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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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are silver and gold the worke of mens hands A mouth they have and speake not eies they have and see not Eares they have and heare not a nose they have and smell not Hands they have and feele not feet they have and walke not they make no sound with their throat Like them be they that make them every one that trusteth in them O Israel trust thou in Iehovah he is their helpe and their shield O house of Aaron trust ye in Iehovah he is their helpe and their shield Ye that feare Iehovah trust in Iehovah he is their helpe and their shield Iehovah hath remembred us he will blesse us he will blesse the house of Israel he will blesse the house of Aaron Hee will blesse them that feare Iehovah the small with the great Iehovah will adde unto you unto you and unto your sonnes Blessed shall you be of Iehovah which made the heavens and earth The heavens are Iehovahs and the earth he hath given to the sonnes of Adam Not the dead shall praise Iah neither any that goe downe to silence But wee will blesse Iah from this time and for ever Halelu-jah Annotations NOt to us or for us the Chaldee addeth not for our desert This Psalme the Greeke joyneth with the former and maketh it a part of the 114. Psalme See the notes on Psal. 10. 1. Vers. 2. now or I pray A word of intreating but used here in mockage See Ps. 79. 10. Vers. 3. And or But our God It is a signe of indignation as Psal. 2. 6. Vers. 5. They have Hebr. is to them speake not or cannot speake as Psal. 77. 5. and so the rest Compare herewith Ier. 10. 3 4 5 9 c. Deut. 4. 28. Vers. 7. sound or matter meditate see Psal. 1. 2. Vers. 9. Israel the Church is here distinguished into three parts 1 Israel or the body of the Common-wealth 2 Aarons house the Ministers and 3 the fearers of Iehovah that is strangers converts of all nations Acts 2. 5. and 10. 35. So after in vers 12 13. and Psal. 118. 2 3 4. trust thou the Greeke saith hath trusted and so the rest See the notes on Psal. 22. 9. and 114. 7. their helpe to wit which trust in him Or it may be for your helpe one person put for another as often is See Psal. 59. 10. 65. 7. and 80. 7. Vers. 10. House that is children or posterity See Psa. 113. 9. Vers. 12. hath remembred The Chaldee explaineth it The word of the Lord hath remembred us for good will blesse to wit us as the Greeke turneth it being mindfull of us hath blessed us See the like want in Ps. 59. 14. and 69. 2. and 45. 4. Vers. 13. small or little in age or degree So Rev. 11. 18. Vers. 14. will adde unto or adde upon you that is increase you as Deut. 1. 11. Esa. 26. 15. or adde his blessings Vers. 15. shall you be of or are you to Iehovah that is by him See the like phrase Gen. 14. 19. 2. Sam. 2. 5. Vers. 16 hee hath given or understand which hee hath given for the earth also is his Psal. 24. 1. though heaven properly is his dwelling place yet not able to containe him 1 King 8. 30. 27. Vers. 17. to silence the grave the place of silence quiernesse as Iob 3. 17 18. See Ps. 94. 17. So the Chaldee expoundeth it the place of buriall in the earth PSAL. CXVI The Psalmist professeth his love and dutie to God for his deliverance 12 He studieth to be thankefull I Love because Iehovah heareth my voice my supplications Because he bowed his eare unto me and in my daies I will call The pangs of death compassed me and the straight afflictions of hell found me I found distresse and sorrow And I called on the name of Iehovah O Iehovah deliver my soule Gracious is Iehovah and just and our God is mercifull Iehovah keepeth the simple I was brought low and he saved me Returne O my soule unto thy rest for Iehovah hath bounteously rewarded unto thee Because thou hast released my soule from death mine eie from teares my foot from sliding I will walke on before Iehovah in the lands of the living I beleeved therefore did I speake I was afflicted vehemently I did say in my hastening away every man is a lier What shall I render to Iehovah for all his bountifull rewards unto me I will take up the cup of salvations and will call on the name of Iehovah My vowes to Iehovah I will pay in the presence now of all his people Precious in the eies of Iehovah is the death of his gracious Saints O Iehovah surely I am thy servant I am thy servant the son of thine hand-maid thou hast unloosed my bands To thee will I sacrifice a sacrifice of confession and will cal on the name of Iehovah My vowes to Iehovah will I pay in the presence now of all his people In the courts of the house of Iehovah in the middest of thee O Ierusalem Halelu-jah Annotations I Love to wit the Lord or I am lovingly affected and well pleased The Greeke here beginneth the 114. Psalme see the note on Psal. 10. 1. and after vers 10. heareth or will heare to wit continually Vers. 2. and that is therefore will I call or when I did call my daies that is whiles I live or daies of affliction as Iob 30. 16. See Ps. 119. 84. 37. 12. Vers. 3. pangs or paines compare Psa. 18. 5. c. hell the state of death or grave see Ps. 16. 10. found that is came upon me So 1 Chron. 10. 3. Nehem. 9. 32. Esth. 8. 6. Psal. 119. 143. Vers. 5. Oh or I beseech thee O now The Hebrew Anna and Na are words of intreating as the Greeke Nai Philem. 1. 20. Rev. 1. 7. Vers. 6. brought low drawns drie weakened and afflicted see Psal. 41. 2. and 79. 8. Vers. 7. thy rest thy quiet comfortable estate in God without trouble of conscience This Christ giveth Matth. 11. 29. but sinne taketh away Deu. 28. 65. rewarded or as the Greeke saith been beneficiall the Chaldee explaineth it the word of the Lord hath rewarded good unto thee See Psal. 13. 6. Vers. 8. sliding or thrust fall See Psal. 56. 14. 1 Sam. 2. 9. Vers. 9. walke on to wit pleasingly as the Greek explaineth or pleasingly administer so 1 Sam. 2. 30 35. Psal. 86. 14. the living in this world see Psal. 27. 13. Vers. 10. therefore the Hebrew Ki For is here used for therefore as the Greek translateth and the Apostle alloweth 2 Cor. 4. 13. So may it also be taken 1 Sam. 2. 21. so the Greeke ho●● as Luke 7. 47. for she loved that is therefore she loved much Here the Greek version beginneth the 115 Psalm Vers. 11. my hastening through feare in Greek my extasie or trance see Psal. 31. 23. hereto is opposed his quietnesse Psal. 30. 7. every man even the Prophets which have promised mee the kingdome
The Restauration GOD promiseth that Christ the Womans seed shall bruise the Serpents head The man calleth his wife Eve God layeth chastisements on them both clotheth them and drives them out of Paradise Chap. 3 The government of the old World ADAM begetting two sonnes Kain the first borne is wicked Abel faithfull Kain killeth Abel and is cursed yet liveth and increaseth in the world Seth is given in Abels sted and of Seth Enos Chap. 4 SETH progateth the faithfull seed Enoch prophesieth and God taketh him away that he dieth not Chap. 5 Seths seed and Kains are mixed so Giants are bred and sinne increased God repenteth that he made man threatneth to drown the world but Noe findes grace Chap. 6 NOE and his house with some of all creatures are saved in the Arke which God bade him make the world is all drowned Ch. 7 The government of the world aset the Flood NOE with his familie come out of the Arke are blessed to fill the world againe Chap. 〈◊〉 GOD promiseth to drowne the world no more Sinne reviveth in Cham Noes son whose posteritie is cursed the blesse continueth to Sem and Iaphet Chap. 〈◊〉 Noes three sonnes Sem Cham and Iaphet doe multiply on the earth Chap. 〈◊〉 Their posterity are scattered by confusion of tongues at Babel Sem propagateth the faithfull seede which in Terah falleth 〈◊〉 God but is called to repentance Chap. 〈◊〉 ABRAM is called from Idolatry and commeth a pilgrim into the land of Canaan Chap. 〈◊〉 Abram parted from Lot is promised the land of Canaan and a plenteous seed Chap. 〈◊〉 He fighteth for Lot o●ercommeth foure Kings and is blessed of Melchisedek Chap. 〈◊〉 He being childlesse is promised an heire justified by faith and comforted by a vision and covenant of God Chap. 〈◊〉 He hath a son after the flesh Ismael of Agar his bondwoman Chap. 1● He hath a new name Abraham the covenant of circumcision and promise of Isask Sarai is named Sarah Chap. 1● Abraham enterraineth Angels hath the promise renewed and Sodoms destruction revealed for whom he maketh intercession Chap. 1● Sodom is burned Lot delivered begetteth of his daughters Moab and Ammon Chap. 19 Abrahams wife taken by Abimelec is restored unto him Chap. 20 ISAAK the promised seed is borne Agar and Ismael are cast out of Abrahams house Ab melec covenanteth with Abraham Chap. 21 Isaak is offred for a sacrifice by his father but saved from death by God Abraham is blessed and heareth of his kindreds increase Chap. 22 Abraham purchaseth in Canaan a burying place for Sarah Chap. 23 He provideth a wife for Isaak who marieth Rebekah Chap. 24 Abraham dyeth Isaak begetteth Esau and Iakob who strive in the wombe Iakob buyeth the birthright of Esau surnamed Edom. Chap 25 Isaaks wife taken by Abimelec is restored he covenanteth with Abimelec Chap 26 IAKOB by subtilty getteth the blessing from Esau and is threatned Chap. 27 Iakob fleeing from Esau is comforred by a vision of a Ladder at Bethel Chap. 28 He sorveth for a wife is beguiled marieth two and hath foure sonnes Chap. 29 He is increased with moe children is wronged by Laban but waxeth rich Chap. 30 He fleeth secretly is pursued by Laban but God delivereth him Chap. 31 He is met of Angells afraid of Esau wrastleth with God and is named Israel Chap. 32 Iakob and Esau meet and are friends Iakob put chaseth ground at Sechem Chap. 33 Iakobs daughter Dina is defiled his sonnes slay the Sech mites for it Chap. 34 Iakob burieth Deborah the Nurse Rachel his wife and Isaak his father Chap. 35 Esau dwelleth in Seir hath many Dukes and Kings of his posteitie Chap. 36 IOSEPH Iakobs sonne is hated for his dreames and sold by his brethen into Egypt Iakob mourneth for him and will not be comforted Chap. 37 Iudah Iakobs son begetteth of his daughter in law Pharez and Zarah Chap. 38 Ioseph in Egypt is tempted to adultery falsly accused and imprisoned Chap. 39 Ioseph in prison expoundeth the dreames of Pharaohs officers but is forgotten Chap. 40 Ioseph expoundeth Pharaohs dreames and is made ruler over all Egypt Chap. 41 Iakob sendeth his sons for corne into Egypt Ioseph handleth them roughly Chap. 42 Iakob constrainedly sendeth his sons againe and Ioseph feasteth them Chap. 43 Ioseph challengeth Benjamin for his cup Iudah supplicateth for his brother Chap. 44 Ioseph makes himselfe knowne to his brethren and sendeth for his Father Chap. 45 Iakob by Gods advice goeth with his houshold into Egypt in all seventy soules Ioseph meeteth them in Goshen and instructeth them what to say to Pharah Chap. 46 Ioseph nourisheth his father and brethren in time of famine bringeth the Egyptians into bondage and sweareth to bury his father in Canaan Chap. 47 Iosephs two sons are blessed and adopted of Iakob on his death bed Chap. 48 Iakob blesseth his twelve sons prophesieth of Christ and dyeth in Egypt Chap. 49 Ioseph burieth his father in Canaan and returneth forgiveth his brethren prophesieth of their departure from thence giveth charge concerning his bones and dyeth Chap. 50 The number of the Sections or Lectures in Genesis are twelve the Chapters fiftie the verses 1534. The midst is at Gen. 27. 40. Search the Scriptures Iohn 5. 39. To the Law and to the Testimonie Esay 8. 20. Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15. 4. THE FIRST BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED GENESIS CHAPTER I. 1 The Heavens and the Earth are created and the Light in the first day 6. In the second the firmament is spred and the waters divided 9. In the third the earth is made dry land and fruitfull the waters are gathered to be seas 14. The Sunne Moone and Stars are created for Lights the fourth day 20. Fish and Fowles are brought forth and blessed in the fifth 24. In the sixth Beasts are made out of the Earth 26. Man is created in the image of God 28. he is blessed and hath dominion of the world 29 Food is appointed for Man and beast 31. Gods workes are all good IN THE BEGINNING GOD created the Heavens and the earth And the earth was empty and voide and darkenesse was upon the face of the deepe and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters And God sayd Let there bee light and there was light And God saw the light that it was good and God separated betweene the light and the darkenesse And God called the light Day and the darknesse he called Night and the evening was and the morning was the first day And God said Let there be an Out-spred firmament in the midst of the waters and let it separate betweene waters and waters And God made the Outspred-firmament and separated betweene the waters which were under the outspred-firmament and the waters which were above the outspred-firmament and it was so And God called the outspred-firmament Heavens and the evening was and
the morning was the second day And God sayd Let the waters under the heavens bee gathered-together unto one place and let the dry land appeare and it was so And God called the dry land Earth and the gathering together of the waters he called Seas and God saw that it was good And God said Let the earth bud-forth the budding-grasse the herbe seeding-seed the fruit-tree yeelding-fruit after his kinde whose seed is in it selfe upon the earth and it was so And the earth brought-forth budding-grasse the herb seeding-seed after his kinde and the tree yeelding fruit whose seed was in it selfe after his kinde and God saw that it was good And the evening was and the morning was the third day And God sayd Let there be lights in the outspred-firmament of the heavens to separate betweene the day and the night and let them be for signes and for seasons and for dayes and yeares And let them be for lights in the outspred-firmament of the heavens to give light upon the earth and it was so And God made the two great Lights the greater light for the rule of the day and the lesser light for the rule of the night also the starres And God set them in the outspred-firmament of the heavens to giue light upon the earth And to rule over the day and over the night and to separate betweene the light and the darkenesse and God saw that it was good And the evening was and the morning was the fourth day And GOD sayd Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving-thing the living soule and fowle that may flye above the earth on the face of the outspred-firmament of the heavens And God created the great Whales and every living creeping soule which the waters brought forth abundantly after their kinde and every winged fowle after his kinde and God saw that it was good And God blessed them saying be fruitfull and multiply and fill the waters in the seas and let the fowle multiply in the earth And the evening was and the morning was the fift day And God said Let the earth bring forth the living soule after his kinde cattell and creeping thing and beast of the earth after his kinde and it was so And God made the beast of the earth after his kinde and the cattell after their kinde and every creeping thing of the earth after his kinde and God saw that it was good And God sayd Let us make Man in our image according to our likenesse and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowle of the heavens and over the cattell and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth And God created Man in his image in the image of God created he him male and female created he them And God blessed them and God sayd unto them Be fruitfull and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowle of the heavens and over every living thing that creepeth on the earth And God sayd Behold I have given to you every herb seeding seed which is upon the face of all the earth and every tree in the which is the fruit of a tree seeding seed to you it shall be for meat And to every beast of the earth and to every fowle of the heavens and to every creeping thing upon the earth which hath in it a living soule every green herb for meat and it was so And God saw every thing that hee had made and behold it was very good and the evening was and the morning was the sixt day Annotations BOoke of Moses so it is intituled in Mark 12. 26. called elsewhere the booke of the law of Moses 2. King 14. 6. Luke 2. 22. being indeed the booke of the Law of the Lord by the hand of Moses 2. Chro. 34. 14. Of this Moses his birth education authority and death see Exod. 2. and 4. c. Numb 12. Deut 34. He was forty yeares a Philosopher in King Pharaohs Court in Egypt Forty yeares a shepheard in the land of Madian and forty yeares a King and Law-giver of Israel leading them through the wildernesse of Arabia and dying an hundred and twenty yeares old hee was buried of God Act. 7. 22. 23. 29. 30. 35. 36. Deut. 3● 4● and 34. 5. 6. 7. His writings are approved of by the Prophets after him by the testimonie of Christ and his Apostles and by the Church of God in all ages Nehem. 8. 1 2 3. Dan. 9. 11. 13. Mal. 4. 4. Luke 16. 29. 31. and 24. 27. 44. Acts 15. 21. Rev. 15. 3. Genesis that is Generation so the Greeke version calleth this booke because it setteth forth the generations of the heavens and earth and of Adam or mankind Gen. 2. 4. and 5. 1. How beit in Hebrew the five bookes of Moses have no names but by the first words of them as this booke is called Breshith that is In the beginning Vers. 1. In the beginning namely of the Creature which God created as our Saviour expoundeth it Mark 13. 19. the whole frame whereof is called the World Mat. 24. 21. Beginning therefore is here extraordinary and supernaturall of the Creature or Creation and so of time The Chaldee paraphrase called Ierusalemy translateth it In wisedome so sundry Hebrewes apply this mystically to the wisedome of God whereby the world was created as it is written The Lord by wisdome founded the earth Prov. 3. 19. and in wisdome hast thou made them all Psal. 104. 24. R. Menachem on Gen. 1. Many Christian writers also apply it unto Christ the wisdome of God by whom he made the world 1. Cor. 1. 24. Heb. 1. 2. Prov. 8. 27. 30. God in Hebrew Aelohim which signifieth the Almighties or Almightie-powers his name is most used in this forme plurall but ioyned with a word singular hee created because God is but one Deut. 6. 4. although in power infinite in person or manner of being there are three which beare witnesse in heaven the Father and the Word and the holy Spirit and these three are one 1 Ioh. 5. 7. The Father is this Creator as is shewed in Eph. 3. 9. The Word or Sonne is the Creator Heb. 1. 8. 10. Col. 1. 16. so is the Holy spirit as is here in the second verse and in Psal. 33. 6. and 104. 30. Iob 26. 13. and 33. 4. Hereupon Solomon saith Remember thy Creators Eccles. 12. 1. and God saith Let us make man Gen. 1. 26. The Apostles apply the generall name God to the persons severally unto the Father Heb. 1. 1 2. unto the Sonne Acts 20. 28. Rom. 9. 5. and unto the Holy Ghost Acts 5. 3. 4. The Hebrew Doctors have left records of this mystery though at this day that nation understands it not Come and see the mysterie of the word Aelohim there are three degrees and every degree by it selfe alone that is distinct and yet notwithstanding
in Iesudei hatorah chap. 3. sect 8. The name of the Sunne is spiritually applied unto Christ Mal. 4. 2. whose face appeared like the Sunne shining in his strength Rev. 1. 16. ac whose death this created Sunne was darkned at noon day for the space of three houres Amos 8. 9. Mar. 27. 45. with him this spirituall Sunne his Church is cloathed Revel 12. 1. and shall shine also as the Sun in the kingdome of heaven Mat. 13. 43. lesser or little light that is the Moone called in Hebrew of her faire whitenesse Lebanah Song 6. 9. and of refreshing the earth with her coole influences Iaroach Deut. 33. 14. starres which also are for to rule the night Psal. 136. 6. called starres of light Psal. 148. 3. Of these some are fixed other some wandring starres or planets whereunto unstable men are compared Iude verse 13. The starres differ one from another in glory 1 Cor. 15 41. and are not for man to number Genes 15. 5. but GOD counts their number and calleth them all by names Psalm 147. 4. and with them he hath by his spirit garnished the heavens Iob 26. 13. Some of the starres or constellations have names in holy scripture as Ash Cosil Cimah and Mazzaroth or Mazzaloth Iob 9. 9. and 38. 31. Amos 5. 8. 2 King 23. 5. which wee call by other names Arcturus Orion Pleides Planets and Signes in the Zodiake They might well bee Englished water-starres winter-starres Thunder-starres and the like for by their rifing and influences stormes tempests faire and pleasant weather c. doe proceed by the disposition of God Consider those places Iob 38. Am. 5. Verse 17. set Hebr. gave them which word is often used for setting or putting as I have given my spirit Esa. 42. 1. that is I have put it Math. 12 18. It signifieth also a firme setling as thou hast giuen thy people 1 Chr. 17. 22. for which in 2 Sam. 7. 24. is written thou hast confirmed thy people Accordingly David sayth that God hath firmly constituted the Moon Stars Psal. 8. 4. Of the Stars with their orbes and sphaeres the Hebrew Doctors write thus The sphaeres are called Heavens and the Out-spred firmament c. and there are nine sphaeres that which is nearest unto us is called the sphaere of the Moone and the next above it is the sphaere wherein is the Starre called Cocab or Mercurie And the third sphaere is that wherein Nogah or Venus is The fourth sphaere hath in it the Sunne the sift Maadim or Mars the sixt hath in it the starre Tsedek or Iupiter the seventh Shabthat or Saturne and the eighth sphaere hath in it all the other starres that are seene in the firmament The ninth sphaere is that which turneth about every day from the east to the west and it compasseth all ron●● about c. The starres that are all in that one 〈◊〉 sphaere although they be one above another yet because the sphaeres are pure and cleare as chrystall and as Saphire therefore the starres in the eighth sphaere are seene underneath the first sphaere c. None of the sphaeres are either light or heauy or coloured redl or blacke or of any other colour and whereas wee see them of a blew colour it is onely to the appearance of the eye by reason of the height of the ayre Also they have neither tast nor smell because these accidents have no place but in bodies that are beneath them Maimony in Misn. treat Iesudei hatorah chapt 3. sect 1. 3. V. 18. over the day or as the Greeke translateth to rule the day for by their successive courses the light is dispensed of God unto the world by day and by night Ier. 31. 35. Vers. 20. the moving thing or as the Greeke translateth creeping things But the Hebrew Sherets is more large then that which wee call the creeping thing for it conteyneth things moving swiftly in the waters as swimming fishes c. Lev. 11. 10. and on the earth as running weasels mise c. Lev. 11. 29. and fowles also flying in the ayre Levit. 11. 29. Moving things in the waters there are innumerable one argument of Gods praise in Psalm 104. 25. Soule named in Hebrew nephesh of breathing and the scriptures apply this word not onely to mankinde but to all creatures that live and the breath of them as here and in Iob 41. 21. The Hebrewes say The soule of all flesh is the forme thereof which God hath given thereunto Maimony in Iesudei hatorah chap. 4. sect 8. V. 21. Whales or Dragons the Hebrew Tannin is used for both These are the greatest creatures in the waters one kinde of them called Levjathan is described in Iob 41. In the belly of a Whale Ionas lived three dayes and three nights Ion. 1. 17. And humane writers testifie that into the riuer of Arabia there have come Whales 600. foot long and 360. foot broad Plinie hist. b. 32. chap. 1. that they are not without cause called great Whales These Whales and Dragons are used in Scripture to signifie great Princes Psal. 74. 13. Ezek. 29. 3. creeping The Hebrew remes which hath the name of treading is also largely used for things creeping on the earth or swimming in the waters Levit. 11. 44. 46. Gen. 1. 25. V. 22. Blessed that is gave power to conserve their kinde by generation and to increase unto many for so the word blessing is often applied unto multiplication Gen. 24. 60. Ps. 128. 3. 4. This word is also largely used for Gods gracious giving of all good things earthly or heavenly Gen. 24. 35. Deut. 28. Eph. 1. 3. And when men give thankes therefore unto God that is called blessing also see Gen. 14. 19. 20. V. 24. cattell in Greeke it is translated foure-footed beasts The Hebrew Behemah is generally all beasts of the greater sort whereof the Elephant is called Behemoth Iob 40. 15. The Apostle once translateth it in Greeke Therion which properly is wilde beast Heb. 12. 20. from Exod. 19. 13. beast or wilde-beast named in Hebrew of life or livelinesse which is most seene in the wilde beasts In Perkei R. Eliezer chap. 11. the Iew Doctors say These that were created out of the earth their soules and their bodies were of the earth and when they dye they returne to the place where they were created as it is sayd in Psal. 104. 29. thou takest away their spirit they dye ●and another Scripture saith Eccles. 3. 21. and the spirit of the beast that goeth downward to the earth Vers. 26. Let us This is meant of the three in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Spirit which three are one 1 Iohn 5. 7. Hereupon hee is called God our makers Iob 35. 10. Psal. 149. 2. After the world was made and garnished the holy Trinity mentioneth the making of man the excellentest creature under heaven he is fearfully and marvellously made Psal. 139. 14. Man or earthly man in Hebrew Adam so called of Adamah that is
