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A34874 The history of the Old Testament methodiz'd according to the order and series of time wherein the several things therein mentioned were transacted ... to which is annex'd a Short history of the Jewish affairs from the end of the Old Testament to the birth of our Saviour : and a map also added of Canaan and the adjacent countries ... / by Samuel Cradock ... Cradock, Samuel, 1621?-1706. 1683 (1683) Wing C6750; ESTC R11566 1,349,257 877

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boves Ita eos arguit Parens q. d. crudeles essent avidi raptores down a Wall viz. of Shechem's house where their Sister was kept to rescue her out of their hands He pronounces their anger to be detestable which was so cruel and violent and which had like to have been the Ruine of him and his Then speaking in the Person of God as Prophets used sometimes to do He says He will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel And accordingly it happened For Simeon was not planted apart by himself as the other Tribes were but his Tribe had their Inheritance intermixed (o) Yet out of their Lot in several places here and there these Simionites had certain Cities and Villages Josh 19.9 And afterwards upon their multiplying they were forced to seek further for new Habitations in Mount Seir and Mount Geder driving out the Amalekites 1 Chron. 4.39 and so they were scattered in their Habitations with that of Judah Josh 19.1 And the Tribe of Levi was dispersed among all the Tribes of Israel 3ly He comes to Judah He tells him as his Name signified Praise Ch. 29.35 so his Tribe should be renowned and praised and should be famous and eminent among the rest not only in regard of external Power and Government but much more because out of him the Messias should come Heb. 7.14 For it is evident that our Lord sprang out of Judah He tells him His hand shall be in the Neck of his Enemies that is He should Conquer and subdue them This Prophesie of the prevailing power of Judah was fulfilled when that Tribe became the Leader Numb 10.14 7.11 12. Judg. 1.2 20.18 As also in those Worthies of this Tribe Othniel Jud. 3.9 10. David 2 Sam. 8.1 Solomon 1 Chron. 22.9 But more eminently in Christ who hath vanquished all the Powers of Darkness He goes on Thy Fathers Children shall bow down before thee whereby he intimates that his Posterity shall be advanced to the Soveraignty and to a Regal Power to which all the Israelites should sumbit Yet this was more fully to be accomplished in the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ to whom every knee shall bow Phil. 2.10 He further adds Judah is a Lions Whelp whereby he intimates the mighty strength and courage of this Tribe and how terrible they should be to their Eenemies and how great and glorious their Conquests He further adds For the Prey my Son thou art gone up (p) Leones postquam in planis praedati sunt Saturi ad montes redeunt Teste Zenoph de Venatione that is having taken the Prey thou shalt go up to thy Habitation in a triumphant manner He stooped down he couched Here He varies the person as the Prophetick Spirit moved him sometime speaking as to his Son and sometimes of him And as a Lion is the King of Beasts and flies upon other Beasts and tears them in pieces and returning from his Prey coucheth down and lieth at rest and none dare disquiet him or offer to rouze him and take his Prey from him so should Judah's Kings Conquer and subdue their Enemies and then returning with Victory should quietly and peaceably (q) So it was in Solomon s days after David's Victories 1 King 4.25 enjoy their Spoils and Conquests See Numb 23.24 But this is more especially verified in Christ the Lion of the Tribe of Judah Rev. 5.5 He further declares That the Scepter shall not depart from Judah that is from the Nation and Kingdom of the Jews so denominated from Judah (r) After the Royal Dignity was once setled in this Tribe viz. in David 1 Chron. 5.2 there were no more Kings of that Tribe after Jeconiah and Zedekiah Jer. 22.30 After their return from Captivity the Principality was in Zerubbabel and likely in others of the Tribe of Judah for a time But some while after the Maccabees of the Tribe of Levi got the Rule and continued therein by the choice and consent of the people of Judah till a little before the Birth of Christ when Herod an Idumaan was made King by the Romans which became a Kingdom apart by it self after the ten Tribes were separated from them and although there were some of the Tribe of Levi and of Benjamin mix'd among them and incorporated into them yet the people were called by the name of Judah the Kingdom and Commonwealth of Judah and there was a Government still in Judah whereas the ten Tribes after they were carried away Captive into Assyria did never return to be a Kingdom again but those of Judah after 70 years Captivity did return into their own Land and became a Kingdom and Commonwealth though not so glorious (s) The Jewish Scepter was much weakened by Pompey much shaken by Herod's Intrusion but finally broken and abolished at the destruction of Jerusalem after which they had no force nor face of a Commonwealth Therefore it is evident against the Jews that the Messiah is come as before and did live under the Government of their own Laws and Command of their own Rulers He further adds That there should not cease to be a Lawgiver between Judah's feet see Deut. 28.57 that is of the Seed and Progeny of some belonging to that Kingdom till Shilo come that is the Prosperer and Prince of Peace the promised Messiah to whom not only the believing Jews but the Gentiles also shall come in as to their King and submit themselves to his Scepter Jacob further prophesieth of the wonderful fruitfulness of Judah's lot in the Land of Canaan which was the best and largest that fell to day of the Tribes viz. that it should abound with Vines and rich Pastures and that they should have such stout and well-grown Vines that an Ass might be tied to them as to other Trees and that they should have such plenty of Wine that they might even wash their Garments in the juice of the Grape Therefore He adds Judah's Eyes shall be red with Wine and his Teeth white with Milk whereby he signifies the fruitfulness of their Vineyards and richness of their Pastures insomuch that Wine and Milk should in a manner be as plentiful and common among them even as Water 4ly He comes to Zebulun whom though younger than Issachar * Gen. 30.18 20. yet he blesses before him so doth also Moses Deut. 33.18 And his lot fell to him in the Land of Canaan before Issachar's Josh 19. from 10. to 17. He pronounces of Zebulun that he shall dwell at the haven of the Sea and he shall be for a Haven of Ships that is his Habitation shall be at the Sea-coast His Border shall be the Ocean West-ward and the Sea of Galilee East-ward and he shall rejoyce in his going out or trading Deut. 33.18 And his Border shall be unto Sidon that is not to the City but Country of the Sidonians For the Land of the Sidonians or Phaenicians extended to Accho or Ptolemais (t) Bochart
of Israel were fled from Etham and it was so represented to Him as if they had run away from thence being terrified whereas they marched back with an high Hand and with displayed Banners Pharaoh hearing this and that they were pitched at so inconvenient a place as Pihahiroth He and his Courtiers said among themselves They are entangled in the Land and the Wilderness hath shut them in Let us therefore pursue after them Pharaoh accordingly with his Horses and Chariots (h) Of old they used Chariots with Sithes at their sides to mow down men in their way They had other Chariots out of which they fought as men do now out of Ships But where had Pharooh horses seeing 't is said Ch. 9.6 All the Cattel of Egypt died Answ All here is taken for many See the Notes on that place of War to the Number of 600 all that could be got together on the suddain with his Horse-men and Army pursues after them and found them Encamped in those Streights near the Sea When Pharaoh with his Army drew nigh the Children of Israel were dreadfully affrighted Fly they could not having the Sea before them the Egyptians behind them and steep and unpassable Hills on either side of them Yet God so order'd it that the Egyptians overtook them not their Camps being parted by the Pillar of Cloud which from going before the Camp of Israel now removed and went behind them and it cast a great darkness on the Egyptians but gave light to the Israelites However the people being in great Consternation they Cry unto the Lord for help and cry out in a high discontent against Moses What say they were there no Graves in Egypt that thou hast brought us forth to die in the Wilderness Did we not desire thee to let us alone with our Bondage in Egypt rather then expose us to such dangers as these Moses desir'd them to be quiet fear not says he but stand still and see the Salvation of the Lord which he will shew you this day For the Egyptians whom ye have seen to day ye shall see them no more for ever The Lord will fight for you you need only to be quiet and hold your peace and to keep your selves from doubting or murmuring and humbly to trust in God whose help is readiest when the danger of his people is greatest However Moses though he firmly relied on God yet sent up many strong Cries and Ejaculations to the Lord mixed with some perturbation of Mind upon the peoples Clamour against him The Lord hereupon calls to him not to employ himself further in praying to him at that time but to march on directly with the people to the Red-Sea which he doth accordingly and coming thither the Lord bids him Stretch forth his Rod over the Sea and upon that action of his the Sea should divide it self Moses does as he was commanded and a strong East-wind blew and the Sea miraculously divided it self standing on heaps on each side Then the Israelites by God's Command Moses leading the way passed thorow it safe as upon dry ground and the Waters were a Wall unto them on the right hand and on the left (i) The Apostle says Heb. 11.29 That by Faith they passed thorow the Sea and 1 Cor. 10.2 That they were all baptized to Moses in the Cloud and in the Sea See Apostol History pag. 169. the explication hereof Pharaoh and his Host coming to the Sea and seeing it thus divided they thought they might pass thorow it as well as the Israelites and accordingly entred the passage (k) Quos excidio destinat occaecat Deus to follow them but they were much hindred in their march after them by the falling off of their Chariot wheels For the Lord in the Morning-Watch (l) Anciently the nights in stead of hours were divided into many Watches 1 Sam. 11.11 the number of which is not certainly known and the day into Morning Mid-day and Even looking out of the Pillar of Fire and Cloud upon the Egyptians testified his Displeasure against them by Lightnings and Thunder and Rain with which he much distressed and disorder'd them as David more largely relates Psal 77.18 19. Insomuch that many of the Egyptians themselves were now sensible that God appear'd against them and for the Israelites and therefore desired to retreat and not to pursue after them any further The Israelites at last got all safe to the other side of the shore viz. to the Desert of Etham and then God commanded Moses to stretch forth his Hand again over the Sea which being done the Waters came together again and so overwhelmed (m) This was a just Judgment of God upon the Egyptians who had cast the poor Infants of the Israelites into the water and had drowned them without remorse the whole Host of the Egyptians not one of them escaped The Israelites saw some of their Carcasses floating upon the Sea and cast upon the shore Thus God with an out-stretched Arm saved the Israelites that day out of the hands of the Egyptians and the people feared the Lord and believed in him and believed the word which Moses spake unto them in the Name of the Lord. Gen. 14. whole Chapter SECT V. THe Israelites being thus Miraculously delivered from the Egyptians Moses (n) See Rev. 15.3 compos'd a Song of Praise and Thanksgiving to God for this wonderful and transcendent Mercy and He and the Children of Israel sang it before the Lord. This Song is the first of that kind * Canticum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we find any where in the Scripture 'T is partly Historical setting forth a triumphant Narration of Gods admirable Mercy in destroying his and their Enemies partly Prophetical containing Prophesies of future Bessings assured to Israel set down not only in the Future but often in the Preter-tense for the greater Certainty First 'T is Historical It begins I will sing unto the Lord for he hath triumphed gloriously the Horses of the Egyptians and their Riders hath he thrown into the Sea The Lord is my strength and my Song that is we being weak in our selves He fought for us and subdued our Enemies 'T is the Lord therefore of whom we will sing and whose Praise we will set forth in our Song 'T is by him that we are saved and delivered out of the hands of our Enemies He is our God and we being his people He hath by the Spirit of Prophesie fore-shewed us that we shall build a Tabernacle for his Worship and Service He is our God and the God of our Fathers therefore we will lift up his high Praises and exalt him He is a mighty and all-powerful Warrior indeed Jehovah (o) See Annotations on Ch. 3.14 15. is his Name Pharaoh's Chariots and his Host hath he cast into the Sea his chosen Captains also are drowned in the Red-Sea The Depths have covered them they sank into the bottom as a stone Thy right
Hand O Lord is become Glorious in Power Thy right Hand hath broken and destroyed the Enemy and by thy glorious and excellent Power thou hast overthrown the Egyptians who in rising up against thy people did rise up against thee Thou didst send forth thy Wrath which consumed them utterly and speedily even as stubble is consumed by the fire With the blast of thy Nostrils the Waters were gathered together that is by a mighty Wind raised by thine Almighty Power accompanied with a great Noise (p) To this the Prophet seems to have reference Hab. 3. 10. the Sea was divided and the Waters were heaped up on either side and stood like congealed or compacted Walls in the heart of the Sea The Enemy said I will pursue overtake and divide the Spoil my lust shall be satisfied upon them I will draw my Sword my Hand shall destroy them But thou O Lord didst soon confound their vain Imaginations For thou didst blow with a mighty Wind and immediately the Waters came together again and the Sea covered them they sank as lead in the deep Waters Who is like unto thee O Lord among the Gods who among all the false Gods of the Heathen or the mightiest men on the Earth is in any degree worthy to be compared to Thee who art glorious in holiness fearful in praises that is to be praised with a great measure of filial fear and awfulness doing Wonders Thou stretchedst out thy Hand and the Earth swallowed them that is those of them whose bodies were cast up by the Waves upon the shore were thrown into Pits by us and there buried Thou in thy great Mercy hast brought forth thy people whom thou hast redeemed out of the Land of Egypt and hast thus far led them by thine Almighty Power and Strength towards the Land of Canaan where thou hast determined to set up thy holy Temple thy resting Place Psal 132.14 The Place which thou hast chosen where thy holy Worship shall be set up and established and where thou hast promised to dwell that is to afford thy special Presence See 1 Kings 9. vers 3. The Second Part of this Song is Prophetical beginning at v. 14. The people shall hear and be afraid sorrow shall take hold on the Inhabitants of Palestina That is the report of this dreadful overthrow of Pharaoh shall so amaze and astonish the Inhabitants of Palestina the Dukes of Edom and the mighty men of Moab (q) See this Prophesie fulfilled Numb 22.3 Josh 2.9 5.1 and the Inhabitants of Canaan that their very hearts shall faint and melt with fear as wax does before the fire insomuch that they shall be as still as a stone and Israel shall pass over Jordan into Canaan without opposition Thou wilt bring them in and plant them in the Mountain of thine Inheritance that is in Canaan a mountanous Country Deut. 11.11 and particularly thou wilt bring them to Mount Moriah which thou hast chosen as thine Inheritance and where by thy own Hands and Power thou intendest to establish thy Sanctuary and where thou hast promised to dwell and to afford thy gracious Presence The Lord will Reign for ever and ever in spight of all his Enemies Miriam (r) She was the Sister of Moses also but her reference to Aaron was best known by reason of Moses's absence She is said to be the wife of Hur by the Hebrews the Sister of Aaron who had the Spirit of Prophesie Numb 12.2 and was one of the three Principal Guides which God gave his people Mich. 6.4 took a Timbrel in her hand and the Women followed her playing on their Timbrels also according to the Custom in publick Rejoycings Judg. 11.34 and they expressed their exultation and rapture of Mind by lively motions and tripudiations of their Bodies and when the Men had sang a Verse of this Song then She with the Women sung it over again at least they repeated the first Verse of it Sing to the Lord for he hath triumphed gloriously the Horse and his Rider hath he thrown into the Sea And possibly they added For his Mercy endureth for ever as 't is Psal 136. 2 Chron. 5.13 With this Song of Moses for Victory over the Egyptian-Pharaoh the Holy Ghost compares the Song of them that shall be Victorious over the Spiritual Pharaoh viz. the Beast and Antichrist Rev. 15. from 1. to 5. Exod. 15. from 1. to 22. SECT VI. THe Israelites being now come on the other side of the Red-Sea they marched three whole days thorow the Wilderness of Shur (s) Called also the Wilderness of Etham Numb 33.8 one might be the general name of the whole Wilderness and the other of some part of it It seems the Wilderness on both sides of the Red-Sea was called the Wilderness of Etham but found no water all the way As for Food 't is probable they were sustained with that unleavened Bread and other provisions they had brought with them out of Egypt At last they came to Marah their fifth Encamping where they found water indeed but it was so bitter they could not drink it hereupon they murmur against Moses asking him in a discontented mood What they should drink Moses upon this Cries unto the Lord who shewed him a Tree which when he had cast into the waters the waters were made sweet But the changing of the nature and tast of the waters was to be attributed to the Power of God and not to any vertue in that Tree After God had thus tried them and proved them not only by their want of water but by his present favourable dealing with them in not punishing them for their murmuring as he might justly have done He then admonishes them by Moses to take heed of this sin of murmuring against Him or distrusting of Him and to carry themselves more obediently towards Him for the future And so he made this a Statute and an Ordinance That if they would do that which was right in his sight and would obey his Commandments and keep all his Statutes he would bring none of those Diseases and Plagues upon them which he had brought on the Egyptians For He was their Healer (t) V. 26. Medicus quia ex omnibus periculis malis tam animarum quam corporum quae morbis morti saepe comparantur homines sibi confisos liberat Psal 103. v. 3. Glasius and could heal not only their Bodies but their Souls also by forgiving their sins and sanctifying their natures Exod. 15. from 22. to 27. SECT VII FRom Marah they removed to Elim their sixth Station famous for twelve Wells of water and 70 Palm-Trees And here it seems they stayed many days because the Place was so pleasant and convenient by reason of the waters and the shade Exod. 15. vers 27. SECT VIII FRom Elim they turned back again to the Red-Sea which was their seventh Station as appears from Numb 33.10 the Lord so ordering it as 't is probable that
Providence see Mat. 6.11 However some of them were so Disobedient that they reserved some of it till next morning and it bred Worms and stank which Disobedience of theirs much provoked Moses to be angry with them 2. They were to gather it in the morning betimes For when the Sun waxed hot it melted 3. On the sixth day they were to gather twice as much as on other days namely two Omers for one person which order when the people observed the Elders and Rulers came and told Moses thereof doubting whether they did well therein seeing an Omer and no more was their fixed allowance for one day Hereupon Moses tells them That the next day was an holy Sabbath to the Lord and on that day (c) From whence some infer the antiquity and morality of the Sabbath this happening before the giving the Law on Mount Sinai no Mannah should fall and therefore on the sixth day they had a double allowance and on that day they were to bake or seeth of their Mannah what they thought fit to eat thereof that day and to reserve the remainder for the Sabbath-day and though reserved to that day it should not stink or breed Worms as one other days if kept it would do Yet some of the people were so unbelieving and disobedient that they went out on the Sabbath-day to seek Mannah but found none for which God was angry with them and charged them not to go out on the Sabbath-day any more to seek it but to observe that day unto him which the people accordingly did On this kind of bread they lived afterwards by the space of forty years * Comederant Man 40 annis tanquam cibum ordinarium cui non erat vetitum carnes vel cibos alios adjungere si quos vel venatu vel emptione a vicinis gentibus consequebantur ut apparet ex Deut. 2.6 Janson even till they came to the borders of the Land of Canaan And a Pot containing the quantity of an Omer was afterwards by Gods Command fill'd therewith and reserved by the Ark of Testimony (d) Or Ark of the Testimony because in it were the Tables of Gods Law which testified his Will to his people See Heb. 9.4 See Apostolical History pag. 380. viz. which testified Gods Presence among them to be kept as a Memorial of Gods goodness in thus miraculously feeding of them Exod. 16. whole Chapter SECT X. THeir ninth Remove was to Dophka their Tenth to Alush Numb 33.12 13 14. and their Eleventh to Rephidim a place in the Wilderness near Mount Horeb. Here they wanted water again and this want drove a great many of them into an high discontent and murmuring insomuch as they said Is the Lord among us or not vers 7. Thus they tempted the Lord as the Psalmist says Psal 78.41 and limited the holy One of Israel Then they fell a chiding with Moses saying Give us water that we may drink wherefore hast thou brought us out of Egypt to kill us and our Children and our Cattel with thirst Moses asked them Why they chid with him was it in his power to help them why did they tempt the Lord by their distrust and murmuring And from this distrustful murmuring of the People the place was afterwards called Massa and Meriba signifying Temptation and Chiding Then Moses cried unto the Lord saying What shall I do to this people they are almost ready to stone me God Commands him to take some of the Elders of the people with him and to take his Rod in his hand with which he commanded Aaron to strike the River Nile Ch. 7.20 and to go to Mount Horeb where he would appear to him in the Cloudy Pillar and there to smite the Rock with his Rod and it should give forth water Moses and the Elders accordingly going to Horeb He there in their sight struck the Rock and immediately the waters gushed forth * The Apostle says 1 Cor. 10.4 The Rock followed them and that Rock was Christ see Psal 78.15 16 20. And the Streams issuing thence trailed after them thorow the Wilderness see Psal 105.41 Deut. 9.21 The Cloudy Pillar it seems conducting them in such by-ways in such Levels and Vallies in that Mountainous Country that the water might conveniently be derived after them Exod. 17. from 1. to 8. SECT XI THe Amalekites descended from Timnah Concubine to Eliphaz Esau's eldest Son Gen 36.12 whose Country lay hereabout having an inveterate malice against Jacob and his Posterity fell now upon the Rear of the Israelites they being much spent and tired with their long march and slew some of the feeblest (e) That is of such as were feeble thorow travel not sickness see Psal 105.37 and hindermost of them Deut. 25.17 18 19. Moses hereupon sends Joshua with a chosen Party to fight with them in the Valley and betakes himself to the top of Mount Horeb where with the Rod of God in his hand as a Signal to strengthen the faith of the people in God's Power and Help He lifts up his hands towards Heaven earnestly praying unto the Lord and imploring his Aid and Assistance against their Enemies And whilst Moses's hands were help up Israel prevailed but when they flag'd and fell down Amalek prevailed He therefore being weary with standing so long as well as with lifting up his hands they put a stone under him to sit on and Aaron and Hur (f) See James 5.17 Quare precum comites adhibendi qui nos labantes fulciant supported his hands whereby they were steady to the going down of the Sun and so they obtained a great Victory over the Amalekites And God commanded Moses to write (g) See Exod. 34.27 this for a Memorial in a Book that is in the Chronicles and Annals of time that the wickedness of Amalek in assaulting the people of God may be remembred and to Inculcate it in the ears of Joshua who was to succeed him that He and all his Successors who shall be Generals to the Israelites at any time hereafter may put this his Command in Execution when He shall give them occasion to do it For says God I have determined utterly to put out the remembrance of Amalek from under Heaven (h) Deut. 25.19 See this Command executed by Saul 1 Sam. 15.3 c. that is I have determined that their Honour and Greatness shall be so broken and brought down that they shall not be remembred or made mention of as a flourishing State or Kingdom any more And Moses in thankfulness to God for this great Victory built an Altar in that place and call'd it Jehovah-Nissi as a Memorial to Posterity that there Jehovah had as with a Banner displayed gone forth and fought against the Enemies of his people And because Amalek had lifted up his hand against the Throne of the Lord (i) V. 16. Quia manus Amalec fuit contra solium Domini Sic Jun. Tremel Piscator reddunt hunc
