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

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to preserve us alive as it is this day And justice shall it be unto us when we observe to doe all this commandement before Iehovah our God as hee hath commanded us Annotations COmmandement put generally for Commandements as the Greeke translateth it see Deut. 5. 〈◊〉 Here Moses entreth upon the explanation of the first commandement of the ten before rehear●●● in chap. 5. to doe that yee may doe them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 continually For practise and obedience is that which the Law requireth for blessednesse Iam. 〈◊〉 ●5 And that w ch one prophet calleth Doing the words of the covenant 2 Chron. 34. 31. another call●th Stablishing or Confirming 2 King 23. 3. and Confirming is expounded by the holy Ghost 〈◊〉 Gal. 3. 10. from Deut. 27. 26. 〈◊〉 to wit the river Iordan that so they might come into Canaan This was by the cond●●t of Iosua Ios. 1. 1 2 c. and it figured the 〈◊〉 of the Church under Christ by whom these commandements are fulfilled in us that beleeve 〈◊〉 20. 40. 44. Rom. 8. 1 2 3 c. In the 〈◊〉 time the possession of Canaan and good thin●s therein was a gracious inducement of that People unto voluntarie obedience and keeping of God●●aw which notwithstanding they perform not Psal. 105. 44. 45. Nehem. 9. 24 25 26 35. Vers. 〈◊〉 feare this is the beginning of wisdome Psal. 111. 10. and by it we depart from evill Prov. 16. 6. and it comprehendeth generally Gods worship and true religion Esay 29. 13. Matt. 15. 8 9. therefore it is mentioned in the first place prolonged under which eternall life is also implied for Gods commandements when they are kept doe adde unto men length of dayes and yeeres of life and peace Prov. 3. 2. 1 Pet. 3. 10 11 c. Vers. 3. and honey signifying heavenly graces as is observed on Exod. 3. 8. Vers. 4. Heare The last letter of this first word Heare and of the last word One are extraordinarily great in the Hebrew and so noted in the margent to cause heed and attention And here beginneth the first and great commandement as our Saviour calleth it Mark 12. 29 30. Matt. 22. 38. And this place of Scripture unto the end of the ninth verse was one of the foure paragraphs which the Iewes were wont to write upon their Phylacteries as is noted on Exod. 13. 9. and fastned to their doore-posts and read in their houses twice a day as the Hebrewes say Twice every day doe men reade the lecture HEARE O ISRAEL c. at evening and at morning as it is written in Deut. 6. 7. when thou liest downe and when thou risest up at the time when men are wont to lie downe which is at night and at the time when men are wont to rise up which is at day And what is it that he readeth Three sections to wit Heare O Israel c. Deut. 6. 4 And it shall be if you shall hearken c. Deut. 11. 13. And Moses said unto the people c. Exod. 13. 3. And they read first the section Heare O Israel because in it there is the propertie of God and the love of him and the doctrine of him which is the great foundation whereupon all doe depend Maim in Misn. b. 2. in Keriath Shemangh ch 1. sect 1 2. is one so in Mark 12. 29. the LORD our God the LORD is one where the word is which the Hebrew wanteth is supplied in the Greeke and explained by a learned Scribe saying Well Master thou hast said the truth for there is one God and there is none other but he Mark 12. 32. So Paul saith There is no other God but one 1 Cor. 8. 4. Here it is probable that Moses closely taught the unitie of the God-head and trinitie of persons Iehovah the Father our God the Sonne and Iehovah the Holy Ghost thus many doe understand these words But the Apostle cleerely openeth the mysterie saying There are three that beare record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one 1 Ioh. 5. 7. And here is the ground of saith Vers. 5. love The end of the commandement is love out of a pure heart and of a good conscience and of faith unfained 1 Tim. 1. 5. See the notes on Exod. 20. 6. Ie●●vah thy God these implie the causes of our love of the Lord the one for his owne nature and being Iebovah the other for the covenant of his grace whereby he is our God These two are often joyned together by Moses and all the Prophets heart unto the heart the Scripture attributeth wisdome and understanding 1 King 3. 9. 11. 12. Prov. 2. 2. 10 and beleefe in God differing from confession with the mouth Rom. 10. 10. and it is opposed unto hypocrisie Matth. 15. 8. soule the seat of the will and affections Deut. 21. 14. and 24. 15 and 12. 20 21. might in Hebrew Meod which signifieth might or vehemencie all that we can The Chaldee translateth it riches the Greeke power dunamis but the holy Ghost useth a more significant Greeke word ischus might or ability Mark 12. 32. where also another word is added for explanation dianoia which is the efficacie both of the mind and will and the Scribe useth a fit word Sunesis understanding Mark 12. 33. By which variety of words God would teach us to love him unfainedly with all whatsoever is in vs and in our power for wee ought to honour him with our substance also Prov. 3. 9. This praise is of King Iosias above all kings that he turned to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soule and with all his might according to all the law of Moses 2 King 23. 25. Moreover from this word with all thy might the Heb●ewsteach that a man is bound to blesse God with cheerefulnesse of soule for evill or affliction even as he blesseth for good or prosperity with gladnesse Maimony in Beracoth chap. 10. sect 3. And hereof we have a good example in Iob Iob 1. 21. Vers. 6. these Words the Oracles of God are also to be loved as the outward meanes whereby wee are bronght to the love and obedience of God Psal. 119. 97 98. in thy heart as the fleshly tables wherein Gods law is to be written Prov. 3. 3. and 7. 3. 2 Cor. 3. 3. The Greeke addeth in thy heart and in thy soule Vers. 7. What them that is often earnestly and diligently teach them that they may pierce the hearts of thy children to understand and affect them So the Greek and Chaldee explaine it to fore-instruct and teach thy children or thy sonnes under this name the Hebrews understand not the naturall sonnes onely but schollers also or disciples because disciples are called sonnes as it is written in 2 King 2. 3. and the sonnes of the Prophets came forth c. Maimony in Thalmud Torah chap. 1 sect 2. Children are to bee trained up or catechized in the way they should goe and brought
is faire and commendable among the unfruitfull trees and all the world knoweth it so the Lord of the world was faire and commendable among the Angels when he was revealed upon Mount Sinai at the time that hee gave the Law unto his people at that time I desired to sit in the shadow of his Divine majesty and the words of his Law were sweet to my palate and the reward of his precepts is reserved for me in the world that is to come Vers. 4. the house of wine that is either the wine celler the place where wine is kept or rather the banquetting house where wine is drunke For cellars are called the treasuries or store-houses of wine in 1 Chron. 27. 27. Wine besides that it slaketh thrist cheareth also the heart of man Psal. 104. 15. causeth him to forget his sorrow and misery Prov. 31. 6 7. comforteth the sicke by cherishing and augmenting the vitall spirits By this the Church signifieth encrease of grace from Christ as the fruit of the vine excelleth the fruit of the apple tree and is more comfortable unto the heart And as her troubles and tentations were increased so was his grace towards her for spirituall consolations for as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ 2 Cor. 1. 5. This house of wine is like that in Prov. 9. 1. 5. where wisedome having builded her house c. inviteth the simple to come and eate of her bread and drinke of the wine which she hath mingled Of the Hebrewes Iarchi expoundeth this wine house to be the Tabernacle of the congregration where the interpretation explanation of the Law is given answerable to which now is the assembly of the Saints though it may also be understood of Gods booke or Scripture the true wine-celler that affordeth spirituall comforts his banner or his standard a flag or ensigne spred abroad a warlike signe as in ch 6. 4. 10. the Church is said to bee terrible as an army with banners And the banner lifted up is a signe of fighting with ioy and victory as in Psal. 20. 6. We will shout-joyfully in thy salvation and in the name of our God we will set up the banner So Christs banner over her signified his defence and the victory which he giveth over all her enemies Sin Satan and the world also the signe that as all souldiers doe camp under their owne standards Num. 2. 2. so shee under the Gospell the ensigne of Christs love towards her love that wherewith Christ hath loved us 1 Iohn 4. 10. wherefore some reade it thus his standard was love toward me By love the Church is redeemed Ephes. 5. 25 by it everlasting consolation is given us and good hope through grace 2 Thess. 2. 16. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us Romanes 5. 5. Vers. 5. Stay or Sustaine Strengthen Uphold ye me The Church in her soule sicknesse speaketh to her friends the Ministers of Christ and other Christians that they with the comfortable doctrines and promises of the Gospell applyed unto her conscience would stay and uphold her ready to fall as into a swowne through trouble of minde because of her owne infirmities and want of feeling of Christs grace and blessing Thus in figure when Isaak had blessed Iakob he saith with corne and wine I have sustained him Gen. 27. 37. Spiritually we are sustained and strengthned by the words and promises of Christ which comfort the heart quicken the spirit and strengthen faith when it is weake as it is said Be ye also patient stablish or strengthen your hearts for the comming of the Lord draweth nigh Iam. 5. 8. and I long to see you that I may impart unto you some spirituall gift to the end you may be established Rom. 1. 11. And example may be seene in Iudah when Ezekias spake unto their heart and said Bee strong and couragious c. for there be moe with us then with him with him is an arme of flesh but with us is Iehovah our God to helpe us and to fight our battels And the people stayed or rested themselves upon the words of Ezekias King of Iudah 2 Chron. 32. 6. 7. 8. Likewise in the Apostles who preaching the Gospell confirmed or stablished the soules of the Disciples Acts 14. 21. 22. and 18. 23. with flagons to weer of wine which at banquets was wont to bee distributed by flagons When David had brought the Arke of God into his place and had offred burnt-offrings and peace-offrings and blessed the people he dealt to every 〈…〉 of Israel both man and woman to every one a loafe of 〈◊〉 and a good peace of flesh and a flagon 1 Chr. 〈…〉 2. 3 meaning a flagons or pot of wine as flagons of grapes that is of wine made of grapes are mentioned in Hos. 3. 1. So here with flagons of the 〈◊〉 of grace and consolation which Gods people have distributed among them in the spirituall banquet of the Gospell doth the Church desire to be sustained Flagon are named for the wine in them as the cup for the wine therein Luk. 22. 20. The Hebrewes after their wonted manner apply this to the doctrine of the Law as the Chaldee paraphrast here saith Receive ye ô Moses and Aaron the voice of the words of the Lord out of the midst of the fire and bring me into the house of doctrine and sustaine me with the words of the Law wherewith the world is delighted But it is the Law which causeth the sicknes of the soule as the Apostle sheweth in Rom. 7. and the Gospell of Christ healeth it Luke 4. 18. strow me a bed or spread mee make me a couch boulster me up The originall Raphad signifieth properly to spread abroad as a bed to lye on Iob 17. 13. and so it is translated by the Greeke Stoibasate which is to strow a bed as they were wont with hearbes or to stuffe and boulfter up Thus it is of like meaning with the former word for they used beds and couches at banquets Amos 6. 4. Esth. 1. 5. 6. or it further signifieth her falling downe as into a swowne and as one not able to stand is to lye down on her couch which she desireth may bee made and boulstred with the apples the comfortable doctrines and fruits of Christ forementioned in verse 3. which the Chaldee explaineth the interpretation of the holy words which are sweet like the apples of the garden of Eden sicke of love in languishing with desire to enjoy the comforts of my beloved The Greek translateth it wounded of love The originall word signifieth also weaknesse as in Iudg. 16. 7. 11. This speech implieth a want of feeling and enioying the presence and comforts of Christ as by her after speech is manifest when she saith I adjure you ô daughters of Ierusalem if ye finde my beloved that ye tell him that
