecost or of first fruits verse 17. 21. the first day of the seventh moneth which was the feast of Blowing trumpets verse 24. 25. and the first and eight day of the feast of Boothes verse 35. 36. The seventh was Atonement or expiation day wherein they might doe no worke at all verse 28. Ofthese the Hebrewes give these rules The sixe dayes wherein the Scripture forbiddeth worke which are the first and seventh of the Pass●over the first and eight of the feast of Bo●thes the day of the feast of Weekes or Pentecost and the first day of the seventh moneth are called good dayes and the kesting is alike in them all for it is unlawfull to doe 〈◊〉 servile worke in them save the worke which is needfull about food Exod. 12. 16. Who so resteth from servile worke in them observeth a commandement and who so doth in any of them worke which is not necessary for food as if he build up or pull downe or weave or the like he breaketh a commandement and transgresseth against this prohibition YE SHALL NOT DOE A●● SERVILE WORKE and if he doe and there be witnesses and evident proofe hee is by the law to be beaten But for working on the Sabbath hee is to be stoned to death Num. 15. 32. 35. All worke needfull about meat is lawfull as killing of beasts and baking of bread and kneading of dough and the like But such workes as may be done in the evening of a feast day they doe not on the feast day as they may not reape nor thresh nor winow nor grinde the corne or the like For all these and such like may be done on the evening of the feast and there is thereby no corruption or minishing of the tast But they knead and bake and kill and boile or rost on the feast day because if they doe these on the evening there is thereby corruption or
is to be a Nazirite thirty daies If he say I will be a Nazirite thirty daies and an houre he is to be a Nazirite thirty one daies for there are no houres determined He that saith I will be a Nazirite two Naziriteships or 〈◊〉 he is to be a Nazirite according to the number which he hath mentioned every Naziriteship of them shall be 30 dayes And at the end of every 30 dayes hee is to shave his haire and bring his offrings and begin to count for his second Naziriteship though hee have spoken of 100 thousand Naziriteships though it be unpossible he should live so long he is to count one after another untill he dye or untill hee have accomplished the number of his Naziriteships He that saith I will be a Nazirite for ever or all dayes of my life he is a Nazirite for ever If he say I wil be a Nazirite 1000 yeeres he is a Nazirite for the time determined although it is unpossible for a man to live 1000 yeares And what differeth a Nazirite for ever from a Nazirite for a determined time A Nazirite for a determined time may not shave his haire till the end of the dayes of his separation Num. 6. 5. But a Nazirite for ever if his haire be too heavy for him may lighten it with a rasor at every twelve-months end and bring three beasts for his oblation when he shaveth himselfe as it is written of Absalom 2 Sam. 14. 26. at every yeares end he polled c. And Absalom was a Nazirite for ever as we have been taught by tradition Samson was not a full Nazirite for he vowed not to be a Nazirite but the Angell separated him from uncleannesse And what was required of him He might not drinke wine nor shave his head but he might be polluted by the dead this also wee have by tradition Therefore he that saith I will be a Nazirite like Samson he is to be a Nazirite from polling his head and from wine for ever but may be defiled by the dead Maimony in Neziruth ch 3. And Thalmud Bab. in Nazer ch 1. He that saith I will be a Nazirite one day before my death it is unlawfull for him to drinke wine or to defile himselfe or to shave his head for ever Maim ibidem chap. 4. sect 10. the locks or the haire as after is explained by another word of like signification The haire is an ornament and a covering by nature and as by washing of garments the cleansing from impuritie was shadowed Exod. 19. 10. so by keeping them white and cleane the continuance of sanctification is signified Revel 3. 4. 7. 14. 15. 19. 8. Such was the keeping of the head from the rasort for when the Nazirite v. 9. or the Leper Levit. 14. 8. 9. was cleansed from impuritie their haire was shaven off so the keeping it from shaving signified that they had kept themselves from uncleannesse Therefore when the Lord would figure out the rejection of Israel as being vnclean before him hee did it by this signe of cutting off the 〈◊〉 with a rasor Esai 7. 20. Ezek. 5 1. 10. The growing of the haire signified also the growing of the graces of Gods Spirit in them as in Samson who with the losse of his haire lost also the power of God and as his haire grew againe so his strength in God renued Iudg. 13. 25. 14. 19. 16. 17. 19 20. 22. 28. This strength came not by the growth of the haire for long haire rather weakneth the body than strengthneth it naturally but by the Lord who sanctifieth to his people outward signes whereunto himselfe onely addeth grace as he sanctified the waters of Iordan to wash away Naamans leprosie which of themselves had no such esticacie 2 King 5. 10. 14. Moreover as the womans long haire is noted as a signe of her husbands power over her and her subjection unto him 1 Cor. 11. 5. 10. so the Nazirites haire might be the like signe of their subjection to the Lord under whose power they had by this vow inspectall manner committed themselves for further sanctification in his sight Vers. 6. at a dead soule that is a dead person whereby he should be defiled the soule is often used for the whole man liuing or dead see Lev. 19. 28. 21. 1. and so Ionathan in his Thargum here explaineth it at the sonne of man that is dead Thus the soule is put for the bodie for at death the soule departeth Gen. 35. 18. and by the Hebrew Canons the dead d●fileth not untill his soule be departed Maimony in Tumoth meth ch 1. sect 15. Of pollution by the dead see Numb 19. 11. c. This refraining from the dead in whom the image as it were of Gods curse for sinne was to be seene for the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6. 23. figured our abstaining from sinfull and dead works and such as live in them which are dead while they are alive 1 Tim. 5. 6. that we may keepe our selves unspotted of the world I am 1. 27. Vers. 7. not make himselfe uncleane or as the Greeke translateth not be defiled for them namely in touching mourning for or burying them For this as for the former the Nazirite if hee did it presumptuously was to be beaten by the Magistrate Maim in Nazir ch 5. sect 15. c. This also taught them to moderate their affections and sorrow for their earthly parents that they might be holy unto their father which is in heauen Here the Hebrews have their traditionall exceptions saying It is lawfull for a Nazirite to leave the pollution by the dead which is commanded as if walking by the way he light upon a dead body and there is none there to bury him then is he to desile himselfe for him and to bury him If two Nazirites light upon a dead the one a Nazirite for 30 dayes the other for an hundred he that is a Nazirite for 30 dayes shall make himselfe uncleane and the other not The like they say for shaving his head that it is lawfull for him if it be a shaving commanded as if a Nazirite prove a Loper and be healed of his leprosie within the dayes of his Naziriteship he is to shave off all his haire for the shaving of him is commanded in Levit. 14. 8. And wheresoever thou findest a commandment to doe a thing and a prohibition from doing it if a man can keepe them both he doth well and if not the commandment is to be done and the prohibition is to be let passe Maimony in Neziruth chapt 7. sect 11. 12. 14. 15. and Thalmud in Nazir chap. 7. the Naziriteship or the separation Hebr. Nezer in Greeke the vow in Chaldee the crowne of his God as the word Nezer here used is else-where●● crowne Levit. 21. 12. This is the reason why hee must mortifie his affections and rather follow his vow in honouring the Lord than to follow naturall dutie in honouring his dead
plainnesse exactnesse and solemniey of the action as also to shew an equall right that all the Princes and Tribes had in the Altar now to be dedicated and how the Lord esteemed of the religious dutie now to be performed which he would have done in distinct dayes Wherefore he also writeth their particular offerings at large repeating the same things twelve times together Verse 12. Naasson Hebr. Nachshon so in Num. 1. 7. of the tribe or for the tribe in which sense the oblation was not for his owne person but for the whole tribe whereof he was governour but the Greeke translateth Prince of the tribe of Indas Here the Captaines of the tribes offer every one in his day not according to their births or as they are named in Num. 1. but according to the order wherein God had set them round about his Sanctuary in Num. 2. beginning at the East quarter proceeding to the South then to the West and ending at the North according to the course of the Sunne as may be viewed thus of East 1. Iudah Naasson verse 12. 2. Issachar Nethaneel verse 18. 3. Zabulon Eliab verse 24. South 4. Reuben Elizur verse 30. 5. Simeon She lumiel verse 36. 6. Gad Eliasaph verse 42. West 7. Ephraim Elishama verse 48. 8. Manasses Gamaliel verse 54. 9. Benjamin Abidan verse 60. North. 10 Dan Ahiczer verse 66. 11. Aser Pagiel verse 7● 12. Naphtali Ahira verse 78. Thus God would have that order kept in their oblations w ch he had appointed for their situations Num. 2. and so likewise for their journeyings Num. 10. 14 27. to shew that he is not the author of confused tumult but of peace 1 Cor. 14. 33. And Iudah in Naasson his sonne was first in these oblations as in many other things for to type out the honour of Christ who was to be his sonne according to the flesh Heb. 7. 14. Verse 13. dish or charger platter in Hebrew Kag●nara● in Greeke Trublion which word is used for a dish in Mat. 26. 23. Such dishes were used to set the Shewbread in on the golden Table Exod. 25. 29. and thirtie shekels the word shekels is expressed in the Chaldee version and rightly as the next words manifest the shekell spoken of in the Law weighed three hundred and twenty barley cornes saith Maimony in treat of shekels ch 1. sect 2. See the notes on Gen. 20. 16. bason or viall called in Hebrew Miz●ak of powring out in Greeke Phialee a viall w ch word is used in Rev. l. 16. where the vials of Gods wrath are powred out Such basons or vials were used to carry the blood of the sacrifices to the Altar where it was powred out of them mention is made in Zach. 14. 20. the p●ts in the LORDS house shall be like the basons before the Altar shekell of the Sanctuarie or of Sanctitie that is the holy shekell as the Greeke translateth it which weighed 〈…〉 rahs Num. 3. 47. and Exod. 30. 13. 〈…〉 offering or Minchah of this see Levit● 2. Verse 14. of gold touching this C 〈…〉 noteth the cup it selfe was of gold and the weight o● it was by silver shekels So Ionathan in his T●●rgum saith One cup weighing ten shekels of silver 〈◊〉 the cup was of gold This is plaine by the 〈◊〉 verse following there Sol. Iarchs saith that 〈◊〉 shekels of gold weighed not so much as the silver 〈…〉 kels of incense or perfume in Hebr. K 〈…〉 every meat-offering of floure as it was 〈◊〉 with oyle so it had frankincense Lebonah 〈◊〉 Levit. 2. 1. but the incense Ke●oreth was ●or the golden Altar the making whereof is descr●bed 〈◊〉 Exod. 30. 34. c. Sol. Iarchi here noteth 〈◊〉 incense for any particular person nor for the 〈◊〉 brasen Altar but this onely So it was an ex●raordinary oblation for this present action Verse 15. bullocke in Chaldee a 〈◊〉 in Hebrew Par which is a yong bull of the second or third yeere see the notes on Exod. 29. 1. 〈◊〉 ling Hebrew sonne of the herd or 〈◊〉 Exod. 29. 1. ramme which also was of the second yeere as lambes were of the first see the notes on Levit. 1. 10. his first yeere Hebr. sonne of his yeere of which phrase see the notes on Gen. 5. 32. Exod. 12. 5. Burnt-offering the Law and signification hereof see in Levit. 1. Verse 16. goat-bucke a goat of the second yeere such was the ordinary Sin-offering for a ruler see Levit. 4. 