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A15408 Hexapla in Genesin & Exodum: that is, a sixfold commentary upon the two first bookes of Moses, being Genesis and Exodus Wherein these translations are compared together: 1. The Chalde. 2. The Septuagint. 3. The vulgar Latine. 4. Pagnine. 5. Montanus. 6. Iunius. 7. Vatablus. 8. The great English Bible. 9. The Geneva edition. And 10. The Hebrew originall. Together with a sixfold vse of every chapter, shewing 1. The method or argument: 2. The divers readings: 3. The explanation of difficult questions and doubtfull places: 4. The places of doctrine: 5. Places of confutation: 6. Morall observations. In which worke, about three thousand theologicall questions are discussed: above forty authors old and new abridged: and together comprised whatsoever worthy of note, either Mercerus out of the Rabbines, Pererius out of the fathers, or Marloran out of the new writers, have in their learned commentaries collected. By Andrew Willet, minister of the gospell of Iesus Christ. Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621.; Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621. Hexapla in Genesin. aut; Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621. Hexapla in Exodum. aut 1633 (1633) STC 25685; ESTC S114193 2,366,144 1,184

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sent before when the other plagues were but the Scripture maketh no mention of it as many matters of fact are omitted beside but Thostatus refuseth this conjecture for why should this bee onely here expressed that Pharaoh sent if he had done it at other times 2. Some thinke that the other plagues all but the first as of the frogges the lice and swarmes were such as Pharaoh could not send and in the plagues following but in the first Pharaoh did not then bethinke himselfe of any such thing Perer. 3. But it is more likely that Pharaoh though now twice he had been told so much by Moses did neglect to trie whether the Israelites were exempted from these plagues or no. Simler QUEST VII Why Pharaoh called not to Moses to pray PHaraoh entreated not Moses at this time to pray to God to remove this plague partly through envie and griefe to see the privilege and freedome of the Israelites which was an occasion of the hardning of his heart partly because the other plagues continued sometime and so might be remooved But this plague of mortalitie and murraine came all at once and suddenly swept the cattell away so that no remedie was left neither was there place for prayer to remoove it after this plague had suddenly smitten their cattell in all their coasts Pererius QUEST VIII Whether this plague were naturall or supernaturall COncerning the kind of this plague 1. It is evident that it was no naturall plague but supernaturall for the text saith the hand of God should be upon their cattell that is should smite them immediately no meanes being used at all not so much as Aarons rod whereby other plagues were called for And beside it was not infectious as other naturall plagues are for the cattell of the Israelites feeding among the Egyptians cattell they dwelling in the middest of them were not smitten at all with this plague Simler 2. Yet there might be some preparation unto this plague by the former as it is mentioned cap. 8.14 that the land stunke of the dead frogges and so both the aire and ground were corrupted apt to breed putrefaction Perer. But this was not the cause of the plague for if the earth and aire generally had been corrupted the men had died as well as the beasts QUEST IX Why Moses is the minister of the sixt plague Vers. 10. ANd Moses sprinkled them toward heaven 1. They both tooke the ashes out of the fornace but Moses sprinkled them toward heaven Philo saith that Aaron was the Minister of those plagues wherewith the earth and water were smitten and Moses of those which came from heaven out of the aire Augustine giveth this reason because Aarons office was to speake to the people he worketh upon the earth and water because Moses was in the things that belonged to God hee is the minister of those plagues which came from above But these are curious observations The reason rather was this they stood both before Pharaoh and therefore Moses as the chiefe whom the Lord had made as Pharaohs God he is the minister of this wonder Ferus 2. As the two first signes were of the water the two next on the earth so this is wrought in the aire Simler rather than the element of fire as Ferus QUEST X. Of the sixt plague of boyles and of the manner thereof Vers. 10. ANd there came boyles breaking out First the handfull of ashes being cast into the aire there was raised as a cloud of white dust like unto the ashes of the fornace over all Egypt which dust could not be engendred of that handfull but upon the sprinkling of the ashes the Lord by his great power caused that cloud of dust in the aire over al Egypt 2. The matter which is here used is somewhat answerable to the effect for as Moses taketh of the white ashes of the fornace so they falling upon man beast caused burning boyles which at the first swelled hoved the flesh then brake forth into sores the word here used for blisters is derived of bagnah which signifieth to boyle up as the water doth at the fire Borrh. Perer. Philo. thinketh that these sores or boiles were over al their bodie grew into one being most grievous to behold 3. This plague is answerable to the Egyptians sinne for as they oppresse the Israelites with fornace work in the burning of brick so they are punished with burning sores which came of the ashes taken out of the fornace Perer. QUEST XI Why the Egyptians are smitten with vlcers Vers. 11. ANd the boyles are upon the enchanters 1. This sheweth that the Magitians though before they had confessed the power of God yet doe persist still in their malice against Moses Simler Hereupon Cajetane thinketh that they did not acknowledge the power of God before but rather some superiour power of the spirits but this followeth not because they resist Moses still that they did not confesse the power of God before for like as the same aire that is illuminate by the sunne is darkened when the sunne is gone away so no marvell if the minds of the wicked after they have received some light be darkned againe Perer. 2. This is the third time that these sorcerers are confounded first when Aarons serpent eat up theirs secondly when their power was restrained in the third plague and now because they will not yet give over they are punished 3. Like unto these sorcerers are all unfaithfull counsellers to Princes whom the Lord in like manner will plague Borrh. And thus the Magitians of that Pharaoh of Rome are smitten with exulcerate consciences which swelling with pride and hypocrisie doe bring forth most vile ulcers of impietie Simlerus QUEST XII Of the hardning of Pharaohs heart Vers. 12. ANd the Lord hardned Pharaohs heart 1. The word signifieth to obfirme or strengthen chazak because it was a signe of strength or rather stubburnenes to stand against God there is another word used to signifie the same thing cabadh to make heavie as cap. 8.15 Pharaoh first by his owne corrupt mind hardning or making his heart heavie the Lord as by casting a heavie weight upō it maketh it heavier Iun. 2. Origen well noteth how sometime Pharaoh is said to harden his owne heart c. 8.15 sometime the Lord as in this place the first kinde of hardning is declared by the Apostle how it commeth when men by their impenitencie abuse the lenitie and longanimitie of God Rom. 2.5 But the same Apostle making mention of the other hardning by the Lord Rom. 9. he passeth it over and it may be thought to bee one of those high matters which Paul heard being taken up into paradise and is not to bee uttered Thus Origen counteth this a great secret how God is said to harden the heart And so it is yet not such a secret but that we find the same opened in scripture how the Lord by giving wicked men over to themselves and withdrawing his
of the aire Hereunto agreeth the name given unto heaven which is called shamaiim of sham and maiim there is water which agreeth first unto the inferiour region of the aire where the raine is ingendred This name also is applied to the higher heavens also because the eye maketh no difference betweene them Mercer QVEST. XI How the waters were gathered together that covered the earth Vers. 9. GOd said againe let the waters vnder heaven bee gathered together into one place and let the dry land appeare and it was so Out of these words divers questions are moved not unnecessary to be knowne nor unprofitable to be handled which shall be touched in their order First it is enquired how the waters and whether they were gathered together which before covered the face of the whole earth 1. Some thinke that the earth was this second day created and by the earth mentioned v. 1. that matter is understood whereof the world was afterward made Of this opinion is the Master of sentences and Hugo lib. 1. de sacramentis but wee refuse it because the Lord saith not let there bee earth as when hee maketh other things but onely let the dry land appeare whereby it is evident that the earth was made before but now severed from the waters 2. Some thinke that the earth was equall and plaine without hils and mountaines that the waters might more speedily run together and that this inequality that now is of the ground begun after the flood but this conceit is contrary to the Scriptures Gen. 7.10 The waters prevailed fifteene cubits above the mountaines Prov. 8.25 Wisdome was begotten before the mountaines and hils therefore in the beginning there were both mountaines and hils 3. Others imagine that the waters were dried up by the fervent heat of the Sun and that the Northerne parts of the earth began to appeare first as the higher ground and the rest of the earth by little and little Eugubinus in Cosmopeia 4. Others that the earth was dried by a mighty winde as it was after the deluge see Tostatus But neither of these two opinions are probable for the dry earth appearing all at once was so prepared by a greater power than either of the Sun or wind which could not worke it at once and hardly in continuance of long time 5. Some thinke that the waters did run together and cover the other part of the earth opposite to this where wee dwell as Augustine seemeth to thinke lib. 16. de civitate dei c. 9. But the experience of skilfull Navigators as of sir Francis Drake Master Candish with others who by their famous travels haue compassed the wide Ocean hath found that part of the world to bee habitable as ours is and not to bee under the water 6. Paulus Burgens hath a strange device of this matter he thinketh that the water maketh a globe by it selfe and hath his proper center and so likewise the earth and this is the cause why the earth appeared dry because the water did forsake the land and was gathered to his owne center in addition ad postil Nicol. de Lyra. But this opinion is very false and absurd First for that the text saith that the water at the first covered the earth v. 1. and so made but one globe with the earth pressing to the same center unlesse he will say that God made a new kind of water the second day and indued it with new qualities which cannot be affirmed Secondly Isay 40.22 The Lord is said to sit upon the circle of the earth the word is chugh a spheare or circle as Iob 22.14 He walketh in the circle of heaven But experience sheweth that the earth without the sea maketh not a round globe or circle 7. Some thinke that the Sea is much higher than the land and so the waters were gathered as it were to a great heape that the dry land might appeare Thus Basil thinketh and Ambrose in his Hexem●ron l. 3. c. 2. but that this is not so it shall be shewed in the next question 8. Wherefore leaving these uncertaine opinions I rather incline to think that these might be the meanes and causes of the appearing of the dry land and separation of the waters First the water while it compassed the earth being of a lighter and thinner matter might be coagulate together and thickned as we see the sea water is of a grosser substance than the fresh water so be contained in a lesse compasse than before so Augustine lib. 1. de Genes ad literam 12. and Beda in his Hexemer Secondly the clouds being made this second day and the region or stretching forth of the aire called the firmament brought into fashion it is no other like but that a great part of the water was extenuate and evaporate into the aire and clouds a daily experiment whereof we have by the conversion of the mists clouds into water Thirdly the earth being much greater and deeper than the circumference of the water which compassed the earth might easily receive the water into the concavities and hollow places thereof which were appointed of God to bee receptacles for the water And that the earth is of a greater depth than the water that did at the first cover it thus it may appeare by taking the iust measure of the compasse o● the earth and so of the diameter that is the through measure thereof Then for the compasse circuit of the earth Aristotle affirmeth it to containe 50000 Italian miles ●ib 2. de coelo Hypparchus as Pliny witnesseth 34625. miles Eratosthenes 31500. miles Ptolome 22500. whom Basil followeth Alphrag●nus 21500. Pharnelius 24514. But of late they which have compassed the whole Ocean doe find the circuit of the earth to bee but 19080. nineteene thousand and fourescore miles And the diameter thereof is found to be 7000. miles the semidiameter or space from the center of the earth to the circumference 3500 miles Now what the depth of the water was above the earth may be conjectured by the height of the middle region of the aire which is found by Mathematicians not to exceed 60. miles as they gather both by the twilights which extend no further and by the distance of meteors and exhalations which appeare in the aire Now the earth so far exceeding the water in depth might easily receive it into the hollow places concavities thereof which also is insinuated by the Hebrew word Kava that here signifieth to congregate or gather together from whence the latine word Cavus hollow may seeme to be derived as Pererius well noteth And this lastly is Ambrose conjecture that God did enlarge the low places of the earth and the force also of the waters might make them deeper lib. 3. Hexem c. 2. And this is agreeable to the Scripture Ps. 104.8 The waters descend to the place which thou hast founded for them the word Iasadh signifieth to lay a foundation