they finish wholly the reading of the law in one yeare beginning in the Sabbath which is after the feast of Tabernacles at the first section of Genesis in the second Sabbath at These are the generations of Noe in the third at The Lord said unto Abraham Gen. 12. 1. so they reade and goe on in this order till they have ended the Law at the feast of Tabernacles Maimony in Misn. treat of Prayer chap. 13. S. 1. Vers. 9. generations that is off-spring and things that did befall him and them so Gen. 25. 19. and 37. 2. and 2. 4. and 5. 2. just or righteous Noe is the first in the world that hath this title of just and as generally the just liveth by faith Rom. 1. 17. so of Noe the Apostle witnesseth he was made heyre of the justice which is by faith Heb. 11. 7. perfect or intire syncere of a simple plaine and upright cariage as justice usually respecteth faith so perfectnesse respecteth life and conversation in the heart of man Esay 38. 3. and in his wayes Psalm 119. 1. This is not meant of perfection in measure or degrees as being without all sinne Eccles. 7. 22. Iames 3. 2. 1. Ioh. 1. 8. but when men by the grace of God keepe themselves from their iniquity Psalm 18. 33. 24. and sinne hath not dominion in them Psal. 19. 14. The perfect man is opposed to the perverse and restlesse wicked Iob 9. 20. 22. in his generations that is among the men of the ages wherein he lived So generation Mat. 11. 16. and 12. 42. is expounded the men of that generation Luk. 7. 31. and 11. 31. walked with God that is by faith pleased and acceptably served God see the like before of Enoc Gen. 5. 22. The word may imply also administration in the office whereunto God had called him which was to be a preacher of justice 2 Pet. 2. 5. So the Hebrew Doctors say hee preached to the old world and faid Turne ye from your wayes and from your evill workes that the waters of the flood come not upon you and cut off the whole seed of the sonnes of Adam Pirke R. Eliezer ch 22. Vers. 11. the earth was corrupt that is the inhabitants of the earth see Gen. 11. 1. and so the earth it selfe for and through them as is shewed after in vers 12. 13. therefore both were destroyed together Corrupting is in speciall applyed to idolatry and depraving of Gods true service Exod. 32. 7. Deut. 32. 5. Iudg. 2. 19. as the people are said to doe corruptly 2 Chron. 27. 2. when they sacrificed and burnt incense in the high places 2 King 15. 35. So idolatry was their chiefe corruption here as may also be gathered by Gen. 4. 26. see the annotations there before God that is openly and boldly in Gods sight as Gen. 10. 9. and in respect of his worship and law see Gen. 17. 1. violent wrong injurious and cruel dealing which seemeth to be chiefly meant of violating the duties towards men as the former word noted corruption of religion Gen. 49. 5. Ioel 3. 19. Obad. 1. 10. The Chaldee turneth it rapines or robberies Or by violent wrong violent and cruell men may bee understood as pride is used for proud men Ier. 50. 31. 32. sinne for sinfull men Prov. 13. 6. poverty for poore men 2 King 24. 14. and many the like Thus corruption encreased in the ecclesiasticall and politicall estate as it began in the domesticall Vers. 12. all flesh that is all men who are called flesh both for their frailty Psal. 71. 39. and corrupt unregenerate estate Gen. 6. 3. So flesh is expounded to be men and people Psal. 56. 5. 12. Esay 40. 5. 6. their way that is both their religion or faith for so a way often signifieth Act. 18. 25. 26. and 22. 4. 2 Pet. 2. 2. and their manners workes or course of life as elsewhere is mentioned the way of Kain for maliciousnesse Iude vers 11. the way of Balaam for covetousnesse 2 Pet. 2. 15. and sundry the like And of this way of the old world wherein wicked men did walke it is noted that God had filled their houses with good things but they said unto him depart from us they did eate they dranke they maried wives they were given in mariage untill the day that Noe entred into the Arke and the flood came and destroyed them all Iob 22. 15. 17. 18. Luke 17. 27. Vers. 13. An end is come that is the time of de 〈…〉 tion is at hand so Amos 8. 2. Ier. 51. 13. Ezek. 〈◊〉 2. 3. 6. from the face that is because or through them destroy or 〈◊〉 corrupting that is ready to corrupt or destroy Before the word was used for corrupting by sinne here for corrupting with punishment due for their sinne that is destroying So Gen. 18. 28. and 19. 13. and often in the Scriptures with the earth the Greeke saith and the earth which being given for a possession to the somes of Adam was also destroyed with them as in other particular judgements mens goods perished with them Gen. 19. Num. 16. 32. Ios. 7. 15. 24. Vers. 14. an Arke or Chest Coffin called in Hebrew Tebah and differeth from the Arke or Coffer which Moses made for Gods Sanctuary which was called Aron Exod. 25. 10. and served to keepe the Tables of Gods law Deut. 10. 2. 5. but this Arke Tebah was to keepe men and live things from the water as a ship used onely in this history and in Exod. 2. 3 The holy Ghost in Greeke expresseth them both by one word Kibotos an Ark Heb. 11. 7. and 9. 4. Heathen writers also make mention of this Arke but by another name Larnax that likewise is an Arke Plutarch de industr animal This Arke was a figure of Christs Church where into they that enter by saith are saved from the stood of Gods wrath of which grace Baptisme the answerable type is a signe and seale See 1 Pet. 3. 20. 21. Gopher trees The Chaldee paraphrafts make them a kind of Cedars the Scripture mentioneth not this word any other where But Gophrith is after used for sulphure or brimstone Gen. 19. 24. whereupon some thinke these to be Turpentine trees which beare sulphury b 〈…〉 yes and the wood is knowne to be fit for such an use nests that is little roomes or mansions as the Chaldee translateth for men beasts birds c. to be in severally So a nest is for a mansion Num. 24. 21. Obad. 4. pitch or plaister the Hebrew Copher which elsewhere is often used for covering and propit●●ting of sinne making atonement and the like is onely here used for pitch or plaister there being two other proper words for such stuffe Exod. 2. 3. It figured the atonement made for the Church by Christ wherewith wee being by faith covered and plaistered the waters of Gods wrath enter not upon us Vers. 15. cubits or ells a cubit is the measure from the elbow to the fingers end
to be revived when it is built and repaired 1 Chron. 11. 8. and stones revive when they are restored to their former state Nehem. 4. 2. And the Apostle confirmeth this interpretation citing the place thus At this time will I come Rom. 9. 9. It may also be translated According to the time of life or rather at this time of life the word this being usually understood as in Exod. 9. 18. 1 Sam. 9. 16. and 20. 12. and sometime expressed as in Ios. 9. 6. The Chaldee referreth it to Abraham and his wife According to this time when ye shall be alive A like promise is made in 2 King 4. 16. 17. where the Greeke version hath as the time or when the houre liveth Vers. 11. into dayes that is into yeeres as Gen. 4. 3. A like phrase the Evangelist useth of some gone forward in dayes for very aged Luke 1. 7. 18. So Gen. 24. 1. the way that is the custome or manner of women for the ordinary and naturall course of the body or fluors mentioned Levit. 15. 19. 25. meaning that she was past naturall strength to conceive and beare children as is explained in Rom. 4. 19. Heb. 11. 11. So the promise of redemption was fulfilled for us by Christ when wee were without strength Rom. 5. 6. even dead in trespasses and sinnes Ephes. 2. 1. Vers. 12. laughed as thinking it could not bee which her weake faith is after reproved and shee strengthned vers 13. 14. But Abrahams laughing was for joy in beleefe and admiration Gen. 7. 17. and so was Satahs afterward Gen. 21. 6. wherefore her faith also is commended unto us Heb. 11. 11. my Lord that is my husband whom Sarah reverenceth by this name wherefore her obedience is set forth for an example to all women in 1 Peter 3. 6. Vers. 14. any thing or word that is whatsoever can be spoken of unpossible or marvellous that is hard to be done or unpossible as the holy Ghost translateth this according to the Greeke version Luke 1. 37. So in Zach. 8. 6. It implyed also a thing hidden and unknowne Here God graciously pardoneth Sarahs infirmity after he hath reproved her and repeateth his promise to strengthen her faith that shee might bee blessed in beleeving that there should be a performance of those things which were told her from the Lord as Luke 1. 45. For Zachary was stricken dumbe for a time because hee beleeved not a like promise made unto him Luke 1. 13. 18. 20. Vers. 16. to bring them on the way or to send them away to weet with honour and after a godly sort as the Apostle speaketh 3 Ioh. 6. for this is a dutifull kindnesse much spoken of as in Act. 20. 38. and 21. 5. Rom 15. 24. 1 Cor. 16. 11. Tit. 3. 13. Vers. 17. shall I hide that is I will not hide As shalt thou build me an house 2 Sam. 7. 5. is the same that thou shalt not build 1 Chron. 17. 4. And doe men gather grapes of thornes Mat. 7. 16. which another Evangelist recording saith men doe not gather Luke 6. 44. The Lord will doe nothing but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the Prophets Amos. 37. Vers. 18. being shall be that is shall surely bee or become in him that is in his seed Christ see Gen. 12. 3. Vers. 19. how that hee will or to the end that hee may command but the Greeke keepeth the former sense his house the men of his house as the Chaldee explaineth it According to this is the law Deut. 6. 7. and 11. 19. and they shall keepe or that they may keepe these two phrases are implyed in the Hebrew and the Scripture useth them indifferently as judge not and ye shall not bee judged Luke 6. 37. or that ye be not judged as Mat. 7. 1. the way that is the true religion faith and obedience prescribed for men to walke it Act. 18. 25. 26. Deut. 8. 6. and 10. 12. The Chaldee saith the wates that are right before the Lord. unto him or of him The Greeke translateth all things that he hath spoken unto him Vers. 20. heavy or grievous of their sinnes see the notes on Gen. 73. 13. The Greeke here translateth their sinnes are very great Vers. 21. I will goe downe see this phrase in Gen. 11. 5. The Chaldee saith I will appeare and judge done altogether or made a full end that is have wholly finished their sinne which bringeth forth death Iam. 1. 15. This word full-end or consummation is used also for the full punishment and consuming of the sinners Ier. 46. 28. that I may know so the Greeke translateth it may also be Englished I will know that is make triall God speaketh of himselfe after the manner of men So in Gen. 22. 12. Exod. 33. 5. The Chaldee paraphraseth I will consume them if they repent not but if they doe repent I will not take vengeance Vers. 22. the men two of the three which appeared to Abraham vers 2. which were two Angels Gen. 19. 1. the third stayed with Abraham and he is called Iehovah the Lord Christ. stood or was standing as the Greeke translateth the Chaldee addeth stood in prayer before the Lord so Gen. 19. 27. And elsewhere by standing before God prayer is meant as Ier. 15. 1. And Christ saith when ye stand praying Mark 11. 25. Vers. 23. drew-neere to make his requests to the Lord a signe and fruit of faith Heb. 7. 19. and 10. 22. consume or make-an-make-an-end of Vers. 24. If so be or It may be peradventure it is a word that intimateth difficulty and yet with some hope of possibility as in Exod. 32. 30. Ios. 14. 12. Zoph 2. 3. 1 Sam. 14. 6. 2 King 19. 4. spare or forbeare forgive the place under one City Sodom implying all the rest Vers. 25. Far be it from thee The Hebrew Chalilah signifieth a profanation or profane thing and so forbidden to be done And sometime the name of God and Lord is added as in 1 Chron. 11. 19. 2 Sam. 23. 17. and it is in our phrase God forbid or Gods forbod The Apostles following the Greeke version expresse it sometime by Me genoito bee it not or sarre be it Rom. 3. 4. 6. sometime by hileos that is propitious or favourable as praying God in mercy to keepe it away as Matth. 16. 22. Farre be it from thee or God forbid Lord. to doe or from doing this word or this thing judgement that is right judgement or equity So the word judgement is often used as Psal. 9. 5. 17. and 119. 121. Mat. 23. 23. Vers. 26. all the place and so the people of the place In Ier. 5. 1. God offreth the like for Ierusalem if there could a man be found that executed judgement and sought the truth hee would spare it Vers. 27. have taken upon me or have willingly begun for so the originall word sometime signifieth willingnesse and content Ios. 17. 12. Iudg. 17. 11. sometime a voluntary beginning or