it He made him ride on the high places of the Earth that is he inabled them to subdue and conquer the mountainous places and the high-walled Cities of their Enemies and to possess a Land far excelling others in all Commodities whatsoever He made him to eat of the increase of the Earth to suck Honey out of the Rock that is of Bees nestling in the holes of Rocks and Oil of Olive-Trees that grow in stony places He made him to eat of Butter of Kine and Milk of Sheep with the fat of Lambs and Rams of the choice breed of Bashan and Bread made of the finest plumpest and largest kernels of Wheat resembling Kidneys in shape and to drink the pure blood of the Grape that is the choicest red Wine But Jeshurun * Jeshurun derived from Josher signifying Righteousness intimates that by their calling they ought to be a righteous people and to walk uprightly in Gods ways but Moses here by giving them this Title seems to upbraid them that they were so unlike the people they should have been being waxed fat kicked that is hath behaved himself wantonly forsaking God that made him contemptuously and lightly esteeming the Rock of his Salvation in whom alone was his help They provoked Him to jealousie and made him exceeding angry by their spiritual Fornication and worshipping strange gods They sacrificed unto Devils that is unto Idols wherein the Devil was served and not God Levit. 17.7 1 Cor. 10.20 They sacrificed to gods whom they knew not nor had any knowledge or experience of any good from them to new gods newly come up for though they had continued many hundred years in the World yet if compared to the Eternal ever-living God they might be said to be newly come up and to be meer up-starts and such as their Fathers slighted as Vanities Of the Rock that is of the strong God that created them and begat them they were unmindful and forgot Him that formed them and made them his people Isa 43.21 When the Lord saw this he abhorred them because of the provoking of his Sons and Daughters that is of those that professed themselves to be his people And he said I will hide my face from them I will see what their end will be that is I will let them see what a miserable end they will come to when I forsake them For they are a very froward Generation Children in whom there is no faithfulness or fidelity or stedfastness to keep their Covenant with me They have moved me to jealousie with that which is not god that is provoked me to Displeasure by giving that worship which is only due to me to Idols which are no gods and so preferring mear Vanities viz. Stocks and Stones before their Creator Therefore he says he would move them to jealousie that is vex and disquiet them with those that are not a people † The Jews understand this of the Chaldeans who carried them Captive and so grieved them But the Apostle understands it of the Jews rejection for refusing Christ and of the calling of the Gentiles at which the Jews were very angry see Rom. 11.14 Completum hoc cum ab Ethnicis infesterentur Judaei deinde in Gentium vocatione Confer Hos 1.10 Rom. 10.19 Anonym even with a foolish Nation that is by calling the Gentiles who were not now his people and were despised by the Jews for their blindness and folly Rom. 10.19 For a fire is kindled in mine anger and shall burn unto the lowest Hell and shall consume the Earth with her increase and set on fire the foundations of the Mountains that is the Judgments which God in his anger would bring upon them should be most vehement and dreadful and should utterly destroy the Land and therefore this desolation and destruction is set forth in expressions resembling the Conflagration of the World at the last day He further adds I will heap mischiefs upon them I will spend mine arrows upon them that is I will strike them with many Plagues and they shall be wounded with them as with Arrows suddainly and unexpectedly They shall be burnt with hunger that is consumed with Famine see Lam. 4.8 and devoured with burning heat and bitter destruction that is with burning Carbuncles and fiery Vlcers on their Bodies I will send the teeth of Beasts upon them with the poyson of Serpents of the dust viz. that hide themselves in the dust and feed on the dust and assault suddainly They that are abroad shall be slain by the Sword and they that are within shall die with terrour and fear and this misery and calamity shall fall on all sorts old and young I said I would scatter them into Corners and make the remembrance of them cease from among men were it not that I feared the wrath of the Enemy lest the Adversaries of my people should behave themseves strangely and lest they should say Our hand is high and the Lord hath not done this God here speaks of Himself after the manner of men who oftentimes desist from doing what otherwise they intended to do for fear of encouraging the pride and insolency of wicked men And therefore God would not bring his people so near to utter destruction as their sins deserved lest their Enemies should thereupon exalt themselves as if by their own power alone or the help of their Idols they had vanquished Israel and done all that they had done see Psal 140.8 And the reason why God was so far provoked as to be ready almost utterly to destroy the Israelites had not respect to his own glory restrained him was because they were a Nation void of Counsel neither was there any understanding in them that is they went on blindly and desperately in wickedness without considering what would be the issue of it O that they were wise says God that they would consider what will befal them in the latter end if they go on in their Rebellions against me that so by true Repentance they may prevent these miseries For if they had not by their frequent and high Transgressions extreamly provoked me their Enemies should never have had that power over them that they have had seeing I had promised them in case they were obedient that an hundred of them should put ten thousand of their Enemies to flight Josh 23.10 Levit. 26.8 and this they have found true in many strange Victories which they have gotten wherein a few of them have defeated whole Armies of their Adversaries And how could it come to pass quite contrary that one of their Enemies should chase a thousand of them and that two of their Enemies should put ten thousand of them to flight except their Rock had sold them and the Lord had shut them up that is except the Lord who is their Rock and their only Stay and Strength had delivered them up into the hands and power of their Enemies to be captivated and imprisoned by them at their will and to
be made their Slaves and Vassals see Psal 31.7 8. And the Israelites may well say If our God had not done it the Idol gods of the Heathens could never have made them so Victorious over us For their Rock is not as our Rock Our God is of infinite Power and therefore able to make his people Victorious over their Enemies when He pleases but their Idol-gods on which they rely cannot make them to prevail over us except our God withdraw his help and give us up into their hands And this is so clear that our Enemies themselves cannot deny it But if any shall ask How came the Lord to be so incensed against Israel as to give them up into the hands of their Enemies The reason was because their Vine is the Vine of Sodom and of the Fields of Gomorrah their Grapes are Grapes of gall their Clusters are bitter that is they are of like nature and disposition and their lives and doings are like theirs of Sodom and Gomorrah and therefore no wonder if God be so highly offended with them their Wine is * This may have respect to their bitter and deadly malice against the Prophets and other faithful Servants of God in future times but especially against Christ and his Apostles the poyson of Dragons and the cruel venome of Asps that is their Works are distastful to God and deadly to themselves and others And says the Lord though for a time I forbear to punish these cursed Works of theirs yet let them not therefore think totally to escape For all their Transgressions are laid up in store with me and I keep them sealed up among my Treasures that is a Memorial of them is kept among the unsearchable Treasures of my Wisdom and Knowledge see Col. 2.3 To me belongeth Vengeance and Recompence that is the work of punishing wickedness they shall not stand stedfast in the prosperous Estate they now are in their foot shall slide in due time they shall certainly fall when my time is come and the day of their Calamity is at hand that is after they are grown thus desperately wicked it shall not be long ere this Calamity here threatned shall overtake them and the things that shall come upon them make hast But if they shall repent of their evil deeds and turn unto me I will take pity on them in the height of their misery and will change the course of my Administration towards them and will take Vengeance on their Oppressors and Adversaries And especially when I see their power is gone and there is none shut up or left viz. in Garrisons or Cities to defend themselves but all are in a manner overthrown and ruined then will I arise and help them for my great Name sake Then will I say to the Heathen Where are your gods your Rocks in whom ye trusted which did eat the fat of your Sacrifices and drank the Wine of you Drink-Offerings that is where are your Idols to whom ye burned the fat of your Sacrifices and poured out the Wine of your Drink-Offerings let them now rise up and help you and be your Protection if they can You shall know That I am the true God and there is none besides me I kill and I make alive I wound and I heal 1 Sam. 2.6 neither can any deliver out of my hands I lift up my hand to Heaven and sware by my Self As sure as I live for ever I will do what I now say If I whet my glittering Sword and my Hand take hold on the Weapons of Judgment I will render Vengeance to mine Enemies and will reward them that hate me I will make mine Arrows drunk with blood and that with the blood of the slain and of the Captives that is both with the blood of those that are slain in the field and of those that are hurt in battel and thereupon taken Captive and my Sword shall devour much flesh from the beginning of revenges upon the Enemy that is from the time that I begin to take Vengeance on mine and my peoples Enemies and I will revenge all the wrongs that my people have suffered from their Enemies even from their first beginning to oppress them And seeing it shall be so Rejoyce O ye Nations with this people that is both Jews and Gentiles rejoyce and praise God together for his great goodness to his people in taking Vengeance on their Enemies and being so propitious and favourable unto them and hereby possibly is intimated that the time should come when both Jews and Gentiles should joyn together in praising the Lord namely when they shall be both his Church and people and therefore the Apostle alledgeth this place to prove the calling of the Gentiles Rom. 15.10 This was the Song that Moses spake in the ears of the Children of Israel Joshua standing by and as it were assenting to what he spake Moses further said unto them Set your hearts to all the words which I testifie among you this day and command your Children also to observe all the Precepts of this Law for it is not a vain thing for you so to do it is your life that is 't is the best way and means to prolong your days in the Land which you are going to possess God now gives Moses a Charge to go up to Mount Nebo to view the Land of Canaan telling him That there he should die and be gathered unto his people that is his godly fore-Fathers and the society of the Souls of just men made perfect as Aaron his Brother died on Mount Hor. And he gives him a reason why they both were excluded the Land of Canaan namely because they trespassed against Him at the waters of Meribah-Kadesh and sanctified Him not in the midst of the people see Numb 20.11 12. that is they did not at that time publickly shew before the people such an affiance in Him nor did so glorifie his great Name as they should have done Moses the man of God * He is so stiled that the Is●aelites might assure themselves that what he spake to them in these Prohetical blessings he spake by the authority of God Samuel is so stiled 1 Sam. 9.6 7. see 1 Tim. 6.11 viz. the Prophet of the Lord having received that Charge Ch. XXXIII to go up to Mount Nebo where he was to die He now immediately before his death solemnly blesses the twelve Tribes pronouncing such Prophetical blessings upon them as might allay in good part the bitterness of the fore-going Predictions Indeed the Tribe of Simeon is not at all here mentioned but the reason of it seems to be because this Tribe was to have their Inheritance within the Inheritance of the Sons of Judah Jos 19.1 Whence it was that they went joyntly together to fight against the Canaanites Judg. 1.3 and consequently this Tribe was blessed with that of Judah among whom they were to dwell And first as an Introduction or Preface to his Prophetick Benediction he sets
Therefore says he keep your selves all of you from the accursed thing Take none of the accursed banned things to your own use lest you bring a Curse upon your selves and upon the Camp of Israel thereby Joshua having given the people these Instructions he gave order to the Army to march round about the City seven days in the manner that was prescribed the Sabbath-day being one of them and that by Command of him who is Lord of the Sabbath The armed-men marched before the Ark and the remainder of the people that were in the Rear not armed followed after and thus they did six days on the seventh day they rose early and compassed the City after the same manner seven times and at the seventh time when the Priests that blew with the Trumpets made a long blast Joshua bad them shout for the Lord had given them the City The people hereupon gave a great shout and the wall of the City fell down flat viz. all that part of it over against which the Israelites in a long train marched and so all the armed men went up every man right from the place where they were and entred in at the breach into the City And they utterly destroyed all that was in the City Men Women young and old and the Oxen and Asses and Sheep and what ever they met with excepting Rahab and her Family whom Joshua sent the two Spies unto whom she had preserved to bring them forth and to leave them without the Camp till they were cleansed from their former pollutions according to the Law Numb 31.19 and were instructed in the Israelites Religion and admitted into the Congregation and so they and their Posterity continued among the Israelites and Rahab was afterwards married to Salmon a Prince of the Tribe of Judah one of Christs Progenitors Matth. 1.5 Luke 3.32 Then they burnt the City with fire and all that was therein excepting only the Silver and Gold and Iron and Brass which were reserved to be put into the Treasury of the House of the Lord none of them offering to meddle with one jot of the Spoil save only Achan of whom more presently In the judgment of reason one would have thought it must needs be grievous to the Israelites to destroy so brave a City and so goodly Houses wherein they might so conveniently have setled themselves and the Prey and Spoil of so fair and rich a City whereby they might have so greatly inriched themselves The more remarkable therefore and commendable was their ready Obedience herein to Gods Commands And Joshua by a special Inspiration of the Holy Ghost adjured them not to go about to build that City again and pronounced a Curse upon that man that by rebuilding it should as it were endeavour to blot out the memorial of this miraculous Work of God in giving this Idolatrous City after so strange a manner into their hands Whosoever shall go about to do it says He he shall lay the Foundation thereof in his First-born and in his youngest Son shall he set up the Gates thereof that is it shall cost him the loss of his Children of the first when he begins it of the other as he goeth forward with the work and of the youngest when he finisheth it and hangeth up the Gates thereof This Curse afterwards fell upon Hiel the Bethelite who in Ahab's Reign built this City again 1 Kings 16.34 This man was very ignorant if he knew not of this Curse but if he did know of it he was very audacious and impudently profane in not regarding it But though he was in his own particular severely punish'd for thus transgressing Gods Command and neglecting this Curse yet the City being rebuilt it was afterward allowed for a fit Habitation even for good men to lodge in as Elijah and Elisha 2 Kings 2.4 18. yea our Saviour himself did honour this City with his presence and Miracles Luke 19.1 5. Josh Ch. 5. from 13. to the end Josh Ch. 6. whole Chapter SECT XCIX JOshua now sent Spies to Ai not to go into it as those sent to Jericho did but to bring him Intelligence in what posture the City and Country thereabout was The Spies return and make a Report as if the place were of no great strength and might easily be taken by a few of the Israelites and therefore there was no need to carry up the whole Host of Israel against it Let only about two or three thousand say they go up and finite it Joshua accordingly sent up about three thousand against it But the men of Ai couragiously sallying out upon them the Israelites fled presently before them which plainly shewed that God being offended with them for something amiss among them did in an extraordinary manner strike them with fear and astonishment The men of Ai chased them from their City Gates to Shebarim and killed 36 of them in the going down of the Hill so that it seems the Israelies fled at the first On-set and were slain only in flying The whole people of Israel were extreamly terrified and dismaid at this For God seemed to have withdrawn his supporting Hand from them and in such a case the most stout and valiant will soon shrink and be afraid Joshua and the Elders of Israel hereupon rent their Clothes * A Ceremony used in great Mournings see 2 Sam. 1.11 Job 2.12 Ezek. 27.30 put dust upon their Heads and fell to the earth on their faces before the Ark. Neither was it their loss so much as the apprehension of Gods displeasure that so much afflicted them God had promised that no man should stand before them Ch. 1.5 and that they should drive out the Inhabitants out of the Land Their flying therefore now before the Enemy especially in such an inglorious manner was a plain Demonstration that God was offended with them and had withdrawn his gracious presence from them And the smallest Affliction if it be looked upon as an effect of Gods anger is very dreadful Joshua lying thus prostrate before the Lord said Alas O Lord God wherefore hast thou at all brought this people over Jordan to deliver us into the hands of the Amorites to destroy us I wish we had been content to have staid and dwelt on the other side Jordan * Joshua seems here a little too much transported thorow humane frailty O Lord what shall I say when Israel turneth their backs before their Enemies For the Canaanites the Inhabitants of this Land will hear of it and will inviron us round and cut off our Name and Memorial from off the Earth and what wilt thou then do to thy great Name How wilt thou preserve thy Glory when the Canaanites shall say Thou hadst not power to subdue them nor defend us against them and thou wast not able to give us this Land which thou hadst promised us See Deut. 33.27 Then the Lord spake to Joshua saying Get thee up why liest thou prostrate on thy face
dealing with Benjamin both that they had in the heat of War slain their Brethren with so great a slaughter and more especially because they had killed the Women and knew not how in regard of their Oath to furnish those that remain'd of them with Wives This made them bewail that the Lord for their sins had made such a Breach among them They fell therefore into consideration what they should do for these two hundred Benjamites that yet wanted Wives They said Those that were escap'd of Benjamin must keep the whole Inheritance that was allotted to them no part of it might be given to any other Tribe and their portion being so large and they that were to inherit it so few in number they ought to be provided of Wives that the Tribe might continue in being and that they might people their Inheritance the sooner They pitch therefore at last upon this way to supply the two hundred remaining Benjamites with Wives It seems it was a Custom at the Feast of Tabernacles for the young Virgins of Shiloh to dance among themselves at a place nigh the Town They advise that these two hundred Benjamites should come at that time and hide themselves in the Vineyards thereabouts and so when the Daughters of Shiloh came forth to dance then they should suddainly rise up and catch every man one of them and so carry them away 'T is strange they should satisfie their Consciences with such a shift as this For what difference was there between giving their own Daughters to the Benjamites and appointing them with their consent to go and take them themselves by force 'T is strange they could satisfie their Consciences to permit the Benjamites in a way of Rape without the particular consent either of Parties or Parents thus to provide themselves Wives But it was a rash and unlawful Oath they had taken and therefore could not bind them to that which was evil How much better had it been to have acknowledged their sin in making this rash Oath and to have repented of it and so to have taken the liberty which God gave them to free themselves from it But men are naturally more inclined to stop the mouth of Conscience with some device of their own than to see their own folly or judge themselves for their former Errour However one thing is remarkable in the Israelites that they permitted not these Benjamites to take any more than every one one Virgin to wife Which shews that though Polygamy was practised by some among them yet it was not publickly approved in those times And yet there was more than ordinary cause to have allowed it now to these Benjamites to increase and multiply their Tribe reduced to so small a number and to replenish their Inheritances which were otherwise like to lie wast and destitute of Inhabitants Things being thus contriv'd the Elders of Israel acquaint the Benjamites with this their Project and to encourage them in it they tell them That if the Parents or Brethren of any of the young Virgins whom they should seize came to them to complain thereof they would say to them Be favourable to these Benjamites for our sakes that you may free us from that Guilt which otherwise will lie upon us For we have brought this necessity upon them by destroying their women and not reserving a sufficient number for them and besides 't is no breach of your Oath to permit it so to be For you did not give your Daughters to these Benjamites but they themselves took them by force The Benjamites readily agreed hereunto and accordingly took them Wives answerable to their number of the Virgins that danced at Shiloh and so returned unto their Inheritance and repaired their Cities and dwelt in them Indeed these seem to be strange kind of Matches For what ground could the men have to believe that they should love their Wives it not being permitted them to chuse the fittest whom they liked but being necessitated to catch the first they could lay their hands on Or what ground could they have to believe that they should be beloved by their Wives whom they took by storm and force and not by a fair Treaty And the case was much the same on the Womens part But what ever conditioned Husbands these new Brides met with yet they had one thing to comfort them viz. they were all married to rich and great landed-men seeing the fair large and fruitful Inheritance of the Tribe of Benjamin was to be shar'd among six hundred of them as the sole Survivors and absolute Heirs of the whole Country Ch. 21. whole Chapter SECT CXXXIII BY these preceding Disorders we may see how corrupt this new Generation was For they turned quickly out of the way their Fathers had walked in and forsook the Lord and served Baal and Ashtaroth (f) Baalim was the common name of the Heathenish gods and Ashtaroth of their Goddesses see 1 King 11.5 They ceased not from their own doings nor from their stubborn way They went a whoring after other gods basely and unlawfully joyning themselves to Idols though they had formerly entred into Covenant with God and therefore should have kept themselves wholly to Him as a chast Wife to her own Husband And the anger of the Lord was hot against them and he delivered them into the hands of Spoilers that spoiled them of their goods and he sold them into the hands of their Enemies round about see Psal 44.12 And his Hand was sore against them as he had threatned it should be upon such Provocations Levit. 26. Deut. 28. and they were greatly distressed In these their Distresses they cried unto Him and humbled themselves before Him and upon their altering their course and returning unto Him by Repentance He also altered his course of proceeding against them and shewed them Mercy And this was the course they usually held with God and God with them throughout this whole Book In the time of their Distresses God sometimes raised them up Judges to avenge them of their Enemies and to Govern them according to his Laws endowing them with the Gifts of his Spirit and fitting them for those great Imployments And though for a time they hearkened to their Judges yet they soon returned to their former evil ways and relapsed to Idolatry God being highly provoked by their breach of Covenant with Him would not drive out the Nations out of the Land which Joshua left when he died but suffered them to continue there to prove Israel by them that is to try whither they would be drawn away by their Idolatries or no and suffering these Canaanites greatly to Vex and Oppress them He thereby proved them whether by these Afflictions they would be brought to repent and turn unto Him And further He left these Nations in the Land that the present Generation might be made careful to train up their Children in War and Martial Discipline that so they might be the better able in
