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

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2. 22 23. 14. Vers 10 11. In Nathans denunciation of punishment for Davids sinne We see that sinne draweth ever punishment as we see in our first parents first world Sodome Egypt and infinite other examples Scripturall and prophane histories And therefore sinne may be compared to these Locusts Revel 9. 7 8. Which had mens faces and the alluring haire of women but Scorpion tailes vers 10. With stings that did both hurt and torment or like that little book Revel 10. 10. Which was sweet in the mouth like hony but bitter in the belly Therefore let none who sinne dreame of impunity how long suffering soever the Lords patience be to suffer them for a while but in the end resolve if they eate the sower grapes that their teeth shall be set on edge At farthest in that place where there is weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth 15. Judgment here is denounced against David a King from the Lord as the inflicter Which shewes that albeit Kings and great men may escape punishment by men in respect of their place and power yet they shall not escape at the hands of God as we see in the examples of Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar Saul Herode and others A notable example we have hereof in our own Chronicles Bachavan 〈◊〉 5. which is this The nobility of Scotland having consulted to depose King Fer●uhard for the detestable cruel●ies he had committed by Colmanus Bishop of Northumberland they were diswaded who told them that the punishment of Kings belonged to God and that he ere it were long would take vengeance of his wickedness which accordingly came to pass for the King after a few daies being a hunting happened to be bitten by a wolfe and falling in a fever such a putrefaction ensued in his body that out of every part thereof issued such abundance of lice and vermine which made him loathsome to all so that languishing in this Consumption he sent for Colman to whom he exprest his remorse for his wicked life and would needs be carried to the nex fields wrapped in sackcloth where after humble confession he was absolved and so ended his life shortly after his absolution 16. In Nathans denuncing the sword against Davids house and the defiling of ●his Wives as he had killed Vriah with the sword and defiled his Wife we see how oftimes by Law of talion the Lord punishes sinne as he did Pharaoh Adonibezek and as we see Job 31. 10. So that a man may read his sinne in his punishment As David might here and as we see performed Revel 16. 6. 17. Vers 11. Whereas the Lord sayes I will raise up evill against thee meaning the evill of punishment this teaches us in all punishments corrections or tryalls as Job did and David in the cursing of Shimei Chap. 16. 11. To look up to the hand of God and acknowledge that comes from him as we see Gods people did Hos 6. 1. And therefore to returne to him and humble ourselves under his hand 18. Whereas also the Lord sayes to David I will raise up evill against thee out of thine own house We see that the saddest punishments are these which are domesticke and so most neer unto us and affects us most as David shewes Chap. 16. 11. And as we see in Sinacherib King of Assyrias punishment 2 King 19. 37. 19. Vers 12. The Lord sayes what David did secretly should be punished publickly which shewes that it is vain to commit sinne in secret thereby to hide the same for what is done secretly in sinning shall be made publicke by the Justice of God in the punishing God being thereby glorified in the manifestation of his omniscience and Justice as has been seen in the discovery and punishment of many secret murthers adulteries incests and such like hatefull crimes But specially such sinnes are are hid and secretly committed if they be not discovered and punished here in the day of the generall judgement they shall be discovered and punished then Psal 50. 21. II. SAM Chap. 12. from the 13. vers to the end FOllows now after Nathans Message and his accusation of David and denunciation against him 1. Davids penitent confession in few words but weighty which at more length is amplified in all the circumstances thereof in the 51. penitentiall Psalme which may 〈◊〉 as a commentary upon this text 2. Is subjoyned Nathans absolution or declaration that God had remitted his sin wherein as Psal 32. 1. The blessedness of man consists and that he should not dye towit that death which his sin deserved and which the Apostle Rom. 6. 23. declareth to be the wages of sin Howbeit the Child that was borne unto him of that adulterous procreation it should dye the temporall death because by that deed he had given great occasion to the Lords Enemies to blaspheme which by the Childes death in the scandall thereof would the sooner be forget nor by the life thereof if it continued whereupon ensueth the performance of what Nathan herein had foretold 1. By the Lords strinking of the Child with sicknesse and thereafter Vers 18. With death during which time of the Childs sickness Davids behaviour is set down towit his humiliation by prayer and fasting and lying on the Earth doubtles confessing his great guiltinesse provocation in the begetting of that Child and as Vers 22. intreating the Lord if it were his will to be gracious to him that the Child might live but when he heard by the servants of his house Vers 19. That the Child was dead then he changes his behaviour arised from the Earth washes and annoints himself changes his apparell And 1. goes to the house of God and worships and then comes to his own house and refreshes himself by meat the reason of which both his former carriage while the Child was sick and of his contrary carriage after the Childs death he gives unto his servants who asked him the reason thereof and this he donh Vers 22. and 23. After which Vers 24. and 25. is set down Davids comforting of Bathsheba now his Wife and his begetting upon here a Son whom she boor to him and he called his name Solomon whom the Lord loved and in testimony thereof he sent by his Prophet Nathan and he called his nam J●dediah which is by interpretation the beloved of the Lord. After all which is set down a new document of the Lords favour to David in giving him a notable victory over his Enemies the Ammonites by the expugnation of there chief and royall City Rabbah which so long had been beseiged and at last the chief part whereof which was the City of Waters or where their Water was without which the other could not long hold out was taken in by Joab who hereupon sent to David to come in Person himself with his forces to take the honour of the Victory and full in taking thereof which David accordingly does where he is crowned with there Kings Crown weying a Talent of gold
of these two Kings by whose contrary authorities great dissention was raised in Israel being formerly treated of till the 12. Vers Now from the 12. to the end we have the history of the first civill debates between Abner Generall of Ishboseths Army and Joab Generall of Davids In the which we have proponed these particulars first the singular combat between 12. on every side of the companies conducted by Joab for David and Abner for Ishboseth and the circumstances thereof Secondly from the 17. Vers to the 24. We have the battles between the Armies and the event thereof which is a bloody victory which befell to Joab Thirdly from the 24. Vers to the end we have the retreate from the battle occasioned by the conference between the two Captaines Joab and Abner In the first which is the singular combat from the 12. Vers to the 17. are to be considered these circumstances the persons place time occasion act and consequence The time is observed to have been after the election of both the Kings David in Judah and Ishboseth in Israel the which time David appeares to have dedicate himselfe to quietness for three reasons First in regard of his oath made to Saul concerning his posterity 1 Sam 24. 22. The second is grounded upon prudence seeing he was followed as yet by the fewer number whom he would not hazard as being prodigall of their lives The third is from faith patiently abiding Gods time and referring his further advancement whereof he was assured unto Gods opportunity and work where Ishboseth on the contrary breaks Faith and depends upon the opportunity and power of his forces The persons occasioners are Joab Davids sisters sonne and Abner kinsman to Ishboseth the one provoking the other yeilding both men of great courage and experience the one having an evill cause and relying on carnall respects the other defending a good cause and relying on God and the equity thereof the actours are 12 on each side The place is at the poole of Gibeon in the lot of Benjamin The occasion is Abners provocation Joab being defender The act is a singular combat 12. against 12. with great eagerness and cruelty fought The event is they are all slaine and therefore the place receives a new imposed name in memory of the fact aud the two Armies mutually joyne in battle It is to be resolved then whether this forme of singular combats be lawfull amongst Christians and the godly or not Whereto I answer it is simply unlawfull First because it is altogether without warrant of Gods Word and therefore is an action without Faith and consequently sinne whereof also it followes that doing it without Gods command we cannot look for his aide or protection therein Secondly it is altogether against Gods command Thou shalt not murder which thou hereby committest on thy neighbour if thou kill and so is ever after haunted with the conscience of blood or of thy selfe if thou be killed desperately running thy body on the sword of thy enemy and thy soule on the sword of Gods punishment Thirdly as it is without precept yea against precept so is it without laudable practise in all Gods Word never a one but a barbarous Philistine making offer thereof and David by an extraordinary providence and motion upon extraordinary former experience by an extraordinary weapon and way for the glory of God and honour of Gods people being brought thither and stirred up doth undertake the same Fourthly it is against the law of man likewise in all Christian and well established kingdomes Fiftly it is altogether brutish seeing that is the forme of beasts to push and teare or kill each one another from whose practise man endued with reason but much more with grace should altogether abhorre Sixtly yet more it is divelish seeing he hath been a man-slayer and defacer of Gods image from the beginning and all man-slayers are his children and consequently inheritors of his portion reserved for him Seventhly it directly impugnes that evangelicall command of Christ Jesus forbidding privat revenge and so is an antichristian practise Eightly it is a high wronging of God and contempt of the Magistrate to whom he hath committed the sword disturbing them both from their places as it were of repaying revenge and so is a practise hatefull to heaven and to earth As for the maintaining of thy credit thereby let the credit of thy person yeild to the credit of thy profession which above all things thou ought to maintaine and obey and as for triall in doubtfull cases there are 4 waies in Gods Word by witnesses Deut. 17. 6. By writ Jer. 32. By confession Josh 7. And by oath of the party Exod. 22. 11. Besides these there is none other lawfull but the party and matter must be left to Gods just judgment and time of further light and better that some truths a while be unknown then unlawfully searcht OBSERVATIONS 1. IN these troubles that are raised by Abner against David and his people we see the truth of that royall sentance which he afterwards upon manifold experience pronounced many are the troubles of the Godly but the Lord delivers them out of them all as our master Jesus Christ affirmes In the world you shall have affliction c. And as the Apostles testifie whosoever will live Godly in this present world must suffer persecution and by many tribulations we must enter into the kingdome of heaven this is confirmed by reason and éxperience the first reason is taken from Gods Fatherly care by this way exercising his children and his gifts in them that like Moab they settle not upon their lees and containing them in discipline to make them conformable in sufferings with their Saviour here that they may be so in glory hereafter yea and to witness thereby which is strange his love to them for whom the Lord loves them he chastises the other reason is from the nature of Satan and the world ever opposite to the quietness of the faithfull which experience taken from all ages of the Godly and consideration of the estate especially from Davids in this present history and Christ and his Apostles in the Gospell doth evidently confirme 2. In respect that David is only defender his intention is commendable not meaning to amplify his kingdome by trouble oppression blood and faith-breaking but by Godly peaceable and honest meanes referring the work to God for the farther promotion and amplifying of his kingdome But Ishboseth and Abner are the contrary and use the contrary meanes whose example albeit the most part follow them in inlarging the bounds of their commandment should be eschewed therefore also it is that many like unto them fall and decay and as few follow David so few stand and grow like unto him as may be amplified by the fall of sundry Tyrants and standing of Godly princes An exhortation therefore to conquer by lawfull and conscionable meanes not joyning house to house nor field to field by iniquity least so
as the Prophet saith they conquer shame and destruction to themselves as the Psalmist likewise found by experience I looked after the ungodly and he was not but the just inherit the earth 3. Vers 14. The cruell and barbarous nature of the wicked is seen in Abner delighting to feed his eies with bloodshed and slaughter and counting no more of it but as a game whereas the Godly man regardeth the life of his beast but the very mercies of the wicked are cruell this nature they participate of their severall masters the Godly who are called the meek of the earth of that meek Lamb Jesus and the wicked the gyants of the earth of that roaring Lyon Satan who ever goeth about seeking whom he may destroy and hath been a manslayer from the beginning 4. Vers. 16. The sad and unfortunate event of this singular combat all of them on both sides being slain proveth the unlawfulnesse of such practises whether they obtrude the triall of a title or right that otherwise cannot be decided for a warrant or a meanes to stay further effusion of blood neither of which is here effectuate for albeit Davids title be undoubtedly good yet all of his men here doe fall as oftimes in Monomachies it happeneth the innocent to receive the foil not that hereby we should accuse God for n●t regarding innocence but justly so that he punisheth presumption and will not be holden to blesse with good successe unlawfull practises without and against a warrant of his approbation not staying for his time of clearing what is in doubt but thrusting ourselves into his room and as for the battle it joyneth hereupon presently so that it was rather a spurre than a bridle to further effusion of blood than hinder the same 5. In Ioab yeilding to Abner and in the young men obtempering them both Ioabs losse of such valiant twelve Champions their losse of themselves teaches what it is to obey an unlawfull challenge and ungodly command rashly ad aras then let our obedience be to superiours and ever Marshall God aright giving him the first place to obey rather him than man in election and him before man in Location and with holy wisdome and Christian care of others of whose life or welfare we ought not to be prodigall laying aside pride foolish temerity and lavish carelesnesse of the estate of them whom we may command and to behave and impale our selves in offer or acceptation within the Limites of the Lords command 6. In denominating the place the field of the strong men Helkathhazairim to wit where they were slain we see that inconsiderately oftimes without any such intention of the Authours by the providence of God monuments of the memory of things are erected whereby God will not only have good things to keep record but the facts of turpitude for their further detestation to have there own remembring thus was the field which was bought with the price of our saviour named Aceldama that proud towre of Nimrod called Babel the place where Israel murmured for wa tearmed Meribah with sundry the like examples seeing therefore post fata facta after death deeds have their own remaining by record remembrance let us be carefull that they be such as rather may be blazed with happy fame then blotted with haplesse infamie and seeing this place is so called to testify the enormity of the fact let us fight that good fight onely whereof the Apostle speakes which is between the flesh and the Spirit which onely hath the profitable end the glorious theater the godly armour and the blessed reward of assured triumph II. SAM Chap. 2. from the 17. verse to the 26. COncerning the ensueing battle we have to resolve whether warres are Lawfull or unlawfull we answer that publick warres undertaken by publick authority are Lawfull as that answer of the Baptists to the souldiers Christs direction to give Caesar that which was Caesars the commendation of the centurion the Laws of warfare set down by God himself to the Israelites the practise of their godliest Patriarches Judges and Kings the title of God himself the Lord of hosts that which is said 1 Sam. 25. 28. And the Apostolick Canon of the Magistrates sword all do testify providing they have these four causes and caveats the matter be punishment of vice the forme right proceeding the efficient Lawfull authority and the end that peace and piety may be obtained The Anabaptists hold the contrary because it is forbidden say they to revenge or resist evil and it is against Christian patience recommended by Christ and his Apostles as also against the nature of Christs Kingdome Isa 2. 4. Micah 4. 2. To all this it is answered that private revenge is onely forbidden and in that place of the Prophets he speaketh not against publick Lawfull warres but sheweth how the hearts of the godly shall be affected one to another albeit of divers nations which peace and love shall begin and grow here but be perfected hereafter And in some sort too even private warres in defense or resistance are Lawfull when by circumstances the Magistrates help cannot be implored for protection in which case as one of the ancients affirmeth the Magistrate seemeth quietly to consent to the deed and which is called inculpata tutela OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 17. A sore battle ensueth on this former combat whereby we see that of smal-provocations and infortunate beginnings great troubles oftimes arise witnesse the abuse of the Levites wife and the Benjamites froward answer the event which was the occasion of the pitifull overthrow of that whole tribe which might at first if the like practise as that of the men of Abel had been followed been wisely prevented 2. The servants of Abner fall before the servants of David so that a right and just cause may ever ordinarily look for Victory being prosecuted aright for as Hezekiah said concerning the King of Ashur there are more with us then with him for with him is the arme of flesh but with us is the Lord our God to help us even so that same protecting presence albeit the eye of the body like Gehezies while it was opened cannot perceive the same doth still attend and give a happy successe to all upright affaires so that if God be with us who can be against us and if that captain of the Lords hoste that appeared unto Joshua stand armed on our side we need not doubt of Victory ordinarily in any just cause and quarrel between us and any adversary whosoever witnesse Abraham against the 5. Kings Israels deliverance from Pharaoh their battles under Moses Joshua and their Judges David against Goliath and here against Abner with sundry others 3. Yet Abner here hath the greater forces eleven tribes against one The arme of man therefore is vain to trust unto neither is the race to the swift nor the battle to the strong but the Victory is of the Lord who will have the glory of