22 23. But this is brought for s 〈…〉 e 〈◊〉 generall not for any speciall sinne which L 〈…〉 4. treateth of and so it was also extraordinary 〈◊〉 Chazkuni here observeth This man 〈◊〉 voluntary incense whereas no particular p 〈…〉 eth voluntary incense this bringeth a 〈…〉 which is not for sinne whereas no particular 〈◊〉 bringeth a sin-offering but for sinne Verse 17. of Peace-offerings in Greake of 〈…〉 tion in Chaldee of sanctifications see Levit. 〈◊〉 where the Law of this sacrifice is opened T 〈…〉 sacrifices of all sorts figuring the death of C 〈…〉 and benefits to be reaped thereby they recon 〈…〉 and made themselves theirs acceptable to God and were made partakers of his grace to rem 〈…〉 of sinnes justification and sanctification through faith and by the worke of the Holy Ghost in the communion and feeling whereof they r●joyced before God Verse 18. Nethaneel the sonne of Zuar called in Greeke Nathanael the sonne of Sogar see Num. 1. 〈◊〉 Prince this title is given to all 〈◊〉 〈…〉 cept Naasson of Iudah who offered first 〈◊〉 Chazkuni giveth this reason He is not 〈…〉 that he might not be puft up because he 〈…〉 and all the other are called Princes ●●r that 〈◊〉 〈…〉 mitted themselves and offered after 〈◊〉 Verse 19. He offered In the Chaldee of 〈◊〉 than there is added He offered hi● 〈…〉 dah by the mouth of the Holy 〈◊〉 S 〈…〉 writeth thus Why speaketh the 〈…〉 Prince of the tribe of Issachar HEO 〈…〉 when the like is not said of all the 〈…〉 cause Reuben came and made a stirre and said It is enough that my brother Iudah offred before me I will offer after him Moses answered It was said unto me by the mouth of the Almighty that they should offer according to the order of their journying by their standards Therefore is it said He offered his offering and the word Hikrib offered wanteth the letter jod that after the plaine writing by the consonant letters it is Imperative Hakreb offer thou for that by the mouth of God he was commanded to offer Verse 42. Deguel in Num. 2. 14. he is called Reguel and so the Greeke here hath Elisaph the sonne of Rigovel see Num. 1. 14. Verse 48. the seventh day the Hebrewes note this to be extraordinarie that on the Sabbath day the same course of offring was kept as on the other dayes without intermission Ammihud in Greeke Semioud see the notes on Numb 1. 10. Verse 54. Gamaliel in Hebrew Gamliel Pedahzur in Greeke
service Verse 17. the day that I smote in Chaldee the day that I killed by day comprehending the night also as in Gen. 1. where the day consisteth of evening and morning for properly the first borne of Egypt were smitten at midnight Exod. 12. 29. I sanctified them as is to be seene in Exod. 13. 2. 12 13. The prerogative of the first borne was from the beginning before the smiting of the Egyptians Gen. 25. 31. and 49. 3. but upon that deliverance in Egypt the ordinance was renewed that they might know the heavenly birthright should be of grace not by nature Iam. 1. 18. and obtained through faith in the blood of the Lambe Christ Heb. 11. 28. and 12. 16 17 23. Rev. 14. 4 5. So the first-borne and the Levites taken in their stead were figures of the Elect whom God of his grace hath chosen out of many unto himselfe Verse 19. as given in Greeke a gift given to Aaron who being a figure of Christ these Levites in stead of the first borne figured the Elect children given of God the Father unto Christ Ioh. 17. 6. 9. 11. Heb. 2. 13. to serve the service in Greeke to doe the workes of the sonnes of Israel that is which the first borne of Israel should have done themselves had not the Levites beene taken for them to make atonement for the sonnes of Israel this the Levites did not by offering sacrifices for the peoples sinnes which was done by the Priests onely but by their other service in the Tent which being performed according to the will of God hee was pleased with the people and sent no plague upon them either for neglect of his service or for doing it amisse and this the words following doe confirme that there be no plague among the sonnes of Israel c. Thus Phineas when hee had killed the whoremongers whereupon the Plague was stayed from the Israelites is said to have made atonement for the sonnes of Israel Num. 25. 7. 8. 13. no plague which the Chaldee expoundeth no death 〈◊〉 unto the Sanctuary Hebr. unto the Holinesse that is the place and things of Holinesse which the Greeke translateth the Holies Vnto which if they came neere and should performe the worke amisse they werein danger of death as there be examples in Nadab and Abihu Levit. 10. 1 2. in Vzzah 1 Chron. 13. 10. and the like Chazkuni explaineth it thus If all the first-borne should have served there might have beene a plague amongst them For the father of a first-borne perhaps was no first-borne himselfe nor his fathers father neither were they inured with the service so when the sonne came to serve he should have no experience or skill therein and doing that which was not meet he should be plagued as we find in Nadab and Abihu But the Levites when they were chosen they and their sonnes and their sonnes sonnes throughout their generations they were inured and instructed in the service to doe as was meet And therefore the Scripture saith The Levite shall have no part nor inheritance c. Deut. 18. 1. that they might not imploy themselves in any worke save in the service of the Sanctuary lest if hee should learne his hands profane worke his armes and fingers should thereby become hard and unsit to bee applied to minister on the Psalterie Harpe c. Verse 20. Then did Moses Hebr. And Moses did c. Moses set or presented the Levites verse 13. Aaron waved them verse 11. and the sonnes of Israel laid their hands on them verse 10. every one his worke as God had commanded Verse 21. purified themselves from sinne as the originall word implieth the outward rite whereof was by sprinkling the sinne water upon them verse 7. waved them the Greeke saith gave them for a gift see verse 11. made atonement by offering their sactifices verse 12. Verse 22. to serve their service in Greeke to minister their ministerie or liturgie Verse 24. from twenty five yeares old Hebr. from a sonne of twentie five yeares so in verse 25. In Num. 4. 3. it was said from thirtie yeeres old there he spake of their entrance upon their full administration here of their beginning to learne the service see the notes on Num. 4. 3. he shall that is every of them shall as the Greek translateth they shall goe in so in verse 25. to warre the warfare in Greeke to minister the ministerie or liturgie Why their service is called a warfare see Num. 4. 3 23. Verse 25. from the age Hebr. from a sonne of fiftie yeares he shall returne that is every of them shall returne or cease in Greeke shall depart from the liturgie and shall not worke any more Meaning of the hard labour in bearing the Sanctuary but not of other ministration as the next verse sheweth Maimony in treat of the Implements of the Sanctuary chap. 3. sect 8. saith That which is spoken in the Law of the Levites From fiftie yeares old he shall returne c. is not meant but for the time that they carried the Sanctuary from place to place and it is nos a commandement of force in the generations following But in the ages following a Levite was not disallowable by yeares neither by blemishes but by voyce when his voyce failed through much age he was disabled from serving in the S 〈…〉 And it seemeth to me that he is not disallowable save for singing the song but he might be of the P●●ters Verse 26. the charge or the custodie the watch or ward in Greeke the custodies not 〈◊〉 service in Greeke not worke the workes This the Hebrewes as Sol. ●archi and Chazkuni on this place expound to be the service of bearing the holy things on the shoulders but he was to keepe the charge to encampe round about the Tent 〈◊〉 to sing and to beware that no stranger came into the 〈◊〉 bernacle Hereby God taught that his ministers should be both for yeares and graces fitted ●or●● worke wherein they are imployed and no long●● continued therein than they have abilitie to performe their dutie but imployed in more easie service CHAP. IX 1 The Passeover is commanded againe to bee kept in the first moneth 5 and so it was 6 Vpon occasion of some that were uncleane and could not keepe it a second Passeover is allowed in the second moneth for them that were before uncleane or 〈◊〉 13 but not for others 15 The cloud that covered●●● Tabernacle guideth the removings and incamp 〈…〉 the Israelites ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses in the Wildernesse of Sinai in the second yeare after they were gone out from the land of Egypt in the first moneth saving And let the sonnes of Israel do the Passeover in his appointed season In the fourteenth day in this moneth betweene the 〈◊〉 Evenings yee shall doe it in his appointed season according to all the statutes of it and according to all the judgements of it 〈◊〉 shall doe it And Moses spake unto the sonnes
thus seeing the Law had twise said that the breaker of the Sabbath should die Exod. 31. 4. and 35. 2. Sol. Iarchi saith it was not declared what manner of death he should die but they knew that hee that prophaned the Sabbath was to die And the Chaldee called Ionathans paraphraseth thus This judgement was one of the foure judgements that came before Moses the Prophet which he judged according to the word of the holy God Some of them were judgements of lesser moment and some of them judgements of life and death In the judgements of lesser moment of pecuniarie matters Moses was readie but in judgements of life and death be made delayes And both in the one and in the other Moses said I have not heard viz. what God would have done For to teach the heads or chiefe of the Synedrions or Assises that should rise up after him that they should be ready to dispatch inferiour causes or money matters but not hastie in matters of life and death And that they should not be ashamed to enquire in causes that are too hard for them seing Moses who was the maste● of Israel had need to say I have not heard Therefore he imprisoned him because as yet it was not declared what sentence should passe upon him The foure judgements which hee speaketh of were about the uncleane that would keepe the Passeover Num. 9. 7 8. and the daughters of Zelophead that claimed possession in the land Num. 27. 4 5. these were the cases of lesse impor●ance about the blasphemer Lev. 24. and the Sabbath breaker here both which hee kept in 〈…〉 ard till he had answer from the Lord. Verse 35. stone him This was esteemed the heaviest of all the foure kinds of death that malesa 〈…〉 s suffered in Israel see the notes on Exod. 21. 12. without the campe Hereupon they used to carrie such out of the cities and execute them farre off from the judgement hall as S●l Iarchi noteth So they dealt with Stephen casting him out of the citie and stoning him Act. 7. 58. likewise with Naboth 1 Kings 21. 13. also with the blasphemer Levit. 24. 14. which was a circumstance that aggravated the punishment being a kind of reproach as the Apostle noteth Heb. 13. 11 12 13. And this severitie sheweth of what weight the commandement touching the Sabbath is the prophanation whereof God would have thus to be avenged And it further signified the eternall death of such as doe not keepe the Sabbath of Christ entring into the rest of God by faith and ceasing from their own works as God did from his Heb. 4. 1 2 3 4 10. 11. Verse 37. And Iehovah said After the violating of the Sabbath and punishment for it God giveth a Law and ordaineth a signe of remembrance to further the sanctification of his people that they might thinke upon his commandements and doe them Vers. 38. sonnes of Israel This Law for Fringes concerned Israel onely not other nations and as the Hebrewes say men onely were bound to weare them not women Women and servants and little children are not bound by the Law to weare the Fringe But by the words of the Scribes every childe that knoweth to clothe himselfe is bound to weare the fringe to the end he may be trayned up in the commandements And women and servants that will weare them may so doe but they blesse not God as men doe when they put them on and so all other commandements which women are not bound unto if they will doe them they doe them without blessing first Maimony tom 1. in Zizith or treat of Fringes ch 3. sect 9. that they make they themselves and not heathens for them a Fringe which is made by an heathen is unlawfull as it is written Speake to the sonnes of Israel that they make unto them Maim in Zizith ch 1. sect 12. a Fringe that is Fringes as in Deut. 22. 