so that God did make a low foundation for the waters in the earth And in the same place the Prophet sheweth the manner how the waters were dispersed that wheras they covered the earth as a garment and stood vpon the mountaines at the rebuke of God they did flee and ascended by the mountaines and went downe by the vallies to the place appointed for them 104. v. 6 7 8. QVEST. XII Whether the Sea be higher than the earth SEcondly we are to enquire whether the Sea be higher than the earth which was as I shewed the opinion of Basil and Ambrose with others that thinke that the waters are kept by Gods extraordinary power and miraculous work that they returne not to cover the earth and that place is alleaged Psal. 104.6 The waters stand above the mountaines v. 9. Thou hast set them their bounds which they shall not passe c. and Ierem. 5.22 Will ye not feare my presence which haue set the sand for the bounds of the sea by a perpetuall decree that it cannot passe it and though the waves thereof rage yet can they not prevaile c. For answer hereunto we say that in the first place the Prophet speaketh of the first situation of the waters above the earth and hils before by Gods commandement they went to their place In the next the Prophet speaketh not of any myraculous worke against nature but of the ordinary providence of God by naturall meanes keeping backe and bounding the Sea as the Prophet giveth the like instance of the raine vers 24. They say not in their heart let us feare the Lord that giueth raine in due season early and late and reserveth the appointed weekes of harvest All these workes shew the watchfull providence of God not by miracle but by the naturall course of the creatures preserving the world Indeed the water in the red sea stood up like a wall by a miraculous worke and in Noahs deluge the sea ouerflowed the earth by an extraordinary work but now the sea is kept in by his naturall banks bounds as with swadling bands Iob 38.9 But whereas Ambrose to prove the Sea higher than the earth alleageth how Sesostr●s King of Aegypt and Darius afterward would have cut the earth and joyned the Aegyptian and the red Sea together they finding the red sea higher by three cubits than the land of Aegypt fearing the inundation of the whole countrey left off from their purpose Ambr. lib. 3. Hexemer c. 3. First it is true that these Kings attempted to bring Nilus into the red sea and ceased from their enterprise upon that erroneous conceit yet afterward the Ptolomies Kings of Aegypt as Strabo writeth effected that worke and made a passage out of Nilus into the red sea without any such danger of inundation Secondly though it were granted that the red sea were higher than the plaines of Aegypt it followeth not that it should be higher than all the earth So then our opinion is that the earth is higher than the sea and that this is more agreeable to the Scripture 1 Psal. 107.23 They are said to goe downe to the sea in Ships as to the lower place 2 Psal. 24.2 Hee hath founded the earth super maria above the Seas ergo not under them 3. Eccles. 1.7 All the rivers goe into the Sea but the water hath his naturall course downward Now whereas the ships sailing upon the seas se●me to one standing upon the shoare as floting aloft the reason thereof is because the sea being a plai●● 〈◊〉 liquid element doth more easily shew the round compasse thereof rising to the fashion of a globe 〈…〉 earth being uneven full of hils and dales QVEST. XIII How the waters were gathered into one place THe third question is how the waters are said to bee gathered into one place seeing there bee 〈…〉 lakes rivers and fountaines that are farre asunder First we may answer with Basil that this 〈…〉 is not to be vnderstood of every collection and gathering of water but only of the sea which though it be diuers in name yet it is continued together one sea being perpetually joyned with another unlesse it bee the Caspian Sea which some thinke to be filled by the Northerne Ocean as Strabo Pliny Basill others that it is fed only by ●ivers and emptied againe by the secret passages of the earth as Herodotus in Clio. Aristot. lib. 2. Meteor And Ambrose hereto agreeth that like as all the earth except certaine Ilands maketh one continent as Spaine Syria Africa so the sea being joyned together maketh but one general collectiō of water Some other thinke that the waters are gathered into one place because as Salomon saith All rivers though they have divers heads run into the sea Eccles. 1.7 Or else we may say that the waters are gathered into one place that is a place separated and divided from the habitable earth so that the waters have not one place in respect of their divers divisions but because they are severed from their earth into their proper places QVEST. XIV Whether the earth be founded upon the waters THe fourth question is whether the earth be founded upon the waters which was the opiniō of Thales among the Philosophers of Chrysostome among the Christians Which opinion seemeth to be favoured by two places of Scripture Psal. 24.2 He hath founded it upon the Seas 2 Pet. 3.5 The earth was of the water by the water by the word of God For the first place Basil so understandeth it that upon the Seas flouds should signifie in the waters because the earth was first in and under the water Augustine referreth it to the Ilands and promontories that doe hang over the sea lib. 2. de G●nes c. 5. Euthymius thinketh it is meant of the secret passage of the water that run within the earth But the meaning of that place is evident to bee this that the earth is founded not upon but above the waters so the Hebrew word gnal signifieth supra aboue and so we see as wa● noted before out of Augustine that the dry land hangeth over the sea For the other place of S. Peter the earth is said to be of the water not as though it was made of the water but because it was made to appeare out from the water which before covered it the other part of the sentence is not well translated by the water 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but in the water as 1 Pet. 3.20 Noe is said to bee saved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not by the water but in the water And so the earth may be well said to be in the water because the whole continent being lesse in compasse than the Ocean seemeth to be as a great Iland in the sea But that the earth hath not his foundation upon the waters it is evident both by experience because we see the earth to be the heavier element and so to have his situation lowest as also
by the Scripture Iob 26.7 He hangeth the earth upon nothing then not upon the waters Psal. 104.5 He hath set the earth upon her foundation c. that it cannot be moved the earth hath no foundation but of it owne by the word of God and seeing the earth is immoveable it is not like to be founded upon the waters which are moveable QVEST. XV. Whether the dry land was caused to appeare upon the second or third day Vers. 9. GOd said againe 1. Some thinke that this was part of the second dayes worke the causing of the dry land to appeare as Aben Ezra to whom subscribeth Mercerus their reasons are these 1. because it is said Gen. 2.4 that in one day God made the heavens and the earth Ans. This is spoken of the heaven and earth which were made in the beginning on the first day Gen. 1.1 2 because the approbation of this worke omitted before in the second day is inserted here vers 10. Answ. This approbation God saw that it was good is omitted before not because Gehenna was made the second day and th● Angels fell then as the Hebrewes imagine nor because two is the beginning of division as Hierome for this division was good whereas the creatures were in confusion before nor yet for that the second dayes worke was not yet ended as Aben Ezra but because the worke begun upon the second day was finished upon the third For the which cause this approbation is omitted in the first verse when as yet the heavens and earth were created in their ●ude and imperfect state 2. It is therefore more probable that this appearing of the drie land was part of the third dayes worke and that the second dayes worke was finished not so much because this worke beginneth with vaiomer and God said which is used sometime in the beginning of a new worke upon the same day as vers 26. but for that vers 8. this conclusion is added the evening and the morning was the second day which is an evident distinction of the severall dayes workes To say with Aben Ezra that an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here to be admitted that to be set downe last which was done first is to force and racke the story QVEST. XVI Of the divers kinds of trees and plants created out of the earth Vers. 11. THen God said let the earth bud forth c. 1. God caused the earth to bring forth these things without helpe of the Sunne or Starres which were not yet made as hee caused the light to shine in the first day without the ordinarie instrument thereof the Sunne Iun. 2. Although God speaketh to the earth yet it hath no understanding or will to obey as some Philosophers imagine but God worketh this by his power Mercer 3. Here are three kindes of plants and fruits brought out of the earth the bud the herb the tree which some distinguish into herbs shrubs and trees Vatablus maketh the bud and herb to be all one the first so called in the sprouting thereof the other in the perfection but they differ rather thus desheh is that kinde which the earth bringeth forth of it owne accord gnesheh that which beareth seed and is set and planted by the industry of man gnetz is that kinde of greater plants which are called trees Iun. 4. Whereas the earth is bid to bring forth gnetz peri the tree of fruit Rob. Sel. his note is ridiculous that God would have had the trees to bee all fruit and not only bearing fruit and because the earth did not bring forth such it was afterward accursed Likewise R. Isaak his collection is curious that would have this clause understood only of the trees of paradise as though there were no fruit-bearing trees without paradise Mercer 5. Neither had the earth onely power given to bring forth these kindes of fruits but it both brought them forth in act and had power given to continue the propagation of them Mercer Calvin And therefore it is added fruitfull trees bearing fruit that is which even then came forth with fruit for the present use of man Iun. 6. Neither yet as Basil thinketh all trees were made fruitfull in the beginning which afterward became barren when the earth was cursed But either Moses speaketh of the fruitfull trees as more principall or even those trees which beare not fruit yet because they are profitable for medicine or other uses may also be numbred among the fruitfull trees or rather they may bee comprehended among those trees that beare their seed though no fruit of such kinde are ashes willowes and such like QVEST. XVII Whether the world were created in the spring or autumne Vers. 12. ANd the earth brought forth the bud of herb Some would prove by this that the world was made in the Autumne because the trees were created with ripe fruit Concerning this matter there are three opinions 1. Mercator thinketh that the world was made in Iulie and his chiefe reason is taken from Noahs floud where the beginning of the yeere he would have to bee in Julie because in the eleventh moneth which he supposeth to bee in May when the olive beginneth to put forth the dove brought greene olive leaves Contra. 1. There is no mention made of greene leaves Gen. 8.11 the word is gnaloh which Hierome translateth elsewhere frondes olivae branches of olive Nehem. 8.16 such as they made bowers of and the Septuagint cals it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a dry stalke it might be then some branch of the olive tree rather than the leaves 2. Admit that the branch or stalke had leaves this is no argument of the spring in May for the olive loseth not her leaves as other trees Plin. lib. 16. c. 20. and therefore as Chrysostome thinketh the olive might remaine greene under the water for it is unlike that the olive in seven dayes should have new leaves for seven dayes before the dove was sent forth and could finde nothing 2 Other doe thinke that the world was made in the Autumne in the moneth Tisri 1. because that moneth was the beginning of the yeere as Iosephus thinketh before Moses by a new institution appointed Nisan which answereth to part of March and April to be the first moneth and therefore it is called the end of the yeere Exod. 34.22 from whence they began the account of the Jubile 2. And beside they use this as another reason because in the autumne the fruit of trees and plants as grapes apples are ripe and not before Contra. 1. It might bee that the Israelites accounted the beginning of their yeere according to the manner of the Egyptians among whom they lived who began their yeere in the moneth Ptho which answereth to September as the Athenians did in the moneth Hecatombaion which is in June but it cannot bee shewed that this reckoning was observed from the beginning It is indeed called the end of the yeere because all the fruit of