red-mould or earth because of it his body was created Gen. 2. 7. It was the name of the woman also Gen. 5. 2. and so of all mankind usually called Adam and Adams sonnes Gen. 9. 6. Psal. 11. 4. our image the image of the holy Trinity whereby man in nature knowledge righteousness holinesse glory c. resembled God his makers See Gen. 9. 6. I am 3. 9. Colos. 3. 10. Ephes. 4. 24. 1 Cor. 11. 7. 2 Cor. 3. 18. The Hebrew Doctors say The excellent knowledge or reason that is found in the soule of man it is the forme of man and for this forme it is said Let us make man in our image c. R. Mos. Maimony in Misn. treat Iesudei hatorah chap 4. sect 8. Also this Image and likenesse is said to be in man for the understanding minde which is in him such as is not in other living creatures R. Menachem Rakanat on Gen. 1. The Heathens opinion agreed hereunto as Proclus saith The mind that is in us is an image of the first mind that is of God Man is also called of the Hebrewes Olam Hakaton of the Greekes Microcosmos that is A little world for the hath in him the beauty of thing without life even the chiefest as of the Sun Moon and Stars c. Eccles 12. 2. Gen. 37. 8. 9. Ezek. 28. 13. 14. he hath growth as plants Gen. 38. 11. and 49. 22. sense and sensible properties with beasts Gen. 49. 9. 17. 2 Sam. 23. 20. reason and wisedome with Angels 1 Sam. 14. 20. But the image of God in him excelleth all Letthem have that is man and woman with their posterity for if the root bee holy so are the branches Rom. 11. 16. Adam had Gods image and glory for him and his if hee had stood in his integrity but falling hee lost them from him and his Rom. 5. 12. 17. 18. 19. Howbeit in the dominion and glory of man and woman there is inequality 1 Cor. 11. 7. 8. 9. 1 Timoth. 2. 12. 13. Vers. 27. Created By reason of the excellency of man above all earthly things and of Gods image in him the name Creature is appropriated unto him as often in the Hebrew Doctors writings so by Christs and his Apostles every creature that is every man Mar. 16. 15. Coloss. 1. 23. So all living for all men Gen. 3. 20. because the most excellent life is in man male or a male and a female meaning one and not moe females for a male This beginning of mans creation Christ alledgeth against unlawful divorces and taking moe wives then one Mar. 10. 6. See also Malac. 2. 15. And when a thing is set downe thus singularly it is often to be restrained unto one This the Scripture sheweth in repeating matters as a loase of bread and a flagon of wine 1 Chron. 16. 3. which another Prophet writeth thus one cake of bread and one flagon of wine 2 Sam. 6. 19. So the Law him shalt thou serve Deut. 6. 13. Christ restraineth to him onely Mat. 4. 10. Vers. 28. subdue it or keepe it in subjection the Greeke translateth exercise dominion over it Subduing meaneth such a prevailing and possessing as a master hath over servants Ier. 34. 11. 16. 2 Chr. 28. 10. Neh. 5. 5. For this state of man made a little lower then the Angels but crowned with glory and honor and set over the works of Gods hands David laudeth the Lord in Psal. 8. Vers. 31. everything or as the Greeke translateth all things very good or vehemently good and so pleasing and profitable see before in vers 4. This sheweth that sinne and evill was not of God or by the worke of his hands but came in after by the creature it selfe falling from God Eccles. 7. 31. the sixt day According to this number of dayes in the creation of the world the Hebrew Doctors haue guessed at the number of yeares that the world should continue they say it is a tradition of Rabbi Elias Six thousand yeeres shall the world be and then it shall bee destroyed Two thousand empty that is before the promise unto Abraham two thousand the Law the time of Circumcision and two thousand the dayes of Christ and for our iniquities say they which are many they that are past of them are past that is the yeeres are past and the Christ is not come Thalmudin Sanhedrin chapt Chelek This conjecture some doe the more regard both because it is a testimony that the Christ is long since come even by the Iewes owne tradition and because it is written one day is with the Lord as a thousand yeeres and a thousand yeeres as one day 2. Pet. 3. 8. We may compare with these six dayes the six ages of the world as they are manifestly distinguished in Scripture The first from Adam to Noes flood which was often generations this is called the old world 2 Pet. 2. 5. The second from the Flood unto Abraham which was also of ten generations at him the new Testament beginneth the genealogie of Christ Mat. 1. 1. 2. The third from Abraham to David fourteene generations The-fourth from David unto the captivitie of Babylon fourteene generations The fift from the captivitie of Babylon unto Christ fourteene generations all which are so reckned by the Holy Ghost in Mat. 1. 17. The sixt is the age after Christ called the last dayes Heb. 1. 2. the last time 1 Pet. 1. 20. 1. Ioh. 2. 18. after which remaineth the Rest or Sabbatisme for the people of God to begin at our Lords second comming and to continue for ever 1 Thessal 4. 16. 17. CHAPT II. The seventh day is sanctified for a Sabbath 4 The manner of the Creation 8 The planting of the Garden of Eden 10 and the River thereof 17 The tree of knowledge onely forbidden 19 Adam nameth the creatures 21 The making of Woman and institution of mariage ANd the heavens and the earth were finished and all the host of them And in the seventh day God had finished his worke which he had made and he rested in the seventh day from all his worke which he had made And God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it because in it hee had rested from all his worke which God had created and made These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created in the day that Iehovah God made the earth and the heavens And every plant of the field before it was in the earth and every herbe of the field before it grew-up for Iehovah God had not caused-it-to-raine upon the earth and there was not a man to till the ground And a myst went-up from the earth and watred the whole face of the earth And Iehovah God formed man dust of the earth and inspired his nostrills with the breath of life and man was a living soule And Iehovah God planted a garden in Eden eastward and there hee put the man whom he had formed And Iehovah God made to grow-up
out of the ground every tree desirable for sight and good for meat and the tree of life in the midst of the garden the tree of the knowledge of good and evill And a river went-out of Eden to water the garden and from thence it was parted and was to foure heads The name of the one Pison the same is it that compasseth the whole land of Havilah where there is gold And the gold of that land is good there is Bdelium and the Beryll stone And the name of the second river ●i●on the same is it that compasseth the whole land of Cush And the name of the third river Hiddekel the same is it that goeth to the east of Assyria and the fourth river is Euphrates And Iehovah God tooke the man and put him in the garden of Eden to till it and to keepe it And Iehovah God commanded the man saying of every tree of the garden eating thou maist eat But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evill thou maist not eat of it for in the day thou eatest of it dying thou shalt dye And Iehovah God said It is not good the man should bee himselfe alone I will make for him an helpe as before him And Iehovah God had formed out of the ground every beast of the field and every fowle of the heavens and brought them unto Adam to see what hee would call them and whatsoever Adam called each living soule that was the name thereof And Adam called names to all cattell and to the fowle of the heavens and to every beast of the field but for Adam hee found not an helpe as before him And Iehovah God caused a deepe sleep to fall upon Adam and he slept and he tooke one of his ribs and closed-up the flesh in the stead therof And Iehovah God builded the rib which he had taken from Adam to a woman and hee brought her unto Adam And Adam said This now is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh she shall bee called Woman because she was taken out of Man Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother and he shall cleave to his wife and they shall be one flesh And they were both of them naked Adam and his wife and they were not ashamed-of-themselves Annotations FInished or al-done perfected host or army called in Hebrew Saba which meaneth an army standing in order or battle ray The Greeke here translateth it garnishing or furniture Hereby is meant all creatures in the earth and heavens which stand as an army servants to the Lord Psal. 119. 91. and by him commanded Esay 45. 12. The Angels are of this army 1 King 22. 19. and are called the multitude of the heavenly host Luke 2. 13. 15. and they were by likelihood created with the heavens in the first day because those morning starres and sonnes of God did sing and shout when God laid and fastned the foundations of the earth Iob 38. 4. 6. 7. The stars and furniture of the visible heavens are also Gods host Esay 34. 4. Deut. 4. 19. and the starres in their courses fought against Sisera Judg. 5. 20. The Israelites comming out of Aegypt are called the Lords hosts Exodus 12. 41. Hereupon he is often named the Lord of hosts or of Sabaoth and the Apostles in Greek sometime keep the Hebrew name Lord of Sabaoth Rom. 9. 29. Iam. 5. 4. sometime they translate it Lord God Almighty Revel 4. 8. from Esa. 6. 3. Vers. 2. seventh day The Hebrew shebang from which the German word sieben and English seven are derived hath the signification of fulnesse and is a perfect and complete number after which we begin again with the first day of the weeke Therefore seven is used for many or a full number Gen. 33. 3. Lev. 4. 6. 1 Sam. 2. 5. Ier. 15. 9. Prov. 26. 25. And many mysteries are throughout the Scripture set forth by the number of seven as in the feasts and sacrifices of Israel Deut. 16. 3. 8. 9. 15. Num. 28. 19. and 29. 12. 32. especially in the booke of the Revelation See also Gen. 21. 31. The Greeke interpreters translated the sixt day for the seventh left the heathens should thinke mistaking the phrase that God wrought upon the Sabbath rested or sabbathised that is kept sabbath for of this Hebrew shebath it is called the Sabbath or Rest day God rested or ceased from making moe creatures Exod. 20. 11. Heb. 4. 3. though as touching the preserving ordering governing of the world the Father worketh hitherto and Christ worketh Ioh. 5. 17. Gods Sabbath was also his rejoycing in his workes Psal. 104. 31. and this the Chaldee paraphrast observed here saying and God delighted the seventh day in his worke which hee had made and rested This resting is spoken of God after the manner of men and implieth not any wearinesse in him for the Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is weary Esa. 40. 28. worke generally put for workes as the Apostle expounds it in Heb. 4. 4. Vers. 3. And God blessed in Exod. 20. 11. it is sayd Therefore God blessed that is because he him-selfe rested in the seventh day therefore he blessed and sanctified it unto man whereupon the Apostle reasoneth hee that is entred into his rest hee also hath ceased from his owne workes as God did from his Heb. 4. 10. and he blessed the seventh day by giving it this singular priviledge to bee a day of rest and holinesse of delight and of feasting vnto the world Exod. 20. 10. 11. Nehem. 9. 14. Esai 58. 13. Levit. 23. 2. 3. Wherefore this day is not described by evening and morning as were the other sixe which consisted of light and darknesse but this is all day or light figuring out our perpetuall joyes Esa. 60. 20. Zach. 14. 6. 7. Revel 21. 25. And so the Hebrew Doctors understand it of the world to come for in Breshith rabbah they say The blessing of the Lord it maketh rich Prov. 10. 22. this is the Sabbath day as it is written And God blessed the seventh day Gen. 2. 3. he calleth the Sabbath the Blessing of the Lord because it is receiued from the Blessing that is on high therefore hee sayth it maketh rich because it is the abundant wealth of the world c And if we expound the seventh day of the seventh thousand of yeares which is the world to come the exposition is and he blessed because in the seventh thousand all soules shall be bound in the bundell of life for there shall be there the augmentation of the Holy Ghost wherein we shall delight our selves and so our Rabbines of blessed memory have sayd in their Commentarie God blessed the seventh day the holy God blessed the world to come which beginneth in the seventh thousand of yeares Compare the last note on Gen. 1. 31. sanctified or hallowed that is separated it from common use and worke unto his owne service alone that it might be a
with thankes for his blessings having gathered in their fruits so the law of Moses did command Exod. 23. 16. which order as by this appeareth the Fathers observed from the beginning and it was so accustomed among the Gentiles for the ancient sacrifices and assemblies unto that end were after the gathering in of the fruits for an oblation of the first fruits sayth Aristotle in Ethicks booke 8. brought in Greeke offred It is likely that the sonnes brought their offrings unto God by Adam their Father who was high Priest as after all the first borne in families were Priests Exod. 19. 22. and upon an Altar he offred their gifts The Hebrew Doctors say It is a tradition by the hand of all that the place wherein David and Solomon built an Altar in the floore of Araunah 1 Chron. 21. 22. 26. and 22. 1. 2 Chron. 3. 1. was the place where Abraham builded an Altar and bound Isaak upon it Gen. 22. 9 and that was the place where Noe builded after he came out of the Arke Gen. 8. 20. and that was the Altar upon which Kain and Abel offred and on it Adam the first man offred an offring after he was created and out of that place hee was created Our wise men have sayd Adam was created out of the place of his Atonement Maimony in Misn. book 8. treat of the Temple chap. 2. S. 2. an offring or oblation called in Hebrew a Minchah by which name the Meat offring is called in the Law Lev. 2. which commonly was of wheat flower Although the word is sometime used generally for any gift or present Gen. 32. 13. But Kain brought of the fruit of the ground which custome continued so that in Israel men might eate neither bread nor corne till they had brought an offring unto God Lev. 23. 14. Among the Greekes also they used to sacrifice the fruits of the earth Homer Iliad 1. and Numa ordeyned the like among the Romans who tasted not new corne or wine before the Priests had sacrificed the first fruits saith Plinie in book 18. chap. 2. and in the Roman lawes of the twelve Tables the same oblation of corne is commanded Derelig tit 1. lex 4. The like was for sacrificing of beasts as Abel did which was used of Israel and of all Nations till the comming of Christ see Lev. 1. Vers. 4. the fat of them As the first fruits of the earth of beasts of men were given in thankefulnesse to the Lord that all the rest might be sanctified and blessed Exod. 22. 29. 30. and 23. 19. so God challenged the fat of all sacrifices peculiarly to himselfe Lev. 3. 16. 17. and 7. 25. which fat sometime figured mans unbeleefe hardnesse of hear● and want of sense Psal. 119. 70. Acts 28. 27. which was to be consumed by the fire of Gods spirit sometime it signified the best of all things Numb 18. 12. in which sense it seemeth to bee spoken here of Abel From whose example the Hebrew Doctors teach that a man should inlarge his hand and bring his offring of the fairest and most laudable amongst those kinde of things whereof he bringeth Behold it is written in the law And Abel hee also brought of the firstlings of his flocke and of the fat of them And this is a common law in every thing which is for the name of the good God that it be of the goodliest and best If one build a house of prayer let it bee fayrer then his owne dwelling house if he feed the hungry let him feed him with the best and sweetest that is on his Table If he cloathe the naked let it be with the fayrest of his cloathes if he sanctifie any thing let him sanctifie of the fayrest of his goods and so hee sayth Lev. 3. 16. All the fat is the Lords Maimony in Misn. rom 3. in Asurei mizbeach chap. 7. S. 11. By the sacrifices of old there was besides a thankefulnesse to God a yearely remembrance also of their sinnes Heb. 10. 3. and hope of the forgivenesse of them by Christ to come Heb. 10. 1. 10. 14. And seeing the godly offred in faith Heb. 11. 14. and faith is by hearing the word of God Rom. 10. 17. Abel and the rest were taught of God thus for to worship him for all wil-worship devised by men is vaine Mat. 15. 9. Col. 2. 22. 23. had respect to weet with delight as the Hebrew word implyeth and so one Greeke version translateth it was delighted and with favourable acceptation as the Chaldee paraphrase explaineth it So GOD commanded every man to offer sacrifice for his favourable acceptation Lev. 1. 3. that hee and it might bee accepted of the Lord. This gracious respect unto Abel was seene of Kain for which hee was gtieved and the Apostle noteth it to be a testification of Abels justice by faith Heb. 11. 4. It is likely therfore that God shewed it by some visible signe as by fire from heaven consuming the sacrifice for so he used to doe in such cases after as Lev. 9. 24. 1 Chron. 21. 26. 2 Chron. 7. 1. 1 King 18. 38. and the burning of the sacrifices to ashes was a signe of his favourable acceptance Psal. 20. 4. and Theodotio a Greeke interpreter translateth it here he set onfire By this Gods acceptance Abels faith was confirmed touching life salvation in Christ otherwise God would not have received an offring at his hands as Iudg. 13. 23 unto Abel for his faith in Christ whereby he was just and by which he offred a greater sacrifice then Kain Heb. 11. 4. And so the sacrifice was respected for the man not the man for the sacrifice Prov. 12. 2. and 15. 8. Vers. 5. grieved or displeased very wroth The Hebrew word signifieth to burne or be inflamed either with anger or griefe the Greek here translateth he was grieved and in sundry other places as Ion. 4. 1. 9. where both the Greeke version and all the circumstances shew it to meane griefe So in 1 Sam. 15. 11. Samuel was grieved and Dauid 1 Chron. 13. 11. and Nehemiah Neh. 5. 6. and many the like countenance or his face fell that is he shewed himselfe ashamed grieved and discontented This is else-where expressed by the falling of the light of the countenance Iob 29. 24. contrary to which is the lifting vp of the face for a signe of comfort and joy Iob 11. 15. See also Gen. 19. 21. Vers. 7. doe well or doe good Hereby God teacheth that wel-doing consisted not in the outward offrings which Kain brought but in faith which hee wanted Heb. 11. 4. Ioh. 6. 29. And the Apostle hence concludeth that Kains workes were evill 1 Ioh. 3. 12. forgivenesse or acceptation The Hebrew word which properly signifieth elevation or lifting up when it is spoken of sinne as the words following shew here it is meaneth forgivenesse at Gods hand who lifteth up and so easeth us of the burden of it as Rom. 4. 7. from Psal. 32. 1. And