the ground about it were dry then he would look upon it as a sign that God would save Israel by his hand The Lord grants his Request without any reprehension of him at all and accordingly in the morning Gideon found the Fleece so wet that he wrung a Bowl full of water out of it the ground about it being all dry Gideon seeing this earnestly besought the Lord that his anger might not wax hot against him if he humbly desired one sign * Herein Gods great Condescention to Gideon was manifested working a Miracle forward and backward as it were yea many Miracles for the strengthening of his Faith in his Vocation and in Gods Promises more which was just contrary namely that the next morning the Fleece only might be dry and upon the ground about it there might be dew which came to pass accordingly to the great Encouragement of Gideon Ch. 6. whole Chapter SECT CXXXIX THen Gideon and all the people that were with him rose early and pitched besides the well Harod or the Well of Terror in the Tribe of Manasseh so called either from the fear that seiz'd on the twenty two thousand of the Israelites vers 3. or on the Midianites vers 21. and the Midianites encamped at the Hill Moreh on the North-side of them and in the Valley The whole Army that Gideon had gathered together were in all but thirty two thousand and the Midianites were a hundred thirty and five thousand * For there were an hundred and twenty thousand of them slain in their first overthrow and the remainder that were left with Zeba and Zalmunna were fifteen thousand Ch. 8.10 so that they were above four times as many as the Israelites and had the Israelites vanquished the Midianites with these thirty two thousand that were now come to Gideon one would think they should never have gone about to attribute the Victory to themselves or to rob God of the Glory of it But the Lord who foresaw how prone men would be to vaunt themselves upon any great Success told Gideon they were too many for him to Conquer the Midianites by lest Israel should say Mine own hand hath saved me Therefore He orders Gideon to make Proclamation That all that were afraid according as was injoyn'd Deut. 20.8 might depart from Mount Gilead (a) The Mount Gilead here spoken of must needs be not the famous Mountain of that Name without Jordan but another Mount of the same name within Jordan For a great many of this half-Tribe of Manasseh within Jordan being descended from Gilead the Son of Machir the Son of Manasseh they might also call this Mountain Gilead in remembrance of their Father in the Tribe of Manasseh within Jordan where they now were gathered together Hereupon twenty two thousand of them seeing the power and strength of the Enemy their hearts failed them and so they embraced the liberty given them to depart But their Trumpets it seems they left behind them by Gideon's order so there remained only ten thousand with Gideon The Lord tells him They were too many yet He bids him therefore bring those ten thousand down unto the water and there he would try them for him and discover who among them were fit for this Service and who not And accordingly those whom he approved for this Service should go along with him the others should depart When they were come to the water the Lord tells him That every one who coming to the water bended his body only a little and snatched up a little water in the palm of his hand and so lapped it up for his present refreshment as Dogs lap a little water and make hast presently away every such one should go with him but those that kneeling down on their knees bowed their heads down to the River and so putting their mouths into the water drank and sucked up their fill those should be dismissed For this kind of drinking argued sloth and a greedy desire of filling themselves and impatience of thirst whereas the other argued strength and ability of body and that they were content with a little refreshing being more intent upon the business they had in hand than on filling themselves This Experiment being made the number of those Lappers were found to be but 300 the rest were dismissed The Lord tells Gideon He would save them by this small number and by them vanquish the Midianites though for every Souldier Gideon had left there were four hundred and fifty of the Enemy The same night after Gideon had dismissed all his Army but these 300 the Lord spake to him in a Vision or Dream and said to him If thou fearest to go down and set upon the Enemy because of the smallness of thy number go down first privately in the night with thy Servant only and get as near to their Host as thou canst and there thou shalt hear something that shall further strengthen thy Faith Gideon accordingly crept down with his Servant to the first Sentinels of the Host and the Midianites and Amalekites lay along in the Valley like Grashoppers for multitude and their Camels were innumerable Gideon being got near to the Sentinels he heard one of them tell his Dream unto his Fellow says he Behold I dreamed that a Cake of Barley-bread tumbled into the Host of Midian and came into a Tent and smote it that it fell and so over-turned the Tent that it lay along His Fellow answered This is nothing else save the Sword of Gideon the Son of Joash for into his hand hath God delivered Midian and all the Host When Gideon heard this Interpretation of the Dream he bowed himself by way of thankfulness to the Lord for bringing him to hear this comfortable News for the strengthening of his Faith and hereby he perceived that God had alreadly stricken the Enemy with a fear of Him So returning to his little Army he acquaints them with what had passed and told them God had delivered their Enemies into their hands Then he gave to every one of his Souldiers a Trumpet and a Torch which being lighted he was to carry holding an empty Pitcher over it that no light might be seen till they had occasion to discover it Then dividing his 300 into three Companies that so they might encompass the Camp of their Enemies in several places and appear as if they were a great Army He bids them to look on him and to do as He did says He When we are come to the out-side of the Camp of our Enemies and you see me break my Pitcher and discover my Light and blow with my Trumpet do you likewise the same and with a great shout cry out The Sword of the Lord and of Gideon He would have them own God as the chief Agent but yet to name Him as an Instrument because he perceived by the Interpretation of the Dream which he had heard that his Name was terrible among them So Gideon and the three
Courage Fortitude and Zeal for the Execution of his Office And indeed the people at that time needed a wise and able Judge to reduce them to their former Government overthrown by Abimelech and to abolish Idolatry which much prevailed in his licentious Reign and to restore God's pure Worship which 't is like had been much corrupted Though there is no mention made of Enemies that invaded the Land during his Government yet there might be some such Invasions and Oppressions though not so vexatious as the former He dwelt in Shamir a Town bordering on Mount Ephraim that so he might be near the Tabernacle at Shiloh and there was buried having judged Israel three and twenty years Judg. 10. vers 1 2. SECT CXLIII AFter Tola arose Jair dwelling in Gilead in the Tribe of Manasseh Jair the Seventh Judge beyond Jordan and judged Israel twenty two years It seemed he was a man of great Quality before he was raised to be Judge for he had thirty Sons to wit by several Wives that rode on Asse-Colts which was a token of Dignity and Authority He was descended it seems of that Jair who having taken the Cities of Argob called them after his own Name Havoth-Jair that is the Villages of Jair Numb 33.41 Deut. 3.14 Those Villages were at first only twenty three 1 Chron. 2.22 but this Jair coming to inherit these Towns which his Ancestor had taken from the Amorites divided them among his Sons and they were increased either by themselves their Father or Grandfather to thirty and the old Name continued to them In this time it seems the Israelites were horribly corrupt and their Apostacy and Idolatry was far worse than that of their fore-Fathers * Israelitae admodum proni erant in Idolatriam cujus causae erant 1. Quia finitimas gentes● Idolatricas florere videbant se autem inopia premi 2. Multitudo Idololatrarum collata cum ipsorum paucitate 3. Cultus Dei severior erat tristior Non in eo Theatra Saltationes Comaediae vel Tragaediae qua omnia erant in cultibus Idolorum immo etiam saepe turpia libidinosa P. Martyr For now they worshipped all the Idols of the Nations round about them Baalim and Ashtaroth the Idols of Syria Zidon Moab Ammon and the Philistines and so wholly gave themselves up to the Worship of false gods that at length they quite laid aside the Worship of the true God in the Tabernacle And therefore the Text says They forsook the Lord and served him not 'T is like Jair did what he could to restrain them from this abominable Idolatry but was over-born by them So that about the beginning of the fifth year of his Government the Lord being extremely angry with them sold them into the hands of the Ammonites who oppressed (c) The years of the Oppressions are not to be reckones apart from the years of the Judges see in Chap. 3.11 them sorely on the other side of Jordan and into the hands of the Philistines who invaded those Tribes that were within Jordan so that they were invaded both on East and West on the West by the Philistines on the East by the Children of Ammon The fifth Oppression by the Ammonites The Ammonites having oppressed the two Tribes and half without Jordan for eighteen years and Jair dying they proceeded further and passed over Jordan and oppressed the Israelites within Jordan also Judg. Ch. 10. from vers 3. to 10. SECT CXLIV THe Children of Israel being now sorely distressed they cry unto the Lord and acknowledge their Sin and the Lord either by some Prophet or by the High Priest who inquired for them returned them this Answer Have I not delivered you from the Egyptians AmoritEs the Children of Ammon the Philistines the Zidonians (d) Divers of these Deliverances we do not find mentioned before So that this people had received from the Lord many more Favours and Blessings than are here recorded Amalekites and the Maonites * Possibly hereby are meant the Canaanites that inhabited the Wilderness of Maon 1 Sam. 23.24 and yet ye have forsaken me and followed other gods Go and cry unto the gods ye have chosen let them deliver you in the time of your Tribulation I will deliver you no more This Threatning was not absolute but conditional though the condition be not expressed but is thus to be understood viz. except ye truly repent and forsake your Idolatry and amend that which has been so much amiss among you They answered O Lord we humbly acknowledge that we have hainously sinned against thee and do thou punish us hereafter as thou pleasest if we do not continue in thy true and pure Worship utterly renouncing all false gods only make trial of us this once by delivering us out of the hands of our Enemies Then they putting away their strange gods and setting upon a real Reformation the Lord was touched with Compassion towards them and his Soul † This is spoken of God after the manner of men and by way of comparison only affirmed of him was grieved for the miseries they suffered About this time the Children of Ammon gathered themselves together and incamped in the Land of Gilead which now it seems they claimed as belonging unto them see Ch. 11. vers 13. The Children of Israel gathered what Forces they could together to oppose them and encamped at Mizpeh in Mount Gilead in the Tribe of Manasseh beyond Jordan Then they begun to consider who should be their Leader in this Expedition against Ammon and they declared That who-ever being able and fit would undertake it he should be the Head or Judge over all the Inhabitants of Gilead But there were none there present willing to undertake it the Service being very dangerous therefore they resolved to send to Jephtah being a skilful Commander and of known Valour Jephtah was a Gileadite his Fathers name being Gilead and probably he was born in the City of Gilead His Mother was an Harlot It seems in process of time his Brethren that his Father had by his lawful Wife being grown up did by the help and decree of the Magistrates of Gilead see vers 17. bar him of any share of the Inheritance of his Father and denied him any portion for a Livelihood among them Jephtah being thus used betook himself into the Land of Tob a Country lying along Mount Gilead not far from the Ammonites at the entrance of Arabia the Desart and a Company of idle Fellows that had no Means or took no Course for a Livelihood listed themselves under him as their Captain and with them he us'd to Inrode Prey upon and Spoil the Ammonites And he grew to a great Fame for these Exploits and was held a mighty man of Valour Upon this account the Elders of Gilead now came and intreated him to be their Captain-General against the Ammonites For though the Law forbad that any Bastards should be admitted to any Place of
Eucharisticum ut Luc. 1.46.68 unto him to continue his life and to bless him she begins her Song (a) There is in many passages a great harmony between this Song and that of the Blessed Virgin Luk. 1.46 thus My heart rejoiceth in the Lord mine born is exalted in the Lord whereby she intimates that through the Lords goodness to her in giving her a Son she was become stronger and more renowned than before for children are the strength and glory of their Parents and that she had cause now to triumph over her enemies who had before upbraided her for her barrenness My heart is enlarged over mine enemies whereby she intimates that she had enough now to say wherewith to stop the mouth of her insulting adversaries There is none holy as the Lord for there is none besides thee that is there is none essentially and perfectly holy besides the Lord who is the fountain of all the holiness that is in others For there is no God besides thee neither is there any rock like our God He is our only refuge in all our troubles and he only can deliver us out of them all He is the rock says she on which I rested and relyed when I was ready to sink in the time of my trouble Let not my adversaries therefore Peninnah or any others talk any more so exceeding proudly against me let not arrogancy come out of their lips for the Lord is a God of Knowledg that is He knows all that in your pride and arrogancy you think or speak or attempt against his poor servants And by him actions are weighed that is He exactly ponders all the actions of men and will therefore as a just Judg recompence them as he finds them good or evil yea according to the degree of goodness or badness that he finds in them Then she goes on to shew what strange and unexpected alterations God maketh among men By him says she the bows of the mighty are broken that is God doth many times break the strength of the mighty and blast their attempts and makes them successless just as when the bow of a mighty man breaks all his endeavours to shoot come to nothing And on the other hand they that stumbled are girt with strength that is He many times so strengthens the feeble that of themselves were ready to stumble or at least so prosper their weak endeavours that unexpectly they bring mighty things to pass and so those that were weak and feeble in themselves being strengthened by the power of God overcome great difficulties even such as by the power of nature they were not able to overcome as I my self can abundantly testifie They that were full have hired out themselves for bread that is they that were rich he sometimes brings to poverty so that they are fain to work like hired servants to relieve their wants and they that were hungry ceased to be so and were plentifully provided for She that was barren has born many Seven in Scripture is usually put for many as Deut. 28.7 children and they that have had many children are either grown weak and so through feebleness have left off bearing or else have buried the children they have had and so have lost their strength as children are esteemed to be to their Parents Possibly Hannah had assurance by the Spirit of Prophesie that God would give her many children more as indeed we find v. 21. of this Chapter that she had after this three Sons and two Daughters The Lord killeth and maketh alive He bringeth down to the grave and bringeth up that is the Lord bringeth some into desperate dangers into grievous and heavy afflictions and yet delivereth them out of them See Ch. 20.3 Hos 6.2 Isa 26.17 and Gods power is most manifested when men are recovered from such desperate distresses God doth sometimes seem to kill men and then revives them again He maketh poor and maketh rich He bringeth low and raiseth up He raiseth up the poor out of the dust and lifteth the beggar from the dunghill to set them among Princes and to make them inherit the throne of glory that is He raiseth some from beggery to Soveraignty and from the dunghill to the throne For the pillars of the earth are the Lords and he hath set the world upon them that is Though the earth hangs in the midst of the air having nothing to support it but the Almighty power of God yet it stands firm (c) Habet terra suos polos quibus aut sustinet se in quiete aut ut alii volunt in motu se librat Gr. and fast upon its center as if it were supported with pillars and therefore 't is no wonder God should sometimes turn things upside down in the government of the world since he that made the world at first must needs be of power sufficient to do what he will for with his own why should he not do what himself pleaseth He will keep the feet of his Saints that is He will guide and protect his people and keep them from falling And the wicked shall be silent in darkness that is overwhelmed with confusion and astonishment in the great calamities that shall befall them Eccles 5.17 Zeph. 1.15 Jer. 8.14 or cut off from the land of the living for such are said to dwell in silence Psal 94.17 For by strength shall no man prevail that is by his own strength For if the Lord did not preserve his Saints by their own strength they could not keep themselves neither can the wicked by their own strength secure themselves against Gods hand And if any man prevail in any of his enterprises let him not assume the glory of it to himself but ascribe it intirely unto God The adversaries of the Lord shall be broken in pieces out of heaven shall he thunder upon them This clause seems to be a Prophesie and may have reference to that particular judgment upon the enemies of Gods people in the time of Samuels Government 1 Sam. 7.10 when the Lord thundered with a great thunder on the Philistines and discomfited them and they were smitten before Israel yet it may be meant generally of the Lords pouring down vengeance on his adversaries See 2 Sam. 22.14 15. And because God destroyed his enemies often by thunder it grew it seems into a Proverb that the Lord would thunder upon them when he meant terribly to destroy them The Lord shall judg the ends of the earth and he shall give strength unto his King and exalt the horn of his Anointed This seems to be a Prophesie concerning the Exaltation and Kingdom of the Messiah and 't is the first place in the Old Testament where he is mentioned under that name The Lord will rule the world and judg all the inhabitants of the world and particularly those that are in the uttermost parts of the earth by the Messiah his Anointed King who though he shall at first live in a low and
more careful to avoid those ways of injustice and oppression which he had told them before the Kings of the earth were prone unto see Ch. 8.11 As also that he might hereby convince them of their sinful folly in rejecting him and with him the upright and impartial Government of Judges and chusing to be under Kings from many of whom they should find but hard and oppressive usage Having thus justified himself he goes on further to argue with them concerning Gods dealing with them and their carriage towards him Now therefore says he stand still that I may reason with you concerning all the righteous acts of the Lord wherein he hath approved himself faithful and hath performed his Covenant which he made with you and your fathers and hath given you help and deliverance out of the hands of your enemies and therefore you are guilty of great ingratitude in not relying upon him but distrusting him and rejecting his Government Recollect I pray you and call to your remembrance Gods former dealings with you when Jacob was come into Egypt and his posterity exceedingly multiplied they being grievously oppressed cried unto the Lord for deliverance he then made Moses the Governour of his people and Aaron the High-Priest and sent them to deliver your Fathers out of that bondage which they accordingly did and then they led them through the Wilderness and brought them into the Land which the Lord had promised to give unto them And Moses put them in possession of that part of the land which was without Jordan and substituted Joshua in his place who gave them possession of the rest But they soon forgot the kindness of the Lord and regarded not his Commandments So he sold them into the hand of Sisera Captain General to Jabin who dwelt at Hazar and into the hands of the Philistines and into the hand of the King of Moab And when they were in these distresses they cried unto him and confessed their sins and how they had wickedly fallen to Idolatry and had worshipped Baalim and Ashtaroth and then humbly besought him to help them and deliver them out of the hands of their enemies and promised faithfully to serve him The Lord being moved with compassion towards them he sent them several Saviours and Deliverers particularly Jerubbaal or Gideon and Bedan that is Samson so called because he was of the Tribe of Dan and Jephthah * He mentions not these Judges in the order of time in which they lived and insisteth only on some of them to put them in mind of the rest V. 14. Eritis post Jehovam i. e. Jehovah antecedet vos defendet vos Pisc And to come down to your own times I hope I may without vanity mention my self also as one under whose conduct by the blessing of God you have had great deliverances and have enjoyed great tranquillity and safety But when ye understood that Nahash King of the Ammonites was coming against you nothing then would satisfie you but to have a King set over you whereas the Lord your God was your King and held in his own hands the right of governing you and ruled over you by Judges as his Substitutes and Deputies And with his Government you should have been well contented and satisfied till he was pleased to alter it And now behold seeing nothing else would content you he hath set a King over you But though you have greatly offended him and deserve to be rejected of him and cast off from being his people as you have rejected him from being your King yet if you will fear him and serve him and obey his voice the Lord will not forsake you but will be to you and your King a Leader Guide and Protector and you shall continue to be his people following of him as dutiful children do their father which will be a great honour and advantage to you But if you will not obey the voice of the Lord your God his hand will be against you as it was against your Fathers whom for their disobedience he caused to fall in the Wilderness But possibly you will think that all that I have said unto you in blaming you for desiring a King are but the words of a weak old man but ye shall know that I speak to you from the Lord who hath sent me unto you as his Prophet and Ambassadour and seeing you are so difficult to believe me in this thing except my words be confirmed by Miracles you shall see a Miracle to confirm you Is not this a fair and bright day as the days use to be in Wheat-harvest * Their Wheat-harvest in those dry Countries of Syria and Canaan was in the heat of Summer which dried up the vapours and exhalations that are the causes of thunder at that time especially when the day on which Samuel spake to them was fair there was no likelihood of such weather Tonitru illud tempore messis praeter naturam fuit id●oque mirabile propterea quod vere tan●um autumno fiunt tonitrua Cujus rei causa est quod concitantur ex conflictu calidi frigidi qui conflictus neque hyeme superante frigore neque aestate superante aestu fieri potest praesertim in aestuosis terris qualis Syria est Castalio you know we use to have no rain or thunder at this time of the year see Prov. 26. you see now no sign of any approaching tempest yet ye shall see me at this time by my prayer obtain both rain and thunder from God by which you may be convinced that your wickedness is great in desiring a King and thereby rejecting the Lord who is so powerful a Protector and hath thunder and rain heaven and earth at his command and is able to destroy all his and his peoples enemies as you have had lately experience Ch. 7.10 as also in rejecting me his Prophet who by my prayers can procure thunder and rain from heaven Samuel accordingly prayed unto the Lord that day and immediately the Lord sent thunder and rain in a very extraordinary manner insomuch that the people were not only convinced thereby that they had heinously sinned in desiring a King but also were much afraid that by this terrible tempest they should be destroyed They hereupon desired Samuel to pray for them saying they had added to all their former sins this also in asking a King (a) They failed in the manner of asking him 1. Asking him very unseasonably not waiting Gods time 2. They askt him with impetuous impatience brooking no delay 3. Proudly they would be like other Nations 4. Distrustfully resting more on their King than on Gods power and promises 5. Rebelliously shaking off Gods Government as weary of it and desiring to exchange it for that of a King and casting off his holy Prophet Samuel a most innocent and upright Judge Samuel encouraged them and bad them not despair of Gods mercy towards them provided they turned not aside from
shews that the hearts of Kings are in the hand of the Lord Prov. 21.1 He comes at last to Naioth where he Samuel and David being all met together he prophesied for a while before them praising God with Psalms and Hymns and then throwing aside his Princely robe or military habit and falling down on the ground he lay in a trance or extasie all that day and the night following see Numb 24.4 And thus was Saul in the midst of all his fury cast down * See a like case in one of his name and Tribe Act. 9. and as it were bound by the Almighty power of God and expos'd to shame and contempt among all that saw him thus disrobed thus manacled and restrain'd insomuch that some of them said What is Saul that hath shewed himself so great an enemy to David now among the Prophets and come hither to act as one of them This was mercifully ordered for David who hereby had liberty to escape for his life 1 Sam. Ch. 19. whole Chapter SECT CLXXI. DAvid taking the opportunity of Saul's extasie wherein he continued a day and a night he fled from Naioth to Gibeah where Jonathan was and heavily complaining to him that his father should still persecute him he said What have I done what is mine iniquity what is my sin against thy father that he so earnestly seeketh my life Jonathan replies Chap. 19.6 God forbid it should be so my father hath sworn to me that thou shalt not die and moreover he doth not use to do any thing of moment without acquainting me with it and I know nothing of any such purpose he hath and therefore I believe thou art more afraid than thou needest to be It seems Jonathan had not heard of Saul's sending his messengers to take David at his own house nor of his pursuing him to Naioth David seeing him so difficult to believe that he was in such danger he solemnly protested and swore to him as true as the Lord liveth it was so and as sure as he himself was alive there was but a step between him and death And as for his Father 's not acquainting him with it that was no argument against it for 't is like he would not let him know of it that it might not grieve him and that he might not use means to prevent it Jonathan then said seeing the case is so I will do any thing for thee thou canst reasonably desire of me David therefore propounds a way to him how he might discover his fathers affection towards him It seems the Feast of the New-Moon was to be celebrated on the morrow in which they offered Peace-offerings and Gratulatory Sacrifices sounding Trumpets over their Offerings see Numb 10.10 28.11 Psal 81.3 and on the remainder of these Oblations they feasted together And though the Feast lasted only one day viz. the first day of the month yet there being provisions in an ample and plentiful manner provided they were allowed to eat what remained the next day if the Sacrifice which was offered was a vow or voluntary offering see Levit. 7.16 This Feast was to be kept at Saul's Court the next day the chief men of his Court being to sit with him at Table and every one having his known seat which was so peculiar to him that if it were empty no other sat in it Now David being a great Commander in the Army and the Kings Son-in-law had among others his seat and did use at this Festival to sit with the King at Table David therefore tells Jonathan that he intended to absent himself from this feast and not to be at it either the first or second day but on the third day he would come and hide himself in the fields that he might be inform'd how things went He desires Jonathan diligently to observe how the King took his absence If he missed him and took notice of his absence he desires Jonathan to tell him that he asked leave of him that he might go and keep this New-Moon-Feast with his kindred at Bethlem for their family for some signal mercy received from God did annually set apart that day to commemorate it And says he if thy father accept my excuse and be not displeased at my absence then we may conclude all is well but if he be angry at it then it it a manifest sign that he hath determined evil agai●●t me and is vex'd at my absence because it did cross his purpose of doing me a mischief I pray thee therefore deal kindly with thy servant for thou hast brought me into a Covenant of friendship with thee which we made in the presence of the Lord and with invocation of him to be a witness and judge between us to reward the faithful and to punish the transgressour And as for me if thou hast hitherto found any iniquity in me slay me thy self for why shouldest thou expose me to thy fathers fury Jonathan replied Far be it from thee that thou shouldest die either by my hand or my fathers If I knew of any evil determin'd against thee by my father assure thy self I would not conceal it from thee Then David said seeing thou canst hardly come to me thy self without suspition nor canst safely intrust any servant with such a secret how shall I know whither thy Father were enraged at my absence or no Jonathan desires him to go out with him into the field that they might discourse of these things more privately there he tells him that when he had sounded his Father and discovered his mind and purpose concerning him he would faithfully reveal it to him whether it were good or bad if I do not says he then let the Lord God of Israel inflict deserved punishments on me as a false and faithless friend And as for my part being well assured that the Lord hath made choice of thee to succeed my Father I do heartily pray that the Lord would advance thee to the Kingdom as he did my Father and would make thee victorious over thine enemies as my Father hath been And when God shall have made thee King after my Father thou shalt not cut me off as a jealous King would do being the next heir but shalt manifest that great kindness towards me which by Covenant made in the Lords presence thou hast bound thy self to shew me And because this Covenant made between us extendeth not only to our own persons but to our posterity also thou shalt not take off thy loving-kindness from my house for ever see 2 Sam. 21.7 no not then when the Lord hath cut off all the enemies of David from the face of the earth So Jonathan renewed and ratified the Covenant that was before made between them and he said let the Lord require it at the hands of Davids enemies and consequently of me if I keep not Covenant with David but prove his enemy And as Jonathan renewed and confirmed his Covenant by a solemn oath with David