their mouth against heaven making the creature faulty and culpable whereas God created all things good tract 4. in Matth. But if it shall be objected that many things fall out according to the predictions of Astrologers I briefly answer that it commeth so to passe sometimes not by the dexterity of their wit and knowledge but either by the subtilty of Sathan that foretelleth what he himselfe is permitted to worke or by the credulity of such as consult with them whereby their affections give way unto the effect or by the secret disposing of Gods providence that such things should fall out for the probation of the faithfull and further confusion of misbeleevers QVEST. XXI Great Whales how said to be created Vers. 21. GOd created great whales 1. We need not because God is said here to create the whales which were made out of the water to have recourse unto that indigested matter which was made the first day of nothing Calvin So not only that is said to be created which is made of nothing but that also which is made new out of some matter as man is said afterward to bee created yet made out of the earth 2. But we deride that Jewish fable that God when he had made two great whales lest the increase of so huge a creature might tend to the destruction of the rest he did geld the male and salted the female to be meat for the just in the next world As though God did not foresee every thing before it was made and approved it being made and beside the Lord gave a blessing to all fishes and so to the whales among the rest to increase and multiply Mercer QVEST. XXII Of the great Whales Vers. 21. GReat Whales the word turmin signifieth a serpent dragon or great fish And this epithete great is not added without cause for the whale or great fish is the greatest of all living creatures Iob 41.24 In the earth there is none like him It is almost incredible what some writers report of the hugenesse of these creatures the Hebrewes write that whales have beene found of 500. stadia or furlongs in length Mercer Some have appeared in the waters of the bignesse of Islands Muscul. Pliny writeth that in the Indian sea there are certaine fish called balaenae whirlpooles quatuor jugerum of three or foure akors or furlongs in length and certaine long fish called pristes of 200. cubits and e●les in the riuer Ganges of 300. feet in length lib. 9. cap. 30. The same Author citeth Iuba King of Mauritania who maketh mention writing to Caius Caesar sonne of Augustus of whales in the Arabick coasts of 600. foot in length and 300. in breadth lib. 16. c. 40. Aelianus also writeth lib. 15. c. 21. that Alexander found in a caue in India a dragon supposed to be 70. cubits long they saw only his head out of the caues mouth not daring with the whole ●oast to approach neerer whose eyes appeared to be of the bignesse of a Macedonian target or shield These strange reports are found in forraine histories the truth whereof I will leave to the credit of the authors and the judgement of the readers Ambrose saith aequalia montibus corpora habere praedicantur the Whales are reported to have bodies equall to Mountaines Hexemer li. 5. c. 10. Certainly it is evident out of Scripture that these creatures of the sea are of a wonderfull bignesse as it appeareth both by that description Iob 41. His jawes are likened to doores v. 5. his scales to shields v. 6. hee maketh the sea to boile like a pot v. 2 2. As also by the story of Ionas where we reade that the Prophet was swallowed whole of a great fish and cast up againe And not to search further our owne Chronicles make mention of great fishes that have been taken as of one that was in length 22. yards being 12. foot broad betweene the eyes some of his ribs were 16. foot long his tongue 15. foot long three men might stand upright one upon another in the opening of the jawes Stow ann Elizab. 16. QVEST. XXIII Whether the fowles were made out of the water or earth Vers. 21. WHich the waters brought forth c. and every feathered fowle c. By these words it seemeth that the fowles had their beginning out of the water but the contrary is affirmed c. 2. v. 19. So the Lord God formed of the earth every beast of the field and every fowle of heaven c. To reconcile these places we neither affirme that the fowles were made of the thinner part of the water extenuated into the aire as Augustine lib. 3. in Genes ad lit c. 3. and Rupertus nor yet that they were made of mud or slime and so partly of earth partly of water as the Hebrewes not yet that they were made of the element of the water as Eugubinus in Cosmopeia nor yet that the fowles were made part of the water and part of the earth as wee see there are two sorts of them some that live in the water and some that keepe the land as Vatablus But we thinke that the fowles were created onely out of the earth Gen. 2.19 neither is the contrary affirmed here that the waters brought them forth but the Lord saith let the fowle f●ye upon the earth v. 20. so Iun. Cajetan Catharin QVEST. XXIV How and wherefore God is said to blesse the fish Vers. 22. ANd God blessed them c. 1. God is not said before to have blessed the herbs and trees as here hee blesseth these living creatures because the generation of living things whether it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in bringing forth young egges or wormes is a more admirable worke of nature than is seene in the increase of plants 1. In that the beasts of the earth are not blessed as here the fishes and fowles it is not because of the serpent that was to be accursed as the Hebrewes imagine but for that the abundance and number of the fishes exceedeth the other yet it must bee understood that God also blessed the rest though it bee not expressed 3. The Lord here first of all speaketh to the creatures because now he beginneth to create living things Iun. hee speaketh to them as he did to the whale to cast up Ionas not by any syllabicall voyce but by his omnipotent will and power which the creature forthwith obeyeth Mercer 4. The fishes are said to fill the waters the fowle to multiply because the fishes are more in number and they only live in the waters but the fowles live not only vpon the earth but other creatures beside 5. By the waters in the seas all other gatherings together of waters are understood but the Seas are named as the principall wherein there is greatest store of fish Iun. 6. Eugubinus here is deceived that thinketh that the fishes began to rise out of the water as soone as the Seas were gathered together and so every
So here the Lord holdeth on his unchangeable course of judgement in punishing sinne yet seemeth to repent in undoing his worke in destroying man whom he had made Perer. QVEST. XII Why the creatures are punished with man 9. Vers. 7. I Will destroy from man to beast c. Not onely man shall be destroyed but the other creatures with him and yet man onely had sinned The reason is 1. as Chrysostome sheweth because all things were made for mans use hic igitur cum e medio tollitur quis illorum usus erit and therefore when man is taken away there should be no use of them 2. Like as when the head is cut off all the members die so together with man the creatures over the which he had power are punished not onely he but his Hereby the severity of Gods punishment appeareth as also the greatnesse of mans sin that brought destruction upon many as Davids sin in numbring the people did upon the whole land 3. Because beastly men had abused the creatures to their filthy pleasure and riotous excesse it standeth with Gods justice to punish the instrument with the principall 4. The fishes are not also here threatned to be destroyed because they lived in that element wherewith God purposed to overflow the earth neither had man so much abused them as the other kinds and beside it pleased God to spare them among other creatures at other times the Lord threatneth also to take away the fish of the Sea Hosh. 4.3 Mercer QVEST. XIII How Noah is said to be perfect Vers. 10. NOah was a just and perfect man c. 1. Noah not yet any man living can be said to be perfect in respect of Gods justice or in the sight of God as the Psalmist saith If thou O Lord markest what is done amisse who shall be able to abide it Ps. 130.3 2. Neither yet in regard of that perfection which the Saints shall attaine unto in the Kingdome of God as the Apostle sheweth Not as though I had already attained either were already perfect Phil. 3.12 3. Neither yet is any so perfect as that he can be found in this life without sinne which was the heresie of the Pelagians for the Preacher saith there is not one just man upon the earth that doeth good and sinneth not Eccles. 7.20 4. Neither is any said to be perfect because they can keepe the commandements and doe more than is commanded in observing the Evangelicall counsell as Pererius and other Popish Writers 5. But Noah is said to be perfect in comparison of others and therefore it is added in his generation or in regard of the perfection which may be attained unto in this life which is rather in the will and desire to be perfect and in increasing and going still forward than in any actuall accomplishment of the desire and in this sense the Apostle having a little before denied himselfe to bee perfect yet saith to the Philippians Let as many as be perfect bee th●● minded Philippians 3.15 and so our Saviour biddeth us be perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect that is that we should more and more labour for perfection As Augustine saith Ingredi sine macula non a● surde dicitur non qui jam perfectus sed qui ad ipsam perfectionem irreprehensibiliter currit Hee is not amisse said to walke without spot not who is already perfect but runneth unto perfection without reproofe Thirdly how Noah is said to be perfect is expounded vers 8. Noah found grace in the sight of God it was the perfection then of faith whereby Noah was excepted as just and perfect in the sight of God being by faith cloathed with the perfection and justice of Christ. QVEST. XIIII How the earth was corrupt 11. THe earth was corrupt before God 1. That is the inhabitants of the earth where corrupt as Chrysostome saith Homo terra appellatur quia totus terrenus Man is called earth because he was become wholly earthly 2. Or they had infected the very earth with their abominations and made it accursed Iun. as the Psalmist saith A fruitfull land is turned into barrennesse for the wickednesse of them that dwell therein Psal. 107.34 3. The earth may be said to be corrupt that is defiled with those sinnes of uncleannesse which they committed as the Scripture testifieth that the land is defiled with such abominations Levit. 18.25 4. The earth was corrupt before God that is they were growne to such impudency and boldnesse in their sinnes that they would commit them even as in the presence and sight of God as the Prophet saith They declare their sinnes as Sodome they hide them not Isay. 3.9 QVEST. XV. Whether they which died in the floud perished everlastingly Vers. 13. I Will destroy them with the earth c. Here a great question ariseth whether all they which were destroyed in the floud perished everlastingly that is both in body and soule 1. For answer to this question we neither thinke that most of the old world were onely temporally punished which seemeth to have beene the opinion of Hierome that they which perished in the floud as likewise the Sodomites receperunt in vita malasua received their punishment in this life To the which purpose he urgeth that place Nahum 1.9 Non consurget duplex tribulatio Affliction shall not rise the second time and therefore it standeth not with Gods justice to punish twice for the same sinne both in this world and the world to come To this place I answer first that the Prophet speaking of the destruction of the Assyrians sheweth onely that thei● overthrow should be finall that God should not need to smite them againe As Abishai said to David when hee found Saul asleepe Let mee smite him and I will not smite him againe 1 Sam. 26.9 Thus Theohpylact and Theodoret expound this place Secondly if it bee expounded as it is alleaged it must be understood onely of penitent persons that such being afflicted in this life shall not need to be punished againe as we may see in the repentant theefe but concerning the the other theefe detemporali ad aeternum transvectus est supplicium he was carried from temporall to eternall punishment as Rupertus saith 2. Neither doe we approve their opinion that thinke many of the old world though incredulous before yet when they saw the floud comming in fine vitae poenetentiam egerunt did repent them even in the end of their life sic Lyranus Bellarmine For S. Peter calleth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the world of the wicked 2 Pet. ● 5 They then that were wicked so continued to the end 3. Neither is the opinion of Cajetanus to be received that thinketh non fuisse simpliciter incredulos id est sine vera Dei side that they were not simply incredulous that is without the true faith of God but only beleeved not Noah in this that the floud should