as here when Abner and Ishboseth are making all their power against David even then they are divided a sunder and David is freed from danger and in our own time when that high enterprise of subverting Church and commonwealth Prince and people by gunpowder was contrived and brought to the point of execution within this land then the Lord mightily discovered and disappointed the same to the confusion of the enemies his Churches comfort and praise of his name for ever as he had-dispersed also and disappointed that Spanish invincible armado of Spaine in 88 before 2. As in the time of the highest machinations of the wicked being combined together the Lord bringeth all their counsells to nought so we see that God maketh their dissentions amongst themselves being divided to tend to the peace and quietness of his Church thus God made the incursion of the Philistines upon Sauls borders an occasion for him to retire from compassing David in the wilderness of Maon to defend his land thus likewise did the Lord put a hook in the nostrills of Sinacherib and made the invasion of the King of Egypt an occasion for him to returne from Jerusalem and persuit of good King Hez●kiah so Pauls delivery is occasioned by a dissention amongst his accusers And here Ishboseths accusation of Abner is made to be an occasion of variance for the peace of David Let us ever rely then upon our provident and powerfull God who can draw light out of darknesse sweetnesse out of the strong as Sampsons ridle saith and peace out of discord and who hath infinit means to comfort his own Church with and hath all hearts in his hands to turne them what way he pleaseth 3. In the variance of these two we see there is no solid and constant friendship amongst the wicked for that which is in God is onely like unto him immutable and sure and worthy of the name of amity the other being more properly conspiracies as they are called Psalm 2. Which God shall dissolve and undo a clear example whereof we have in that league between Abimelech and the men of Sechem between whom notwithstanding the Lord sent an evil Spirit of variance that the blood of Gideons Sonnes might be revenged whereof both were guilty Let us not therefore make such friendship as is spoken of in the 50. Psalm 18. Nor be like Sampsons foxes tyed together or Simeon and Levi Brethren in evil but let our friendship be in God and our concurrance be to holy duties 4. Vers 7. Saul leaves behind him Rizpah a concubine who is here the occasion of all this trouble between Ishboseth and Abner where we may see the Scorpions taile of sinne stings the posterity of a man oftimes when he lyeth in ashes witnesse the immediate former example of base Abimelech begotten in whoredome who after his Fathers death is reserved as it were to be the burrean of his 70. lawfull begotten Brethren 5. We perceive that albeit reprehensions be lawfull in nature yet they should be prudently and timorously used otherwise they may import more hur than profit as we see here in Ishboseths example this moved the preacher to say a word spoken in due season is like aples of gold with pictures of silver Therefore let our reprehensions be after due tryall spoken in love observing the necessary circumstances of time place and person c. And uttered to that end that we may winne our Brother from his sinne to God 6. Vers 8. In Abner we see how impatient the wicked are at the rebuke of sinne that they altogether misregarding God and authority cannot be appeased till they be avenged on them who reprove them this is our corrupt nature till we be reformed by grace and that strong man who rageth within us being loath to depart till he be cast out by that stronger Jesus Then rebukes shall be unto us like sweet ointment and pretious balme this naturall hatred to be reformad wee see in Pharaoh Ahab Jeroboam Herod and many others of all ranks 2 Chron. 36. 14 15. 7. In the ambitious recitall of his high deservings Abner sheweth here that the wicked for wordly benefits would be winked at in the commission of sinne else no longer shall the river of their bounty flow then the fountain of wholesome admonition beginne to be opened and in all things they shall willingly hear till you come to their Herodias but there you loose them Let Gods servants then be free of them that they may be faithfull with them 8. Also in upbraiding to Ishboseth ingratitude let us learn never to expect sure amity nor upright thankfulnesse at the hands of men whom we would benefit with the detriment of our own conscience as Abner did here Ishboseth But be persuaded th●t thereby we shall make ourselves vile in their accompt and their favour which we have so hunted after with misregard of God conscience the Lord shall in the end turn into detestation of us accepting of the deed tending to their commodity but hating the doer thereof with an evil conscience Let us then approve our selves above all and in all to our gratious God who will both praise and reward his own 9. In Abners threatning we see the nature of high exalted and ambitious courtiers who would have their Princes to serve their appetites else in discontentednesse they will not regard to hazard if they can the estate and condition both of King and Kingdome 10. Also we may behold the admirable presumption and boldnesse of dust and ashes against the omnipotent creator when man is not indued with grace which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fight against Gods known ordinance and to resist his manifested decree albeit the same be confirmed by his oath therefore saith Abner as the Lord hath sworn not considering that the pot is in the hand of the potter ever to do there with as it pleaseth him best Let this teach us therefore the duty of humility considering what we are both by nature and corruption dust towit and repyning clay voyde not onely of will or performance of good but highly rebellious and stubborne in evil against God till grace doth renew us 11. Vers 11. In Ishboseths timorousnesse and pusillanimity we see where the fear of God is not there worldly fear soon dasheth and occupieth the minde but where Gods fear is and the maintenance of a good cause there is true courage and wonderfull holy boldnesse This made Eliah bid Obadiah go tell his Master Abab that he was there and would shew himself unto him albeit through all Kingdomes about he had straitely sought for him this made Job likewise in his greatest calamity to say though mine adversary would write a book against me would not I take it upon my shoulder and bind it as a crown unto me I would tell him the number of my goings and go unto him as a Prince This made the Apostles in like manner answer
treacherous or towards David as insinuating onely for his owne preferment it was simply evill whereupon followeth that the accepting of the condition which in it selfe was Lawfull howsoever it proceeded from an evill author was Lawfull likewise and by this reason is excused the fact of Rahab surrendring Jericho to Israel as their owne City But hereon resulteth another doubt if David consents to that which on Abners part is evill and sinne by the sentence of the Apostle he falleth in the like guiltinesse with the worker of sinne Answer Augustine in his writing to Publius and in that disputation of his whether an infidels oath may be received by a Christian cleareth this doubt where concluding affirmatively that it may he sheweth that a godly man without sinne may make use of that which in the actor is sinne approving the same by the example of Iacobs league with Laban and accepting of his oath by the God of Nachor for conservation of civil peace and by Pauls saying to the Philippians that some preacht the Gospel upon envy and evil minde c. And yet affirmes that he is glad that Christ be preached upon whatsoever pretense for every one shall render their owne accompts and so the answer of the second question is conformed to the first that Lawfull conditions should be received by whatsoever instrument or of whatsoever minde they be offered But touching the Lawfulnesse of the contracting of a special amity with Abner we shall speak of it hereafter OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 12. IN all this dealing of Abners both in the manner and matter of his message to David we see the crafty nature of the wicked and that they are wiser in their generation then the Children of Light but all their wisdome is like that of Achitophels themselves oftimes are insnared therewith and the wilde Asse is found in his own moneth Let sanctity therefore season wit and conscience convey our conceptions let the doves simplicity and serpentine wisdome go together even the sincerity of the Holy Ghost and a good conscience direct our conclusions and moderat our consultations and then assuredly comfort shall attend our courses and a happy successe crown all our doings Let Pharaoh then applaud himself while he is working wickedly to say let us work wisely but plagues on his Land destruction of his first borne submersion of himself and subversion of his whole Kingdome shall prove he hath done foolishly wit then with wickednesse is Satans craft and was never undisappointed or punished witnesse Jonadabs Counsel to Ammon the issue thereof 2 Sam. 13. But wit guided by godlinesse is onely true wisdome both prospered and rewarded 2. In respect that Abner doth this of a vindictive minde as he threatneth Ishboseth Vers 9. We see the malitious and revenge-full hearts of the wicked which upon small or no just occasion at all oftimes are kindled and stirred up so that they can get no rest untill they put in practise their malice and evil will examples whereof we have in cursed Kain reprobat Esau rejected Saul cruell Ioab proud Haman wicked Achab hatefull Herodias the Highpriest and scribes against our saviour and his Apostles and sundry others where on the contrary the Children of God are meek patient and mercifull suiting redresse of their wrongs at the hands of the Magistrate or pardoning the same and ever having their hearts voyd of malice and committing their causes unto the Lord for he will repay yea praying for their adversaries and doing good in place of evil Examples whereof we have in Isaac Gen. 26. 19. In Iacob Gen. 31. 41. In Ioseph Gen. 50. 17. In meek Moses through all his life in David sparing Saul in our saviour praying for his crucifiers Steven for his stoners and the Martyrs for their persecutors 3. In Abners acknowledging of Davids title at last upon whatsoever minde we see the Lords overruling of the wicked to the comfort of his own in making the conscience of the wicked to be so convinced that their tongue in the end shall be forced in a sort to confesse that which with great reluctation they have striven against So did Saul acknowledge Davids innocency and that he was juster then he Pilate Christs the high priest the expedience that he should die for the people and so confessing him a Saviour for others Likewise that counsell convocated by Herod that he should be born in Bethlehem Gamaliels advise Acts. 5. 38. And the extorted confessions of the adversaries unawares impugning themselves and justifying the truth most frequently do testify so that like the unprofitable servants confession the very mouths of the wicked condemne themselves and they are caught in their own speeches like Pharaoh crying out that he had done wickedly Exod. 9. 27. 4. Yet in his Expostulation of a league with David the capitulation whereof as Josephus affirmeth was such promotion as he had with Saul or Ishboseth we perceive the corrupted mind and manners of the wicked albeit in his conscience he acknowledgeth and with his mouth he confesseth that the true title belongeth only unto David yet he will do nothing but ex pacto like Judas quid mihi dabitis sympathising herein with the bribing Judge and Simonaick patron 5. Abner calleth here his treasonable and corrupt dealing a league covering foule practises with faire pretenses and colouring rotten Sepulchers with pleasant paintings like the wicked who give honest names to unhonest actions and call vertue vice and vice by the name of vertue thus is superstition holy devotion pride called gravity ebriety good fellowship deceit wisdome whoredome youthfulness bloodshed manhood avarice frugality profusion liberality and every vice so strangely masked like whorish Tamar that Judah cannot know her and so cunningly disguised like Jeroboams wife faining her selfe to Abijah that except the Lord discover the matter the Prophet shall be deceived 6. In Abners promise unto David we see the ambitious self-confidence of the wicked making their own arme the pillar of their trust and stretching forth the same as if it were for others to relye upon therefore mine hand shall be with thee saith Abner to reduce all Israel This was the practise likewise of Goliah Nimrod Nebuchadnezzar Sinacherib Baltashar Antiochus Pharaoh with sundry others who all perished Pride ever more drawing with it as sundry sorts of vices to be noted here so likewise the professors thereof assuredly to their own destruction at last for the apostolick Canon is true God resists the proud and he giveth grace to the humble 7. And in all this we have an example of Gods inscrutable judgments leading the counsells of the wicked to the end of his glory and to his faithful's comfort in all their adversities he brings order from confusion light from darkness honour from ignominie and advancement from dejection over ruling ever all the courses of the wicked and directing them to his own end witness the perverting of Satans work in mans seduction in the work of Jacobs sonnes against
workers Pharaoh therefore in his Court shall bring up Moses to be a deliverer of Israel and Achab shall entertaine in his house an Obadiah to be a hider and feeder of the Lords Prophets Out of Sauls bowels also shall a Jonathan proceed to comfort and preserve David and Haman himselfe shall decree and performe the honour to be done to Mordecaj whom he thought to have hanged yea Tatnaj and his associates shall not only be commanded not to hinder the work of the Temple farre contrary to their expectation but also injoyned to further and furnish it Ezra 6. 8. And out of Balam's mouth who was sent for to curse Israel a blessing shall proceed whether he will or no. 2. In that Abner sheweth it was their former suit to have David we see what it is to have a just cause even the Lord will incline the hearts of men whom we know not and who seemed adversaries to favour the same as Israel did here Davids title though they were under Ishboseth Therefore saith Salomon when the waies of a man please the Lord he will make also his Enemies at peace with him for the Lord hath the hearts of men in his hands and turneth them which way he pleaseth 3. We note likewise in Abner damnable hypocrisie in making Scripture serve his turne and abusing Gods Word to sell Ishboseth and buy David which the Apostle calleth cauponari verbum dei and under a pretext of reverence to Gods ordinance which hitherto he had neglected and of obedience to the Lords appointment now concerning David he will alleadge a divine warrant out of malice against Ishboseth seeking his ruine and his own promotion this was the fault of Simeon and Levi so odious to Jacob and the practise of Satan in the tempting of Christ and the followers of this divelish and detestable example are they who cloake their particular affections and ambition with Gods Word and will make religion to serve their appetite in favour or seade to destroy or preserve not considering that as a heavy curse abides on them who adde or impaire so likewise doth it on those who throwe and abuse the same let holy things then be holily used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not Gods Word to be forced to serve man yea worse to serve sinne and Satan and for wicked ends 4. In the contracting of this amity with Abner we find not that David consulted with God as he had formerly done Chap. 2. therefore the success of this is not as the former but matter of griefe through Joabs fact ensueth unto David Whereby we learne not to relye upon the arme of flesh or in purposes of any importance to be unconsulted with God who more clearly manifesteth now his will in his written Word then ever he did before by Prophet or vision so that we need not to goe farre but to the testimony and to the word which is amongst the midst of us else look for no happy success in the end The cause of all sinne and punishments for sinne is and hath ever been the omission of this duty amongst all sorts and degrees of men when not making God their direction they have fallen in his correction and despising his counsell they were defrauded of his comfort 5. Vers 20. David likewise here entertaineth and confederates with a wicked man which society of the Godly with the wicked hath ever been displeasing unto God as in the alliance of the posterity of Seth and Kain which procured the deluge is most evident and not only in the law was afterwards prohibited but by sundry examples made most apparent as in that covenant made between Benhadad and the King of Israel Of Jehosaphat with wicked King Ahab Salomons affinity with the King of Egypt Hezekiah's familiarity with the King of Babylon with sundry others and Davids league here with a treacherous Abner 6. Vers 21. In Abners pollicitation to David at his departure we see not only his arrogant self-confidence noted before but likewise that there is nothing more perillous than to put wicked men in places of great credit therefore Achitophell Davids counsellour giveth counsell against him and for Joabs authority in the camp David dare not execute Justice for the blood of Abner So Haman had almost brought Ahasuerus in a fearfull guiltiness of bloodshed And Rehoboam's wicked young Counsellours made him loose his kingdome The Roman Senat was likewise troubled by this meane And the accident by Phocas Author of the Popes creation 7. In like manner we see that the pusillanimity of a Prince makes hardy Rebells therefore Abner knew well enough that Ishboseth who durst not answer for timourousness his words of proud threatning Vers 11. doth farre less seek to repress his deeds of this his headstrong practising In a Prince then the foxes wit to rule wisely and Lyons heart to rule valiantly should ever dwell together parcere subjectis debellare superbos politick carriage and polemick courage being as two twinnes which like Gemini should be in a Princes Zodiack 8. And in regard as is probable by wine and good entertainment his courage was the more stirred up so to brag and presumingly to speak having attained likewise to Davids favour and high account in being royally banqueted Let us learne in prosperity not to be insolent but look for alteration as in the examples of Haman Balthassar and Alexander their banquetings was seen II. SAM Chap. 3. from the 22. verse to the 28. THe former part of the Chapter after the generall proposition of the history having contained the five severall means whereby the house of David waxed stronger and the house of Saul weaker This next part containeth the treacherous murther of Abner by Joab which may be accounted a sixt meane whereby the house of Saul is weakned and Davids house strengthned in having a new reconciled enemy taken out of the way and who being full of levity would hardly have proved faithfull together with Davids solemne purgation of himselfe from the guiltiness of the fact and his deploration of the forme of his death In the history of Abners murther we have to be considered 1. Davids estate at that time 2. Joabs acting of the fact described from the occasion motives manner of doing and event thereof And 3. Abners simple imprudency after his returne committing his life in a secret conference to an unreconciled enemy Concerning David and his estate the text sheweth that his Army was in the warres as is supposed against the Philistines without and within in like manner was exercised in obviating the practises of the contradictory Authority of Ishboseth and his followers so that David is troubled both with intestine and forraine Enemies while as yet he is only King of Judah and moreover the fact of Joab in this murther appeareth to have a more perillous consequence leading to the eversion of Davids whole estate present and rejection from the promised Kingdome by God and expected by Abners