12. Moses speaketh of many and so the Greeke and Chaldee translate it here A Fringe is in Hebrew called Tsitsith or Zizith which in Ezek. 8. 3. is used for a locke of haire of the head and is here applied to a Fringe the threds whereof hang downe as locks of haire And the Hebrew Doctors call it also Gnanaph that is a Branch because it hangeth as branches or twigs of a tree The Branch which they make upon the skirt of a garment is called Tsitsith because it is like to Tsitsith a locke of the head Ezek. 8. 3. And this Branch is called White because we are not commanded to die or colour it And for the threds of this Branch there is no set number by the Law And they take a thred of wooll which is died like the color of the Firmament and tye it upon the Branch or Fringe and this thred is called Blew Maim in Zizith ch 1. sect 1. 2. The Fringe is called in Greeke Craspoda and this word is used by the holy Ghost in Matt. 23. 5. and of it the Chaldee also calleth it Cruspedin The word Gedilim used for Pringes in Deut. 22. 12. were the thrums of the cloth which was woven and Tsitsith the Fringe here spoken of were threeds tied unto those thrums with knots on the skirts Hebr. on the wings This is expounded in Deut. 22. 12. on the foure skirts or wings The skirt end or border of a garment is usually called a wing as in Ruth 3. 9. 1 Sam. 15. 27. and 24. 5 11. Deut. 22. 30. Zach. 8. 23. Ezek. 5. 3. Hag. 2. 12. so the foure ends or corners of the earth are called the foure wings thereof Esai 11. 12. Eze. 7. 2. Iob 37. 3. and 38. 13. The garment which a man is bound to make the Fringe on by the Law is a garment which hath foure skirts or more than foure and it is a garment of woollen or of linnen onely But a garment of other stuffe as of silke or cotton or camels haire or the like are not bound to have the Fringe save by the words of our wise men that men may bee admonished to keepe the precept of the Fringe For all clothes spoken of in the Law absolutely are not save of woollen and linnen onely When hee maketh a fringe on a garment that hath five or six skirts he maketh it but on foure of the skirts as it is said UPON THE FOVRE SKIRTS Deu. 22. 12. A garment that is borrowed is not bound to have the Fringe for 30 dayes after and thence forward it is bound A garment of wooll they make the white thereof of threeds of wooll and a garment of flax or linnen they make the white thereof of threeds of flax and so of every garment after the kinde thereof c. Every man that is bound to doe this commandement if hee put upon him a garment which is meet to have the Fringe must put on the Fringe and then put the garment on and if he put it on without the Fringe he breaketh the commandement But
purification the third day was mysticall having reference to the resurrection of Christ w ch was on the third day after his death 1 Cor. 15. 4. whereof see the annotations on Gen. 22. 4. The seventh day was also mysticall as being the number of perfection of the Sabbath and of accomplishing a work as is noted on Gen. 2. 2. Ex. 12. 15. and Lev. 4. 6. and so it figured our full cleansing and ceasing from our sinfull and dead works after that we are sprinkled with the bloud of Iesus and water of his Spirit Heb. 4. 9 10. and 9. 13 14. wash his cloathes w ch was a common rite for all that were defiled with other uncleannesses wherof see Lev. 11. 25. and 14. 8 9. and 15. 5. bathe his flesh in Greeke wash his body the word flesh is expressed before in v. 7. it is meant of his whole body or all his flesh as Lev. 15. 16. cleane at evening after the Sun is set at what time a new day beginneth and so in mysterie a new life to begin This cleansing of the defiled by the dead figured Christs worke of grace upon dead and sinfull men of him it is prophesied Hee shall sprinkle many nations Esai 52. 15. and of him doth the Apostle open this figure saying If the blend of buls and goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the uncleane sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without blemish unto God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9. 13 14. The sprinkling of the ashes of the heifer figured the applying unto us of Christs death whereunto he was delivered for our offences and was raised againe for our justification Rom. 4. 25. The living water wherewith the ashes were mixed figured the Spirit of God which they that beleeve in Christ doe receive Ioh. 7. 38 39. of which he gave this promise Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shal be clean Eze. 36. 25. These being applied unto our consciences by faith as with hyssop w ch purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. by the preaching therof Gal. 3. 2. doe baptise us into Christs death that like as he was raised up frō the dead unto the glorie of the Father even so wee also should walk in newnesse of life Rom. 6. 3 4. And so we draw neere unto God with a true heart in sul assurance of faith having hearts sprinkled from an evill conscience and bodies washed with pure water our robes washed and made white in the bloud of the Lambe Heb. 10. 22. Rev. 7. 14. and cleansing our selves frō all filthines of the flesh and spirit we perfect holinesse in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7. 1. Of these mysteries the Hebrew Doctors though estranged from the true life and light of Christ retained some knowledge for they say When the living water is mixed with the ashes it purifieth the uncleane whereas before that while the ashes were alone they defiled all that were imployed about them And behold the living water signified the water that is on high which taketh away uncleannesse from the ashes c. And loe when it is sprinkled on the uncleane the uncleannesse fleeth from him c. and a cleane spirit resteth upon him and purifieth him R. Menachem on Num. 19. Vers. 20. uncleane by any of the things afore-said about the dead not purifie himselfe or not be purified to wit by having the water sprinkled upon him as the Chaldee explaineth it and the latter part of this verse manifesteth that soule in Chaldee that man cut off in Greeke and Chaldee destroyed defiled the Sanctuarie by comming into it before he hath beene purified For such were shut out of the host Num. 5. 3. how much more out of the Sanctuary Therefore Porters were see there at the gates that none which was unclean in any thing should enter in 2 Chr. 23. 19. An unoleane person that commeth into the Sanctuary presumptuously his punishment is cutting off Num. 19. 20. if ignorantly then he is to bring the sacrifice appointed Lev. 7. Maim in Biath hamikdesh 〈◊〉 3. s. 12. See the annotations on Lev. 5. 2 3. Vers. 21. wash his cloathes as being uncleane and so to continue untill evening likewise he that toucheth the water of separation shall wash his cloathes and be uncleane untill evening This interpretation Chazkuni here giveth of it that in the former branch uncleannesse is implied untill evening and in the latter branch the washing of his cloathes also is implied though not expressed This is one of the mysteries of this Law that a clean mā as he is called in v. 18 19. was made uncleane by sprinkling or touching the holy water which sanctified those that were uncleane and so it had contrary effects to purifie the uncleane and to poulute the cleane as the Sun melteth wax and hardneth clay Hereby the Holy Ghost seemeth to signifie the imperfection and insufficiencie of these legall rites which in their greatest vertue did but sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh as the Apostle saith Heb. 9. 13. and yet even then also left the purifier himselfe in uncleannesse which hee had not before That by consideration of these effects the people might be led unto Christ and his Spirit who is able to purge the conscience from dead workes and to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him Heb. 9. 14. 7. 25. The Hebrewes understand this of such as sprinkled or touched the water when there was no need as when no unclean person or vessell was to be sprinkled with it Maimony in Pharah ch 15. Vers. 22. whatsoever or whomsoever Hebr. all implying men vessels c. the uncleane to wit by the dead of whom was spoken before shall be uncleane to wit untill evening as the end of the verse sheweth and this is an inferiour degree of uncleannesse for the man or vessell polluted by the dead was uncleane seven dayes vers 11. 14. but that w ch such an unclean man or vessell touched was uncleane till the end of that day So in the Hebrew Canons A man which is defiled by the dead and the vessels which that man toucheth are uncleane seven dayes as it is said And yee shall wash your cloathes in the seventh day and ye shal be clean Num. 31. 24. But a man that shall touch a man which is defiled by the dead whether he touch him after that he is separated from the things that defiled him or touch him whiles he toucheth the dead lo this second man is uncleane till the evening as it is said in Num. 19. 22. And the soule that toucheth shall be unclean untill the evening Mai. in Tumath meth ch 5. s. 2. the soule in Chaldee the man that toucheth to wit him that is defiled as before is noted or it the thing which is defiled by the te●d of an uncleane man
the land of Edom Iudg. 11. 18. For the Lord had charged them that they should not meddle with the sonnes of Esau or their possession Deut. 2. 4 5. So Targum Ionathan here paraphraseth they were commanded by the word of the God of heaven that they should not wage warre with them because the time was not yet come when hee would execute 〈◊〉 on Edom by their hands Thus Israel suffered patiently the unkindnesse of Edom and obeyed the Lord herein though the way which they after went thorow the wildernesse was very grievous unto them and their soules were much discouraged because of the same Numb 21. 4 5. Vers. 22. mount Hor a mount in the edge of the land of E●ora and the next resting place which they came unto from Kadesh Num. 33. 37. The name it selfe signifieth a mount for Har in Hebrew is a mountaine and Sol. Iarchi here explaineth it a ●ountaine upon a mountaine 〈◊〉 argum Ionathan nameth it mount Omanos Vers. 24. gathered unto his people that is die and be buried and his soule be among the spirits of just men made perfect as Hebr. 12. 23. Gathering signifieth here taking away by death as in vers 26. and in Esai 57. 1. mercifull men are gathered that is taken away and that which is gathered is the spirit of man as in Psal. 104. 20. thou gatherest their spirit they give up the ghost and returne unto their dust The peoples meane the Fathers deceased as is spoken of David in Act. 13. 36. and in Judg. 2. 10. all that generation were gathered unto their fathers So his people 's here are Aarons godly forefathers as David desireth the contrary Gather not my soule with sinners Psal. 26. 9. See the Annotations on Gen. 25. 8. rebelled against my mouth that is against my word as the Chaldee expoundeth it the Greeke saith yee provoked me See before on vers 12. Vers. 26. strip Aaron or disaray Aaron of his garments meaning of his Priestly robes the garments of holinesse which Moses had made him for 〈◊〉 and for beautifull glory Exod. 28. 2. and which at his consecration to the Priesthood Moses had put upon him Levit. 8. 7 8 9. So Targum Io 〈…〉 expoundeth it strip Aaron of the honourable garments of the Priesthood The taking off of these garments and putting them upon Eleazar signified the taking away of his office and dignity and giving the same to another as by a like similitude God said unto Shebna the treasurer I will drive thee 〈◊〉 thy station and from thy state shall he pull thee downe And it shall be in that day that I will call my servant Eliakim the sonne of Hilkiaeh and I will cloath him with thy robe and strengthen him with thy girdle and I will commit thy gouernment ●●to his hand and he shall be a father to the inhabitants of 〈◊〉 c. Esay 22. 15 19 20 21. As by Aarons offering for his owne sins first and then for the sinnes of the people Levit. 16. 6. 11. 15. the holy Ghost shewed the inability of the legall Priesthood in comparison with Christs to reconcile men unto God Hebr. 7. 