not to returne because he came not againe into the Arke bur onely rested upon it or for that he returned without giving notice of that wherefore he was sent as the Dove did sic Lyranus Tostatus 3. Their conjecture also which say that the Raven returned not but lighted upon some carrion or dead body cannot be allowed as contrary to the text and beside unlikely seeing now it was the eleventh moneth in which time all the dead bodies were either consumed of the water or devoured of the fish 4. Wherefore we hold the Septuagint and Latine to be corrupt and that according to the Hebrew text the Raven went and came to the Arke both because there was his food his mate or fellow and his nest or resting place though I thinke that Raven was not received into the Arke as the Dove was 5. But the Hebrewes fables we refuse how that the Raven was sent forth out of the Arke because of his intemperancie with his mate and that two other in the Arke were in the same case Cham and Canis the dogge likewise they imagine that the Raven should expostulate with Noah why he was sent out from his mate as though Noah should keepe her for himselfe some thinke that this was the Raven that afterward fed Elias but these ridiculous toyes are not worth the rehearsall 6. The Hebrewes and some Christian writers doe here much stand upon allegories some of them which tend to edifying we refuse not as that the simple hearted are signified by the Dove who are to be received into the Church but Hypocrites and carnall men must not be admitted into the Arke of the Church as the Raven returned not Mercer QVEST. XII Of the sending out of the Dove and the computation of the seven dayes Vers. 8. HE sent also forth a Dove from him c. 1. Though the tops of the mountaines appeared before the sending forth of the Dove yet she found no rest for the sole of her foot because the earth was not yet dry but muddy and standing with water as Chrysostome noteth and Iosephus saith that the dove returned with fowle and durty feet and beside the dove delighteth in the vallies and places which were yet under the water Mercer 2. whereas she brought an olive leafe c. I rather thinke with Chrysostome that the olive tree yet keepe the leaves greene under the water especially seeing the olive as Pliny noteth is one of those trees whose leaves are alwayes greene then with Ambrose that Deo jubente uno die c. germinavit terra c. at Gods commandement the earth in the same day wherin it began to be dry did bud and bring forth that this olive branch was fetcht forth from Paradise or out of the land of Israel is a Jewish fable 3. Where Moses saith v. 10. he abode yet other seven dayes I approve rather the opinion of Tostatus and Lyranus and Mercerus that Moses observeth thrice seven dayes then of Rupertus and Pererius that understand but twice seven which Noah waited for the sending forth of the dove for it is evident that he had staid 7. dayes before not seven other from those forty dayes as Pererius expoundeth it but other seven from the first seven as the seven other mentioned v. 12. were other from the second seven QVEST. XIII Of the account of the 601. yeare of Noahs age Vers. 13. IN the six hundred and one yeare c. 1. Whereas in the first moneth the upper face of the earth was dried and yet v. 14. it is said the earth was dried the 27. day of the second moneth wee need not with Cajetan to reconcile this doubt to say that this was all one moneth but divers in computation the first in respect of Noahs age the second of the yeare for it was not like that Moses in the same place would use a divers computation which would breed a confusion in the story but the text expoundeth it selfe that in the first moneth onely the upper face of the earth seemed to bee dry but it was not firme and sound and fit for habitation till the second moneth 2. In that Noah removed the covering of the Arke that is part thereof so much as might serve to looke forth it followeth not that the window of the Arke was too little for Noah to looke out at as Pererius noteth or not convenient in respect of the situation for that use for both Noah out of the window had perceived before the tops of the mounntaines to bee bare v. 5. for how else and of whom were they seene as also in that Noah put his hand out of the window and tooke in the dove it appeareth it was not out of his reach but from the top of the Arke Noah might see round about whereas the window opened but one way and therefore he removed some part of the cover QVEST. XIIII Noahs floud of the longest continuance of all others Vers. 14. ANd in the second moneth the 27. day of the moneth 1. This floud then which was in Noahs time was of the longest continuance of all flouds and inundations that ever were that great inundation of Nilus under Prometheus endured but a moneths space that under Ogyges in Achaia two moneths another under Deucalion in Thessalia three moneths they make mention also of a fourth inundation of the Isle Pharos called therefore Pharonica under the Aegyptian Proteus but none of these were like unto this inundation in Noahs time neither for generality of place or perpetuity of time 2. For this floud neither continued only nine moneths as Annia●●s thinketh or ten moneths as Cajetanus supposeth but twelve moneths full and ten dayes according to the course of the Sunne for Noah went into the Arke when the floud began in the second moneth and 17. day of the six hundred yeare and hee came forth the second moneth of the yeare six hundred and one upon the 27. day of the moneth QVEST. XV. Abstinence in the Arke Vers. 18. ANd Noah came forth c. 1. Ambrose noteth as some Hebrewes before that whereas Noah is bid to come forth he and his wife his sonnes and their wives v. 16. but when he is bid to come in he and his sonnes and his wife and his sonnes wives are joyned together chap. 6. v. 18. that they lived apart in the Arke and companied not together non commiscetur sexus in introitu sed commiscetur in ingressu although it is like that Noah and his sonnes lived in abstinence in the Arke because it was a time of mourning and therefore the Hebrewes note that Ioseph had his children not in the yeares of famine in Aegypt but before yet this cannot be gathered out of the 16. v. where Noah and his wife his sonnes and their wives are named together when they are bidden to come out of the Arke for here v. 18. they are againe named asunder 2. But R. Isaack Carus his
of Iephunne Othoniel of Seraiah which Iephunne and Seraiah were the sons of Kenaz for Caleb was not the son of Kenaz but of Iephunne 1 Chron. 4.15 yet it seemeth that he was of the stocke of Kenaz as grand-child unto him because he is called a Kenazite Num. 23.12 and yet the sonne of Iephunneh Othaniel then is called the brother of Caleb not properly but in a large sense as Lot is called Abrahams brother being indeed his brothers sonne Wherefore Pererius in following the blind latine text was much deceived 6. Morall observations 1. Observ. Against discontentment Vers. 2. AS they went from the East c. Chrysostome hereupon noteth that as these men not contented with their state sought out a new countrey so mankind saith hee non potest intra suos limites consistere can never keepe it selfe within the bounds but alwayes coveteth more 2. Observ. Against continuing in sinne ANd there they abode Philo noteth here that as these men having found a pleasant field did not passe thorow but continued there so sinners doe delight to continue and dwell in sinne ejus malum fuisset si post quam in peccata inciderant pro alicuis non pro domestic is habuissent c. it had beene a lesse evill after they had fallen into sinne if they had used it not as a domesticall but as a stranger 3. Observ. Against vaine and momentary pleasure Vers. 3. COme let us make bricke Like as these that dwelt in Shiner build of bricke sic qui voluptatib carnis inserviunt de fragili materia c. so they that are the servants of pleasure doe build with brittle matter that cannot continue but they which follow vertue lateres in lapides mutant doe turne brickes into hewed stones Gregor This appeareth in the parable of the rich man Luke 16. whose pleasure was soone over but Lazarus joy was everlasting 4. Observ. Difficulty should not hinder vertuous workes SO they had bricke for stone c. Many times the difficulty that occurreth doth cause men to cease off from their enterprise But nothing could hinder these men though they had neither stone nor mortar yet they will build a tower such as was never seene in the world before or after Calvin We learne hereby that nothing should discourage us or make us give over in a good worke seeing these were so laborious in compassing this their proud and ungodly enterprise 5. Observ. Against building for ostentation Vers. 4. THat we may got us a name c. Chrysostome here well noteth the vanity of worldly men that build houses and make great workes ut immortalem nominis memoriam relinquant to leave an immortall memory of their name whereas both they faile of their purpose hodie domus dicitur hujus eras alterius to day it is called one mans house to morrow another and so their name is extinguished and they might take a more sure way to preserve their name by doing of good while they live as it is in the Psalme 112.9 he hath distributed and given to the poore his righteousnesse remaineth for ever But worldly men doe as Absolon did because he had no children left to keepe his name he built him a pillar 2 Sam. 18.18 So they wanting good workes which are the true fruits of the spirituall men seeke to make themselves famous by sumptuous buildings 6. Observ. Wicked men proud before their fall Vers. 4. LEst wee be scattered Philo readeth before we be scattered and thereupon observeth that such is the obstinacy of the wicked though they see that great judgements are hanging over their heads yet they will goe on in their wickednesse as the conscience of these proud men gave them that they should not goe unpunished yet for all that they proceed in their purpose Thus we see verified that saying of the wise man Prov. 16.18 pride goeth before destruction as these men when they were in the height of their pride were dispersed and scattered like as Saul made a goodly place for himselfe as triumphing for the late victory obtained against Amelech even then when he was cast off from being King 1 Sam. 15.13 Oecolampad in hunc locum 7. Observ. Not to condemne any rashly Vers. 5. THe Lord came downe to see c. Chrysostome noteth vult erudiri nos ne unquam fratres temere condemnemis In that God commeth downe to see and examine hee would have us learne never without due examination to condemne our brethren rashly And it is especially a rule for magistrates not to condemne any their cause unheard as Putiphar did Ioseph Gen. 39.20 Muscul. 8. Observ. The division of the wicked profitable Vers. 8. SO the Lord scattered them c. Hence Gregory well observeth that the unity of the wicked is pernicious their division profitable So Paul escaped while his enemies were divided Act. 23. eripi●●tur justi dum dividuntur injusti the righteous are delivered while the unrighteous are divided like as the Israelites by the dividing of the waters had a ready passage thorow the red Sea so here this proud and vaine-glorious enterprise by the division of tongues was disappointed CHAP. XII 1. The Argument and parts THis Chapter hath two parts the first sheweth the occasion of Abraham comming into the Land of Canaan v. 1. to 6. the second containeth such things as hapned to him there from v. 6. to the end In the first part 1. Gods calling is set forth v. 1. with his large and ample promises both temporall to Abraham himselfe that his name should be great to his posterity that a great nation should rise of him v. 2. and spirituall to Abraham I will blesse thee to his posterity all the families of the earth should be blessed in him v. 3. namely in Christ. 2. Abrahams obedience is set forth with the circumstances of his age v. 4. of his company that came with him into the land of Canaan v. 5. In the second part is described 1. Abrahams travell and journeying in Canaan toward Shechem where Abraham built an altar and the Lord appeared to him vers 6.7 toward Bethel vers 8. the South vers 9. 2. his going downe into Aegypt 1. The occasion by reason of the famine vers 10. 2. His consultation with Sa●a to say she was his sister to save his life vers 11 12 13. 3. Pharaohs presumption in taking Abrahams wife to vers 17. 4. Gods revenge or punishment vers 17. which brought forth these three effects 1. Abrahams admonition by Pharo vers 18. 2. the restitution of his wife vers 19. 3. his safe deliverance and dimission vers 20. 2. The grammaticall construction or sense v. 1. And the Lord had said S. Ch. A.B. but the Lord H. for the Lord. T.G. Come into the land S.H. into the land caeter v. 5. The soules which they possessed S. which he had subjected to the Law C. which he had made H. gotten T.B. G. gnasah made Into Canaan they came the