like may be seen Let us beware then to loose in such quarrell 's the bridle to our affections but ever speak our particular justly with a diligent providence and care that thereby we be not offensive unto the estate publicke 3. Vers 24. In Ioabs manner of seeking to effectuate his purpose by dilating the fraudulent nature of Abner and that to prye into Davids estate and to circumvent him he had onely come and so concluding that David had done too simply in dimitting him and therefore it were best that he should be recalled we see the godlesse nature of the wicked ever misconstruing the intentions of men to whom they bear the least grudge and malitiously and most unjustly detracting and slandering their Persons This Satanicall practise we see in the Author thereof Job 1. Chap. And in Achab against Naboth and Eliah Daniel and Susannas accusers●● the blasphemous Highpriest and Pharisees their calumnies against Christ and his Apostles and the most unjust opprobries of the Martyrs under the pensecuting Emperours the members and supposts of that cruell Dragon Where the contrary practise is of Gods Children not to backbite and uncharitably to construe mens intentions or make the worst of their indifferent actions but to be carefull to abstaine as well from the Murther of the tongue as of the hand it self knowing that the surviving same of man is more pretious unto him then is his peristing life 4. Vers 26. Likewise Ioab laboureth first to make his particular to be the Kings cause and when he cannot persuade the godly King in that forme then he goeth to practice by fained friendship This then is the nature of Atheists and ungodly worldlings first to colour their wicked pretences by the cloake of common causes and so to snare men and when they cannot this way prevail in that form of course to circumvent those whose harme they seek by dissimulate friendship or some such crafty means Let Princes therefore noble men and Magistrates learn here of David through too hasty credit and facility to beware that they suffer not their authorities in this manner to be abused And let private men be prudently suspitious and providently wary of the coloured friendships of the subtile and ungodly because the event is so perillous It being ever their nature to cloak their evil purposes with good pretenses as the examples of Sauls alliance with David for a snare Ioabs saluation of Amasa Absolons entertainment of Amnon with a feast and his treason thereafter Herods speech to the wisemen and Iudas kisse with sundry others do testify 5. In that he diviseth one snare that assuredly shall intrap Abner as is aforesaid if another fail we see how plentifull and ripe the wicked are in their impious inventions to accomplish their godlesse purposes and how diligent they are and restlesse in their executions that one way shall not sooner misgive but presently they shall attempt another that old experienced Serpent being their crafty schoolmaster and they docile in his Doctrine Thus when bondage and burdens cannot waste Israel Pharaoh can finde out a way by the Midwives to kill their male Children and when that succeeds not causes his Souldiers to drowne them in the River So look to Herods wayes and plots how to apprehend Christ the Highpriests and Scribes how to insnare him and put him to death and their Counsels With the practises of heathen Emperours how hereafter to suppresse his Gospel what nets were likewise spread by Saul to intrap David by the Philistines to get their adversary Sampson and by Achab and Iesabel to get Naboths Vineyard c. But in end all their witty wickednesses runne at last amain to their utter ruine they are caught at last in their own snares and are made fast by the fetters of their own devises the true wisdome of God in the godly having the contrary success 6. Vers 27. Abner had Davids protection and safe conduct whereunto he trusted but he wanted the Lords and therefore is murthered Let men therefore labour to be reconciled with God principally and to have his powerfull protection to watch every where over them otherwise that of man shall be found in vaine Seek Abrahams buckler therefore and unto Davids tower of refuge and then with Jacob because thou hast prevailed with God thou shalt prevaile with man and he who was with Joseph in the prison with Daniel in the denne with the three Children in the fiery furnace and with Israel in the desert wilderness shall shew himselfe to be unto thee as that Captaine of the Lords host who appeared unto Joshua armed for thy defense And as Elisha said unto Gehezi there shall be more with thee then is against thee though an Army were come to kill thee with Davids confidence Psal 4. 8. Thou shalt also lye downe and rise up in safety and he who hath numbered thy haires shall not let one of them fall to the ground without his good providence amd will 7. Abner was a bloody man and therefore dieth a bloody death so that blood cryeth for blood though Magistrates draw not the sword yet it is impossible that the gyants and centaures of the world shall escape Gods punishments howsoever they be able to escape the ordinary corrections of men Examples in Pharaoh Adoni-bezek Saul Joab Sinacherib Achab Antiochus Herod and sundry others that were punished Then let not wicked men boast in their favours remissions and oversights which they have of worldly Princes for without serious repentance to prevent Gods just judgments the Lord hath Joabs and such like instruments to raise up and correct when he best pleaseth 8. The time when Abner is slaine is immediatly after his reconcilement with David and his coming from the royall banquet that was made unto him even when he was assuring himselfe of peace then suddenly came his destruction Thus are the wicked in the midst of their security punished and when they least look for it cometh their visitation Examples the primitive world Sodome Pharaoh the Philistines smothering by Sampson Eglons death Balthassars overthrow and sentence thereof Hamans dejection Sisera's humbling the rich fooles departing Herods consuming and that glorious whore spirituall Jesabel her abasing Revel 18. 8. 9. Joab killeth Abner thus is one wicked man made to be anothers scourge Thus also are the Midianites made to kill one another Ammon and Moab to rise up first against Mount Seir or the Idumeans and then each one of destroy another in Mizpah Sinacheribs sonnes to stab him in the Temple of his God Misroch Ishboseths two servants to kill him on his bed And where God want scourges he shall make the same not only to proceed out of their own bowels as is said of Sinacherib but shall make themselves to be so to themselves sharp whips and cruell burrean's as in the examples of Saul Judas and Achitophel 10. In all this we see Davids kingdome is not promoted by Abners treason as David so expected but rather by the away
himself into an Angel of light when he intends to bring into greatest darknesse so can the the wicked cover themselves in their most impious proceedings with least suspicious and best be seeming shewes like Jael giving the sweetest milk when they intend most bitter destruction and under subtilest Hypocrisy evermore harbouring most dangerous impiety 10. The fall of the house of Saul after this manner in himself and in his posterity represents last of all unto us the example of Gods Justice against Tyrants and persecutours of his Church and Kingdome of Christ agreeable unto that in the first Psalme The wicked shall not stand amongst the just but as the wind bloweth the chaffe and dust to and fro so shall the wicked perish and decay this consenting unto the frequent other Prophecies of the Lords words Job 18. Psal 2. 37 110. Isa 13. 18 23 44. Jerem. 25. Revel 17. 18. As the examples of Pharaoh as of all ages clearly can testify and as we may evidently remarke when in Gods judgement we see by treason and violence one after another the Enemies of the Church cut down by the siccle of justice and cast in the Winepresse of Gods wrath till they be made all at last his footstool to tread upon II SAM Chap. 4. from the 8. Verse to the end THe second part of this Chapter which beginneth at the 8. Vers hath the honest part of David in condigne revenge of Ishboseths Murther wherein are three things 1. The oration of the Murtherers 2. Davids reply And 3. the punishment of those and the honour exhibited unto the head of Ishboseth in burying the same As for the Murtherers they carry with them the Kings head and in great hast they flie from Mahanaim beyond Iordan in the Territory of Galaad and passing the River through all the Territory of Benjamin journing by night they come unto David in Hebron and their diligence as an argument of their good will to David thus travelling by night to be the first reporters Being come they have a short accurate speech the end whereof is to perswade David of their well doing and good intention in that fact to his advancement and the butt whereat they aime is hereby to acquire some high place and authority with the new King or else to get a rich reward from him The perswasions are from three places of Rhetorick à Jucundo honesto utili 1. The fact say they is pleasant because hereby we have brought unto thee the head of thine Enemy who sought they life and there is nothing more pleasant to naturall man than the destruction of his capitall Enemy 2. God hath wrought this by our hands and there is no purpose more honest then that which he hath ordained and is an actor in the same 3. By this work thou art fully avenged on the house of Saul so that there is none left of his seed save an impotent boy to quarrell with thee now in the Kingdome or seek after either thy life or honour which is to thy great profit and commodity David answereth and refuteth their speech by two arguments the former he taketh from the true cause of his preservation and replyeth in this manner It is not by your deed that my life is preserved or by the taking away of Ishboseth that so I am freed from trouble or adversity and henceforth may live secure But it is by Jehova who lives by whose favour I have been raised directed and protected in all my wayes hitherto upon whose promise I depend and not upon any indirect means to have my advancement or establishment wrought thereby and this argument is couched in words set down in form of an oath or solemne protestation The second argument is taken from an example or preparative by way of comparison of the lesse with the greater in this manner Ye suppose saith David to abuse my lenity because I spared Ioab in the Murther of Abner but I referre you to remember the execution which I used upon the Amalekite who slew Saul and brought me the first news with the royall ornaments hoping thereby to get a reward but I took and slew him how much more then are you worthy of death and of a greater punishment in respect your fact is much more odious considering all the circumstances thereof That man was an Amalekite but you are Israelites yea and of the same tribe with Ishboseth he slew Saul at his own desire but you by a devised treason have slain your Master unwittingly he helped him being wounded and to accelerate his death which was a benefit but you murdered your Lord sleeping on his bed being in his health he did the one in the field and persuit of battle but you the other in your Masters bed-chamber and in time of no other perill Saul also was an Enemy to the Amalekites but Ishboseth a just man and a loving Master to you therefore in all respects your fact being more odious your punishment must be proportionable and the greater Therefore accordingly he commandeth his servants to make the execution seeing the office of a publicke executioner was not then in use And in greater detestation of the fact and striking terrour in the hearts of others to do the like he addeth a form of severity in cutting off their hands and feet instruments of that cruelty and as a publicke spectacle for example to others he hangeth the same up in a open place In the mean while David honoureth the head of Ishboseth and burieth the same wherein he confirmeth three notable lessons marked before 1. That a Prince or noble man should not take pleasure or allow any vice 2. That nothing can be profitable which is not godly and honest And 3. that no man should insult or rejoyce in the misery or destruction of his very Enemy OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 8. THe nature of the wicked is ever to measure others by themselves and therefore because to flesh and blood it is a pleasant thing to be avenged on their Enemies therefore these two Murtherers think that even so here it will be unto David and that they both actours and first reporters thereof cannot misse both thanks and reward but they measure David by the wrong line and find him contrarywise disposed for as the naturall man knoweth not the things which are of God so neither the work of regeneration wrought in the Godly whereby they think they speak they do and desire farre otherwise then the Child of Adam and mass of blind corruption Witness the contrary dispositions of Jacob and Esau though Brethren and in this place of these Beerothites and Davids 2. The audacious impiety of these wicked Murtherers may be seen in that they will in this their vile practise make God to be a worker and chiefe actour of the deed like Simeon and Levi colouring their bloody fact with the vaile of Religion and imbarking divine mercy it selfe in participation with Divelish cruelty The most odious sin of any is
to cover the Divell with Gods garment and taint the sacred Majesty of holiness it selfe with the menstruous pollution of monstrous crimes And too commonly used now adaies when rebellion against Lawfull authority odious treason merciless massacres and such like are now obtruded for conscience sake and go currant under pretext of Religion Jesuiticall Doctrine teaching their emissaries and paricides that they do merite thereby 3. Vers 9. In Davids words of protestation We see that it is the godlies lot to be in adversity and under the cross as his whole life hitherto could have taught omitting other examples but there is their comfort which with a thankfull acknowledgment with this godly Prince here the godly ought ever to record as Job said of his redeemer so the Lord liveth who delivereth their souls out of all adversity and though their troubles be many yet he upholdeth them in them and from them in his good time giveth them freedome with Victory like Joseph who though the archers grieved him and shot at him and hated him yet his bow abode strong and the hands of his armes were strengthned by the hand of the mighty God of Jacob. 4. Vers 12. In Davids adjudging them to punishment farre contrary to their expectation we see how being blinded by Satan they are greatly disappointed of that they looked for even as our first parents being deceived by that crafty Serpent thinking to be like God became to be like the Divell let none therefore look for happy fruit of the forbidden Tree nor think by doing evill that good shall come of it which serveth greatly to correct those who by malefices and wickednesse pretend to attain to the favour of Princes and great men Let Balams blood Doegs infamy Achitophels despare Hamans hanging and these mens execution bear witnesse of the issue 5. We have likewise here in David the patterne of a good Magistrate and upright justitiar who hath an eye not to his own commodity in this ungodly fact but to just judgement and to that which ought to be done according to the Law shall I not therefore saith he require his blood at your hand and take you from the Earth not as usually now it is quo volunt reges vadunt leges plus valet favor in judice quam lex in codice Farre contrary to good Jehosaphaths admonition to the Judges of Israel 2 Chron. 19. Take heed what yee do and let the feare of the Lord be upon you for yee execute not the judgements of man but of the Lord and he will be with you in the cause and judgement 6. In practices we may perceive what is to be followed There are two here in this matter of blood the one is of David sparing of Ioab the other is of his justice towards the Amalekite These criminals though they presume on pardon by the one yet David followeth the other hid reason is the one agreed with God and a good Law the other disagreed Whereupon we observe in use of practices what should be followed and what should be eschewed by Magistrates decrees given according to equity good Law and conscience should onely ever be followed and the contrary rejected Let Judges then beware what decrees they give out that they prejudge not the course of upright justice but if they do let them not be ashamed to retrait the same and follow the best practice 7. David joyneth that form of severity by cutting of their hands and feet and hanging of them up for the terrour of others where we see what should be the end of punishment aimed at by the Magistrate even to prevent offences amongst the people and like a skillfull Phisitian making the Phlebotomy of one member a preservative to the whole body as they do in fevers plewrisies and the like 8. We see how the Lord maketh a requitall to be given to the wicked these men cruelly had deformed the dead body of their Master by cutting off his head and now justly are their bodies deformed by the cutting off their hands and feet This we see in Pharaoh as he killed the Israelites first borne males so are the first borne of all his land as he drowned their infants so is he and his Army And this retribution lege talionis did Adonibezek acknowledge justly to have been inflicted upon him when the thumbs of his hands and his feet were cut off Judg. 1. 7. Let men beware then how they sinne or cruelly behave themselves and think that there is a just God who will both require and requite this Job wisheth of himselfe Job 31. 9 10. And this Christ Jesus confirmeth For with what measure yee meete it shall be measured to you againe Math. 7. 2. and this also we see Revel 16. 6. II SAM Chap 5. from the 1. verse to the 6. and 1 CHRON. 11. IN the former three Chapters the estate of Israel being treated on from the death of Saul to the death of Ishboseth which history affirms and confirms that the house of Saul daily decayed and the house of David increased till at length in the death of Ishboseth and inability of Mephiboseth there remained no expectation of the recovery of the same againe Now in this Chapter we have in generall the history of Davids increase after the death of Abner and Ishboseth and the extream and desperate decay of the house of Saul This generall is confirmed by two particular arguments whereinto this Chapter is divided The one from the 1. Vers to the 6. containes the history of Davids inauguration by universall consent to be King over all Israel The second from the 6. Vers to the end containeth foure acts whereby David is renounced and made honourable in Israel done by him soon after his inauguration The first is the expugnation of Sion and Jerusalem proponed from the 6. Vers to the 11. The second is the amitie contracted between Hiram King of Tyrus and David from the 11. verse to the 13. The third is his marrying Wives assuming to him Concubines in Jerusalem by whom he procreated many Children from the 13. verse to the 17. The fourth is two notable Victories obtained against the Philistines treated on from the 17. verse to the last The inauguration of David written also 1 Chron. 11. Chap. from the 1. to the 10. verse and in the 12. from the 23. to the end of that Chap. it is amplified from all the circumstances of time Persons place persuasions and solemne form of the action The time is observed in the particle then that is after the death of Abner and Ishboseth and an end is now put thereby to the civill dissentious and jarres between the house of Saul and of David between Judah and Israel Others extend this to the first beginning of the promise and anointing of David made by Samuel 1 Sam. 10. Unto this time of the performance thereof which containeth at least the space of 20. years that after so long delay after so
that promise made to Abraham of the holy Land of his seed in whom all Nations should be blessed and multiplying thereof Of the whole possession of that land made to Israel in the desert deferred till the reigne of David of the reducing of the people out of Babylon after 70 yeares Davids inauguration here and as in our owne daies is commonly found in the experience of the estate of many good men and Princes 2. In the example of David patiently abiding the Lords leasure and in adversity neither doubting nor grudging neither using any unlawfull means we have the generall rule of the behaviour that the Godly should learne when they find themselves in the like condition in good causes which God hath promised to bless and in following of the same albeit the promise be slowly performed and the middes be troublesome let them not think that God hath not a care over them neither grudg as do impatient men neither doubt as do the weak in faith neither use unlawfull seconds as do the worldlings neither despaire as do the reprobate but following the examples of David Abraham Moses Joshua Daniel the Apostles and such assure themselves upon the conclusion of Christ that heaven and earth shall perish but one jot of Gods promise shall not alter and remember what Paul saith Rom. 8. 39. That nothing whatsoever is able to separate Gods chosen Children from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus and that all things in the end shall work together for their good who love him 3. Vers 1. The whole people are moved by Gods instinction to offer their voluntary obedience to David and albeit they had the word amongst them yet it was not followed because they wanted the inward perswader till now who is the holy Ghost so that the kingdome of David riseth not by violence and compulsion but by the inward perswasion of the holy Spirit whereupon we inferre in the generall literally and then mistically that the hearts of subjects to temporall princes are in the Lords hands to harden or mollifie them as he thinketh expedient to shew in them his favour or his wrath to their superiours and therefore if they will have obedience of their subjects let them subject their scepters to the obedience of God for he will honour them that honourt him and they that despise him shall be despised and therefore as the tiranny of these in authority is Gods punishment for the sinnes of inferiours so the rebellion of inferiours is a token of Gods ire against their Magistrates 4. As this is true in Davids temporall so it is true in Christs spirituall kingdome for it is not the externall hearing that moveth the heart albeit that thereby the incredulous be made inexcusable but it is the inward operation of the Holy Ghost which inwardly perswadeth and draweth the heart as the Loadstone doth the iron to the obedience of the Lords Word and so erecteth the kingdome of Christ into the soule of man No marvell then that the greatest part of the world remaine in infidelity and wickedness albeit Gods Word plentifully sounds in their eares because as a sound only there it evanisheth And as a feeling power descendeth not in the heart to take root downewards and bring forth fruit upwards as Christ therefore spoke of his body Iohn 6. 