former teares to proceed not from true repentance And in hating his brother for the blessing hee shewed himselfe to bee of that wicked one as was Kain 1 Ioh. 3. 12. 15. This hatred continued also in his posterity against Iakob Obad. v. 10. 11. c. for my father the Hebrew phrase as also the Greeke is of my father but the meaning is for my fathers death as the like speeches otherwhere manifest Ezek. 24. 17. Ier. 6. 26. and at burials they used to mourne seven daies Gen. 50. 10. The Greeke translateth Let the daies of my fathers mourning be nigh that I may kill Iakob my brother so making it a wish for his fathers speedy death and the Hebrew also will bear that translation yea his words are such as may imply not a stay till his fathers death but that hee would with the first opportunity kill Iakob and so his father would soone die with sorrow Thus meaning he would be a double parricide And Rebekah with the first sent Iakob away to prevent danger Vers. 42. comforteth himselfe in respect of his losse of the blessing with this purpose and hope to kill thee So the comfort of the wicked is grounded on evill The Greeke translateth he threatneth thee and the Chaldee he layeth wayt for thee Vers. 43. flee thou or flee for thy selfe and for thy safety Here the blessing brought speedy persecution and exile upon Iakob which his mother counselled him in faith to undergoe rather then for his life to make accord with Esau and to forgoe his first birthright now obtained Vers. 44 a few daies these fell out to bee twenty yeeres as the sequele of the history sheweth Gen. 31. 38. and Rebekah saw him no more as the Hebrew Doctors gather by the time of her death which they thinke was before Iakob came againe See the notes on Gen. 35. 8. Vers. 45. why should I be the Greeke turneth it lest I be bereaved and she speaketh of the losse of them both for that Esau for his murder was also to be killed by the law in Gen. 9. 6. or if man had not punished him God might have cursed and cast him out as he did Kain Gen. 4. 11. 16. of Cheth the Greeke saith daughters of the sonnes of Cheth the Chethites whom Esau had maried Gen. 26. 34. 35. This griefe she tooke for an occasion also to get Isaaks consent unto Iakobs departure of the land that is of the inhabitants of the land whether Chethites or any other of the Canaanites see Gen. 11. 1. wherefore have I that is what good will my life doe me meaning none at all CHAP. XXVIII 1 Isaak blesseth Iakob and sendeth him to Padan Aram for a wife 9 Esau seeing it marieth Machalath the daughter of Ismael 10 Iakob by the way hath a dreame and vision of a ladder 13 God appearing promiseth to blesse him and bring him home againe 16 Iakob awaking and moved with reverence of the place annointeth a stone set up for a pillar and nameth the place Bethel 20 and maketh a vow to honour God there when he shall returne in peace ANd Isaak called Iakob and blessed him and commanded him and said unto him Thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan Arise goe to Padan Aram to the house of Bethuel thy mothers father and take to thee a wife from thence of the daughters of Laban thy mothers brother And God Almighty blesse thee and make thee fruitfull and multiply thee and be thou an assembly of peoples And he give to thee the blessing of Abraham to thee and to thy seed with thee that thou maist inherite the land of thy sojournings which God gave unto Abraham And Isaak sent-away Iakob and he went to Padan Aram unto Laban son of Bethuel the Syrian the brother of Rebekah mother of Iakob and Esau. And Esau saw that Isaak had blessed Iakob and sent him to Padan Aram to take unto him a wife from thence when he blessed him and commanded him saying thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan And Iakob had obeyed his father and his mother and was gone to Padan Aram. And Esau saw that the daughters of Canaan were evill in the eyes of Isaak his father Then went Esau unto Ismael and tooke Machalath daughter of Ismael son of Abraham the sister of Nebajoth unto his wives to him to wife 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Iakob went-forth from Beersheba and went to Charran And he lighted upon a place and taried there all night because the sunne was gone-downe and he tooke of the stones of the place and put for his pillowes and lay-downe in that place And he dreamed and behold a ladder set-up on the earth and the head of it reaching to the heavens and behold the Angels of God ascending and descending on it And behold Iehovah was standing above it and said I Iehovah the God of Abraham thy father and the God of Isaak the land that which thou lyest upon to thee will I give it and to thy seed And thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth and thou shalt spread-abroad to the sea and to the East and to the North and to the south and blessed shall be in thee all families of the earth and in thy seed And behold I will be with thee and will keepe thee in all the way that thou shalt goe and will returne thee againe unto this land for I will not leave thee untill that I have done that which I have spoken unto thee And Iakob awaked out of his sleepe and he said Surely Iehovah is in this place and I knew it not And he feared and said how fearefull is this place this is no other but the house of God and this is the gate of heavens And Iakob rose-up-early in the morning and took the stone that he had put for his pillowes and set it for a pillar and he powred oile upon the head thereof And hee called the name of that place Bethel but Luz was the name of the citie at the first And Iakob vowed a vow saying If God will be with mee and will keepe mee in this way which I am going and will give me bread to eat and rayment to put on And I returne in peace unto my fathers house and Iehovah shall be to me a God And this stone which I have set for a pillar shall be the house of God and of all that thou shalt give to me I will tithing givethe-tenth unto thee Annotations BLessed him God hereby confirmed Iakobs faith against doubts and feares both of things past and to come while his father now wittingly and willingly blesseth him and comforteth him against future troubles that might befall him in his pilgrimage The Hebrew Doctors say Better is the end of a thing then the beginning thereof Eccles. 7 8. the first blessings where with Isaak blessed Iaakob were of the dew of heaven and corne of the earth Gen. 27. 28. the after
Hebrew doctors gathered from Deut. 21. 13. she shall bewaile her father and her mother a moneth of daies those thirtie daies they might not trim the haire of their head or beard nor weare white new garments nor marrie and the like Maimony ibidem ch 6. Vers. 11. inhabitants Hebrew inhabitant and Canaanite See Gen. 10. 16. heavy in Greek great as before in verse 9. was called Hebrew he that is every one called see the notes on Gen. 16. 14. The mourning Hebr. Abel Mizaim Vers. 15. peradventure or it may be The guilty conscience causeth feare Levit. 26. 36. rewarded him that is done of our owne accord unto him Vers. 16. commanded that is sent some on their message to Ioseph and after went themselves verse 18. The word command is effectually to procure a thing to be done as God commandeth his blessings and mercies by effectuall sending them Psal. 42. 9. and Levit. 25. 21. Deut. 28. 8. where the Greeke translateth send Here the Greeke expoundeth it they came unto Ioseph and said Vers. 17. of the God by this speech they seem both to insinuate their repentance and faith to obtaine mercy at Gods hand and use a reason to obtaine the like at Iosephs For if we forgive men their trespasses our heavenly Father will also forgive us otherwise not Mat. 6 12. 14. 15. Wherefore it is said forgive one another even as God for Christs sake forgave you Ephes. 4. 32. But the Hebrew Doctors observe a difference betweene dammage to our neighbour in his goods and hurts or injurie to his person which here was Iosephs cause They say hee that doth his neighbour dammage in his goods when hee hath paid that which hee ought to pay atonement is made for him But he that hurteth his neighbour although hee gave unto him for satisfaction the five things namely 1. dammage it selfe as when eye must bee given for eye tooth for tooth 2. for the smart 3. for his healing 4. for his resting from his labour 5. for his shame or dishonour of which see the notes on Exod. 21. 19. yet atonement is not made for him yea though he should sacrifice to God all the Rams of Nebaioth Esay 60. 7. yet atonement is not made for him nor his iniquitie forgiven unill he request it of him that was hurt and he doe forgive him Maimony in Misneh Tom. 4. treat of Hurt and dammage chap. 5. S. 9. Vers. 21. unto their hart that is friendly comfortably and which pleased them as that which came into Solomons heart 2 Chron. 7. 11. is expounded that which he was pleased to do 1 King 9. 1. See also the notes on Gen. 34. 3. Here Ioseph is an example of lenitie and readinesse to forgive and to doe good for evill as Christ teacheth all Matt. 5. 44. So the Hebrew canons say It is unlawfull for him that is hurt to bee cruell and not to forgive this is not the way of the seed of Israel But when hee that did the hurt doth request it and aske grace of him once or twise and hee kneweth that hee turnes from his sinne and repenteth of his evill hee shall forgive him Maimony in his said treat of Hurt and dammage ch 5. S. 10. Vers. 23. third generation or third sonnes So was his blessing begun to bee accomplished Gen. 49. 22. and 28. 19. borne that is brought up Of Machir see Num. 32. 39. Vers. 24. visiting c. that is will surely visit meaning in mercy See Gen. 21. 1. This was a testification of his faith in Gods promises as is written by faith Ioseph at his ending made mention of the departure of the sonnes of Israel and gave commandement concerning his bones Heb. 11. 22. The land of Canaan was a signe of their heavenly inheritance as before is shewed on Gen. 12. 5. 17. 8. Heb. 11. 13. 14. 16. and there Christ rising from the dead should bee the first fruits of them that slept by whom the resurrection of the dead which Ioseph exspected was to come 1 Cor. 15. 20. 21. 22. And there many bodies of the Saints which slept arose and came out of the graves after Christs resurrection Matt. 27. 52. 53. Vers. 25. from hence or from this place the Greeke addeth with you This charge was fulfilled when at their going out of Egypt Moses tooke the bones of Ioseph with him Exod. 13. 19. which afterward were buried in Sechem Iakobs purchase and Iosephs sonnes heritage Ios. 24. 32. Stephen sheweth that the other Patriarchs the sonnes of Iakob were buried also in Sychem in the land of Canaan Act. 7. 16. Vers. 26. old Hebrew sonne of 110. yeeres Gen. 5. 32. The same was the age of Iesus or Iosuah when he dyed the conqueror of Canaan and one of Iosephs seed Ios. 24. 29. an arke or chist coffin to be ready at their removall out of Egypt This death of Ioseph whereat the first book of Moses endeth was after the creation of the world 2369. yeeres ANNOTATIONS VPON THE SECOND BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED EXODVS VVHEREIN BY CONFERRING THE HOly Scriptures comparing the Chaldee and Greeke versions and other records of the Hebrewes MOSES his Words Lawes and Ordinances are explained BY HENRY AINSWORTH PSAL. 103. 7. The Lord made knowne his wayes unto Moses his acts unto the sonnes of Israel ACTS 7. 38. This is that Moses which was in the Chruch in the wildernesse with the Angel which spake to him in the mount Sina and with our fathers who received the lively Oracles to give unto us IOHN 1. 17. The Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Iesus Christ. LONDON ¶ Printed by Miles Flesher for John Bellamine and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. The Summe of EXODVS THis second booke of Moses sheweth the increase and oppression of Israel in Egypt the sending of Moses to deliver them the tenne plagues of God upon Egypt the bringing out of Israel with strong hand the leading of them through the sea where Pharaoh was drowned the safe conducting of them in the wildernesse the Covenant betweene God and them at Mount Sina where he gave them Lawes and Iudgements and Statutes ordaining a Priesthood for his service and erected a Tabernacle for to dwell therein among them More particularly ISrael increase are oppressed in Egypt and their sonns drowned Chap. 1 Moses his birth education pietie and persecution 2 Moses keeping sheepe seeth a vision and is sent to deliver Israel 3 He is confirmed by signes is sent with Aaron to Pharaoh and Israel 4 Pharaoh resisteth and vexeth Israel they cry out of Moses and grieve him 5 God incourageth Moses and sends him again to Israel and Pharaoh 6 Moses worketh miracles and is resisted by Pharaohs sorcerers 7 Egypt is plagued with Frogs Lice and Flies Pharaoh is hardned 8 Moe plagues of Murrain Boyls and Haile yet Pharaoh resisteth 9 Plagues of Locusts and Darknesse Pharaoh is more hardned 10 Egypt is appointed to the spoile