26 27 28. so by this disaraying and death of Aaron hee signified the disanulling of that Priesthood for the weaknesse and unprofitablenesse thereof Hobr. 7. 11 18. When therefore the same hands of Moses which had put on the garments did pull them off now at this time for the sinne which the high Priest had committed vers 12. Deut. 32. 50 51. they and all the people were taught to expect a better Priesthood of the Sonne of God who is perfected for evermore Hebr. 7. 28. Eleazar his sonne This was a comfort to all especially to Aaron the father that the Priestly function ended not with the death of the Priest but was derived to his posterity and so continued thorow all ages till Christ came who is a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedek the true Eliazar that is the Helpe of God who is made not after the law of a carnall commandement but after the power of an endlesse life Heb. 7. 11. 16. Wherefore to signifie the continuance of his grace and love to the Church God promised that the Priests the Levites should not want a man before him to offer Burnt-offerings and to kindle Meat-offerings and to doe sacrifice continually Ier. 33. 18. So Aaron did behold in the cloathing of his sonne a type of his owne and of all Israels salvation that his death might not be bitter unto him but he might depart in peace because his eyes did see though as a farre off the salvation of God as Luke 2. 29 30. shall be gathered unto his peoples vers 24. and shall die Hee that before in the worke of his Priesthood made atonement for the people and stood betweene the dead and the living and the plague was stayed Numb 16. 47 48. now dieth himselfe for his own sin an evident demonstration of the insufficiencie of the Leviticall Priesthood Whereupon the Apostle teacheth that they were many Priests because they were not suffered to continue by reason of death But Christ because he continueth ever hath a priesthood which passeth not from one to another wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him seeing hee ever liveth to make intercession for them Hebr. 7. 23 24 25. Vers. 28. Moses stripped Aaron The actions of Moses signified the effects of his ministery and Law 2 Cor. 3. 13. Whereas therefore he unvested Auron by reason of sinne and death which was to ensue it shewed that no Priest who was a sinner and under the power of death could satisfie the justice of the Law and avoid the wrath of God so the Legall Priesthood now might say He hath stript me of my glory and taken the crowne from my head Iob. 19. 9. Againe in putting the priestly garments upon Eleazar who was before this the Prince of the Princes of the Levites Numb 3. 32. he signified that the Law had a shadow of good things to come Heb. 10. 1 and therefore the blessings figured thereby should not be frustrate but continued under hope by succession till hee should come unto whom the right of the high Priesthood belonged even the Branch that should build the Temple of the Lord and should beare the glory and sit and rule upon his throne and should be a Priest upon his throne and the counsell of peace be betweene them both Zac. 6. 12 13. ●er 33. 18. Thus the Law was a Schoolemaster unto Christ Gal. 3. 24. It may also be observed how among the Gentiles their prophets and prophetesses who did weare some ornaments and ensignes of their dignity used solemnly to put them off before their death as resigning them up unto God and iudging it an unmeet thing to die in them as appeareth by the example of Cassandra in the Greeke Poet Aeschylus and of Amphi 〈…〉 s the Prophet in Statius
tribute to the Lord by this homage and tribute they were to acknowledge the victory to be of God and to shew their thankfulnesse for his salvation So David dedicated unto the Lord silver and gold of all nations which hee had subdued 2 Sam. 8. 11. 12. And Esaias prophesieth In that time shall a present be brought unto the LORD of hosts of a people scattered and peeled c. Esay 18. 7. one soule of 500 by soule is here meant person of mankinde and living body of beasts as after is explained And as the 12000 souldiers had much more of the spoile considering their small number than the other many thousands of the congregation so their tribute to the Lord was much lesse by proportion they giving but the five hundreth part when the congregation gave the fiftieth ver 30. God requireth lesse of them as their labour service and jeoparding of their lives had beene greater than their brethrens Vers. 29. unto Eleazar The Lord who was the inheritance of the Priests and Levites Dent. 18. 1 2. and had given them the ordinary heave-offerings which the Israelites offered unto him Num. 18. 19. giveth them also this extraordinary tribute which was levied for him So Abram gave to Melchisedek the Priest the tithe of the spoiles which he had gotten in warre Gen. 14. 20. And as the Levites had the tithes in Israel and the Priests had but a tenth of those tithes Num. 18. 21. 24. 26. 28. so is there here a like proportion allotted whiles the Levites had the fiftieth part vers 30. and the Priests but the five hundreth Vers. 30. one portion of fiftie or one taken or detained of fiftie so in vers 47. of the sheepe or of the flocke-beasts that is of sheepe and of goats for both these are implied under the name flocke as in Lev. 1. 10. of all beasts that is of all manner of beasts but this seemeth to be meant of the beasts fore-named onely and not of Camels or other uncleane beasts because in the particular summes after rehearsed vers 32. 39. there are no uncleane but Asses onely spoken of Chazkuni here saith If thou aske why God commanded not to take a tribute of the Camels seeing there were man camels there as it is written in the warre of Gideon against the Midianites Their Camels were without number Iudg. 6. 5. and 7. 12. the answer is The Scripture mentioneth those onely whereof they tooke the tribute and they tooke no tribute of uncleane beasts save of Asses because they are sanctified by the firstling of the Asse Exod. 13. 13. and 34. 19 20. which keepe the charge or observe the observation keepe watch and doe the service see the notes on Num. 18. 5. Vers. 32. the residue of the prey the cattell whose numbers follow are called the residue or remainder either because some had beene slaine for the souldiers to eat or in respect of the gold and silver and other such spoiles whereof there was no tribute levied Vers. 33. seventie and two thousand that is seventie thousand and two thousand as was explained in the former verse So after Vers. 35. soules of mankind Heb. soule of Adam meaning by soule the persons and by Adam or mankinde the women as after is explained For as at the first both man and woman were called Adam Gen. 5. 2. so the same name is often used for both sexes as here and in vers 40. 46 47. Vers. 40. two and thirtie So the whole number of beasts and girles which were the Lords tribute out of the Souldiers halfe was eight hundred and fortie which were given to Eleazar the Priest vers 41. Vers. 47. one portion of fiftie or one taken of fiftie as in vers 30. The particular summes as may be gathered by the former computation were six thousand seven hundred and fiftie sheep seven hundred and twentie oxen six hundred and ten Asses three hundred and twentie soules of young women the whole summe of them altogether was eight thousand and foure hundred which were taken out of the Congregations halfe and given to the Levites So the whole prize brought home from the Midianites and kept for the use of Israel was of beasts and women-kinde eight hundred thousand and fortie thousand out of which the Lord tooke for his Priests and Levites nine thousand two hundred and fortie Thus he enriched his people with the spoiles of their enemies and they in homage thankfulnesse to the Lord gave him one of five hundred out of the one halfe and one of fiftie out of the other halfe as Abram gave one of ten to Melchisedek the Priest of God of all the spoiles that he had taken from his enemies Gen. 14. 20. Vers. 48. the Officers or Bishops as in vers 14. Vers. 49. in our hand that is in our power under our leading and charge w ch the Greeke and Chaldee translate with us there lacketh not Heb. there is not numbred or mustered to wit as wanting or missing for in such musters the number is observed of those that are absent as of those presēt This was a rare and wonderfull mercie that twelve thousand men of Israel should vanquish so great a nation of Midian without losse of any mans life whereas commonly the sword devoureth one as well as another 2 Sam. 11. 25. But hereby appeareth that precious in the eyes of the LORD is the death of his Saints Psal. 116. 15. and a much like speech was uttered by our Saviour Of them which thou gavest me have I lost none Ioh. 18. 9. Moreover by this victory God encouraged his people to fight the residue of his battels against the Canaanites Vers. 50. an oblation for Iehovah or as the Chaldee explaineth it the oblation of the Lord in Greeke a gift to the Lord. This was a voluntary gift whereas the former levie was commanded v. 25 c. hath found that is hath gotten in this war jewels or instruments vessels atonement for our soules that is for our lives which God hath spared and that there be no plague amongst us as Exod. 30. 12. Herein also they might have respect unto their sinne in sparing the women alive for which Moses reproved them vers 14. 17. Thus though they found all alive yet were they not proud neither boasted of their valour but gave the glory unto God and in themselves they were humbled in conscience of their unworthinesse Vers. 51. every wrought jewell Hebr. jewell or instrument of worke that is cunningly wrought So as the matter was the best of gold the forme also was the best Chazkuni here saith The Scripture sheweth that they brought no broken instrument Vers. 52. shekels what the shekell waighed see on Gen. 20. 16. of the captaines or from the captaines that is Moses tooke the gold of them as in vers 51. and 54. Vers. 54. the Tent the Lords Tabernacle where it was a memoriall for them as the like is spoken of the halfe shekels w ch the Israelites gave when
Chaldee do interpret it the Burning a place so called because the people complaining there the fire of the Lord was kindled and consumed some of them See the historie in Num. 11. 1 2 3. Massah in English the tentation and so the Greek and Chaldee translate it A place at Rephidim in the wildernesse before they came to Horeb ten stations from Egypt in the first yeere of their travell where wanting water they tempted God saying Is the Lord amongst us or no and there he gave them water out of the Rocke Exod. 17. See the annotations there and Psal. 95. 8 9. Heb. 3. 8. c. Deut. 6. 16. Kibroth-hattaavah in English the Graves of lust so translated also by the Greeke Here a little from Taberah forementioned they loathed Manna and lusted for flesh God gave them Quailes but they died of a plague 〈◊〉 the flesh was yet betweene their teeth and 〈◊〉 buried there occasioned this name of the 〈◊〉 for a perpetuall memoriall See Num. 11. 4 34. and the annotations there Also Psal. 78. 〈◊〉 31. and 106. 14 15. Vers. 23. Kadesh-barnea where being come thorow the wildernesse of Pharan to the border of the land of Canaan they were commanded of God to goe take possession Then they sent spies who discouraged the people so through want of 〈◊〉 they durst not enter and were for it condem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 40. yeeres wandring in the wildernesse and 〈◊〉 ended their dayes See Numb 13. and 14. 〈◊〉 against the mouth that is against the 〈◊〉 or commandement in Greeke yee disobeyed 〈◊〉 word Vers. 24. that I knew you the Greeke expounds 〈…〉 the day that he was knowne unto you So he 〈…〉 deth with a generall charge of rebellion upon them shewing hereby the impossibility of the law and ministery thereof to bring men unto God for it causeth sinne and wrath to abound as 〈◊〉 4. 15. and 8 3. Gal. 3. 19 22. For besides these 〈…〉 lars they sinned many other times in the 〈…〉 nesse as is noted on Num. 14. 22. and in Psa. 〈◊〉 and 106. Vers. 25. I fell downe in Greeke I prayed Hee 〈…〉 th to speake of their reconciliation to God which was by the prayer of Moses as a mediatour 〈◊〉 figure of Christ by whom and not by our own deserts we have entrance into the kingdome of God Gal. 3. 