63. So it is the spirit which quickneth the Word without the same profiteth nothing 5. In this occasion and election or inauguration of David we inferre the generall rule of electing of Magistrates as well in regard of his qualities and forme of election as of the end wherefore he is to be elected As for his qualities 1. He must not be a stranger in birth much less in religion but must be of a conjunction naturall and spirituall with them whom he governeth otherwise there can be no sympathy nor symbolizing between ●hem 2. He must be able to governe which is called here to leade out and in Next the forme of his election should be by common and voluntary consent according to the constitution of the state and oath or obligation of right administration the rule whereof should be the Law of God and positive constitutions of the realme And last the end should be to feed the people caring that they be spiritually fed in the food of life and temporally that they be not spoiled or bereft of their meanes of the life corporall to be their guider protector father patron and to have a regard to all their necessities as the good pastour hath to his sheep and the Father to his family 6. By all this history it is evident that he is rather compelled and urged by the people to reigne over them then they are urged by him to give unto him the government for he saw that it was not so much honos as onus teaching hereby all those who are to undertake any function in Church or Commonwealth not to runne before they be sent nor to thrust themselves in at the window till they be lawfully let in at the doore and as they have the inward and effective calling of God fiting them for the work so to expect the outward and declarative calling of man suiting them to the work The Lord will therefore give wisdome and skill to Bezaleel and Aholiab but Moses must call them 7. Vers 3. The covenant of mutuall observance of duty which they make it is before the Lord who did heare not only the words of their league but did see the sincerity of their hearts therein and whom they acknowledged not only as a solemne witness to beare record but as a just judge and severe revenger of the breach So before this same Lord we ought to consider that both we and our secretest actions yea the very thoughts of our hearts are patent and as in his presence whose al-seeing eye beholdeth all things watchfully we ought to walk fearing to speak or do either wickedly or hypocritically seeing as Elisha said to Gehezi his heart goeth ever with us and he will make no other but our own wickedness to find us out 8. Vers 4. In the Chronology of Davids life and reigne as we see that the people get a great benefit from God in having a Prince given them of ripe age experience and ability to governe being 30 yeare old when he began to reigne where women and Children are given in Gods wrath so on the other part we see also that long life and a prosperous government in a Princes person is a great blessing likewise and old age as Salomon saith is a Crowne of Glory when it is found in the way of righteousness therefore honour thy Father and Mother saith the Lord that thy daies may be long in the Land which the Lord thy God hath given thee the long life is a reward and the contrary as a punishment is denounced against the house of Eli 1 Sam. 2. 32. II. SAM Chap. 5. from the 6. Verse to the 11. THe first
the King of Askelon taking the Sea they landed in an Island where they founded this City Tyrus out of which there came many colonies after who were the foundators of Carthage in Africke and so the Poet calls Dido Phaenicia a speaking of the origen of Carthage he writs urbs antiqua fuit Tyrii tenuere coloni It was situated betwixt Sidon and Caesarea and did abound with cedars and free stones whereof the holy Land did not so abound and therefore Hiram supplies David of his aboundance The substance of Hirams messengers probably has been a congratulation of Davids coming to the Kingdome and of his prospering and growing great therefore now he offers his amity to him which he did not before when he was in adversity according to the Worldly custome as the Poet sayes Si fueris flix multos numerabis amicos OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 11. HIram is here commended 1. For sending messengers to David to congratulate his prosperity a good disposition and not envious to rejoyce at the prosperity of the godly 2. He sends furniture and workmen for building his house in Sion whereof David stood in need in Canaan where we see 1. That God in his wise dispensation hath not given all things to every Land or Person but as the Apostles shew by the fabrike of the body there is a diversity of dispensation that none may contemne another but keep a seemly and necessary unity and corespondence together 2. Whereupon followes the right rule of dispensation which is each land and Person should communicate with others in the benefits of God the giver that he may behonoured and Gods people mutually may be conforted and mutuall charity entertained 3. In this we have 1. the mystery also of the increase of Christs Church typified by conjunction of the gentiles in building of the house of David or Church of Jesus Christs 2. In Hirams commendation we see that all such who contribute to he building of the Church and advancement of the Gospel their memory shall be flesh and fragrant to all ages like ointment poured out and Maria Magdalens anointing of Christ as we see in the register of Scripture whereas the remembrance of the wicked shall ●ot or stink in the records of posterity 4. David hath a good worke in hand therefore the Lord moves the heart of a very gentile to help to promote the same as he did also to the temple which may be an encouragement to do good and be forward in good courses and causes Pharaoh in Egypt to Ioseph Cyrus to Serubabell Ahasuerus to Nehemiah Darius to Esdras and Heathen Philosophers to defend the cause of God and of his servants as we read of Iustin Martyr and others converts 5. Vers 12. The godly advert the Lords gracious dealing and with a thankfull and humble heart acknowledge the same which wicked and worldlings do not 6. Princes and Magistrates should ever remember for what end next to Gods glory his Churches good they are advanced which is for the good of his people and not their own private good pleasure or preferment Vers 13. Followes how David in his great prosperity maries many Wives and Coucubines which did proceed from wordly wit which he chooses as a fit means to confirm his Kingdome and setle it in his posterity and yet this disagreed from Gods revealed will and institution of marriage and therefore did offend God as the sequels thereof did prove in the disagreement amongst his Sonnes in challening of his succession Absoloms rysing against him and defiling his Concubines which caused Davids divorce from them for notwithstanding of the diversity of names it is thought that all the Concubines were married Wives for in Israel whoredome was not permitted and therefore they make 〈◊〉 the difference that the Concubines were not of a like rank or authority in the family and the Concubines Children succeeded not to the heritage but ad bona mobilia as we see Genes 25. 5 6. The observatirn which we remarke on this is 1. How ready men are in prosperity to forget their due obedience to Gods will and commandements as we see also in the matter of Vriah 2. the cause of all errour in faith and manners is the declyning from Gods revealed will and the following of our own wit and fancy being the cause of all Popish superstition and will worship which ends in Idolatry therefore said our saviour concerning polygamy that from the beginning it was not so Vers 17. Followes the last part of the Chapter towit the warres betwixt David and the Philistines and his victories over them In which warres the Philistines are persuers and David the defender In the time of the civil warres between the house of David and Saul these common Enemies were spectators beholding the Jewes to wrake themselves by their own intestine dissentious● but now when they finde peace setled in Israel then they beginne to stir and persue David although they should rather entertained peace with him being now grown so potent but by the secret counsell of God they are drawn to their own destruction and blinded by Satan This warre is set forth from all the circumstances as time place persons occasion form of proceeding battles events and finall end 1. The time is when David looks for greatest quietnesse 2. The place is the valley of Rephaim which is a fruitfull part betwixt Jerusalem and Bethlehem towards the southwest 3. The persons are the Philistines Davids and the Jewes common Enemies 4. The cause is to withstand the rising of Davids Kingdome 5. The form of proceeding is diverse for David counsults and followes Gods command the Philistines depend upon their Idols which they carried with them as Vers 21. 6. The event is victory on Davids part and shame and destruction on the Philistines and the last the greatest from Gaba the Metropolitan of Benjamin to Gazar a City in the Territory of Ephraim so that Davids honour and fame is increased by his Enemies troubles moved against him OBSERVATIONS 1. WHen David is in greatest honour and looks for greatest quietnesse then his Enemies make him greatest inquietation where we see what the estate of Gods Church is when she is in greatest peace and flourishing then she is most exposed to the fury of Satan and her Enemies therefore in time of calm as Matth. 8. 24. prepare for a storm neither let us be discouraged when we see Satan with all his displayed forces rise up against the rising and flourishing of Religion but consider that this hath ever been the Churches lot and look to the joyfull issue of all Satans and his instruments opposition which shall be joyfull to his Church and confusion of his Enemies 2. We see here the envious nature of the wicked by the instigatiō of him that is called the envious man and envyed our first parents happy estate and so here his instruments envy David growing great and the prosperity of Gods people under him 3. The divers form that is
used by David and the Philistines in their proceeding David en●uiring of the Lord and the Philistines confiding in their multitude and idols which shewes that the godly in all their troubles or enterprises consult with God and his mouth and rely upon him whereas Idolaters confide in their Idols and have their recourse to creatures and rely on the arme of flesh as in 88. the Spanish did in their invincible Armado 4. Davids faith and obedience is seen herein that as God directs so he obeyes not fearing the greatnesse of the Philistines host and on the Lords word he builds his confidence as we should in like manner ours 5. Vers 20. Though David smote them yet he ascribes all the victory only to God saying The Lord hath broken out upon my Enemies as a breach of waters such is the humility of the Godly looking ever up to the Lords hand giving him the glory of all 6. The calling of the place Baal perazim or the breach of waters or plain of breaches shewes that the godly desire ever to keep in fresh memory the mercies and deliverances that hee gives unto them Psalm 103. 1 2. 7. Also we see as the Psalmist speaks though many be the troubles of the godly yet the Lord delivers them out of them all 8. Vers 21. Whereas there they left their images and David and his men burnt them we see 1. the vanity of idols that can not help in the day of distresse as in 88. and 2. We see what should be done with idols as the Lord hath commanded Deut. 7. 25. 9. Whereas Vers 22. the Philistines yet again came up agains● David we see 1. the restles and irreconciliable malice of the wicked driven on by Satan which they have against God and his Church 2. how blind they are in not seeing by their former experience that the hand of God was against them and made a breach upon them 3. We see that Satan leades men in wicked courses to their own destruction in the end 10. Vers 23. David will do nothing without direction from God and consulting with him this being the onely sure way to prosper which wee also should follow and therefore the Lord readily answers and directs him of new what he should do 11. Vers 24. The Lord not onely directs what David should do which he obeyes but it is said that the Lord should go out before him to smite the host of the Philistines which is a great comfort to the godly who follow Gods direction that his powerfull presence as their generall marches before them to prosper them and overcome their Enemies as it is or may be a terrour to their Enemies Josua 5. 14. 12. God fights for David both by ordinary and also extraordinary means as the shaking of the tops of the mulberry Trees whence we gather how impossible it is for man to fight against God and his Church seeing he is the Lord of hostes who hath so many armies and by the most contemptible of his creatures is able to overthrow the most mighty as we see in the plagues of Egypt the Rams hornes their sound against Jericho Gideons pitchers Herods lice and here a shaking of the tops of Trees A comfort as is said to such as fight under such a Captain and his colours as it is a terrour to his Enemies and such who rise up against him or against his Church II. SAM Chap. 6. from the 1 vers to the 17. and 1 CHRON. 13. IN this Chapter is set down after Davids establishment in his Kingdome and victories over his Enemies his Religious disposition and testimony of his thankfullnesse to God by fetching the Arke of God from Kiriath Iearim to his house now in Sion and the severall passages that fell out therein which History is likewise set down 1 Chron. 13. This generall argument of the reduction of the Ark from Kiriath Iearim house of Aminadab which all the time of Sauls raign had been neglected is divided in two heads The one is Davids care to establish it in his house at Sion the second is the impediment that hindred the same for a time with his prosecution of his godly intention afterward till he brought it to perfection But before we proceed it is necessary that we speak somewhat of this Arke it self what it was how it is called and what was the use and signification thereof As for the first it was a chest of Shittim or fine wood overlaid within and without with gold as we see Exod. 25. 10. c. The cover whereof was called the propitiatory whereon stood two Cherubims of Gold looking and streatching their wings one towards another and wherein was kept the two tables of the Law Aarons rod that flourished and the pot of Manna 2. It was called as vers 2. by the name of the Lord of hostes being onely a sign of his presence where we see by way of Sacramentall speeches the signe getting the name of the thing signified as circumcision is called the covenant and the Lamb the Passover as likewise Baptisme the Laver of regeneration and the bread in the Lords Supper Christs body c. 3. The use thereof was to represent Gods presence with his people and from between the Cherubims to declare his will and oracles 4. The signification thereof was 1. It was the keeper of the Tables and Testimony and so is Christs Church the keeper of the Scriptures to them the oracles of God being committed and the same being the Pillar of truth 2. In it was also the pot of Manna and Aarons●od ●od and so is the spiritual food of Doctrine Sacraments and true exercise of Discipline i● Christs Church 3. The propitiatory covered the Arke and s● doth Christ our propitiation his Church by protection an● covering of all their defects and infirmities 4. God manifested hi● presence with the Arke and so doth he ever with his Church 5. The Cherubims stood above it continually and so doth th● Angels as ministring Spirits attending the same 6. The oracle● of God were heard from this onely and so is his voyce to be heard in his true Church onely 7. it was moveable ever in the Wildernesse till at last it was setled in Solomons Temple and so is the Church restles in this World till it rest at last from its labours in Heaven Rev. 14. 13. Now the first beginning of this Religious work in reforming Religion and setling his Arke in Sion who had setled him in his Kingdome he takes it from a publicke assembly of 30000. of the chosen men of Israel with whom he deliberates and whom for the better and more solemne performance he associates like a prudent as well as a pious Prince But in the performance and bringing of the Arke from its place where it was the commandement of God is not remembred which was that the Levits should carry it on their shoulders but they imitate the example of the Philistines 1 Sam. 6. Who
his carnall lust 5. V. 2. When David is idle and at ease not fighting the battles of the Lord nor ministring justice to his people as Chap. 8. 15. Then Satan prevailes against him Which teaches every one to be diligently exercised in some lawfull and particular calling if they would eschew temptation and the snares of the Divell 6. David from the roof of his house beholds the beauty of Bathsheba washing herself and is insnared Which should teach us to watch over our senses that they be not like open doors to let in temptations to our hearts as we see by the eye and care Satan entred into the heart of Eve by the eye likewise he entred into the hearts of the Sons of God who saw the daughters of men and took of them to wives which brought the deluge on the first world so did temptation enter into the heart of Potiphars Wife into Achans heart and here into Davids Whereas Jobs practise was contrary Job 31. 1. 7. Bathsheba's washing herself in so publicke a place gives occasion of committing uncleannesse with her of the murther of her Husband Which should teach modesty and care to all Women to eschew the occasions of sin that they make not their beauty or curtizan dressings or any other unseemly behaviour to be snares to uncleannesse but that they be of a chast conversation coupled with fear as Peter speaks 1 Pet. 3. 2 3. And whose adorning may not be that outward of platting the hair of wearing of gold or of putting on of apparell but the hidden man of the heart in that which is not corruptible even the ornament of a meek quiet spirit which in the sight of God is of great price to make that discription of a vertuous woman Prov. 31. 10 c. A patterne to follow 8. V. 4. She yeilds to temptation wanting grace to resist so David commits adultery with her against the express known Law of God a haynous guiltines indeed which Iob describeth Cha. 31. 9 10 11. 12. And the bitter fruits thereof and as may be seen in that bloody war between Israel Benjamin Judg. 20. And what fornication produced Gen. 34. 25. 9. In this fact of Davids we see also the progresse of sin till it come to the highest perfection 1. He is idle then beholds a woman washing herself and lusts after her because of her beauty thereafter sends and brings her and at last he lies with her as is said hanc vidit visamque ci●pit potitunque cupita The like progresse we see also in Achons sacriledge whereby we should learn to resist the beginnings of sin to crush the Cockatrice in the egg and dash Babels babes against the stones choaking the seeds of sin in the bryer before it come to a ripe harvest of guiltinesse procure a harvest of wrath 10. It is said that she was purified from her uncleanesse which was Ceremoniall onely but in the mean while she was committing a morall uncleanesse to keep herself free from which she was not so carefull being herein like the Pharisees who cleansed the outside of the cup onely and were like painted tombs But had much hid uncleanesse and corruption within as there are likewise many now adayes who content with an outward formality and shew of Religion who otherwise deny the power thereof 11. Vers 8. David labours first with all subtilty to cover his sin from the eyes of the World but considers not what this would avail when the all seeing God did know the same and whom he should rather feare then man seeing he has power both of soul and body as our Saviour speaks to cast both in Hell fire Therefore let no man sin in secret and think all is well if it be concealed from men For either God discovers it here as he did Davids or else at the day of his account and judgment before men and Angels as he shewes Psal 50. 21. For there is nothing so bad sayes or saviour which shall not be revealed 12. Davids dissembled kindnesse to Vriah and his messe of meat that he gave her was but for a snare even as Michal Sauls Daughter for the same end was given to himself and as the Serpents dissembled kindnesse to Eve was to be a snare to her Even so the baits of unlawfull profite or pleasure which Satan holds out they are but snares to intrap men in guiltinesse 13. Vers 9. Vriah notwithstanding of the Kings direction guided by secret providence goes not down to his house Whereby we see that God disappoints the policy of the subtile as he did Pharaohs working wisely Exod. 1. 10. And Herodes Matth. 2. 16. For there is no Counsell nor wisdome against the Lord. 14. Vers 11. Good Vriah sheweth a godly and tender sympathy with the Lords people and Joab who with the Arke were lying in tents and in the open fields and therefore he would not take ease and daliance with his Wife Which should teach us the like sympathy with the Church of God in danger and distresse and to regard the affliction of Joseph Amos 6. 6. As we see was the practise of Nehemiah Daniel Esther and others farre contrary to yours who if themselves be well and at ease they care not for the distresse of Gods people and Church As also we see as Eccles 3. That there is a fit time for every thing and that even Lawfull and best actions are not ever seasonable therefore it is said That a word spoken in due season is like apples of gold with pictures of silver neither does this abandoning of Vriahs Lawfull pleasure more magnify his zeal for Gods Arke and people then it doth aggravate Davids sin and taking unlawfull pleasure 15. Whereas Vriah sayes to David that he would not do that thing commanded we see that the unlawfull commands of Princes are not to be obeyed as we see in the examples of Daniel and the three Children in the Midwives of Egypt and Sauls servants 1 Sam. 22. 17. 16. Vers 13. David deviseth another sinnefull subtilty and makes Vriah drunk that so he might have a minde to his Wife being inflamed with Wine wherein also he is again disappointed wherein David for covering one sin falls into many and which we see to be the practise of Satan by one sin to draw on men to another as from drunkennesse to draw to whoredome or bloodshed and from unjust anger to draw to murther as he did Cain and the like he does by covetousnesse As we see in Judas 17. By Vriahs being drunk we may see that the best man may sometimes fail and fall into sin and excesse as we see in Noah and Lot yea David here with Bathsheba but they make not a trade of sin and if they fall throw frailty they rise by grace and their faults are not registred as is said for imitation but to be fled not followed As also we see that David knew that Wine would be an