his feet and said Surely a husband of bloods art thou to me And he let him goe then shee said a husband of bloods for the circumcisions And Iehovah said to Aaron Goe to meet Moses into the wildernesse and hee went and met him in the mountaine of God and kissed him And Moses told Aaron all the words of Iehovah who had sent him and all the signes which he had commanded him And Moses went and Aaron and they gathered together all the Elders of the sons of Israel And Aaron spake all the words which Iehovah had spoken unto Moses and he did the signes in the eyes of the people And the people beleeved and they heard that Iehovah had visited the sonnes of Israel and that hee had seene their affliction and they bended downe the head and bowed themselves Annotations BVt beheld Hebr. and beheld or and if as the Greeke translateth it adding this question what shall I say unto them So hên behold is used for im if in Ier. 3. 1. Moses having experience of former refusall Exod. 2. 14. feareth the like againe and maketh exceptions Vers. 2. a rod or a staffe as in Gen. 38. 18. A● instrument which shepherds used to guide their sheepe with Lev. 27. 32. with it Moses now fed Iethroes flocke but God sanctified it to work 〈…〉 miracles by and to feed his people Israel Therfore it is after called the rod of God v. 20. and many great things were effected by it To this the Prophets after have reference as feed thy people 〈◊〉 thy rod c. Mich. 7. 14. Vers. 3. was turned to or became a serpent 〈◊〉 the word turned is expressed in Exod. 7. 15. and the Greeke here addeth it in verse 17. As the shining of Moses face and veile put upon it Exod. 34. 30. 33. signified the glory of his ministerie and the hiding of the end thereof from unbeleeving Israelites 2 Cor. 3. 7. 13. 16. so his rod turned to a serpent was here for a signe to such as would not otherwise beleeve him verse 5. 8. 9. signifying that his ministery should become deadly to all that by faith saw not the end of the same to be theredemption of Abrahams seed by Christ Luk. 1. 68. 74. Rom. 10. 4. Gal. 3. The feeding of Gods people with his rod was a signe of life and grace and comfort Mith. 7. 14. 15. Psal. 23. 4. the rod turned to a serpent was a signe of death Gen. 3. Num. 21. 6. Esa. 14. 29. Ierem. 8. 17. from before or from the face of it for feare because all serpents are odious to man and this was terrible called a dragon in Exod. 7. 10. So the woman fled from the face of the serpent Revel 12. 14. Vers. 4. by 〈◊〉 taile which was dangerous to d 〈…〉 n lest hee 〈◊〉 be bitten thereby howbeit Moses obeying in faith had no hurt but the serpent was turned to a rod againe so that ministration of Moses which turneth to the unbeleevers unto death is to the obedient become an instrument of guiding them as a flocke unto life and salvation by Christ Mark 16. 18. 2. Cor. 2. 15. 16. and 3. 6. 16. Gal. 3. 24. The Hebrew Doctors barely apply it to the present case thus as the serpent biteth and killeth the sonne of Adam so Pharaoh and his people did bite and kill the Israelites but hee was turned and made like a drie sticke ●inkei R. Eliezer c. 40. Vers. 5. That they may this sheweth the end of the former signe was to worke faith and it is an unperfect speech as if he should say Doe this before them that they may beleeve Such wants the holy Scripture of 〈…〉 supplieth in the beginning or end of speeches as in Mar. 14. 49. but that the scriptures might be fulled which another explaineth thus but all this is done that the scriptures of the Prophets might be fulfilled Matth. 26. 56. So in 2 Sam 5. 8. these words are wanting hee shall be chiefe and Captaine which are afterwards supplied in 1 Chron. 11. 6. and sundry the like See Exod. 13. 8. and 16. 8. and 18. 11. and 3● 32. Verse 6. leprous as snow that is white as snow as the Chaldee translateth The leprosie was a sore contagious disease and by man incurable and God laid it sometime suddenly upon persons for their great sinnes as upon Mary the sister of Moses Num. 12. 10. upon Gehazi 2 King 5. 27. and lepers were shut out of other mens company See the law hereof Levit. 13. And they that were thus leprous as snow were as dead their flesh halfe consumed Numb 12. 10. 12. Vers. 7. as his flesh that is ruddy and lively the Greeke translateth into the colour of his flesh A thing done in the bosonte signifieth secrecie and effectualnesse Prov. 21. 14. Psalme 29. 12. So by this plague of leprosie on Moses hand in his bosome and healing it againe God seemeth to threaten unto Moses himselfe if he refused and to all that should disobey the word of the Lord by his ministories sudden secret and terrible judgement but upon their returne unto him to cure them for hee 〈◊〉 undeth and boaleth Deut. 32. 39. Compare Ex 〈…〉 25. 26. Deut. 28. 27. 35. 59. 60. 61. And Moses hand signifieth his ministerie unto the sonnes of If 〈◊〉 Psal. 77. 21. The Hebrew Doctors apply it thus As the Lapet is uncleane and maketh others 〈◊〉 so were Pharaoh and his people unleane and 〈◊〉 Israel uncleane And when hee made his band 〈◊〉 hee find unto him thus shall Israel bee 〈◊〉 the uncleannesse of the Egyptian Pirk●i 〈…〉 c. 40. Vers. 8. the 〈…〉 ice or at the voice which is here given 〈…〉 signe as in Gen. 4. 10. it is unto blood because God by 〈◊〉 signes speaketh unto men and an 〈…〉 word with the signe that it may be heard and understood as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 30. Ezek. 1. ●9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 16. So 〈◊〉 calleth them the words of his sign●● Psal. 10● ●7 Vers. 9. to blood This third signe was for like end as the former to signifie unto Israel if they beleoved not that God would bring upon them yet more bloody afflictions and they beleeving hee would avenge them on their enemies Of the Egyptians waters turned to blood see after in Exodus 7. 19. c. V. 10. Oh in Gr. v I pray thee Lord see this word in Gen. 43. 20. so after in v. 13. man of words that is eloquent so a man of 〈◊〉 that is talkative Iob 11. 2. a man of arme that is mighty Iob 22 8. a man of tongue that is a pratler Ps. 140. 12. The Gr. here translateth Iam not sufficient So Paul saith and who is sufficient for these things 2 Cor. 2. 16. from daies heretofore Heb. from yesterday or from the day before used for al daies past see Gen. 31. 2. of an heavy or heavy of mouth that is slow or troubled in speaking hard to be understood of the hearers as the latter of
But I will remember unto them the covenant of their Ancestors them whom I brought forth out of the land of Egypt before the eyes of the heathens to be unto them a God I Iehovah These are the Statutes and the Iudgements and the Lawes which Iehovah gave betweene him and the sonnes of Israel in mount Sinai by the hand of Moses Annotations IDols in Hebrew Elilim that is Vanities or things of nought in Greeke things made-with hands Of these and the making of them see the notes on Levit. 19. 4. and Exod. 20. 4. graven thing which the Chaldee expoundeth an image see Exod 20. 4. pillar or statue or standing-image which hath the name of setting-up or standing and seemeth to have beene usually of stone as Iakob set up a stone for a pillar Gen. 28. 18. and 35. 14. And pillars were set up either for civil moniments as was the pillar on Rachels grave Gen. 35. 20. and Absoloms pillar 2 Sam. 18. 18. or for religious moniments as were altars Gen. 35. 14. Esa. 19. 19. these latter are here forbidden after that God had appointed the place and ordinances of his worship and he signifieth his hatred of them in Deut. 16. 22. Yet were they used not onely by the heathens as in Egypt Ier. 43. 13. but by the idolatrous Israelites 1 King 14. 23. 2 King 17. 10. The Hebrewes say Matsebah the Pillar or Statue which the Law forbiddeth is a building or edifice by which all doe gather themselves together though it be to serve the LORD because such was the manner of Idolaters and who soreareth up a pillar is to be beaten Maimony treat of Idolatrie chap. 6. sect 6. And Sol. Iarchi on Deut. 16. 22. saith Matsebah the Pillar is a stone to offer upon though it bee to the God of heaven set or put lay Hebr. give Whereby also he may forbid the sufferance of such in their land for elsewhere they are willed to destroy their pictures Num. 33. 52. and giving is often used for suffering see Gen. 20. 6. stone of imagerie or stone of picture or of figure that is any pictured or figured stone or image of stone the Chaldec calleth it stone of adoration or of worship upon or unto which they used to bow downe Of this word pictures have their name Num. 33. 52. Esa. 2. 16. The Hebrewes understand this of such stones as wherewith they used to pave their holy places and bow downe upon them to serve their Gods The stone of imagerie spoken of in the Law although a man bow down him-selfe thereupon unto God he is to be beaten because it was the manner of Idolaters to lay a stone before the Idoll and to bow downe upon it therefore they might not doe so unto the LORD Maimony treat of Idolatrie chap. 6. sect 6. 〈…〉 in your land The Hebrewes understand this Law of stones upon which they worshipped doe by the land here understand all other places save the Sanctuarie which was paved with stone upon which they bowed downe In the Sanctuarie it was lawfull to bow downe upon the stones as it is written IN YOVR LAND in your land ye may not bow downe upon stones but ye may bow downe upon the stones wherewith the Sanctuarie is paved And for this cause all Israel are wont to lay matts or some such thing in the Synagogues which are paved with stone to make a separation betweene their faces and the stones c. Maimony ibidem sect 7. But this seemeth to savour of superstition for God forbiddeth not stones simply but stones of imagerie which were pictured or graved with figures unto it or upon it for so both the Hebrew and Chaldee may be Englished but the Greeke translateth unto it And the Hebrew doctors understanding it to be a prohibition of bowing downe upon any such stone though unto the true God doe determine the punishment to bee beating by the magistrate whereas if they bowed upon it to an idoll they were stoned to death according to the law in Deut. 13. 10. Maimony treat of Idolatrie ch 6. sect 6. 8. Vers. 2. Sabbathes in Chaldee Sabbath dayes see Levit. 19. 3. 30. reverence or feare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 see Levit. 19. 30. where these lawes were before given and are here repeated as generals implying all other religious duties because God would by promises and threatnings confirme his whole Law binde his people to the more carefull obedience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the three and thirtieth Section or Lecture of the Law after the Hebrewes computation whereof see Gen. 6. 9. Vers. 3. Walke in my statutes This maketh men just before God Luk. 1. 6. and if the Law could give life and were not weake through the flesh Rom. 8. 3. verily justice should have beene by the Law Gal. 3. 21. but when the commandement commeth Sinne reviveth and man dyeth Rom. 7. 9. Therefore by the workes of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in Gods sight Rom. 3. 20. but she just shall live by faith Gal. 3. 11. and by faith this condition here required is fulfilled as Enorh walked with God Gen. 5. 24. when hee pleased him by faith Heb. 11. 5. 6. This then according to the letter is legall and promiseth life to them which doe these things Rom. 10. 5. but spiritually leadeth unto Christ who is the end of the Law for justice to every one that beleeveth Gal. 3. 24. Rom. 10. 4. Vers. 4 your raines in Greeke raine unto you hee meaneth the raine of the land the first raine and the latter raine whereof see Deut. 11. 14. These none can give but God Ier. 14. 22. they figured spirituall blessings by the doctrine of the Gospell of Christ Deut. 32. 2. Psal. 72. 6. 2 Sam. 23. 4. their season that is due season so they make the earth fruitfull and are of the Lords good treasure which hee openeth unto men Deut. 28. 12. and should move them to feare him Ier. 5. 24. her increase or her fruit which is an effect of the raine through Gods blessing for when the showers of blessing come in their season the tree of the field yeeldeth her fruit and the earth her increase Ezek. 34. 26. 27. And this is spiritually applied to our earthly nature made fruitfull unto God through the raine and dewes of his graces and so it receiveth of him a blessing Ps. 67. 7. and 85. 12. 13. Heb. 6. 7. 8. Of the Hebrewes R. Menachem here saith the land hath a mysticall signification of the land that is on high Vers. 5. reach unto the vintage or to the grape-gathering meaning hereby large blessings with a bundance and variety of fruits continued one after another The like figurative promises are given to the Church under the Gospell in Amos. 9. 13. saying The plowman shall overtake the reaper and the treader of grapes him that soweth seed to the full or to satietie this signifieth abundance from God Ioel 2. 26. and contentation in