Amos 5. ●1 Wherefore the Chaldee translateth the Lord accepted with favour his oblation The Scripture speaketh of God after the manner of men who are delighted with sweet odours Esay 3. 24. Song 1. 〈…〉 of rest that is of sweetnesse or of sweet savour which refresheth comforteth and quieteth the sense The Hebrew word is of the same root that Noes name was of which signified rest and comfort Gen. 5. 29. The Greeke here and usually turneth it eu●di●s of sweet-savour which the Apostle followeth saying Christ hath given himselfe for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a smell of sweet savour Ephesians 5. 2. where this sacrifice of Noe and all other in the Law are shewed to have their accomplishment in Christs death for otherwise as it was unpossible that the blood of buls and goats should take away sinnes Heb. 10. 4. so was it unpossible that the smoake of such flesh burned should be a sweet odour to God in his heart or unto his heart that is hartily minding and purposing this thing which followeth Some understand it unto Noes heart as spoken to his comfort but the Hebrew el unto is often used for in as Gen. 6. 6. 1 Sam. 27. 1. and the Greek explaineth it in the former sense The Chaldee translateth in or by his word which may bee understood as an oath as not onely the Hebrew Doctors say that God stretched out his right hand and swar● c. Pirke R. Eliezer chap. 23. but the Prophet also witnesseth I have sworne that the waters of Noe shall no more goe over the earth Es. 54. 9. not againe curse or not adde to curse This taking away of the curse notwithstanding mans corrupt heart remaining is a notable testimony of Gods rich mercy in Christ by whom we are freed from the curse Gal. 3. 13. Rev. 22. 3. Zach. 14. 11. For the covenant now made concerning the waters with Noe was a figure of that spirituall and eternall covenant of peace with us in Christ as is shewed in Esay 54. 8. 9. 10. for mans sake the Greek saith for mens workes for the imagination or though the fiction See Gen. 6. 5. where from mens merits the contrary is concluded to that which here God in mercy promiseth youth or child-hood so that it meaneth not onely mans age but infancy or childs age as the word whence youth here is derived is spoken of Moses when he was a babe Exod. 2. 6. and we all are transgressors from the womb Esay 48. 8. Psal. 51. 7. and 58. 4. In Breshith rabba an Hebrew commentary upon this place a Rabbine is said to bee asked When is the evill imagination put into m●n And hee answered From the 〈◊〉 that he is formed as I have done to weet universally with water howbeit fire shall consume the remnant Iob 22. 20. for the heavens and the earth now are by Gods word kept-in-store reserved unto fire against the day of judgement and perdition of ungodly men 2 Pet. 3. 7. Vers. 22. Henceforth all dayes of the earth that is Hereafter so long is the earth endureth It is a promise to conserve the orderly course and state of the world through all ages unto the end under which also the promise of stability of grace in Christ is spiritually covenanted unto the faithfull as Ier. 33. 20. 21. CHAPT IX 1. God blesseth Noe and his sonnes 4 Flesh with the blood and murder are forbidden 9. Gods covenant to drowne the earth no more 13 signified by the Rainbow 18 Noe replenisheth the world 20 planteth a vineyard 21 is drunken and mocked of his son 25 Curseth Canaan 26 Blesseth Sem 27 prayeth for Iaphet 28 and dyeth 950 yeeres old ANd God blessed Noe and his sonnes and said unto them Be fruitfull and multiply and replenish the earth And the feare of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast of the earth and upon every fowle of the heavens on all that moveth upon the ground and on all the fishes of the sea into your hand are they given Every moving thing that is living to you shall it bee for meat as the greene herbe have I given to you all things But flesh with the soule thereof the blood therof ye shall not eate And surely your blood of your soules will I require at the hand of every beast will I require it and at the hand of man at the hand of every mans brother will I require the soule of man He that sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed for in the image of God made he man And you be yee fruitfull and multiply bring-forth-abundantly in the earth and multiply therein And God said unto Noe and unto his sonnes with him saying And I behold I establish my covenant with you and with your seed after you And with every living soule that is with you of the fowle of the cattell and of every beast of the earth with you from all that goe out of the arke to every beast of the earth And I will establish my covenant with you and all flesh shall not bee cut off any more by the waters of a Flood and there shall not bee any more a Flood to destroy the earth And God sayd This is the signe of the covenant which I doe give betweene me and you and every living soule that is with you to eternall generations My Bow I have given in the cloud and it shall bee for a signe of the covenant betweene me and the earth And it shal be when I make-cloudy the cloud over the earth that the bow shall bee seene in the cloud And I will remember my covenant which is betweene me and you and every living soule of all flesh and there shall not be any more the waters to a flood to destroy all flesh And the Bow shall bee in the cloud and I will see it to remember the everlasting covenant betweene God and every living soule of all flesh that is upon the earth And God said unto Noe This is the signe of the covenant which I have established betweene me and all flesh that is upon the earth And the sonnes of Noe that went-out of the arke were Sem and Cham and Iapheth and Cham he is the father of Canaan These three were the sonnes of Noe and of these all the earth was over-spred And Noe began to be an husbandman and he planted a vineyard And he dranke of the wine and was drunken and hee uncovered himselfe within his tent And C ham the father of Canaan saw the nakednesse of his father and told his two brethren without And Sem and Iapheth took a garment and they layd it upon both their shoulders and went backward and covered the nakednesse of their father and their faces were backward and they saw not their fathers nakednesse And Noe awoke from his wine and hee knew that which his younger son had done unto him And he said Cursed be Canaan a servant of servants
in the length This survey was to strengthen Abrams faith who under this earthly land did view an heavenly Heb. 11. 10. 16. that he might be able to comprehend the length and bredth and depth and height and know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge Ephes. 3. 18. 19. Vers. 18. in the okes that is the oke grove or plain see Gen. 12. 6. Mamree in Greeke Mambree a man of the Amorites then living with whom Abram made league Gen. 14. 13. One of the chiefe Sorcerers of Aegypt was called by the like name See the notes on Exod. 7. 11. Chebron or Hebron the Greeke writeth it Chebrom as Esron Gen. 46. 12. is written Esrom Mat. 1. 3. It had this name afterward for before it was called the City of Arba Gen. 23. 2. and 25. 27. which Arba was a great man among the Anakims and a father of them Ios. 14. 15. and 15. 13. It became a place of buriall for many worthy persons Gen. 23. 2. 19. and 49. 3 1 it was sometime possessed by Giants whom Caleb drove out Num. 13. 23. Ios. 15. 14. It was given to Caleb for an inheritance Ios. 14. 14. was made a City of refuge and given for the Levites to dwell in Ios. 20. 7. and 21. 11. 12. In it David first reigned over Gods people a Sam. 2. 1. 11. and to it came Ma●y to visit Elisabeth Luke 1. 39. an Altar to sacrifice thankfully unto God and to sanctifie his viewed heritage See Gen. 12. 7. CHAP. XIV 1. The battell of foure foraine Kings against five Kings of Canaan 10 Sodom and Gomorrhe are spoiled 12 Lot is taken prisoner 14 Abram pursueth and smiteth the conquerors 16 bringeth backe the spoyles the captives and his br●iber Lot 17 The King of Sodom goeth out to meet Abram 18 The King of Salem Melchisedek brings him forth bread and wine and blesseth him 20 Akram giveth him tithe of all 22 The rest of the spoiles his partners having had their portions hee restoreth to the King of Sodom ANd it was in the dayes of Amraphel King of Shinar Arjoch king of Ellasar Chedor-laomer king of Elam and Thidal king of nations They made warre with Bera king of Sodom and with Birsha king of Gomorrha Shinab king of Admah and Shemeber king of Zebojim and the king of Bela that is Zoar. All these were joyned together in the valley of Siddim that is the sea of salt Twelve yeeres they served Chedor-laomer and the thirteenth yeere they rebelled And in the fourteenth yeere came Chedor-laomer and the kings which were with him and they smote the Rephaims in Ashteroth Karnaim and the Zuzims in Ham and the Emims in Shaveh Kirjathaim And the Chorites in their mount-Seir unto El-pharan which is by the wildernesse And they returned and came to En-mishpat that is Kadesh and they smote all the field of the Amalekite and also the Amorite that dwelt in Hazezonthamar And there went out the King of Sodom and the king of Gomorrha and the king of Admah and the king of Zebojim and the king of Belah that is Zoar and they joyned battell with them in the valley of Siddim With Chedor-laomer king of Elam and Thidal king of nations and Amraphel king of Shinar and Arjoch king of Ellasar foure Kings with five And the valley of Siddim had many pits of slime and the King of Sodom and of Gomorrha they fled and fell there and the residue fled to the mountaine And they tooke all the substance of Sodom and Gomorrha and al their victuals and went away And they tooke Lot the sonne of Abrams brother and his substance and they went away and hee dwelt in Sodom And there came one that had escaped and told Abram the Hebrew and he dwelt in the Okes of Mamree the Amorite the brother of Escol and brother of Aner and they were confederates with Abram And Abram heard that his brother was taken captive and he armed his trained servants the children of his house three hundred and eighteene and hee pursued them unto Dan. And hee divided himselfe against them by night he and his servants and he smote them and pursued them unto Chobah which is on the left hand of Damascus And he brought againe all the substance and also brought-againe his brother Lot and his substance and the women also and the people And the King of Sodom went out to meet him after his returne from smiting Chedor-laomer and the kings which were with him unto the valley of Shaveh that is the valley of the King And Melchisedek king of Salem brought-forth bread and wine and he a Priest of God most-hye And he blessed him and said Blessed be Abram of God most-hie possessor of heavens and earth And blessed be God most-hye who hath delivered thy enemies into thy hand and he gave him the tenth of all And the King of Sodom said unto Abram give me the soules and the substance take thou And Abram said unto the King of Sodom I have lift-up my hand unto Iehovah God most hie the possessor of heavens and earth If I take from a threed even to a shoe latchet and if I take of any thing that is thine that thou say not I have made Abram rich Save onely that which the young-men have eaten and the portion of the men which went with me Aner Eshchol and Mamree let them take their portion Annotations IN the dayes the Greeke saith in the reigne of Shinar that is Chaldea or as the Chaldee turneth it Babylon see Gen. 10. 10. Thargum Ierusalemy interpreteth it Pontus Ellasar this is thought to be Syria Chedor-laomer written in Greeke Chodollogomor Elam that is the Elamites or Persians named of Elam sonne of Sem Gen. 10. 22. Thidal or Thidgnal which the Greek writeth Thargal d changed into r see Gen. 10. 3. of nations Hebr. Gojim which may bee kept unchanged but the Greeke and Chaldee translate it nations or peoples It seemeth they were of sundry families or populous as Galilee of the nations Es. 9. 1. Their country is thought to be after named Pamphilia Vers. 2. Zebojim in Greeke Seboeim it is written by the letters in the line Zebiim of Zebi which signifieth glory pleasantnesse and a Roe by which name the pleasant and glorious land of Israel is called in Ezek. 20. 6. but by the vowels and in the margine noted to bee read Zebojim as being unworthy the pleasant name So in vers 8. that is Zoar or Zogar so called after upon Lots request Gen. 19. 20. 22. These five Cities stood neere together in the land of Canaan in the plaine of Iordan and were all except Zoar butned with fire and brimstone from heaven Gen. 19. Deut. 29. 23. Here they are fore-chastned of God by warres sea of salt or salt sea so Ios. 3. 16. meaning that this goodly valley after it was burnt from heaven became a salt sea and so barren and fruitlesse that no living thing fish or other was found therein For so all
south parts of Canaan are noted to bee in Iudg. 1. 15. Hereupon grew that betweene Isaak and the Philistines for wells of water Gen. 26. 18. 20. 21. The Greeke for well translateth wells as being many and indeed Abraham had there moe wells then one as appeareth by Gen. 26 15. 18. and it is usuall in scripture to put one for many as is obserued on Gen. 3. 2. and 4. 20. Albeit the 30. vers sheweth rather one speciall to be here meant where also the Greek speaketh of one Vers. 31. Beer sheba by interpretation the well of the oath as the Greeke translateth it and the words following doe confirme or the well of seven because of the 7 lambes forementioned for Sheba usually signifieth seven and Shebuah an oath See also Gen. 26. 33. they sware or were sworne for swearing is alwaies expressed in Hebrew in the forme passive to be sworne because it is with a passion of the mind and offred or occasioned by another It hath also the signification of seven which is a mysticall number Gen. 2. 2. The reason hereof some thinke to be because it is confirmed as by seven that is by many witnesses or as having reference to the seven spirits that are before the throne of God Rev. 1. 4. the seven hornes and seven eyes of the Lambe Christ which are the seven spirits of God sent into all the world Rev. 5. 6. Wherefore Abrahams seven lambes seeme to bee not without mystery Vers. 33. he planted that is Abraham planted as the Greeke expresseth which sheweth his purpose and hope here long to continue a tree or a grove that is a plot of trees the Greeke saith hee planted a field the Ierusalemy Thargum translateth it a paradise or orchard and it is usuall to put one for many see Gen. 3. 2. The Hebrew Aeshel is used also for a tree in 1 Sam. 22. 6. and 31. 13. which another Prophet rehearsing calleth Aelah that is an Oake 1 Chron. 10. 12. It is before recorded that Abram had such trees by his tent under whose coole shadow men sate and were refreshed in that hot Country Gen. 18. 1 4 8. but by that which here followeth that hee called there on the name of the Lord it is also probable that this plantation was for religious use which before the Law given by Moses might bee lawfull and was used generally of the nations Deut. 12. 2. but after was forbidden when God had chosen a place of worship Yet as from Abrahams example offring his sonne Isaak Gen. 22. the Iewes would superstitiously sacrifice their children Ier. 7. 31. and 19. 5. so from Abrahams grove they used groves for religious use and sacrificed under greene trees 2 King 17. 10. Ier. 17. 2. Esay 57. 5. But God forbad such things Deut. 16. 21. yet the heathen Romans commanded them saying Lucos in agris habento Leg. 12. tab de relig lex 2. eternall God or God of eternitie or of the World But the Greeke translateth eternall and so God is called in Rom. 16. 26. Here is the first place where this title was given him Ver. 34 many daies or yeres as Gen. 4. 3. Thus God gave some rest to this weary pilgrim hee dwelled here still when Isaak was offred which was in the 33. yeere of his life Gen. 22. 19. and how long after is uncertaine CHAP. XXII 1 Abraham is tempted tr offer-up Isaak 3 Hee giveth proofe of his faith and obedience 11 The Angell stayeth him 13 Isaak is exchanged with aram 14 The place is called Iehovah jireh 15 Abraham is blessed againe 20 The generations of Nahor unto Rebekah ANd it was after these things that God did tempt Abraham and said unto him Abraham and hee said Behold here I am And he said Take now thy son thy onely son whom thou lovest even Isaak and goe thou into the land of Morijah and offer him there for a burnt-offering upon one of the mountaines which I shall say unto thee And Abraham rose-earely in the morning and sadled his asse and tooke two of his yongmen with him and Isaak his sonne and clave the wood of the burnt-offring and rose-up and went unto the place which God had said unto him In the third day then Abraham lifted vp his eyes and saw the place afarre-off And Abraham said unto his yongmen abide you here with the asse and I and the yong-man will goe yonder and we will bow-downe our-selves and we will returne unto you And Abraham tooke the wood of the burnt-offring and put it upon Isaak his son and he took in his hand the fire and the knife and they went both of them together And Isaak said unto Abraham his father said my father and he said Behold I am here my son and he said Behold here is the fire and the wood but where is the lambe for a burnt-offring And Abraham said God will provide himselfe a lamb for a burnt-offring my son and they went both of them together And they came to the place which God had said unto him and Abraham builded there an altar and layd the wood in order and bound Isaak his son and put him on the altar upon the wood And Abraham thrust forth his hand and tooke the knife to kill his son And the Angell of Iehovah called unto him out of the heavens and said Abraham Abraham and he said loe here I am And he said Put not forth thy hand unto the yong-man neither doe thou any-thing to him for now I know that thou fearest God and thou hast not with-held thy sonne thy onely son from me And Abraham lifted-up his eyes and saw and behold a ramme behind holden in a thicket by his hornes and Abraham went and tooke the ram and offred him for a burnt-offring in stead of his son And Abraham called the name of that place Iehovah Iireh of which it is said to this day in the mountaine of Iehovah it shal be seene And the Angel of Iehovah called unto Abraham the second time out of the heauens And hee said By my selfe have I sworne assuredly saith Iehovah that for because thou hast done this thing and hast not with-held thy son thy onely son Surely blessing I will blesse thee and multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the starres of the heavens and as the sand which is upon the sea shore and thy seed shall possesse the gate of his enemies And in thy seed shall all nations of the earth blesse themselves because that thou hast obeyed my voyce And Abraham returned unto his yong men and they rose up and went together to Beersheba and Abraham dwelt in Beersheba And it was after these things that it was told Abraham saying Behold Milcah she also hath borne sonnes unto thy brother Nachor Vz his first borne and Buz his brother and Kemuel the father of Aram. And Kesed and Chazo and Pildash and Iidlaph and Bethuel And Bethuel begat Rebekah these eight did Milcah beare to Nachor
home as Iudg. 5. 24. or being with the sheepfolds as an heirder for shepherds kept in tents Gen. 4. 20. Esa. 38. 12. and such was Iakobs trade and his childrens Gen. 46. 34. Besides that dwelling in tents signified his pilgrimage in the land Heb. 11. 9. Hereupon Iakobs tents are used for the state of the commonwealth of Israel Num. 24. 5. Mal. 2. 12. The Greeke here translateth dwelling in house but the Chaldee saith A minister of the house of doctrine as giving himselfe to religious study and schollership So other of the Hebrew Doctors as in Pirkei R. Eliezer ch 32. it is said After the children were growne the one walked in the way of life the other walked in the way of death Iakob our father walked in the way of life for he dwelt in tents and studied the law all his dayes but Esau the wicked walked in the way of death to kill Iakob Gen. 27. 41. Vers. 28. in his mouth or for his mouth namely his meat as the Greeke explaineth it that is because he delighted to eate of Esaus venison This love for carnall respect continued contrary to the Oracle of God but it was disappointed Genes 27. 4. 33. Vers. 29. pottage or broth Hebr. sod a seething faint with wearinesse as the word implyeth This signified Esaus vaine imployment of his time and strength whereas they that wait on the Lord spiritually faint not Esay 40. 30. 31. but the righteous eateth to the satisfying of his soule Pro. 13. 25. Vers. 30. Let me cast or let me have a draught the Greeke and Chaldee translate it tast It is a word not used but in this place red which in Hebrew is Adom whereupon his name was called Aedom The doubling of the word red and omitting the word pottage noteth Esaus hast and greedinesse increased also by the colour he called or his name was called Aedom that is Red for hee was ruddy when hee was borne vers 25. and now longing for red broth and selling his birthright for it this name was given him as a brand-marke of his greedinesse and profanenesse Vers. 31. this day or even now the Hebr. Cajom As to day is often used for hajom this day as the Greeke here interpreteth it and in vers 23. following So 1 Sam. 2. 16. and 9. 13. 27. 2 Chron. 18. 4. And the Hebrew word for As is often a very affirmation see Gen. 27. 12. firstbirthright The dignity whereof the Law sheweth to be great in that all the first-borne were peculiarly consecrated and given unto God Exod. 22. 29. were next in honour to their parents Gen. 49. 3. had a double portion of their fathers goods Deut. 21. 17. succeeded them in the government of the family or kingdome 2 Chron. 21. 3. and administration of the priesthood and service of God Num. 8. 14. 17. Therefore the first-borne is used for one that is loved and deare to his father Ex. 4. 22. and higher then his brethren Psal. 89. 28. and figured Christ Rom. 8. 29. and true Christians heyres of the kingdome of heaven Heb. 12. 23. This honour Iakob strove to have at his birth but missing then hee seeketh now and obtaineth it The Greeke translateth it plurally firstbirthrights and so doth the Apostle in Heb. 12. 16. Vers. 32. going to dye that is ready or in danger to dye which may bee meant both in respect of his present hunger which could not as he prophanely thought bee satisfied with the title of his birth-right and of his daily danger to bee killed by the wild beasts in the field where hee hunted wherefore serveth or what profiteth as if he should say nothing at all Vers. 33. Sweare to confirme the bargain Heb. 6. 16. and to make it irrevocable Psalm 110. 4. and 15. 4. So by oath he renounced his birthright before God whose name is therfore used in othes Deut. 6. 13. he sold It is recorded in the Iewes canon lawes that the first-borne who selloth the portion of his birthright even before it be parted his sale standeth in force because the firstborne hath part in the birthright before the parting thereof Maimony Treat of Inheritances ch 3. S. 6. Vers. 34. of lentiles a kind of pulse much like to vetches or small pease and but course food so vile an exchange did Esau make of his heavenly dignity that not without cause doth the holy Ghost call him a profane person who for one meales meat sold his first birthrights Heb. 12. 16. It is a tradition of the Hebrew Doctors that Lentiles were wont to be eaten of men in their sorrow and mourning and that Iakob did feed upon Lentiles in mourning and sorrow for that the kingdome and dominion and first-birthright was Esaus Whereupon they also gather that the sonnes of Esau should not fall untill the Remainder of Iakob come and give to the sonnes of Esau food of lentiles with mourning and sorrow and take from them the dominion kingdome and firstbirthright which Iakob bought of him by oath Pirkei R. Eliezer ch 35. eat and drinke This seemeth to intimate not onely a satisfying of his hunger but a carnall secure despising of his honor now sold as in 1 Cor. 15. 32. let us eat and drinke for to morrow wee shall dye went away without shewing any remorse or sorrow for his profane bargaine despised unto this the Ierusalemy Paraphrast addeth that he also despised his portion in the world to come and denyed the resurrection of the dead Thus the Iewes esteemed his fact most irreligious and profane as the Apostle also doth Heb. 12. 16. CHAP. XXVI 1. Isaak because of famine goeth to Gerar 2 God biddeth him not goe into Aegypt but dwell in the land and promiseth him the blessings of Abraham 7 Isaak denyeth his wife 9 Abimelech therefore reproveth him 12 He groweth rich 18 Hee diggeth three wels Esek Sitnah and Rechoboth 23 Abimelech maketh a covenant with him at Beersheba 34 Esaus wives ANd there was a famine in the land besides the first famine which was in the dayes of Abraham and Isaak went unto Abimelech King of the Philistims unto Gerar. And Iehovah appeared unto him and said Goe not downe into Aegypt dwell in the land which I shall say unto thee Sojourne in this land and I will bee with thee and will blesse thee for to thee and to thy seed will I give all these lands and I will stablish the oath which I sware unto Abraham thy father And I will multiply thy seed as the starres of the heavens and will give unto thy seed all these lands and in thy seed all nations of the earth shall blesse themselves Because that Abraham obeyed my voyce and kept my charge my commandements my statutes and my lawes And Isaak dwelt in Gerar. And the men of the place asked of his wife and he said she is my sister for he feared to say my wife left the men of the place should kill mee for Rebekah because shee was of a good