against Levi but not against Christ. QVEST. XX. Of the lifting up of the hand how diversly it is taken in Scripture Vers. 22. I Have lift up my hand c. The learned have observed divers significations of this phrase in Scripture 1. It betokeneth prayer generally 1 Tim. 2.8 Saint Paul would have men lift up pure hands c. 2. It signifieth speciall suit and request for helpe Lament 2.19 Lift up thy hands for the lives of the young children 3. It is a gesture expressing thankfulnesse Nehem. 8.6 Ezra praised the Lord c. and the people lift up their hands c. and worshipped 4. It is used when any thing is done with a willing mind and glad heart Psa. 119. I have lift up my hand to the commandements which I have loved 5. As also it is a token and signe of calling Isay 49.22 I have l●ft and stretched my hands to the Gentiles 6. It betokeneth helpe and deliverance Ezech. 20. 5. I lift up my hand upon the seed of Iacob and was knowne unto them in the land of Egypt 7. To lift up the hand is to rise against one to vex and oppresse him Iob. 31.22 If I have lift up my hand against the fatherlesse c. Perer. 8. They used also to lift up their hands in giving of voyces which the Greekes call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Calvin 9. It was a gesture used in taking of an oath and therefore the Lord saith Num. 14.30 They shall not come into the land ever the which I lift up my hand to make them dwell in it This signification it hath here for Abraham before he went to battell had vowed unto God in his prayer as the Chalde interpret that if God would deliver the enemies into his hand he would not seeke to make himselfe rich thereby but give the praise to God QVEST. XXI Wherefore Abraham tooke an oath ABraham therefore tooke an oath swearing by the true God to professe his faith and religion that he onely worshipped the true God Perer. 2. That he might take occasion hereby to reprove the superstitious use of the King of Sodome in swearing by their Idols and instruct him concerning the worship of the true God Calvin 3. As also that they might know that Abraham did not this suddenly or of vaine-glory but of a religious minde having bound himselfe by an oath Muscul. 4. That by this oath as with a shield Abraham might be preserved from the baits of covetousnesse wherewith the King of Sodome might have tempted him if he had not beene firme Calvin QVEST. XXII Why Abraham refuseth to take ought of the King of Sodome Vers. 23. I Will not take of all that is thine so much as a threed or a shooe latchet 1. Abraham refuseth not to take of those things which belonged to the foure Kings whom he had conquered which now were his by reason of his just victory but not of any thing which was the Kings of Sodome 2. Which Abraham calleth his not as Ambrose thinketh because the spoyles of the enemie belong to the King for he was not Abrahams King but for that they had beene before appertaining to the King 3. Though Abraham might have challenged them by the right of his victory yet he would not take so much as a threed 1. Least he might have beene thought for his owne lucre to have waged that battell 2. He would doe justice to restore the goods to the first owners 3. That the heathen King should have no advantage to thinke Abraham bound unto him Neither would Abraham that any should have the honour and praise of enriching him but onely God of whose blessing hee onely depended Pererius 4. Abraham refused not the gifts which Pharao bestowed upon him Gen. 12.8.16 but he will take nothing of the King of Sodome the reasons may be yeelded to be these 1. There the King gave of his liberality and Abraham could not refuse without suspition here nothing was given but recovered in battell 2. There the King gave of his owne but these goods belonged to all the Sodomites Mercer 3. By that meanes it pleased God that Abraham should be then enriched but Abraham was now rich enough he needed no such helps 4. Here Abraham might have beene thought if he had taken any thing to himselfe of a covetous minde to have pursued the enemies and so God should not have had the honour of the victorie but here was no such feare 5. The King of Sodome and his people were ordained for a greater destruction and therefore God would not that Abraham should take any thing which was accursed But Pharao received mercy of God thus the case was much different betweene the gifts of the one and the other 6. Abraham excepteth those things which the young men had eaten making no mention of the tithe which he had given before because that was taken not out of the King of Sodomes substance but his owne neither doth he prejudice the other three by his example but that they notwithstanding might take their parts Muscul. 4. Places of doctrine 1. Doct. Of the custome of paying of tithes Vers. 10. GIve him tithe c. We see how ancient this custome of paying tithe to the Priests and Ministers is It was practised before the Law as appeareth here by the example of Abraham and the vow of Iacob Genes 28. yea such was the equity of it that from the Hebrewes the Gentiles borrowed that use the Romans paid tithes of their goods to Hercules Plinie writeth that the Arabians pay tithe of their incense to their God Sabis and that it is not lawfull before that be done to buy or sell. Xenophon also sheweth that they which had gotten the victory did use to pay tithes to their Gods of the spoile of their enemie Perer. 2. Doct. Of the lawfulnesse of an Oath Vers. 21· I Have lift up my hand c. In that Abraham doubted not to take an oath wee see the lawfulnesse thereof that it is not denied unto a Christian to sweare when he is lawfully called thereunto contrary to the phantasticall doctrine of the Anabaptists that simply condemne the use of an oath but Moses saith Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and sweare by his name Deut. 6.13 Muscul. 3. Doct. God onely the possessor and true owner of the earth Vers. 22. POssessor of heaven and earth c. Philo noteth hereupon that no mortall man is properly possessor or true Lord of the earth But that both the heaven and earth are the Lords possession and we are but tenants at the Lords pleasure as the Lord himselfe saith The land shall not be sold to be cut off for the land is mine and ye are but sojourners and strangers with me Levit. 29.23 Whereupon he enforceth Ius possessionis omnium rerum ad Deum pertinere usum solum ad creaturam that the right of possession of all things belongeth to God the use onely to the creature 5. Places of
Perer. QUEST XXII Of the largenesse of the plaine that was destroyed Verse 25. ANd overthrew those cities and all the plaine c. where now standeth the dead and salt lake or sea 1. Plinie saith it is above an hundred miles long and twenty five broad 2. But Iosephus which better knew being brought up in the countrey giveth it ●ut 580 furlongs in length that is 72. miles and somewhat more and 150. stadia or furlongs broad that is nineteene miles or thereabout By this it may appeare what a great destruction this was which overflowed such a great circuit of ground 3. Aristotle also testifieth by heare-say that the thicknesse and saltnesse of the water is such that it beareth up man or beast throwne into it ex Perer. QUEST XXIII Whether any were saved beside Lot and his company ALL the inhabitants of the cities 1. Then Strabo 〈◊〉 deceived which thinketh that some of the cities were forsaken of those which could flie away lib. 17. so that he supposeth that divers escaped but the Scripture testifieth that all the inhabitants saving Lot his wife and two daughters were destroyed 2. Not onely the men and women but the infants also perished in the fire so that there remained no seed or off-spring of the Sodomites as the Prophet witnesseth Isai. 1.19 Except the Lord had reserved unto us a seed wee should have beene as Sodome c. This the Lord did 1. to increase their sorrow and torment in seeing the destruction of their children 2. to shew his perfect detestation of that wicked nation whose very seed was accursed 3. Although those infants were not guilty of their fathers actuall sinnes yet it may stand with Gods justice temporally to chastise the children for their fathers sins as Davids childe begotten in adulterie died Perer. 4. God hath absolute power and free choice to shew mercy to whom he will and to withhold it at his pleasure 5. Gods judgements are secret yet most just Calvin 4. This destruction of the Sodomites by fire was a foreshewing of everlasting fire the vengeance whereof they now suffer Iude 7. therefore Hierome is deceived that saith Deum ad praes●ns reddidisse supplici● ne in aeternum puniret that God did chastise them presently that hee should not punish them eternally Unlesse Hierome bee expounded to speake conditionally if they repented which it is not like they did Wee may therefore safely subscribe to the sentence of Saint Iude that the Sodomites are eternally punished for neither were there any just men left after Lot was gone out upon whom God might shew mercie neither is it like they did repent in that instant seeing they scorned Lots warning before neither can any temporall punishment whatsoever redeeme or buy our everlasting damnation QUEST XXIV Of the barrennesse of the ground where Sodome stood and the strange fruit there growing Verse 25. ANd all that grew upon the earth 1. Not onely for that time were the plants and herbs smitten but the earth was stricken with barrennesse for ever As the Psalme hath reference to this example 107.34 A fruitfull land turneth he into barrennesse or saltnesse for the wickednesse of the inhabitants Aristotle also witnesseth that the bitternesse and saltnesse of the water is such that no fish can live therein lib. 2. meteor 2. Borchardus also that spent 10. yeares in the viewing of that countrey saith that no grasse groweth there and that it alwaies smoaketh 1. pars c. 7. num 38. which is agreeable to that place of the Prophet Isay 34.9 The rivers thereof shall be turned into pitch the dust thereof into brimstone the smoake thereof shall goe up for evermore 3. Others also doe write that the fruit which there groweth is outwardly like other fruit but within the rine there is nothing but dust and ashes Ioseph li. 5. de bell Iudaio Solinus saith Fuliginem favillaceam ambitus extimae cutis cohibet that the goodly outward rine or skinne onely doth keepe in the filthy soily embers cap. 37. Pererius QUEST XXV Why Lot feareth to stay in Zoar. Vers. 30. HE feared to tarry in Zoar c. 1. Not so much for that the City was subject to earth-quakes and had divers times before beene thereby overthrowne whereupon it was called Bala of Balaug which signifieth to swallow or devoure and therefore Lot might thinke that now much more the same calamity might befall it in this fearefull tempest of fire and brimstone sic Hieron in tradition Hebraic 2. But rather Lot seeing the same sinnes to reigne in this place might feare lest the same punishment should overtake them wherein notwithstanding he sheweth his weaknesse in not staying upon the Lords promise Calvin 3. As also that fearefull judgement which fell upon his wife at his entring into Zoar might move him the sooner to depart from thence QUEST XXVI How Lot is said to be delivered for Abrahams sake Vers. 29. GOd thought upon Abraham and sent Lot out c. It may bee here questioned how Lot is said for Abrahams sake to be sent out when Saint Peter saith That just Lot was delivered 2 Pet. 3.7 he was then delivered for his owne righteousnesse by the Apostles sentence The answer here is not that Lot was delivered for his service to Abraham in Egypt in concealing Sarah to be his wife or following him out of his Countrey but 1. Lot was indeed principally delivered neither for Abrahams nor his owne righteousnesse but for the Lords owne mercy and goodnesse sake and it is most certaine that Lot should have beene delivered though he had not beene Abrahams nephew yet the Lord to testifie his love to Abraham and to encourage us one to pray for another doth shew how much the prayers of the faithfull prevaile with him 2. God is said to remember Abraham not what hee prayed but what God said to him that he would not destroy the righteous with the wicked Muscul. 3. As also it may be referred to the Lords first promise made to Abraham I will blesse them that blesse thee Gen. 12. so that Lots deliverance dependeth not upon any merit in Abraham but Gods gracious promise toward him Iun. QUEST XVII Whether Lots daughter were indeed ignorant that there was no man left alive but her father Vers. 31. THere is not a man in the earth to come in unto us c. 1. Origen thinketh that Lots daughters thought ver●●y that all the world had beene destroyed by fire as it is like that they had heard of their father that there should be a conflagration of the world but they perfectly understood it not But this is not like for they might easily have discerned from the hils the rest of the Countrey to be untouched and they came but lately from Zoar which was preserved 2. Some thinke further that this ignorance of theirs was invincible and remedilesse and by this argument would excuse their practice with their father sic Ioseph lib. antiq Irenaeus lib. 4. c. 51.