men as they that are never content are said not to know satietie Esa. 56. 11. and when God withholdeth increase they eat but not to satietie Hag. 1. 6. Thus God fed them with Manna to the full Exod. 16. 8. and promiseth so to feed the poore meeke under Christ Psal. 13● 15. and 22. 27. The just eateth to the satietie of his soule Pro. 13. 25. in confident safety or in hopefull securitie safely The Hebrew Betach signifieth trust hope or confidence Act. 2. 26. from Psalme 16 which ought to be in God Psal. 40. 5. whereupon followeth safety through his defense as the Greeke here translateth ye shall dwell in safety and so men are secure and bold without feare of disturbance Gen. 34. 25. as in Psal. 78. 53. Hee led them with confident safety and they dreaded not This as it is a blessing which God onely giveth Psal. 4. 9. so it is promised to the obedient Prov. 21. 33. and is performed to such as are in the sheepefold of Christ Ezek. 34. 25. 27. 28. Vers. 6. peace This though generally it signifieth all prosperitie yet sometime it is specially opposed to the sword Matth. 10. 34. and unto warre Psal. 120. 7. which seemeth to be that which is intended here as the former was against famine none shall make you afraid This God promiseth to fulfill under Christ Ieremie 30. 10. Ezekiel 34. 28. Mich. 4. 4. cause the evill beast to cease that is as the Greeke translateth I will destroy evill beasts one being put for a multitude or many and ceasing being used for utter abolishing as in Exod. 12. 15. Psal. 119. verse 119. or at least for repressing their rage and furie for in Israel Lions Beares and the like sometime destroyed the inhabitants 2 King 17. 25. 26. and 2. 24. This promise is applied also to the Church under the Gospell Ezek. 34. 25. So in Iob 5. 23. the beasts of the field shall be at peace with thee The contrary followeth in verse 22. By the evill beasts R. Menachem here understandeth mystically vicious lusts the powers of uncleannesse which flew from the uncleane Spirit that they shal not prevaile to pollute the land which is on high So they seeme to call our nature regenerate as the Apostle calleth the Church Ierusalem which is on high Gal. 4. 26. the sword used ordinarily for warre when it is spoken of men but the Lords sword is explained to be the pestilence 1 Chro. 21. 12. which may specially be intended here and so God promiseth blessings opposed to his foure sore judgements which are the sword or warre the famine the evill beast and the pestilence mentioned in Ezek. 14. 21. and Revel 6. 8. Or if we understand this sword for warres then under peace aforesaid may the promise be implyed against the sword of the Lord the pestilence These blessings though they concerne this life yet the end of them is to lead to life eternall so the Hebrewes of old understood them as their later doctors though wandring out of the way of life doe witnesse saying The holy blesed God hath given us a Law which is the Tree of life and whosoever doth all that is written therein and knoweth him with a perfect knowledge shall thereby be made worthy of the life of the World to come c. And he hath promised us in the Law that if wee doe it with joy and goodnesse of soule and exercise our selves in the ●●●dome thereof continually he will remove from us al things that may let us from doing it as sicknesse and warre and famine and the like And he will supply us with all good things that may strengthen our 〈◊〉 to doe the Law as satietie and peace and store of silver and gold that we be not imployed all our dayes in the things which the body hath need of but may be made fit to 〈◊〉 wisedome and to doe the Commandements that we may be worthy of the life of the world to come Maimony in treat of Repentance chap. 9. sect 1. Thus they followed after the Law of righteousnesse but attained not to it because they sought it not by 〈◊〉 in Christ but as it were by the workes of the Law 〈◊〉 they have stumbled at the stumbling stone Roman 9. 31. 31. Vers. 8. five of you shall pursue a hundred This promise is inlarged in Ios. 23. 10. One man of you 〈◊〉 pursue a thousand and was notably performed it Davids Worthies 1 Chron. 11. of whom some one lift up his speare against eight hundred and slew three hundred at one time 2 Sam. 23. 8. 18. 1 Chro. 11. 11. Three men brake through the host of the Philistines 1 Chron. 11. 18. Of the Gadites there were men that had faces like the faces of Lyons and were as swift as the Roes of the mountaines 1 Chron. 12. 8. And David himselfe celebrateth this mercy I pursued mine enemies and overtooke them and turned not till I had consumed them Psal. 18. 38. 2 Sam. 22. 38. See also Deut. 32. 30. Vers. 9. I will have respect or turne my face in Greeke I will looke upon you and blesse you and the Chaldee expoundeth it I will have respect by my word to doe good unto you For this grace David prayed Psal. 25. 16. and 69. 17. and when God delivered Israel from their enemies it is said hee had respect unto them because of his covenant c. 2 King 13. 23. The contrary hereto is the hiding of Gods face Deut. 32. 20. fruitfull or to increase as he had done before in Egypt Exod. 1. 7. This blessing is acknowledged in Nehem. 9. 23. Their children thou multiplyest as the starres of heaven and promised to be again under Christ I will bring my sheep● againe to their folds and they shall be fruitfull and increase Ier. 23. 3. establish my covenant that is faithfully keepe and continue to doe the things which I have promised see the notes on Gen. 6. 18. Vers. 10. very-old in Greeke old of old things this respecteth the increase of their land as the 〈◊〉 did of their bodies See Levit. 25. 22. because of or as the Gr. translateth from the face of the new they should bring forth the old for want of roomth to lay up the new This fruitfulnesse of the land figured the many graces wherewith God would inrich the hearts of his people as in vers 4. For how ever God perswadeth his people by promise of outward blessings to keepe his Law yet the end of the commandement is love out of a pure hart end of a good conscience and of faith unfaigned 1 Tim. 1. 5. and such as for worldly benefits receive the word of the Lord when tribulation or persecution arisith because of the word by and by they ●are offended Matth. 13. 21. The Hebrewes say All love that dependeth on a thing when the thing ceaseth the love ceaseth He that serveth the blessed God to the end that his riches may be multiplied or his
for a continuall Burnt-offering yee shall make ready these After this manner ye shall make ready for every day seven daies the bread of the Fire offering of a savour of rest unto Iehovah it shall be made ready beside the continuall Burnt-offering and his Drinke-offering And in the seventh day yee shall have a convocation of holinesse yee shall not doe any servile worke And in the day of the First-fruits when ye offer a new Meat-offering unto Iehovah after your weekes ye shall have a convocation of holinesse ye shall not doe any servile worke And yee shall offer a Burnt-offering for a savour of rest unto Iehovah two bullocks younglings of the herd one ramme seven hee-lambes of the first yeare And their Meat-offering fine flower mingled with oile three tenth parts for one bullocke two tenth parts for one ramme A severall tenth part for one lambe throughout the seven lambes One goat-buck of the goats to make atonement for you Yee shall make them ready beside the continuall Burnt-offering and his Meat-offering perfect shall they be unto you and their Drinke-offerings Annotations COmmand the sonnes of Israel After that God had numbred the people and appointed them their inheritance he now repeateth and explaineth former lawes concerning his service which they should doe unto him in that their inheritance daily weekely monethly and at their solemne Feasts as they fell every yeare for he therefore would give unto them the lands of the heathens and they should inherit the labour of the peoples that they might observe his statutes and keepe his lawes Psal. 105. 44 45. And because they had omitted the solemnizing of these feasts now 38. yeares from the keeping of the Passeover in the wildernesse in the second yeare Num. 9. untill the Circumcision and Passeover at Gilgal Ios. 5. by reason of their travels wherein the Sanctuary Altar and holy things were folden up and removed from place to place and the generation which had beene before mustered was dead Numb 26. 64 65. therefore lest the ordinances formerly given should be forgotten or neglected and the people continue to doe as now they did every man whatsoever was right in his own eyes Deut. 12. 8. the Lord causeth the law of sacrificing to be againe commanded Which sacrifices being all figures of Christ and our service of God by him as hath beene shewed in the booke of Leviticus teach us to serve the Lord under the Gospel of his Sonne in spirit and truth for thereof were these legall feasts a figure Esay 66. 23. Zach. 14. 16 19. 1 Cor. 5. 7 8. Coloss. 2. 16 17. Heb. 13. 15. Mine oblation that is mine oblations in Greek my gifts Hebr. my Korban which is an offering or gift by which men drew nigh unto God through faith in Christ. See the notes on Levit. 1. 2. my bread for my Fire-offerings the Chaldee expoundeth it the bread ordained for my oblations Vnder the name of bread all food is implied and the flesh it selfe or fat of the sacrifices as is noted on Levit. 3. 11. the savour of my rest the savour or odour of sacrifices which may quiet or pacifie my spirit and anger and make you and your service pleasing and acceptable to me The Greeke translateth it for a savour of sweet smell the Chaldee to be accepted with favour See Lev. 1. 9. in his appointed time every one in the time appointed therefore of God the Greeke saith in my feasts for the same word which signifieth an appointed time is also used for a solemne feast appointed of God Levit. 23. 2. Hereby God limiteth every sacrifice his proper day and time which if it were let slip that oblation might not be offered in another day or time This is further manifested in vers 10. where he saith The Burnt-offering of the Sabbath in his Sabbath which the Hebrewes expound thus and not the Burnt-offering of one Sabbath in another Sabbath Maimony tom 3. in Tamidin chap. 1. s. 7. And it is a common proverbe among them Gnabar Zeman gnabar korban If the time be past the oblation is past and it is prophesied of Antiochus the wicked that he should thinke to change the times and the lawes Dan. 7. 25. And Ieroboam king of Israel who kept the feast of the seventh moneth in the eighth moneth is taxed for it in the Scripture which calleth it the moneth which he had devised of his owne heart 1 King 12. 32 33. Vers. 3. the Fire-offering the sacrifices to be burned with fire unto the Lord which Fire signified both the worke of Gods Spirit and the fiery trials and afflictions through which Christ and his children should be consecrated unto God Matth. 3. 11. Hebr. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 4. 12 13 14. of the first yeare Hebr. sonne of the yeare so after often in this and the next chapter of which phrase see the Annotations on Exod. 12. 5. perfect that is perfect lambes without blemish or corruption what this meant is shewed on Lev. 1. 3. and 22. 21. day by day or for a day that is daily a continuall Burnt-offering Hebr. a Burnt-offering of continuation which should be offered without intermission See the notes on Exod. 29. 42. and Levit 1. Vers. 4. make ready or doe that is kill sprinkle the bloud cut in peeces burne on the Altar and all other rites pertaining to sacrificing shewed in Levit. 1. betweene the two evenings that is in the after-noone of which phrase see the Annotations on Exod. 12. 6. God setteth no houres for the morning or evening sacrifices because they might occasionally be changed By the Hebrew Canons the ordinary time of killing the morning sacrifice was before Sun-rising after that the face of all the East was inlightned that is betweene day-breaking and Sun-rising The time of killing the evening sacrifice though it might be all the after-noone yet they used not to kill it till halfe an houre after two of the clocke and this they did by reason of the sacrifices of particular persons or of the congregation because it was unlawfull to offer any oblation at all before the continuall Burnt-offering of the morning neither killed they any oblation after the continuall evening sacrifice save the oblation of the Passeover only for it was unpossible for all Israel to offer their Passeovers in two houres So they killed not the Passeover but after the daily evening sacrifice Maimony in Tamidin chap. 1. sect 3 4. By this daily sacrifice morning and evening was signified the reconciliation of the Church unto God by faith in Christ notwithstanding their continuall infirmities which they fell into night and day as one end of the Burnt-offering was to make atonement for sinnes Iob 1. 5. and that being reconciled they should both shew their thankfulnesse for it unto God and expect from him a blessing upon them their labours and their rest Wherefore at such times speciall favours were shewed of God unto his people as in the morning when the Meat-offering