2. These were of the worst sort of people in the land Ezek. 16. 3. Vers. 35. a bitternesse of spirit that is a griefe of mind through their bitter provocation and rebellious cariage so that they were yrked of their life by reason of them Gen. 27. 46. Or of a rebellious spirit resisting their parents This latter the Greeke followeth calling them Contentious with Isaak and Rebekah and the Chaldee saith they were rebellious and stubborne against the word of Isaak and Rebekah unto which the Ierusalemy Thargum addeth that they served God with strange service that is idolatry and received not the instruction either of Isaak or of Rebekah See Gen. 27. 46. CHAP. XXVII 1 Isaak sendeth Esau for venison purposing to eat and blesse him before his death 5 Rebekah instructeth Iakob to obtaine the blessing 15 Iakob under the person of Esau obtaineth it 30 Esau bringeth venison 33. Isaak trembleth 34 Esau complaineth and by importunity obtaineth a blessing 41 He threatneth to kill Iakob 42 Rebekah disappointeth it ANd it was when Isaak was old and his eyes were dimme that he could not see then called hee Esau his elder son and said unto him my son and hee said unto him Behold here am I. And he said Behold now I am old I know not the day of my death And now take I pray thee thy wepons thy quiver and thy bow and goe out to the field and hunt for me venison And make for me savoury-meats such as I love and bring it to me that I may eat that my soule may blesse thee before I dye And Rebekah heard when Isaak spake to Esau his sonne and Esau went to the field to hunt for venison for to bring it And Rebekah said unto Iakob her son saying Behold I heard thy father speaking unto Esau thy brother saying Bring me venison and make for me savoury-meats that I may eat and I will blesse thee before Iehovah before my death And now my sonne obey my voice according to that I doe command thee Goe now unto the flocke and take to me from thence two good kids of the goats and I will make them savoury-meats for thy father such as he loveth And thou shalt bring them to thy father that he may eat for that hee may blesse thee before his death And Iakob said to Rebekah his mother Behold Esau my brother is a hairy man and I a smooth man If so be my father shall feele me then shall I be in his eyes as a deceiver and I shall bring upon me a curse and not a blessing And his mother said unto him Vpon me be thy curse my sonne Onely obey my voice and goe take them unto me And he went and tooke and brought them to his mother and his mother made savoury-meats such as his father loved And Rebekah tooke the desireable garments of Esau her elder sonne which were with her in the house and put them upon Iakob her yonger sonne And the skinns of the kids of the goats she put upon his hands and upon the smooth of his neck And she gave the savoury-meats and the bread which shee had made into the hand of Iakob her sonne And he came unto his father and said my father and hee said Behold here I am who art thou my sonne And Iakob said unto his father I am Esau thy firstborn I have done even as thou spakest unto mee Arise I pray thee sit and eate of my venison that thy soule may blesse me And Isaak said unto his son How is this that thou hast so soon found it my son And hee said because Iehovah thy God brought it to passe before me And Isaak said unto Iakob Come neere I pray thee and let me feele thee my sonne whether thou be the same my sonne Esau or not And Iakob went-neere unto Isaak his father and he felt him and he said the voice is the voice of Iakob and the hands are the hands of Esau. And he discerned him not because his hands were as the hands of Esau his brother hairy and he blessed him And he said art thou the same my sonne Esau And he said I. And he said Bring-neere unto me and I will eat of my sonnes venison that my soule may blesse thee and hee brought it neere to him and he did eat and he brought unto him wine and hee dranke And Isaak his father said unto him Come neere now and kisse me my sonne And he came neere and kissed him and he smelled the smell of his garments and blessed him and said See the smell of my sonne is as the smell of a field the which Iehovah hath blessed And God give unto thee of the dew of the heavens and of the fatnesses of the earth and multitude of corne and of new-wine Let peoples serve thee and nations bow-downe themselves unto thee be thou a master to thy brethren and let thy mothers sonnes bow-downe-themselves unto thee Cursed be every one of them that curse thee and blessed be every one of them that blesse thee And it was when as Isaak had made an end of blessing Iakob and it was that Iakob was but going gone out from the presence of Isaak his father that Esau his brother came in from his hunting And he also made savoury meats brought them to his father and said unto his father Let my father arise and eate of his sonnes venison that thy soule may blesse me And Isaak his father said unto him who art thou and he said I am thy son thy first borne Esau And Isaak trembled with a very vehement great trembling said Who where is he that hath hunted venison broght it unto me I have eaten of all ere thou camest and have blessed him yea and he shall bee blessed When Esau heard the words of his father then cryed-he-out with an outcry great and bitter very vehemently and said unto his father Blesse me mee also my father And he said Thy brother came with guile and he hath taken thy blessing And he said Is it because his name was called Iakob for hee hath supplanted me these two-times he tooke my first-birthright and behold now he hath taken my blessing and he said hast thou not reserved a blessing for me And Isaak answered and said unto Esau Loe I have appointed him to be a master over thee and all his brethren have I given to him for servants and with corne and new wine have I sustained him and unto thee now what shall I doe my son And Esau said unto his father Hast thou but that one blessing my father blesse me me also my father and Esau lifted up his voice and wept And Isaak his father answerd and said unto him Behold of the fatnesses of the earth shall thy dwelling be and of the dew of the heavens from above And by thy sword shalt thou live and thy Brother shalt thou serve and it shall be when thou shalt get-the-dominion that thou shalt breake his yoake
was he when hee interpreted Pharaohs dreame Gen. 41. 46. and nine yeeres after when there had been 7 yeers plenty and two yeeres famine did Iakob with his family goe downe into Egypt Gen. 41. 53. 54. and 45. 6. 11. and at their going-downe thither Pharez the sonne of Iudas whose birth is set downe in the end of this chapter had two sonnes Ezron and Hamul Gen. 46. 8. 12. Seeing then from the selling of Ioseph unto Israels going into Egypt there cannot bee above three and twenty yeeres how is it possible that Iudas should take a wife and have by her three sonnes one after another and Selah the yongest of the three bee mariageable when Iudas begat Pharez of Thamar Gen. 38. 14. 24. and Pharez bee growne up maried and have two sonnes all within so short a space The time therefore here spoken of seemeth to bee soone after Iakobs comming to Sechem Gen. 33. 18. before that historie of Dinah Gen. 34. though Moses for speciall cause relateth it in this place Iudah or Iudas as the Greeke alwaies nameth him Mat. 1. 2. a man an Adullamite that is an heathen man dwelling in Adullam or Odollam as the Greeke calleth it a citie in the land of Canaan which afterward was given for a possession to the Sonnes of this Iudas Ios. 15. 1. 35. The word man here as in the verse following may be omitted for the sense see Gen. 13. 8. or it may be read a man of Adullam as where one Evangelist writeth The men Ninivites Mat. 12. 41. another writeth The men of Niniveh Luk. 11. 32. Vers. 2. Canaanite the Chaldee translateth it a merchant and so the word is sometime used in Scripture Prov. 31. 24. Iob. 41. 6. but the Greeke here calleth him a Chananaean Shua in Greek Saba but in vers 12. Saua tooke her namely to wife as verse 12. Contrary to his dutie for he should not have maried with such Gen. 24. 3. and 27. 46. and 28. 1. Iudas was now in likelihood about 13. or 14. yeeres of age went in that is lay with her see Gen. 6. 4. Vers. 4. Onan in Greeke Aunan Vers. 5. Selah or Shelah in Greeke Selom so after verse 11. c. he was the Greeke saith she was Chezib a towne called also Achzib which likewise fell to the tribe of Iudah Ios. 15. 44. The Greeke calleth it Chazbi The name hath in Hebrew the signification of lying and to it the Prophet alludeth saying the houses of Achzib shall be Achzab a Lye to the Kings of Israel Micah 1. 14. Vers. 6. to Er or for Er when in likelihood he also was about 14. yeeres of age Thamar or Tamar that is by interpretation a palme tree Song 7. 7. Of what kindred she was the scripture speaketh not but shee became the mother to our Lord Christ according to the flesh Mat. 1. 3. Vers. 7. evill in the eyes that is displeasing The letters in Hebrew of this word * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 evill and of his name * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Er are the same the order onely changed the like whereof is before in Noes name and Grace Gen. 6. 8. slew him this was very soone after his mariage in his youth So evill doers shall bee cut off Psal. 37. 9. And this judgement on Iudahs first borne is mentioned sundry times Gen. 46. 12. Num. 26. 19. 1 Chron. 2. 3. And as our Lord Christ was to come of Iudas Hebr. 7. 14. so God would have no wicked man to be his progenitor Vers. 8. marie her the Hebrew word is not meant of usuall solemnization of mariage but peculiar for marying with his brothers widow and doing that dutie of a kinsman whereof there was a law after given of God according to this case Deut. 25. 5. which law as many other God had made knowne before unto the Patriarchs as this scripture manifesteth The Hebrew Doctors say It is commanded by the Law in Deut. 25. 5. 6. that a man shall marie the wife of his brother by the fathers side if they have beene maried or if they have beene betrothed together if he dye without seed Brethren by the mothers side onely are not counted brethren in this case of marying the brothers wife or for matter of inheritance c. Maimony in Misneh tom 2. in Iibbum and Chalitsah chap. 1. S. 1. 7. See the annotations on Deut. 25. seed a childe which may bee counted thy brothers who is deceased that his name be not wiped away out of Israel Deut. 25. 6. Otherwise excepting this case it was unlawfull for a man to have his brothers wife Levit. 18. 16. and 20. 21. Vers. 9. not be his but stand up with his brothers name as his brothers childe though this was onely for the first borne all the rest should have beene counted his owne Deut. 25. 6. So the Chaldee translateth that the seed should not bee called by his name when or if at any time Whensoever spilled or corrupted which the Greeke translateth shed or spilled An unkinde and most unnaturall fact to spill the seed which by Gods blessing should serve for the propagation of man-kinde and in this man for the propagation of the sonne of God according to the flesh in whom all nations of the earth should be blessed Gen. 22. 18. which made the sinne most impious and hastened Onans speedy death from the hand of God Vers. 11. Remaine or sit dwell a widow so sending her home to her fathers house but without permission to mary another man yet not purposing she should have his sonne for whom hee made her stay This was in him very injurious which God soone chastened him for by the death of his wife and giving him over to incest with his daughter in law By the law in Levit. 22. 13. a widow that had no childe might returne to her fathers house and her estate was as in her youth he sayd in his heart as the Greeke explaineth it lest hee dye meaning I will not give her unto Selah to wife lest he dye also vers 14. An unperfect speech wherof see Gen. 3. 22. and an evill surmise that he had of Thamar as if shee had caused his other sonnes death Vers. 12. the daughter of Shuah the Greek translateth and Saua the wife of Iudas dyed was comforted after mourning for his wives death as Gen. 23. 2. and 24. 57. sheepe shearers At such times they used to have feasts 1 Sam. 25. 8. 11. So hee went to make merry after his mourning his friend the Greeke translateth Eira his shepheard reading for Regneh a friend without vowels Rogneh a shepheard and so in verse 20. but the Chaldee translateth friend and it hath the name in Hebrew of feeding-together and so generally of society friendship neighbourhood Timnath or Thamna a citie in the Philistines country which also befell to Iudahs children for a possession Ios. 15. 57. There Sampson tooke a wife Iudg. 14. 1. c. Vers. 14. wrapped
glorie of the Majestie of the Lord was revealed upon it in a flame of fire The mountaine burnt with fire unto the midst of heaven with darknesse clouds and thicke darknesse Deut. 4. 11. all the mount the mountaines saw the Lord and trembled Hab. 3. 10. they leaped like rammes Psal. 114. 4. the earth quaked the heavens also dropped at the presence of God even Sinai it selfe at the presence of God the God of Israel Psal. 68. 6. Iudg. 5. 5. The Greek translateth all the people was astonied Vers. 19. going and waxing strong that is continually proceeding and increasing in londnesse and strength more and more See a like phrase in Gen. 8. 3. Moses spake so fearfull was the sight that Moses said I am sore afraid and tremble Heb. 12. 21. by a voyce by a more gentle meane than the thunder or loud shrilling trumpet that Moses might be confirmed and not affrighted So Daniel being daunted with a vision was strengthned by the Angels words Dan. 10. 8. 16. 17. 19. And this voyce was heard of the people as is likely by that promise unto Moses in verse 9. It signified also that onely the Lords voyce takes away the terrors of the Law for by Moses the Law was given but by Christ who answered the Law and fulfilled it commeth grace and truth Ioh. 1. 17. Vers. 21. testifie unto or charge contest the people Paul used to contest or charge before God and his Angels 1 Tim. 5. 21. 2 Tim. 2. 14. and 4. 1. lest they breake or that they breake not through to wit the bounds set them to see as Moses did at the first till he was stayed of God Exodus 3. 3. Curiositie is forbidden that men might walke by faith not by sight 2 Cor. 5. 7. and learne humility Rom. 12. 3. The Greeke here translateth Lest they draw neare unto God to consider or to behold and Luke useth the word in that sense in Stephens speech of Moses Act. 7. 31. fall that is be killed of the Lord verse 12. as 50. thousand and 70 men of Berhshemeth were slaine for looking into the Arke of God 1 Sam. 6. 19. So falling is used for staine in Gen. 14. 10. 1 Cor. 10. 8. Vers 22. which come neare that is as the Chaldee explaineth which come neare to minister before the Lord. These priests are after called yong men of the sonnes of Israel Exodus 24. 5. and were the first borne of the people whom God had sanctified to him-selfe Exodus 13. 2. in whose place hee afterward tooke the tribe of Levi Numb 8. 14. 15. 17. 18. sanctifie themselves that is prepare wash and keepe themselves from being defiled with sinne by touching the mount as vers 24. 12. breake forth which the Chaldee expoundeth bee strong that is very angry but it implieth death also when God breaketh forth as the breach of waters upon men to destroy them as 2 Sam. 5. 20. and 6. 6. 7. 8. Vers. 23. cannot or shall not be able to come up by reason of the former charge and limitation It seemeth therefore that Moses thought it needlesse to speake so often and instantly to the people but God urgeth it againe verse 24. so restraining the curiositie of the people and shewing the end of the Law to be rather to exclude men from God by reason of their sinnes than to justifie or give them life as doth the Gospell for it was the ministration of death 2 Cor. 3. 7. Gal. 3. 10. 11. 19. 21. 22. 23. 24. Mount Sina is in bondage with her children Gal. 4. 25. Vers. 24. breake through the Greeke here translateth let them not violently presse to come up but that which the Law suffereth not the Gospell admitteth Mat. 11. 12. Luke 16. 16. Heb. 12. 18. 22. 23. 24. CHAP. XX. 1 The ten Commandements are spoken by God on mount Sinai 18 With thunders lightnings sound of the trumpet c. whereat the people are afraid 20 Moses comforteth them 22 God upon this occasion againe forbiddeth them Idolatrie 24 Of what sort the altar should be AND God spake all these words saying I Iehovah thy God which have brought thee out from the land of Egypt from the house of servants Thou shalt not have any other gods before my face Thou shalt not make unto thee a graven thing or any likenesse of things which are in the heavens above or which are in the earth beneath or which are in the waters beneath the earth Thou shalt not bow downe thy selfe to them neither serve them for I Iehovah thy God am a jealous God visiting the iniquitie of the fathers upon the sonnes upon the third and upon the fourth generation of them that hate me And doing mercy unto thousands of them that love mee and of them that keepe my Commandements Thou shalt not take up the name of Iehovah thy God in vaine for Iehovah will not hold him guiltlesse that shall take up his name in vaine Remember thou the Sabbath day to sanctifie it Six daies shalt thou labour and shalt doe all thy worke But the seventh day is a Sabbath to Iehovah thy God in it thou shalt not doe any worke thou or thy son or thy daughter thy man servant or thy woman servant or thy cattel or thy stranger which is within thy gates For in sixe daies Iehovah made the heavens and the earth the sea and all which are in them and rested in the seventh day therefore Iehovah blessed the Sabbath day and sanctified it Honour thy father and thy mother that thy dayes may bee prolonged upon the land which Iehovah thy God giveth thee Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adulterie Thou shalt not steale Thou shalt not answer a false witnesse against thy neighbour Thou shalt not cover thy neighbours house thou shalt not covet thy neighbours wife or his man servant or his woman servant or his oxe or his asse or any thing which is thy neighbors And all the people saw the voices and the lightnings and the voice of the trumpet and the mountaine smoaking and the people saw and removed away and they stood a farre off And they said unto Moses Speake thou with us and we will heare and let not God speake with us lest we die And Moses said unto the people Feare not for God is come for to tempt you and that his feare may be before your faces that you may not sinne And the people stood afarre off and Moses drew neere unto the thicke darknesse where God was And Iehovah said unto Moses Thus thou shalt say unto the sons of Israel you have seene that I have spoken with you out of the heavens Yee shall not make with me gods of silver or gods of gold yee shall not make unto you An altar of earth thou shalt make unto me and shalt sacrifice thereon thy burnt offrings and thy peace offrings thy sheepe and thy oxen In every place where I shall make the memoriall of my name I wil come unto
people saith the Greeke version offred-it-for-sin The Greeke translateth purified it so the word sometime meaneth but it figured also a purifying of others from sinne thereby as Levit. 6. 26. and so the Chaldee here expoundeth and he made atonement by the blood thereof as the first spoken of in vers 8. and so he burnt it without the campe as the other was in verse 11. for which he was reproved by Moses Levit. 10. 16. 17. Vers. 16. the manner or the ordinance Hebr. the judgement the Greeke saith as was meet It respecteth the Law in Levit. 1. Vers. 17. filled that is tooke his handfull out of it see Levit. 2. 2. of the morne that is which was daily to be offred every morning as God commanded Exod. 29. 38. 39. 40. This therefore was extraordinary that as the daily meat-offring was to testifie their thankfulnesse for Gods ordinary and daily mercies so this for his speciall grace now manifested Chazkuni explaineth it thus It teacheth that there were two Meat-offrings one with the Burnt-offring and one by it selfe Sol. Iarchi saith All this he did after the daily Burnt-offring Vers. 18. sprinkled according to the law in Levit 3. 2. The Greeke translateth he poured it Vers. 19. fat Hebr. fats so in vers 20. rumpe or tayle to weet of the ram see Levit. 3. 9. that which covereth in Greeke the fat which covereth the inwards and so the text explaineth it in Levit. 3. 9. Vers. 20. they put the fat Hebr. the fatts Sol. Iarchi saith After the waving the Priest that waved gave them to another Priest to burne them Vers. 21. waved as was commanded Lev. 7. 30. c. By these sacrifices the sanctification of the people was signified by the Sin-offring and Burnt-offring they had remission and justification from their sinnes and reconciliation unto God by the Meat-offring their renovation by the spirit and by the Peace-offrings their thankefulnesse unto God whom they honour with the fruits of his owne graces all these obtained by faith in Christ and in his death for he of God is made unto us wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1. 30. Vers. 22. lift-up his hand or his hands as the Hebrew vowel and reading in the margine both shew so the Greeke translateth hands See Exod. 32. 19. R. Menachem giveth this reason why it is written Hand to signifie the right hand because that was listed up higher then the left The lifting up of the hand was a gesture used in speaking or signifying of any weighty thing Esa. 49. 22. and particularly in swearing Gen. 14. 22. praying Psal. 28. 2. and blessing eyther of God Psal. 134. 2. or of men as in this place So Paul speaking of prayer useth the phrase of lifting up holy hands 1 Tim. 2. 8. and David let the lifting up of my hands be as the evening sacrifice Psal. 141. 2. blessed them This appertained to the Priests office to blesse the people in the name of the Lord for ever Deuter. 10. 8. 1 Chron. 23. 13. and was accomplished by our high Priest Christ Iesus when having finished his ministery on earth hee lift up his hands and blessed his disciples Luk. 24. 50. The forme of Aarons blessing is prescribed in Num. 6. 23. 27. see the annotations there And this being done in the Lords name by his Priests a figure of Christ whom God hath sent to blesse us Act. 3. 26. without all contradiction the lesse is blessed of the greater Heb. 7. 7. came downe from the banke or hilly place of the altar which was higher then the other ground see Exod. 20. 26. So in Thargum Ionathan it is explained he came downe from the Altar with joy after that he had finished the making of the Sin-offring c. On the contrary Christ when hee had blessed went up into heaven Luke 24. 51. from making or doing that is offring as vers 7. After that he had done as before is shewed Vers. 23. went into the Tent the Priest went in according to the law in Exod. 30. 7. 8. to burne incense on the golden altar Moses went in with him in likelihood to direct him how to doe the service so Sol. Iarchi here explaineth it But hee addeth withall an other exposition thus When Aaron saw that they had offred all the oblations and done all the workes and the Majestie of God came not downe to Israel he was grieved and said I know that the holy blessed God is angry with me and for my sake the Majestie of God commeth not downe to Israel c. Immediately Moses went in with him and prayed for mercie and the divine Majestie came downe unto Israel After this manner Thargum Ionathan also expoundeth it they blessed This was a second blessing by Moses and Aaron when the people were dismissed Vnto which and the like at other times especially on Atonement day Levit. 16. David prophesying of Christs dayes seemeth to have reference in Psal. 118. 26. Wee blesse you out of the house of Iehovah glory the visible signe of Gods glory and favour out of his holy place either by the fire mentioned in the next verse or by a clowd as was in Exod. 16. 10. and 40. 34. or by them both It was a token of his gracious acceptance of them and of their service as after in 1 King 8. 10. 11. 12. Vers. 24. from before Iehovah the Greeke translateth from the Lord. And it was either from heaven as after in Solomons dayes Fire came downe from heaven and confirmed the Burnt-offring and sacrifices 2 Chron. 7. 1. or out of the Tabernacle By this miracle God confirmed the people touching the doctrine and ordinances given by Moses and the priesthood now committed to Aaron and his sonnes as appeareth by the prayer of Elias when the like miracle was shewed from heaven Let it be knowne this day day that thou art God in Israel and that I am thy servant and that I have done all these things at thy word 1 King 18. 36. consumed or ate up by which signe the church was assured that their sacrifices were accepted See Psal. 20. 4. The like was at the dedicating of Solomons Temple 2 Chro. 7. 1. 2. 3. and at Elias sacrifice 1 King 18. 38. 39. This Fire which now came from God was nourished on the Altar as the Hebrewes say unto Solomons time Chazkuni here writeth thus The fire which came-out from the Lord in the daies of Moses went not up from the brazen Altar untill he came into the eternall House that is into Solomons temple so called because of that promise in 2 Chron. 7. 16. that Gods name should be there for ever And that Fire which came downe in the dayes of Solomon went not up from the Altar of Burnt-offring untill it went up in the dayes of Manasseh Of the departing of that fire in Mana●ses dayes wee finde no mention in the Scriptures But after Solomons Temple was destroyed and the second builded the