22. 24. Rom. 3. 20 22. and 5. 1 2 c. as I fell downe to wit at the first as v. 18. or which I fell downe that is which I said before that I fell downe But the Hebrew asher which is sometimes used for as as in Ier. 48. 8. said for to destroy that is said that he would destroy you See the like phrases so expounded in Esay 49. 6. with Acts 13. 47. 1 Chron. 17. 4. with 2 Sam. 7. 5. Matt. 20. 19. with Mark 10. 33 34. Vers. 26. Lord Iehovoh in Greeke Lord Lord in Chaldee Lord God See the annotations on Gen. 15. 2. thy people this respecteth their adoption in Christ and justification 1 Pet. 2. 9 10. inheritance this implyeth their sanctification unto the obedience and service of God by the Spirit See Exod. 34. 9. through thy greatnes in Greek through thy great strength as v. 29. it implyeth also his great goodnesse and therefore is often spoken of his gracious workes for his people 1 Chron. 17. 19. Luke 1 49. Vers. 27. thy servants Hee meaneth Gods oath unto them to multiply their seed and to give them the land for an eternall inheritance as is expressed in this prayer before Exod. 32. 13. So the Greeke addeth here unto whom thou swarest by thy selfe hardnesse the naturall corruption whereby the heart is hardned that it cannot repent and beleeve the word of God from which the two evils following doe flow Rom. 2. 5. Vers. 28. the land that is as the Greeke and Chaldee both explaine the inhabitants of the land This reason is also alleaged in Exod. 32. 12. and Numb 14. 16. CHAP. X. 1 A rehearsall of Gods mercies in renuing the two tables of the Covenant 6 in leading the people forward towards Canaan and continuing the priest-hood after Aarons death 8 in separating the tribe of Levi unto the ministerie 10 in hearkning unto Moses his suit for the people 12 An exhortation unto obedience 14 because of Gods glorie 15 love unto Israel 17 justice towards all 21 his fearefull workes 22 and multiplication of his people AT that time Iehovah said unto mee Hew thee two tables of stone like the first and come up unto me into the mount and thou shalt make thee an Arke of wood And I will write on the tables the words which were on the first tables which thou brakest and thou shalt put them in the Arke And I made an Arke of Shittim wood and hewed two tables of stone like the first went up into the mount and the two tables in my hand And he wrote on the tables according to the first writing the ten words which Iehovah had spoken unto you in the mount out of the midst of the fire in the day of the assembly and Iehovah gave them unto me And I turned my self and came downe from the mount and I put the tables in the Arke which I had made and there they be as Iehovah commanded me And the sonnes of Israel journeyed from Beeroth of the sonnes of Iaakan from Moserah there Aaron dyed and was buried there and Eleazar his sonne administred the Priests office in his stead From thence they journeyed to Gudgodah and from Gudgodah to Iot-bath a land of rivers of waters At that time Iehovah separated the tribe of Levi to beare the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah to stand before Iehovah to minister unto him and to blesse in his name unto this day Therefore Levi hath no part or inheritance with his brethren Iehovah he is his inheritance as Iehovah thy God spake unto him And I stood in the mount according to the former dayes fortie dayes and fortie nights and Iehovah hearkened unto me at that time also Iehovah would not destroy thee And Iehovah said unto me Arise goe in journey before the people that they may goe in and possesse the land which I sware unto their fathers to give unto them And now Israel what doth Iehovah thy God aske of thee but to feare Iehovah thy God to walke in all his waies and to love him and to serve Iehovah thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule To keepe the commandements of Iehovah and his statutes which I command thee this day for good unto thee Behold unto Iehovah thy God belong the heavens and the heavens of heavens the earth and all that therein is Onely in thy fathers Iehovah had a delight to love them and he chose their seed after them even you above all peoples as it is this day Circumcise therefore the super fluous foreskinne of your heart and make not your necke stiffe any more For Iehovah your God
Maim treat of Theft ch 9. sect 2 3. Others thinke that if he either served himselfe with him or sold him hee was to dye and this may well bee the meaning of the Law for and often signifieth or as is noted on Gen. 13. 8. and 19. 12. shall dye as the Hebrewes say he was to be strangled to death Maim ibid. ch 9. sect 1. Vers. 8. plague of leprosie which might bee on mens bodies or on garments or in houses The Law of all these is given at large in Levit. 13 and 14 Chapters all that the Priests the Greeke translateth all the Law that the Priests the Levites shall shew unto you This is a warning to Israel that if any man had the Leprosie or a sore like the Leprosie he should not dissemble or hide it or pluck off or cut away the signes thereof or labour by medicines to cure it or doe any thing thereto but as the Priest directed him according to the Law because this plague was usually by the hand of God for mens sinnes and did pollute both the person himselfe and all that touched him so that for the discerning and curing of this plague they should seeke unto God by the meanes which hee appointed Therefore from this Law the Hebrews teach Hee that plucketh off the signes of uncleannesse either all or some of them or seareth the living raw flesh all or some of it or cutteth all the sor● out of his flesh or out of a garment or house ●ither before he come to the Priest or whiles he is shut up or after c. hee transgresseth against this prohibition TAKE THOV HEED IN THE PLAGVE OF LEPROSIE c. Deut. 25. 8. Maimony tom 3. treat of Leprosie chap. 10. sect 1. See the Annotations on Levit. 13. as I commanded them If then the Priest spake or did otherwise than God prescribed it was not to stand A Priest that pronounceth him uncleane that is cleane or him cleane that is uncleane he doth nothing at all for it is written in Lev. 13. v. 14 15. he is uncleane and the Priest shall pronounce him uncleane c. Maim in Leprosie ch 9. sect 3. Vers. 9. unto Marie in Hebrew Mirjam in Greeke Mariam shee was the sister of Moses and Aaron a Prophetesse in Israel who for speaking against Moses was smitten of God with Leprosie Numb 12. whose example is for a warning to all that they should not sinne as shee did lest God plague them also and that the justice of the Law should bee executed upon all Lepers without respect of persons So all other examples in Scripture are examples unto us 1 Cor. 10. 6 11. and so Christ saith Remember Lots wife Luk. 17. 32. Vers. 10. when thou lendest or when thou shalt exact of thy neighbour the exaction of any thing that is any debt which if it were with rigour or of a poore man that had not to pay was unlawfull See the notes on Exod. 22. 25. The Greeke translateth If there be a debt in thy neighbour that is if he be indebted to thee what debt soever See the notes on Deut. 15. 2. thou shalt not goe in This is spoken to the creditor and as the Hebrews say to the messenger of the Magistrate sent to take a pawne He that lendeth to his neighbour poore or rich may not take a pawne of him but by the Synedrion that is by authority of the Magistrate and though it bee the messenger of the Synedrion that commeth for a pawne he may not come into his house and take his pawne but must stand without and the borrower is to bring out a pawne unto him Deut. 24. 10. If it be so what difference is there betweene the crediter and the messenger of the Synedrion The messenger of the court he may take the pawne out of the hand of the borrower by force and give it the lender but the creditor may not take the pawne till the borrower give it him with consent If the creditor transgresse and goe into the borrowers house for his pawne or snatcheth a pawne cut of his hand by force hee is not to bee beaten because the act is broken off for he must restore the pawne Deut. 24. 13. If he keepe not this 〈◊〉 to restore it as if the pawne be lost or burnt he is to be beaten and to restore the price of the pawne Maimon ●om 4. treat of the Lender and Borrower ch 3. sect 4. Vers. 12. not lie downe to sleepe not goe to bed For breach of this Law the Lord reproveth Israel They lay themselves downe upon clothes laid to pledge by every altar Amos 2. 8. But hereby not onely the use of the poore mans pawne but the keeping of it is forbidden with his pawne that is and his pawne by thee or in thy custody Maimony in Lender and Borrower c. 3. s. 5. Vers. 13. when the Sun or as the Greeke translateth about the going downe of the Sunne in Exod. 22. 26. it is said before the Sunne goeth downe see the Annotations there where is shewed that every pawne is to bee restored when the poore man hath need of it by night or by day If the pawne must thus be restored when he hath need what booteth it to take the pawne The Hebrewes answer that by this meanes the debt is not released in the seventh yeere which the Law biddeth Deut. 15. 1 2 3. and if the borrower die his moveables are not made his childrens but paiment is made by the pawne after his death Maimony ibid. chap. 3. sect 5. justice in Greeke almes a worke of mercy which God will reward as on the contrary in v. 15. he saith it bee in thee a sinne that is an iniquity which God will punish Vers. 14. not fraudulently oppresse or not defraud the Greeke translateth Thou shalt not fraudulently keepe backe the hire of the poore c. which word the Apostle useth in like ●ase saying Behold the hire of the labourers c. which is by you fraudulently kept backe crieth c. Iam. 5. 4. and among the other weighty lawes our Saviour nameth this for one in Mark 10. 19. See also Levit. 19. 13. thy gates that is as the Greeke and Chaldee translate thy cities Vers. 15. In his day in Greeke The same day Day is used for all time his hire or his wages whether for his owne labour or for his beasts or other things So the Hebrewes explaine it Whether it bee the hire of man or the hire of beasts or the hire of instruments hee is bound to give it in his time and if hee keepe it after the time he transgresseth against a prohibition Maimony tom 4. treat of Hiring chap. 〈◊〉 sect 1. not goe downe upon it in Lev. 19. 13. it is said it shall not abide all night with thee which two the Hebrewes unfold thus What is the time or day of him that is hired He that is hired for a day his hire is due all that nights of