herein as God is to have the chiefe glorie being the author of this counsell and the onely revealer of secrets so your Highnesse is to be honoured as the instrument whose cogitation the Lord directed as a light to search out the mysterie of darknesse and as a cunning Pilot to guide the ship beside the rocks and sands Now is fulfilled that saying of the Wise-man A King that sitteth in the throne of judgement chaseth away all evill with his eyes It was David not the sons of Zerviah Ioab and Abishai his Counsellors that found out by consulting with God the treacherie of the men of Keilah intended against him And Pharaoh himselfe had the instinct by dreame to foresee the calamitie of Egypt by the future famine And the King of Nineveh gave the advice how to prevent the destruction of the Citie by repentance Like as Ambrose doth celebrate the memorie of the Emperour Valentinian who sitting in his Consistorie assisted with his Nobles when they all gave counsell to restore unto the Romans their Idoll Temples Solus velut Daniel excitato in se Dei spiritu Gentilibus obviabat He onely as another Daniel the spirit of God moving him resisted the Gentiles request The Seraphims in Isaiah which Hierome was taught by an Hebrew Rabbine to understand of the Kings and state of Iudea had six wings with two they covered their face with two their feet and with two they did flie so while the face of the men of State was as it were blinded and the feet and inferiour parts had their counsell darkned thanks bee to God that your Majesties wings of judgement were not pinioned but did flie aloft with the Eagle to espie what was working below And so as he well saith Necesse erat ut qui potentior cunctis fuerat prudentior fieret universis It was fit that hee which was beyond all in power should exceed the rest in prudence But now may it please your Majestie to the glorie of God and for eternall memorie to bee transmitted to posteritie to give mee leave in few words to describe this worke of darknesse and to bring it to the light whereby this Cockatrice brood consulting with infernall spirits in the earth thought at once to have undermined and subverted both the Civill and Ecclesiasticall State of this land Wicked Abimelech slew upon one stone seventie of Gedeons sonnes yet Iotham escaped but here none within danger could have beene delivered Adonibezeks crueltie is noted that cut off the thumbs of hand and feet of seventie Kings but in this mischievous plot both the heads and hands of many honourable persons should have beene miserably rent from their bodies Cruell Saul in one day commanded fourescore and five Priests to bee murthered yet Abiathar the sonne of the high Priest was delivered but in this bloudie exploit all our Reverend Fathers were appointed to the slaughter Ambitious Athaliah destroyed all the Kings seed yet Ioash the Kings sonne was preserved but here no not the heire of the Crowne should have beene spared Savage Caligula was not more barbarous who wished that all the Senatours of Rome had but one necke that hee might smite it off at a blow Nor yet Hannibal who when he saw a pit filled with humane bloud cried out O formosum spectaculum O goodly sight Or Valesus Proconsul of Asia under Augustus Caesar who having put to death three hundred men walked and vaunted himselfe among the dead bodies saying O rem regiam O Kingly act Syl●a was not so bloudie who commanded seven thousand Citizens to be killed whose crie was heard to the Senate house where Sylla with the Senatours was assembled for hee did forbeare the Senate house nor that King of Persia which commanded the people of Syria to have their ●oses cut off or irefull Camby●es who in his expedition against the Aethiopians caused every tenth man to be tithed out for food his armie being almost famished But here scarce one man of ten that feared God and loved the truth should have beene left alive yea the very infants could not have beene exempted from this generall massacre but as Hierom speaketh of the crueltie of the Hunnes Cogerentur mori qui nondum vivere coeperant nescientes malum suum inter hostium manus ●ela riderent They should have beene forced to die that yet begun not to live and not knowing their doome should have smiled under the bloudie hand of the enemie Blessed be God therefore who hath in his great mercie and love to his Church disappointed their wicked imaginations in this snare which they laid for others is their owne foot taken and they are sunke into the pit that they made for others the stone which they would have rolled upon us is fallen upon their owne head And as Ambrose writeth of the Bees Apes quae non obtempera verint legibus regis immoriuntur aculei sui vulneri That they which disobey the order of their King amongst them die upon their owne stings So that engine wherewith the Romanists thought to have gored others hath wounded themselves As they with Abimelech sought to have fired the tower of Sichem so their owne parts have justly felt the fire and as with Sathan that used the winds to overwhelme the house upon Iobs sonnes they attempted with a sulphureous spirit to have blowne up that honourable house so now most worthily their owne members are exposed to the winde and aire and their wicked acts leave a sulphureous smell behind them This I write not God is my record as rejoycing in their confusion but grieving rather at the cause thereof pitying their persons but hating their actions ut probem me as he saith non homines odisse sed erro●es To shew that I hate not the men but their manners They with Dathan and Abiram are gone downe into the pit whose mouth they opened to swallow others as they laboured in the earth to worke iniquitie so their names are written in the earth to blot out their memorie they which wickedly imagined to deprive others of buriall with Iehoiakim are themselves buried as an asse is buried and cast forth without the gates of Ierusalem Now nothing remaineth most Christian King but that we give due thanks unto our gracious God who hath wrought this glorious deliverance In which action of thanksgiving the Church of God hath used to performe three duties To give solemne praise unto God to send presents one to another in signe of joy and to give gifts to the poore In the first your Majestie hath given us example who in the same place where the danger was devised and deliverance received publiquely with godly Iehoshaphat blessed God and this honourable Parliament concurring with your Christian Majestie hath well seconded your princely example in decreeing an annuall commemoration to bee kept of that day no lesse worthie to bee remembred than the Iewes feast
is shewed before in the divers readings QUEST XIV What are the strong before whom the Lord is preferred Vers. 11. WHo is like unto the Lord among the mightie 1. This being uttered with an interrogation is more emphaticall than if it had been barely affirmed Calvin 2. The most reade Among the Gods But the word e●lim is also taken for the Mightie as Psalm 29.1 Give unto the Lord yee sonnes of the mightie give unto the Lord glorie and it hath a more generall signification preferring God before the Angels both good and evill which of the latter sort assisted the Magicians against Moses and before the Idols of the Egyptians upon whom the Lord also executed judgement chap. 12.12 and before the mightie of the earth for Pharaoh and his Princes were confounded 3. This exposition is warranted by the like place Psal. 89.6 Who is equall to the Lord in the heavens and who is like the Lord among the sonnes of the strong Psal. 89.6 QUEST XV. How the Lord is said to be fearefull in praises Vers. 11. WHo is like thee so glorious 1. In three things God is preferred before all other in holinesse for the very Angels are imperfect in his fight in feare and reverence none is so to be reverenced as the Lord whose glory the Angels cannot endure to behold and in the power of his workes Siml 2. He is said to be fearefull in praises which some do interpret that whereas the Devils are feared because they worke mischiefe God is feared because his workes are mercifull and praise-worthy as it is in the Psal. 130.3 Mercy is with thee that thou mayest be feared Some expound it that God is not to be praised without feare and trembling but the fittest sense is Quod Deus non potest rite laud●ri 〈◊〉 rapiuntur omnes in stuporem That God cannot duly be praised but all men fall into astonishment no man can praise him as he is worthy Calv. To this purpose the Prophet David Psal. 89.7 God is very terrible in the assemblies of his Saints Even the Saints the holy Angels do tremble and wonder when they consider Gods praises 3. Lastly God is said to doe wonders many things amongst men are counted wonders which wise men doe not admire and many things are miraculous even unto wise men which are not so to the Angels but God doth wonders which are an astonishment even to the Angels Simler QUEST XVI Wherein the Egyptians are compared unto lead Vers. 10. THey sanke as lead in the mighty waters c. 1. Impurissimo metallo comparantur They are compared to the most impure mettall not to silver and gold but to lead which is called ghophereth derived of ghophir which signifieth dust or earth because lead is of the most terrene and earthly nature of all the metals Borrh. 2. Likewise they are compared to lead Quia peccatum sua mole ad inferna trahit Because sinne by the waight thereof draweth into hell And therefore by the Prophet wickednesse is compared to a talent of lead Zachar. 5.7 Ferus 3. Neither in respect of the waight of their sinne onely but of the heavinesse of their judgement doth 〈◊〉 similitude agree unto them Onere perfidiae gravitate judicii divini in altum depressi They are borne downe into the deepe with the burden of their sinne and the heavinesse of Gods judgement Borrh. 4. And beside Nullus fuit evitandi locus There was no way for them to escape as lead swimmeth not neither floteth in the waters but sinketh downe to the bottome Osiander 5. Beside whereas Omnia qua in opere metallorum conflatori● usurpantur hic nominantur All things which are used in melting of mettals are here named as fire spirit or wind lead Borrh. Herein also they are likened unto lead because that mettall is soonest of all metals melted wasted and consumed in the fire and so the wicked are swept away with Gods judgements whereas the righteous are thereby tried and purified as silver and gold So the Prophet Ieremy saith The bellowes are burnt the lead is consumed in the fire Ier. 6.29 6. Likewise this similitude sheweth that this their sinking downe like lead betokeneth their everlasting punishment Malitia graves importabiles Deo hominibus abjiciuntur in abyssum inferni cum Satan● Angelis illius discruciandi They being weighed downe with malice and importable to God and men are cast downe into the bottome of hell for ever to ●e tormented with Satan and his Angels Pellican QUEST XVII How the earth is said to have swallowed them Vers. 12. THe earth swallowed them 1. Neither is the water here understood by the earth as the earth is sometime taken for this inferiour part of the world as when God is said to have made the heaven and the earth as August quaest 54. in Exod. for this were somewhat coact 2. Neither yet did the earth open and devour them as the water swallowed them as Vatab. For if they had beene swallowed up of the earth as Core Dathan and Abiram were the Scripture would not have concealed so great a miracle 3. Neither are they said to be devoured of the earth Quia in limo haeserunt Because they did sticke in the mudde as Simler For they were cast up upon the land 4. Neither is the meaning Subitò perierunt a● s● eos terra deglutivisset That they perished suddenly as though the earth had swallowed them Osiander For this is not a similitude but a narration of the fact 5. Therefore by the earth here is understood Alvens ●●ari● The chanell of the sea hemmed in and compassed of the mountaines as Ionas described the bottome of the sea I went downe to the bottome of the mountaines the earth with her barres was about mee for ever Ionah 2.6 Iun. 6. Ferus by the earth understandeth hell Vbi nullus ordo sed sempiternus horror inhabitat Where there is no order but everlasting horrour and confusion But the other sense better agreeth to the historie 7. Wherein appeareth the correspondency of the judgement of their state Amatores terren●rum dev●rabuntur à terra The lovers of earthly things are devoured of the earth Pellican QUEST XVIII How the Lord will lead and carry his people Vers. 13. THou wilt carry them in thy strength unto thine holy habitation 1. The word in the originall is in the preterperfect tense Thou hast carried not that Moses only wisheth that the Lord would carry them to the land of promise but he speaketh confidently that the Lord which had redeemed them would not now leave them till he had accomplished his good worke toward them and it is the manner of Prophets to speake of things to come as already done and past because of the certainty of Gods promises Siml 2. Here Moses useth two effectuall words the one is ●achah which signifieth to leade as a shepheard leadeth which sheweth the provident care of God as a faithfull and carefull shepheard leading his people