it such tribulations which the Ierusalemy Thargum explaineth thus and great sorrow hath befallen me this day for that my two sons Nadab and Abihu are dead and I mourne for them good in the eyes that is pleasing and acceptable see Gen. 16. 6. Thargum Ierusalemy expoundeth it thus Loe if I had eaten the sin-offring to day were it possible that it could bee pleasing and right before the Lord meaning it could not be So Aaron excuseth himselfe by reason of his sorrow which made him unfit and unworthy to eat of those holy things The law requireth them that ●at before the Lord to rejoyce Deuteronomie 12. 7. And when they brought their sanctified things they were to say I have not eaten of it in my mourning Deut. 26. 14. When God would refuse the sacrifices of sinners hee saith they shall be unto them as the bread of mourners all that eat thereof shall be polluted Hosea 9. 4. In the Hebrew canons it is also said An inferiour Priest which is in the Sanctuary at his service if hee heare that hee hath a friend dead whom hee ought to bewaile although hee goe not out of the Sanctuary hee may not serve because he is a mourner and if hee serve when he mourneth according to the law he polluteth his service whether it be in the offring of one man alone or the offring of the Congregation But the High Priest serveth when hee is a mourner as it is written Levit. 21. 12. HE SHALL NOT GOE OVT OF THE SANCTVART AND HE SHALL NOT PROFANE c. as if he should say he shall abide and serve the service that he hath in hand and it is not profaned But though the High Priest serve mourning it is unlawfull for him to eat of the holy things as it is written Levit. 10. 19. AND IF I HAD EATEN THE SIN-OFFRING TO DAY SHOVLD IT HAVE BEENE GOOD IN THE EYES OF THE LORD And so he hath no portion to eat with the rest at evening Maimony treat of Entring into the Sanctuary chap. 2. Sect. 6. 8. See for the Priests mourning more on Levit. 21. Vers. 20. it was good the Greeke translateth it pleased him So Moses admitteth of the answer as reasonable For often times the letter of the law giveth place to great necessities as David in his hunger did ea● the shew-bread which was not lawfull for him Matth. 12. 3. 4. Ezekias admitted to the Passeover some chat were not cleansed according to the law but healed by the Lord● 2 Chron. 30. 18. 19. 20. Here now all Israol saw and Moses and Aaron themselves acknowledged the impossibility of the law and of the Priesthood thereof to bring them unto God in that so great imperfections were manifested at the very first administration and alwaies after For the Law maketh m●n High Priests which have infirmitie but the word of the oath which was since the Law maketh the Son who is perfected for evermore Heb. 7. 28. CHAP. XI 1 A law teaching what beasts may 4 and what may not be eaten 9 What fishes 13 and what fowles 24 How carkasses doe pollute 29 The creeping things which are unclean 32 and how their carkasses doe defile things 39 Clean beasts that dye of themselves become uncleane 43 An exhortation unto holinesse in observing this Law ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses and unto Aaron saying unto them Speak ye unto the sonnes of Israel saying These are the beasts which ye shall eat of all the beasts which are on the earth All that parteth the hoofe and cleaveth asunder the cleft of the hoofes and cheweth the cud among the beasts that shall ye eat But this ye shall not eat of them that chew the cud or of them that part the hoofe the Camel because he cheweth the cud and he parteth not the hoofe he shall be uncleane unto you And the Conie because hee cheweth the cud and parteth not the hoofe hee shall be uncleane unto you And the Hare because he cheweth the cud and parteth not the hoofe he shall be uncleane unto you And the swine because he parteth the hoofe and cleaveth-asunder the clef● of the hoof he cheweth not the cud he shall be unclean unto you Of their flesh shall ye not eat and their carkasse shall ye not touch they shall be uncleane unto y●u These ye shall eat of all that are in the waters all that hath ●in and scale in the waters in the seas and in the rivers them shall yee eat And all that hath not ●in and scale in the seas and in the rivers of every moving thing of the waters of every living soule that is in the waters they shall be an abhomination unto you Even an abhomination shall they be unto you of their flesh ye shal not eat and their carkasses ye shall have-in-abhomination All that hath not fin and scale in the waters that shall be an abhomination unto you And these ye shall have-in-abhomination among the fowles they shall not be eaten they shall be an abhomination the Eagle and the Ossifrage and the Osprey And the Vulture and the Kite after her kinde Every Raven after his kinde And the Owle and the Night-hawk and the Sea-gull and the Hawk after his kinde And the Great-owle and the Cormorant and the Little-owle And the Redshanke and the Pelecan and the Gier-eagle And the Storke the Heron after her kinde and the Lapwing and the Bat. Every creeping-thing that flieth that goeth upon all foure that shall be an abhomination unto you Yet these ye shall eat of every creeping-thing that flieth that goeth upon all foure which * 〈◊〉 hath not legges above his feet to leap with them upon the earth These of them yee shall eat the common-Locust after his kinde and the locust-Soleam after his kinde and the locust-Chargol after his kinde and the locust-Chagab after his kinde And every creeping-thing that flieth which hath foure feet that shall be an abhomination unto you And for these yee shall be uncleane who-soever toucheth the carkasse of them shall be uncleane untill the evening And whosoever beareth ought of the carkasse of them shall wash his clothes and be unclean untill the evening Of every beast which do●● part the hoofe and it cleaveth not the cle●asunder and it cheweth not the cud they shall be uncleane unto you whosoever toucheth them shall be uncleane And whatsoever goeth upon his pawes of any beast that goeth upon foure feet they shall be uncleane unto you whosoever toucheth the carkasse of them shall be uncleane untill the evening And hee that beareth the carkasse of them shall wash his clothes and bee unclean untill the evening they shall be unclean unto you And these shall be unclean unto you among the creeping-things that creepe upon the earth the weasel the mouse and the ●ortoys after his kind And the ferret and the chamaeleon the lyzard and the snail and the moll These shall be uncleane to you among all that creepe whosoever toucheth
Priests but they had no right unto them till after the fat was burned And the cake which was waved and the sodden shoulder were eaten by the priests and therest of the bread with the residue of the flesh was eaten by the owners as is shewed by Maimony in Maaseh ●akorbanoth ●h 9. sect 6. 9. 12. See the notes on Lev. 3. and 7. ch In that the other shoulder besides the ordinary gift was here given to the Lords Priest it taught the Nazirites as they had received more speciall grace of God to performe their vowes so they should give him more speciall thankes Verse 20. wave them this shoulder was waved of which word see the annotations on Exod. 29. 24. the other was heaved up ward called therfore the heave shoulder by which motions performed by the Priests hands under the Nazirites God taught them that the perfection and acceptation of all their actions was through the mediation of our great Priest Christ Iesus by whom we are to offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually that is the fruit of the lips confessing to his name Heb. 13. 15. holy Hebr. holinesse that is an holy portion for the Priest to eat so the Nazirite was taught to give the glory of his Sanctification unto Christ whom the Priest here figured wave brest Hebr. brest of waving and shoulder of heaving those which the Priest had of all the Peace-offerings Levit. 7. may drinke wine or shall drinke if he will and also shave his head when he will and be uncleane by the dead for now hee was discharged of his vow Though here speciall mention is made of drinking wine which being for the comfort and cheering of mans hart might signifie the fruit and comfort which followeth affliction and humiliation when sorrow and mourning shall be done away And where it is said and after hee may drinke it sheweth that before the shaving and sacrifices here appointed he might not drinke wine though the time of his vow were expired The Hebrewes say A Nazirite that hath fulfilled the dayes of his Nazirite ship and is not shaved with the shaving for cleannesse it is unlawfull for him to be shaved or to drinke wine or to be desiled by the dead as he was before all the particulars of Naziriteship are upon him and if he be shaven or drinke wine or be defiled he is beaten Maim in Neziruth ch 4. s. 12. Verse 21. his oblation understand this is his oblation or as the Greeke saith his gift for his N 〈…〉 ship in thankfulnesse to God for giving him grace to fulfill his Naziriteship and to make atonement for his sinnes committed under that his vow This ordinance of Nazirites was a speciall glory in Israel Amos 2. 11. where their Nazirites were purer than snow they were whiter tha milk they were more ruddy in body than Rubies their polishing 〈◊〉 of Saphir Lam. 4. 7. all which denote the heavenly graces wherewith the Saints that faithfully kept this vow were indued Yet was it but a legall service which by Christ is taken away in whom we have obtained a more glorious state being washed from our sinnes in his owne blood whereby we are whiter than Snow Rev●● 1. 5. Psalm 51. 9. and being sanctified by his Spirit we have our conversation in Heaven from whence also we looke for our Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ Philip. 3. 20. The abolishing of this ordinance is declared in Act. 21. 25. As touching the Gentiles which beleeue we have written and concluded that they observe no such thing and it is a Canon of the Hebrew Doctors that The Samaritan or Gentile hath no Naziriteship Thalmud in Nazir ch 9. And by the overthrow of the Citie and Temple of the Iewes by Nebuchadnezar the Nazirites visags became blacker than acoale they were not knowne in the streets their skin cleaved to their bones it was withered it became like a sticke Lam. 4. 8. that they might bee taught to looke for a better sanctification which Christ should give in the heavenly Ierusalem in the light wherof the nations of them which are saved doe walke and into which nothing that defileth shall enter Rev. 21. 24. 27. where that is fulfilled which the Hebrewes say of the Nazirite that he is warned not to defile himselfe by the dead because the power of uncleannesse may not enter into the holy Temple as it is written in Song 4. 7. Thou art all faire my love there is no blemish in thee R. Menachem on Num. 6. Verse 22. Iehovah spake after that the people were instructed with Gods Covenant set in order round about his Sanctuary and sanctified in that their order the Law is here given for the blessing of them in that holy state of life For who so looketh into the perfect law of libertie and continueth he being not a forgetfull hearer but a doer of the worke he shall be blessed in his doing Iam. 1. 25. Verse 23. his sonnes the Priests to whom this office of blessing the people is in speciall manner committed as it is said them hath Ichovah thy God chosen to minster unto him and to blesse in the name of Iehovah Deut. 21. 5. And Aaron was separated that he should sanctifie the most holy things hee and his sonnes for ever to burne incense before Iehovah to minister unto him and to blesse in his name for ever 1 Chron. 23. 13. Herein the work of Christ a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedeck Psal. 110. was figured whom God sent to blesse us in turning away every one of us from his iniquities Act. 3. 26. whos 's first Doctrine began with manifold blessings Matth. 5. 2. 12. who also having fulfilled his ministery here on earth lifted up his hands and blessed his Disciples and so was carried up into heaven Luke 24. 50 51. Therefore when he was to come into the world the Priest of Aarons seed when he should have blessed the peo ple was speechlesse Luke 1. 21 22. to signifie that the end of his Priesthood was at hand and that the people should looke for another Priest in whom all nations should bee blessed Gal. 3. 8. And in this respect wee may have use of the Iewes tradition that their Priests of Aarons stocke were to lift up their hands and blesse the people in the Morning but not at the Minchah or Evening sacrifice Maimony treat of Prayer chap. 14. 〈◊〉 1. for in these last dayes the Evening of times God hath spoken unto us by his Sonne whom he hath appointed heyre of all things Heb. 1. 1. 2. The Hebrewes also say the reason why this blessing is mentioned when the Tabernacle was erected was because from the Tabernacle that is above the abundance of blessing is spred abroad on thē that are beneath R. Menachem Rakanat on Num. 6. Which is indeed fulfilled in Christ the Minister of the true Tabernacle which the Lord pitched and not man who if he were on earth should not be a
be utterly unpunished ye shall not be unpunished 〈◊〉 25. 29. He speaketh this against the Midianites rather than against the Moabites whom he had forbidden Israel to vex or distresse Deut. 2. 9. because they were chiefe in the mischiefe For though Balaam gave the counsell to the king of Moab Rev. 2. 14. and the Moabitish women were prostitute also unto whoredome Num. 25. 1. yet Balak at first did not much regard that counsell but turned B●laam away with shame Num. 24. 11 25. but the Midianites retained him and amongst them hee was slaine Num. 31. 8. And Cezbi a kings daughter of Midian was a principall instrument of evill unto Israel as God sheweth in vers 18. therefore the Midianites were first in the punishment smite ye them that is as the Chaldee expoundeth it kill ye them Vers. 18. For they vox you or disiresse you not with warre but with wiles and deceit So God saith of Babylon Reward her even as shee hath rewarded you Rev. 18. 6. The reward of unrighteous workes is righteous judgement their wiles or their guiles deceits crafts beguiled you or dealt wilily and craftily with you as the Egyptians when they thought to deale wisely for the suppressing of Israel Exod. 1. 10. are said to deale craftily Psal. 105. 25. and Iosephs brethren when they craftily conspired his death Gen. 37. 18. By this it appeareth that the amitie of the Midianites was but feigned and that they plotted the destruction of Israel matter Hebr. word of Peor the idolatrie with Baal-Peor w ch Israel was drawne unto vers 2 3. So the matter or word of Cozhi is meant the fornication with her vers 6. for Peors sake Hebr. for the word of Peor that is which plague came on Israel for Peors sake or cause CHAP. XXVI 1 The summe of all the men of Israel from twentie yeares old and upward is taken in the plaines of Moab 5. The families and numbers of Reuben 12 Simeon 15 Gad. 19 Iudah 23 Issachar 26 Zabulon 29 Manasseh 35 Ephraim 38 Benjamin 42 Dan. 44 Aser 48 Nathtali 51 The summe of them all 52 The Law of dividing among them the inheritance of the land 57 The families and number of the Levites 62 The cause why they were not numbred among the Israeli●es 63 None were left of them which were numbred at Sinai but Caleh and Iosua ANd it was after the plague that Iehovah said unto Moses and unto Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest saying Take ye the summe of all the congregation of the sonnes of Israel from twentie yeares old and upward according to the house of their fathers every one that goeth forth with the armie in Israel And Moses and Eleazar the Priest spake with them in the plains of Moab by Iordan neere Iericho saying From twentie yeares old and upward as Iehovah commanded Moses and the sonnes of Israel which went forth out of the land of Egypt Reuben the first-borne of Israel the sons of Reuben of Enoch the familie of the Enochites of Phallu the familie of the Phalluites Of Hezron the familie of the Hezronites of Carmi the familie of the Carmites These are the families of the Reubenites and they that were mustered of them were three and fortie thousand and seven hundred and thirtie And the sonnes of Phallu Eliab And the sonnes of Eliab Nemuel and Dathan and Abiram this is that Dathan and Abiram the called of the congregation who strove against Moses against Aaron in the congregation of Korah when they strove against Iehovah And the earth opened her mouth and swallowed up them and Korah when the congregation died when the fire devoured two hundred and fiftie men and they were for a signe But the sonnes of Korah died not The sonnes of Simeon according to their families Of Nemuel the familie of the Nemuelites of Iamin the familie of the Iaminites of Iachin the familie of the Iachinites Of Zerah ●he familie of the Zarhites of Saul the familie of the Saulites These are the families of the Simeonites two and twentie thousand and two hundred The sonnes of Gad according to their families of Zephon the familie of the Zephonites of Haggi the familie of the Haggites of Suni the familie of the Sunites Of Ozni the familie of the Oznites Of Eri the familie of the Erites Of Arod the familie of the Arodites of Areli the familie of the Arelites These are the families of the sonnes of Gad according to those that were mustered of them fortie thousand and five hundred The sonnes of Iudah were Er and Onan and Er and Onan died in the land of Canaan And the sonnes of Iudah according to their families were of Selah the familie of the Selanites of Pharez the familie of the Pharzites of Zarah the familie of the Zarhites And the sonnes of Pharez were of Hezron the familie of the Hezronites of Hamul the familie of the Hamulites These are the families of Iudah according to those that were mustered of them seventie and six thousand and five hundred The sonnes of Issachar according to their families of Thola the familie of the Tholaites of Phuva the familie of the Phunites Of Iashub the familie of the Iashubites of Simron the familie of the Simronites These are the families of Issachar according to those that were mustered of them sixtie and foure thousand and three hundred The sonnes of Zabulon according to their families of Sered the familie of the Sardites of Elon the familie of the Elonites of Iahleel the familie of the Iahleelites These are the families of the Zabulonites according to those that were mustered of them sixtie thousand and five hundred The sons of Ioseph according to their families were Man esses and Ephraim The sons of Manasses of Machir the family of the Machirites and Machir begat Gilead of Gilead the familie of the Gileadites These are the sons of Gilead of Ieezer the familie of the Ieezerites of Helek the familie of the Helekites And of Asriel the familie of the Asrielites and of Shechem the familie of the Shechemites And of Shemida the familie of the Shemidaites and of Hepher the familie of the Hepherites And Zelophehad the sonne of Hepher had no sonnes but daughters and the names of the daughters of Zelophehad were Machlah and Noah Hoglah Milcah and Tirzah These are the families of Manasses and those that were mustered of them two and fiftie thousand and seven hundred These are the sonnes of Ephraim according to their families of Shuthelah the familie of the Shuthalhites of Becher the familie of the Bachrites of Tahan the familie of the Tahanites And these are the sonnes of Shuthelah of Eran the familie of the Eranites These are the families of the sonnes of Ephraim according to those that were mustered of them two and thirtie thousand and five hundred these are the sonnes of Ioseph according to their families The sonnes of Benjamin according to their families of Bela the familie of the Belaites of Ashbel the
turneth aside See the Law concerning this in Deut. 24. 17. Vers. 20. fathers wife of this and the rest that follow see Lev. 18. Because men give themselves over to divers noysome lusts of the flesh God causeth divers curses to be pronounced against this sin the more to deterre men from following the same in any sort Vers. 24. smiteth this word is used sometime for slaying or killing as Deut. 1. 4. and 13. 15. sometime for wounding only Zach. 13. 6. or chastising Deut 28. 27 28. sometime for smiting with the fist of wickednesse Esai 58. 4. or with the tongue Ier. 18. 18. in secret the Greeke expoundeth it by guile Vers. 25. a reward a bribe or gift as the Greeke translateth it gifts and this is the Magistrates sin Deut. 16. 19. and was found in Israel as Mic. 3. 11. The heads thereof judge for bribes to smite in Chaldee to kill a soule that is a person the bloud of an innocent or as the Greeke expoundeth it of innocent bloud which is an effect of briberie as in Ezek. 22. 12. In thee have they taken bribes to shed bloud Vers. 26. Cursed be he the Greeke translateth Cursed be every man and so the Apostle alleageth it Gal. 3. 10. where he giveth this doctrine So many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse that whiles men doe the Law outwardly yet are they cursed by the Law as being privie transgressors for the Law is spirituall but men are carnall sold under sinne Rom. 7. 9 14. confirmeth not or stablisheth not which the Greeke and our Apostle in Gal. 3. 10. expound continueth not For when the just man turneth away from his justices and committeth iniquitie c. all his justice that he hath done shal not be mentioned in his trespasse that he hath trespassed and in his sinne that he hath sinned in them shall he die Ezek. 18. 24. See the Annotations on Lev. 26. 15. the words in Greeke all the words see the like in Lev. 25. 18. Exod. 25. 40. Deut. 19. 15. And so the Apostle citeth this place in Gal. 3. 10. continueth not in all things written in the booke of the Law to doe them this is an exposition of the former word confirmeth and sometime the one is put for the other as to confirme the words of this covenant 2 King 23. 3. for which another Prophet saith to doe the words 2 Chron. 34. 31. For not the hearers of the Law are just before God but the doers of the Law shall be justified Rom. 2. 13. And for asmuch as there is not a just man upon earth that doth good and sinneth not Eccles. 7. 20. therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight Rom. 3. 20. that the Apostle rightly gathereth as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse Gal. 3. 10. Therefore the use of the Law was to be a Schoolemaster unto Christ who hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 24. 13. CHAP. XXVIII 1 Vpon condition of observing and doing all Gods commandements hee promiseth many blessings earthly and heavenly 15 But for disobedience he threatneth manifold curses plagues and miseries ANd it shall be if hearkening thou shalt hearken unto the voice of Iehovah thy God to observe to doe all his commandements which I command thee this day that Iehovah thy God will give thee to bee high above all the nations of the earth And all these blessings shall come upon thee and overtake thee if thou shalt hearken unto the voice of Iehovah thy God Blessed shalt thou be in the city and blessed shalt thou be in the field Blessed shall be the fruit of thy wombe and the fruit of thy ground and the fruit of thy cattell the increase of thy kine and the flockes of thy sheepe Blessed shall be thy basket and thy dough trough Blessed shalt thou be when thou commest in and blessed shalt thou be when thou goest out Iehovah will give thine enemies that rise up against thee to be smitten before thy face they shall come out against thee one way and flie before thee seven waies Iehovah will command the blessing to be with thee in thy store-houses and in all that thou settest thine hand unto and he will blesse thee in the Land which Iehovah thy God giveth unto thee Iehovah will stablish thee unto him selfe for an holy people as hee hath sworne unto thee if thou shalt keepe the commandements of Iehovah thy God and walke in his waies And all peoples of the earth shall see that the name of Iehovah is called upon thee and they shall bee afraid of thee And Iehovah will make thee plenteous in good things in the fruit of thy wombe and in the fruit of thy cattell and in the fruit of thy ground in the land which Iehovah sware unto thy fathers to give unto thee Iehovah will open unto thee his good treasure the heavens to give the raine of thy land in his season and to blesse all the worke of thine hand and thou shalt lend unto many nations and thou shalt not borrow And Iehovah will give thee to be the head and not the taile and thou shalt bee above only and shalt not be beneath if thou hearken unto the commandements of Iehovah thy God which I command thee this day to observe and to doe And thou shalt not goe aside from any of the words which I command you this day to the right hand or to the left to goe after other gods to serve them And it shall bee if thou wilt not hearken unto the voice of Iehovah thy God to observe to doe all his commandements and his statutes which I command thee this day that all these curses shal come upon thee and overtake thee Cursed shalt thou be in the citie and cursed shalt thou be in the field Cursed shall be thy basket and thy dough-trough Cursed shall be the fruit of thy wombe and the fruit of thy ground the increase of thy kine and the flockes of thy sheepe Cursed shalt thou bee when thou commest in and cursed shalt thou be when thou goest out Iehovah will send upon thee a curse vexation and rebuke in all that thou settest thine hand unto which thou wouldest doe untill thou bee destroyed and untill thou perish quickly because of the evill of thy doings for that thou hast forsaken mee Iehovah will make the pestilence cleave unto thee untill he have consumed thee from off the land whither thou goest to possesse it Iehovah will smite thee with the consumption and with the burning-ague and with an inflammation and with an extreme burning and with the sword and with blasting and with meldew and they shall pursue thee untill thou perish And thy heavens which are over thine head shall be brasse and the earth which is under thee shall be iron Iehovah will give the raine of thy land to be