and so committed that vile act of incest against the lawes both of God and man and which the baptist reprehended in Herode and which the Apostle also 1 Cor. 5. condemned as deserving excommunication and giving over into the hands of Satan where we see that where Satan prevailes no arguments neither from reason equity dammage or the Word of God will prevaile but what God or man saies is despised as we see is said Chap. 12. 9. Yea God himself is contemned as vers 10. is shewne 18. It is said that Amnon forced her he being stronger then she Where we see when gifts of body or mind or any other benefit that God gives is abused to sinne against the giver from blessings or benefits they turne to curses and to their destruction in the end who are the abusers of them as we see in the strength of Sampson the wisdome of Achitophel he preferment of Judas the riches of the rich glutton and foole the beauty of Absolon and here the strength of Amnon 19. Vers 15. Then Amnon hated her exceedingly more then he loved her Which shewes the shortness of unlawfull pleasure enduring no longer then the sinfull act and for which like fooles they hazard and loose pleasures for evermore and next wherein the fulfilling of unlawfull lust and carnall sinfull pleasure as also all ill grounded love and friendship at last doth end when once the conscience is touched and awaked towit in a bitter hatred more then ever they loved sinne as we see 1 Cor. 7. 11. The same being as those locusts Rev. 9. 20. Herein also is a resemblance of true repentance when we are not only grieved for the committing of sinne but also hates the same exceedingly and puts it to the dore from us in the practise of our lives and bolts the dore upon it that it may never after returne to us nor we to it like the dog to the vomit or the sow to the puddle 21. Vers 20. In Absolons speech to Tamar saying that Amnon is her brother and not to regard that thing for which himselfe conceaved a deadly hatered against Amnon and resolved to kill him though he was his brother we see the pattern of a notable and dangerous dissembling hypocrite who spoke so faire extenuating the matter to Tamar and in that particular spoke neither good nor evill to Amnon but on the contrary thereafter invited him to a feast where he caused crually to murther him as hereafter also chap. 15. He played the cunning hypocrite as shall be shewne in their own place whereby he stole the hearts of the people from his father first and next would have stolen his Crowne 22. Vers 21. When David hard of these things he was very wroth Doubtless both at himselfe for his own simplicity and indulgence the sad fruit thereof he now saw as also at his sonne Amnon for his wicked fact of incest which proceeded from idleness pampering the flesh and carnall delight in the beauty of women the pests of Kings courts Wherein we see that oftimes the Child which the father loves most as David did Amnon as we see vers 36. and 37. becomes their greatest griefe through too much indulgence towards such As we see in the sonnes of Eli in Amnon here and Absolon hereafter 23. Where it is said that Absolon hated Amnon because he had forced his sister as this teaches us that such wrongs should not be done lest we incurre the hatred of those whose love rather we should seek to injoy So likewise this sheweth where sin and especially murther here beginnes towit at the heart as we see in Cain And therefore we should resist beginnings and watch over the heart with all watchfulness and diligence It being like the fort or citadell which if Satan once take in he will the more easily command all the rest II. SAM Chap. 13. from the 23. vers to the end FOllows now the second part of the Chapter in it the Tragicall history of Absolons murthering of Amnon for the forcing of his Sister Tamar and as an accomplishment of that threatning in part of Nathan against David for the killing of Vriah whose blood did crye like Abels for revenge In which History we have to consider 1. The haynousnesse of this sinne of fratricide and muther 2. The persons actors in this Tragedy 3. Their severall vices or errours 4. The manner of this murther and acting thereof And 5. the consequences First what a haynous sinne murther is we may see not onely in the prohibition thereof in Gods Word and the punishments that ensueth thereon as we may perceive in these wherewith Vriahs blood was avenged and Naboths the Lords Priests whom Saul caused to be killed c. the same making a man like to Satan who being a murtherer from the beginning and innocent blood crying ever to heaven till the same be avengend as we see in Abels and Rev. 6. 10. And debarring from the Kingdome of Heaven as we see Rev. 22. 15. But of all sorts of murther paricide and fratricide is the most haynous as we see that of Cains murthering of his Brother Abel and Abemelechs murthering of his Brethren Judg. 9. And therefore perishing thereafter shamefully and of Absolons murthering here of his Brother Amnon Secondly the persons actours in this Tragedy are 1. Absolon King Davids third Son procreat upon Maacha the Daughter of Talmai King of Geshur an infidell who is the principall actour deviser commander and avower of this cruell murther 2. David the King in his simplicity and indulgence to his Children albeit by circumvention yet he is the exposer by his authority of his Sonne Amnon to this murther 3. Amnon the Kings eldest Sonne incircumspectly and yet by Gods just judgement is he who is murthered 4. Absolons servants are the burreans and executers of this murther 5. The Kings other Sonnes were spectatours being invited and present at this bloody banquet 6. Jonadab acts the part of an inconstant courtier his friend Amnon now being slain implying Vers 32. That the fact was a just revenge of the forcing of Absolons Sister Tamar notwithstanding that he had plotted the way how it should be done and therefore now he turnes to Absolons part who was living the other being dead and gone 7. Gods part is not to be a bare spectatour in all this or a permitter onely but also a worker directing all these evills to a good end As he did all that which was done to Joseph by his Brethren towit to his own glory in the punishment of vice and fatherly correction of his servant David and so to performe what his word was by Nathan threatned Thirdly the vices of these actouns are 1. In Absolon we see hatred Grosse dissimulation implacable malice desire of revenge ambition to the next to the Crown treason effeminate cruelty commanding others to do what he durst not himself and want of all reverence or duty to his Father or his authority and herein
they may be admonished by the Example of Achitophell what they may turne to 6. Joab would not himselfe go to the King to suit for Absolons reduction fearing to offend and not being sure of the success And therefore he subtily employes and subornes this wise woman of Tekoah Where we see oftimes in Courtiers more policy than piety wit than grace And not only being expert in dissimulation themselves but also teaching others the same art as Joab doth here this woman of Tekoah 7. Vers 4. This woman gets ready ac●ess to the King faining her selfe to be a distressed widdow ● as also patient audience and a gracious answer A worthy example to be followed by Kings and inferiour Magistrates who should pity the distressed and give them the like access audience and answer the like whereof we see in Job Chap. 29. 12 13 14 15 16. verses 8. In her humble gesture also falling on her face to the ground and doing obeysance We see a good example of inferiours in reverencing and honouring their superiours as is commanded in the first precept of Gods law and has ever been practised by them who have any civility let be grace As also her saying help O King We see the end wherefore Kings are set over Gods people which is to help the distressed widdow and fatherless and all such who are oppressed any manner of way and to redress their injuries as that former place and practise of Job shewes Chap. 29. 9. Vers 8. 10 11. In King Davids pronouncing sentence not having heard the other party herein he failes in the office of a just judge who has two eares that he may heare both parties the accuser and accused and not having only heard the one to pronounce sentence against the other 10. David also herein erreth that he rashly and needlesly sweareth by the name of the Lord and so takes his name in vain against the third commandment In observing whereof they who are in primest places should give good example to inferiours 11. Vers 11. Where she saies Let the King remember the Lord thy God that thou would'st not suffer the avenger of blood to destroy any more We see that the remembrance of God and of his commandments who is the supream Judge of all men and has power both of soule and body is and ought to be before the eyes of all Judges and a most powerfull motive to duties and restraint from sinne 12. Vers 12. Where David after three severall answers and the last confirmed by an oath yet patiently heares this woman and speaks thus Say on We see a notable example of patient hearing to the full in so great a King and necessarily to be followed by inferiour Magistrates 13. Vers 13. and 16. This woman would perswade the King to bring back Absolom by reasoning a simili from that which was granted to her for her own sonne Whereas just judgment should be ruled not by examples but by lawes as it is said We live by lawes and not by examples 14. Vers 14. Where this woman saies We must needs dye and are as water spilt on the ground that cannot be gathered up againe We see the necessity of our mortall condition and that dust must returne to dust and no returning to this life againe This being the common condition of all flesh sooner or later 15. Where in like manner she saies That God is not the respecter of any person as Peter saies Act. 10. 34. And as is said Job 34. 19. He accepteth not the person of Princes nor regardeth the rich more then the poore for they all are the workes of his hands It should teach all alike to feare to sinne against God the righteous judge of the whole world and not to dreame of impunity at his hands because of their worldly grandure and of mens respecting their persons as we see in Pharaoh Saul Nebuchadnezzar Belshazzar Ahab Herod and others 16. Vers 15. Howsoever the people would have made her afraid to speak to the King because of his Majesty and greatness yet she shewes that she was encouraged to speak to him in this business because of his lenity and goodness These two being seemly when they concurre together in earthly Princes as they do in Christ our heavenly Prince who as he is called the great sheapherd Heb. 13. 20. So is he the good sheapherd Joh. 10. 11. Whose greatness ought not so much terrifie or his goodness should encourage and allure humble and sinfull suiters to come unto him as he invites them Matth. 11. 28. 17. Vers 17. and 20. This woman to attaine to her purpose useth gross flattery saying to David That he was an Angell of God to discerne good and bad and according as an Angell of God to know all things that are in the earth A vice wherewith usually Princes and great Men are tickled and abused to the puffing them up with pride The danger whereof we may see in Herod Act. 12. 22 23. And whereof therefore pious and prudent Princes and others should beware 18. Vers 19. Upon the Kings asking her if the hand of Joab was not in this she reveales plainly that he was her subor●er Which should teach men to beware to reveale secrets to women for saies the wise man they and Children can hardly conceale but whereof they are ignorant an example of the danger whereof we see in Sampsons revealing wherein his strength lay to Dalilah And the King Midas who revealed to his wife the deformity of his eares upon condition she should not disclose the same to no earthly creature therefore she digged a hole in the ground and would needs tell the same to the infernall spirits 19. Vers 21. David in the reduction of Absolon has inwardly a great debate betwixt two Counsellours The one flesh blood and affection moving him to pardon and reduce his sonne on the one part and the law of God of good conscience and duty of his office to punish him on the other part In which debate David yeilds to affection makes shipwrack of conscience and duty of his office Which example may be applyed by reprehension to the greatest part of the world who in the like deliberations follow flesh and blood pleasure or profit in sinning and neglect both God a good conscience and their own good in the end As we see in the first world In Jacobs sonnes their cruelty towards the Shechemites and their brother Joseph in Pharaoh regardding his utility and disobeying God to let the people of Israel go in David before in the matter of Vriah and here in the reduction of an unnaturall treacherous murtherer Absolon 20. David here is glad that Joab his counsellour consents to his affection in perverting justice and Joab is likewise glad that his master grants his unlawfull petition Whereupon we collect the infelicity of that estate where the Magistrate and his counsellours agree in iniqui●y As we see in Saul with Doeg Absolon with Architophel Achab with Jezabell
with his subjects We see that it is the very first precept and practise in the black art of sedition and rebellion to flatter the people and to accuse the Magistrate and lay upon him the foulest aspersions that they can devise that by blameing the present Government and calumniating boldly them who are in place they may first as Absolom did here steale the hearts of people from them and so make them naked and thereafter engage them to themselves and so work the point of their own preferment But as is said Prov. 12. 3. a man shall not be established by wickednesse 9. Vers 4. Absolom vaunts greatly and promises much of himself if he wee made Judge whereby howsoever he pretended great humility in his gesture yet he discovers great pride in his words for vice cannot hide it self long and in a most unseemly way he praises himself where Prov. 27. 2. It is said Let another man praise thee and not thine owne mouth a stranger and not thine own lips 10. Vers 7. Neer after 40. years that his Father had raigned Absolom hatches and brings forth this monstrous brood of rebellion in his Fathers old age and latter time of his raigne which as it shewes his great impatiency who could abide his fathers death and his ambitious thirst to raigne so it shewes a wicked disposition of a Son crossing his father most when most he should have comforted him 11. Absolon pretends that his going to Hebron was to pay there a religions vow to God and to serve him Where we see that the pretending of Religion has been ever made a cloake to palliatall treasonable and wicked designes like Satan who when he intends greatest mischiefe he transformes himselfe into an Angel of light and Antichrist to deceive Gods people the more subtilly is described Revel 13. 11. By that beast that is horned like the Lamb but speaks like the Dragon This also we may see in that cruell practise of Simeon and Levi against the Shechemites and here in Absoloms against his own Father so that the fouler fact is it seeks ever the fairest visard 12. Vers 10. Thirdly in the spies and trumpeters that were sent out by Absolom through all the tribes of Israel to proclaim him King We see that rebellion and wicked courses never wants wicked instruments to promote the same as we see not only in Scripturall examples but in later times whereof Sleidan in his Commentaries lib. 5. makes mention And how that Luther in his speech and answer to the desires of the commons in Germany who rose up in rebellion against their Princes speaking of certain preachers who stirred up and fomented that rebellion he saies Satanas enim sub Evangelii pretextu multos hoc tempore seditiosos plane sanguinarios excitavit doctores such as the Pope also sends forth that Jesuiticall brood who are those uncleane spirits like froggs which go forth unto the Kings of the earth to gather them to battle to the great day of the Lord Revel 16. 13 14. And which I would to God we had not such even in our times amongst us 13. In the 200 also that followed Absolom in the simplicity of their heart not knowing any thing of his conspiracy We see in former times and even now likewise how many follow that Roman Antichrist in like manner in the simplicity of their hearts not knowing the depth of Satan nor the mistery of iniquity and being only of the number and name of the beasts that is counted and called Roman Catholicks but not having the marke of the beast and the deep impression thereof as we see Revel 13. 17. 14. Lastly Vers 12. In Achitophels joyning with Absolom We see the image of a temporising Polititian and Courtier quitting his loyalty to his old Master David and now cleaving to him whom he thought to be the sunne rising and joyning his wit with Absoloms forces to promote an ill cause which brings him therefore at last to an ill end Also we see what trust can be in flesh and blood when not only Davids Counsellour turnes traitour but also he is not safe from one of his own loynes II. SAM from the 13. Verse to the 30. FOllowes now the other two parts of this Chapter The first whereof is Davids patience and course that he takes by flying whereby he declines the fury of his sonne Absolom And 2. Ittai the Gittite his constant and faithfull cleaving to David in his distress as Ruth did constantly cleave to Naomi and would not leave her Ruth 1. 16. and this is to the 24. vers The second is Davids prudence 1. In sending back Zadok with the Ark to Jerusalem and appointing his sonne and the sonne of Abiathar who went back with their fathers to be Davids intelligencers And this to the 31. vers 2. In sending likewise Hushai the Archite to insinuate himselfe into Absoloms favour and countermine the counsell of Achitophel and by the sonnes of Abiathar and Zadok to certifie him of every thing which he heard In prosecuting of the first part of Davids patience and flieing for the time We shall consider 1. If flieing in the time of persecution be lawfull or agreeable to Christian fortitude 2. The causes of Davids flieing at this time 3. The fact it selfe and circumstances thereof And 4. The company or associates of David herein For resolution then of the first we distinguish flieing in time of persecution in three kinds The first is desertion The second defection The third is retreat I call desertion a desperate abandoning and deserting of a good cause I call defection not only a desertion of a good cause but also the profession of the contrary And I call retreat a necessary giving place or ceding to violence or flieing therefore for time and place As for the first two sorts there is no question but they are unlawfull as well in causes civill as religious But as for the third 1. We have Christs precept to his disciples Matth. 10. If they persecute you in one Citie flie to another 2. We have the examples of Jacobs flieing to Laban from the furie of Esau Gen. 27. Moses flieing from Pharaoh to the land of Midian Exod. 2. David from Saul 1 Sam. 19. And here from Absolom Eliah from Ahab Joseph and Mary from Herod to Egypt with the Child Jesus and his disciples from one place to another as they were commanded Which must be done notwithstanding upon these cautions 1. That above all respect be had to the glory of God and good of his Church which must be preferred to our personall safety 2. That respect be had to our lawfull calling And 3. That in all these two extremities be eschewed to wit Temeritie and Timiditie that men neither expose themselves to unnecessary dangers neither yet for carnall feare refuse those that are necessary when God calls them thereto for witnessing of the truth The second is the causes which moved David at this time to flie which are 1.