God are taught to hold fast their inheritance in his promises and right in Christ which they enjoy by faith that as the Father hath made them meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light Coloss. 1. 12. so they may keepe the faith and grace which they have obtained unto the end 1 King 21. 3. Ezek. 46. 18. Iude vers 3. Hebr. 6. 12. ESAY 65. 9. I Will bring forth out of Jakob a seed and out of Judah an inheritor of my mountaines and mine elect shall inherit it and my servants shall dwell there EZEK 20. 35 36 37. I will bring you into the wildernesse of peoples and there will I plead with you face to face like as I pleaded with your fathers in the wildernesse of the land of Egypt so will I plead with you saith the Lord God And I will cause you to passe under the rod and I will bring you into the bond of the Covenant c. HEBR. 9. 15. Christ he is the Mediator of the New * Or Testament Covenant that by meanes of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Covenant they which are called might receive the promise of the eternall inheritance ANNOTATIONS VPON THE FIFTH BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED DEVTERONOMIE WHEREIN BY CONFERENCE OF THE Holy Scriptures by comparing the Greeke and Chaldee Versions and Testimonies of Hebrew Writers the Histories Lawes and Ordinances which MOSES a little before his death repeated and enlarged unto ISRAEL in this Booke are explained BY HENRY AINSWORTH IOSVA 1. 8. This booke of the Law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night that thou maiest observe to doe according to all that is written therein for then thou shalt make thy way prosperous and then thou shalt have good successe LVKE 16. 31. If they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rose from the dead LONDON Printed by John Haviland for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. The summe of the Booke of DEVTERONOMIE IN this fifth Booke Moses to prepare the Israelites unto their inheritance in the Holy Land rehearseth the chiefe things that had befallen them in their forty yeares travell thorow the wildernesse exhorteth them to the love of God and observation of his Law repeateth the ten Commandements and explaineth them particularly with the Ordinances to them belonging adding some moe which he had not before mentioned confirmeth the whole Law with promises to those that keepe it and threatnings to the disobedient reneweth the Covenant between God and his people prophesieth of things that should come to passe in ages following blesseth the Tribes of Israel with severall blessings and having viewed the Land of promise from an high mountaine he dyeth and is buried of God Iosua being his successor in the Government of the people More particularly MOses rehearseth Gods calling of Israel from Horeb towards Canaan The Officers set to governe them The Spies sent to view the land and the peoples rebellion following thereupon Chap. 1 How they passed by Edom Moab and Ammon but fought with the Amorites and conquered King Sihon 2 How Ogwas conquered and their Countries allotted to some tribes of Israel 3 An exhortation to obey Gods law and to shun idlatrie 4 Of the ten Commandements given at Horeb and how the people were affected at the giving of the Law 5 An exposition of the first Commandement how God should be knowne loved and obeyed 6 To root out the Canaanites and their Idolatrie 7 To beware lest forgetfulnesse of former mercies or plenty of good things in Canaan turne them from God 8 Moses would humble Israel under the Lord their God by remembrance of their former many rebellions and Gods mercies renewed and continued notwithstanding 9 and 10 Hee exhorteth them to love and obey the Lord by many weighty reasons 11 An explanation of the second Commandement of abolishing false worship and serving God according to his law 12 The third Commandement expounded against abuse of Gods name by false prophets inticers and revolters to Idolatry 13 The holy Communion of Gods people taught by shadowes of cleane meats tithes c. 14 The fourth Commandement explained by the rites of the Sabbath yeare and the solemne feasts c. 15 and 16 The fifth Commandement of obedience to governours civill and ecclesiasticall appointed of God but not to hearken to any heathenish ministers or false Prophets 17 and 18 The sixt Commandement touching man-slaughter wars murder by one unknowne c. 19 20 21 The seventh Commandement touching adultery rape fornication incest 22 The eighth Commandement touching usury payment of vowes liberty in anothers field pledges man-stealers wages almes justice weights and measures c. 23 24 25 The solemne profession of homage unto God in Canaan at the bringing of first-fruits tithes c. 26 Of writing the Law upon stones the blessings and curses openly pronounced and confirmed by the people 27 Moses promiseth many blessings to them that keepe the Law and threatneth many curses to the disobedient 28 The renewing of the Covenant betweene God and Israel 29 A promise of mercie to repentant sinners beleeving in Christ. 30 The people are encouraged to enter into Canaan with Iosua their Captaine Their falling from God is foretold 31 Moses song wherein he prophesieth of the state of Israel untill the latter daies 32 Before his death Moses blesseth the Tribes of Israel 33 Moses vieweth the land and dyeth is buried of God mourned for of the people and praised above all Prophets 34 THE FIFTH BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED DEVTERONOMIE CHAPTER I. 1 Moses speech in the end of the fortieth yeare briefly rehearsing the Story 6 Of Gods promise and offer to give Israel the Land of Canaan 9 Of Officers given them 19 Of Spies sent to search the Land 34 Of Gods anger for Israels incredulitie 41 and disobedience THese bee the words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side Iordan in the wildernesse in the plaine over against the red Sea betweene Pharan and Tophel and Laban and Hazeroth and Dizahab Eleven daies journey from Horeb by the way of mount Seir unto Kadesh-Barnea And it was in the fortieth year in the eleventh moneth in the first day of the moneth Moses spake unto the sonnes of Israel according unto all that Iehovah had commanded him unto them After he had smitten Sihon King of the Amorites which dwelt in Heshbon and Og king of Bashan which dwelt in Ashtaroth in Edrei On this side Iordan in the Land of Moab began Moses to declare this Law saying Iehovah our God spake unto vs in Horeb saying Yee have dwelt long enough in this mountaine Turne you and take your journey and goe to the mount of the Amorite and unto all his neighbours in the plaine in the mountaine and in the vale and in the south and by the Sea side to the land
godlinesse hath the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Tim. 4. 8. Vers. 9. make thee plenteous or make thee excellent unto which Thargum Ionathan addeth for good that yee may prosper in all the workes of your hands rejoyce over thee This Christ taught in parables of rejoycing for the lost sheepe that was found Luk. 15. 6 7. and of the Prodigall sonne he saith It was meet that wee should make merry and be glad for this thy brother was dead and is alive againe and was lost and is found Luk. 15. 32. So in the other Prophets I will rejoyce in Ierusalem and joy in my people Esay 65. 19. and I will rejoyce over them to doe them good Ier. 32. 41. See also Deut. 28. 63. Vers. 10. that which is written meaning all and every thing written so teaching us exact obedience unto Iehovah in Chaldee unto the feare of the Lord. Vers. 11. this commandement which after in v. 14. he calleth the Word and the Apostle expoundeth it the Word of faith Rom. 10. 8. So this speech is not of the Law onely neither sheweth it what man can doe by the Law much lesse by nature but is the speech of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 10. 6. Though Moses teacheth them also not to blame the Law of hardnesse to bee learned seeing God had now caused it to be written expounded unto them not hidden from thee or not too marvellous and hard for thee to know and so not impossible through faith in Christ as is the Law without faith in that it is weake through the flesh Rom. 8. 3. The Chaldee translateth it is not separated from thee and Thargum Ionathan expoundeth it is not covered or hid from you The holy Ghost in Greeke translateth this word marvellous Matt. 21. 42. from Psal. 118. and unpossible Luk. 1. 37. See the Annotations on Gen. 18. 14. and Deut. 17. 8. By Esaias also God saith I have not spoken in secret in a darke place of the earth Esay 45. 19. Vers. 12. to say that is that thou shouldest say so in v. 13. see the Annotations on Gen. 6. 19. where sundry like speeches are shewed This saying is meant of the heart also wherefore the Apostle citeth it thus Say not in thine heart who shall goe up into heaven Rom. 10. 6. Who shall goe up for us the Ierusalemy Thargum explaineth it O that wee had one like Moses the Prophet that might goe up into the heavens c. but the Apostle applieth it more heavenly to Christs incarnation Who shall goe up into heaven that is to bring Christ downe from above Rom. 10. 6. Vnto which doubt hee opposeth the confession with the mouth that Iesus is the LORD vers 9. that is that God was manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3. 16. for no man hath ascended up to heaven of whō we may learne the true understanding of the Law but hee that came downe from heaven even the Son of man which is in heaven Iohn 3. 13. and cause us to heare it that is preach it unto us that wee may doe it or and we would doe it Vers. 13. beyond the sea Thargum Ionathan explaineth it beyond the great sea and Thargum Ierusalemy addeth Neither is the Law beyond the great sea that thou shouldest say O that we had one like Ionas the Prophet that might goe downe to the bottome of the great sea and bring it to us c. All things hidden from men which they cannot attaine are either in heaven above or beyond sea in the farre places of the earth but the Law of God is in neither of these but neere unto every one to learne and to doe who shall goe over to beyond sea Paul alleageth this place thus Who shall goe downe into the deepe that is to bring up Christ from the dead Rom. 10. 7. unto which he opposeth in vers 9. beleefe in the heart that God hath raised him from the dead Now Ionas the Prophet to whose example the Ierusalemy Thargum applieth this was a figure of Christ as himselfe hath said As Ionas was three daies and three nights in the Whales belly so shall the Sonne of man be three daies three nights in the heart of the earth Matt. 12. 40. And as the Sea in Ionas case is called the Deepe Psal. 104. 6. and 107. 24 26. Exod. 15. 5. so David prophesying of Christ saith that God had brought him up from the deepes of the earth Psal. 71. 20. So the Apostle speaking of Christs rising out of the grave useth the word Abysse or Deepe which is spoken both of earth and sea Vers. 14. But the word This the Apostle expoundeth thus But what saith the righteousnes which is of faith The Word is nigh thee c. that is the word of faith which we preach Rom. 10. 8. By this it appeareth that Moses wrote of Christ Iohn 5. 46. and that he was closely taught in the Law E●r Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth Rom. 10. 4. And the Iewes which cleaving to the Law refused the Gospell or word of faith had a zeale of God but not according 〈◊〉 knowledge Rom. 10. 2. in thy mouth or for thy mouth that is for thee to confesse with thy mouth that Iesus is the LORD as Rom. 10. 9. So in is used for for in Deut. 9. 4. and 24. 16. in thine heart or for thine heart that thou maist beleeve in thine heart that God hath raised him Christ frō the dead so maist be saved Rom. 10. 9. to do it the Law which is fulfilled by beleeving in Christ as it is said This is the worke of God that ●ee beleeve in him whom he hath sent Iohn 6. 29. upon which beleefe true obedience followeth H●● 8. 10. Vers. 15. I have set Hebr. I have given that is proposed and confirmed by my doctrine So in vers 19. life and good life as the end and good as the meanes leading to life or life that is God himselfe of whom hee saith i● vers 20. hee is thy life and good that is felicity following The Greeke version changeth the order thus life and death good and evill Thargum Ierusalemy explaineth it the Law of life which is a good Law and the Law of death which is an evill Law And Thargum Ionathan thus The way of life for which a good reward shall be recompenced to the just and the way of death for which an evill reward shall be recompenced to the wicked Vers. 16. to love this is a declaration of the life and good fore-mentioned which they whose hearts God would circumcise vers 6. should come unto by the faith that is in Christ. in his wai●s the Chaldee saith in the wayes that are right before him keepe his commandements which is an effect of love as If ye love me keepe my commandements Iohn 14. 15. and This is the love of God that we keepe