4. 2. Neither were they to make any likenesse of beasts of the earth to worship them for divers of the Heathen did adore the terrestriall creatures as the Egyptians made Apis which was a pide Bull their god they also worshipped a Ramme for so they pictured Libycus Ammon with a Rammes head and generally the Egyptians worshipped all those cattell which the Hebrewes used to sacrifice unto God as it appeareth Exod. 8.26 3. They are forbidden also to make the likenes of any thing in the waters as fish or other creeping things as it is further explained Deut 4.18 For the blind Gentiles did worship fishes for although at the beginning when Idolatrie was first taken up among the Heathen they at the first fell not to this grossenesse because in those first ages navigation was not so common and so they had not any great experience of the waters and fish yet afterward the fondnesse of the Heathen brought them also into this foolish vaine to worship fishes as the two fishes they made one of the signes in the Zodiak because Venus and Cupid two of their gods when they fled away from Tipheus the giant did take upon them as their Poets faine the shape of two fishes likewise they set the Delphine as a signe among the starres in memorie of Ari●n the Musitians deliverance who being cast into the Sea by the mariners that robbed him of his riches was carried by a Delphine being allured by his musicke safe to the land Ex Tostat. quaest 4. 4. The waters are said to be under the earth not in respect onely of the higher parts of the earth or because it descendeth into the concavities and hollow places of the earth cum tamen sit supra terram being yet of it selfe situate above the earth as Tostatus but rather as Cajetane thinketh Situs aquarum est terra habitabili inferior the situation of the waters is indeed lower than the habitable earth as it is said to be founded upon the seas Psal. 24.2 QUEST III. Of the difference betweene bowing downe and serving Vers. 5. THou shalt not bow downe to them neither serve them c. 1. Cajetane referreth both these unto the externall act of worship as in bowing the knee uncovering the head and such like and offering of sacrifice which he understandeth under the name of service Omnis enim oblatio sub servitutis nomine comprehenditur For all kinde ob oblations are comprehended under the name of service The internall act of adoration hee would have contained in the former precept Thou shalt have no other gods c. To the same purpose Tostat. quaest 4. But this being a divers commandement from the former it forbiddeth all kinde of worship of Idols both externall and internall Idolatrie is the proper transgression of this precept and therefore therein is absolutely and generally condemned 2. Their opinion then is rather to bee received that doe thus distinguish these two the first word shacah to bow downe signifieth that outward worship which is done by the bodie or the members thereof the other word ghabad betokeneth to serve and it importeth such service as the servant yeeldeth to his master Oleast which is in the minde So also Pr●copius Cultus proficiscitur ex animo adoratio fit specie quadam cultus Worship proceedeth from the minde adoration is in outward shew He that worshipped Idols doth also adore them that is outwardly but he that adoreth or boweth himselfe unto them that is by externall gesture doth not alwayes worship As a man may be constrained by torment to give outward adoration to Idols which in his minde he knoweth to be nothing So it is forbidden ut nec affectu colas nec specie adores that neither thou worship them in affection nor adore them in shew Gloss. ordinar Nec excusatur Marcellinus Papa qui tamore impulsus exteriori actu obtulit illis thura Neither is Pope Marcellinus excused who being compelled by feare did in externall act offer incense unto them Cajetane QUEST IV. In what sense the Lord is called a jealous God Vers. 5. I Am the Lord thy God strong jealous 1. Origene sheweth well how the Lord is jealous of his people Zelans dicitur Dominus quia animum sibi mancipatum non patitur damonibus admisceri The Lord is said to be jealous because he will not suffer the soule addicted to his service to have any societie with devils Like as a man is jealous over his wife but that shee may keepe her selfe onely to his love but for other women hee careth not So the Lord was jealous over his people but as for the Gentiles hee suffered them to continue in Idolatrie he was not jealous over them The jealousie therefore of the Lord proceedeth from his love but if his people whom he is jealous of shall commit spirituall fornication still then the Lord threatneth to cast them off and to be no more jealous of them as the Lord saith by his Prophet My jealousie shall depart from me and I will cease and be no more angrie Ezeck 16.42 Zelus itaque charitatem declarat The zeale therefore of God sheweth his love Theodoret. 2. Zelare dicitur Deus cum creaturam quam non vult perire castigat God is said to be jealous of his creature which he doth chastise and correct that it perish not Augustin 3. The Manichees tooke exception to this that the Lord calleth himselfe a jealous God which they tooke to be an affection unmeet for God and so they would deprave the author of the old Testament To whom Augustine maketh this answer That like as the wrath of God non est perturbatio mentis sed potentia vindicandi is no perturbation of minde but his power of revenging sic zelum Dei non crucia●um animi c. So the zeale of God we understand not to be a vexatien of the minde such as the husband is tormented with against the wife or the wife against the husband sed tranquillisimam sincerissemamque justitiam but Gods most sincere and calme justice c. And further he excellently sheweth the cause why the Spirit of God in Scripture useth such termes of God quae apud homines in vitio poni solent which among men are taken in the worse part ut inde admonerentur c. that men thereby should be admonished that even when they speake as they thinke with honour of God they speake not worthily of the divine Majestie cui honorificum potius silentium quàm ulla vox humana competeret to whom honourable silence better agreeth than any speech of man 4. Iulian the Apostata also here thus objected whereas the Lord is said to bee a jealous God either hee suffered Idols to bee worshipped in the world then is not Idolatrie to be condemned or if they were worshipped against his will then is he not omnipotent Answ. 1. A man is jealous of his owne wife onely and not of another woman therefore because
in mind by this sudden sicknesse of his fault and spake or made signes to his wife to circumcise the child Aben Ezra Simler But the suddennesse and greatnesse of the sicknesse which made Moses altogether unable to doe it himselfe may be thought also to have given him small respite either to bethinke himselfe or to give notice to his wife 3. Some thinke that shee had heard before of her husband how straightly they were injoyned to circumcise their children the eight day and that of her selfe it came into her minde that they had not done well in omitting the childs circumcision Osiander But it seemeth by her words of indignation that shee had not so reverent an opinion of the necessity of circumcision as of her selfe to enter into an action so much displeasing unto her 4. Therefore I consent with Iunius that whether the Angell appeared in visible shape or no as some thinke yet by evident signes it appeared both to Moses and Zipporah that Gods wrath came upon him for that cause the phrase here used that the Lord occurrebat ei came upon him dimisit cum and departed from him doth shew that God after some sensible manner assaulted Moses that they both knew both from whence that sudden stroke came and for what cause QUEST XXXII Who it was that departed from Moses Vers. 26. SO he departed from him 1. Not Zipporah tooke her leave of Moses and returned to her father as Lyranus for beside that the Verbe is put in the Masculine gender in the originall it is more like that Moses sent Z●pporah backe than that shee first sought it 2. Nor yet is the meaning that Moses left him that is his child new circumcised and sent him backe to his father in law as Paulus Burgensis It should have beene said then that Moses left her which is his wife rather than him that is the infant that could not shift for himselfe Perer. 3. And to understand it of the disease that it left him is somewhat improper But it must be referred to the Angell for he departed now from Moses that before ●an upon him met him or assaulted him sic August q. 11. in Exod. QUEST XXXIII Of the mysticall application of this story NOw for the mysticall application of this story 1. That of Gregory Nyssen is somewhat farre fetcht that Moses married to Zipporah a Midianitish woman sheweth a Christian teacher addicted to Philosophie which he must circumcise and pare off many error● from before it can bee admitted in Christianity 2. So is also that application of Pererius not so fit that as Moses was chastised because one of his children was uncircumcised though the other had received circumcision so it suffiseth not the judgement only to be reformed and circumcised but the will and affection also must be purged 3. That of Ferus is more fit that Christ may be said to be our husband of bloud by whose bloud we are purged And Zipporah betokeneth the Church which by repentance doth circumcise her children to make them acceptable unto God QUEST XXXIV What manner of faith it was which the people had in beleeving Moses Vers. 31. SO the people beleeved 1. Not all the people whom the Egyptian taskmasters would not suffer to intermit their worke Simler but a convenient number of the people gathered together with the Elders Pellican 2. These having seene the signes before mentioned as the Rod turned into a Serpent Mos●s hand suddenly to become leprous and to be healed againe and the water turned into bloud gave credit unto Moses and Aaron and beleeved they were sent of God Osiander 3. But this seemeth to have beene but a temporarie faith for a while after they are offended with Moses and Aaron when their affliction at the first was made more heavy Simler 4. And now they see the effect of Gods promise that the people should at the first hearken unto them Chap. 3.18 Borrh. 4. Places of Doctrine 1. Doct. The use of true miracles Vers. 5. THat they may beleeve The end then and use of true miracles is to confirme faith whatsoever miracles are wrought to any other end as to perswade any false doctrine and to draw away the people from the true worship of God are false miracles wrought by the operation of Satan and are not to be regarded as Moses sheweth Deut. 13.2 Simler 2. Doct. Things by their nature noxious and hurtfull are subdued to the faithfull Vers. 4. HE put forth his hand and caught it By this that this Serpent is turned againe into a Rod and hath no power to hurt or harme Moses we see that by the power of God things by nature hurtfull yet to the beleeving and faithfull are not noxious or discommodious The Lions mouthes were stopped against Daniel the Viper that leaped upon Pauls hand forgat her kind This power and privilege floweth from Christ our head which as it is externally shewed in such miraculous workes so spiritually it is now seene in that the old Serpent the enemie of mankind hath no power to hurt any of the members of Christ. Simlerus 3. Doct. Temporary obedience doth often turne aside a temporary punishment Vers. 26. SO he departed from him c. Zipporah here not of any devotion but of necessity circumcised her sonne yet it pleased God so to accept of this forced obedience that he spared Moses so many times a temporary and externall obedience doth turne away a temporall punishment as Ahabs sackcloth put off the punishment threatned that it came not in his dayes So the Samaritanes corrupt worship of God delivered them from the Lions 2. Kings 17. Simler Piscator If God be so pleased sometime with outward service accepting the small beginnings of those that are comming unto him how much more acceptable unto him is the true spirituall worship 5. Places of controversie 1. Cont. Against popish transubstantiation Vers. 3. ANd it was turned into a Serpent This can give no warrant to the popish transubstantiation and that imagined conversion of the bread into the body of Christ for here both the Scripture testifieth that the Rod was turned into a Serpent and the sense discerned it but they can shew neither word for their devised change and sense also is against it Simler 2. Cont. Against the Arrians that Christ is a true God Vers. 16. THou shalt be to him as God The Arrians most blasphemously abuse this place making Christ no otherwise God than Moses is called God Cont. 1. Not the name Eloh●m only is given unto Christ but Iehovah which is given to no creature 2. Not only the name of God but honour and worship are given unto him and to no creature beside Let all the Angels of God worship him Hebr. 1.6 Simler 3. Where the word Elohim is given unto men it is not properly attributed unto them but by way of comparison with others as here in respect of Aaron Moses is so called as by way of relation unto God because they
are in his stead in earth but the Godhead and name of God is simply and properly given unto Christ. 3. Cont. Ecclesiasticall persons subject to the civill magistrat FUrther though Aaron be Moses mouth and speake for him to the people yet Moses is made his superiour so though the Priests and Ministers doe declare unto the people the will of God and the law is to be required at their mouth yet are they subject to the Civill power as here Aaron to Moses Pellican as the Apostle saith Let every soule be subject to the higher powers Rom. 13.1 4. Cont. Against the baptisme of infants by women Vers. 25. ANd Zipporah tooke a sharpe knife This example is alleaged by the Romanists to prove the lawfulnesse of Baptisme by women in the case of necessity Bellar. lib. 1. de Bapt. cap. 7. Contra But this example cannot serve their turne 1. because the Minister of circumcision in the old Testament is not precisely appointed as the Minister of Baptisme is for the Levites and Priests were not specially charged by commandement to bee Ministers of circumcision but that charge did indifferently lie upon the masters of the family Gen. 17.9 But in the Gospell they are bid to baptise that are commanded to teach Mat. 28.20 Piscato● 2. The Romanists lay upon baptisme a necessity of salvation but here the necessity was not in respect of the infant uncircumcised but in regard of Moses and not a necessity of eternall salvation but of preserving the outward life Piscator 3. Zipporah did it in presence of Moses by this example they may allow women also to baptise in the presence of the lawfull Minister Simler 4. And though it pleased God to remit the temporall punishment upon this externall obedience yet this sheweth not that God did approve this act as before instance is given of the Samaritanes who were delivered from the Lions being but halfe worshippers of God 2. King 17. the Lord onely sheweth hereby that it is pleasing unto him that the externall discipline of the Church should be preserved Simler 5. This then being in it selfe an unlawfull act in Zipporah saving that necessity forced it and extraordinary it cannot be drawne to an ordinarie practice specially where there can bee no such necessity Iun. 6. This example rather sheweth that baptisme though by an unlawfull Minister is to be held to bee baptisme as after Zipporah had circumcised her sonne he was not circumcised againe then that such are to be allowed lawfull Ministers Heretikes are not fit Ministers of Baptisme yet if they keepe the true forme of Baptisme the Church useth not to baptise after them for as Augustine well saith That which is given 〈◊〉 be said not to be given although it may be rightly said not to be rightly given 5. Cont. That the punishment for the contempt of circumcision was not only temporall but in Gods justice eternall Vers. 24. THe Lord met him and would have killed him Bellarmine from hence would prove that the penalty of the neglect of circumcision was only temporall and consequently that circumcision had not to it annexed the promise of remission of sinnes and deliverance from eternall death as the Sacraments of the new Testament have lib 2. de effect sacrament cap. 17. Resp. 33. ad argum 1. Cont. 1. The penalty inflicted for the omission of circumcision is laid upon the party himselfe that is not circumcised even that person shall be cut off Gen. 17.4 therefore this example of punishment imposed upon the parent for the neglect of it in his sonne is not fitly urged to that end 2. that law is made against those that willingly neglect circumcision and so wilfully breake the Lords covenant but here is no contempt but only negligence and oversight 3. It followeth not Moses only should have beene temporally chasticed for this negligence therefore the neglect of circumcision was onely punished by temporall death like as God would have killed Aaron with temporall death for consenting to the Idolatry of Israel Deut. 9.20 Doth it therefore follow that the punishment of Idolatrie was only temporall God unto his servants remitted in mercie the eternall debt chastising them onely temporally for their owne amendment and the example of other 4. But that the contempt of circumcision deserved everlasting death in the justice of God appeareth both by the phrase that soule shall be cut off from his people which signifieth a finall perishing from the Church of God both in this world and in the next as it is taken Levit 20.3 that he which giveth his seed to Moloch shall bee cut off as also by the reason there given because hee hath broken the Lords covenant and cursed is every one which transgresseth any part of the law Deut. 27.26 And the curse of God is not only temporall but eternall 5. Further that circumcision had annexed to it a promise of grace and remission of sinnes the Apostle sheweth calling circumcision the seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4.11 and the outward circumcision represented the circumcision of the heart whose praise was not of men but of God Rom. 2.29 6. Cont. Against the necessity of Baptisme NEither can this example of Zipporahs necessary circumcision of her sonne bee fitly alleaged to prove an absolute necessity of baptisme an hypotheticall that is a conditionall necessity depending upon the precept of Christ wee graunt that it is necessary that baptisme both in generall should bee retained in the Church because Christ hath instituted it and in particular that every one should yeeld ready obedience thereunto as unto Christs ordinance when it may bee conveniently had but such a penall necessity as to imagine children dying without baptisme to bee excluded the kingdome of God cannot be admitted 1. This were to tye salvation unto the externall signe and so to limit the worke of the spirit 2. Some of the fathers indeed as Augustine held such a necessity but hee made the same necessity of the other Sacrament upon these words of our Saviour Ioh. 6.53 Except yee eat the flesh of the Sonne of man c. ye have no life in you c. Simler 3. There is not the like necessitie of baptisme now and of circumcision then for that was tied to the eight day so is not baptisme and the necessitie was not in respect of the infant but of the parent that neglected it as the child here was not in danger but Moses himselfe 6. Morall observations 1. Observ. That one standeth in need of anothers gifts Vers. 14. DOe not I know Aaron thy brother c. that he shall speake God could if it had pleased him have given unto Moses the gift of eloquence utterance but he rather joyneth Aaron as assistant unto Moses not giving all gifts unto one but so diverslie dispensing and disposing his graces that one may stand in need of another even as the members of the bodie cannot say one to another I have no need of thee 1