despaires not for the extremities of true fortitude are presumptuous confidence and desperate diffidence the midest being moderate feare with hope the one whereof breeds tempting of God and diffidence is the mother of despaire Therefore let men in afflictions feare God as a punisher of sinne in justice but yet hope in God for mercy 4. Where David saies to his servants make speed to depart lest Absolom over take us suddenly and smite the Citie with the edge of the sword We see that it is the part of a prudent Prince or any other who are wise timely to fore see and prevent dangers before they come and neither to contemne appearances of what may befall or to sleep in careless security as those of Laish did Judg. 18. 27. As also to be carefull for the good and safety of their people 5. We see here also Davids condition contrary to Absoloms Davids being like a comedy with a sad and sorrowfull beginning but having a happy deliverance and joyfull ending whereas Absoloms condition is like a tragedy a pompous and joyfull beginning with joyfull acclamation as King and a great following but a tragicall and sorrowfull ending and even such is the case and condition of the Godly and the wicked as we see Psal 73. And in the example of Joseph David and Saul the rich glutton and Lazarus c. And here of David and Absolom therefore let no man judge of the Godly by their crosses and afflictions that they who are not in Gods favour are unhappy neither let any man Judge of Gods Works by their beginnings as the former examples may teach us but look to their end and as we may see Psal 126. 5 6. 6. David has a good cause but few followers in respect of those who followed Absolom with whom was the multitude of all Israel as vers 12. and 13. And yet in the end is victorious even so it fareth oftimes with good causes And in speciall with the cause of God which in the time especially of Antichrists prevailing as before in the time of Eliah under Ahab had few followers therefore compared unto two witnesses Revel 11. And as it was likewise when the Arrian heresie so prevailed that as Jeronie testifies the whole world groaned under the same and wondered that it was turned Arrian but in the end the truth has prevailed and in the end shall prevaile more and more when that mysticall whoore shall be made naked and her flesh eaten and she burnt with fire Revel 17. 16. and 18. 8. 7. Vers 16. Davids leaving of his ten Concubines to keep the house which was his only intention was not without divine and secret providence that by their defiling by Absolom the Lords Word by Nathan might be fulfilled Chap. 12. 11. and his polygamie punished So that many things falls out beyond mens intention or expectation for the punishment of sinne wherein we see not the finger of God and performance of his word till they come to pass 8. Vers 25. In Davids sending back the Priests and Levites with the Ark to Jerusalem we see the Jurisdiction that the civill Magistrate has over Church-men according to that Apostolicall precept Rom. 13. 1. To command them to do their office and punish them if they transgress either in negligence in their spirituall function or against the lawes of the republick as we see in Salomon punishing Abiathar for his conspiracy with Adoniah in 〈…〉 likewise in punishing the Arrians and herein David commanding the Priests and Levites to returne to Jerusalem to execute their office 9. David likewise for his preservation relyes only on the mercy of God and that God would work that work without the presence of the Ark albeit it was the externall sacrament and signe of Gods presence whereupon we ground this generall That grace or remission of sinnes comes from the free mercy of God in Christ and is not tyed to sacraments which as they ought not to be contemned being necessary as we say necessitate precepti but not that they are so necessary necessitate medii that grace and salvation should be thought to be tyed unto them 10. Vers 26. Where David saies Let the Lord do to me what seemeth good to him In him we see the duty of a Godly soule under any cross to submit humbly to the good will of God as our Saviour said Let this cup pass from me notwithstanding not my will be done but thine O Father and indeed this is the work of one truly humbled and mortified and is a presage of comfort and deliverance in the end 11. Vers 30. Likewise in Davids going bare-foot and weeping as he went we see his right apprehension that this proceeded from the hand of God correcting him for his former sins before whom therefore he humbles himselfe after this manner Which teaches us the right use of corrections that they serve us as a Pedagogy to repentance for our sinnes for there is no evill towit of punishment in the Citie which God does not and therefore as Hos 6. 1. We should turne to him who smites us and whose fatherly hand chastises us for our good as we see Heb. 12. 10. And therefore the Lord uses bloody tyrants as Nebuchadnezzar and the King of Assyria Herod and others as Absolom here but as rods in his hand to execute his judgments as he does sometimes insensible creatures against the wicked as water fire the aire the sea the earth and the basest creatures as lice and vermine wherewith he plagued Pharaoh and Herod 12. Vers 15. Having spoken and observed all the former in David we see next in the persons of his Servants a laudable and worthy example of fidelity to their Master and of obedience to his just commands with all promptitude being ready and offering to do what he should direct them The like we see in Abrahams servant Gen. 24. And which is injoyned to all others Ephes 5. 6. 13. Vers 21. In Ittai the Gittite and his 600. men that were strangers their constant resolution to abide with David and take part with him in life and death when his own Son had unnaturally rebelled against him and sought after both his life and estate We see and collect an argument of courage and comfort to the godly afflicted that when those who are neerest foresake them or become their Enemies the Lord will never forsake them but stirre up strangers to assist them and be their truest friends and comforters As we see in Joseph when he was hated and sold by his brethren in the friendship likewise of Achish King of Gath to David when he was persecuted by his own Father in Law Saul of Jethro likewise Prince of Midian to Moses when he was put in such danger by one of his own people of Ebedmelech the Ethiopians favour to Jeremie chap. 38. And of Ittai's assistance here of David in his greatest distresse and desertion For the Lord has the hearts of all men in his hands and if
he be our friend we shall not want friends 14. Vers 23. and 30. In the people and all the countries weeping with David We see the tender sympathy that we should have with those who are in distresse especially who neerly concerne us in any sort of relation as we are commanded Rom. 12. 15. to weep with them who weep and to rejoyce with them that rejoyce and a wo is denounced against such who rejoyce when the Church of God or the members thereof are in distresse or who regard not the affliction of Joseph Amos 6. 6. This want of sympathy shewing that they are not of the communion of Saints 15. Vers 24. In the Priests and Levites their loyall cleaving to David We see a worthy and imitable example for all Ecclesiasticall persons to follow in siding with a good cause laying aside all feare of danger and in being exemplar to all others by word and practise of love loyalty to their Prince and soveraigne Magistrate whom God sets over them II. SAM Chap. 15. from the 30. vers to the end HAving hitherto spoken of Davids patience and yeilding for the time to Absoloms fury and his followers as also of his prudence in part in sending back Zadok and Abiathar the Priests with the Arke and their two Sonnes to be intelligencers from Ierusalem unto him followes now to speak further both of his piety Vers 30. and 31. As also of his prudence in sending back Hushai the Archite a wise Counsellour of Davids to be an intelligencer in like manner and to insinuate himself to this end into the favour of Absolom and to defeat the Counsell of Achitophel From the 31. verse to the end First then Davids piety appears in these two actions 1. In his sorrowfull weeping for his sinnes that had procured this sharp correction which we see also exprest in the sixt Psalme and the other penitentialls The manner of which his humiliation is not onely set down by his weeping But by the other circumstances 1. of the place towit while he is going by the ascent of mount Olivet 2. By the manner of his going barefoot 3. With his head covered Which was the Jewish custome of mourners as we see Vers 32. and chap. 13. 12. 4. It is described from the universality of this weeping by the whole people that were with him so that it might have been called as Gen. 50. 11. A great mourning to the Israelites 2. His piety appears in his prayer which he made to God Vers 31 Upon the hearing that Achitophel was joyned with the conspirators that the Lord would turne his wicked counsell into foolishnes Next Davids prudence herein appears that with prayer he uses the means whereby Achitophels counsell may be disappointed and therefore when David was come to the top of the mount where he worshipped God being still exercised in piety and prayer and that Hushai the Archite Davids faithfull friend and Counsellour came to him in a sorrowfull and lamenting manner he sends him back to Jerusalem for three reasons 1. If he should passe on with him he should be no benefit but on the contrary a burden Vers 33. 2. By his returning and offering his service to Absolom he might do him better service by defeating and countermining the crafty Counsell of Achitophel 3. He might be a good Intelligencer unto him by revealing whatsoever he heard in Absoloms house to the Priests Zadok Abiathar who would send the same to David by their Sonnes that were with them Ahimaaz Zadoks Sonne and Jonathan Abiathars Sonne Vers 34 35. and 36. Which advise of Davids Hushai obeyes and returnes to Jerusalem Vers 37. OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 30. 31. DAvid in his great difficulties and distresse humbles himself greatly and has his recourse to God by prayer who onely could deliver him and overthrow the courses and counsells of his adversaries their plots though crafty and their cruell practises Which teaches us in all our distresses in like manner to have our recourse to God as he has commanded Psal 50. 15. And as we see was the practise of Jacob Gen. 32. Of Gods people in Egypt Exod. 3. 7. Of Moses at the red Sea of Gods people under the oppression of their Enemies Judg. 3. 9. and 15. and 4. 3. c. Of good Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32. 20. And of David here and frequently in the time of Saul As his Psalmes testifie and which was the armour that the Church under the Gospel in time of persecution used prayers and teares 2. In particular he prayes that the Lord would turn the counsell of Achitophel to foolishnes Where we see the great overruling power of God in all humane affaires that he not onely knowes the secretest counsells of men as we see 2 King 6. 9. But also that he can disappoint them and turne their wisest counsells into foolishnes As he did Pharaohs working wisely Hamans plot against his people and all Satans and his instruments their machinations against Christ and his Gospel as we see Psal 2. 4. For their is no wisdome nor counsell against the Lord. 3. Vers 34. David sends back Hushai the Archite by his wisdome to outwit and defeat the counsell of Achitophel as he did so that as he prayes to God to turne his counsell into foolishnesse so he uses also the ordinary means to have it so done Whereby we learn that with prayer to God for any good corporall or spirituall or avoyding any evill in either we should not neglect but use the ordinary means otherwise we but presume and tempt God against both that precept and practise of Christ Matth. 4. 7. And of the godly from time to time as we see Jacobs Gen. 33. 8. And Pauls Act. 27. 31. 4. Vers 35. David also sends back Hushai to Ierusalem to give him intelligence secretly what Absolom was doing or intending against him that he might prevent the same Whereby we see that intelligence is a necessary and laudable state policy being oftimes the very life of affaires and wherein for the good of his the godly and of his own people he has made his Prophets miraculously instrumentall as we see 2 King 6. 9. 5. Vers 37. At last Absoloms rebellion under colour of simulate piety comes to that hight that at last he enters into Ierusalem and possesses the holy City being herein a type of Antichrist who under the like colour of simulate piety and religious holinesse raised his rebellion against Christ to that hight by all deceivablenesse of unrighteousnesse in them that perish that he sitteth in the Temple of God as God 2 Thess 2. 4. Pretending to be Christs vicar or vicegerent in the Church and he usurps the power of God in deposing of Princes and disposing of their Kingdomes as also in dispensing with the Law of God against incestuous marriages and the like and many other wayes as I have shewn in my treatise of Antichrist Chap. 11. and 12. And who is said to sit in the Temple
be in every estate and at all times watchfull and humble 8. Vers 5. In this second action between Shimej and David we see 1. When King David came to Bahurim there to refresh himselfe and his men as we see vers 24. in place of rest which he looked for Behold new trouble a railing Shimej persecutes him and his followers both with tongue and hand So that we see as is said many are the troubles of the righteous and like Jobs messengers one comes on the back of another as wave followes wave and as Jacob was no sooner rid of Laban that followed him but he heares of Esau coming against him and in the mean time encounters with an Angel that wrestles with him No rest then to be expected here till after our dyeing in the Lord we settle in our heavenly Canaan Rev. 14. 13. 9. This Shimej being a man of the house of Saul his hid malice against David which lurked in the time of Davids prosperity breaks out now by cursing and casting stones at David in the time of his adversity which shewes not only what a wicked treasure and unclean ground the heart of man is which harboureth and preserveth what Satan shewes therein till occasion offer of manifestation as we see in Cain against Abell and Absolom against Amnon But likewise we see that adversity discovers who are true friends as we see those was to David who are mentioned Chap. 15. and Chap. 17. 27. and who are enemies as Shemej was here and Achitophel 10. Vers 6. Shimej curseth and casteth stones at David and so persecutes him both with tongue and hand Which sheweth what persecution in like manner the Godly may expect at the hands of the wicked as the Prophets found and our Saviour the Prince of Prophets and as he told his Apostles that they should find Matth. 5. 12. and Joh. 16. 33. And therefore not to think it strange nor to care for the scourge of their tongue or causeless cursing or reviling so that the Lord bless and that they have his approbation and of a good conscience 11. Vers 8. Where Shimej saies that God had returned upon him all the blood of the house of Saul and delivered the Kingdome to his sonne Absolom We see that malice so blinds the wicked that they most wrongfully censure the Lords doings in afflicting or trying his own and as if they were of Gods counsell they alledge that to be the cause of their sufferings which their malicious hearts suggests and is not the cause indeed and by the events they judge of the cause and justifies or condemnes the same 12. Where he saies that the Lord had delivered the Kingdome into Absoloms hand We see how foolish they are who measure Gods doings by their beginnings and do not attend the end as we see in the steps of Josephs fore prophesied advancement and here in Davids sad condition in respect of Absoloms great following and hopes which made Shimej say that the Kingdome was delivered to him The contrary whereof was shortly seen thereafter 13. Whereas in like manner he attributes to God the returning of the blood of Sauls house upon David and the delivering of the Kingdome into Absoloms hand We see the impudency of wicked men who dare ascribe to God what the wicked hearts of men doe hatch and their wicked hands for their wicked ends seek to performe and so to make him who is goodness it selfe and hates all iniquity to be not only accessary but author of sinne 14. Vers 9. Abishaj being incensed by this fact of Shimej out of a carnall humour offers to revenge this wrong done unto David Where we see that a good cause is not to be prosecuted by bad meanes as here by carnall revenge and cruelty which was also the disciples fault who would have had fire come downe from heaven upon the Samaritans for their not receiving of Christ but as the cause is good or bona so it should be prosecuted by good meanes or bene And as a revenge may be just so it should be seasonable 15. Vers 10. Abishaj looked onely to the stone as it were an instrument but David looked higher to the hand that was the supreame caster and chastiser of him as all the Godly do Gen. 50. 20. Job 1. 21. Which is the ground of their patience under sufferings and makes the same a pedagogie to leade them to repentance Therefore David gives way meekly rather to his own humiliation then to the punishment of another 16. Vers 11. Where David speaks of his own sonnes rising up against him to seek his life and therefore much more might Shimej do it We see that domestick crosses and those of nearest relation are the greatest and sharpest of any and such as may justly make men to be the more patient in lesser so that herein David gaines by it and it is the advantage of great crosses that they swallow up the lesser and though a weak heart faint with every addition of trouble yet the strong in grace do not so 17. Vers 12. Where David saies it may be that God would look on his affliction and requite good for Shimeis cursing that day We see Davids faith and confidence in the Lords goodness towards him even when he is many waies now sharply chastizing him so sharp is the eye of faith that through the darkest cloud it can perceive the light of the sun-shine of the Lords countenance which David ever did so highly esteeme Psal 4. 6. Also the bestowing of temporall favours go at peradventure it may be but eternall are infallible 18. Also we see here the truth of that Rom. 8. 28. That all things work together for the best to them who feare him even the cursing of a wicked Shimei as the hatered likewise of Josephs brethren and their selling of him did to him As likewise that the wicked are no more bent and ready to do evill to the Godly but God is more bent and ready to do them good as David shortly found by experience after this even as he projected 19. Vers 13. Shimei being thus spared he continueth and increaseth in his cursing and casting of stones abusing so Davids lenity and patience as the wicked do also the Lords which should leade them to repentance So that the wicked are like the Wasp that gathereth poyson out of that from which the Bee gathereth hony and make the worst use of best offices done unto them by Gods servants or others and because of impunity they continue in sinne and iniquity as all evill natures growe presumptuous upon forbearance whereas good are the contrary Mercy then has need to be guided with wisdome lest it prove cruell to it selfe II SAM Chap 16. from the 15. verse to the end FOllowes now Absoloms entry into Jerusalem the chiefe City of the Kingdome and Achitophel as chiefe Counsellour with him Where we have 1. Hushaj his coming to Absolom and his gratulatory salutation of him as King ingeminated to
15. 31. In the case of Achitophel we ought to be devout in prayer and to watch as our saviour exhorts us 10. We see also in Achitophel that policy and grace or piety lodge not ever under one roofe And Pharaoh may say Exod. 1. 10. Let us deal wisely with them While in the mean time he was dealing foolishly and wanting grace to season and sanctify his wisdome he was drawing on the plagues of God on himself and his Land and in end utter destruction II. SAM Chap. 17. from the 1. vers to the 15. IN this Chapter is set down 1. The consultation had by Absolom concerning the warre against David how it may be prosecuted and have a full Victory Till the 15. verse 2. The intelligence that is given to David hereof what use he makes thereof Till the 23. verse 3. Achitophels hanging of himself Vers 23. And the progresse of both armies towit Davids to Mahanaim and Absoloms to the Land of Giload to the 27. verse And last the furniture and provision for his Army which David got being in Mahanaim To the end of the Chapter First in the consultation had by Absolom we have 1. The Counsell of Achitophel offered by him to the 5. verse 2. The contrary Counsell of Hushai being required thereto from the 5. to the 14. vers 3. The approbation of Hushais Counsell by Absolom and all Israel and the rejecting of Achitophels vers 14. First then in the Counsell of Achitophel we have 1. The scope whereat it is directed vers 2. Towit the destruction of David and therefore as cruell as well as crafty counsell as Satan is both 2. To come to this desired end he assumes these sure mediums 1. Celerity and expedition a thing most necessary to be used for surprising of Enemies and obtaining a speedy Victory 3. Thus the end being resolved and the mean in generall being concluded he labours to prosecute the warre by arguments from facility and utility The facility is grounded upon the reasons taken from the circumstances of persons and times the first person is himself as he should say this matter is so facill that it needs not the presence of the King and that I appear not to be the mover of others to endanger themselves I offer my self to execute that which I Counsell though my profession be not military The second perswasion is from the small number which he craves for the enterprise in respect of Absoloms great Army The third reason is from the estate of the adversaries whom he affirmes to be weary and weak The fourth is from the time of his invasion and surprisall the night time when all are at rest Next his arguments from utility are 1. By this speedy and unexpected invasion the Enemy shall be put to flight and every one retire to his own home leaving David destitute 2. David being so deserted shall be easily killed who is the head of the faction 3. Hereby the whole people shal be reduced to Absoloms obedience and so peace which should be the end of all warre shall be established all which sayings at first pleased Absolom well and all the elders of Israel Next followes the contrary Counsell of Hushai who being interrogated by Gods providence by Absolom he layes down the contrary end in minde and contrary mean to attain thereto his end being Davids preservation and the mean being delay which to David being weary was very advantagious for perswading Absolom to which delay and taking his Counsell which he was to give he uses a very artificiall oration wherein 1. he refutes the Counsell of Achitophel And 2. confirmes his own resolution before which refutation he uses a preface wherein he shewes that he denyes not but Achitophels Counsell is good but not at this time and then shewes that this enterprise is not so easy as Achitophel affirmed it to be but on the contrary dangerous by the reasons following The first whereof is taken from the known and confessed fortitude of David 2. From Davids Army who were so inraged like beares robbed of their whelps 3. From Davids experience that David had in the warres knowing all the Stratagems thereof and so being not onely valorous but wise the two properties of a complaet Generall 4. From Davids subtilty that he would not be found in the night with the Army but lurk in some secret place as he had sometimes done when Saul did persecute him 5. From the perill of the first overthrow of so few whom Achitophel would lead which commonly is interpreted to be the presage of future and the losse of the whole cause and whereby it shall come to passe that the hearts of the most valiant like Lyons who are with Absolom when they hear thereof shall melt for all Israel knowes that David and all who follow him are valiant men Unto which refutation of Achitophels Counsell he subjoynes his own 1. That Absolom commit not the leading of the Army to any Lieutenant the matter being of so great concernment as also people being the more encouraged by the presence of their Prince as likewise it being fitter that the Prince himself have the honour of the Victory which was a powerfull argument to a young ambitious Prince 2. He Counsells Absolom to go not with a part of the Army but with all the preparation he can and therefore that all Israel be assembled from Dan to Beersheba wherein he uses a● Hyperbole from the sand of the Sea And drawes the matter to a delay 3. He reasons from the event which should be a totall overthrow of David and his Army if they were found in the field and if he should get him to a City that great multitude should as it were with cordes drawit into a River and not leave a stone thereof Last of all followes Absoloms and all Israels approbation of Hushais Counsell as better than Achitophels the reason wherof is subjoyned For the Lord had appointed to defeat the good Counsell of Achitophel to the intent that the Lord might bring evill upon Absolom Achitophels Counsell here being called good the Spirit of God dimitting himself to the improper speaking of men who are accustomed to call that good which is profitable for the person end for which it is intended and which was better nor the Counsell of Hushai for the cause of Absolom The Lords purpose herein being that the deserved evill of punishment in Gods justice might be brought on Absolom OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 1. WIt and experience had taught Achitophel that in conjurations and hostile invasions celerity uses to produce most successefull events and therefore he gives Counsell to use speed whereas delay or protracting of time gives advantage to the adverse party whereby we learne that it is wisdome in such cases and all others to consider the due proportion between actions and the fit times of their performance 2. He offers his service to Absolom not onely as a Counsellour but as a generall his malice against David