name Israel given to all Gods people even the Gentiles also that have Iakobs faith Gal. 6. 16. as long before Iether who was by nature an Ismaelite 1 Chron. 7. 17. was for his faith and religion called an Israelite 2 Sam. 17. 25. It may also bee observed how in this word ISRAEL are contained the first letters of the names of Abraham and Sarah his wife of Isaak and Rebekah his wife of Iakob and of both his wives Leah and Rachel all which persons except Rachel were also buried together in one cave Gen. 49. 29 31. PSAL. XV. David describeth a citizen of Sion by his godly and righteous conversation A Psalme of David Iehovah who shall sojourne in thy tent who shall dwell in the mountaine of thy holinesse He that walketh perfect and worketh justice and speaketh truth in his heart Slandereth not with his tongue doth not evill to his next friend and taketh not up a reproach against his neighbour In whose eyes an abject is contemned but hee honoureth them that feare Iehovah sweareth to his hurt and changeth not Giveth not his money to biting usury and taketh not a bribe against the innocent he that doth these things shall not be moved for ever Annotations IN thy tent or pavilion called in Hebrew Ohel of spreading over God caused an habitation to be made in the wildernesse wherein he dwelt among men Exod. 26. Psal. 78. 60. that mansion made of ten curtaines he called Mishcan an Habitacle or Tabernacle Exod. 26. 1. Psal. 26. 8. over which other curtaines were made and cast for a covering called Ohel a Tent or covering Exod. 26. 7. Hereupon the whole place is called sometime Ohel a Tent sometime Mishcan a Tabernacle To this Tent all Gods people were to come for his publike worship Lev. 17. 4 5. Deut. 12. 5 6. It was a moveable place and so differed from an house or setled habitation 2 Sam. 7. 1 6. 1 Chron. 17. 5. yet for the use it is sometime called a house as is noted on Psal. 5. 8. mountaine the mount Sion whereof see Psal. 2. 6. The Chaldee calleth it the mount of the house of thy holinesse Vers. 2. walketh perfect that is leadeth his life perfect entire simple sincere and unblemished It noteth the integritie that is before God in heart and spirit according to the covenant walke before me and be perfect Gen. 17. 1. and thou shalt be perfect with Iehovah thy God Deut. 18. 13. Mat. 5. 48. Therefore this perfectnesse must first be in the heart Psal. 119. 80. then in the waies Psal. 18. 33. and 119. 1. worketh or effecteth justice this is wrought by faith Hebr. 11. 33. and such a man is acceptable to God Act. 10. 35. Vers. 3. Slandereth not or defameth not backbiteth not This word Ragal from whence Regel a foot is derived properly noteth a going to and fro prying and spying and carrying tales and rumours and is used for defaming or calumniating by craft and guile 2 Sam. 19. 27. and here generally for all busie craftie deceitfull or malicious abuse of the tongue which the Greeke expresseth by using fraud or dole taketh not up a reproach or layeth not on or beareth not a reproach This importeth both the first raising and the after receiving and reporting of a reproachfull tale Exod. 23. 1. Levit. 19. 16. The like phrase is used sometime for bearing or suffering reproach Psal. 69. 8. Ezek. 36. 15. that sense is not amisse here beareth not reproach upon his neighbour that is suffereth not his neighbour to be reproached as else-where he saith beare not sinne upon thy neighbour or suffer him not to sinne Levit. 19. 17. Vers. 4. In whose eyes an abject or In his eyes a reprobate is contemned The order also may be changed thus in whose eyes the contemptible or vile person as Dan. 11. 21. is rejected See examples of such cariage 2 King 3. 14. Esth. 3. 2. Luke 23. 9. The Greeke translateth it an evill doer is set at nought before him the Chaldee thus He that is despised in his owne eyes and contemned sweareth to his hurt or to his evill his hinderance or to afflict himselfe Which may be understood of oathes to men turning to his own losse and dammage which yet he keepeth or of oathes to God vowing to afflict himselfe by abstinence The Hebrew word which signifieth evill is often used for affliction as in Ruth 1. 21. the Almightie hath done evill unto me that is hath afflicted mee Otherwise if we understand it of doing evill to another the meaning is sweareth to doe evill but doth not recompense it that is performeth it not for the word change here used sometime signifieth recompence as Iob 15. 31. compare this place with the Law for swearing to do evill or good Levit. 5. 4. The Greeke translateth sweareth to his neighbour for rangh evill reading reangh a neighbour this sense is good And rangh though not usuall may be taken for a neighbour here and in Prov. 6. 24. Vers. 5. money Hebr. silver that is money usually made of silver to biting usury or with biting that is usury fitly so called because it biteth and consumeth the borrower and his substance See the notes on Exod. 22. 25. be moved or shaken removed And commonly it implieth in it some evill to the thing moved Psalm 38. 17. and 94. 18. and 13. 5. and 60. 4. and often in the Psalmes therefore the just have this privilege of God never to be moved Psal. 55. 23. Prov. 10. 30. and 12. 3. PSAL. XVI David prophesieth of Christs confidence in God and love to the Saints on earth 4 The sorrowes of Idolaters with whom he hath no communion 5 He is content with his lot and heritage 7 blesseth God in his afflictions 9 professeth his hope of resurrection from the dead and eternall joyes at the right hand of God MIchtam of David Preserve me O God for I hope for safetie in thee Thou hast said to Iehovah thou art my Lord my good not unto thee To the Saints which are in earth and the excellent all my delight in them Their sorrowes shal be multiplied that endow another I will not powre out their powred out oblations of bloud neither will I take up their names upon my lips Iehovah the portion of my part and of my cup thou sustainest my lot The lines are fallen to me in the pleasant places yea the heritage is faire for me I will blesse Iehovah which hath counselled me yea in the nights my reines doe chastise me I have proposed Iehovah before me continually for he is at my right hand I shall not be moved Therefore my heart rejoyceth and my glory is glad also my flesh shall dwell in confidence For thou wilt not leave my soule to hell thou wilt not give thy gracious Saint to see corruption Thou wilt make me know the way of life satietȳ of joyes before thy face pleasures at thy right hand to perpetuitie Annotations MIchtam of
so the Greeke explaineth it well the Hebrew speaking of the good thing in generall comprehending the wholestore of pleasures and commodities 〈◊〉 Deu. 6. 11. Ge● 45. 23. The like here followeth holy for all holy things And among good things understand the principall the gift of the holy Ghost as that which in Matth. 7. 11. is good things in Luk. 11. 13. is called the holy Ghost Vers. 6. Fearefull things c. God out of his Tabernacle gave oracles and answers to his people Numb 7. 89. and from Heaven he answered to their prayers against their adversaries Psal. 3. 5. he answered alwaies things reverend and fearefull those farre off by sea whereby is meant not onely those upon the sea whose hope God is Psal. 107. 23. 28 c. but those also that dwell farre asunder disjoyned by the sea as in Ilands which wait for his law Isa. 42. 4. So the Chaldee interpreteth it and of the Iles of the sea which are disjoyned from the dry land or continent Vers. 7. O he that stablisheth or which setteth fast it is a continued speech to God as the words before and after manifest but the person changed for more passion like that in Iob 18. 4. O he that teareth his soule for O thou that tearest thy soule See the notes on Psal. 59. 10. mountaines hereby is often meant kingdomes polities and common-weales Ier. 51. 25. See Psal. 30. 8. The Chaldee understands it here of Gods preparing food for the wild Goats of the mountaines Vers. 8. of the seas waters signifie peoples Rev. 17. 15. and seas are the huge armies of peoples Ier. 51. 42. Esai 17. 12 13. All such as well as the naturall seas God asswageth See also Psal. 46. 7. Vers. 9. And they or When they feare utmost parts or borders to wit of the earth as is expressed Isa. 41. 5. the out-goings of morning c. This may be meant both of the successive course of day and night and of them that go out at morning and evening which be men to their labour and beasts for their prey as is shewed Psal. 104. 20 23. and of people inhabiting the East and West parts of the world Vers. 10. plenteously moistenest it This sense the Greeke yeeldeth the Hebrew also may be turned when thou hadst made it to desire raine or and givest it the desire thereof These things are spoken first of the land of Canaan as the Chaldee expoundeth thou remembrest the land of Israel which God visited and blessed continually as Moses telleth Deut. 11. 12. and spiritually are meant of Christs Church Ezek. 36. 8. 9 c. very much or with multitude to wit of riches or good things the streame or brooke riveret See Psal. 1. 3. and 46. 5. The Chaldee paraphraseth from the fountaine of God which is in heaven which is full of the showers of blessing of God that is with heavenly sweet and wholesome streames of waters not as Aegypt watered with mans labour but drinking waters of the raine of heaven Deut. 11. 10 11. The streame of God may here be taken for an excellent streame as mountaines of God Psal. 36. 7. and the word with is to be supplied Compare herewith Ioel. 3. 18. Rev. 22. 1. where a fountaine and pure river of water of life come forth from the Lords house and throne their corne theirs that dwell in thy land and house after that thou hast thus prepared the land and watered it thou makest it fruitfull Vers. 11. set lest the furrowes or the clods that is with raine thou causest the clods to lye close to cover the seed The Hebrew words being indefinite to settle c. have like signification with the former See Psal. 49. 15. and 77. 2. and 103. 20. makest it soft or meltest resolvest makest it moist with drops of raine that fall many See Psal. 72. 6. the bud or branch that which springeth up out of the earth This name is given to Christ himselfe Esai 4. 2. Zach. 3. 8. and 6. 12. Vers. 12. yeere of thy goodnesse that is thy good yeere which thou honourest with singular blessings So God commanding the Sabbath yeere promised to blesse the sixt yeere that it should bring forth fruit for three yeeres Lev. 25. 20 21. But the good yeere is that acceptable yere of the Lord which Christ preached Esai 61. 2. Luke 4. 19. thy pathes drop the clouds which are Gods chariot Psal. 104. 3. in which water is bound Iob 26. 8. and from which raine is dropped to cause the earth to fructifie Iob 36. 28. and 38. 26 27. And pathes here are properly such trackes as are made by chariot wheeles Vers. 13. of the wildernesse where there is no man Iob 38. 26. that grasse may grow for beasts Psal. 104. 14. Though sometime shepherds there feed their flocks as Exo. 3. 1. girded with gladnesse rejoycing for the store of grasse that grow on them on every side Things are figuratively said to be glad when they attaine unto abide in their naturall perfection so light is said to rejoyce when it shineth cleare and continually Prov. 13. 9. Vers. 14. the pastures or fields are cloathed that is covered abundantly stored with flockes of sheepe For fields the Greeke putteth Rams of the sheepe the Hebrew Carim signifieth both Esai 30. 23. and 34. 6. but the grammaticall construction and coherence here sheweth it rather to be fields or pastures PSAL. LXVI An exhortation to praise God 5 to observe his workes 8 to blesse him for his gracious benefits 13 The Prophet voweth religious service to God 16 Hee declareth Gods speciall goodnesse to him-selfe To the Master of the Musicke a Song a Psalme SHout ye unto God all the earth With Psalme sing the glory of his name put glory to his praise Say unto God how fearefull is every of thy workes through the greatnesse of thy strength thine enemies shall falsly deny to thee Let all the earth bow downe themselves to thee and sing Psalme to thee let them sing Psalme to thy name Selah Come and see the workes of God he is fearefull in his doing toward the sonnes of Adam He turned sea to dry land they passed thorow the River on foot there did wee rejoyce in him He ruleth with his power for ever his eyes espie among the nations the rebellious let them not exalt themselves Selah Ye peoples blesse our God and make the voice of his praise to be heard That putteth our soule in life and hath not given our foot to be moved For thou O God hast proved us thou hast tried us as silver is tried Thou hast brought us into the net thou hast laid straitnesse on our loines Thou hast caused men to ride upon our head we came into fire and into waters and thou hast brought us out to an abundant place I will come into thine house with burnt-offerings I will pay to thee my vowes Which my lips have opened and my mouth hath spoken in the distresse upon me
Burnt offerings of marrowed rammes I will offer up to thee with incense I will make ready beeves with goat-bucks Selah Come heare ye and I will tell all ye that feare God what he hath done to my soule Vnto him I called with my mouth and he was extolled under my tongue If I had seene in my heart painfull iniquitie the Lord would not have heard But surely God hath heard hath attended to the voice of my prayer Blessed be God which hath not turned away my prayer and his mercy from me Annotations SHout to wit with a joyfull or triumphant noise see Psal. 41. 12. all the earth or all the land that is the inhabitants thereof as the Chaldee explaineth So vers 4. and Psal. 98. 4. and 100. 1. and often in the Scripture Vers. 2. put glorie in Greeke give glory to his praise that is make his praise glorious and honourable A like phrase is in Ios. 7. 19. put glory to Iehovah that is give him glory Vers. 3. fearefull is every c. or fearefull art thou in thy works One word singular and another plurall meaneth exactly all and every one as Psal. 57. 2. and 62. 5. falsly deny or l. e that is fainedly submit See Psal. 18. 45. Vers. 4. Let all or All shall Vers. 5. in his doing or in practise the Greek translateth in counsels See Psal. 9. 12. Vers. 6. sea to dry land the red sea God turned to dry land by a strong east wind dividing the waters that Israel might goe thorow it Exod. 14. 21 22. thorow the river Iarden when the banks thereof were full was dried the waters stood still on an heape till all the people went thorow it Ios. 3. 13 14 17. So the Chaldee explaineth it 〈◊〉 the river 〈◊〉 the sonnes of Israel went on their feet there did we rejoyce he teacheth them to apply their fathers deliverances to themselves for all things fore-written are for our learning and use Rom. 15 4. Alike speech another Prophet useth he found him in Rethel and there he spake with us Hos. 12. 4. The Chaldee paraphraseth I will lead them to the mount of the house of the Sanctuary there we will rejoyce in his Word Vers. 7. espie that is watchfully view in the nations that is as Solomon expoundeth it in every place both the evill persons and the good Prov. 15. 3. the rebellious or the off-fallen froward and refractarie persons which exasperate and provoke the Lord to bitternesse as the Greeke here translateth exalt or be exalted puft up in themselves Vers. 8. peoples tribes of Israel called also pe●ples Act. 4. 27. make to bee heard or cause men to heare sound forth audibly See Psal. 26. 7. Vers. 9. That putteth our soule in life that is first giveth then preserveth life and finally restoreth our dead soules unto life Saving from dangers of death Psal. 30. 4. quickning them that were dead in sinnes Ephes. 2. 1. The Chaldee expounds it the life of the world to com● given ou●foot to be moved that is suffered our estate to be changed to our ruine So Psal. 38. 17. and 121. 3. See Psal. 15. 5. Vers. 10. as silver is tried Hebr. as to try silver and this meaneth sore afflictions as at large is shewed Ezek. 22. 19 20 21 22. wherefore when God mentioneth lesser trialls he saith Loe I have tried thee but not as silver Isa. 48. 10. Hereby also is meant a purifying from drosle and corruption by afflictions See Mal. 3. 3. Zach. 13. 9. 1 Pet. 1. 7. Vers. 11. straightnes or affliction as the Greek also turneth it but hereby a strait chaine or wringing girt may bee meant such as burthens are tied with to beasts backs Vers. 12. upon our head to use us as beasts for to carry them it meaneth servile subjection See the like in Isa. 51. 23. came into fire and into waters that is passed thorow afflictions of sundry sorts Psal. 32. 6. Ezek. 15. 6 7. Also in Num. 31. 23. those things are said to come into or passe thorow fire which would abide the same without being consumed as metals That sense hath also use here as after is shewed an abundant place or a moist a well watered land where we may drinke our fill The Greeke calleth it a refreshing which well fitteth with the comforts of the Gospell as Act. 3. 29. Vers. 14. opened that is uttered or promised distinctly and seriously as the Greeke saith distinguished for the mouth being opened in vowes signifieth that they may not be called backe Iudg. 11. 35 36. distresse upon me or in my distresse so Psal. 18. 7. and 59. 17. Vers. 15. marrowed rammes that is fat and lusty The word rammes is in Hebrew set after the word incense which may therefore be read the incense or perfume of rams meaning the fat which was burned on the altar And so it may intend peace offerings as before he mentioned burnt offerings See Levit. 3. 9 10 11. compared with Levit. 1. 10 13. The Chaldee expoundeth it incense of spices and sacrifices of Rams make ready or offer as the Greeke interpreteth it The Hebrew word to make or doe is used for dressing or making ready of meat or sacrifices Gen. 18. 8. Iudg. 6. 19. Exod. 10. 25. and 29. 36. Levit. 16. 24. and 22. 23. beeves the Hebrew bakar is the Beefe generally one for many as in Psal. 8. 9. These were the principall sacrifices Lev. 1. 2 10. Ver. 17. under my tongue that is with my tongue or it may be meant of the heart and inward parts which are under the tongue Vers. 18. If I had seene in my heart that is had regarded with it so to see is to behold with a corrupt affection Iob 31. 26. Thus God cannot see evill Habak 1. 13. would not have heard for God heareth not sinners Iohn 9. 31. nor hypocrites Iob 27. 8 9. Prov. 15. 29. The Greeke maketh it a wish Let not the Lord heare me PSAL. LXVII A Prayer for the enlargement of Gods kingdome to the joy of all peoples and increase of Gods blessings To the Master of the Musicke on Neginoth a Psalme a Song GOd be gracious unto us and blesse us he make his face to shine with us Selah That they may know in the earth thy way thy salvation among all the Heathens Peoples shall confesse thee O God peoples all of them shall confesse thee The nations shall rejoyce and shout for thou wilt judge the peoples with righteousnesse and the nations in the earth thou wilt guide them Selah Peoples shall confesse thee O God peoples all of them shall confesse thee The earth yeeldeth her increase God our God will blesse us God will blesse us and all the ends of the earth shall feare him Annotations FAce to shine or to be light that is cheerefull and favourable See Psal. 4. 7. and 31. 17. Vers. 3. That they may know meaning men indefinitely or that thy way may be knowne Gods way is generally his administration