unto thee For hee is an abomination to Iehovah thy God whosoever doth these things whosoever doth unrighteousnesse Remember that which Amalek did unto thee by the way when ye were come forth out of Egypt How hee met thee by the way and smote the hind most of thee all that were feeble behind thee and thou wast faint and weary and hee feared not God Therefore it shall be when Iehovah thy God hath given rest unto thee from all thine enemies round about in the land which Iehovah thy God giveth unto thee for an inheritance to possesse it thou shalt blot out the remembrance of Amalek from under the heavens thou shalt not forget it Annotations A ●o●t●oversie a plea or strife in Greeke a contradiction and they or that they the Iudges may judge them And this Law concerneth all Courts the highest of 71 Iudges the Court of twenty three and the Court of three the lowest of which judged inferiour causes and money matters and had authority to beat malefactors but not to put to death justifie that is pronounce just so absolve or acquit in judgment condemne for wicked or pronounce wicked and so tendemne in judgment as the Greeke translateth it condemne This is contrary to the former and so the Apostle opposeth them saying It is God that justifieth who is hee that condemneth Rom. 8. 33. 34. This law is perpetuall the transgression whereof is a great sinne for Hee that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are an abomination to the LORD Prov. 17. 15. Vers. 2. worthy to be beaten Hebr. a son of beating which the Greeke translateth worthy of stripes and the Chaldee a sonne guilty of or worthy to bee beaten So the sonne or childe of hell Matt. 23. 15. is one worthy of hell fire the son of death in 1 Sam. 20. 31. is one that was worthy of death and therefore should be killed and in the Gospell If the sonne of peace bee there in the house Luk. 10. 6. which another Evangelist explaineth thus If the house be worthy Matt. 10. 13. Now who they were that deserved beating are by the Hebrewes shewed thus Hee that transgresseth against a prohibition whereby the contrary commandement to be done is broken off and they warned him of it and said unto him Doe not this thing for if thou doest it and keepest not that which is commanded concerning it thou shalt be beaten and he transgresseth and keepeth not the commandement loe he is to be beaten Maimony in Sanhedrin chap. 16. sect 4. More particularly Th●se are to be beaten whosoever transgresseth against a prohibition for which he deserveth to be cut off but is not to bee put to death by the Synedrion as he that eateth fat or bloud or leven at the Passeover Likewise whosoever transgresseth against a prohibition for which they are guilty of death by the band of God as hee that eateth of fruits before the first-fruits tithes c. be paid and a Priest that is uncleane and eateth of the heave-offering which is cleane Likewise who so transgresseth against a prohibition wherein there is an act or worke as hee that boyleth a Kid in his mothers milke which the Hebrewes understand of eating flesh with milke or that weareth Linsey-woolsey But a prohibition wherein is no act as to walke as a tale-bearer to revenge or beare grudge or receive a false report c. for such he is not beaten nor for any other wherein there is an act some few excepted Every prohibition for which they are to be put to death by the Magistrate as adulterie working on the Sabbath c. they are not beaten therefore So every prohibition for which they are to make satisfaction as robbery theft c. they are not beaten for it And every prohibition whereby the contrary commandement is broken off as Thou shalt not take the dam with the young Deut. 22. 6. Thou shalt not wholly rid the corner of thy field Levit. 19. 9. c. they are not beaten for it unlesse they keepe not the commanded thing concerning them that is unlesse they omit the letting of the dam goe Deut. 22. 7. and the leaving of the corner for the poore Levit. 19. 10. And for a prohibition implied in the generals they are not beaten but all other prohibitions which are in the Law they are to bee beaten for doing them What is that prohibition comprised in the generals It is one prohibition which generally compriseth many things as yee shall not eat with the bloud Levit. 19. 26. And so when it is said Doe not such a thing and such a thing forasmuch as there is not a particular prohibition set before every one of them he is not to be beaten for every one of them unlesse they bee divided in other prohibitions or said by word of mouth that they are divided As where it is said Eat not of it raw or sodden Exodus 12. 9. hee is not beaten for eating of it raw and sodden twice but once Of the first-fruits hee saith Yee shall not eat bread and parched corne and greene eares Levit. 23. 14. a man for eating these three is to bee beaten thrice by word of mouth wee have beene taught that these are divided or severall It is said in Deut. 18. 10. Let there not bee found in thee any that maketh his sonne or his daughter to passe thorow the fire a diviner of divinations an observer of times although all these things be comprehended generally in one prohibition yet are they divided in other prohibitions as in Levit. 19. 26. ye shall not observe fortunes and yee shall not observe times to teach that every one of these is a prohibition by it selfe severall and so all other of like sort Maimony in Sanhedrin ch 18. sect 1 2 3. Finally they say All prohibitions for which cutting off is due but not death by the Magistrate for which men are to be beaten are one and twenty All for which death is due by the hand of God which are prohibitions wherein an act is for which men are to be beaten are eighteene All prohibitions in the Law for which there is neither cutting off due nor death by the Magistrate for which men are to be beaten are an hundred sixtie and eight So there are found in all which are to be beaten 207. Maimony ibidem chap. 19. All which are there particularly related but would be too long here to repeat the Iudge that is the Iudges as the Greeke translateth for one Iudge sate not alone to judge controversies Neither was any man to be beaten without witnesses of his crime No man is to bee beaten but by witnesses and evidence and they are to examine the witnesses by inquiry and diligent search even as they do in judgments of life and death Maimony in Sanhedrin chap. 16. sect 4. cause him to lie downe or to be laid downe and bound fast the manner is said to bee thus both his hands
his commandements 1 Iohn 5. 3. And this is his commandement that we should beleeve on the name of his Sonne Iesus Christ and love one another c. 1 Iohn 3. 23. Vers. 17. But if or And if thine heart turne c. This is the death and evill fore-spoken of see Deut. 29. 18. other gods in Chaldee the idols of the peoples Vers. 18. perishing yee shall perish that is assuredly and speedily perish as the Greeke saith perish with perdition So in Deut. 4. 26. Vers. 19. I call the heavens c. This obtestation of heavens and earth used also before in Deut. 4. 26. may be understood of God and the Angels in heaven as Paul expresseth them in 1 Tim. 5. 21. or of the other creatures also in heaven and in earth as Iosua said This stone shall be a witnesse unto us for it hath heard all the words of the Lord c. Ios. 24. 27. So in Deut. 32. 1. Esa. 1. 2. Give eare O heavens heare Oearth in Psa. 50. 4. He will call to the heavens from above and to the earth to judge his people and in Iob 20. 27. the heavens shall reveale his iniquity and the earth shall rise up against him I have set Hebr. I have given that is faithfully proposed by doctrine and discharged my dutie so in vers 15. The life and blessing which he set before them was by the faith of Christ Gal. 2. 16. and 3. 9. the death and curse was by refusing Christ and seeking to be justified by the workes of the Law for as many as are of the workes of the Law are under the curse Gal. 3. 10. therefore chuse Hebr. and chuse thou or and thou shalt chuse which is the dutie of all Gods people to be performed by grace in Christ. So David chose the way of truth the precepts of God Psal. 119. 30. 173. Compare also Ios. 24. 15 22. Thargum Ionathan explaineth this speech thus and chuse ye the way of life which is the Law that ye may live in the life of the world to come you and your sonnes This is true if it be understood not of the Law of workes but of the Law of faith as Rom. 3. 27 28. and 9. 31 32 33. Vers. 20. to hearken to his voice in Chaldee to receive his word unto him Chald. unto his feare he is thy life that is the author of thy life and salvation through Christ as in Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternall to know thee the onely true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent yea Christ himselfe is the resurrection and the life Iob. 11. 25. and 14. 6. And in 1 Iohn 5. 20. We know that the Sonne of God is come and hath given us an understanding that we may know him that is true and we are in him that is true even in his Son Iesus Christ this is the true God and eternall life CHAP. XXXI 1 Moses being ready to die encourageth the people that should goe into Canaan 7 He encourageth Iosua that should be their Governour 9 He delivereth the Law unto the Priests which was to be read in the soventh yeere unto the people 14 Moses and Iosua present themselves before the Lord 16 who fore-telleth the peoples falling from him and his anger against them therefore 19 Hee commandeth a song to be written to testifie against the people 24 Moses delivereth the booke of the Law to the Levites to be kept in the side of the Arke for a witnesse against them and their rebellion 28 Hee maketh a protestation to the Elders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Moses went and spake these words unto all Israel And hee said unto them I am an hundred twenty yeeres old this day I can no more goe out and come in and Iehovah hath said unto me thou shalt not goe over this Iordan Iehovah thy God he goeth over before thee hee will destroy these nations from before thee and thou shalt possesse them Iosua he shall go over before thee as Iehovah hath said And Iehovah will doe unto them as hee did to Sihon and to Og Kings of the Amorite and unto the land of them whom hee destroyed And Iehovah will give them before you and yee shall doe unto them according to every commandement which I have commanded you Be ye strong and couragious feare not neither be discouraged because of them for Iehovah thy God he it is that goeth with thee he will not faile thee nor for sake thee And Moses called unto Iosua and said unto him in the eies of all Israel Be thou strong and couragious for thou shalt goe in with this people into the land which Iehovah hath sworne unto their fathers to give unto them and thou shalt cause them to inherit it And Iehovah he it is that goeth before thee hee will be with thee hee will not faile thee nor forsake thee feare not neither be dismaid And Moses wrote this Law and gave it unto the Priests the sonnes of Levi which bare the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah and unto all the Elders of Israel And Moses commanded them saying at the end of seven yeeres in the solemnity of the yeere of release in the feast of Boothes When all Israel is come to appeare before Iehovah thy God in the place which he shall chuse thou shalt reade this Law before all Israel in their eares Gather together the people men and women and children and thy stranger that is within thy gates that they may heare and that they may learne and may feare Iehovah your God and observe to doe all the words of this Law And that their sonnes which have not knowne may heare and learne to feare Iehovah your God all the daies that yee shall live on the land whither ye are going over Iordan to possesse it And Iehovah said unto Moses Behold thy daies approach to die call Iosua and present your selves in the Tent of the congregation that I may give him a charge And Moses and Iosua went and presented themselves in the Tent of the congregation And Iehovah appeared in the Tent in a pillar of a cloud the pillar of the cloud stood over the doore of the Tent. And Iehovah said unto Moses Behold thou liest downe with thy fathers and this people will rise up and goe a whoring after the gods of the strangers of the land whither they are going in to be amongst them and will forsake mee and breake my covenant which I have stricken with them And mine anger shall be kindled against them in that day and I will forsake them and will hide my face from them and they shall be devoured and many evils and distresses shall finde them and they will say in that day have not these evils found us because our God is not amongst us And I hiding will hide my face in that day for all the evils which they shall have done in that they are turned unto other gods And now write ye