forces to resist the common enemy Hereupon David called the place Sela-Hammahlekoth that is the Rock of Divisions 1 Sam. Ch. 23. from 14 to 29. 9ly Hence David flies to the strong holds in the Wilderness * Here 't is thought he penned the 57 Psalm adjoyning to Engedi (b) A place exceeding fruitful with Vines and other fruit-trees Cant. 1.14 a City of Judah Saul returning with his forces from pursuing the Philistines it was told him whither David was fled and he took 3000 chosen men out of Israel and went to pursue David and his men upon those high steep and cragy rocks upon which wild beasts used to live and he came to the sheep-coats where was a Cave and Saul (c) Nisi somnum Saul captasset motus in spelunca sensisset militares Some Caves in that and other Countries are of that vast wideness that they are sufficient to contain great numbers of men being weary went into the entrance of it which was narrow to cover his feet that is to sleep See note in Judg. 3.24 But though the entrance of the Cave was narrow yet it seems it was room●by within for David and several of his men had hid themselves in the sides and innermost parts of it David's men perceiving that Saul was come into the entrance or mouth of the Cave and that there he had laid himself down to sleep they tell him that God had now put such an opportunity into his hands of cutting off his enemy that thirsted after his blood as if he had from heaven called unto him and commanded (d) V. 4. dicit h.e. dicere videtur quia praebet ansam him to do it But David arising went softly to Saul and only cut off the skirt of his Robe that he might thereby make it evident to him that he could as well have killed him if he had had a mind to it and yet David's heart smote him for this little that he had done because it had an appearance of an injury offered to the King But it seems his men were almost ready to mutiny that he would not kill Saul at this time and so put an end to his and their tedious troubles Whereupon David mildly spake unto them saying God forbid that I should stretch forth my hand against my Master the Lords Anointed I cannot I dare not do it And with these words he stayed his Souldiers from offering violence unto Saul Saul awaking rose up and went on his way David immediately gets out of the Cave and following him cried after him My Lord the King When Saul looked back David bowed himself to the earth before him and then humbly addressing himself to him said Wherefore hearknest thou to mens words that tell thee that David seeketh thy hurt Thou seest that this day the Lord delivered thee into my hands when thou wast in the Cave some bad me kill thee but mine eye spared thee and I told them I would not put forth my hand against my Lord seeing he is the anointed of the Lord. Moreover my father see yea see the the skirt of thy robe in my hand for in that I cut off only the skirt of thy robe and killed thee not when I might so easily have done it thou maist assure thy self that there is no evil intention in my heart against thee neither have I transgressed against thee as those base Sycophants that are about thee do suggest And yet thou huntest my life to take it The Lord judge between me and thee and in this my innocent cause wherein I so unjustly suffer do me right against thee But however though it should not please him to do it yet I am resolved not to avenge my self on thee neither shall my hand be upon thee The Proverb of the Ancients tells us That wickedness proceedeth from the wicked that is wicked men will not stick to do any wicked thing But thou needest not fear any such thing from me seeing thou hast found the contrary by thine own experience I am resolved to refer my cause to God and not to avenge my self in my own quarrel Besides consider I pray thee who it is that thou pursuest with so much eagerness and violence even a weak and contemptible man and in comparison of thee no more to be esteemed than a flea (e) Valde Pathetica oratio Index summa Davidis modestiae vid. Psal 131. or a dead dog (f) Can●m mortuum pulicem persequi dicitur de iis qui tenuissimos homines magno conatu insectantur Having therefore neither power nor will to do thee hurt the Lord judge between me and thee and plead my cause and deliver me out of thy hands David having ended Saul was so affected with what he had said that he lift up his voice and wept and said Is this thy voice my Son David Thou art more righteous than I for thou hast done me good and I have rewarded thee with evil I am convinced that thou hast dealt exceeding kindly with me For when the Lord had delivered me into thy hands thou didst not take away my life If a man find his enemy and have him at an advantage will he let him go away without doing him any hurt This is not the common course of the world The Lord therefore reward thee for the great kindness thou hast shewed me this day And now I know assuredly that thou shalt be King see Ch. 15.28 23.17 seeing God hath endued thee with such heroick and Kingly virtues and does so eminently prosper thee in all thy undertakings I know that the Kingdom of Israel shall remain firm and established to thee and thy posterity after thee Swear now therefore to me that thou wilt not cut off my seed after I am gone as other jealous Princes use to do nor blot out my name by destroying my posterity And David sware unto him accordingly having in effect bound himself by Covenant and Oath before unto Jonathan to do the same that Saul here required But how can David be said to have observed this Oath when as afterwards he delivered the five Sons of Merab Saul's daughter and the two Sons of Rizpah his Concubine to the Gibeonites to be hanged see 2 Sam. 21. I answer David had a full intention to observe this Oath as far as lay in him as appears by his putting to death those that murdered Ishbosheth though he had risen against him 2 Sam. 4. and by his preserving and cherishing Mephibosheth 2 Sam. 9. But in the case before mentioned he was not left to his own choice but necessitated by a special command from God to deliver them into the hands of the Gibeonites for their satisfaction that Gods wrath being appeased the heavy judgment of famine under which they lay might be removed from the land see 2 Sam. 21.6 9. and therefore in this he brake not his Oath * Omnia pacta promissa vota jurejuranda ad hoc caput referenda
beasts I pray thee therefore consider what is fit to be done in the case for David is a man of courage and prowess and will never suffer such a gross abuse and injury offered to him to go unchastised For my part I am afraid he will revenge himself on our whole family I thought good to speak to thee of it that thou maist consider of some way to prevent it As for our Master he is such a Son of Belial of such an harsh and churlish temper that a man knows not how to speak to him Abigail being greatly awakened by this representation of her servant she speedily without acquainting Nabal therewith provided and took two hundred loaves and two leather-sacks of wine and five sheep ready dressed and five measures of parched corn and a hundred clusters of raisons and two hundred cakes of figs and laid them on asses and bad her servants go before with them and she would follow after and riding upon her ass attended with her servants who had the charge of the presents on a sudden as she came under the hollow of the hill she met David and his men Seeing David coming she lighted off her ass and bowed her self to the ground and fell at his feet and said Vpon me * Crimen initio transfert ab odiosa persona in favorabilem my Lord upon me let the punishment of this great iniquity (b) Iniquitas hic peccati paenam significat and transgression fall which has so much provoked thee yet I pray thee let thy hand-maid speak a few words in thy ears which may possibly dispose thee to forbear taking revenge upon us Let not my Lord regard this man of Belial this Nabal Nabal is his name and indeed he answers his name for folly is with him it will not be for thy honour to regard his words or actions wise men do not use to regard the words of fools He is not worthy that thou shouldst trouble thy self about him much less that thou shouldst destroy me and my whole family for his sake She spake not thus to disgrace her husband for his folly was too notoriously known but because she had no other excuse to make for him to preserve him from ruin As for me she says I saw not the young men whom my Lord did send Had I seen them or known of their coming I should have treated them more civilly And now my Lord as sure as the Lord liveth and as sure as thou thy self art alive thou oughtest to believe that by my coming to meet thee and to pacifie thy anger the Lord doth intend to hinder thee from coming to shed blood and from avenging thy self with thy own hand and seeing I trust the Lord will by his alwise Providence so over-rule thy heart my earnest prayer is that God would make all thine enemies like Nabal that is as weak and unable to hurt thee as Nabal is And as for the present (c) V. 27. Benedictionem id est munus sive donum sive rem a benedictione Dei profectam that thy handmaid hath here brought to my Lord though it is so mean that it is not worthy of thy acceptance yet do not I pray thee disdain it seeing it may be of some use to thy servants that follow thee And I beseech thee vouchsafe to forgive the trespass of thy handmaid seeing I take the blame of all this miscarriage wholly upon my self I do verily believe the Lord will give thee the Kingdom and that thy Kingdom will be lasting and durable † * Stabile manebit regnum in familia tua and nothing better becomes a a King than clemency and mercy And that which enduces me to believe this is because I see thou fightest the Lords battels and hast often engaged thy self having warrant from him in a just defence of his cause and people and no self-revenge or cruelty hath been found in thee all thy days hitherto therefore I pray thee do not stain thine honour now by shedding innocent blood Indeed Saul is risen up unjustly to pursue thee and seek thy life but all his attempts will be in vain for the Lord will carefully preserve and charily keep thy life as men are wont carefully to bind up those things in bundles which they much value and intend to preserve And that mans rage must needs be vain who seeks to destroy him whom the Lord will preserve and protect But as for the lives of thine enemies them will he by a violent death sling out as men use to sling out stones out of their slings which they value not And it shall come to pass when the Lord shall have performed all his promises which he hath made unto thee and hath setled thee in thy Kingdom and made thee Ruler over all Israel then it will be a comfort to thee to remember that thou didst spare us and thou wilt not be tormented with anguish and trouble of conscience that thou didst shed innocent blood as certainly thou wilt be if thou shouldst proceed to execute thy bloody purpose And when thou art come to thy Kingdom let me find favour in thine eyes when my occasions and necessities shall require me to wait upon thee Abigail having thus spoken David said Bl●ssed be the Lord God of Israel which sent thee this day to meet me and blessed be thy advice and blessed be thou who hast kept me this day from shedding blood and avenging my self with my own hand for in very deed as sure as the Lord liveth who hath graciously kept me back from hurting thee and thy family except thou hadst thus seasonably met me I had utterly destroyed by the next morning Nabal and all that belonged to him But thou maist now assure thy self that my wrath is appeased and as an evidence thereof I do kindly accept of the present thou hast brought me and will not avenge the wrong offered me by thy husband either upon him or any of his family I have heard thy suit and do grant all that thou desiredst therefore go in peace to thy own house and the Lord be with thee Abigail returning to her husband Nabal behold he kept a Feast that day in his house like the Feast of a King for plenty of provisions and multitude of guests And he had been so merry with his guests that he was very drunk wherefore she said nothing to him more or less of his danger till the morning In the morning when he had slept out his drunkenness and d●bauch she acquainted him with the desperate danger he had by his folly run them all into and how near destruction they all were if in the very nick of time it had not been by a wonderful Providence prevented He hearing this was so terrified with the horrour and dread of the danger he had been in that his heart died within him and falling into a swoon he became as a stone and about ten days after the Lord smote him with
perceive every thing to prosper that thou takest in hand However the Princes of the Philistines have resolv'd that thou shalt not go with them to battel wherefore arise very early in the morning and with thy forces that are Saul's subjects depart and be gone lest our people fall upon thee Achish intended no more by his advice than this but God had a further design in it for by this means David was not only freed from the danger of being perfidious and ungrateful to Achish who so much trusted in him but also from fighting against his brethren and Country-men and hereby also he came in time to rescue the prey out of the hands of the Amalekites which they had carried away from Ziklag * As he went forth with the Philistines and as he returned from them divers fell to him of the Tribe of Manasseh as we may see 1 Chron. 12.19 20 21 22. 1 Sam. Ch. 29. whole Chapter 15. David according to Achish's advice marches back with his forces and coming on the third day after to Ziklag he found it to his great astonishment burnt by the Amalekites for such of them as had escaped Saul's sword formerly and his sword of late taking advantage of the Philistines and his absence and resolving to revenge themselves on him they suddenly invaded the South part of the Philistines (a) V. 14. Called Cherethites some part of the Philistines Country being call'd Cherith and thence the Philistines called Chereshim or Cherethites See Ezek. 25.15 16. Zeph. 2.5 Country and the South of Judah (b) By the South of Caleb is meant the South of Judah belonging to Calebs posterity Josh 14.13 where Davids possessions lay which he had by Abigail Nabals widdow and surprizing Ziklag burnt it or at least a great part of it and carried away the women and children captive God so over-ruling their hearts that they did not put any of them to death but kept them alive to sell them † Quod mirum cum David occidisset omnes Cap. 27.9 11. sed Deus ipsorum furorem mitigavit as 't is probable for slaves and to make merchandize of them among the rest that were carried away captive were David's two wives Ahinoam and Abigail David and his men coming to Ziklag were extreamly surpriz'd at this dismal calamity and bursting out into tears they wept till they had no more power to weep David now felt the hand of the Lord sore upon him for his distrust of God and seeking to help himself by flying to the Philistines the professed enemies of Gods people and for his lying and dissembling and pretending to Achish as if he had a desire to fight against Saul and against the Israelites never was he in greater straits than at this time for his followers being transported with rage and discontent for the loss of their wives and children began to mutiny (c) Hac omnia Davidi acciderunt cum jam sibi videretur esse in tuto and talk of stoning him as the chief cause of this their great calamity and misery because having provoked the Amalekites by invading their Country and slaughtering their people Ch. 27.8 9. he had imprudently drawn out his forces out of the city and left it naked to the malice of their enemies all this only to imploy them in assisting the Philistines in a pernicious war against their own people However in this desperate danger David encouraged himself in the Lord his God and by an humble and actual trust cast himself upon his power goodness and fatherly care of which he had had so large experience then calling to the High-Priest Abiathar to bring the Ephod and by it to enquire (d) This David had divers times neglected to do upon weighty occasions as particularly before he fled out of Judea into the land of the Philistines and before he followed Achish in the war but having smarted for it he is now unwilling to do any thing without Gods direction of the Lord whither he should pursue those Amalekites and whither he should overtake them he had a gracious answer encouraging him to pursue them and a promise that he should without fail recover all that they had taken away Wherefore immediately with his six hundred men he marches after them as far as the brook Besor in the borders of Simeon where two hundred of them being faint and tired could march no further Here God was pleased to try and exercise his faith again in that after he had encouraged him to pursue his enemies he seem'd now to cross him by disabling one third part of his men from going on against them and this he did that the glory of the victory might be ascribed unto him and not to David therefore with these four hundred men leaving the other two hundred with their baggage going on in the pursuit at last they found a poor Egyptian in the field almost ready to perish thorough sickness and hunger having neither eaten nor drunk any thing for three days and three nights together this poor creature they refreshed with bread and water and a piece of a cake of figs and some raisins and then brought him to David who examining him whence he was and to whom he belonged he told him he was by Nation an Egyptian and serv'd an Amalekite that was in the army gone before who left him there in the field three days ago upon his falling sick He tells him he came out with his master and they had inroaded and plundered the South part of the Philistines and of Judah and had burnt Ziklag David asks him if he could bring him down to the Camp where his master was It seems the Amalekites had told him where they intended to encamp that so if he recovered he might come to them Accordingly he tells David that if he would swear to him by God that he would neither kill him himself nor deliver him into the power of his master he would bring him down to them David promised him faithfully he would not and so he brought them to the place where the Amalekites had pitched David found them in a careless posture spread abroad upon the earth eating and drinking and dancing and rejoicing for the great spoils they had gotten out of the land of the Philistines and out of the land of Judah seeing them in this posture he fell upon them immediately at the evening of the day and smote them to the evening of the day following and destroyed in a manner all of them excepting only four hundred young men that rode upon Camels and so escaped He spared none he could lay his hands on they being a Nation destin'd by God to utter destruction David and his men having thus vanquished this great band of the Amalekites they rescued all the women and children which had been carried away by them and there was nothing lacking to them either small or great either sons or daughters they recovered all (e) Miro
1 Chron. 14.1 2. SECT CLXXXV THE Philistines who during the Civil Wars between David and Ishbosheth were content to look on when they saw that Ishbosheth was dead and the people had generally received David for their King who was a great warrior and that he had driven the Jebusites out of the strong Fort of Sion and that the King of Tyre had made a league with him they thought it was time for them to bestir themselves and to oppose his growing power And herein the Providence of God was remarkable that they began with him and not he with them to whom he had been formerly obliged and so might have seemed ungrateful if it had been otherwise They therefore having raised a great Army invaded the land of Israel and came to seek David to fight with him When David heard of it he went to a Fort or strong-hold near the Cave of Adullam see 2 Sam. 23.13 there to muster and arm his Soldiers and the Philistines spread themselves in the valley of Rephaim which was in the way to Bethlem and they had their Head-quarters in Bethlem it self The Israelites being as it seems at this time something distressed through want of water it being hot weather and harvest-time David wished he had a draught of the well of Bethlem but not with any intent as 't is probable to stir up any of his Souldiers to adventure to fetch it for him however three of his valiant Commanders who are supposed to be Adino Eleazar and Shammah see 1 Chron. 11.19 2 Sam. 23.13 who were the chief over the thirty Colonels or Commanders having heard him express his desire of that water they ventured to break through the host of the Philistines and came to Bethlem and drew of the water which was by the Gate and brought it unto him but David when he understood the extreme danger they had gone thorough to procure it was very sorry he had given occasion to such a rash enterprize and had thereby so dangerously exposed the lives of his great Captains therefore he would not drink of it but took it and poured it on the ground as an offering of Thanksgiving unto God for delivering them from that great danger saying Far be it from me O Lord to drink that water which was procured with the extreme hazard of these mens blood (a) 2 Sam. 23.17 Is not this the blood of the men that went in jeopardy of their lives and lives (b) Aquam tam pretiosam dignam judicavit quae Domino libaretur Then David enquired of the Lord by Abiathar the High-Priest whither he should go up against the Philistines or no For though he had a great Army yet he relyed not upon it but seeks to God for direction and without that would not stir He receives answer from God that he should go up and be victorious Then David came to Baalperazim whether the Philistines were now come from the valley of Rephaim 1 Chron 14.11 and David smote them there with a great slaughter whereupon he said the Lord hath broken in upon mine enemies by my hand like the breaking forth of waters signifying thereby the sense he had of Gods hand and power in driving away his enemies as waters when they break through the bank do sweep away all before them Thence this place was called afterwards Baal-perazim * The name is taken from the Idol Baal who with his Idolatrous worshippers was there destroyed see Is 28.21 And there the Philistines left their Images and Idols which they had brought with them and trusted in as their Titular Gods which were neither able to defend their vain worshippers nor themselves and David commanded his men to burn them see Deut. 7.25 1 Chron. 14.12 The Philistines shortly after recruiting their scattered Army came again to provoke the Israelites to fight with them in the very same place where they had received their former defeat though they had no provocation from David to do so he having not hotly pursued his former victory but though David had gotten a great victory over them before yet he was not so puffed up with it as to relye on his own strength therefore he would not engage with them again without first inquiring of the Lord. The Lord bids him not go up openly and directly against them as formerly but to fetch a compass and so to come upon them behind over against the Mulberry Trees where they look'd not for him and when he heard the sound of a going on the tops of the Mulberry Trees viz. of an Army of Horsemen and Chariots marching over the tops of the Trees like that 2 King 7.6 which should be a sign to him that the Lord is gone forth with his holy Angels to destroy the Philistines before him then he should bestir himself and fet upon them for says the Lord I will give thee victory over them And David did accordingly and smote the Philistines from Geba or Gibeah in Benjamin where the fight began unto Gazer situate in the west of Ephraim which was then possessed by the Philistines So that the fame of David went into all lands and God brought the fear of him upon all Nations round about him 2 Sam. Ch. 5. from v. 17. to the end 2 Sam. Ch. 23. from v. 13 to the 18. 1 Chron. Ch. 11. from v. 15 to the 20. 1 Chron. Ch. 14. from v. 8 to the end SECT CLXXXVI DAvid now enjoying peace and quietness began to take into his pious thoughts the bringing up the Ark from Kirjath-jearim and placing it in the Fort of Sion which he had lately taken from the Jebusites The Tabernacle was now at Gibeon 2 Chron. 1.3 whither it had been removed from Nob after that bloody slaughter of the Priests by Saul 1 Sam. 22. And there was the great Altar for Burnt-offerings to which the people frequently went contenting themselves therewith and not regarding the Ark the principal evidence of Gods presence among them and whereat Divine Oracles and directions were given it being now lodged in a private house Upon what occasion the Ark was removed to the house of Abinadab in Kirjath-jearim we may see Sect. 153. and 1 Sam. 7. where it continued about fourtysix years saving only when upon extraordinary occasions it was brought into the Camp see 1 Sam. 14.8 viz. thirtynine in the days of Samuel and Saul and seven in the days of David David therefore judged it more for the honour of God and of the Ark that it should not lye hid in a private family which possibly had occasion'd the people so much to neglect it but be setled in the chief City of the Kingdom in a place purposely appointed for it that the people might more conveniently resort unto it wherefore calling his great Commanders and the Elders and Heads of the people together he imparted his design unto them and desired their advice upon it He told them that if it seem'd good to them and they apprehended