thy judgements to the King and thy justice to the Kings sonne That he may judge thy people with justice and thy poore afflicted ones with judgement The mountains shall bring forth peace to the people and the hills with justice He shall judge the poore afflicted of the people he shall save the sonnes of the needy and shall breake downe the fraudulent oppressour They shall feare thee with the Sunne and before the Moone to generation of generations Hee shall come downe like the raine upon the mowen grasse as the showers the dispersed moisture of the earth In his dayes shall the just man flourish and multitude of peace untill the Moone be not And he shall have dominion from sea unto sea and from the river unto the ends of the land They that dwell in dry places shall kneele before him and his enemies shall licke the dust The kings of Tharshish and of the Iles shal render an oblation the kings of Sheba Seba shall offer a present And all kings shall worship him all nations shall serve him For he shall deliver the needy that cryeth out and the poore afflicted and him that hath no helper He shall mercifully spare the poore and needy and shall save the soules of the needy He shall redeeme their soule from fraud and violent wrong and precious shall their bloud be in his eyes And he shall live and he shall give to him of the gold of Sheba and shall pray for him continually shall blesse him all the day There shall bee a parcell of Corne in the land in the top of the mountaines the fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon and flourish shall they of the City as the herbe out of the earth His name shall be for ever his name shall be continued before the Sunne and they shall blesse themselves in him all Nations shall call him blessed Blessed be Iehovah God the God of Israel which doth marvellous things himselfe alone And blessed be the name of his glory for ever and let all the earth be filled with his glory Amen and Amen Ended are the prayers of David sonne of Iesse Annotations FOr Solomon the Greeke addeth a Psalme of David for Solomon and the last verse sheweth it to be made by David and it concerneth Christ and his Kingdome figured by Solomon Song 3. 11. and therfore called by his name as elsewhere he is called David Hos. 3. 5. Such also is the title of the 127. Psalme Kings sonne to whom the right of the Kingdome belongeth by birth and inheritance So Christ was King Davids sonne and borne King of the Iewes Mar. 11. 10. Mat. 2. 2. and 22. 42. to him the Father gave all judgement Iohn 5. 22. The Chaldee expoundeth the King to bee Christ and the Kings sonne to be King Davids son Vers. 2. That he may or Let him judge that is governe thy people in justice that is justly wherefore he is named Melchizedek that is King 〈◊〉 justico Heb. 7. 2. of whom it was prophesied behold a King shall reigne in justice Isa. 32. 1. Vers. 3. The mountaines shall bring forth or shall beare to wit as their fruit for so this phrase importeth Iob 40. 15. This and the rest that follow may also bee read prayer-wise let the mountaines beare c. The Chaldee paraphraseth The dwellers on the mountaines shall bring peace to the people of the house of Israel peace that is prosperitie plenty of fruits which should be injoyed with peace as all Solomons dayes Israel dwelt without feare every man under his vine and figtree 1 King 4. 25. And under Christ the worke and effect of justice is peace quietnesse and assurance for ever Isa. 32. 17. Rom. 5. 1. the mountaines drop downe new wine and the hils flow with milke Ioel 3. 18. Amos 9. 13. hils with justice that is the hils also shall beare peace with justice both peace and justice as these two are said to kisse each other Psal. 85. 11. and Christ is King both of justice and peace Heb. 7. 2. his Kingdome is justice peace and joy Rom. 14. 17. It may also be read for justice Vers. 4. shall judge that is shall deliver see the notes on Psal. 43. 1. save the sonnes of the needy that is the needy persons in Chaldee shall redeeme the sonnes of miserie that is such as are in wretched case the fraudulent oppressor whom the Greeke here calleth sycophant which word is used for injurying by forged cavillation Luk. 19. 8. and 3. 14. See before in Psal. 62. 11. Vers. 5. They shall feare men shall reverence that is worship and serve thee So feare is used for worship Isa. 29. 13. Mat. 15. 9. with the sun or before the sun as is after expressed vers 17. as the Hebrew ghnim with is elsewhere used for before Est. 7. 8. and before the sun and moone meaneth continually so long as they shine on the earth which is so long as the world endureth Gen. 8. 22. Psal. 89. 37 38. The Chaldee intrepreteth it with the rising of the sunne and in the light of the moone that is at morning and evening day and night as the twelve Tribes are said so instantly to serve Act. 26. 7. Vers. 6. the mowen grasse the medow which being mowen in the beginning of Summer craveth raine that it may grow againe The orginall word signifieth also a shorne fleece of wooll which sense some keepe here and referre it to the deaw that fell on Gedeons fleece when the land was dry and againe on the land when the fleece was dry Iudg. 6. 37 40. Solomon and Christ are here said to come downe as raine in respect of the doctrine and administration of judgement by them So Moses said My doctrine shall drop as the raine c. Deut. 32. 2. and Iob said they waited for me as for the raine c. Iob 29. 23. and the Lord shall come unto us as the raine c. Hos. 6. 3. the dispersed moisture understand which are the moisture that is which showres doe moisten the earth Zarziph the Hebrew word used only in this place hath the signification of dispersing moisture or water as is by showers God having divided spouts for the raine whereby it is strowed abroad upon the earth Iob 38. 25. Wherefore the former word showers implieth raine that falleth with manifold or millions of drops as Psal. 65. 11. Vers. 7. multitude of peace to wit shall be or shall flourish and this Shalom peace may respect the name of Shelomoh or Solomon which signifieth peaceable as was promised to David Behold a son is borne to thee which shall be a man of rest for I will give him rest from all his enemies round about therefore his name is Solomon and I will send Salom peace and quietnesse upon Israel in his daies 1 Chron. 22. 9. moone be not or be taken away as the Greeke explaineth it that is till the worlds end as before vers 5. Vers. 8. from sea to sea
2 c. Vers. 15. judgement shall returne to justice that is severity to mercy the rigour of the Law changed to the clemency of the Gospell So judgement is often used for sentence of punishment as Ier. 52. 9. and justice for grace and mercy see Psal. 24. 5. Or judgement which in the affliction of Gods people and prosperity of the wicked seemeth to be parted from justice shall returne unto it when the godly are delivered and the wicked punished after it so the Greeke turneth it or after him meaning God Vers. 16. who will rise up or who standeth up namely to assist me meaning no man doth Vers. 17. an helpfulnesse that is a full helpe see Psal. 44. 17. in silence the place of stilnesse and silence that is the grave as the Greeke explaineth it so Psal. 115. 17. see also Psal. 49. 13. Vers. 18. is moved or slippeth see Ps. 38. 17. Vers. 19. my cogitations my carefull troubled thoughts perplexed as the branches of a tree for so the word properly signifieth therefore the Greeke turneth it sorrowes So Ps. 139. 23. Vers. 20. of wofull evils or of mischiefes the mischievous tyrannous throne of the unrighteous Iudge shall it have fellowship or be joyned with thee O God meaning it shall not as Shalt thou build 2 Sam. 7. 5. is Thou shalt not build 1 Chr. 17. 4. See also Psal. 5. 5. which frameth or he that frameth or formeth by a decree or for a statute a law V. 21. run by troupes combine and gather together as banded to fight in Greeke they hunt for V. 23. will turne Hebr. hath turned that is will assuredly turne in their malice or for their evill PSAL. XCV An exhortation to praise God 3 for his greatnesse 6 and for his goodnesse 8 A warning not to harden the heart against Gods word as Israel had done who therefore entred not into his rest COme let us shout joyfully to Iehovah let us shout triumphantly to the Rocke of our salvation Let us prevent his face with confession with Psalmes let us shout triumphantly to him For Iehovah is a great God and a great King above all gods In whose hand are the deepe places of the earth and the strong heights of the mountaines are his Whos 's the sea is for he made it and the dry land his hands have formed Come let us bow downe our selves bend downe let us kneele before Iehovah our maker For he is our God and we are the people of his pasture and sheepe of his hand to day if ye shall heare his voice Harden not your heart as in Meribah as in the day of Massah in the wildernesse Where your fathers tempted me proved me also saw my worke Fortie yeeres I was irked with ' that generation and said they are a people erring in hart and they know not my waies So that I sware in mine anger if they shall enter into my rest Annotations COme or Goe to The holy Ghost by David thus exhorteth Israel to laud the Lord and obey his voice For he penned this Psalme Heb. 3. 7. and 4. 7. the Rocke meaning Christ as the Apostle sheweth Heb. 3. 6 7. the Greeke translateth it God our Saviour Vers. 2. prevent come first and speedily Vers. 3. great God or great Potentate Ael So Christ is also intituled Tit. 2. 13. All Gods Angels Princes or false gods Psa. 8. 6. and 82. 6. and 96. 4 5. Vers. 4. deepe places or deepe closets Hebr. searchings that is deepe secret places for which search is made Iob 28. 1 2 c. and which cannot by mans search be found Iob 38. 4 5 6 18. strong heights or wearisome heights high mounts which weary men to climbe them but the word hath also a signification of strong and not being wearied Numb 23. 22. Vers. 7. of his hand that is of his guidance Psal. 77. 21. See also Psal. 100. 3. to day hereby is meant the whole time wherin Christ speaketh by his Gospell Heb. 3. 7 13 15. and 4. 7 8. Vers. 8. in Meribah that is in the Contention or Provocation as the Greeke turneth it The name of a place in the wildernesse where Israel contended with Moses and tempted the Lord saying Is the Lord among us or no because there was no water for the people to drinke Therefore he called the place Massah Tentation and Meribah Contention Exod. 17. 1 2 7. Also another place where againe they contended with Moses with the Lord Num. 20. 1 3 13. day of Massah that is of Tentation by day againe we may understand the whole space wherein they tempted God ten times as is said Num. 14. 22. so the day of salvation 2 Cor. 6. 2. is the time thereof Yet there was a speciall day and place of Tentation named Massah Ex. 17. 2 7. whereupon Moses warned the people Ye shall not tempt the Lord your God as ye tempted him in Massah Deut. 6. 16. Vers. 9. tempted me hereupon the Apostle saith they tempted Christ 1 Cor. 10. 9. my worke that is workes Heb. 3. 9. both in miraculous mercies giving them bread from heaven and waters out of the rockes c. Psal. 78. 15 23 c. and in punishments for their rebellions Psal. 78. 31 33 c. Heb. 3. 17. For worke sometime signifieth reward Psal. 109. 20. Iob 7. 2. Lev. 19. 13. Vers. 11. if they shall enter that is they shall not enter Heb. 3. 11. 18. a part of the oath is not uttered see Psal. 89. 36. This oath was made at Cadesh where the people through unbeleese refused to enter the promised land Num. 14. 21 22 23 30 32. Heb. 3. 17. 19. my rest the land of Canaan Deut. 12. 9. 1 Chron. 23. 25. a figure of a better rest which we that have beleeved the word doe enter into Heb. 4. 3. for if that land wherein now they were had beene their rest David would not have spoken of another there remaineth therfore a Rest for the people of God let us studie to enter into it Heb. 4. 8 9 11. PSAL. XCVI An exhortation to praise God for his greatnesse 5 The vanity of Idols 8 God onely is to be served 9 His reigne and judgement is to be shewed to the Gentiles SIng ye to Iehovah a new song sing ye to Iehovah all the earth Sing ye to Iehovah blesse ye his name preach the good tidings of his salvation from day to day Tell among the nations his glory among all peoples his marvellous workes For great is Iehovah and praised vehemently fearefull he is above all Gods For all the gods of the peoples are vaine idols but Iehovah made the heavens Glorious majesty and comely honour are before him strength and beauteous glory in his sanctuary Give to Iehovah yee kindreds of the peoples give to Iehovah glory and strength Give to Iehovah the glory of his name take up an oblation and come into his courts Bow downe your selves to Iehovah in the comely honour of the sanctuary
peoples in righteousnesses Annotations A New song see Psal. 33. 3. saved him or got him salvation and victory over all his enemies See Esa. 59. 16. and 63. 5. Vers. 2. his salvation the redemption by Christ as Luke 2. 30 31 32. so his justice is that which is by faith in Christ Rom. 10. 3 4 6 10. Vers. 3. remembred and consequently performed his mercy c. so Luk. 1. 54 55 72 73 74. all the ends that is the dwellers in the ends of the earth so Esa 52. 10. V. 6. voice of the cornet or sound of the trumpet for here are two severall words for trumpets some of which were made of metall as silver c. Num. 10. 2. some of horne Ios. 6. 4. and these were used both in warres and in the worship of God see Psal. 81. 4. V. 8. clap the hands or clap palmes a signe of joy as Isa. 55. 12. Psal. 47. 2. V. 9. in justice that is justly So Psal. 96. 13. in righteousnesses that is most righteously So Psal. 9. 9. PSAL. XCIX The Prophet setting forth the kingdome of God in Sion 5 exhorteth all by the example of fore fathers to worship God at his holy mountaine IEhovah reigneth the peoples are stirred he sitteth on the Cherubims the earth is moved Iehovah is great in Sion and high he is above all the peoples Let thē confesse thy name great and fearefull holy it is And the strength of the King loveth judgement thou hast stablished righteousnesses thou hast done in Iakob judgement and justice Exalt yee Iehovah our God and bow downe your selves at the footstoole of his feet holy he is Moses and Aaron with his Priests and Samuel with them that call on his name they called upon Iehovah and hee answered them In the pillar of a cloud hee spake unto them they kept his testimonies the decree he gave them Iehovah our God thou answeredst them a God forgiving thou wast unto them and taking vengeance on their practises Exalt yee Iehovah our God and bow downe your selves at the mountaine of his holinesse for Iehovah our God is holy Annotations ARestirred or though they be stirred to wit with anger as the Greeke translateth be angry see Psal. 4. 5. This is opened in Rev. 11. 17 18. thou Lord reignest and the nations are angry Thus the wicked are affected but the godly doe rejoyce Psal. 97. 1. he sitteth or even hee that sitteth on the Cherubims reigneth see Psal. 80. 2. is moved with indignation stirred up to resist as Act. 17. 13. Vers. 4. the strength this is joyned with Gods wrath Ezr. 8. 22. and here seemeth to have like meaning that God is strong to punish in judgement the rebellious and defend his people V. 5. at the footstoole or toward it meaning the Sanctuary and Arke there Esa. 60. 13. 1 Chron. 28. 2. Lam. 2. 1. Psal. 132. 7. Ezek. 43. 7. he is as is expressed vers 8. or it the temple is holy V. 6. with his Priests or among his principall officers see the like phrase in Ps. 54. 6. The Hebrew Cohén w ch we call a Priest or Saerificer is the name of the kings chiefe officer as in 2 Sa. 8. 18. Davids sons were Cohéns chiefe Rulers Aularchai as the Greek termeth them which is expounded in 1 Chro. 18. 17. to be the first or Chiefe at the Kings hand It hath the name of ministration Esa. 61. 6. 10. was a title specially given to Aaron and his sonnes that ministred unto God in the Sanctuary Exod. 28. 3 4 41. called or were calling that is prayed for the people as Exod. 32. 11 c. Numb 14 17 19. and 16. 22 46. 1 Sam. 7. 9. and 12. 19 23. Hereupon Moses and Samuel were noted for chiefe intercessours with God Ier. 15. 1. So the Chaldee here expounds it his Priests which gave their lives for the Lords people and Samuel prayed to the Lord for them as the fathers of old which prayed in his name V. 7. of a cloud as Exod. 33. 9. Num. 16. 42. and this noteth Gods favour but with some obscurity and so is inferiour to the mediation of Christ who hath without clouds or shadowes obtained eternall redemption for us that we may goe boldly to the throne of grace for to receive mercy finde grace to helpe in time of need Heb. 4. 14 16. and 7. 25. and 9. 11 12. Vers. 8. a God for giving a mighty God that pardonedst or tookest away to wit the punishment of their sin see Psal. 25. 18. and taking or though thou tookest vengeance on their practises theirs that is the peoples for whom Moses prayed as Num. 14. 20 21 23. Exod. 32. 14 34 35. or theirs that is Moses and Aarons sinnes which God punished and would not be intreated as Num. 20. 12. Deut. 3. 23 24 25 26. PSAL. C. An exhortation to praise God cheerefully for his grace goodnesse and fidelity A Psalme for confession SHout ye triumphantly to Iehovah all the earth Serve ye Iehovah with gladnesse come before him with singing joy Know yee that Iehovah he is God hee made us and a His we art not we his people and sheepe of his pasture Enter ye his gates with confession his courts with praise confesse ye to him blesse ye his name For Iehovah is good his mercy is for ever and his faith unto generation and generation Annotations FOr confession for the publike praise of God with thanks for his mercies all the earth that is as the Chaldee translateth all inhabitants of the earth Vers. 2. singing or shrilling shouting mirth Vers. 3. made us this word is used both for our first creation in nature Gen. 1. 26. and for the making of us high and excellent with graces and blessings as 1 Sam. 12. 6. Deut. 32. 6. Esa. 43. 7. and 29. 23. Ephes. 2. 10. and not we or and his we are as the Hebrew in the margine readeth it Both senses are good and the Chaldee keepeth this latter his we are sheepe or flocke which hee seedeth See Ezek. 34. 30. 31. Psal. 95. 7. V. 4. confession the sacrifice of thankes was thus named 2 Chron. 29. 31. Ier. 17. 26. Vers. 5. faith or faithfulnesse truth in performing his promises PSAL. CI. David maketh a profession of godlinesse touching his owne person his house and the Citie of God in cherishing the good and suppressing the wicked A Psalme of David MErcy and judgement I will sing to thee Iehovah will I sing Psalme I will doe wisely in the perfect way when wilt thou come unto me I will walke in the perfection of mine heart in the middest of mine house I will not set before mine eies any word of Belial I hate the doing of them that turne aside it shall not cleave unto me A froward heart shall depart from me I will know none evill he that in secret hurteth with tongue his fellow-friend him will I suppresse the haughty of eyes and large of heart him I cannot suffer
condition our matter and forme the originall word properly is a formed vessell of earth applied to our fraile estate Rom. 9. 20 21. sometime this is spoken of our fictions and sinfull imaginations Gen. 6. 5. Deut. 31. 21. and so the Chaldee interpreteth it here our evill concupiscence which carrieth us into error Vers. 15. as the grasse c. that is few and transitorie though making a faire shew Compare Psal. 90. 5 6. Iob 14. 1 2. Iam. 1. 10 11. 1 Pet. 1. 24. Vers. 16. not know it or know him that is hee shall have no more place here So Iob 7. 10. Vers. 18. to doe them this noteth the outward practise and operation of the Law whereas keeping or observing is with the heart and spirit of man Prov. 3. 1 3. and 4. 4 21. Psal. 78. 8. Vers. 19. prepared his throne● or stab●●●he it a signe of dominion and gover 〈…〉 be administred in heaven whereby the Church is figured Rev. 4. 1. 2. See also Psal. 9. 5 8 9. and 11. 4. Vers. 20. hearkning or to hearken to obey and this noteth a willing and ready minde in the Angels and our Lord teacheth vs to pray for the like Mat. 6. 10. The Hebrew phrase to obey may be Englished obeying as the like in Psal. 104. 15 21. and 105. 11. See also Psal. 49. 15. and 65. 11. Vers. 21. his hosts or armies the thrones principalities powers c. that are in the heavenly places Eph. 3. 10. Col. 1. 16. for they are his hosts 1 King 22. 19. Gen. 32. 2. and generally all creatures are his hosts see Psal. 24. 10. ministers the Angels which minister unto him Psal. 104. 4. Dan. 7. 10. the same title is given also to men Esa. 61. 6. PSAL. CIV A meditation upon Gods powerfull workes and wonderfull providence in creating and governing the world and creatures therein 31 Gods glory is eternall 33 The Prophet voweth perpetually to praise him MY soule blesse thou Iehovah Iehovah my God thou art vehemently great thou araiest thy selfe with Majesty and comely honour Deeking him-selfe with light as with a garment stretching out the heavens as a curtaine Planchering his lofts in the waters making the clouds his Chariot walking vpon the wings of the wind Making his Angels spirits his Ministers a flaming fire He hath founded the earth upon her bases it shall not bee moved for ever and aye Thou coveredst it with the deepe as with a raiment the waters stood above the mountaines At thy rebuke they fled at the voice of thy thunder they hasted away The mountaines they went up the vallies they went downe to the place which thou foundest for them Thou didst set a bound they shall not passe they shall not returne to cover the earth That sendeth wel-springs in the vallies they walke betweene the mountaines They give drinke to all the wilde beasts of the field the wilde asses breake their thirst By them the fowle of the Heaven dwelleth from betweene the branches they give the voice That watreth the mountaines from his lofts the earth is filled with the fruit of thy workes That maketh grasse to grow for cattle and the herbe for the use of man bringing forth bread out of the earth And wine that rejoyceth the heart of sorry man making the face chearefull with osle and bread that upholdeth the heart of sorry man Tilled are the trees of Iehovah the Cedars of Lebanon which he planted That there the birds may make their nest the Storke the Fir trees are her house The high mountaines for the wilde goats the rocks a shelter for the conies He made the Moone for appointed times the Sunne knoweth his going downe Thou puttest darknesse and it is night in it doe creep forth all wilde beasts of the wood The lurking Lions roaring for the prey and seeking their meat of God The Sunne riseth they gather them away and couch downe in their dens Out goeth man unto his worke and to his labour till evening How many are thy workes Iehovah all of them hast thou done in wisdome the earth is full of thy riches This Sea great and wide of spaces there are creeping things even innumerable small wilde beasts with great There goe the ships Levjathan whom thou hast formed to play therein They all looke attentively unto thee to give them their food in his time Thou givest it to them they gather it thou openest thine hand they are fil●ed with good Thou hidest thy face they are suddenly troubled thou gatherest their spirit they breath out the ghost and returne unto their dust Thou sendest forth thy spirit they are created and thou renewest the face of the earth The glory of Iehovah be for ever rejoyce let Iehovah in his deeds He looketh upon the earth and it trembleth he toucheth the mountaines and they smoke I will sing to Iehovah in my life I will sing Psalmes to my God while I am Sweet shall my meditation be of him I will rejoyce in Iehovah Consumed be sinners out of the earth and wicked men be they no more my soule blesse thou Iehovah Halelujah Annotations ANd comely honour that is shewest thy selfe by all thy works to be God over all to whom glory and honour is due Therefore God challengeth Iob and so all men to doe thus if they can and they shall be celebrated of him Iob 40 4 5. 9. Of these words see Psal. 8. 2 6. Vers. 2. Decking or clothing or He clotheth to wit himselfe with light dwelling in the light that none can attaine unto 1 Tim. 6. 16. and at first commanding the light to shine out of darknesse wherewith he decked the world Gen. 1. 3. 2 Cor. 4. 6. as a curtaine that is as a canopie or tent Song 1. 5. Ier. 49. 29. when he spred out the firmament by himselfe alone Gen. 1. 6. Esa. 44. 24. and 51. 13. Iob 37. 18. Vers. 3. Planchering He plancketh or planchereth his lofts or upper chambers that is the clouds aloft or upper regions of the aire as after in vers 13. in the waters among them or with waters which are above in the firmament Gen. 1. 7. where God bindeth the waters in the clouds and the cloud is not broken under them Iob 26. 8. making or putting that is disposing them his Chariot to sit and ride on as Esa. 19. 1. Rev. 14. 14. Compare Psal. 18. 11. Vers. 4. spirits that is spirituall substances so differing from Christ who is no made or created spirit but the maker of all things Psal. 102. 26. and from men made of flesh and bloud Luk. 24. 39. The originall word also signifieth winds and Angels by interpretation are messengers whereupon some translate he maketh the winds his messengers but the Holy Ghost in Heb. 1. 7. sheweth this to be spoken of Angels properly who are named also ministring spirits Heb. 1. 14. flaming fire effectuall in their administration the Angels therefore have appeared like horses and Chariots of fire 2 King 6. 17. and 2.