of the City To which their disswasion David assents knowing it to be out of love towards him and the Commonwealth And so standing in the gate by which the Army was to march forth in order he gives command to the three Generalls in audience of the people to deal gently with the young man Absolom Whereof some gives these reasons 1. Because of his naturall affection which moved him to pity his own flesh though rebellious 1. Because he looked not so much on the instrument or rod as on his own sinnes of homicide and adultery that had procured this his correction by his own sonne as the Lord had threatned And 3. Because he looked on the double danger of soul and body wherein Absolom now stood and therefore labours for the preservation of his body that thereafter he might be induced to repentance and so his soule might be saved Followes next the battle it selfe and circumstances thereof and 1. The place the wood of Ephraim in the territory of Gilead where Ephraim fought with Jephta after the defeat of the Ammonites Judg. 12. 2. The number of those who were slain on Absoloms side in battle towit 20000. besides those that were devoured by the wood and in flying 3. The manner of Absoloms own death who flying through the wood on his Mule whereon he rid and the Mule going under the thick boughes of a great Oke his head caught hold of the oake and he was taken up between heaven and earth and the Mule that was under him went away Which thing when one of Davids Army had seen he told Joab who challenged him that he had not killed him and he would have rewarded him with ten shekells of silver and a girdle which the discoverer shew he would not doe though he might have a thousand shekells 1. Because he was the Kings sonne 2. Because of the Kings command that none should touch him 3. Because the fact had been capitall 4. Because it could not be hid from the King if he had done it And 5. Because Joab himselfe would have been his accuser and enemy Whereupon followed the killing of Absolom by the hand of Joab himselfe while he was hanging in the oake alive by thrusting him through the heart with three darts and by his Armour bearers their smiting of him and killing him Whereupon ensued Joabs sounding a retreat from following of the people that had been with Absolom And Absoloms buriall in a great pit in the wood whereon was laid a great heap of stones notwithstanding that he had in his life time provided and built a sumptuous pillar or buriall place for himselfe in the Kings dale to keep his name in remembrance seeing he had no sonnes and which he called after himselfe Absoloms place One doubt only rests to be solved how it is said that he had no sonnes seeing chap. 14. 27. It is said that he had three sonnes and a daughter to which it is answered that those were dead before the erecting of that pillar or tombe God so ordering that such a poysonous stock should not prosper to have a posterity of such like branches OBSERVATIONS 1. IN David we see an accumulation of most worthy parts requisite in a good Prince to wit prudence patience authority courage hearkning to good Counsell and love to his people and above all piety and Godlinesse to whom therefore God gives good successe a fit pattern to all Princes to follow 2. Vers 2. and 3. We see here in Davids offering to go with his Army in person and in their disswading a loving contest between a Godly Prince and a loyall and a loving subject every one striveing to overcome another by good offices David offering his paines yea the very hazard of his Person blood and life for the common welfare and his subjects highly valuing his safety and contenting for the same to hazard their lives and fortunes O happy state then and Kingdome or other society whatsoever Ecclesiasticall Politicke or Economicall where this harmony is found as on the contrary unhappy is their condition where the contrary contention is seen 3. Vers 5. David desireth his Generalls to deal gentle with the young man Absolom what means this too great indulgence Deal gently with a traitour but of all traitours with a Sonne and of all Sonnes with a wicked incestuous and bloody fratricide and an intending pariside Where we see ever in holiest parents as Eli was nature may be guilty of an injurious tendernesse and sinnefull indulgence Or whether shall we not rather think that this was done in type of that free and matchles love and mercy of that Son of David the King of Kings and redeemer of Israel who prayed for his murtherers and said when they were killing him Father forgive them for they know not what they do And though we be rebellious Sonnes yet still also is he so compassionate towards us that he intercedeth for us 4. David speaks so concerning Absolom as confident of the victory on his side though in respect of the contrary Army he was but a few Which shewes Davids faith and confidence in God who is able to save by a few as well as by many as Gideons 300. proveth and that he was not afraid of the arme of flesh having the arme of the Almighty Lord of hostes to be for him 5. Vers 7. The sword devoures 20000. of Absoloms Army the wood more than the sword which shewes how numerous an Army Absolom had how strong an arme of flesh and how universall this rebellion was Wherey we observe how easely a fickle multitude may be transported to the wrong side and what vertue or merits of a Prince can assure the hearts of the vulgar when so gracious a King finds so many rebells 6. We see also how God takes part as the Lord of hostes with a just cause and the very wood and insensible creatures conspire with the swords of Davids Army and lets Israel feel what it is to take part with an unnaturall and traiterous usurper Let no people therefore look to prosper alway in rebellion but in end look for divine revenge 7. Vers 9. Absolom in his flying through the wood on his mule his head takes hold of the thick boughes of a great oak whereby he hangs between Heaven and Earth as hated of both for his unnaturall rebellion and other his wickednesse as if God meant to prescribe this punishment for traitours therefore Absolom Achitophel and Judas dye all three one death and so let all such perish who are guilty of the like treachery against the Lords anointed or the Lawfull supreame Magistrate 8. An oak serves to be both gallowes and hangman to this vile traitour and the very mule that he rode upon leaves him to divine revenge who had left filiall duty to his Father and loyalty to his soveraigne if there were no others to persue and punish wickednesse God will make the very sensles creatures and brute beasts to avenge the same
might not goe with the King for the forenamed reasons he makes offer of his Sonne Chimham to go with him he to do to him what he thought good Which offer David doth kindely accept and promiseth that whatsoever he would ask of him he would do for him And so having blessed Barzillai he dismisses him home again and so goes on in his journey to Gilgall a famous place in the territory of Benjamin neer to Jericho accompained with Chimham the tribe of Judah and the halfe of the people of Israel The second action is between the ten tribes of Israel and the tribe of Judah the men of Israel complaining to David of the men of Judah That they had stolen him away and brought him and his houshold and men over Iordan and so despised them whose advice should been first had in bringing back their King To whom the men of Iudah answer that they were first in that action 1. Because the King was neer of kinne unto him being of that tribe and therefore collecting that they where causesly angry at them for that cause 2. They shew that it was not for any benefit or reward that they expected or had for this their being first in his conduct To whom these of Israell reply especially concerning that right by kindred to David which the men of Judah pretended affirming that their right to him was greater as having ten parts in him because they were ten tribes whereas they were but one whereby arises such a contention between them in bitter speeches that it occasioned the rebellion of Sheba in the next Chapter and in which contention it is said That the words of the men of Judah were fiercer then the men of Israell OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 33. IN Davids kinde remembrance of Barzillais favour and bounty to him when he was in distresse and in the gracious offer that he now makes unto him for the same We see the praise worthy vertue of gratitude commendable in all persons as the contrary vice is odious and especially in Princes for which we see the thenth leper who was healed by Christ and came back to give him thanks so commended as likewise Pharaoh his gratitude to Joseph in giving Goshen to his Father and friends to whom his successor proved so ungratefull thereafter and was plagued in like manner Davids gratitude to the King of Ammon ungrately requited which was the cause of the Ammonites utter ruine likewise Eliahs gratitude to the Widdow of Sareptah Elisha's to the Woman of Shunem Davids also to the posterity of Jonathan and our Saviours promise That a cup of cold water shall not be given to one of his which shall want its reward as he also shewes at the last day how it shall be said When I was hungry ye fed me not c. Inherit therefore the Kingdome prepared for you before the beginning of the World Which should teach us to be thankfull both to God as we see Psal 103. 2. And to men who have deserved well of us 2. Barzillai is said to have been a very rich and great man and in Davids distresse both helps and hazards with him Whereby we observe the right use of riches and a great estate towit when occasion calls for it both to help and hazard in a good cause wherein either Church or Commonwealth or both have their interest and not to mispend upon pride ryot or superfluities farre lesse to use their greatnesse or bestow their goods for persecuting Gods Church and opposing his cause As we see that Roman Antichrist and his followers which are the hornes of the beast doe Revel 17 12 13. 3. Vers 34. Barzillai speaks of the shortnesse of his life and Vers 37. Of his death and buriall teaching all thereby especially the aged in the midst of their greatnesse and prosperity to be mindefull ever of these things which made Joseph of Arimathea to have his tombe into his garden which made Moses also to teach Gods people Psal 90. 12. to pray Teach us Lord to number our dayes that we may apply our hearts unto Wisdome This was Jobs waiting Job 14. 14. All the dayes of his appointed time till his change should come and which like practice counting every day the day of our death account and entring into eternity if it were ours daily it would further our mortification of sinne and prevent falling therein where as while men with the rich fool being in health and strength promised to themselves long life they lull their souls in security put off repentance and amendement of life and are snatcht away by death unawares and presented to judgement 4. This remembrance of the shortnesse of his life of death and buriall weanes Barzillai from regarding worldly or court delights and from high offered promotion so that he becomes dead to the World in affection before he be dead in the World in condition Which in like manner should teach us how to wean our hearts from regarding any worldly pleasures or profit honour or advancement and specially not to hunt after the same by unlawfull meanes as many do by seriously considering how short momentary an a time we have to enjoy the same how uncertain also the honour of death is and that we must leave all when we go to the grave and are presented to judgment 5. V. 41. When David had made an end of the troubles raised by Absoloms rebellion by the victory which he had obtained over him now followes a new trouble by the division dissention that fell out between the tribe of Judah the other ten tribes of Israel So that we see as is said of old age Eccl. 12. 3. That the cloud returne after raine so in this life the Godly may expect trouble after trouble as one wave followeth in the neck of another or as Jobs messengers of evill newes came one after another 6. We see here also Satans pollicy to hinder a good work which was an unanimous and peaceable reduction of David by raising a dissention between the tribes of Judah and Israel who were of one stock of one religion under one King and fellow members of one Commonwealth And which hath ever been Satans practise since he made the first division between God and our first parents as we see in that attempt of dissention between Abraham and Lot Cain and Abell Saul and David Korah and Moses Israel and the Ephramites Judg. 12. Israel and the Benjamites Judg. 21. Israel and Judah here and Paul and Barnabas Act. 15. ●9 And in the Schismes that he hath ever stirred up in the Christian Church and still does to hinder the Gospell and make the greater way to the propagating of his damnable errours 7. We see here likewise in this dissention from whence it and all other the like proceeds to wit from envy jealousy and pride for precedence and preheminence as Salomon speaketh saying by pride cometh contention which was the cause of of Joabs killing of Abner and thereafter
it pleases the Lord to bestow the same 28. Vers 18. She convinceth Joab first by authority of Scripture Deut. 20. 10. That peace should be offered to any City first before the invasion thereof Whereby we see that even then Gods people were accustomed with Scripture and the knowledge thereof against the Popish prohibition of Laiks to read the same and which 2 Tim. 3. 15. Sheweth to be injurious as also that Scripture should be the warrant and rule of all our actions from which whatsoever disagreeth should be eschewed and whatsoever agreeth with the same in matters intellectuall or in matters morall and practicall should be followed and obeyed And as this was the Law of God and his rule prescribed to others so is it his owne gracious practise towards all rebellious sinners he first offers peace and reconciliation to them by the Ministry of his Gospell in treating and beseeching them to be reconciled to him before ever he take any other course of punishing or chastiseing them Where also we see what should be the scope and end of warre towit peace and procurement thereof which if it have any other end it turn's to publicke murther 29. Vers 19. She shewes in her own person to Ioab what was the disposition of all her fellow Citizens towit that they were peaceable and faithfull or loyall two good properties and vertues in Citizens and in all other subjects and contrary to the disposition of seditions unquiet and firy spirited persons who like Salamanders delight in the fire and flame of contention and love ever as we say to fish in drumly or muddy waters 30. She also calles the City of Abell a mother in Israell because of the birth and breeding of the inhabitants therein by analogy whereof all Citizens and others are taught what duty they owe to their native Cities and country and compatriots for the which Moses and Paul were so zealous and for the good whereof the very heathen feared not to yield up their lives 31. She desires also Ioab not to devoure or swallow up by the sword the Lords inheritance it being a City of that holy Land which the Lord so owned Whereupon we note in generall the right use of the sword to be as Paul describes it Rom. 13. To defend the innocent and to punish onely the nocent and not to do the contrary which should be an admonition to all Magistrates and those who have power of the sword 32. Vers 20. Ioab in great vehemency he deprecates that imputation of any intention he had to destroy or waste that City though having harbored a traitour providing he onely were delivered a worthy and imitable example of a wise and valorous generall as Abraham said Gen. 18. 23. Concerning the Lord That he would not destroy the righteous with the wicked How fearfull then is their condition and what shall be their answer in the day of their account Who upon the quarrell onely of their own ambition have not spared to waste whole tribes of the Israell of God and as may be seen in the bloody warres of Nation against Nation at this very day 33. Vers 22. According to this wise Womans capitulation and conclusion with Ioab Sheba's head is cut off and cast over the wall unto him and that most justly loses he his head and life who had conspired against the head of his people and to take his life from him and no lesse wisely by the perswasion of this wise Woman does the inhabitants of this City save their own heads by delivering of his head to Ioab Thus does Sheba's pride and rebellion bring him in the end in the very place where he placed his security to a violent and a shamefull end the same or the like whereof may all such Sheba's expect who rise up and rebell against lawfull and established authority Spiritually also the case is ours every mans breast is a City inclosed every sinne is a traitour that lurks within these walls God calls to us for Sheba's hed to cast it out as Jon●s was in the Sea and to kill the rebell by mortification he having no quarrel to our person but for our sinne if we be wise then we will hearken to this his desires if we love the life of our own souls and then we cannot be more willing to part with our sinne then our mercyfull God is to withdraw his judgments else if we love the head of his traitour better nor the life of our own soul we shall justly perish for ever 34. Then Joab returnes with Victory and hopes by Sheba's head to pay the price of Amasa's blood David hates the murther entertaines the man delayes the revenge Ioab was so great and popular that it was no marvell that David sayes The Sonnes of Zerviah are to hard for me and that it was not so easy or safe to punish him Greatest powers then we see have not all contentments but at sometimes and in some things as we say must have patience perforce and must connive at that which otherwise they a●horre 35. Vers 23. David now being setled in peace takes care of the right administration of all the affaires of his Kingdome and therefore appoints severall persons both in Church and state military civill for their severall offices A worthy commendable example to all Kings and supreame Magistrates in time of peace not to give themselves onely to their pleasures carnall delight or case but to appoint fit and worthy men to governe under them and themselves to have the supreame and speciall care of right administration II. SAM Chap. 21. THis Chapter is branched forth in two parts the first is the History of the three years famine that was upon the Land to the 15. verse And the second is the foure Victories which David and his servants purchased against the Philistims again the History of the famine is reduced to these three particulars 1. The famine it self and deprehension of the cause thereof From the 1. verse to the third 2. The remedy that is sought and adhibited 3. The ceasing of the plague there upon and the buriall of Saul and Jonathans bones and the seven Sonnes of Saul whom the Gibeonites hanged 1. As for the famine it self it is one of the three sore plagues with which the Lord usually threatned his people for their sinnes the famine the sword and the Pestilence Lev. 26. 16. Deut. 28. 23. and 2 Sam. 24. 13. And it is twofold towit a famine of the staff of bread wherewith our bodies are fed and this naturall life which is here meant and a famine of the word of God which is the spirituall bread wherewith our souls are fed and the spirituall life thereof Amos 8. 11. And which is the greatest plague of any With all these three fornamed plagues David and his Land was corrected 1. By the sword of rebellion lately 2. Now by three years famine and 3. chap. 24. By the plague of Pestilence for his numbring the