unto me Thus the glory and strength of the Heathens shall by little and little fade and decay and though they be in places of strength yet even in those close places their fortified Cities and Towers they shall be no less afraid then if they were only in some poor unwalled villages He now concludes his Song praising God for all the benefits before recited The Lord liveth and blessed be my Rock and exalted be the God who is the rock of my Salvation It is God who avengeth me and bringeth down the people under me and who bringeth me forth and delivereth me out of the hands of mine enemies notwithstanding all their power and policies Thou hast lifted me up on high over those that rose up against me Thou hast delivered me from the violent man viz. from Saul my most violent and deadly enemy Therefore I will give thanks unto the Lord among the heathen that is I will labour to spread the knowledg of thee and so to exalt thy praise among the Heathen Nations † See Apostol Hist on Rom. 15.9 This David speaks by a spirit of Prophesie having respect to the calling of the Gentiles whom thou hast brought into subjection to me God is the Tower of Salvation for his King that is he is as a Tower in which he is safe and sheweth mercy unto his anointed unto David and to his seed for evermore that is God will manifest his favour to him to his posterity after him and principally to Christ who was to be of his seed according to the flesh Rom. 1.3 and to all the faithful members of Christ who are also by faith his seed See Isa 53.10 and Heb. 2.13 2 Sam. Ch. 22. whole Chapter SECT CCI. DAvid now towards his latter end apprehending his death approaching in imitation of Jacob and Moses leaves behind him a kind of Testamentary Prophesie that his Kingdom and Throne should be established for ever namely in the person of the Messias who was to come of him according to Gods Covenant 2 Sam. 7.16 and he Prophesies of the righteousness glory and prosperity of that Kingdom and these were the last words he wrote by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost for the use of the Church In the Preface to this Prophesie he first sets down his own Titles saying I am the Son of Jesse by birth yet by the grace and favour of God exalted to be King of Israel and who have been enabled by the Spirit of God to compose many Divine Hymns and Psalms for the benefit of the Church and thereupon have been call'd the sweet Psalmist of Israel I David do now declare that the Spirit of the Lord did formerly speak by me and his word was in my tongue when I uttered those Divine composures And the same God of Israel who is the Rock of Israel hath now spoken to me and I am to declare that there shall be a ruler over men a righteous person that shall rule them in the fear of God (a) These words are unstood by learned men as a promise of the Messiah Quid dominabitur in timore Domini cum spiritu timoris Domini unctus sit quid subditos suos ita spiritu suo gubernavit ut ex vero Dei timore sanctitati vitae studeant Osiand And he shall reign prosperously and still increase in glory his glory shall be like the morning light that shines more and more unto perfect day and shall daily increase like the grass that hath seasonably the moistning rain and warming Sun to make it sprout up and grow And though my house be not so with God as it should be but I and mine have been guilty of many great sins and transgressions yet God hath made with me an everlasting Covenant viz. that my Kingdom and Throne shall be established for ever in the person of the Messiah who shall come out of my loyns Ch. 7.16 and this Covenant is well ordered in all things for the glory of God and Salvation of man and sure to be performed And this promise of God that the Messiah should spring from my loyns and come into the world to save sinners is that on which my hope of Salvation is firmly grounded and this thing I wish and desire above all things though God do not make the glory of my Temporal Kingdom to grow and increase But as for those sons of Belial those prophane graceless and stubborn wretches who will not submit to the Kingdom of the Messiah they shall be all of them as thorns plucked up and cast away because they are so intractable that they cannot be taken with hands but the man that shall go about to touch them had need have his hands armed with some iron glove or gantlet and to have a staff in his hands like the staff of a Spear wherewith to thrust them into the oven And these intractable thorns shall be burnt and consumed in the same place where they grew Whereby as some think he Prophesied of the destruction of the obstinate Jews who were by the Romans destroyed in the same place or City where they lived and by wicked hands had crucified the Lord of life 2 Sam. Ch. 23. from v. 1. to 8. SECT CCII. HEre now follows a Catalogue of David's Worthies men renowned for valour and admirable exploits and such as were great supports to him in all his troubles 1 Chron. 11.10 These are the chief of the mighty men whom David had who held strongly with him in his Kingdom and join'd with the Elders of the people to make him King they were in all thirty seven whereof Joab was the chief being Captain General of the Host 1 Chron. 11.6 Next to him were six chief Colonels and of them the first three were above the other three The first three were Adino Eleazar and Shammah This Adino was call'd the Eznite from the Country where he was born or bred and the Tachmonite or Hackmonite from his Father being the Son of one Tachmani or Hackmani And also Jashobeam or Josheph-Bassebet because he sat in the Chair and was President of the Council of War Concerning his Exploits 't is said of him 2 Sam. 23.8 That he lifted up his Spear against eight hundred and slew them In the 1 Chron. 11.11 There are only 300 mentioned Therefore either 800 were slain by him at one time and 300 at another or else he discomfited 800 whereof only 300 were slain outright by himself and the rest by others which yet are said to be slain by him because they were slain by those that fought under him The Second of the first three was Eleazar one of the posterity of Ahoah a Benjamite 1 Chron. 8.4 he was with David at Pasdammim when the Philistines were gathered together in battel against him and there defended a field of barley against them when the rest of the people fled away and slew so many of them that at last the people returned to the spoil of the enemy
will readily assist thee about things of Gold Silver Brass Wood or any other materials And I doubt not but the Princes and all the people will be wholly at thy command Then David turned his speech again to the whole Assembly and said to them Solomon my Son whom God alone hath chosen to succeed me is yet young and tender the work that he is to do is great For this Palace or Royal Temple that he is to build is not to be built for man but for the Lord God and therefore must be most magnificent As for my self I have provided with all my might and to the uttermost of my power for the building of it and the finishing of all things appertaining to it And I declare before you all not out of pride or ostentation but to stir you up to follow my example that I have provided gold and silver and brass and iron and timber and marble stones in abundance for this great work yea I have provided all manner of precious stones as Onix-stones and glittering stones of divers colours Yea I have so set my heart on the building of this house for God that I have of my own proper goods which I had gathered for my self * David got very rich spoils in the many wars he was engaged in and the wealthy enemies he conquered after I had consecrated to God his part which was the greatest given three thousand talents of Gold viz. of the Gold of Ophir seven thousand talents of refined silver The gold is for to overlay in thin plates the walls of the Temple and the silver to overlay the walls of some particular rooms in the houses and buildings adjoining And now let me exhort you all to follow my example and to assist my Son with heart and hand with your counsel and with your purses in this great work And truly you have great reason to do it Is not the Lord your God among you to bless you Hath he not given you rest on every side Hath he not given the people the inhabitants of the land into my hand so that they peaceably submit to my government Is not the land subdued before the Lord and before his people so that being freed from their enemies they may quietly enjoy their possessions Therefore set your hearts to seek the Lord your God and faithfully to serve him Arise and build the Sanctuary of the Lord your God and bring the Ark and the holy vessels of God into it And now let me see who among you is willing to fill his hand with gifts this day and freely to offer them to the Lord for the building of this house Upon this motion of the Kings the Princes Rulers and Captains and all sorts offered very willingly and liberally for the service of the house and 't is like subscribed what they intended to give and that which they gave amounted to five thousand talents of Gold and ten thousand drams and ten thousand talents of silver and eighteen thousand talents of brass and one hundred thousand talents of iron And they that had precious stones gave them to the Treasure of the house of the Lord for this sacred use And there was great joy among all the people because of the great willingness and forwardness that was in all sorts to contribut to this work And David also rejoiced exceedingly at it and was much pleased with their large free and willing contribution Whereupon he brake out into an holy and zealous praising of the Lord for it and said Blessed be thou Lord God of Israel our Father for ever and ever To thee O Lord belongs greatness power glory majesty and victory For all that is in heaven or in the earth is thine Thine is the Kingdom O Lord and we do willingly exalt thee and acknowledg thee to be head above all and higher than all Both riches and honour come from thee and thou reignest over all and in thine hand is power and might In thine hand it is to make great and to give strength to all to whom thou pleasest Now therefore O Lord we exalt and praise thy name for thy glorious excellencies and thy benefits conferred on us But who am I and what is my people that we should have hearts and abilities to offer so freely and so largely as we have done And yet we have no manner of cause to boast or glory For all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee We do acknowledg that we are not proprietors of the goods that we possess but only thy stewards The land we dwell in is thine we are but strangers before thee and sojourners as all our fathers were And our days on the earth are as a shadow and there is no abiding for us here and therefore seeing we are to continue but a short time in this life and have but a short enjoyment of the things of this world how can we better dispose of them than for thy service who art able to give us in exchange for them an eternal inheritance in thy Kingdom O Lord we do willingly acknowledg that all this great store we have provided for the building of an house for thy holy name was given us by thy free bounty and is all thine own and therefore we present unto thee only what thou thy self didst first give us I know O Lord thou triest the heart and hast pleasure in uprightness As for my self in the uprightness of mine heart I have willingly offered all these things and now to my great joy and comfort I have also seen this people here present to offer willingly unto thee O Lord God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob our Fathers I pray thee keep and preserve this holy zeal in the minds and hearts of this people and establish their hearts and make them ever firm to thy self And give unto Solomon my Son an upright heart to keep thy commandments testimonies and statutes and to do all things required of him and enable him to build and finish this stately Palace for thy name for which I have made so great provision David having ended his prayer he call'd to the whole Congregation to bless the Lord which accordingly they did with loud acclamations and bowed down their heads and worshipped the Lord with divine honour and adoration which being done they bowed themselves to the King and paid him civil honour and respect and so departed The next day they sacrificed Sacrifices and offered Burnt-offerings unto the Lord namely a thousand bullocks a thousand rams and a thousand lambs with the drink-offerings appertaining to them which they offered in the name of all the people and in such abundance that all the Israelites there present might eat of the Peace-offerings that were then offered And they did eat and drink before the Lord that day with great gladness of heart and anointed Solomon a second time King his first anointing having been done on the sudden and almost in a tumultuary
afraid to execute justice upon thee for the doing justice upon such offenders and wicked wretches as thou art is the way by the blessing of God to have my Kingdom established to me and to my posterity after me in the sight of the Lord that is his gracious Providence continually watching over us So the King commanded Benaiah to kill him which accordingly he did And so the Kingdom was established in the hands of Solomon his chief and capital enemies being now cut off 1 King Ch. 2. from v. 39 to the end CHAP. V. The fifth Age of the World from the beginning of the building of the Temple in the fourth year of Solomons reign unto the destruction of it and Captivity of Judah in the 11th year of Zedekiah containing a space of 420 years SECT I. IN the year 480 from the coming of the children of Israel out of Egypt in the fourth year of the reign of King Solomon on the second day of the second Month called Zif answering as some think to our 21 of May the foundation of the Temple was laid in Mount Moriah the very place where Abraham was commanded to offer up his Son Isaac see Gen. 22.2 and in the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite about the year of the world 2988. This foundation was laid with great and costly hewed stones brought thither by the Kings command 1 King 5.17 and this glorious structure with all things belonging to it took up in the building and finishing of it seven years and an half The length of this magnificent building was sixty cubits besides ten cubits allowed for the Porch which made the whole length to be seventy cubits 1 King 6.2 3. The cubits after which the Temple was built it's probable were after the first measure 2 Chron. 3.3 and double to the ordinary cubits which reached only from the Elbow to the tip of the longest finger and equal to our English yard If any shall think this sacred pile to be but little in comparison of other Fanes and Temples let them consider the stateliness of this Temple did not consist so much in the greatness of it as the exquisite workmanship symetry and costly furniture thereof 2ly It was big enough for the uses it was intended for namely to contain the holy vessels with sufficient space between them and to receive such Priests as did officiate therein For the Holy of Holies was accessible only to the High-Priest and that but once a year and into the holy or inward house only such Priests entred as by lot or course came thither to do the service they were appointed unto viz. to light lamps to set shew-bread to offer inincense as appeareth by Zacharies sole staying therein whilst the whole multitude of the people were praying without 3ly The great latitude and capacity of the Temple consisted in the outward Courts with the stately buildings and Cloysters about them which were of such receipt as to entertain multitudes of men sub dio in the open air and so it equalled the greatest buildings in the world But though the covered Temple was not great yet it was more than twice as big as the Tabernacle made by Moses which was only thirty cubits in length ten in breadth and as many in height Both Jewish and Christian writers place the ends or length of the Temple East and West the sides or breadth North and South making the Porch or entrance on the East-end and the Holy of Holies on the West-end as is gathered from Ezek. 8.16 Ch. 44.1 Ch. 47.1 We shall now describe the parts of this Temple particularly and shall speak first of the Porch 1. The Porch In the Book of Kings 1 King 6.3 we meet with the length and breadth of the Porch but no height thereof mentioned In Chronicles we find the length and height thereof but there the breadth is omitted Thus we see that by comparing one Scripture with another we may come to find out the truth This Porch was twenty cubits in length for its length ran parallel to the breadth of the house from North to South ten in breadth from East to West and an hundred and twenty in height being four times as high as the body of the Temple see 2 Chron. 3.4 not that it was all empty and void to the top but probably had Chambers in it and winding stairs ascending up to the roof The height of the lowest room within might perhaps be equal to the rest of the House viz. thirty cubits The battlements on the top might have stately railes of stone besides other ornaments and Pinacles There was a magnificent entrance into it raised by many steps out of the Area of the Priests Court This Porch viz. the arched Portal Solomon overlaid within with pure gold 2 Chron. 3.4 That is gilded it all over it having plates of silver underneath For David is said to have provided seven thousand talents of refined silver to overlay the walls of the houses withal 1 Chron. 29.4 Thus it took its denomination of gold from the metal which was most precious and most visible on the surface of it And so all the several rooms of the Temple might be overlaid with pure gold The Porch with leaf the inward house with plate the Holy of Holies with the most refined gold of Parvaim The Holy or inward House had forty cubits in length the breadth twenty cubits 2. The Sanctuary or inward house or middle part between the Porch and the Oracle adaequate to the general dimensions of the Temple For the wall the out-side of it which was expos'd to open view was as is conceiv'd of white polisht marble or made of some excellent stone for strength and the timber and boards within were all Cedar The Cedar was curiously carved with the Imagery of Flowers Palmes and Cherubims and those figures being outwardly imbossed with visible prominences the plates of gold being of the purest and most flexible metal applied themselves so close to each line in the Sculpture that they set it off and expressed the carved work with advantage abating nothing of the art and adding much to the beauty and richness thereof 1 King 6.18 29. And in some select places as it seems it was most gloriously adorn'd and garnisht with precious stones 2 Chron. 3.6 For Solomon intended this Temple should be very glorious it being built for the honour of the all-glorious God Of the same curiosity for carving were the two doors with folding leaves made of firr-tree and overlaid with gold which led out of the Porch into the Temple The workmanship of these doors and the wall being in all particulars so alike that when they were shut no breach appeared in them Posts of Olive-tree four square were made for these doors to turn upon 1 King 6. from the 31 to the 36. The floor hereof was made of boards of Firr and they were faced and all overlaid with gold 1 King 6.15 30 * V.
habitation there and that being a private place possibly Elisha chose now to go thither that he might be the more retired and might the more give himself to prayer from thence after some time he went to Samaria in which being a populous City he had more work to do and more opportunity to instruct the people and from thence he went along with the Army that shortly after went against the Moabites which undoubtedly he did by the special instinct and direction of the Spirit of God 2 King Ch. 2. whole Chapter Mesha King of Moab upon Ahab's death refused to pay the Tribute which the Moabites formerly paid to the Kings of Israel see v. 5. and Ahaziah being King but a little while and most part of that time possibly bedrid by reason of the hurt received by his fall he could not undertake the reducing of them Jehoram therefore now attempts it as soon as he came to the Crown * The Moabites being formerly Tributary to David and Solomon they had revolted from the King of Judah and given themselves to be vassals to Jeroboam and his Successors and so had continued till this time wherefore going through all the Tribes of Israel he mustered all that were fit for war and sent to Jehoshaphat King of Judah to desire his assistance in this war against the Moabites who were enemies to both Nations and had not long before join'd with Ammon and Edom against him See 2 Chron. 20. Jehoshaphat sent him word he would willingly join with him against them and that himself his people and his horses should be ready to go and do for him according as he should order and as if they were all his own See 1 King 22.4 It may seem strange Jehoshaphat should so readily join with Jehoram having been so sharply reproved before from the Lord for joining with Ahab his Father see 2 Chron. 19.2 and afterwards punished by the Lord for joining with Ahaziah his Son to make ships to go to Tarshish 2 Chron. 20.3 But possibly he thought this Jehoram a better man than either his Father or Brother seeing he had put down the image and worship of Baal and so had given some hopes he would proceed to a further reformation When their Armies were met together Jehoram askt him which way they should go up to fight against Moab Jehoshaphat advised that they should go through the Wilderness of Edom that they might take the King or Viceroy of Edom and his forces along with them who at this time were Tributaries to Judah and so might come upon the Moabites by a way they little expected They agree to take this course and so they fetcht a compass of seven days march about the Wilderness of Edom at last when they came near the Moabites they were sore distressed for water insomuch that all these three Armies and their horses were in great danger of perishing for want of it Jehoram seeing their present distress cried out Alas that the Lord should bring three Kings together to deliver them into the hands of the Moabites we are so infeebled through want of water that we can neither go forward nor can return back and so must needs become a prey to our enemies Thus he impiously reflecteth the blame of their distress upon God and not on their own sins that had brought them into this great strait And God hereby discovered to Jehoshaphat his sin in joining with Jehoram without consulting him first about it but now being by this judgment made wiser he asks Is there not some holy Prophet here who may inquire of the Lord for us and direct us what we should do One of the Kings servants answered Here is Elisha who poured water * Sic solvere corrigium calceamenti idem est quod servire on the hands of Elijah that is ministred unto him and was his servant It was undoubtedly by the special instinct of the Spirit of God that Elisha was come along with the Army into these deserts of Edom and that he was not far from the Camp at this time Jehoshaphat was glad to hear that he was there being the disciple of so great a Prophet and possibly known at this time by his own fame for says he the word of the Lord is with him intimating that he was a Prophet of the true God and consequently able to counsel them from God Upon this all these three Kings went down to him to speak with him 'T is strange they did not send for him to come to them But possibly Jehoshaphat knowing how much the Prophets of the Lord were at that time slighted and despised advised the other Kings rather to go to him that by doing him this great honour they might let the people see how much they esteem'd him When these Kings were come to Elisha he looking upon Jehoram said What have I to do with thee Get thee to the Prophets of thy Idolatrous Father and Mother whom thou toleratest in Israel and some of which are now in the Camp and see if they can help thee in this thy extremity Jehoram mildly answered nay Elisha do not speak of these things now the Lord hath brought us three Kings together with our Armies and hath brought us into such great straights that we are like to fall into the hands of the Moabites if he do not presently help us Elisha replies As the Lord of hosts liveth before whom I stand were it not that I respect the presence of Jehoshaphat King of Judah I would not look towards thee nor regard thee Having said thus and finding his spirit something disturb'd at the thoughts of Jehoram's Idolatry he calls for a Minstril that is one skilful in singing or playing on instruments to compose and calm his affections And when the Minstril played and possibly sang some songs of praise to God the hand of the Lord was upon Elisha viz. the spirit of Prophesie came upon him * Prophetia est donum actuale non habituale whereby he was inabled to give counsel and advice to these Kings and to foretell what should come to pass Which abilities the Prophets had not at all times but only then when it pleased the Lord to give them to them and sometimes they were to prepare themselves for the receiving of them Elisha hereupon being instructed from the Lord bids them make the valley where they were full of ditches and though they should perceive no wind which is the ordinary means of gathering the clouds together and causing them to shower down rain nor see any rain falling from heaven yet the valley should be fill'd with water so that they and their cattel should be abundantly supplied Nay says he besides the mercy which ye so much desire viz. a supply of water the Lord will do a greater thing for you than that viz. He will deliver the Moabites into your hands and ye shall smite every fenced City and every choice City that had the fairest Edifices in it