thy right hand this may be spoken to God the Father at whose right hand Christ sitteth as vers 1. or to the people of God at whose right hand he standeth as Psal. 109. 31. hath wounded or shall wound or embrew in bloud as Psal. 68. 22 24. a prophesie spoken as of a thing done So usually in the Prophets Isa. 9. 6. and 53. 4 5 c. See this fulfilled Rev. 19. 18. Vers. 6. hath filled or shall fill to wit all places with dead bodies slaine and unburied as Ier. 16. 4. So the Chaldee paraphraseth he hath filled the land with carkasses of the wicked which are slaine the head Antichrist the man of sinne whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth 2 Thes. 2. 3 8. or head for heads and land for lands that is all wicked governours wheresoever Vers. 7. of the brooke or streame to wit of afflictions as waters usually signifie Ps. 18. 5. Christ was to drinke that is to suffer and so to enter into his glory Matth. 26. 39 42. Luke 24. 26. 1 Pet. 1. 11. Philip. 2. 8 9. Or drinking of the brooke in the way may meane a short refreshing of himselfe and then a hot pursuit of his enemies without delay till he hath got a full conquest of them Compare herewith the history of Gedeons souldiers Iudg. 7. 4 5 6 c. As waters sometimes signifie doctrine so the Chaldee here expoundeth it From the mouth of the Prophet he shall receive doctrine in the way PSAL. CXI The praises of God for his glorious and gracious workes 1 Halelu-jah I Will confesse Iehovah with all the heart in the secret of the righteous and assembly 2 Great are the actions of Iehovah sought out of all that delight in them 3 Glorious majesty and comely honour is his worke and his justice standeth to perpetuall aye 4 He hath made a memoriall of his marvellous workes gracious and pittifull is Iehovah 5 He hath given a prey to them that feare him hee will remember his covenant for ever 6 He hath shewed to his people the able power of his actions in giving to them the inheritance of the heathens 7 The actions of his hands are truth and judgement faithfull are all his precepts 8 Stablished they are for aye for ever done in truth and righteousnesse 9 Hee sent redemption to his people hee hath commanded his covenant for ever holy and fearefull is his name 10 The beginning of wisedome is the feare of Iehovah good prudency have all they that doe them his praise standeth to perpetuall aye Annotations HAlelu-jah Praiseye Iah This Psalme setteth forth the praises of God and is composed after the order of the Hebrew Alphabet every sentence beginning with a severall letter So also the Psalme following See Psal. 25. 1. the secret or Councell see Psal. 64. 3. and 89. 8. Vers. 2. sought out that is regarded and cared for so Isa. 62. 12. a citie sought out that is cared for as Deut. 11. 12. Or sought out that is found or manifested unto as Isa. 65. 1. compared with Rom. 10. 20. Or sought that is worthy to be sought as Praised Psal. 18. 4. for praise-worthy of all that delight or for all their delights that is the delights and pleasures of Gods workes are such as they are worthy to be sought into The originall may beare either sense Vers. 3. Majestie that is most maj●sticall and honourable standeth that is continueth or abideth firme as 1 Sam. 16. 22 Psal. 102. 27. and 33. 11. 2 Cor. 9. 9. from Psal. 112. 9. Vers. 5. a prey that is a portion of meat or food as the Greeke and Chaldee explaine it So Prov. 31. 15. Mal. 3. 10. Vers. 6. in giving or to give unto them Vers. 7. faithfull or sure constant see Ps. 19. 8. Vers. 9. redemption or deliverance which meaneth both a riddance from the evils wherein they have beene Deut. 7. 8. and 15. 15. Psal. 25. 22. and 130. 8. and a preservation from the evils whereinto the wicked fall Exod. 8. 23. Psal. 49. 7 16. and 119. 134. Vers. 10. beginning the first chiefe and principall either in time or dignity So the first Marke 12. 28. for the great commandement Matth. 22. 36. prudenci● understanding or successe and felicitie which commonly followeth prudency Prov. 3. 4. have all or shall be to all doe them the precepts mentioned vers 7. or these things generally The Greeke saith doe it meaning the covenant vers 9. his that is Gods praise of whom this Psalme is composed vers 1 c. standeth that is abideth or continueth as vers 3. PSAL. CXII The praises of the godly man who hath the promises of this life and of that which is to come His prosperity shall be an eye-sore to the wicked Halelu-jah 1 OBlessed is the man that feareth Iehovah that delighteth greatly in his commandements 2 His seed shall be mighty in the earth the generation of the righteous shall be blessed 3 Wealthy store and riches shall bee in his house and his justice standeth to perpetuall aye 4 Vnto the righteous light ariseth in darknesse gracious and pittifull and just 5 A good man doth graciously and lendeth he will moderate his words in judgment 6 Surely hee shall not be moved for ever the just man shall be to everlasting momorie 7 He will not feare for evill heare-say his heart is fixed trusting in Iehovah 8 His heart is stablished he will not feare untill he see upon his distresses 9 He hath scattered abroad he hath given to the poore his justice standeth to perpetuall aye his horne shall be exalted with honour 10 The wicked shall see and be angry he shall gnash with his teeth and melt away the desire of the wicked shall perish Annotations HAlelu-jah or Praise ye the LORD This Psalme setteth out the praises of the godly man and is composed after the order of the Hebrew Alphabet even as the former 111. Psalme with which in many things it is to be compared Vers. 2. his seed his children as Psal. 21. 11. Levit. 21. 17. So the Chaldee saith his sonnes shall be mighty in the Law the generation their progenie as Deut. 29. 22. Iob 42. 16. or the nation the multitude of righteous men see Psal. 12. 8. and 14. 5. Vers. 3. Wealth or store of riches sufficiency of wealth gathered with labour and industry the Hebrew Hon signifieth also sufficiency Prov. 30. 15. standeth that is continueth abideth as Psal. 111. 3. where the very same is spoken of God So after vers 9. Vers. 4. light ariseth or springeth up properly as the Sunne riseth Mal. 4. 2. Light signifieth comfort peace joy c. as darknesse affliction Iob 30. 26. Esth. 8. 16. Psal. 107. 10. Lam. 3. 2. And so in Religion Act. 26. 18 23. Rom. 2. 19. 2 Cor. 4. 6. Compare this sentence with Esa. 58. 10. Exod. 10. 23. and the contrary Iob 38. 15. gracious this may be understood of God thus from him that is
former teares to proceed not from true repentance And in hating his brother for the blessing hee shewed himselfe to bee of that wicked one as was Kain 1 Ioh. 3. 12. 15. This hatred continued also in his posterity against Iakob Obad. v. 10. 11. c. for my father the Hebrew phrase as also the Greeke is of my father but the meaning is for my fathers death as the like speeches otherwhere manifest Ezek. 24. 17. Ier. 6. 26. and at burials they used to mourne seven daies Gen. 50. 10. The Greeke translateth Let the daies of my fathers mourning be nigh that I may kill Iakob my brother so making it a wish for his fathers speedy death and the Hebrew also will bear that translation yea his words are such as may imply not a stay till his fathers death but that hee would with the first opportunity kill Iakob and so his father would soone die with sorrow Thus meaning he would be a double parricide And Rebekah with the first sent Iakob away to prevent danger Vers. 42. comforteth himselfe in respect of his losse of the blessing with this purpose and hope to kill thee So the comfort of the wicked is grounded on evill The Greeke translateth he threatneth thee and the Chaldee he layeth wayt for thee Vers. 43. flee thou or flee for thy selfe and for thy safety Here the blessing brought speedy persecution and exile upon Iakob which his mother counselled him in faith to undergoe rather then for his life to make accord with Esau and to forgoe his first birthright now obtained Vers. 44 a few daies these fell out to bee twenty yeeres as the sequele of the history sheweth Gen. 31. 38. and Rebekah saw him no more as the Hebrew Doctors gather by the time of her death which they thinke was before Iakob came againe See the notes on Gen. 35. 8. Vers. 45. why should I be the Greeke turneth it lest I be bereaved and she speaketh of the losse of them both for that Esau for his murder was also to be killed by the law in Gen. 9. 6. or if man had not punished him God might have cursed and cast him out as he did Kain Gen. 4. 11. 16. of Cheth the Greeke saith daughters of the sonnes of Cheth the Chethites whom Esau had maried Gen. 26. 34. 35. This griefe she tooke for an occasion also to get Isaaks consent unto Iakobs departure of the land that is of the inhabitants of the land whether Chethites or any other of the Canaanites see Gen. 11. 1. wherefore have I that is what good will my life doe me meaning none at all CHAP. XXVIII 1 Isaak blesseth Iakob and sendeth him to Padan Aram for a wife 9 Esau seeing it marieth Machalath the daughter of Ismael 10 Iakob by the way hath a dreame and vision of a ladder 13 God appearing promiseth to blesse him and bring him home againe 16 Iakob awaking and moved with reverence of the place annointeth a stone set up for a pillar and nameth the place Bethel 20 and maketh a vow to honour God there when he shall returne in peace ANd Isaak called Iakob and blessed him and commanded him and said unto him Thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan Arise goe to Padan Aram to the house of Bethuel thy mothers father and take to thee a wife from thence of the daughters of Laban thy mothers brother And God Almighty blesse thee and make thee fruitfull and multiply thee and be thou an assembly of peoples And he give to thee the blessing of Abraham to thee and to thy seed with thee that thou maist inherite the land of thy sojournings which God gave unto Abraham And Isaak sent-away Iakob and he went to Padan Aram unto Laban son of Bethuel the Syrian the brother of Rebekah mother of Iakob and Esau. And Esau saw that Isaak had blessed Iakob and sent him to Padan Aram to take unto him a wife from thence when he blessed him and commanded him saying thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan And Iakob had obeyed his father and his mother and was gone to Padan Aram. And Esau saw that the daughters of Canaan were evill in the eyes of Isaak his father Then went Esau unto Ismael and tooke Machalath daughter of Ismael son of Abraham the sister of Nebajoth unto his wives to him to wife 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Iakob went-forth from Beersheba and went to Charran And he lighted upon a place and taried there all night because the sunne was gone-downe and he tooke of the stones of the place and put for his pillowes and lay-downe in that place And he dreamed and behold a ladder set-up on the earth and the head of it reaching to the heavens and behold the Angels of God ascending and descending on it And behold Iehovah was standing above it and said I Iehovah the God of Abraham thy father and the God of Isaak the land that which thou lyest upon to thee will I give it and to thy seed And thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth and thou shalt spread-abroad to the sea and to the East and to the North and to the south and blessed shall be in thee all families of the earth and in thy seed And behold I will be with thee and will keepe thee in all the way that thou shalt goe and will returne thee againe unto this land for I will not leave thee untill that I have done that which I have spoken unto thee And Iakob awaked out of his sleepe and he said Surely Iehovah is in this place and I knew it not And he feared and said how fearefull is this place this is no other but the house of God and this is the gate of heavens And Iakob rose-up-early in the morning and took the stone that he had put for his pillowes and set it for a pillar and he powred oile upon the head thereof And hee called the name of that place Bethel but Luz was the name of the citie at the first And Iakob vowed a vow saying If God will be with mee and will keepe mee in this way which I am going and will give me bread to eat and rayment to put on And I returne in peace unto my fathers house and Iehovah shall be to me a God And this stone which I have set for a pillar shall be the house of God and of all that thou shalt give to me I will tithing givethe-tenth unto thee Annotations BLessed him God hereby confirmed Iakobs faith against doubts and feares both of things past and to come while his father now wittingly and willingly blesseth him and comforteth him against future troubles that might befall him in his pilgrimage The Hebrew Doctors say Better is the end of a thing then the beginning thereof Eccles. 7 8. the first blessings where with Isaak blessed Iaakob were of the dew of heaven and corne of the earth Gen. 27. 28. the after
blessings were blessings that had an eternall foundation and had no end of them either in this world or in the world to come as it is written And God almightie blesse thee Gen. 28. 3. 4. and addeth moreover unto him the blessing of Abraham Pirkei R. Eliezer ch 35. Vers. 2 Padan Aram or Mesopotamia as the Greeke turneth it so vers 5. 6. c. see the notes on Gen. 25. 20. a wife The like care Abraham tooke to provide a wife for Isaak Gen. 24. But there servants were sent with camels and store of good things here the son himselfe is sent on foot in poore estate with his staffe Gen. 32. 10. to serve for a wife Hos. 12. 12. So great was the triall of Iakobs faith in this his pilgrimage greater then all his fathers and upon his inheriting of the blessing there followed presently great afflictions Vers. 3. Almighty or Alsufficient see Gen. 17. 1. an assembly or church congregation company that is a multitude of peoples as Ezek. 23 24. I he Greeke translateth it synagogues or assemblies of nations and the Chaldee an assembly of tribes respecting the twelve tribes that came of Iakob Exod. 24. 4. This blessing God promised at Bethel to performe unto Iakob Gen. 48. 3. 4. and 35. 11. Vers. 4. bessing of Abraham which chiefly consisted in redemption frō the curse of the law by forgivenesse of sinnes and receiving the promise of the Spirit of the adoption of children and Sanctification through faith in Christ Gal. 3. 13. 14. 9. 29. Rom. 4. 7. 8. 13. c. Here Iakob is made heyre of the blessing so are all true Christians 1 Pet. 3. 9. of thy sojournings wherein thou art a sojourner and pilgrim the land of Canaan see Gen. 17. 8. gave to Abraham to weet by promise of this gift see Gen. 12. 7. and 13. 15. and 15. 7. 18. and 17. 8. Vers. 5. Syrian so the Greeke usually translateth it which the new testament followeth Luk. 4. 27. The Hebrew is the Aramite see Gen 10. 22. Vers. 8. evill that is displeasing grievous so Gen. 48. 17. on the contrary good is for pleasing Gen. 16. 6. 8. Vers. 9. Ismael that is Ismaels family or the Is maelites for Ismael himselfe was now dead Gen. 25. 17. See the notes on Gen. 19. 37. Machalath called also Basemath Gen. 36. 3. he tooke her being of his kinred to please his father though neither according to Gods will nor his fathers So the wicked would seeme to amend one evill by running into another of Nabajoth that is of the same mother that Nebajoth Ismaels eldest sonne was unto his that is besides and unto the two Canaanitish wives which hee already had Gen. 26. 34. so now he had three wives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the seventh section of Moses law whereof see the annotations on Gen. 6. 9. Which section when it is lesse absolute the Hebr. call Parasha a distinction and signifie it by a threefold P but when it is more full and absolute 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they name it Seder an Order and denote it by a threefold S * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in this place Vers. 10. Charan of which place see Gen. 11. 31. It was distant from Beersheba almost 500 English miles And Iakob was now about 77. yeeres of age when hee undertooke this pilgrimage as may be gathered by the historie following and by Gen. 47. 9. Of which journey the prophet after speaketh how Iakob fled into the land of Syria and Israel served for a wise Hos. 12. 12. So the afflictions of the fathers are examples unto the children in all ages even whatsoever is written Rom. 4. 23. 24. and 15. 4. 1 Cor. 10. 11. Of Iakobs age the Rabbines also say Seventy and seven yeeres old was Iakob when he departed from his fathers house Pirkei R. Eliezer ch 35. Vers. 11. he lighted upon or happened met with by Gods providence not of his owne purpose or choise who would have gone further ha dnot night prevented him and made no reckning of this place above any other It was about 48 English miles distant from Beersheba whence Iakob came and from Ierusalem 8. miles northward pillowes or head bolster so in 1 Sam. 26. 7. The Greeke translateth at his head As this pillow of Iakob sheweth his hard distresse for the present in body so Gods appearing and word here revealed manifesteth the comforts and refreshing of the spirit which the faithfull have in their afflictions and pilgrimage Hos. 12. 4. Gen. 35. 7. 2 Cor. 1. 5. See after on vers 18. Vers. 12. dreamed a divine dreame such as in times past God used to speak unto men by Iob 33. 14. 15. Dan. 7. 1. and so hee usually spake unto the Prophets as it is sayd If there bee a Prophet among you I Iehovah will make my selfe knowne unto him in a vision will speake unto him in a dreame Num. 12. 6. See the notes on Gen. 15. 12. ladder representing Christ the sonne of man on whom the Angels of God ascend and descend Ioh. 1. 51. applyed now in speciall to Iakob and his journey as followeth in verse 13. 15. The Hebrew Doctors say The things made knowne to a Prophet by propheticall vision were made knowne unto him by way of parable and immediately the interpretation of the parable was written in his heart and he knew what it was As the Ladder which Iakob our father saw and the Angels ascending and descending on it And that was a parable of the foure monarchies Maimony in Misn. in Iesud hatorah ch 7. S. 3. Other Rabbines also apply this vision to the monarchies in Daniel but our Saviour is the best interpreter Iohn 1. 51. on the earth signifying Christs humane nature and conversing with men Iohn 16. 28. and 17. 4. the heavens signifying Christs heavenly nature and mediation for men with God Heb. 8. 1. and 9. 24. By whom all things are reconciled unto God and both the things in earth and things in heaven are set at peace through the blood of his crosse Col. 1. 20. He is the way no man commeth to the Father but by him Ioh. 14. 6. ascending c. that is looking with desire into the mysteries of Christ 1 Pet. 1. 12. ministring unto him and through him unto his people Mark 1. 13. Heb. 1. 14. and now in speciall guarding Iakob from all perills in his journey Gen. 32. 1. 2. Vers. 13. Iehovah whose providence and grace is towards his in Christ. The Chaldee translateth it the glory of the Lord. God of Abraham c. See Gen. 17. 7. He is not ashamed to be called their God for he hath prepared for them a citie Heb. 11. 16. Hereby also the resurrection of the dead was taught unto Iakob God calling himselfe no lesse the God of Abraham now dead to the world then of Isaak now living for Abraham also was alive unto him Luk 20. 37. 38. to thy seed that is as
thee I wil blesse thee And if thou wilt make unto me an altar of stones thou shalt not build them of hewen stones for if thou lift up thy toole upon it thou hast polluted it And thou shalt not goe up by steps unto mine altar that thy nakednesse be not discovered thereon Annotations GOd spake The Law was given by the ministerie of Angells Hebr. 2. 2. Act. 7. 53. out of the midst of fire cloud and darknesse with a great voice which shooke the earth Deut. 4. 22. Heb. 12. 26. all these words these tenne Commandements following and he added no moe Deut. 5. 22. wherefore they are called the ten Words Ex. 34. 28. that is the ten Commandements as the Word of God Marke 7. 13. is the commandement of God Matth. 15. 6. See the notes on Exod. 34. 28. The Apostle calleth the Law the voice of words Heb. 12. 19. Vers. 2. I Iehovah understand I am Iehovah as the Greeke explaineth it or I Iehovah am thy God The words I Iehovah note the unity of the God-head as elsewhere he saith Iehovah our God Iehovah is one Deut. 6. 4. what the name signifieth is noted on Gen. 2. 4. Exod. 6. 3. thy God though he is so by creating us yet here he specially intendeth the covenant of grace made with his people whereby they are blessed that have Iehovah for their God Psalm 33. 12. From hence ariseth his authority to command and this is a reason of our obedience because he is Iehovah and our God therefore as it is here prefixed to the first commandement so is it annexed to the rest as to the second in Lev. 19. 4. 31. to the third in Lev. 19. 12. to the fourth in Lev. 19. 3. 30. to the fift in Lev. 19. 3. 32. to the sixt in Lev. 19. 16. to the seventh in Lev. 18. 6. c. to the eighth in Lev. 19. 11. 12. to the ninth in Lev. 19. 16. and generally to all the commandements Lev. 18. 5. and 19. 37. of servants the Greeke and Chaldee saith of servitude or bondage see Exod. 13. 3. Egypt was a furnace of iron Deut. 4. 20. a figure of our spirituall bondage and misery under Satan and the deliverance from it figured our salvation by Christ Coloss. 1. 13. Luke 1. 71 74. 79. Acts 26. 18. from these graces are forcible arguments to perswade us to faith and obedience Ye are my witnesses saith Iehovah c. that ye may know and beleeve me and understand that I am ●e I I am Iehovah and beside me there is no Saviour I have declared and have saved Esay 43. 10. 11. 12. I am Iehovah thy God the Holy one of Israel thy Saviour I gave Egypt for thy ransome c. Esay 43. 3. Vers. 3. Thou shalt not have or There shall not be to thee but this Hebrew phrase the Holy Ghost changeth into another equivalent as There is not to us Luke 9. 13. that is We have not Matth. 14. 17 This and most of the other precepts are prohibitions forbidding the evill expresly commanding the contrary good inclusively for wee must both 〈◊〉 evill and doe good Psalme 34. 15. But Gods forbode bindeth most strictly and alwayes and we are borne in evill and are prone unto it rather then to good and are therefore called by these commandements from all corruption unto the integrity wherein God first created us other gods the Chaldee explaineth it singularly other god and so the Scripture also expresseth it in Exod. 34. 14. Psal. 81. 10. For Is there a god beside me saith the Lord Esay 44. 8. There is none other god but one though there bee many that are called gods 1 Cor. 8. 4. 5. unto whom the vaine heart of man falsly attributeth deity for whatsoever the Gentiles sacrificed was unto devils and not to god 1 Cor. 10. 20. Levit. 17. 7. Deut. 32. 17. And the gods that have not made the heavens and the earth they shall perish from the earth and from under these heavens Ier. 10. 11. Hereby on the contrary wee are commanded to have Iehovah for our God which is to know him and to serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind 1 Chron. 28. 9. to love him with all the heart and with all the soule and with all our might Deut. 6. 4. 5. to feare beleeve honour obey and cleave unto him Deuter. 6. 13. 2 Chron. 20. 20. Psal. 22. 24. 1 Sam. 15. 22. Deut. 11 22. before my face or against my face that is against or before mee the Greeke and Chaldee translate it but me After in verse 23. Moses saith with me It implyeth also all time and place as before the Sunne Psal. 72. 17. is so long as the Sunne endureth so here before me is so long as I am for ever and ever And all place as Whither shall I flee from thy face or presence Psal. 139. 7. Therefore also the face or presence of God is here mentioned because he beholdeth the secrets of the heart Psal. 44. 21. 22. and 139. 23. 24. and the Law and so every precept is spirituall Rom. 7. 14. and bindeth the whole man body soule and spirit the underdanding the will and the effects of them both for ever Vers 4 Thou shalt not make As the former precept forbade all feigned gods so this forbids all feigned service whether it be to the true God or any other and commandeth to worship God in spirit and truth Iohn 4. 24. In the Chaldee paraphrase called Ionathans this is expresly said to bee the second Commandement and such is the generall opinion of the Iew Doctors as Philo in exposit Decalogi Iosephus antiq l. 3. and others yet some now would make this but a part of the first Commandement So the Sabbath is by him and other ancient Rabbines called the fourth precept as is observed on Gen 49. 12. which by the others account must be the third Making here meaneth not onely with the hand but with the heart or imagination for we ought not to thinke that the godhead is like unto gold c. Act. 17. 29. And to worship the Sunne or Moone or any creature is to make an Idoll of it Deut. 4. 17. 19. unto thee to or for thy selfe to wit without commandement from God for by his commandement Moses made the Cherubims in the sanctuary Exod. 25. 18. and the brazen Serpent in the wildernesse Num. 21. 8. And this forbiddeth not all images of creatures for civil use which are allowable Matth. 22. 20. but for religious So the Law explaineth it as ye shall not set up any image of stone in your land to bow downe unto it Levit. 26. 1. and the Prophets phrase of Images which ye made unto you Amos 5. 26. is expounded thus which ye made to worship them Acts 7. 43. But to make any image of the invisible God is altogether unlawfull and unpossible Deut. 4. 12. 15. Esay 40. 18. Rom. 1 22. 23. And by this for thy selfe
Priest but through the veile that is his flesh he is entred into heauen it selfe now to appeare unto the face of God for us Heb. 8. 2. 4. and 10. 2. 20. and 9. 24. Thus shall ye blesse The Priest blessed standing as it is written to stand before Iehovah to minister unto him and to blesse in his name Deut. 10. 8. And it was with lifting up of hands as it is said And Aaron lift up his hand towards the people and blessed them Levit 9. 22. which gesture our Lord Christ also used when he blessed his disciples Lu. 24. 50. The Hebrew Doctors understand the word Thus to imply both matter and manner wherof they haue sundry traditions as Thus shal ye blesse standing Thus with lifting vp of hands Thus in the holy tongue that is Hebrew Thus with your faces against the peoples faces Thus with an high voyce Thus by Gods expressed name Iehovah if ye blesse in the Sanctuarie It is not lawfull for the Priests in any place to adde any blessing unto these three verses as to say like Deu. 1. 11. The Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many moe as ye are or any the like Maimony in treat of Prayer chap. 14. sect 11. 12. The manner they also say was thus The Priests went up to the banke or stage after that the Priests had finished the daily morning service and lifted up their hands on high above their heads and their fingers spred abroad except the high Priest who might not lift his hands higher than the Plate whereof see Exod. 28. 36. and one pronounced the blessing word by word till the three verses were ended And the people answered not after every verse but they made it in the Sanctuary one blessing and when they had finished all the people answered Blessed be the Lord God the God of Israel for ever and ever And he pronounced Gods name as it is written with I●●h but in the citie or countrey they pronounced it Adonai Lord for they mention not the name as it is written save in the Sanctuary onely And after Simeon the just was dead the Priests left off blessing by Gods proper name Iehovah even in the Sanctuary to the end that no man which was not honest and of good esteeme might learne it The Priests blessing is not pronounced in any place but in the holy Hebrew tongue as it is said THVS SHAL YE BLESSE c. The lifting up of hands is by ten Priests of the number A Synagogue which is all of Priests they all lift up hands and the women and children answer Amen If there remaine ten Priests moe than they which are gone up the banke the ten answer Amen A Congregation wherein there is no Priest but a Minister onely he lifteth not up his hands but when he is come to conclude with peace he he saith Our God and the God of our fathers ble 〈…〉 us with the threefold blessing in the Law written by Moses thy servant which was pronounced out of the mouth of Aaron and his sonnes the Priests with thy Saints as it is said THE LORD BLESSE THEE AND KEEP ETHEE c. A Priest that hath lift up his hands in one Synagogue and goeth to another Synagogue and findeth the Congregation at prayer and they are not come to the Priests blessing he lifteth up his hands for them and blesseth them though it be oft times in a day Maim treat of prayer chap. 14. sect 9 10 11. and chap. 15. sect 9 10 11. By these their traditions it appeareth that the not pronouncing of Gods name Iehovah as it is written was a device of their owne first restrayning it to the Sanctuary and blessing onely at last omitting it in the Sanctuarie also lest it should be by the unworthy polluted as they supposed Yea so farre went they in this their precisenesse as they say that their first wise men taught not this name to their disciples or sons which were of honest conversation but once in seven yeeres Maim ibidem c. 14. sect 10. And this it seemeth they did because the nations corrupted the name calling him Iao Iave Iabe Ievo Iovis and sundry other wayes as in humane writers is yet to be seen and applyed those names sometime to false Gods Of the meaning of this name Iehovah see the Annotations on Gen. 2. 4. and Exod. 6. 3. and of blessing see Gen. 14. 19. 20. Vers. 24. Iehovah blesse thee The name Iehovah thrice repeated in this blessing is a mysterie of the Trinitie in the Godhead the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost into whose name we are baptised Mat. 28. 19. which Iehovah is one and his name one Deut. 6. 4. Zach. 14. 9. So the Apostle beginneth wishing Grace and Peace from him which Is and which Was and which Is to come that is Iehovah God the Father and from the seven Spirits which are before his throne that is the Holy Spirit whose graces are seven that is manifold and plentifull but though there be diversities of gracious gifts yet it is the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 4. and from Iesus Christ Revel 1. 4 5. And another Apostle concludeth The grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Spirit 〈◊〉 with you all Amen 2 Cor. 13. 14. Which as all other blessings are derived from this set downe by Moses who sheweth the grace of God the Father in blessing that is giving all good things both for this life and that which is to come as it is written Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things in Christ c. Ephes. 1. 3. This blessing God offered the Iewes when he sent his Sonne Iesus to blesse them in turning away every one of them from his iniquitie Act. 3. 26. The Hebrew Doctors as R. Menachem Rakanat on th●● place have also noted how this name of God Iehovah is thrice mentioned and every time with 〈◊〉 different accent in the Hebrew implying a mysterie which cannot better be applyed than to the three distinct persons of the holy Trinitie 〈◊〉 thee in grace and good estate and safe from evill as it is said Iehovah will keepe thee from all evill hee will keepe thy soule Psal. 121. 7. And for good it is spoken in 1 Chron. 29. 18. So our Saviour prayeth Holy Father keepe through thine owne name those whom thou hast giuen me that they may be one as we are and keepe them from the evill Iohn 17. 11. 15. Ver. 25. his face to shine upon thee or his countenance to shine to be lightsome unto thee For face the Chaldee putteth Shecinah the Divine Maiestie whereby Christ seemeth to be meant as is noted on Exod. 34. 9. Gods face sometime signifieth his anger as Levit. 20. 6. Psal. 21. 10. and. 34. 17. sometime his favour Psal. 21. 7. But the light or shining of his face