are not a ware nor think thereof our hard measures then are not hid from him though his returnes are oftimes hid from us it is sufficient that God can be no more neglective then ignorant of our wrongs 19. Vers 6. For Sauls offence and sinne seaven of his sonnes are delivered to be hanged up It is then an ill inheritance that wicked parents leave to their Children to wit to be punished for their offences as is said That the Lord will visit the sinnes of the Fathers on the Children to the third and fourth generation Neither is a numerous ofspring of Children ever a blessing or to be gloried in seeing as Jerubaall's 69 sonnes were all slaine by their own brother Abimelech upon one stone and Sauls seaven sonnes here were hanged on a gallowes so to the great griefe of their Parents if they be alive or to their friends if they be dead they may come to woefull and violent ends though never so numerous 20. Vers 7. Alwaies David spared Mephibosheth Jonathans sonne because of the Lords oath that was between them Which shewes that the Godly make conscience of all their words and Actions and of their fidelity and promises even to the dead If Davids love also to Jonathan preserves Mephibosheth how much more then shall the Father of mercies preserve and do good to the Children of the Faithfull for the covenant made with their Parents in Christ in whom he is well pleased 21. Vers 9. Sauls seaven sonnes are hanged on a hill before the Lord. The acts of justice then as they are intended for example and restraint so they should be done in that eminency of place that may make others to be both instructed or forewarned and terrified then unwarrantable courses of private revenge will seek to hide their heads in secrecy but the beautifull face of justice both affects the light and becomes it 22. Vers 14. After all this it is said that God was intreated for the land Which shewes unto us that for the removing of this plague not only satisfaction was given to the Gibeonites but likewise earnest prayer and intreaty was used towards God As we see the like Chap. 24. 17. And which should be the practice of all people that are under any correction generall or particular 23 This shewes in like manner that happy is that land where sinne is sharply punished and justice impartially executed this being a way both to hold off judgments off of a land if imminent as also to remove them if they be incumbent 24. Likewise we see that plagues or punishments as they come from God in justice so upon repentance and humble intreaty and supplication they are taken off by God in mercy as is said Hosea 6. 1. He has torne and he will heale us he hath smitten and he will bind us up being like the centurions servants to whom if he said come they come and if he said go they went 25. Vers 10. In Rizpah's kindness and care not only to her own sonnes but to all the rest of Sauls sonnes that were hanged up by preserving them from being destroyed by birds or beast We see a good example of naturall affection to her own sonnes and of pity and piety also towards the rest though dead and ignominiously hanged from whom she could expect no thanks nor reward 26. Vers 12. In David likewise his following of her example towards the dead though his enemies by bringing the bones of Saul and Jonathan from Jabesh Gilead and burying them in Sauls City of Benjamin and in the buriall place of his Father Kish as also in burying Sauls seaven sonnes that were hanged We see a worthy part in David who hearing what Rizpah had done disdaines not to follow her example though a woman in that which was good and commendable As it should be the like duty in all to imitate vertue and piety in any person whatsoever 27. Vers 15. It is said that the Philistims had yet warre againe with Israell Which shewes unto us the restless and indefatigable malice and enmity of the wicked against the Godly and what shall be the condition of Christs Church to the end of the world under the raigne of the sonne of David which may be confirmed by many examples of all ages In the houses of Abraham Isaac and Jacob in Egypt between Pharaoh and Gods people in the desert between Israell and Amalek c. In the daies of the Judges between Israell and their many enemies between David here and the Philistims between the Christian Church and the heathen Emperours the Orthodox and the Arrians and now between Christians and Mahomet and true professours and Romanists Whereupon let us learne two things 1. To prepare for the battle And 2. not to love the worse the truth and professours thereof because it is opposed by many enemies 28. It is said That in the first battle with the Philistims David waxed faint and was in great danger of his life by a gyant till he was delivered by his Captaine Abishai who slew him Which shewes unto us the infirmity of old age as we see Eccl. 12. wherein David was now his naturall strength being decayed and which every aged person should beseech God to recompence with the spirituall strength of grace In our spirituall battle likewise with our spirituall enemies oftimes we faint and are in great danger being invaded by the great gyant Satan but he shall not prevaile because that he who is the Captaine of the host of the Lord Josh 5. 14. is neer and ready to deliver us who hath overcome Satan and freed us from his danger as David did the lamb out of the Lyons mouth 29. Vers 17. In the peoples swearing that David should no more go out in battle with them We see the loyall and loving care that they have of the preservation of his life with the hazard of their own notwithstanding Which is and should be to all loving subjects an example of worthy imitation seeing God has made such to be our heads therefore we should be so farre from conspiring with Absoloms or Sheba's against their lives that on the contrary as in the naturall body the arms and hands will ward any blow intended against the head so should we any hurt that is intended against them whom God has placed in supreame Authority over us 30. The men of David decree and sweare this least he should by endangering himselfe quench the light of Israell Which David was both for wisdome and policy as also for religion and piety as Godly pastours are likewise called the light of the world Matth. 5. Both in respect of sound doctrine as also of a holy conversation Where we observe what reverend and good estimation people should have both of good Princes and Godly Pastours As we see here of Davids men in the one and the Galatians in the other Gal. 4. 14. And that both Princes and Pastours should strive to be lights before their people that as
what David spake he did not the same without a warrant from God who spake by him and as vers 3. who spake to him Teaching us thereby in like manner that we should have a warrant from the Word of God now comprehended in Scripture both for doctrine or what we should believe as also as a rule of our actions and conversation how we should live and order the same a right 7. David likewise as a Prophet saies that Gods Word was in his tongue and so should the same only be in the tongue of all faithfull and true preachers and not mens fancies or the traditions of men 8. Vers 3. David who was a ruler over men himself shewes what are the two parts of such a one to wit the execution of justice impartially and to rule in the feare of the Lord having that rooted in their heart and having the same also ever before their eyes in all their Actions or decrees in judgment But how farre many Magistrates and Judges vary from this rule is but too common and to be deplored 9. Vers 4. By earthly things for our capacity He teaches how comfortable and profitable the government of such a one is to Gods people and especially the government of Christ Jesus the true Messiah is to his Church who is that sunne of righteousness who disperseth the darkness of sinne and ignorance and as a bright morning without obscuring clouds sends forth his beames and rayes of saving knowledge in the minds of his elect and is also as the pleasant and tender grass that springeth out of the earth by cleare shining after raine to be green pasture as David speaks Ps 23. 2. to his own sheep 10. Also as none can hinder the rising of the sunne or the brightness of a cleare morning nor the springing of the grass out of the earth in the due season thereof so none shall be able to hinder the kingdome of Christ and progress of the Gospell but shall find that as is said Psal 2. 4. That he who sits in heaven shall laugh them to scorne and as our Saviour said to Paul That it is hard for them to kick against the pricks 11. Vers 5. Where David saies after the setting down the prosperity of Christs kingdome and continuance thereof for ever although my house be not so with God yet he has made with me an everlasting Covenant of salvation which is all my desire This teaches us to be content with whatsoever dispensation it pleases the Lord to make to be our lot in temporall things though we should be as poore as La●arus so be that we be made pertakers of that salvation wrought by Christ and be within the Covenant of grace Which also with David should be all our desire as he decleres likewise Psalm 4. 6. 12. Vers 6. The wicked are compared to thornes in respect of their present disposition and of their future estate and condition prickly and hurtfull in the one and sad and dreadfull in the other as being appointed to be burnt for ever Which as it should be a terrour to the greatest to be of a wicked disposition and chiefly to be prosecuters of Christs Church which is compared therefore to a Lillie amongst thornes Cant. 2. 2. So it should be a comfort to the Godly who are prosecuted by them that though their wrongs be not redressed here on earth yet they shall be hereafter when these who like Cananites were thornes in their sides shall be burnt in hell fire forever 13. The wicked also are called thornes thrust away that is rejected Whereby we observe that wickedness continued in without repentance is an evident token of reprobation as on the contrary piety and true Godliness is a sure signe of election and predestination unto life eternall and therefore we are exhorted in relation to our selves to make sure our election by wel-doing and Ephes 2. 10. Are called Gods workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works which God hath preordained that we should walke in them elected to them but not elected for them and they being via regni but not causa regnandi 14. Vers 8. And thereafter in this Catalogue of so many valiant men under David We see that it is a happy kingdome wherein there is a good King as David was wise Counsellours and valiant souldiers As also how by the contrary as in Rehoboam a Nation or Kingdome becomes rent and miserable 15. We see likewise how the Lord workes great and admirable workes sometimes by very weake and unlikely meanes As we see chiefly in the book of the Judges and by a few fisher men the conversion of the Nations that all the glory may be given to God and his own finger may be seen in the work as also by this register of their names in holy Scripture That the memory or remembrance of the Godly shall be blessed but the memory of the wicked shall rot 16. Vers 17. We see how tender Davids conscience was who would not drink of the water of the well of Bethlehem which his three valiant men brought unto him because he counted it their blood in respect they had hazarded their lives for the same O then how farre contrary is the consciences of those men seared with a hot iron and past feeling whose daily meat and drink is the blood of men especially the poore whom they oppress and whose faces they grinde and chop their flesh as meate for the pot as the Prophet speaks and what dreadfull an account have those Canniball's to make at the last day And especially how dreadfull shall be their doome and damnation who live by sacriledge or such idoll shepheards who live on the blood of soules as are described Isai 56. and Ezek 34. II. SAM Chap. 24. from the 1. Verse to the 10. THe generall argument of this Chapter is the history of the three daies pestilence wherewith God in his justice punished his people for their own sinnes but specially for Davids their King in numbering the people which may be divided in these four particulars 1. Davids causing the numbring of the people to the 10. vers 2. Davids repentance for the same in the 11. vers 3. The punishment thereof by pestilence to the 16. vers And 4. The removing of the plague from the 16. vers to the end As for the first we shall consider 1. By whom David was moved to number the people 2. What he did being moved 3. Joabs disswasion to David And 4. Joabs obedience at last to Davids command which prevailed First then Vers 1. It is said That the Lord moved David being angry against Israell for their sinnes which doubtless had been great although not nominated and for which he is said to be angry per Anthropopatheiam whereby humane passions are attributed to God which truly and properly fall not in his divine offence but for our capacity the Scripture speaks to us in our own language and attributes to God mans affections And
will come and not delay mercy and truth shall kisse one another and one jot of his word shall not faile let that performance of the promises made unto Abraham concerning his seed Josephs preferment Israels deliverance and many others be witnesses hereof 15. In all the foresaid things we have the kingdome of Christ represented for as by Sauls tyranny David was persecuted so was Christ and his Church yet as Saul was overthrowne and an entry made to David so were the Churches persecutors taken out of the way and she began to be advanced as David did not his own will but followed Gods so Christ wrought not his own will but his fathers as David ascended to Hebron so hath Christ to heaven as David carried thither with him his wives and servants so hath Christ made his Church and servants participate of all his benefits and doth daily bring them to that same place to which he hath gone before them as David was received only by Judah but rejected by the greatest part so is Christ and his kingdome as Davids kingdome is not accomplished at one time so neither Christs as it had ist own competitours so hath Christs but as the kingdome of Ishboseth is short and declining but Davids longer and flourishing so is it between Christ and Satans kingdome and as David was often times anointed by Samuel by Judah and at last by Israel so was Christ which Paul reduceth to three the Spirit of power sanctification and first resurrection 16. Vers 5. Concerning the report made of the men of Jabesh Gilead unto David concerning their burying of Saul after whose body probably he had caused to inquire as is aforesaid others are of opinion that it was to inflame him against them others that he should beware of them seeing they were professed favourers of Saul or reconciled with them but David layeth all sinistrous opinions and suspitions of them aside charitably construing their fact and for their fidelity and kindness to their Lord he honours them with an embassage congratulatory and a promise of his favour and assistance whereby we are taught not to give eare and credit to detraction but being slow to misconceive of mens actions rather charitably to make the best construction of them till more manifest experience prove them otherwise thus greatly shall we disappoint Satan that ill seed sower stop dissention maintaine unity approve our selves to God and readily winne our neighbour 17. In the men of Jabesh we see the loyall and sinceer love of subjects to their prince obeying him being alive and honouring him being dead which fact as pleasing to God and approved by man is registred in Scripture like Mary Magdalens anointing of Christ to be recorded for ever for the memoriall of the just shall flourish that the name of the wicked shall be put out either with the silence of oblivion or else the black dash of the record of their foule deeds innumerable examples hereof may be collected in holy writ where they are recorded 18. Vers 6. That which David wisheth to them from God is mercy and truth in the assured performance but that which he himselfe promiseth is reward the one is free the other of debt no merit then will he ascribe unto them at Gods hands but will yeeld the same at his own in regard by his princely office he was bound to cherish the good as well as to chastise the bad and not to suffer such kind loyalty to his Father-in-law and predecessour which they with such care and hazard of their lives had shewne to be misknowne uncommended and rewarded as being assured that they who were loyall to one would be so to another Let this therefore informe aright the minds of all men how to esteeme of their own actions in all holy and humble sobriety never urging merit upon God howsoever we deserve at the hands of man but suiting free mercy and with Jacob professing our selves unworthy of the least of his mercies being but unprofitable servants and our goods deeds wherein as in the way to the kingdome ever we should walke extending no waies to him but to the Saints on earth as the Psalmist sayeth Psalm 16. 2. And availing our own soules but not God as we likewise see Job 22. 2. and 31. 7. 19. We have also in David here the patterne of a good King and loving who as he was carefull before to execute justice upon the Amalekite for his wicked fact so is he diligent here to practise kindness to the men of Jabesh for their godly deed thus ought all Magistrates who are the Lords deputies and gods on earth cherish virtue and chastise vice that so the one may grow and the other may be repressed being as an awfull Lyon to the one and a mild Lamb to the other rewarding the vertuous and godly and punishing the vicious and wicked so shall their throne be established their Crowne glister and their Scepter flourish In the Church let Abiathar therefore be cast out and Zadok set in his roome and let Joab suffer for his fault and Benajah in the policy be surrogat in his place 20. In respect that he promiseth unto them protection and therefore exhorteth them not to be discouraged by the Philistines late victory or Sauls death seeing God had raised him up and he was anointed King we see not only the duty of a lawfull prince which is to maintaine and defend his subjects but likewise that the Lord suffers never his own to be altogether destitute of comfort for if he humble with the one hand he will raise with the other and if he take one benefit from us he will give us another in the place thereof yea perhaps a greater as he did here David for Saul or as he restored holy Job if with thankfulness patience and constancy we depend upon him 21. Vers 8. In the election and anointing of Ishboseth who was made King by Abner we see no consulting of God against whose ordinance and express notified will confessed c. 3. 18. they were going an indirect course therefore they knew either with Saul they would get no answer or else contrary to their intended proceedings thus against God conscience and right they rebelliously prosecute that course which turned thereafter to their own ruine like many now adaies who if they may attaine to a pretended right and possession by policy and power to defraud the right owners and withhold their due from them whether it be holy things seperate from the common use or mans good and prophane they will never consult Gods Word nor conscience how lawfully they attained or detaine the same yea although the oracle of the one and prick of the other most evidently contradict and convince them yet Achan will take the execrable thing and Ahab will have Naboths vineyard though they should make sure with it Gods curse and heavy judgments unto themselves and theirs II SAM Chap 2. from the 12. verse to the 17. THe election
their brother Joseph in this work of Abner and of Judas against Christ c. 8. Vers 13. In Davids yeilding and acceptation of Abners offer we see that albeit he hath a good cause yet he neglects no occasion of secondarie meanes offered which is an example of imitation for as men are said to contemne God who relye altogether upon seconds so are they to be thought to tempt God who altogether rejects the use of the lawfull seconds Asa then ought not to put his trust more in the Physitians then in God neither should Naman despise to wash himselfe in the waters of Jordan our Saviour also will not cast himselfe down from the pinnacle of the temple neglecting the ordinary degrees nor Paul suffer the mariners to depart out of the boate albeit it was revealed to him that both he and his company all should be safe for it is written saith Christ thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God 9. Vers 15. In Ishboseth his fact of restitution of Michol we see the nature and practise of the gyant oppressors of the world and violent usurpers of other mens rights in a small thing especially if it concerne not them greatly like Michol they will seem very equitable and conscionable but in a great thing which is in their own possession and very gainfull or pleasant unto them such as the kingdome which Ishboseth usurpeth here they will by no meanes hearken to the restitution thereof Herod therefore will heare and obey John the baptist in many things so he touch not his having of Herodias and Pharaoh will beare with Moses and let the people go untill he deny that their sheep and cattle shall abide but then nothing but packing to Moses and that he see his face no more under paine of death The pythoniss masters can abide Paul and Sylas doctrine very well likewise so long as they loose not the hope of their gaine by her divination but when they saw that to be gone nothing but tumult and accusation the like example we have in the smiths Demetrius and Alexander and in many unjust usurpers both of God and mans right now a daies who will heare and be friends in any thing so that their gainfull Diana be not oppugned 10. Vers 16. In Phaltiel we have how difficult restitution is of things unlawfully usurped there being a blinding and bewitching desperate inchantment upon the heart ever therewith so that albeit with Achan they know that without a heavy curse they cannot possess the execrable things yet with perill of soule body estate their coveting heart will take it Achab though he should loose his life and kingdome for it he will have Naboths vineyard while Christ then come into the house look not that Zaccheus will make restitution or while the Idole of covetousness is in the hearts of men that they will abhorre to commit sacriledge stolen waters are so sweet and hid bread so pleasant but they know not that death is there and that the reward is the depth of hell for it is a destruction to a man to devoure that which is sanctified and by wickedness a man cannot be established neither shall riches availe in the day of wrath but the roote of the righteous shall not be moved and righteousness only shall deliver from death 11. In the behaviour of Phaltiel not only following Michol but mourning after her shewing by the first how loath he was to forsake her and by the second what griefe it was to him her desertion we see that illicite pleasures are like the Scorpion having ever the sting of sorrow in the end witness the looseness of the primitive world the voluptie of Sodom the ravishing of Dinah the love of Dalilah the adultery with Bersheba with sundry others but especially that eternity of weeping wailing and gnashing of teeth which the voluptuous wicked shall endure for their momentarie pleasure taking in the deceivable delights of sinne in that great day of exchange and reward like Esau who for the red pottage lost the blessing and was forced to weepe bitterly therefore thereafter II SAM Chap 3. from the 17. verse to the 22. THe persuasion of Israel unto defection from Ishboseth to David hath in it three arguments used by Abner à jucundo à pio ab utili 1. A jucundo It was your own suit formerly and your pleasure to have David to be your King and in deliberation between David and any of Sauls posterity you choosed rather and preferred him as Abner well knew in his familiarity with them now therefore take your pleasure and choose him 2. A pio It is the will of God that so it should be and that by Samuel plainly declared and notified unto all for God hath said it whose word is most true and which without gainstanding it becometh you in piety to embrace 3. A commodo He will save you from all your Enemies which is a great advantage and for that end God hath appointed him to rule over you whose promise is your warrant And in all this he perswadeth most carefully and particularly the Benjamites who were harder to be induced in regard of their naturall conjunction with the house of Saul But at last having cunningly effectuate his purpose at all hands he goeth accompanied with 20 specialls of Israel to Hebron unto David by presence to ratifie that which by message he had covenanted and to shew unto David his diligence credit and convoy of the errand and what he had effectuated Unto whom David maketh a royall banquet as a symbole of their new contracted amity Wherein for satisfaction of the doubt rejected to this place we affirme plainly that David erred 1. In temeritie or forme not consulting with God according to the command and practise of the Godly And 2. In substance or matter in entring in familiarity and entertaining a notorious wicked man with whom according to the apostolik Canon he should not have eaten In the end Abner goeth and promiseth to reduce all Israel arrogantly challenging unto himselfe so great a place in that kingdome where there was a King of such simplicity and pusillanimity as Ishboseth was OBSERVATIONS 1. IN Abners perswasion of Israel to defection from Ishboseth to David first as we see the nature and practise of many ambitious and crafty wicked men who place their chiefe standing and promotion in the disquieting of other mens estates and fisheth ever best in disturbed waters by the weakening and variance of others strengthening and enriching themselves So againe we note the wonderfull working of God in making that same man who perswaded Israel from David to adhere to Ishboseth now from Ishboseth to make defection and adhere to David and so to undoe that which he had formerly done and turne his course contrary so powerfull is God in overruling the wicked and here his Children want comfort or his work for them be unwrought he will make their and his Enemies the