the twentieth of Jotham because according to them Jotham still had the title of King though he had resigned the Kingdom four years before 'T is said indeed in 2 King 17.1 that Hoshea began to reign in the twelfth year of Ahaz because though he thrust himself into the Kingdom before yet he was opposed as an usurper till the twelfth of Ahaz at which time it seems he had the Crown confirmed to him and afterwards reigned four years in Ahaz's time and five in Hezekiah's in all nine years 2 King 15.30 31. HOSHEA the Son of Ela having murdered Pekah got the Kingdom into his own hand The 19th King of Israel HOSHEA in the fourth year of Ahaz yet by reason of stirs and tumults that arose hereupon he could not quietly enjoy it but that State continued in confusion and a kind of Anarchy for the space of nine years Hoshea having at length composed all differences at home began now quietly to reign in the latter end of the twelfth year of Ahaz and reigned nine years He did evil in the sight of the Lord but not as the Kings of Israel that were before him for though he continued Jeroboam's Idolatry of the Golden Calves yet he abandoned the grosser Idolatries of many of his Predecessors And besides he suffered such of his subjects as had a mind to it to go up to Jerusalem to worship there which the former Kings of Israel would not permit For when Hezekiah had proclaimed a solemn Passover many of the Ten Tribes went up to keep their Passover in Jerusalem as we read 2 Chron. 30.11 Nevertheless divers of Asher and Manasseh and of Zebulon humbled themselves and came to Jerusalem 2 King 17.1 2. Tiglath-Pileser after he had reigned nineteen years dying Salmanasser his Son succeeded him This Salmanasser * This seemeth to be that Shalman who in the Prophesie of Hosea Chap. 10.14 is said to have laid waste the house of Arbeb to wit the Country of Arbela in the land of Assyria beneath Arpad either invited by the people or taking advantage of those late broils in the Kingdom of Israel came up now against Hoshea and at length prevailed so far that Hoshea was content to become his servant and pay him tribute 2 King 17.3 But sometime after Hoshea confederating with the King of Egypt resolved to cast off his yoke and refused to pay him tribute any longer Salmanasser understanding this resolved to revenge this injury Wherefore first of all making sure of all the land of the Moabites that he might have no enemy on his back to annoy him and rasing to the ground their two chief Cities Ar and Kirharaseth according to the Prophesie of Isaiah Chap. 15. he then went through and wasted all the land of Israel and at last marched to Samaria in the fourth year of Hezekiah and seventh of Hoshea and besieged it three years viz. in the seventh eighth and ninth year of Hoshea which were concurrent with the fourth fifth and sixth of Hezekiah Isa 15. whole Chapter 2 King 17.4 5. 2 King 18.9 10. Toward the end of the third year of the siege the sixth of the reign of Hezekiah and ninth of Hoshea Salmanasser took Samaria and their King Hoshea and then shut him up and bound him in prison † 2 King 17. latter part of v. 4. those words are spoken by way of anticipation as Josephus says lib. 9. and carried away the Israelites captives into his own country and planted them in Chalachochabor and Nehar-Gozan cities of Assyria whither Tiglath-Pileser had before transported the inhabitants of Perea and in the Cities of Media If any such inquire why the Lord did thus deliver up the Israelites into the hands of their enemies the reason is here fully rendred because they obeyed not the voice of the Lord their God but transgressed his Covenant and all that Moses the servant of the Lord commanded and would not hear them nor do them 2 King 18.12 And 2 King 17.7 c. For so it was that the children of Israel had sinned against the Lord their God who had brought them up out of the land of Egypt from under the hand of Pharoah King of Egypt and they feared other gods and walked in the statutes of the heathen whom the Lord had cast out before them and of the Kings of Israel who made statutes for Idolatry And besides their open Idolatry they did secretly many things which were not right against the mind and will of the Lord their God and they built them high places in all their Cities from the tower of the watchmen † A Proverbial speech whereby the extent of their Idolatry is set forth to their fenced Cities And they set them up Images and groves in every high hill and under every green tree And there they burnt incense in all the high places as did the heathen whom the Lord carried away before them and wrought wicked things to provoke the Lord to anger Yea they served Idols whereof the Lord had said unto them ye shall not do this thing Notwithstanding the Lord testified against Israel and against Judah by all the Prophets and by all the Seers whom he sent unto them saying Turn ye from your evil ways and keep my commandments and my statutes according to what I commanded your fathers in the wilderness and which I have often since inculcated upon you by my servants the Prophets time after time But they would not hear but hardened their necks as their fathers did who did not believe in the Lord their God And they rejected his statutes and his covenant that he made with their fathers and his testimonies † In which respect Ezek. 20.25 Gods statutes are said not to be good that is through the wickedness of the people they prov'd hurtful to them and sentenced them to death whereby he testified against their transgressions and they followed vanity and became vain and went after the heathen that were round about them concerning whom the Lord had charged them that they should not do like unto them And they left all the commandments of the Lord their God and made them molten images even two Calves and made a grove and worshipped all the host of heaven and served Baal And they caused their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire and used divination and inchantments and sold themselves to do evil in the sight of the Lord to provoke him to anger therefore the Lord was very angry with Israel and removed them out of his sight there was none left but the Tribe of Judah only And another cause of Israels ruin was they were an ill example to Judah and infected that Nation And hereupon Judah also kept not the commandments of the Lord their God but walked in the statutes of Israel which they made So the Lord rejected all the seed of Israel and afflicted them and delivered them into the hand of spoilers until he had cast them
out of his sight that is out of that land where he manifested the evidences of his gracious presence 'T is further added that when the Lord had rent Israel from the house of David they made Jeroboam the Son of Nebat King and Jeroboam drave Israel from following the Lord and made them sin a great sin And the children of Israel walked in all the sins of Jeroboam which he did they departed not from them until the Lord removed them out of his sight as he had threatned by all his servants the Prophets And for these reasons was Israel carried away out of their own land to Assyria where they remained as exiles when this History was written 2 King 17. from 7 to the 24. 2 King 18.10 11 12. This was the end of the Kingdom of Israel when it had stood severed from the Kingdom of Judah by the space of two hundred fifty four years Their many great and crying sins highly provoked the Lord against them especially their notorious idolatry their contempt of the Lords Prophets and their contumacy and bold persisting in their wicked ways For after the great blow they received by Tiglath-Piles●r 2 King 15.29 they were so far from any amendment that they used in the pride of their hearts that Proverb Isa 9. v. 10. The bricks are fallen down but we will build with hewn stones the sycamores are cut down but we will change them into cedars intimating thereby that they would build their towns that were spoiled better than they were before For these sins therefore the Lord was provoked to reject and cast them off and to suffer them to be led away captive Tobit or Tobias the elder saith of himself that he at this time with Anna his wife and his Countrymen the Naphtalites was carried away into the land of Assyria and there made purveyor or provider of corn and other victuals for Salmanasser's houshold and also that he was carried into Media and there placed in a principal City called Ruges c. Tobit Ch. 1. Salmanasser having thus carried away the Israelites captives he planted Colonies there of five Nations of his own people taking them out of Babylon Cutha Ava Emath and Sepharvaim and placed them in the Cities of Samaria in the room of the Israelites And these were they that after this time were called Cuthaeans by a Synecdoche because the major part of them came out of Cutha a Country in Persia many of these at their first coming thither not fearing the Lord nor worshipping the true God of Israel were devoured by Lions therefore a Jewish Priest was at the request of the rest of them sent out of Assyria to teach them the manner how the God of Israel would be worshipped But this being as it seems one of Jeroboam's Priests and making his residence at Bethel he taught them not the pure worship of God nor to serve him as they ought in his Temple at Jerusalem but in their own Country after the way of Jeroboam Neither were these people brought to worship the true God alone but every City had also a several Idol of their own which they worshipped according to the custom of the Nations from which they were descended and from whence they had been transported So though they feared the Lord that is acknowledged the God of Israel to be the true God yet they served their own gods also after the manner of the Nations from whence they came * Ex ritu Gentium illarum unde ipsos deportaverant vel è quibus deportati fuerant Pisc And as for the Israelites that were carried away captive into Assyria they were nothing amended by their captivity but 't is said of them 2 King 17.34 That unto this day they do after their former manners they fear not the Lord neither do they after their statutes or after their ordinances appointed and enjoin'd them by God or after the Law and Commandments which the Lord commanded the children of Jacob whom he named Israel to observe with whom he made a Covenant and charged them saying Ye shall not fear other gods nor bow your selves to them nor serve them nor sacrifice to them But the Lord who brought you up out of the land of Egypt with great power and a stretched out arm him shall ye fear and him shall ye worship and to him shall ye do sacrifice And the statutes and the ordinances and the law and the commandments which he wrote for you ye shall observe to do for evermore * Viz. as long as that dispensation shall last and ye shall not fear other gods And the Covenant that I have made with you ye shall not forget neither shall ye fear other gods but the Lord your God shall ye fear and he shall deliver you out of the hand of all your enemies Howbeit they did not hearken but they did after their former manner But as for those Nations whom the King of Assyria brought out of other Countries and placed in Samaria they went on in their mungrel way of Religion they and their children from generation to generation After these first Colonies there were other Colonies brought thither by Esarhaddon King of Assyria who was also called Asnapper the Great Ezra 4.2.10 Son of Sennacherib and Grandchild to Salmanasser This seems to be the last of the Assyrian Kings and the person that carried Manasseh prisoner to Babylon which was then under the Assyrian Empire 2 Chron. 33.11 So that the Prophesie of Isaiah seems now to be fulfilled Chap. 7.8 The head of Syria is Damascus and the head of Damascus is Rezin and within threescore and five years shall Ephraim be broken that it be not a people For though the greatest part of the Israelites were carried away by Salmanasser some years before and their Kingdom utterly abolished yet among them that were left there remained some shew of a Government But now by reason of the great multitude of forreigners which came to dwell there the small remainder of the Ephramites were accounted as nothing yet they were not utterly extinct in their own Country as appears from 2 Chron. 34.6 7. v. 33. Chap. 35.18 2 King 23.19 20. 2 King 17. from 24 to the end These Samaritans before mentioned were succeeded by a second sort of Heretical Samaritans in the time of the Government of Nehemiah in whose time one of the Sons of Ioiada the Son of Eliashib the High Priest married the daughter of Sanballat the Horonite and therefore he chased him from him Neh. 13.28 This Priest thus driven away from Ierusalem went with other Iews that had made the like mungrel marriages to the Samaritans their wives kindred who there as the Iewish Writers relate assisted them in building an Anti-Temple on mount Gerizim where a medly Nation devised a Miscellaneous worship of God rejecting all the Scriptures save the five Books of Moses and maintaining many abominable superstitions So that between these Samaritans and the Iews there grew
And therefore God upbraiding the King of Tyre with his pride and arrogancy Behold saith he thou art wiser than Daniel no secret can be hid from thee therefore I will bring strangers upon thee the terrible of the Nations and they shall bring thee down c. Ezek. Ch. 26. Ch. 27. Ch. 28. In the same year also in the third month God revealed his will to Ezekiel of sending Nebuchadnezzar against Pharoah to the ruin of the Egyptians In the same month also God declared that the Egyptians could no more avoid his decree and determination than the Assyrians had done before Ezek. Ch. 30. Ch. 31. In the eleventh year of Zedekiah the ninth day of the fourth month when the famine grew extream in the City and the pestilence as 't is like very hot Jerusalem was broken up and the Caldeans entred it Ezek. 4. from 9 to the end Lament 4.10 2 King 25.2 3 4. Jer. 52.5 6 7. Jer. 39.2 3. The City being taken Zedekiah and all the men of war fled away by night by the way of the Gate between two walls which was by the Kings garden being it seems a secret way provided on purpose for escape in such a time of danger but the Caldeans pursuing after them took Zedekiah in the plains of Jericho and brought him prisoner to Riblah where Nebuchadnezzar lay where having judgment passed upon him for his perjury and having seen his children first slain before his eyes to his extream torment together with the Nobles of Judah he had then his own eyes put out and being clogged with chains and fetters he was carried away from thence to Babylon so the Prophesies before utter'd concerning him were fulfilled viz. that with his eyes he should see the King of Babylon and speak with him mouth to mouth Jer. 32.4 34.3 But Babylon he should not see though he should die there For so the Prophet Ezekiel foretold Ch. 12.13 My net also will I spread upon him and he shall be taken in my snare and I will bring him to Babylon to the land of the Caldeans yet shall he not see it though he shall die there 2 King 25. from 4 to 8. Jer. 39. from 4 to 8. Jer. 52. from 7 to 12. Upon the seventh day of the fifth month Nebuzaradan Captain of the Guard sent by Nebuchadnezzar made his entry into the City and on the tenth day he set fire on the Temple and on the Kings Palace and upon all the Noblemens houses in Jerusalem and burnt all down to the ground and brake down the walls of Jerusalem round about In remembrance of which dismal calamity the Fast of the fifth month was ordained to be kept Zach. 7.3 v. 5. Zach. 8.19 Thus was the glorious Temple destroyed in the nineteenth year of Nebuchadnezzars reign and four hundred twenty four years three months and eight days after that Solomon laid the first stone thereof 2 King 25.8 9 10. Jer. 52.12 13 14. Jer. 39.8 In the same fifth month the walls of Jerusalem being broken down all that were left in the City and all that had before fled over to Nebuchadnezzar and all the common people of the City with all the treasure of the King and his Nobles and furniture of the Temple did Nebuzaradan carry away to Babylon and thus was Judah for their sins removed out of her own land four hundred sixty eight years after David began to reign over it From the division of the Ten Tribes from the Tribe of Judah three hundred eighty eight years and from the destruction of the Kingdom of Israel one hundred thirty four years If any shall enquire why the Lord gave up this his own people into the hands of their enemies you may find 2 Chron. 36. from v. 12 to 20. that the high provocations both of King and people were the cause thereof Zedekiah did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord his God and humbled not himself before Jeremiah the Prophet speaking to him from the mouth of the Lord and he also rebelled against King Nebuchadnezzar who had made him swear by God but he stiffned his neck and hardned his heart from turning unto the Lord God of Israel Moreover all the chief of the Priests and the people transgressed very much after all the abominations of the heathen and polluted the house of the Lord which he had hallowed in Jerusalem And the Lord God of their fathers sent to them by his messengers rising up betimes (a) That is continually and carefully sendding them a Metaphor taken from careful housholders who with the soonest seek to redress mischiefs causing their servants for that end to rise betimes and sending because he had compassion on his people and on his dwelling place but they mocked the messengers of God and despised his words and misused his Prophets until the wrath of the Lord arose against his people and there was no remedy * After that there remain'd nothing but expectation of judgment Therefore he brought upon them the King of the Caldees who slew their young men with the sword in the house of their Sanctuary (b) That is the Temple whither 't is like many of them fled for refuge and had no compassion upon young man or maiden old man or him that stooped for age he gave them all into his hand And all the vessels of the house of God great and small and the treasures of the house of the Lord and the treasures of the King and of his Princes all these he brought to Babylon And they burnt the house of God and brake down the walls of Jerusalem and burnt all the Palaces thereof with fire and destroyed all the goodly vessels thereof Jer. 39.9 Jer. 52.15 2 King 25. from 11 to 18. 2 Chron. 36. from 14 to 22. The Scripture saith that they that were carried away captive to Babylon in the eleventh year of Zedekiah were to continue seventy years in their captivity 2 Chron. 36.20 21. And them that had escaped from the sword carried he away to Babylon where they were servants to him and his sons until the reign of the Kingdom of Persia To fulfill the word of the Lord by the mouth of Jeremy until the land had enjoyed her Sabbaths for as long as she lay desolate she kept Sabbath to fulfill threescore and ten years Where by those words until the land had enjoyed her Sabbaths we are to understand that so long as the people were kept out of it the land rested there being none to plow or dig it up and so it continued for the most part till the expiration of seventy years as Jeremy had Prophesied Jer. 25.11 And this whole land shall be a desolation and an astonishment and these Nations shall serve the King of Babylon seventy years And Chap. 29.10 Thus saith the Lord after seventy years be accomplished at Babylon I will visit you and perform my good word towards you in causing you to return to
they think to finish this work they have begun and by sacrifices to dedicate it to God as they use to do other great buildings surely we shall hinder them from that except they can hope to finish their work in one day or a very short time And besides they will want materials for such a work except they can raise up again the burnt stones that made the former wall out of the heaps of the rubbish Tobiah being by when Sanballat thus scoffed he said Let them alone alas the walls they build are so weak that if a Fox should go upon them he would break them down Nehemiah hearing of these scorns and contempt of their enemies betook himself to God by prayer and humbly pleaded that relation that was between God and them Hear O our God says he for we are despised and turn their reproach upon their own head and let scorn and contempt fall on them and let them be carried away captive and there made a prey to their enemies And cover not their iniquity nor let it go unpnished and let not their sin be blotted out from before thee except they repent and cease to proceed on in this their impiety For in reproaching the builders of thy City imployed by thy appointment they have reproached thee so that we desire they may be punished not out of any private grudg or desire of revenge but that thy glory may be vindicated Thus prayed Nehemiah And the builders went on with the work and all the wall was joyn'd together unto the half height thereof for the people had a mind to the work and where there is a willing mind much will be done in a little time But when Sanballat and Tobiah and the Arabians and Ammonites and Ashdodites heard that the walls of Jerusalem were made up and that the breaches began to be stopped they were very angry and conspired together to come and to fight against Jerusalem and to hinder the work But Nehemiah and the Jews made their prayer unto God and set a watch day and night because of them About this time also another trouble arose to Nehemiah for the men of Judah who had the oversight of the work and such also as laboured in the work complained that there was still so much rubbish unremoved and the strength of the bearers of burdens being much decayed they thought they should never be able to go through with the work or to build the walls so as to make them a defence to the City They further added that if the Trench without the wall were not cleared of rubbish all that they had done would be to little purpose This added much to Nehemiah's grief that the workmen themselves should thus complain and mutter He understood also that their adversaries said this of them among themselves They shall not know nor see till we come in the midst of them and slay them and cause the work to cease And the Jews that dwelt among the Samaritans when they came to Jerusalem often * V. 12. Ten times that is many times told their brethren there of the contrivances of these their enemies and said to them From all places by which a man may come from thence hither and go from hence thither they will assault you therefore look to your selves Nehemiah hereupon caused the people for the present to give over their work and to arm themselves that the enemy might not surprize them and to that end he set some of them beneath behind the wall and others above in the towers and other fortifications with their swords arrows and bows in their hands And he spake unto the Nobles and Rulers and the rest of the people saying Be not afraid of them remember the Lord who is great in power and terrible to his enemies and fight for your brethren your sons and your daughters your wives and your houses But when the enemy heard that their design was made known to the Jews and that thereupon they were ready and prepared to defend themselves they laid it aside And God having thus brought their counsel to naught the Jews returned every one to his work at the wall again Yet they were careful still to be in a readiness to resist the enemy in case he should assault them And particularly Nehemiah employed only half of his servants in building the wall the other half stood always ready armed to keep off the enemy if occasion should be and those that were imploy'd in building were also arm'd with swords the Rulers being at their backs to encourage them so that they may he said as it were to have wrought in the work with one hand and to have held a weapon in the other because whilst they were busiest in building they had their weapons ready to defend themselves And he that sounded with the Trumpet kept near to Nehemiah that upon any danger he might give warning to all the people to be ready Nehemiah further said to the Nobles Rulers and rest of the people the work is large and great and we are separated upon the walls one from another in what place therefore ye shall hear the sound of the Trumpet resort thither unto us and our God will fight for us And thus they went on with the work some being in arms from morning to evening and some working at the wall Nehemiah also gave charge to all Masters that had servants and to all workmen that had labourers under them that they should all lodg in the City that so they might be in readiness and at hand both to keep their turns of watching by night and of working by day And Nehemiah though the Governour spared not himself but what he required of others he himself was ready to do And both himself his kindred servants and guard that attended him were so watchful and diligent in this time of danger that they slept in their clothes and did not put them off except when need required that they should be washed Nehem. Ch. 4. whole Chapter The Adversaries of the Jews hearing that the walls of Jerusalem were now almost finished Sanballat and Geshem sent unto Nehemiah that they might have a conference with him near to Ono a City in Benjamin pretending a willingness to be reconciled but intending to do him a mischief he suspecting their design sent them word he was about a great work which he could not leave therefore they must not expect him They sent again and again to him even no less than four times importuning him to come but he still returned the same answer Then Sanballat sent his servants to him a fifth time with an open letter possibly that they might shew it to other Jews before they came to him and so might with the contents thereof discourage them The letter spake after this manner It is reported among the Heathen and Geshem the Arabian affirmeth it that thou and the Jews think to rebell and that thou hast built the wall of Jerusalem that
thou maist set thy self up as their King according to the report that goes of thee And thou hast appointed Prophets to preach thee up at Jerusalem and to tell the people that there is now a King in Judah of their own Nation so that they shall not be in bondage any longer to forreign Princes And this will accordingly be reported to the King of Persia and so is like to bring great mischief on all us on this side the river therefore let us meet and take counsel together how we may prevent this great evil Nehemiah returned Sanballat this answer That there was nothing true of what he reported 't was all a fiction of his own head Thus the enemie sought to make them afraid by such reports as these but Nehemiah prayed to the Lord to disappoint their plots and to strengthen his own and his Countryment hands in the work The enemies of the Jews seeing their former plots did not take now betake themselves to a new stratagem viz. to hire false Prophets to terrifie Nehemiah with apprehensions of eminent danger to his own person Accordingly they hired Shemaiah and other false Prophets to assist them in their design Shemaiah was a Priest of the course of Delaiah 1 Chron. 24.18 and pretended to be a Prophet though he was a false one It seems he shut up himself thereby to signifie to Nehemiah that there was such danger approaching as there would be no safety in being abroad Accordingly he sends to Nehemiah to come to him who being come he perswades him to hide himself with him within the Temple and to shut up the doors for he tells him his enemies will seek to slay him yea that very night they would come to slay him Nehemiah replies Should such a man as I flee who am called of God to do what I do and being at present the chief Magistrate and Governour of this City am to take care for the defence of the people and to give them all possible encourageragement both by word and deed What good man is there that being in the place that I am would flee into the Temple to save his life Assure thy self I will not do it But for all his pretended Prophesies Nehemiah perceived the Lord had not sent him both by the nature of the advice he gave him which tended to terrifie him from the work God had called him unto as also from the event for the enemy did not come that night to seize him as Shemaiah prophesied he saw therefore that the enemy hired this false Prophet to make him afraid and to desist from his work and so sin against God in omitting his duty and that they might have matter for an evil report against him and so might reproach him Whereupon he humbly desires the Lord to think upon Tobiah and Sanballat and to deal with them answerably to these their evil works and so likewise with the Prophetess Noadiah who also was hired as it seems to prophesie to Nehemiah after the same manner and with the rest of the false Prophets who had conspired with Shemaiah to put him in fear But all that the enemies could do could not hinder the work for the whole work was finished on the 25th day of the month Elul agreeing with part of our August which shews that they began the work in the height of Summer when the days were at the longest and the season every way most fit for building and so all was dispatched in 52 days which was not full two months and this great dispatch need not seem incredible if we consider that the walls and towers of Jerusalem were not wholly demolished but only in many places broken down 2ly That there was a vast multitude of people that round about the City in several places at one time were employed in the work and did with all earnestness follow it 3ly And above all Gods more than ordinary blessing accompanying them and helping of them in the work I say if we consider all these things we need not wonder that it was finished to the astonishment of the enemy before they dreamed it could have been done see v. 16. so that they were forced to confess that there was more than an ordinary hand of God in it When Nehemiah had overcome all these difficulties he met with one more and that was this At that time some of the Nobles of Judah who possibly had married strange wives and so were something infected with the customs of the Heathen held correspondence with Tobiah and had bound themselves by oath to prosecute his designs he having married the daughter of Sheconiah some great man among the Jews and Johanan his Son having married the daughter of Meshullam * See the mischiefs of forbidden marriages and the hypocrisie of some who made a fair shew before men who had helped to build the wall Chap. 3.4 These men told Nehemiah fair stories of Tobiah and sent back what he said to Tobiah whereupon Tobiah sent threatning letters to him but he was not terrified by any thing that he wrote nor discouraged in his work Nehem. Ch. 6. whole Chapter See Deut. 20.5 Psal 30. the Title The wall being now finished Nehemiah and the Jews resolved to make a solemn dedication of it to the Lord praying unto him that he would please to make it a means of safety to his holy Temple and to the City and the inhabitants thereof Now because the Priests and Levites were to have a chief hand therein he first sets down their Genealogies that it might the better appear that they were true Priests and Levites And here are two pedigrees set down one of such as came up with Zerubbabel to Jerusalem and the other of such as were in the days of Joakim * The prime Priests that were then heads of Families are now set down in number only twenty from v. 12. to 21. yet the number of the courses of the Priests appointed by David was to be 24. See 1 Chron. 24. from 7 to 18. that the number of Priests was now but few that place Ezra ● 15 doth import the Son of Joshua The Priests and Levites being by their distinct orders set down in the former part of the Chapter the dedication it self is now related which was after this manner First they assembled all the Levites together from their several habitations to celebrate this dedication with gladness and thanksgivings and singing with Cymbals Psalteries and Harps and the Priests and Levites being called to this holy service first purified themselves by washing their clothes Exod. 19.10 and their flesh Numb 19.7 and by sprinkling themselves with that purifying water mentioned Numb 19.9 and by all other means both of moral and legal purifying Then they purified the people by such rites as they purified themselves by and purified the gates and the wall recommending them to Gods custody and protection with solemn prayer Then the wall being thick and broad so that many