as a reason of his presence which the Lord had alleaged before as a cause of his departure chap. 33.3 Then he intreateth the Lord by his owne mercifull nature which was ready to give pardon And thirdly he putteth God in minde of his covenant which he had made with his people to be his inheritance Iun. 3. And Moses confesseth and saith our sinnes including also himselfe because there are none perfect in Gods sight Simler As Daniel also prayeth Dan. 9.5 We have sinned and committed iniquitie Cajetane thinketh he hath relation to Aarons sinne for the which he intreateth but the other sense is better 4. Moses maketh mention only of iniquity and sinne omitting the third that is transgressions which proceed of pride and contempt against God Tostatus and Cajetane give this reason because the people were not guilty of that kinde of sinne to offend against God excontemptu of contempt But by these two all other sinnes rather are understood Simler For Moses would make a full and ample confession of their sinnes that he might move the Lord to compassion 5. Moses also wisely frameth his prayer and groundeth it upon the Lords owne words for as the Lord had professed himselfe ready to forgive sinnes and iniquity so Moses saith pardon our iniquitie and the Lord had said that he reserved mercy to thousands so Moses intreateth that he would take them for his inheritance for ever Ferus QUEST XX. What covenant the Lord here renueth with Moses Vers. 10. BEhold I will make a covenant before all the people 1. Cajetane seemeth to thinke that this was the speciall covenant made with Aaron and Moses the one to be the governour of the people the other to be the high Priest But Moses made no suit or request for himselfe but only in the peoples name and therefore the Lord meaneth that generall covenant which he would now ●enue with his people as it is evident by the ordinances which are here propounded which concerned the people in generall Simler 2. Ferus seemeth to understand this covenant of that solemne league which Moses made with the people Deut. 29. in the land of Moab But that was only a renuing of the covenant here made because the people which had seene the Lords great wonders in Egypt were all then dead this covenant then was at this time revived when the Lord writ the second time the Commandements in the tables of stone which were signes of the covenant and sent downe Moses with them unto the people Simler 3. There were two speciall parts of this covenant one was absolute that the blessed Messiah should be borne of that nation the other was conditionall for the inheriting of the land of Canaan which afterward through their disobedience they were deprived of when they went into captivity Simler QUEST XXI Of the divers kindes of marvels Vers. 10 I Will doe marvels There are three kinde of wonders or marvels in the world 1. Some are such as are strange and unusuall yet not beside the order and course of nature but are wrought by the skill and device of men such were those which were called the wonders of the world as the temple of Di●na at Ephesus Maus●lus tombe the image of the Sunne at Rhodes and Iuppiters image at Olympus made by Phidias the wals of Babylon which Semiramis made and the Pyramides in Egypt 2. Some are done beside the ordinary course of nature by the operation of Spirits but they differ from true miracles and wonders for either they be counterfeit workes done by the deceit and collusion of Satan such were the Magicians serpents that contended with Moses and the wonders which Antichrist shall worke by the power of Satan 2 Thessal 2. or they are done to a false end to confirme superstition and false religion such as have beene practised by superstitious Monkes in pilgrimages and at the reliques of Saints to hold the people in errour Simler 3. But the true miracles are indeed such as are wrought by the power of God above and beyond the ordinary course of nature and these are of three sorts either such which only worke terrour and admiration such as were the sound of the trumpet and thunder and the appearance of fire in mount Sinai when the Law was delivered or such as were for some necessary use and present benefit as the raining of Manna the bringing forth of water out of the rocke and such were all our blessed Saviours miracles which alwayes tended to some profitable end or they were such as were sent for the destruction and punishment of the wicked as was the opening of the earth to swallow up Cora Dathan and Abiram and the sudden death of Ananias and Sapphira in the new Testament Act. 5. Simler QUEST XXII What marvels these are which the Lord here saith he will doe Vers. 10. MArvels such as have not beene done in all the world 1. Some understand these marvels to be those wonderfull signes which should be shewed in the day of judgement for otherwise these signes were never given unto the Jewes ad literam according to the letter Gloss. interlinear But it is evident that the Lord speaketh of such signes as Moses and the people among whom hee was should see they were presently then to be performed and such strange and wonderfull workes the Lord shewed indeed unto his people in the wildernesse 2. Rupertus understandeth them of the incarnation passion resurrection of Christ so Ferus of the miracles which Christ wrought in the dayes of his flesh for otherwise saith Rupertus Majora signa visae sunt c. greater signes were seene in Egypt than any done among that people before Christ came But the Lord here speaketh of such workes as he would doe by the ministery of Moses It is a terrible thing that I will doe with thee that is by the ministerie Iun. 3. Oleaster referreth it to that familiarity which Moses had with God like as never any had before him or after But that was no terrible thing but rather gracious and favourable 4. Tostatus understandeth these marvellous things of the shining of Moses face because that served specially as a signe to confirme the covenant and league made here with the people the other wonders which were done after in the wildernesse being so long after did not so properly belong to the confirmation of this covenant qu. 11. Contra. 1. The wonders here spoken of are such as should be terrible but the shining of Moses countenance was not terrible but glorious which they were notwithstanding afraid to behold for the great glory 2. And that was but one wonderfull worke but these are many here spoken of 3. And all the signes and wonders which the Lord wrought for his people in the desart were confirmations of his love and evident signes of his presence 5. Cajetane especially referreth these marvels to those terrible signes which were specially shewed to confirme Moses and Aaron in their office and calling as the
swallowing up of Cora Dathan and Abiram by the earth and the burning of the rest of the seditious with fire Numb 16. But as well this as all other wonders which the Lord did for his people must be here comprehended seeing the covenant was made with them all 6. Wherefore here are understood better all those wonders which God wrought for the people in the desart by Moses and afterward in Canaan under Ioshua Iun. Marbach As the destruction of the foresaid rebellious company the dividing of the waters of Jordan the standing still of the Sunne Lyran. The overthrow and subversion of the Cananites and the victorious conquest over them Calvin Balaams asse spake and God miraculously turned his cursing into blessing Simler To know then what these marvels were we must learne out of the rest of the bookes following what great things the Lord did for his people Gallas Osiander QUEST XXIII Why the Girgashites are here omitted Vers. 11. I Will cast out before thee the Amorites c. Here are only six nations of the Canaanites rehearsed the Girgashites are omitted 1. Lippoman thinketh this to be the reason thereof because before the entrance of the Israelites into the land of Canaan forte de terra illa recesserat it may be that they were departed out of the country But it is like that they would rather have made a league with Ioshua as the Gibeonites did than have forsaken their country for feare of the Israelites 2. Some thinke they are not named because they did not fight against Ioshua Ex Tostat. quaest 79. in Exod. 23. But the contrary appeareth Iosh. 4.10 where the Girgashites are rehearsed among those nations whom the Lord would cast out before them And none of the Canaanites saving onely the Gibeonites are said to have made peace with Ioshuah Iosh. 11.19 3. The Septuagint whose manner is to supply out of one place that which is wanting in another doe here also insert the Girgashite But this is too great boldnesse to adde any thing to the authenticall originall 4. Wherefore the Girgashites either being a small people might be comprehended under the rest Tostat Or by a Synecdoche when part is taken for the whole under these nations here named the other also are signified which is the reason that sometime two or three of these nations are set downe often for all the rest Calvin QUEST XXIV How it stood with Gods justice to destroy all the inhabitants of Canaan I Will cast out It may seeme both a cruell edict decreed of God for the utter extirpation of these inhabitants of Canaan and as cruelly to have beene executed by the Israelites 1. The equity of God in decreeing this to be done may thus appeare 1. If God might rightfully assigne that country unto his people as the earth is the Lords and the fulnesse thereof he may dispose of it at his pleasure then by the same right it was lawfull for the Lord to expell and root out the former inhabitants 2. Yet there is another reason beside of Gods equity the Lord had now spared them a long time even 400. yeeres expecting their repentance and they waxed worse The Lord said in Abrahams time and to Abraham the sinnes of the Amorites were not yet full Genes 15.16 Now then after so long patience in forbearing these wicked nations non fuit crudelitas poenae gravitate moram pensare it was no cruelty with greatnesse of punishment to recompense the long stay thereof Calvin 3. The earth is said to have spued out this people for their great impiety Si mortuo elemento intolerabilis est impietas c. If their impiety were intolerable to the very dead element how much more might the Lord exercise his judgement with rigour Calvin 4. Againe the Lord having decreed to plant his people in Canaan was to expell the idolatrous inhabitants lest they might have beene a ruine and occasion of falling to his people Marbach 2. And as the Lord decree was just againe these wicked inhabitants so the execution thereof by the Israelites in destroying them all was also just 1. Because non est homini● revocare p●●am c. It is not in mans power to revoke the punishment decreed by the Lord for then they should have incurred the same penalty themselves as the Lord by his Prophet said to Ahab who had let Benhadad goe Because thou hast let goe out of thine hand a man whom I appointed to dye thy life shall goe for his Marbach 2. Seeing the victory and conquest of those nations was only of the Lord it was just and right ipsum leges victoriae statuere that he should set the lawes of the victory who were to be spared who not therefore the Israelites could not alter any part of Gods will on that behalfe Gallas 3. And if the Israelites had spared them privassent se legitima haereditate c. they had deprived themselves of the lawfull inheritance which was ordained them of God Calvin QUEST XXV Why they were to make no compact with the Canaanites Vers. 12. THou shalt make no compact with them 1. The Israelites are specially warned to take heed of the Canaanites to make no league with them because they were most in danger to be corrupted by them seeing they were not all destroyed at once but many remained and dwelt among them not only in Cities by themselves as the Canaanites had their Cities in the midst of Ephraim and Manasses Iosh. 16.10 and 17.16 but they dwelt among them in the same City as the Jebusites did in Jerusalem Iosh. 15.63 there was not so much danger to be feared by the nations which were further off and therefore when they tooke any of their Cities they might save their persons alive but if it were a City of the Canaanites they were to save none alive Deut. 20.15 16. Tostat. quaest 12. 2. Another cause of this prohibition was the great impiety and wickednesse of the Canaanites among whom was practised all ungodlinesse for the which cause their land spued them out Levit. 18.28 And this reason is touched here Lest they bee the cause of thy ruine this amity and league betweene them might be a meanes to draw them to idolatry Marbach 3. Further the Lord had appointed the Canaanites to destruction and therefore with such as were Gods enemies no league was to be made Simler 4. By this meanes also legitima sua haereditate privarent they should deprive themselves of their lawfull inheritance which the Lord had promised to Abraham Isaack and Iacob and to their seed Simler 5. Duos pessimos fructus illiciti foederis numerat He reckoneth up two very bad fruits of this unlawfull league the land should be defiled with their altars and superstitious monuments which they would erect under the colour of this league and beside humanitatis praetextu populum corrumpent they will corrupt the people under pretense of humanity in calling them to their idolatrous feasts Calvin 6. But