this song for you and teach it the sonnes of Israel put it in their mouthes that this song may be a witnesse for mee against the sonnes of Israel For I will bring them into the land which I sware unto their fathers that floweth with milke and honey and they shall eat and be filled and be fat and they will turne unto other gods and serve them and despightfully provoke me and breake my covenant And it shall be when many evils and distresses have found them that this song shall answer before them for a witnesse for it shall not be forgotten out of the mouth of their seed for I know their imagination which they doe this day before I have brought them in unto the land which I sware And Moses wrought this song in that day and taught it the sonnes of Israel And he charged Ioshua the sonne of Nun and said Be strong and couragious for thou shalt bring in the sonnes of Israel unto the land which I sware unto them and I will be with thee And it was when Moses had made an end of writing the words of this Law in a booke untill they were finished That Moses commanded the Levites which bare the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah saying Take this booke of the Law and put it in the side of the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah your God that it may be there for a witnesse against thee For I know thy rebellion and thy stiffe necke Behold while I am yet alive with you this day yee have beene rebellious against Iehovah and how much more after my death Gather together unto mee all the Elders of your Tribes and your Officers that I may speake in their eares these words and call the heavens and the earth to witnesse against them For I know that after my death corrupting yee will corrupt your selves and will turne aside from the way which I have commanded you and evill will befall you in the latter daies because yee will doe evill in the eyes of Iehovah to provoke him to anger through the worke of your hands And Moses spake in the eares of all the Church of Israel the words of this song untill they were ended Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the two and fiftieth Section or Lecture of the Law See the notes on Gen. 6. 9. And here Moses setteth the state of Israel in order before his death OLd Hebr. sonne of an hundred and twenty yeeres of which phrase see Gen. 5. 32. So long while Noe preached to the world building the Arke Gen. 6. 3 14. 1 Pet. 3. 19 20. Of these 120. yeeres Moses lived 40. in Pharaohs court in Egypt Acts 7. 20 23. forty in the land of Madian Acts 7. 29 30. Exod. 7. 7. and 40. yeeres he governed Israel I can no more goe out that is no more administer in my office see the Annotations on Num. 27. 17. This inability of Moses was not so much for his age for his eye was not dim nor his naturall moisture fled Deut. 34. 7. as for the ordinance of God next mentioned and Iehovah or for Iehovah hath said as is shewed in Num. 20. 12. Deut. 3. 25 26. And is often in stead of For as is noted on Gen. 12. 19. Or it may be taken as another reason why Moses might no longer governe them Vers. 3. Ioshua in Greeke Iesus who was substitute in Moses place Num. 27. 16 17 18. c. A figure of our Lord Iesus who by grace and truth bringeth us into Gods eternall rest after the ending of Moses Law Iohn 1. 17. Rom. 10. 4. Thus the people are comforted in respect of their sorrow for Moses death by promise of the Lords presence among them and Ioshuahs succeeding government under him Vers. 4. of the Amorite that is of the Amorites as the Greeke translateth by whose destruction before mentioned in Numb 21. 23. c. Deut. 2. and 3. Israel is encouraged against their other enemies the land that is the people of the land Vers. 5. commanded you which was to root them out and let none remaine Deut. 20. 16 17. Vers. 6. Be ye strong or Be confirmed Hold fast to wit your faith in God in Greeke Quit you like men which word Paul useth in 1 Cor. 16. 13. So after in vers 7. couragious or be hardy strong valiant in heart and carriage This word is applied to the heart in Psal. 27. 14. and armes in Prov. 31. 17. and signifieth an increase and stedfastnesse Prov. 24. 5. Ruth 1. 18. The like exhortation is often used as Ios. 10. 25. 1 Chron. 22. 13. 2 Chron. 32. 7. hee it is in Chaldee his Word it is So in vers 8. faile thee or let thee goe leave thee to thy selfe but will hold thee fast So vers 8. and Ios. 1. 5. Heb. 13. 5. Vers. 7. strong and couragious or confirmed and strong as vers 6. Iosua being to beare the charge and toile of the people hath the same exhortation and promise in particular that was before unto all and it was in the eyes of all lest any after Moses death should deny his authority A like speech Davide made to Salomon 1 Chron. 28. 20. Vers. 8. he will be with thee the Chaldee paraphraseth his Word will be thy helpe Vers. 9. this Law in Greeke all the words of this Law in a booke which bare the Arke they had the chiefe charge to looke to the Arke and other holy things and though the Levites bare it as appeareth by Num. 3. 31. and 4. 15. and 10. 21. yet sometime the Priests themselves also bare it as when they passed over Iordan Ios. 3. 6 17. when they compassed Iericho Ios. 6. 12. So after in v. 25. Moses spake to the Levites the Elders the Magistrates as the Priests by teaching so the Elders by governing are to look that the Law of the Lord be observed Mal. 2. 7. Hos. 4. 6. Mich. 3. 1. 2 Chron. 19. 6 8 9 10. Vers. 10. of seven yeeres that is of every seventh yeere which was a yeere of release Deu. 15. 1. the solemnity or the set time as the Greeke and Chaldee translate it the time release of debts Deut. 15. 1 2 c. that being freed from worldly cares they might apply their mindes to Gods Law A figure of the yeere of grace and remission of our debts by Christ whereupon wee should give our selves to holinesse Luke 4. 18 19 21. Rom. 6. 10 11 12 13. Boothes or Tabernacles whereof see Lev. 23. Vers. 11. which he shall chuse to set his Arke and Tabernacle and so to place his name there Deut. 16. 2. thou shalt reade speaking to Israel generally and it was performed in speciall by the chiefest of them either the high Priest as Ezra the chiefe of them that returned from Babylon read it Nehem. 8. 1 2 3 c. or as the Hebrewes say the King himselfe when they had a King used to reade For this Commandement was to Ioshua
blessing of the Gospell that the meeke and needy shall eat and have enough Psal. 132. 15. God filleth the hungry with good things and sends away the rich empty Luke 1. 53. The meeke meaneth the regenerate who are mortified with Christ and their fierce nature made meeke and humble your heart shall live hee turneth his speech to the meeke and seekers of God who should eat of Christs flesh that was given for the life of the world and thereby live for ever Ioh. 6. 51. The living of the heart importeth also the chearing comfort and solace of the same Gen. 45. 27. the contrary whereof is in the dying of the heart 1 Sam. 25. 37. See also the like promise Psal. 69. 33. The Chaldee yeeldeth this sense The spirit of prophesie shall rest in the thoughts of their heart for ever Vers. 28. All the ends c. that is the dwellers in the utmost parts and ends of the world A prophesie of the calling of the Gentiles by the preaching of the Gospell Rom. 16. 26. Eph. 2. 1 2 c. remember the Chaldee addeth remember his miracles families of the heathens or kindreds of the nations whereof see Gen. 10. 5 18 20 31 32. Vers. 29. ruler among the heathens to reigne over them by his Word and Spirit and so to be God not of the Iewes only but also of the Gentiles Rom. 3. 29 30. Vers. 30. All the fat ones that is the rich and mightie personages fat with plentie Deut. 31. 20. For Kings and Queenes and men of authority and wealth are also called to the participati● of Christs grace in his Church Esay 60. 3 5 10. Rev. 21. 24. 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. Sometime fatnesse is used to note out Gods spirituall blessings Psal. 36. 9. and 63. 6. and 65. 12. and 92. 15. Prov. 28. 25. all that goe downe to the dust this is the poore base and wretched people which for their misery and affliction are said to goe downe and sit in the dust as Psal. 113. 7. Esay 47. 1. and 29. 4. Iob 30. 19. Lament 3. 29. but the Chaldee expounds it the house of the grave that quickeneth not or cannot quicken that is the poore wretched man that doth not or cannot as Psal. 77. 5. keepe alive his soule that cannot nourish him-selfe he shall eat So to keepe alive is to nourish Esa. 7. 21. Or he that revived that is cheered not nor refreshed his soule with comfort as before vers 27. or he that cannot keepe alive his soule that is not save it from wrath and eternall death by his owne workes he shall live by faith in Christ. So this phrase to keepe the soule alive is used Ezek. 18. 27. The Chaldee giveth this sense and he will not keepe alive the soule of the wicked Vers. 31. A seed The posterity of those godly forementioned for God chuseth the seed with the parents Deut. 10. 15. and 30. 6 19. Psal. 69. 37. and 102. 29. Esay 43. 5. and 44. 3. Or the seed of Christ the children which God giveth him as Esa. 53. 10. Hebr. 2. 13. Or a seed that is a small remnant as Rom. 9. 29. the Chaldee saith the seed of Abraham for a generation a race of Gods children as Psal. 73. 15. and 24. 6. or to generation that is for ever through all ages Vers. 32. They shall come The Chaldee explaineth it Their sonnes shall come his justice the justice of God which is by faith in Christ Psal. 71. 〈◊〉 16 24. Rom. 10. 3 4. people that shall be 〈◊〉 hereafter to come or a people borne that is regenarate Psal. 87. 4 5. Ioh. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 1. 33. So people created Psal. 102. 19. that he hath done hath performed or accomplished that justice and all things appertaining to it The Greeke referreth it to the people whom the Lord hath made the Chaldee to the marvellous workes which he hath done PSAL. XXIII David under the similitude of a Shepherd sheweth 〈◊〉 love and mercies to his people whereby their 〈…〉 is confirmed A Psalme of David IEhovah feedeth me I shall not lacke In folds of budding grasse he maketh me lie downe hee easily leadeth mee by the waters of rests He returneth my soule he leadeth me in the beaten paths of justice for his Name sake Yea though I should walk in the valley of the shade of death I will not feare evill for thou wilt be with me thy rod and thy staffe they shall comfort me Thou furnishest before me a table in presence of my distressers thou makest fat my head with oile my cup is abundant Doubtlesse good and mercy shall follow me all the daies of my life and I shall converse in the house of Iehovah to length of daies Annotations FEedeth me or is my Feeder my Pastor The word comprehendeth all duties of a good Herd as together feeding guiding governing and defending his flocke Therefore Kings also have this title and are said to feed their people Psal. 78. 71 72. 2 Sam. 5. 2. Hereupon it is attributed to God and to Christ feeding his Church as the Shepherd of their soules Psal. 80. 2. Ezek. 34. 12 14 15. Esay 40. 11. Ioh. 10. 11. 1 Pet. 2. 25. The Chaldee referreth this to a former worke saying The Lord fed his people in the wildernesse they lacked nothing Vers. 2. of budding grasse pleasant pastures and leas where greene and tender herbs doe spring he maketh me or will make me lie downe to wit for rest from heat This also is another dutie of a good Herder as I will feed my flocke and I will make them lie downe saith the Lord Ezek. 34. 15. and Shew me O thou whom my soule loveth where thou feedest where thou makest lie downe at noone Song 1. 6. easily leadeth or comfortably ●uideth mee it noteth a soft and gentle leading with sustaining of infirmitie as Gen. 33. 14. Esay 40. 11. Therefore the Greeke turneth it he nourisheth mee So Psal. 31. 4. by waters or unto waters of rests that is most quiet or calme waters and such as give rest and refreshing All these things Christ performeth to his flocke as it is written They shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sun light on them nor any heat for the Lambe which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them and shall lead them to the lively fountaines of waters Revel 7. 16 17. Vers. 3. returneth my soule or will returne or restore it and consequently give it rest See Psalm 19. 8. Vers. 4. shade of death that is darke and dreadfull shadow and in a manner the very state of death This speech denoteth imminent danger Jer. 2. 6. sore affliction Psal. 44. 20. and 107. 10. 14. feare and terrour Iob 24. 17. and dreadfull darknesse Iob 10. 21 22. whereto spiritually is opposed the light and comfort of the Gospell and grace of Christ Mat. 4. 16. Luke 1. 79. wilt be with me or art with me and this implieth his good safety