love of lucre and make those that should be righteous in Judgment to pass a perverse Sentence Neither shalt thou in Judgment or otherwise oppress a Stranger For ye know the heart of a Stranger and how it useth to be affected having been your selves Strangers in the Land of Egypt Chap. 23.1 2 3 6 7 8 9. 33. If thou meet with thy Enemies (o) Ut hac ratione odientis animum tibi concilies This Law shews us how we should do good to our Enemies It was no Precept of the Law but the Pharisees corrupt gloss That they should love their Friends and hate their Enemies Ox or his Ass going astray thou shalt surely bring it back to him and so any other thing of his that is lost Deut. 22.3 If thou shalt see the Ass of him that hateth thee lying under his burden or any other of his Cattel endangered wouldst thou forbear to help him (p) Num desines sublevare vel juvare eum Minime Vatab Surely thou shalt help with him that is set to thine helping hand with thine Enemy to relieve his Ass and raise him up again that so thou mayst thereby oblige him and dispose him to be reconciled to thee vers 4 5. 34. Six years thou shalt sow thy Land and gather in the Fruits thereof but the seventh year (q) The fruits of the sixth year were by God's promise so abundant that they served almost for three years for the 6th 7th and good part of the 8th See Notes on Lev. 25.20 thou shalt let it rest and lie still and neither plow it nor sow it that the poor of thy people may eat with thee namely that which shall grow in the seventh year of it self without any humane labour by the especial blessing of God See Lev. 25.6 7. and the remainder the Beasts of the Field shall eat And so thou shalt deal also with thy Vineyard and Oliveyard So that the fruit of Trees and what-ever the Earth brought forth of its self this seventh year viz. of the grains scattered in the former Harvest was to be indifferently common to all vers 10 11. 35. Yet in this seventh or Sabbatical Year they were not to think themselves exempted from the peculiar sanctifying of the Seventh-day-Sabbath but were bound religiously to keep it in this as well as in other years And the Lord adds this reason for it That thine Ox and thine Ass may rest and that the slave born in thy House and thy purchased Stranger or hired Servant may rest also and be refreshed as well as thy self vers 12. 36. The Lord further says In all things that I have said unto you be Circumspect and make no mention of the Names of other Gods with any approbation of them nor let their Names be heard out of your Mouths so as to swear by them or to any to such purpose vers 13. 37. Three solemn Anniversary Feasts shalt thou keep unto Me saith the Lord viz. The Feast of the Passover (r) See Exod. 13.3.34.18 Deut. 16.13 14 16. of Pentecost or Weeks (s) Exod. 34.22 and the Feast of Tabernacles or Booths or in-gathering of all thy Fruits not only of Corn which was before inned but of Wine and Oil c. At which three Feasts all thy Males (t) Though the Males only were obliged to attend at these Feasts yet the Women might if they pleased go up with them also And doubtless some of them did See 1 Sam. 12.19 that are able from 20 years old to 60 shall appear before Me in the place (u) Luke 2.41 The place where they met was first the Tabernacle then the Temple which I shall choose And none shall appear before Me empty that is without some Gift or Offering vers 14 15 16 17. 38. Ye shall not offer the bloud of my Sacrifice viz. of the Paschal Lamb with leaven that is having any leavened bread in your houses nor eating any such bread with it neither shall ye leave the fat (x) Adeps recens statim adolendus erat quia facile corrumpitur ne Sacerdotes comederent quod Dei erat De Agno Paschali nihil pra●ter adipem Deo offerebatur quippe is totus excepto adipe ab offerentibus erat comedendus Vide 2 Chron. 35.12 14. or any part of the Lamb until the Morning See Exod. 34.25 vers 18. 39. The First-fruits of thy Land thou shalt bring into the House of the Lord thy God viz. first to the Tabernacle then to the Temple See Deut. 26. from 1. to 12. vers 19. 40. Thou shalt not seeth a Kid in its Mothers milk (y) Videtur crudelitatem sapere si lac matris quod datum ei est pro nutrimento adhibeatur ad consumptionem Lyranus that is thou shalt not be so cruel as to seeth a Kid in the milk of its Dam and so make that which was given to it for its nourishment to be a means to wast and consume it Or thou shalt not imitate the Ishmaelites who through over-much delicacy use to seeth a Kid in the Dams Milk (z) Non coques haedum dum adhuc pendet ab ubere matris suae illius lacte eget nempe primo septiduo a partu Sunt qui sentiunt hujusmodi praeceptorum non esse nimis anxie indagandam rationem Multa quippe a Deo sapienter esse instituta quorum causae vel sapientissimos mortalium latent Nam quid humanae mentis acits ad immortalis aeternae mentis consilium Muis. In lacte matris suae dum scil adhuc eget lacte matris suae ut ejus Caro corroberetur cibo idoneus reddatur nempe primo septiduo a partu Vide c. 22. 39. Pisc Exod. 21. whole Chapter Exod. 22. whole Chapter Exod. 23. from 1. to vers 20. SECT XVIII GOd now promises that he will send the Lord Christ the Angel of the Covenant (a) Mal. 3.1 the Lord of Angels (b) Heb. 1.3 in the Cloudy Pillar to guide and lead them to the promised Land but charges them to obey his Voice and to take heed of provoking him for He will not pardon (c) 1 Chron. 10.9 The Israelites in the Wilderness tempted him and so were justy destroyed by him their Transgressions if they persist in them without Repentance And they should be very careful of offending Him For says God my Name is in Him (d) Joh. 10.38 My Father is in me and I in Him that is He is of the same Nature and Essence of the same Authority and Power with my Self being my Eternal Son and with that Nature He hath my Name Jehovah Jer. 33.6 And further to encourage them to Obedience He tells them That if they would obey his Voice He would be an Enemy to their Enemies and an Adversary to their Adversaries and would afflict those that did afflict them And this glorious Angel should go before them and by an outstretched Arm destroy those Nations of the Amorites
them to give them Victories over them yea signal Victories insomuch that five of them shall chase an hundred and an hundred put ten thousand to flight that is a few Israelites shall chase many of their Enemies 4ly To bless them with fruitfulness He intending by real Performance to make good his Covenant to them and to give them such great plenty that they shall be forced to empty their Barns of old Corn that they may have room to lay up their new 5ly To set his Tabernacle in the midst of them Ezek. 37.26 2 Cor. 6.16 that is cause his Word and Worship to abide among them and by his gracious Presence to dwell and walk in the midst of them and to be their God and they shall be his people having delivered them from the Egyptian Yoke under which they were bowed down so that now they should walk uprightly being freed from their Yoke and Bondage Secondly He threatens dreadful and terrible and manifold Judgments to them in case they were Disobedient and to multiply their Plagues as they multiplied their Sins particularly 1. He threatens to inflict Corporal Diseases on them yea terrible Diseases such as the Consumption and burning-Ague that shall weaken and darken their very sight and cause in them great sorrow of heart 2ly Depredation by Enemies and falling before their Enemies and falling into the hands of their Enemies so that they that hate them shall Reign over them 3ly Terrour and causeless astonishment so that they shall flee when none pursueth 4ly Weakning and breaking the pride of their Power 5ly Making the Heaven as Iron and the Earth as brass and rendring their labours in their Husbandry fruitless 6ly Ravenous Beasts to devour their Children and Cattel 7ly The Sword that shall avenge their breach of Covenant with Him 8ly Sending Pestilence into their besieged Cities so that they shall be as sticks bound up in a Faggot to be burnt together 9ly Captivity 10ly Breaking their staff of Bread that is depriving them of their Bread which is the Staff of Life and bringing such scarcity upon them that one Oven shall bake the bread of ten Families and the Baker shall deliver them their bread by weight see Ezek. 4.16 11ly Such a dreadful Famine that they should eat the flesh of their own Children 12ly To cast down their high places whereon they sacrificed to Idols and to destroy their Idols and to cast their Carkasses upon their broken Idols and his Soul should abhor them 13ly Desolation of their Cities and Country and of all places of publick Worship refusing and rejecting their Offerings and Oblations 14ly Exile and dispersion among the Heathen so that their Land shall be desolate and their Cities wast and their Enemies that shall take possession of some parts of it shall be astonished at the desolation thereof And further the Lord threatens That He would scatter them among the Nations and the Sword should there also pursue them and then the Land shall enjoy her Sabbaths and resting from Tillage from which it should have rested on the Sabbatical years and years of Jubilee but could not be permitted because of their Covetousness 15ly Faintness of heart so that the sound of a shaken leaf shall chase them yea they shall flee as from the Sword when none pursueth and thorow weakness or hast fall one upon another 16ly Death in Captivity They shall perish and pine away in their Iniquities and the Iniquities of their Fathers whom they imitated in their Transgressions in the Land of their Enemies Thirdly Notwithstanding all these Comminations He promises if they shall repent and their carnal impure and uncircumcised Hearts be humbled and shall confess their own Iniquities and the Iniquities of their Fathers and accept of the punishment of their Sins as justly deserved on their part and justly inflicted by God then He will remember his Covenant made with their Fathers and be gracious unto them and will remember the Land He gave them for an Inheritance and though it shall be left of them for a time and shall enjoy its rest yet he will cause it to be inhabited and tilled by them again and when they are in the Land of their Enemies He will not utterly cast them away nor wholly abhor them but for their good will remember the Covenant He made with their Ancestors Levit. Ch. 26. whole Chapter In the last place Moses receives Laws and Directions concerning persons * Some hold that the end and intention of these personal Vows was only that they should pay the price of their Redemption to the Priests which was to be imployed either for their maintenance Numb 18.14 or for the reparations of the Sanctuary 2 Kings 4.5 Jackson and things devoted by Vow unto God and how these Vows might be redeemed in case the person that made them had no mind to stand to them 1. A person (n) For these Vows of persons they were usually made in some time of affliction or distress as when married persons had no Child they did sometimes Vow That if the Lord would please to give them a Child they would give that Child unto the Lord which was Hannahs Vow 1 Sam. 1.11 And these persons vowed being not of the Tribe of Levi were vowed to such Service of the Tabernacle as they were capable of as for drawing of water or hewing of wood which the Gibeonites afterwards did Josh 9.27 Or if they were women they were devoted to spinning Cloth to make the Priests Garments and to provide those things that were necessary for the repair of the Tabernacle and other such like services which accordingly they did perform or else paid the price of their Redemption here prescribed vowed was to be the Lords or else to be redeemed according to the estimation of the Priest who was to set the value This estimation was to vary according to the difference of Sex and Age. 1. The Redemption of a Male from 20 years to 60 was to be 50 Shekels of Silver according to the Shekels of the Sanctuary of a female of the same age but 30. 2. Of a Male from five years old to 20 20 Shekels of a Female 10 Shekels 3. Of a Male from a month old to five years old five Shekels of a Female three Shekels 4. Of a Male from 60 years old and upwards fifteen Shekels of a Female ten Shekels But in case any person be grown poor who possibly was of ability when he vowed so that he be not able to pay the ●rate set according to this Law then it was left to the discretion of the Preist to set a reasonable rate upon him according to his ability Chap. 27. from 1. to 9. 2. Concerning Beasts devoted to God 1. Clean Beasts devoted were to be given as they were to God and not changed for others which if any man attempted to do both the Beast that was changed and that which was put in its place shall both be consecrated to God 2.
David 1 Chron. 18.13 and thereupon he sung that triumphant Song Psal 60.8 Moab is my washpot that is I have so subdued them that I use them in my meanest services as a vessel to wash my feet in over Edom will I cast my shooe that is I will trample upon the Edomites as a vanquished people He says therefore Out of the house of Jacob shall come one that shall have the Dominion and shall destroy the Edomites and not only those that are found in Arms in the Field but those also that remain in the several Cities and fortified Places that shall oppose him Then looking towards the Country of the Amalekites the Posterity of Esau Gen. 36.12 He uttered this Parable or Prediction concerning them Amalek was the first of the Nations that warred against Israel see Exod. 17. but he is appointed to be destroyed till he be rooted from the face of the earth This was fulfilled in part by Saul 1 Sam. 15. and after in Mordecai's time see Esther 7. Then he looked towards the Country of the Midianites called here Kenites from one principal Family or People among them which is put for the whole Nation and predicted this of them Thy dwelling is strong thou buildest thy Nest or Habitation like Eagles among the Rocks yet thou shalt endure much at the hand of several Enemies which was in part accomplished when the Midianites were vanqished by Gideon Judg. 7.2 and shalt at length be carried away Captive by the Assyrians who with the Jews carried away all the Nations round about them compare Jer. 25.9 with 1 Chron. 2.55 And he further added Alas who shall live that is who almost can escape when God shall do this intimating the greivous Calamity of that time when the Assyrians shall make this havock And Ships shall come from the Coast of Chittim and shall afflict Ashur and shall afflict Eber and he shall also perish for ever that is the great Empire of Asia first held by the Assyrians afterwards by the Chaldeans and last of all by the Persians shall be destroyed by the Greeks and Macedonians properly called Chittim (u) Chittim was one of the Sons of Javan the Son of Japhet who seated themselves in Macedonia and the Greek Islands Afterwards the Greeks passing over from thence into Italy and planting themselves there even Italy was also called Chittim Gen. 10.4 Isa 23.1.12 under Alexander the Great and afterwards by the Romans who came into Asia out of the Harbours of Greece Dan. 11.30 And the Jewish Nation and their Country shall be much infected and evil intreated by the Grecians of Syria and Egypt Dan. 8.11 11.31 and much more by the Romans under Vespasian and Titus The Greeks also at last shall be ruined by the Romans and their Empire shall be overthrown by them As for the Roman Empire it self it is now much fallen and the usurping State thereof under the Papacy God will at last consume with the breath of his mouth 2 Thess 2.8 Thus Balaam as he began with the blessing of Israel so he endeth with the destruction of their Enemies Then he went away with a purpose to return home but was stayed as it seems by the Midianites and among them was afterward killed by the Sword of Israel Numb 31.8 Numb 23. whole Chapter Numb 24. whole Chapter SECT LXXX ISrael now being encamped at Abel-Shittim see Ch. 33.49 in the very borders of the promised Land the Women of Moab and Midian were set on work according to the wicked Counsel of Balaam see Numb 31.16 Rev. 2.14 to turn the people to Idolatry and to allure them to commit folly with them that so the Favour of God being thereby turned away from them they might be exposed to mischief from their Enemies And accordingly a great number of the people did commit Whoredom with them and being invited by them to their Idolatrous Feasts made upon Sacrifices offered to their Gods at length were drawn to open Idolatry also see Exod. 34.15 and to bow down to their Gods and worship them Thus a great many of the Israelites worshipped Baal-Peor * See Hosea 9.10 which was the Idol-god of the Moabites so called from Mount-Peor where this Idol was worshipped and the anger of the Lord was greatly kindled against them for it And he commanded Moses to call the Heads and Princes of the people together and by their assistance to take all the Ringleaders of this disorder and to hang them up before the Sun that is openly in the sight of all men that as they had sinned openly they might be punished openly for the terrour of others and this was accordingly done Then Moses gave order to the Judges and Rulers to put to death all such of them that were under their several Commands whom they found to have joyned themselves to Baal-Peor And last of all God sent a Plague among them whereof there died 23000 men in one day see 1 Cor. 10.8 which added to them that were hanged and killed by the Sword amounted in all to 24000. During these dreadful Judgments and Executions Zimri a Prince of Renown in the Tribe of Simeon openly and impudently in the sight of Moses and all the Congreation who were weeping before the door of the Tabernacle under a sense of the wrath of God whereby so many of their Brethren had been cut off carried Cozbi the Daughter of a Prince of Midian into his Tent to commit folly with her Phineas the Son of Eleazar understanding this being stirred up with an holy zeal for God and by the special motion of his Spirit he took a Javelin in his hand and ran into the Tent and slew them both in the very act of their Villany and by this heroick act of Phineas the wrath of God was appeased and the Plague stayed see Psal 106.30 And God was so well pleased therewith that he commands Moses to make known for Phineas's incouragement that he had given unto him his Covenant of peace for the setling of the Priesthood in his Posterity and to be continued in his Seed as long as ever the Levitical Priesthood should continue * V. 13. Sempiternum id dicitur quod diutu●num admodum Nam post pronepotem Phinees translatus erat Pontificatus ad Eli qui erat de familia Ithamari ut patet 1 Paralip 24.3 Foedus ergo hoc conditionatum fuit nempe si posteri in fide perseveraverint Ad tempus interruptum orat sed post quatuor Pontifices vi hujus foederis resipiscentibus posteris Phineas rediit tempore Davidis Solomonis ad Sadoc ex Eleazari Phinees familia in qua deinceps postea mansit ad Herodis tempora usque ad Christum provided they walked in ways pleasing unto God And he call it his Covenant of Peace First Because they should peaceably injoy it 2ly Because the work of the Priest was to make peace between God and the people Now though the Dignity of being High
* See Prov. 22.28 Hos 5.10 V. 14. Non transferes terminos i. e. lapides vel alia signa quae fixa fuerint ad distinguendos agros tuos ab agris proximi hoc enim genus furti infame quod difficulter convinci potest see Deut. 27.17 which would be a piece of great injustice and might occasion quarrels about the bounds of their Lands and Possessions Next he declares That the testimony of a single man rising up as a witness against another shall not be admitted as sufficient to prove the Crime laid to his Charge and to cause him to be condemned for it But by the testimony of two or three witnesses matters shall be established setled confirmed and stand good see Joh. 8.17 And in case two or more witnesses did rise up against a man and only one of them spake home as to the proof of that whereof he was accused if here the party accused did alledge that this man bare false witness against him then both these men between whom the Controversie is shall stand before the Lord that is shall be brought to the place which the Lord shall choose and shall be set before the Ark or Sanctuary and there the witness shall be examined as in the presence of God and possibly if they could not find out the matter by examination then the Priest was to inquire of the Lord according to that 1 Kings 8.31 32. And if the Judges find that the man hath testified falsly against his Brother then they shall do unto him as he thought to have done to his Brother that is the civil Magistrate (f) Indeed the Pharisees in Christ's time expounded this of private revenge viz. that a private person might take life for life eye for eye tooth for tooth c. this is that which our Saviour condemns Matth. 5.38 39. shall without tenderness or pity inflict such punishment on him as should have been inflicted on the party accused had he been found guilty according to that Law Exod. 21.23 And so they should put away evil from among them and those which remain should hear and fear and should no more commit any such abominable thing Chap. XX In the next place he comes to give them directions concerning War and how it should be managed 1. The Priests * Ordinarily some of the Priests went along with the Army with the holy Trumphets to animate them to the battel see Numb 10.9 31.6 should encourage the people when they drew nigh to battel with their Enemies exhorting them not to be afraid though they were more than they And they should say to them Hear O Israel you approach this day unto battel against your Enemies Let not your hearts faint fear not neither be ye terrified because of them For the Lord your God is with you and goeth forth with you to fight for you against your Enemies and to save you 2ly The Officers should proclaim to the people before the battel That if there were any man there that had built a new house and had not dedicated (g) Dedicari res dicitur quando cum solenni aliquo ritu vel convivio usus inchoatur Menoch See Title of Psalm 30. and Neh. 12.27 it or initiated it that is taken possession of it and begun to use it and dwell in it which was to be done with praying singing Psalms and feasting he might go home if he would (h) Ratio hujus legis 1. Ne quis otiosus fruatur alienis laboribus 2. Ne desiderio eorum remissius agerent in praelio sibique parrentes vel etiam fugam capessentes aliis scandalo essent damno God in this and the two next particulars manifesting a special Compassion that men should not suddainly be taken off from those Comforts which they had long laboured for even when they were first entring upon the fruition of them that being threatned as a Curse Ch. 28.30 Thou shalt build an house and shalt not dwell therein Or if any man had planted a Vineyard (i) They might not in the Land of Canaan eat of any Trees they had planted till they had consecrated the fourth years fruit unto the Lord. The fruit of the first three years was lost as uncircumcised The fourth years fruit was holy to be given to God and then the fruit of the fifth year was free for the Owner and others to eat Levit. 19.23 c. and it was not yet made common that is such as himself and others might freely eat of which he could not do by the Law till the fifth year from the planting of it he might also return to his house lest he should die in the battel and another injoy his Vineyard Or if any man had betrothed a Wife * The ancient custom was to have some time interposed between betrothing and marriage see Deut. 22.23 Matth. 1.18 whither Maid or Widow and had not yet taken her to himself he might have liberty to go home also and take her to wife And lastly If any were fearful and faint-hearted they might also depart if they would lest by their fear and faint-heartedness they should infect their Brethren also God hereby testifying how much he disliked a timerous fearful spirit in those that serve Him whom he would have by faith to trust in him and to rest secure of his Protection see Judg. 7.3 The Officers having proclaimed these things they were then to order the battel and appoint every Captain in his place to lead the several Companies of Souldiers from 1. to 10. Further he injoyns them that when they went to besiege any City out of the Land of Canaan they should first proclaim peace (k) See Richardson's Notes on vers 10. to it And if it did accept of the conditions of peace proffered to them then they should spare that City and only make them Tributary to them But if they refused the Conditions of peace tendred to them then if God delivered them into their hands they should kill every Male they found there but the Women little Ones and Cattel and all the Spoil of the City they should take unto themselves and so they should eat and injoy the Spoil of their Enemies which the Lord had given them But when they went to besiege any of the Cities of the seven Nations * Unto which the Hebrews add from Deut. 25.19 the Amalekites in the Land of Canaan see Ch. 7.1.2 which God had commanded them to destroy then they were not to spare Man Woman or Child lest being left alive they should teach them to do after their abominations which they had practised towards their gods and so occasion them to sin against the Lord. Further he injoyns them that when they besieged a City they should not cut down the Fruit-Trees that grow about it for their use in the siege except upon unavoidable necessity because those are very useful for mans food and with these the Land could not be