speaketh of God according to the language of the sonnes of Adam See the Annotations on Gen. 6. 6. Vers. 5. anger ire outward in the face grame grimnesse or fiercenesse of countenante The originall aph signifieth both the Nose by which one breatheth Psal. 115. 6. and Anger which appeareth in the snuffing or breathing of the nose as Saul is said to breathe out threatnings and slaughter Act 91. The circumstances of the Text will shew which of the two is meant though sometime it is doubtfull as Psal. 138. 7. wrath fervent ire inflamed displeasure This word Charon noteth burning or inflammation of choler sometime of griese Gen. 4. 5. Ior. 4. 10. sometime of other affections Nehem. 3. 20. suddenly trouble or vex apall fright make them to start It noteth hastinesse of seare and trouble opposed to firme staiednesse Vers. 6. And I The word And is here a signe of indignation stirred as was in the Apostle when he said And sittest thou to judge me c. Act. 23. 3. or and may be used here for but as in Gen. 42. 10. Isa. 10. 20. and often otherwhere have anointed or powred out that is ordained authorized by powring out the oile of the spirit the oile of gladnesse as is noted on vers 2. Of this word Nasac that signifieth to shed or powre out Nasick is used for a governour or one in authoritie Psal. 83. 12. Ios. 13. 21. Mic. 5. 5. Dan. 11. 8. According hereto the wisdome of God saith Prov. 8. 23. I was anointed or authorized from everlasting In David Christs figure this was outwardly performed when he was anointed King with oile 1 Sam. 16. 1. 13. and 2. Sam. 2. 4. and 5. 3. upon Si●n or over Tsijon the name of an high mountaine in Ierusalem on top whereof was a strong fort which the heathen Iebusites kept by force from Israel till Davids dayes Ios. 15. 63. 2 Sam. 5. 6 7. but he tooke it from them fortified it and called it Davids citie 1 Chro. 11. 4 5 7. Neere unto this was mount Morijah wheron Solomon built the Temple 2 Chron. 3. 1. Hereupon Ierusalem was called the holy citie Nehem. 11. 1. Isa. 52. 1. and 48. 2. Mat. 4. 5. with Luk. 4. 9. and Sion is named the Lords holy mountaine Ioel 3. 17. which he loved Psa. 78. 68. from which the law should come forth Isa. 2. 3. and where he would dwell for ever Psal. 132. 13 14. Therefore was it a figure of Christs Church Heb. 12. 22. Rev. 14. 1. Isa. 60. 14. mountaine of my holinesse or my mount of holinesse that is my holy mount as the Greeke turneth it So the Temple of Gods holinesse Psal. 79. 1. and people of his holinesse Esa. 63. 18. And in speech to Daniel Ierusalem is called the citie of his holinesse that is his holy citie by him so esteemed and regarded Dan. 9. 24. Such Hebrew phrases because they are more forcible the Apostles often used in Greeke to inure the Gentiles with them as Christ is called the Sonne of Gods love that is his beloved sonne Col. 1. 13. our Lord Iesus Christ of glory that is our glorious Lord Iam. 2. 1. and many the like Vers. 7. I will tell telling is often used for preaching declaring shewing as Psal. 22. 23. with Heb. 2. 12. Exod. 9. 16. with Rom. 9. 17. So hereby Christ noteth his propheticall office the decree Here the Hebrew el seemeth to be used for eth as cl haderech 2 Chror 6. 27. is the same that eth hoderech 1 King 8. 36. we may also read it thus I will tell of the decree cl being many times used for of as Gen. 20 2. Iob 42. 7. 2 King 19. 32. Ier. 51. 60. So the Greeke pros answering to the Hebrew el is used for of or concerning Heb. 1. 7. and 4. 13. decree prescript law or statute the Greeke translateth it the ordinance of the Lord the Chaldee the Covenant of God The Hebrew Chok usually denoteth the rules decrees and ordinances about Gods worship as the decree of the passeover Exod. 12. 24. 43. the decree of dressing the lampes Exod. 27. 21. of the Priests office and garments Exod. 29. 9. of their washing Exod. 30. 21. of the sacrifices Lev. 3. 17. and 6. 18. 22. and many other things about Gods service So may it here be taken that Christ preacheth the decree or rule of his calling to the office of priesthood as the Apostle gathereth from this place Hebr. 5. 5. or of serving God fulfilled of us by faith and obedience to his Gospel when these legall ordinances had an end Ioh. 4. 21. c. thou art my sonne Though holy men be called the sonnes of God Deut. 14. 1. 1 Iohn 3. 1. and likewise Angels Iob 1. 6. and 38. 7. yet is this title naturall and peculiar to our Lord Iesus the onely begotten of the Father whereupon the Apostle saith to which of the Angels said he this at any time Heb. 1. 5. The word art is supplied by the Apostle in Act. 13. 33. the like is sometime in the Hebrew Text it selfe as True was the word 1 King 10. 6. which in 2 Chron. 9. 5. is True the word so Thou leading out 1 Chron. 11. 2. Thou wast leading out 2 Sam. 5. 2. Also in the Greeke of the New Testament Sommer neere Mat. 24. 32. Sommer is neere Luke 21. 30. I this day or to day begat thee The word this is often omitted in the Hebrew as Deut. 4. 4. 8. 39. and 5. 1. 3. and 26. 17 18. and often is expressed as Deut. 2. 25. 30. and 4. 20. and 26. 16. and 27. 9. Of this point thus speaketh the Apostle Touching the promise made to the Fathers God hath fulfilled it unto us their children in that he raised up Iesus as it is written in the second Psalme Thou art my sonne I this day begat thee Act. 13. 32 33. See also Rom. 1. 4. and Heb. 5. 5. where Christs calling to be our High Priest is from hence proved Vers. 8. for thine inheritance or to bethine inheritance This noteth the subjection of the nations to the Sonne of God as the like manner of speech importeth Esay 14. 2. Zeph. 2. 9. Levit. 25. 46. Hereupon Christ is called heire that is Lord of all Hebr. 1. 2. See Psal. 82. 8. Ier. 49. 2. for thy firme possession or to be thy tenement to have and to hold It implieth Christs government of the world and so the Chaldee expoundeth it the dominion of the ends of the earth for thy possession The word for or some such like is here to be understood and sometime the Hebrew expresseth it as the house 1 King 7. 51. in stead of for the house 2 Chron. 5. 1. servants 1 Chron. 18. 6. in stead of for servants 2 Sam. 8. 6. and sundry the like Vers. 9. roughly rule them or bruse crush them The word signifieth to intreat evill or rigorously and this is meant of Christs enemies potter or former of the
comes thereof as Prov. 31. 16. 31. their seed that is children or posteritie Psal. 22. 24. 31. and ●7 25. Gen. ●7 7. 10. Vers. 12. shall not be able to wit to stablish as the Greeke explaineth or to effect it After this word can or able there often wanteth a word to be understood see Psal. 101. 5. Vers. 13. a Butt to shoot at Hebr. a shoulder because the earth is heaped up like shoulders The Chaldee paraphraseth thou hast set them to thy people as one shoulder make ready or fit namely thine arrowes against their faces The Chaldee otherwise in the cords of thy Tent thou wilt order thy law before them PSAL. XXII David as a figure of Christ complaineth of his many afflictions 10 Prayeth with faith for deliverance 13 Foresheweth the sundry evils which the wicked would doe unto Christ at his death 23 After deliverance Christ declareth Gods name and praises to his brethren 27 Communicateth the fruits of his death and resurrection to the ends of the earth 31 Whereupon they shew forth their obedience and preach his justice To the master of the musicke concerning the Hinde of the morning a Psalme of David MY God my God wherefore hast thou forsaken me art farre off from my salvation from the words of my roaring My God I call by day thou answerest not and by night and there is no silence to me And thou art holy sitting the praises of Israel In thee our fathers trusted they trusted thou deliveredst them Vnto thee they cried out and were safe delivered in thee they trusted and were not abashed But I am a worme and not a man the reproach of men and despised of the people All they that see me doe scoffe at me they make a mow with the lip they wag the head He confidently turned unto Iehovah let him deliver him let him rid him because hee delighteth in him But thou art the drawer of me forth out of the belly the maker of me to trust even at my mothers brests Vpon thee I have beene cast from the wombe from my mothers belly thou art my God Be not thou gone farre off from me for distresse is neere for there is no helper Many bullocks have compassed me about mighty buls of Bashan have environed me They have wide opened upon mee their mouth as a renting and roaring Lion I am powred out as waters and all my bones dispart themselves my heart is as wax it is molten in the middest of my bowels My able strength is dried up like a pot-sheard and my tongue cleaveth to my jawes and thou hast brought me down to the dust of death For dogs have compassed me the assembly of evill doers have inclosed me they Lion-like pierced my hands and my feet I may tell all my bones they did behold they did view me They parted my garments among thē for my coat they cast a lot And thou Iehovah be not farre off my fortitude hasten to my helpe Rid my soule from the sword my alonely soule from the hand of the dog Save me from the mouth of the Lion and from the hornes of Vnicornes thou hast answered me I will tell thy name to my brethren in the middest of the Church I will praise thee Yee that feare Iehovah praise him all ye seed of Iakob honor him and be afraid of him all ye seed of Israel For hee hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the poore afflicted nor hid his face from him and when hee cried out unto him he heard Of thee shall be my praise in the great Church my vowes I will pay before them that feare him The meeke shall eat and be satisfied they shall praise Iehovah that seeke him your heart shal live to perpetuall aye All the ends of the earth shall remember and turne unto Iehovah and all families of the heathēs shal bow down thēselves before thee For to Iehovah pertaines the Kingdome he is ruler among the nations All the fat ones of the earth shall eat and bow downe themselves all that goe downe to the dust shall bend downe before him and hee that quickneth not his soule A seed shall serve him it shall be accounted to the LORD for a generation They shall come and shall declare his justice to a people that shall be borne that he hath done this Annotations THe Hind of the morning meaning Christ who as a Hind was by Iewes and Gentiles the dogs vers 7. hunted and worroughed in the morning Iohn 18. 28. and also rose from death the third day early in the morning Ioh. 20. 1. when God had made his feet like Hindes feet and set him on his high places Psal. 18 34. Compare with this Song 2. 9. 17. and 8. 14. where Christ is also likened to a young Hart. And in Psal. 49. 15. the resurrection is called the morning for then the true light of comfort and salvation shall appeare A Hinde called in Hebrew Aijeleth hath the name of prowesse or fortitude as in the 20 verse of this Psalme Aejaluth is fortitude and so it may be understood for the strength or fortitude of the morning that is the helpe and power of God to raise up Christ from the dead which may be the meaning of the Greeke translation for the morning helpe Some of the Iewes have interpreted it the morning starre which although the word be no where else found in Scripture for a star agreeth also to our Lord Christ who is intituled the bright morning starre Rev. 20. 16. Others applying this title to the Musicke retaine the Hebrew words still A 〈…〉 eleth hasshachar The Chaldee expoundeth it To praise God for the mightie continuall sacrifice Vers. 2. My God my God c. Christ speaketh this Psalme to God his Father The Hebrew is Aeli Aeli lammah ghnazabtani which words our Lord uttered on the crosse Mat. 27. 46. save for the later he used the Syriak sabachtani of the same signification At which the prophane Iewes mocked saying that he called for Elias Mat. 27. 47. 49. Wherefore hast thou forsaken me or why leavest thou me They are the words of saith striving in tentation and doe imply both a hope of and a prayer for deliverance as it is noted on Psal. 10. 1. See the like also in Psal. 42. 10. and 43. 2. my roaring this argueth great griefe of heart uttered with loud complaint So Psal. 38. 9. and 32. 3. Iob 3. 24. And Christ in the dayes of his flesh offered up prayers with strong crying and teares to him that was able to save him from death Heb. 5. 7. Vers. 3. no silence to me or but I have no silence and consequently no rest or ease So Iob 30. 20. 27. Vers. 4. sitting or sittest that is abidest still one and the same as Psal. 9. 8. and 55. 20. and 102. 13. or fittest to wit still as Ruth 3. 18. that is risest not up to helpe me or sittest that is inhabitest as Psal. 9.