62. 11. the fort or strong frontier ●konce rampart made for strength and safegard of the citie 1 King 21. 23. 2 Sam. 20. 15. So Psal. 122. 7. The Chaldee understands it of the strength of people the multitude disti●●tly view or lift up meaning the eyes to behold or reare up the bankes of buildings The Hebrew Pasgu is here only used of it is Pisgah the name of an hill or mount Numb 21. 20. and 23. 14. Deut. 3. 17. and 34. 1. The Greeke translateth here distinguish or distribute following the Chaldee Passeg which is to distribute or divide Vers. 15. ever and aye ever and yet to eternitie and perpetuitie will guide us or lead us to wit as a flocke of sheepe Psal. 78. 52. 72. therefore the Greeke turneth it poimanei he will f●●d or rule as a shepherd A like phrase is also used in speech of defence from enemies 2 Chron. 32. 22. untill death in Greeke for ever The Chaldee paraphraseth thus For this God is our God his divine Majestie is within it and his dwelling is in the heavens for ever and ever he will lead us in the daies of our youth PSAL. XLIX All are exhorted to heare Christs wisdome and parables 7 To build the faith of Resurrection from the dead not on worldly power but on God 17 Worldly prosperity is not to be admined for man without understanding perisheth like the beast To the Master of the Musicke to the sons of Korach a Psalme HEare ye this all peoples hearken ye● all inhabitants of the transitorie world Both sons of base man and sons of noble man together rich and poore My mouth shall speake wisdomes and the meditation of my heart prudencies I will incline min● eare to a parable I wil open with harpe mine hidden matter Why should I feare in the daies of evill when the iniquitie of my foot-steps shall compasse me They that trust in their wealthy power and glory in the multitude of their riches A man shall not redeeming redeeme his brother shall not give to God his ransome So precious shall be the redemption of their soule and it shall cease for ever That he may live yet to continuall aye may not see the pit of corruption For he seeth the wise doe die together the unconstant foole and brutish doe perish and leave to others their wealthy power Their inward thought is that their houses shall be for ever their dwelling places to generation and generation they proclaime their names on lands But man in honour doth not lodge a night he is likened to beasts that are silenced This their way is unconstant folly to them and their posteritie like well of their mouth Selah As sheepe they are put in hell death shall feed them and righteous men shall have rule over them at the morning their forme weare away in hell from his dwelling place But God will redeeme my soule from the hand of hell for he will receive me Selah Feare thou not when a man shall grow rich when the glory of his house shall be multiplied For he shall not when he die take any thing his glory shall not descend after him Though in his life he blesseth his soule and they will confesse thee when thou doest good to thy selfe It shall come unto the generation of his fathers unto continuall aye they shall not see the light Man in honour and understandeth not he is likened to beasts that are silenced Annotations THe transitory world see Psal. 17. 14. Vers. 3. base man in Hebrew Adam who was so called of Adamah the earth whereupon this title is given to the baser sort of people The Greek translateth it here earth-borne So the Apostle saith the first man of the earth earthly 1 Cor. 15. 47. noble man in Hebrew Ish which is the name of man in respect of heat valour noblenesse and dignitie whereby man is and excelleth and in opposition to the former word Adam it meaneth the great or nobler sort of people The Chaldee paraphraseth thus Both sons of Adam the first and sons of Iakob together righteous and sinner Vers. 4. wisdomes that is excellent and manifold wisdome so after prudencies for very excellent prudence and of sundry sorts So Solomon calleth the chiefe and most excellent wisdome wisdomes Prov. 1. 20. and 9. 1. Vers. 5. a parable or a proverbe in Hebrew Mashal which denoteth rule superiority or excellencie because such speeches prevaile much in the mindes of men and are in esteeme The new Testament in Greeke translateth it a parable Matth. 13. 35. from Psa. 78. 2. of the Latine we name it a Proverb in old English or Saxon it was called a big-spel Sometime it is used in the evill part for a by-word Psal. 44. 15. and 69. 12. mine hidden matter my darke question or grave doctrine my riddle The Hebrew Chidah riddle hath the name of sharpnesse as proceeding from a sharpe wit and needing the like to expound it See Iudg. 14. 12 18. Num. 12. 8. 1 King 10. 1. Prov. 1. 6. The holy Ghost expresseth it in Greeke by hidden things Matth. 13. 35. from Psal. 78. 2. Vers. 6. Why should I feare This is the hidden doctrine or riddle which the Prophet propoundeth as in his owne name and therefore also called it a parable By feare he meaneth dismay or discouragement See vers 17. the iniquitie that is punishment or death which is the wages of sinne see Psal. 31. 11. and by foot-steps or foot-soles he meaneth his waies or workes Or he may call death the punishment of his heeles or feet because the Serpent bruiseth Christ and his people but in the heele Gen. 3. 15. the sting of death being done away and it made a passage into life and glory 1 Cor. 15. 55. 57. Vers. 7. their wealthy power their riches which are thus called because they are gotten by power given of God Deut. 8. 18. with labour and industry and to the rich their goods are their strong citie Prov. 10. 15. therefore here they are said to trust in them contrary to 1 Tim. 6. 17. Iob 31. 24. Mark 10. 24. glory or praise themselves vaunt contrary to Ier. 9. 23. Vers. 8. not redeeming redeeme that is shall in no wise or not at all redeeme The Chaldee expoundeth it a wicked man cannot redeeming redeeme his captived brother Vers 9. So precious shall be or And deare costly is and consequently rare and hard to obtaine as Dan. 2. 11. 1 Sam. 3. 1. of their soule that is of their life So Exod. 21. 30. cease for ever that is it shall never be accomplished So ceasing is used for the not doing of a thing Deut. 23. 22. Zach. 11. 12. Vers. 10. That he may live this is referred to the end of the eight verse not give his ransome and so live And is here for That see Psal. 43. 4. The Chaldee expoundeth live to be the life eternall the pi● to be the judgement of Gehenna or hell Vers. 11. the wise The
low and base estate made sweet and amiable like the rose and lilie as the Prophet saith The wildernesse and the dry-place shall be glad for them and the desert shall reioyce and blossome as the Rose Esay 35. 1. And the Lord saith I will be as the dew vnto Israel he shall blossome as the Lilie and strike forth his roots as Lebanon Hos. 14. 5. But as here is mentioned the plaine of Sharon and the vallies which were open places where cattell fed and not inclosed gardens so by it may bee signified how the Church is exposed to persecution to be plucked of all that passe by the way and troden down and eaten of beasts And this the words following doe more confirme The Chaldee openeth these words thus The congregation of Israel said When the ruler of the world causeth his Diuine majesty to dwell in the midst of me I am like to a moist or greene lilie out of the garden of Eden and my workes are faire as the Rose which is in the plaine of the garden of Eden Vers. 2. among the thornes These are the words of Christ concerning his Love the Church where he confirmeth and amplifieth the former speech preferring her aboue other peoples as the lilie is aboue thomes and thistles and withall signifying how shee is afflicted and pricked with them as with thornes This similitude the Scripture often vseth as If ye will not driue out the Inhabitants c. those which ye let remaine of them shall be prickes in your eyes and thornes in your sides and shall vexe you in the land wherein ye dwell Numb 33. 55. And againe There shall be no more a pricking bryer unto the house of Israel nor any grieving thorne of all that are round about them that despised them Ezek. 28. 24 This similitude sheweth also what the Church ought to be harmlesse as Lilies among thornes innocent as sheepe among wolues as doves among ravenous birds Matth. 10. 16. The Lily among thornes may also in speciall be vnderstood of that which we call the Wood-bind which groweth and flourisheth in hedges and thornes my love or my fellow friend my companion as in chap. 1. 9. the daughters the congregations of peoples as the Scriptures mention the daughter of Babylon Psal. 137. the daughter of Tyrus Psal. 45. and many the like Ves. 3. the apple-tree The Church setteth forth the excellency of Christ by the similitude of an apple-tree which the Scripture commendeth for three things comfortable shadow pleasant fruit both noted in this place and sweet smell Song 7. 8. And as the apple-tree hath more variety of fruits then any other tree that groweth that 〈◊〉 is not easie to reckon up the ●●ny sorts of apples of different taste so Christ excelleth in variety of graces which he bestoweth on his Church The Chaldee Paraphrast expoundeth this of the Pome-citron tree but for the cause aforesaid I would not restraine it to any one kind that the fulnesse of grace and truth which was in Christ might here be observed of whose fulnesse all we have received and grace for grace Ioh. 1. 14. 16. of the wood or of the forest or grove which are wilde trees and without culture bearing either none or sowre bitter and unsavoury fruits Such is the state of all the sons of men by nature Rom. 11. 24. whom Christ farre excelleth in beauty fruit and comfort Psalme 45. 3. Ioh. 15. 1. c. my beloved that is Christ in Hebrew Dod the same in signification with David see the notes on chap. 1. 13. the sonnes of Adam all whom Christ farre excelleth Psal. 45. 3. The Chaldee expoundeth it of Angels which are the sonnes of God Ioh. 1. 6. But though it be true that Christ excelleth them also Heb 1. yet the former similitude of the trees of the wood leadeth us rather to understand it here of earthly creatures as the Kings and Potentates and wise men of the world called sonnes in comparison with their peoples before called daughters in vers 2. So in Rev. 1. 5 Christ is the Prince of the Kings of the earth in Ezek. 31. 3. 6. the King of Assyria is likened to a Cedar in Lebanon under whose shadow dwelt all great nations in Dan. 4. 20. 21. 22. Nebuchadnezar is likened to a tree strong and high under which the beasts of the field dwelt c. and Iosias King of Iudah under whose shadow the Iewes hoped to liue Lam. 4. 20. and others in his shadow that is in his protection and defence The tree shadoweth from the heat of the Sunne and Christ from the heat of the wrath of God and from the persecutions of the world as it is written There shall be a Tabernacle for a shadow in the day time from the heat c. Esa. 4. 6 and Thou Lord hast beene a strength to the poore a strength to the needy in his distresse a refuge from the storme a shadow from the heat when the blast of the terrible ones is as a storme against the wall Esay 25. 4. So the shadow of Aegypt Esay 30. 2. the shadow of Heshbon Ierem. 48. 45. signifie the defence wherein men trusted which the faithfull repose in God and Christ alone as in Psalme 36. 8. 57. 2. and 17. 8. 63. 8. and 90. 1. And they that trust in him shall be safe from evill as Iehovah is thy shadow upon thy right hand the Sunne shall not smite thee by day nor the Moone by night Iehovah will keepe thee from all evill Psal. 121. 5. 6. 7. I desired and sate or I much desired that I might sit The forme of the Hebrew word increaseth the signification as noting a continuall and fervent desire of that which is pleasing delightfull or profitable and by sitting is meant abiding and resting as in Psalm 91. 1. The Church therefore being by sinne under wrath reveiled by the Law and being maligned by the world as a lilie among thornes acknowledgeth her faith hope love and delight 〈◊〉 bee in Christ Iesus who hath delivered as from the wrath to come 1 Th 〈…〉 through whom we have peace with God Rom. 5. 1. and peace in him though in the world we have tribulation 1 Iohn 16. 33. his fruit another benefit which the Church reapeth by Christ that shee is not onely delivered from evill but made partaker of his goodnesse in that the workes of his Prophesie Priesthood and Kingdome his death resurrection and all fruits of them are communicated unto her by the Gospell which shee feedeth upon by faith to the refreshing and life of her soule Fruits signifie graces and good workes which are to the benefit of our selves and others Matt. 3 8. 10. Gal. 5. 22. c. and is also applyed to the doctrine of the Gospel Iohn 15. 16. and signifieth a comfortable reward Psal 58. 12. Prov. 27. 18. The Hebrewes referre these things to the Law which should better bee applied to the Gospell for the Chaldee paraphrast here saith As the Pome-citrontree