implieth both a skilfull minding or judging and a cariage according in word and deed therefore the Chaldee paraphraseth attendeth to the affaires of the poore to have pitie on him the poore weakling The Hebrew Dal hath the signification of drawing out or emptying and is applied to the weake leane sickly whose flesh and health is spent Gen. 41. 19. 2 Sam. 13. 4. and to the poore whose wealth is wasted Psal. 72. 13. and 113. 7. opposed to the rich Exod. 30. 15. And as the poore are thus called weake thinne or leane so rich and great men are called thicke or fat Psal. 78. 31. The poore weakling treated of here was David and his sonne Christ as appeareth by the 10. verse compared with Ioh. 13. 18. Vers. 3. preserve him alive conserve his life and health as Deut. 20. 16. or restore him to health from sicknesse as Hezekiah is said to live when he recovered his health Isa. 38. 9. 21. give thou him not he turneth his speech to the Lord and so againe in the next verse to the soule that is to the lust or will as Luke 23. 25. see Psal. 27. 12. The Greeke saith into the hands the Chaldee to the will Vers. 4. languishing sorrow or of sicknesse feeblenesse The Chaldee expoundeth it thus The Word of the Lord will helpe him in his life and will appeare unto him on the bed of his sicknesse thou hast turned or hast changed It may be understood either of making his bed easie that is comfortable in his sicknesse or of changing his estate from lying sicke to sitting up in health Vers. 5. heale my soule that is heale me who now am sicke or heale my soule of sinnes infirmities c. so God healed the people when hee pardoned their uncleannesse 2 Chron. 30. 20. and healeth the broken hearted Psal. 147. 3. And that which the Prophet speaketh of healing of the people the Evangelist expoundeth of forgiving them their sins Isa. 6. 10. Mark 4. 12. Mat. 13. 15. Vers. 7. abroad or in the street Vers. 9. A mischievous thing or Some devillish matter Heb. a word of Belial See word for thing in Psal. 7. 1. and Belial which the Chaldee here translateth perverse and wicked in Psal. 18. 5. And both joyned as here in Psal. 101. 3. Deut. 15. 9. It may be understood of some odious sin and wicked vice or of some grievous punishmet for the same is fastned or is powred into him The originall word signifieth both and may denote the greatnesse and fast cleaving of his sin and likewise of his punishment for plagues are said to be powred out Rev. 16. 1. c. 〈◊〉 shall no more rise or shall not adde to rise Vers. 10. the man of my peace that is my familiar friend which was at peace with me as Iudas Christs owne disciple The Chaldee expoundeth it the man that should have sought my peace greatly lifted up or magnified the heele or the foot-sole that is hath insolently and contumeliously abused me seeking my ouerthrow And this Christ applied to himselfe Ioh. 13. 18. Hee that eateth bread with me hath lift up the heele against me Vers. 12. shout triumphantly this word noteth any loud sound with voice or trumpet as Iosh. 6. 5. 20. Numb 10. 7. sometime a sorrowfull crying out as Ierem. 20. 16. but commonly joyfull shouting as here and after Psal. 81. 2. and 47. 2. and 66. 1. Vers. 13. And I or As for me Vers. 14. Amen or as the Greeke translateth So be it But the Hebrew word Amen is used in the Greeke English and all other languages to betoken vnity of faith and spirit and it implieth both a wishing of the thing so to be and a perswasion in faith that so it shall be when it is added in the end of blessings prayers or imprecations Num. 5. 22. Deut. 27. 15 c. Matth. 6. 13. 1 Cor. 14. 16. It is used also in the beginning of speeches and then it is an earnest asserveration as Ioh. 6. 26. Amen Amen that is Verily Verily For so else-where when one Evangelist saith Amen Mat. 24. 47. another speaking of the same thing saith Uerily or truly Luk. 12. 44. Sometime it is the title of God himselfe Isa. 65. 16. and of Christ Revel 3. 14. because of his faithfulnesse and truth in performing all promises The Chaldee paraphraseth upon this verse thus Blessed be the name of the LORD the God of Israel from this world and unto the world to come and let the just say Amen and Amen The second Booke PSAL. XLII The Prophet sheweth his desire to appeare before God 4 his teares for his absence 6 hee checketh himselfe for his weaknesse 8 complaineth of his troubles 12 and encourageth his soule to trust in God To the Master of the Musicke an instructing Psalme to the sonnes of Korach AS the Hinde desirously brayeth for the streames of waters so my soule desirously brayeth unto thee O God My soule thirsteth for God for the living God when shall I come and appeare before the face of God! My teares have beene to me bread day and night while they say unto me all the day where is thy God These things I remember and powre out upon mee my soule because I had passed with the throng had resorted with them unto the house of God with voice of shouting and confession a multitude keeping festivitie Why ●owest thou downe thy selfe my soule and makest thou a tumultuous stirre within me wait hopefully for God for yet I shall confesse him the salvations of his face My God within mee my soule boweth downe it selfe for that I remember thee from the land of Iordan and Hermonim from the little mountaine Deepe unto deepe calleth at the voice of thy water-spouts all thy billowes and thy waves doe passe over me By day Iehovah will command his mercy and in the night his song with me a prayer to the God of my life I will say to God my Rock why hast thou forgotten me why goe I sad for the oppression of the enemie With a murdering weapon in my bones my distressers doe reproach me when they say unto me all the day where is thy God Why bowest thou downe thy selfe my soule and why makest thou a tumultuous stirre within me wait hopefully for God for yet I shall confesse him the salvations of my face and my God Annotations THe second booke to wit of Psalmes For though they be all compiled in one volume as were also the small Prophets which thereupon is called The booke of the Psalmes Act. 1. 20. as The booke of the Prophets Act. 7. 42. yet in the Hebrew there are five bookes the first reacheth to the end of the 41. Psalme fore-going which is concluded with Amen and Amen The second to the 72. Psalme concluded also with Amen Amen and the end of Davids Prayers The third reacheth to the 89. Psalme concluded likewise with Amen and Amen The fourth unto the 106. Psalme whose conclusion is Amen
peoples in righteousnesses Annotations A New song see Psal. 33. 3. saved him or got him salvation and victory over all his enemies See Esa. 59. 16. and 63. 5. Vers. 2. his salvation the redemption by Christ as Luke 2. 30 31 32. so his justice is that which is by faith in Christ Rom. 10. 3 4 6 10. Vers. 3. remembred and consequently performed his mercy c. so Luk. 1. 54 55 72 73 74. all the ends that is the dwellers in the ends of the earth so Esa 52. 10. V. 6. voice of the cornet or sound of the trumpet for here are two severall words for trumpets some of which were made of metall as silver c. Num. 10. 2. some of horne Ios. 6. 4. and these were used both in warres and in the worship of God see Psal. 81. 4. V. 8. clap the hands or clap palmes a signe of joy as Isa. 55. 12. Psal. 47. 2. V. 9. in justice that is justly So Psal. 96. 13. in righteousnesses that is most righteously So Psal. 9. 9. PSAL. XCIX The Prophet setting forth the kingdome of God in Sion 5 exhorteth all by the example of fore fathers to worship God at his holy mountaine IEhovah reigneth the peoples are stirred he sitteth on the Cherubims the earth is moved Iehovah is great in Sion and high he is above all the peoples Let thē confesse thy name great and fearefull holy it is And the strength of the King loveth judgement thou hast stablished righteousnesses thou hast done in Iakob judgement and justice Exalt yee Iehovah our God and bow downe your selves at the footstoole of his feet holy he is Moses and Aaron with his Priests and Samuel with them that call on his name they called upon Iehovah and hee answered them In the pillar of a cloud hee spake unto them they kept his testimonies the decree he gave them Iehovah our God thou answeredst them a God forgiving thou wast unto them and taking vengeance on their practises Exalt yee Iehovah our God and bow downe your selves at the mountaine of his holinesse for Iehovah our God is holy Annotations ARestirred or though they be stirred to wit with anger as the Greeke translateth be angry see Psal. 4. 5. This is opened in Rev. 11. 17 18. thou Lord reignest and the nations are angry Thus the wicked are affected but the godly doe rejoyce Psal. 97. 1. he sitteth or even hee that sitteth on the Cherubims reigneth see Psal. 80. 2. is moved with indignation stirred up to resist as Act. 17. 13. Vers. 4. the strength this is joyned with Gods wrath Ezr. 8. 22. and here seemeth to have like meaning that God is strong to punish in judgement the rebellious and defend his people V. 5. at the footstoole or toward it meaning the Sanctuary and Arke there Esa. 60. 13. 1 Chron. 28. 2. Lam. 2. 1. Psal. 132. 7. Ezek. 43. 7. he is as is expressed vers 8. or it the temple is holy V. 6. with his Priests or among his principall officers see the like phrase in Ps. 54. 6. The Hebrew Cohén w ch we call a Priest or Saerificer is the name of the kings chiefe officer as in 2 Sa. 8. 18. Davids sons were Cohéns chiefe Rulers Aularchai as the Greek termeth them which is expounded in 1 Chro. 18. 17. to be the first or Chiefe at the Kings hand It hath the name of ministration Esa. 61. 6. 10. was a title specially given to Aaron and his sonnes that ministred unto God in the Sanctuary Exod. 28. 3 4 41. called or were calling that is prayed for the people as Exod. 32. 11 c. Numb 14 17 19. and 16. 22 46. 1 Sam. 7. 9. and 12. 19 23. Hereupon Moses and Samuel were noted for chiefe intercessours with God Ier. 15. 1. So the Chaldee here expounds it his Priests which gave their lives for the Lords people and Samuel prayed to the Lord for them as the fathers of old which prayed in his name V. 7. of a cloud as Exod. 33. 9. Num. 16. 42. and this noteth Gods favour but with some obscurity and so is inferiour to the mediation of Christ who hath without clouds or shadowes obtained eternall redemption for us that we may goe boldly to the throne of grace for to receive mercy finde grace to helpe in time of need Heb. 4. 14 16. and 7. 25. and 9. 11 12. Vers. 8. a God for giving a mighty God that pardonedst or tookest away to wit the punishment of their sin see Psal. 25. 18. and taking or though thou tookest vengeance on their practises theirs that is the peoples for whom Moses prayed as Num. 14. 20 21 23. Exod. 32. 14 34 35. or theirs that is Moses and Aarons sinnes which God punished and would not be intreated as Num. 20. 12. Deut. 3. 23 24 25 26. PSAL. C. An exhortation to praise God cheerefully for his grace goodnesse and fidelity A Psalme for confession SHout ye triumphantly to Iehovah all the earth Serve ye Iehovah with gladnesse come before him with singing joy Know yee that Iehovah he is God hee made us and a His we art not we his people and sheepe of his pasture Enter ye his gates with confession his courts with praise confesse ye to him blesse ye his name For Iehovah is good his mercy is for ever and his faith unto generation and generation Annotations FOr confession for the publike praise of God with thanks for his mercies all the earth that is as the Chaldee translateth all inhabitants of the earth Vers. 2. singing or shrilling shouting mirth Vers. 3. made us this word is used both for our first creation in nature Gen. 1. 26. and for the making of us high and excellent with graces and blessings as 1 Sam. 12. 6. Deut. 32. 6. Esa. 43. 7. and 29. 23. Ephes. 2. 10. and not we or and his we are as the Hebrew in the margine readeth it Both senses are good and the Chaldee keepeth this latter his we are sheepe or flocke which hee seedeth See Ezek. 34. 30. 31. Psal. 95. 7. V. 4. confession the sacrifice of thankes was thus named 2 Chron. 29. 31. Ier. 17. 26. Vers. 5. faith or faithfulnesse truth in performing his promises PSAL. CI. David maketh a profession of godlinesse touching his owne person his house and the Citie of God in cherishing the good and suppressing the wicked A Psalme of David MErcy and judgement I will sing to thee Iehovah will I sing Psalme I will doe wisely in the perfect way when wilt thou come unto me I will walke in the perfection of mine heart in the middest of mine house I will not set before mine eies any word of Belial I hate the doing of them that turne aside it shall not cleave unto me A froward heart shall depart from me I will know none evill he that in secret hurteth with tongue his fellow-friend him will I suppresse the haughty of eyes and large of heart him I cannot suffer