the Statutes and Judgments which the Lord had given them and that with all their Hearts and Souls Which if they really consented to do then they should consider that that day they did in effect renew their Covenant with the Lord and avouch Him to be their God promising to hearken unto his Voice and to obey Him And the Lord did avouch them to be his peculiar people separate from all others and devoted to walk in his Statutes thorow his Grace working in their Hearts and would make them high above all Nations in praise in name and in honour and an holy people unto Himself from vers 16. to the end 20. Having now again assembled the Elders and people of Israel together He Chap. XXVII commands them that after their entrance into Canaan at their first opportunity they should build a Monument of great stones plaistring them with mortar on Mount Ebal and to write the Law of God thereon viz. the ten Commandments very plainly that it might be a Monument * Joshua 8.30 We find this Monument was erected after their taking of Ai. to put them in mind of keeping Gods Law Together with this Monument they were to build an Altar (u) To teach them that Righteousness and Salvation is not to be attained by the works of the Law but to be sought by Christ of whom this Altar was a Type of whole stones and not to lift up any iron Tool upon it see Exod. 20.24 25. and thereon to offer Burnt-Offerings and Peace-Offerings and to eat there and to rejoyce before the Lord their God And because they had at this time renewed their Covenant with God Moses together with the Priests and Levites advise them to take heed unto themselves and to obey the Voice of the Lord their God and to observe his Commandments and Statutes from vers 1. to 11. 21. Moses now injoyns the people that when they had set up this Monument of stones on Mount Ebal and written the Law plainly upon it and had built the Altar before mentioned and had offered Sacrifices thereon as God had commanded them they should then afterwards give their consent to the Blessings * See Deut. 11.29 and Curses that should be pronounced by the Priests upon those that should keep and upon those that should break Gods Laws and the manner injoyned for the doing thereof was this viz. six of the Tribes were to stand upon Mount Gerizim to wit Simeon and Levi Judah and Issachar and Joseph and Benjamin where by the Tribe of Joseph are meant the two Tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh who are here joyn'd together as one because Levi is reckoned as one of the twelve and all these were the Posterity of Leah and Rachel and then the other six Tribes were to stand on Mount Ebal to wit Gad and Asher Dan and Napthali who were the Sons of their Hand-Maids and with them the Tribe of Reuben who for his sin lost his Birth-Right and Zebulun the youngest of Leahs Sons And the Tribes being thus divided the Priests * V. 14. Pronunciabunt Levitae i. e. aliqui sacerdotum qui erant Levitae Caeteri enim erant in monte Gerizim ad benedicendum see Joshua Ch. 8. v. 32 33 34. were to come with them into the little Valley that was between these two Mountains and there first they pronounced the Blessings turning their faces as 't is like towards Mount Gerizim and then all the Tribes that stood on that Mountain answered Amen and then turning their faces towards Mount Ebal they pronounced the twelve Curses here mentioned and then all the Tribes that stood on Mount Ebal answered Amen Moses omits the Blessings possibly because they might be easily enough gathered from the contrary Curses which are here expressed First Cursed be the man that maketh any graven or molten Image though he keep it never so secret for it is an abomination to the Lord. 2ly Cursed be He that setteth light by his Father or Mother see Exod. 21.17 3ly Cursed be He that removeth his Neighbours Land-mark 4ly Cursed be He that maketh the Blind to wander out of the way and much more those that mislead the people into pernicious Errours or give them knowingly pernicious Counsels 5ly Cursed be He that perverteth the judgment of the Stranger Fatherless and Widow 6ly Cursed be He that lieth with his Fathers wife † V. 20. Quia retexit oram Patris sui i. e. oram vestimenti Patris sui Per vestimentum Patris intelligitur vestimentum quod est in potestate Patris ut possit illud retegere Piscator 7ly Cursed be He that lieth with any manner of Beast 8ly Cursed be He that lieth with his Sister the Daughter of his Father or the Daughter of his Mother that is his half-Sister see Levit 1.8 9. 9ly Cursed be He that lieth with his Mother-in-law that is his Wives Mother 10ly Cursed be He that smiteth his Neighbour secretly either by secret practices procuring his blood to be shed or smiting him secretly with his Tongue 11ly Cursed be He that taketh a Reward to slay an innocent person see Ezek. 22.12 12ly Cursed be He that confirmeth not all the words of this Law to do them To every one of these the people were to say Amen And so subscribe to the justice of Gods Law as it were wishing that the Curses might fall on them if they should in any of these things transgress Gods Commandment from vers 11. to the end Chap. XXVIII Upon observing Gods Commandments He shews them that many blessings would follow and overtake them from vers 1. to 13. particularly these 1. God would set them on high above all Nations both in respect of temporal and spiritual blessings and they shall be the head and not the tail vers 13. that is shall be highly esteem'd above other Nations and not scorned and despised as a base and contemptible people 2. They shall be blessed in the City and in the Field that is whither they dwell in the City or the Country and manage business belonging either to a Citizen or a Farmer 3. They shall be blessed in the fruit of their Bodies their Children in the fruits of their Grounds and the fruits of their Cattel so that they shall abound in all these vers 11.4 They shall be blessed in their Basket wherein they put the fruits of their ground it shall not be empty and in their store they shall have plenty of Provisions they shall be blessed in their Barns and Store-houses vers 8. and God will command his blessing on all that they set their hands unto 5. They shall be blessed when they come in and when they go out see vers 19. that is at home and abroad and in all their employments and businesses publick and private 6. They shall be blessed with Victory over their Enemies who shall flee before them many ways 7. The Lord will establish them for an holy people unto Himself that is will
establish them for a people that may be His in a peculiar manner and may appertain to Him as his peculiar Treasure to serve him faithfully and to enjoy the blessings of his Covenant see Ch. 7.6 And all Nations shall see by the singular blessings that shall be heaped upon this people that God did indeed own them for his peculiar people and that they were called by his Name and so owned as his Children and thereupon called the Children of God upon which account other Nations should be afraid of them 8. They shall be blessed with rain The Lord will open to them his good Treasures the Heavens shall give them rain in due season The Heavens are called the Lords Treasure because He keepeth therein those things wherewith He causeth the Earth to be fruitful as rain to water the ground and snow to make it fertil and the heat of the Sun and influences of the Moon and Stars to make all things therein to grow and prosper 9. They shall so increase in riches that they shall lend unto many Nations and shall not borrow of them Ch. 15.6 These blessings he shews would follow and overtake them if they walked faithfully in Gods Statutes and did not turn aside from them either to the right hand or to the left nor did decline to other gods from vers 1. to 15. But if they were Disobedient then he tells them Such Judgments and Curses should pursue them and overtake them as were directly contrary to these Blessings First God would send upon them cursing vexation and rebuke in all that they set their hands unto He would send the Pestilence into their Cities and Towns and would command it to cleave to them and to continue long among them 2ly He would smite them with the Consumption Feaver Inflammation and extream burning and with Drought Blasting and Mildew 3ly The Heaven should be as Brass and the Earth as Iron and the Lord would make the rain of their Land powder and dust that is instead of rain the dust being driven by the wind in time of drought should fall upon their Grounds Trees and Plants c. 4ly They shall flee before their Enemies and shall be scattered into the several Nations of the Earth and those of them that should be slain by the Enemy their Carcasses should lie unburied and should be meat for the Fowls of the Air and Beasts of the Field none fraying them away 5ly God would smite them with the botch of Egypt that is with Boils breaking forth with Blains see Exod. 9.9 and with the Emrods or Piles with the Scab and with an incurable Itch. 6ly With madness blindness and astonishment of heart that is God would deprive them of the use of their understandings that they should stand like blind men or men amazed and astonished not knowing which way to turn themselves and should do such things which if they were not blind or mad they would never do And as an effect of this bruitish stupidity they should grope at noon-day that is should not apprehend their danger nor discern the right ways of helping themselves they should be oppressed and spoiled and none should succour them 7ly He threatens to deprive them of things very dear to them even then when they were in expectation to injoy them They should betroth wives and others should enjoy them they should build Houses but not dwell in them plant Vineyards but not gather the Grapes of them their Oxen Asses and Sheep should be violently taken away from them 8ly Their Sons and Daughters should be led into Captivity and their eyes should look earnestly and even fail with longing for their return and there should be no might or power in their hands to rescue or recover them again out of the hands of their Enemies They should be oppressed and crushed by a Nation they knew not who should eat the fruit of their Land and of their labour so that they should be even mad and distracted by reason of the dreadful Calamities which they should be constrained to behold with their eyes 9ly The Lord would smite them with a sore and incurable Botch from the crown of the Head to the sole of the Foot 10ly They and their King as it happened to Manassah Jehoiachim and Zedekiah and their Sons and their Daughters should be carried into Captivity and there they should be either inticed or forced to serve other gods viz. Wood and Stone and their Calamities should be so great that their very Enemies should be astonished at them and they should be flouted and scorned and made a laughing-stock in those places where they should be Captive 1 Kings 9.7 11ly Hurtful Vermine such as Locusts and Worms should devour the fruits of their Fields and Vineyards and their choice Trees should cast their fruit 12ly The Strangers that were left among them should prevail against them and be Lords over them and should be in a far better state than themselves And all these Curses which should overtake them should be upon them and their Seed as a sign of Gods great Indignation against them and for a wonder that a people who were once so high in his Favour should be so unwise and wicked as to provoke Him to bring such a Change upon them And because they served not the Lord with joyfulness and gladness of heart with delight and thankfulness for the abundance of all good things he gave them that therefore they should be forced to serve their Enemies in hunger and thirst nakedness and want of all things and that their Enemies should put a yoke of Iron upon their Necks and keep them in bondage till they were destroyed see Neh. 9.25 26 27. Jer. 28.13 14. 13ly God would suffer them to be invaded by a powerful foreign Enemy who should come as swift as an Eagle that is suddainly unexpectedly and with irresistible Violence viz. the Babilonians * Described Dan. 7.4 to be a Lion with Eagles wings see Ezek. 17.3 12. Forsan ad Romanos allusit aquilis suis notissimos a quibus haec passi sunt Tremel whose Language they understood not and so would be extreamly troubled how to speak to them or beg any favour of them A Nation of a fierce Countenance which should not regard the person of the Old nor shew favour to the Young who should wast their Country and eat up the fruits of their Cattel and of their Land and should besiege them in all their Cities * V. 52. In omnibus portis tuis i. e. civitatibus Synecdoche membri and batter down their high and fenced Walls wherein they trusted and then all the Evils and Calamities incident to places straitly besieged should fall upon them Parents should eat the fruits of their own Bodies the flesh of their Sons and Daughters The man that was tender among them and very delicate dainty and voluptuous should grudge † V. 54. Malignas erit oculus ejus i. e. invidebit fratri c.
the men of War from Gilgal till they were come so near Ai that they might the following night go up to it Then he sent from thence that night thirty thousand of his choicest men with a Charge that taking the advantage of the night they should lay an Ambush of five thousand in the West part of the City between Bethel and Ai and the other 25 thousand should stay somewhere near them that they might assist them in case the Inhabitants of the City should discover them and come out with all their Power against them Joshua lodged that night with the rest of the Army and early next morning before it was day he went up after this thirty thousand and joyning as it is probable with the 25 thousand pitched on the North-side of Ai but in a place where the men of Ai could not yet discover them there being a Valley between them and the City vers 10 11. Having thus set the Ambush on the West-side and the body of the Army on the North-side of the City Joshua early in the morning * Visitavit v. 10. visited his Army to fee if they were all ready and in good array and then went presently himself into the midst of the Valley with a small party with him purposing that as soon as it was day to shew themselves to the men of Ai that they might thereupon be the more encouraged to sally out against them The King of Ai hearing of this small Party in the Valley He gave Order that all the Garrison-Souldiers should be presently got ready at such a time and accordingly they all met and together with their King sallied forth and set upon the Israelites Joshua and the rest that were with him designedly fled before them towards the body of their Army left on the Hill beyond the Plain to draw them off from the City It being once noised that the Israelites fled all that could bear Arms in Ai were instantly called to pursue after them there was not a Souldier left in Ai or Bethel for it seems the Inhabitants of that Town being near Ai had joyned with them but all ran eagerly after the Israelites leaving the City open Joshua with his Party being retir'd to the body of the Army he turned his face and stretched his Spear towards Ai upon which Signal his Souldiers as 't is probable gave a mighty Shout which the Ambush of 5000 men hearing knew thereby it was time for them to run and take the City which accordingly they did and presently set some one or more houses therein on fire that by the smoke ascending the Israelites might perceive the City was taken the men of Ai that pursued Joshua looking back and seeing the smoke of their City ascending were quite disheartned Then Joshua and his Army fell upon them and the five thousand that had entred the City issued out upon their backs so that they were hemm'd in behind and before and so the Israelites made a vast Slaughter of them and spared none they could lay their hands on save only their King whom they took alive and brought to Joshua Then the Israelites went up to Ai and smote it with the edge of the Sword so that all that fell that day both in the Field and in the City were about twelve thousand For Joshua drew not his hand back but with his Spear stretched forth led them on in the Chase and Slaughter of their Enemies till they were destroyed The Cattel and Spoil of the City the Israelites took to themselves as God had commanded But Joshua burnt the City and made it an heap and a desolation for a very long time * V. 28. By this word for ever here as in many other places of Scripture a long time only is signified though afterwards in the days of Nehemiah it was rebuilt and inhabited by the Benjamites as we find Neh. 11.31 and then it was not called Ai but Aijah above a thousand years after it was demolished Joshua hanged the King of Ai upon a Tree till eventide and when the Sun was set he commanded him to be taken down † See Deut. 21.23 and to be cast at the entrance of the Gate of the City and that a great heap of Stones should be raised over Him Josh 8. from 1. to 30. SECT CI. MOses having before his death charged the Israelites that when they came into the Land of Canaan they should buid a Monument of great Stones and write the Law thereon and at the same time should build an Altar of whole stones and offer Sacrifices thereon and that on Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal where this was to be done the people should in a solemn manner give their consent to certain Blessings and Curses that should be read in their hearing Therefore Joshua after the taking of Ai finding the way to these Mountains clear and open by reason of the terrour wherewith the Enemy was now stricken took this time to go up with the people thither to perform this Service which upon the first opportunity he knew they were bound to perform And accordingly going thither He built there this Monument and writ the Law thereon and built the Altar and offered Sacrifices thereon and the people of Israel according to Gods Command having assembled themselves together with their Women little Ones and Strangers half of them stood over against Mount Gerizim and half of them over against Mount Ebal that is not upon the top of these Mountains but upon their ascent near unto the bottom that they might be the nearer one to another and both of them to the Ark which was placed in the Valley between them and might the more conveniently hear the Blessings and Cursings pronounced by the Priests at Joshua's appointment These things being done accordingly the people gave their assent unto the Blessings and Cursings and performed all things according to Moses's direction given Deut. 11.29 and Deut. 27. from 2. to 9. Josh Ch. 8. from 30. to the end SECT CII THe Kings of Canaan affrighted at this great Success of the Israelites now at last begin to combine together and to make War against them But the Inhabitants of Gibeon * Afterwards allotted to Benjamin which was a great and strong City having other Neighbouring-Towns under its Government hearing of the Israelites taking Jericho and Ai and what they did to them yet their hearts were not so hardned as the hearts of the other Canaanites were to fight against Israel but they were willing to submit to them and to sue to them for Conditions of Peace which plainly shews that it was of God and not of themselves that these Gibeonites were thus wise and careful to provide for their own safety They concluded there was no resisting such a people for whom God himself fought and therefore they determined to try if they could by any means make Peace with them And whence could this be but from God who taught
two Cities of this Name One fell to the lot of the Ephraimities and the other to the Benjamites So that it seems there were an upper and nether Beth-horon which were afterwards rebuilt beautified and fortified by Sherah a famous woman of the stock of Ephraim 1 Chron. 7.24 and smote them unto Azehah and Makkedah And as they fled some towards the upper and some towards the nether Beth-horon the Lord cast down great and prodigious Hail-stones upon them which destroyed more of them than the Israelites had killed with the Sword This storm of Hail was miraculous not only in regard of the exceeding greatness of the stones but in that they fell only on the Canaanites and not on the Israelites who pursued after them Joshua being now with his Army in the heat of pursuit and execution of their Enemies and fearing he should want day-light to finish his Work His spirit was excited humbly to beg of God that the Sun and Moon might stand still in the Heavens and give them light till they had done their work The Lord was pleased by some special instinct of his Spirit to assure him that his Request was granted whereupon in the presence of his Souldiers and for their future Encouragement looking up to Heaven He said Sun stand thou still upon Gibeon and thou Moon in the Valley of Ajalon † This was a Plain into which men descended from Beth-horon v. 11. and in respect of the small distance between it and Gibeon it is by the Prophet who alludeth to this story call'd the Valley of Gibeon Isa 28.21 And accordingly the Sun and Moon stood still and the whole frame of the Heavens by the space of almost an whole day till they had avenged themselves on their Enemies So that both these great Lights beginning and ending their standing still together the Astronomical Account was no way confounded by this stay even as in Musick the Harmony is not in any sort broken if all the Voices rest at the same time and then begin again every man in his own part going on until the end of the Lesson as Laurentius Codomannus observes This is written in the Book of Jasher * Fuit hic liber quasi Sanctorum Catalogus de Heroum Sanctorum gestis-script●s metrico versu Bonfrerius which seems to be some continued Chronicle of the memorable Acts of Gods Worthies in those times which Book is since lost though 't is mentioned again 2 Sam. 1.18 see also Numb 21.14 And there was no day like this either before it or after it wherein God at the prayer of a man made the Sun and Moon to stand still and made the day twice as long as it should have been Indeed in Hezekiah's time the day was miraculously lengthened by the Suns going backward 2 Kings 20.11 and Isaiah the Prophet cried unto the Lord and he brought the shadow ten degrees backward by which it had gone down in the Dial of Ahaz and yet it was not lengthened so much by far then as it was now to wit not above two hours and an half Neither was that done in such a manner as this was viz. upon Joshua's prayer to God first desiring it and then commanding in his Name that it should be done see Hab. 3.11 Joshua having the day thus miraculously lengthened out for him and following the Chase those five Kings fled to a Cave in the Country belonging to Makkedah and there hid themselves Joshua being informed thereof commanded that the entrance into the Cave should be rammed up with great stones and a Guard set upon it but that the rest of the Army should pursue after their Enemies and smite the hindmost of them and not suffer them to get into their fenced Cities lest they should put them to a new trouble For says he God fights for us and hath delivered these our Enemies into our hands therefore let us not by sloth and negligence lose this opportunity of destroying them which he now affordeth us Accordingly Joshua and his Souldiers made that day a great Slaughter of their Enemies so that only a few of them escaped which got into their fenced Cities For though he at present destroyed the Enemy in the Field yet it seems he did not take their fenced Cities till some time after though they are related in this Chapter as taken presently because the Writer of this Book did resolve to give as it were one short Draught of the War Now those whom Joshua had sent forth to pursue the Enemy returned to him in peace that is sound and safe to Makkedah where his Camp was at present And now the Canaanites were very quiet and durst not offer the Israelites the least Disturbance no not so much as a Dog barked against them to allude to that proverbial Speech Exod. 11.7 Then Joshua caused the five Kings to be brought out of the Cave to him and He called for his Captains and chief Commanders and bad them put their feet upon their Necks not in a proud insulting manner but to teach them that they were to shew no mercy to this people and to intimate to them that thus they should tread all their Enemies under their feet Then Joshua commanded that these five Kings should be slain and hanged * Quia Regum stagitia plurimis exemplo nocent ideo acerbiore supplicio merito debebant Expiari Masius on five Trees where they hung till evening and then they took them down and cast them into the Cave where they had been hid and laid great stones in the Caves mouth which remained when this History was written See Josh 8.29 and Psal 91.13 and Psal 149.8 110.1 Joshua 10. from 1. to 27. SECT CIV JOshua like a prudent General pursueth his Victory while the Canaanites were under so great a terrour and consternation upon the defeat of the five Kings and their Armies And therefore now He resolves to set upon their Cities And first He took Makkedah (c) A City in the uttermost Confines of the Tribe of Judah towards the West see Ch. 15.41 and destroyed all the people therein Men Women and Children reserving the Cattel to themselves for a Prey see Ch. 11.14 And he did unto the King thereof as he had done unto the King of Jericho that is He hanged † Hoc non indicat Scriptura ex caeterorum tamen Regum exemplo colligunt eum suspensum fuisse Bonfrerius him From Makkedah he marched the whole Army that was with him to Libnah (d) A City situate in the Tribe of Judah Ch. 15.42 and given to the Priests Ch. 21.13 and the Lord delivered that City also into his hands and he put all to the Sword he found therein and did unto their King as he did unto the King of Makkedah From Libnah he marched to Lachish (e) A strong City in the Confines of Judah restor'd Ch. 15.39 whose King was one of those that made War against Gibeon and besieged it
Thummim whither they should go up any more against the Benjamites The Lord bids them go up for to morrow he would deliver the Benjamites into their hands The Israelites having this Promise from God undoubtedly were much encouraged thereby however they resolved not to neglect any good means to obtain the Victory but by Policy and Military Stratagems to get all advantage they could of their Enemies Accordingly they divided their Army into three parts the one was laid in Ambush in the Medows of Gibeah vers 33. the second was sent against Gibeah with Orders that they should presently fly before the Benjamites that so they might draw them far off from the City vers 30 31. and the third which was the main body was to stay at Baal-tamar and to renew the battel when the Benjamites came thither in pursuit of the Israelites that fled before them Things being thus ordered that part of the Army that was to make the first On-set upon the Benjamites and then presently to fly and give back * See a like Stratagem in the taking of Ai Josh 8. marched up against the City and accordingly flying when the Benjamites came out against them the Benjamites eagerly pursued them and killed about thirty men and thought they should have cut them down as they did before But being drawn a good way off from the City the Ambush arose being ten thousand men and suddenly took the City and set it on fire which when they had done they put themselves between the City and the Army of the Benjamites to hinder their retreat The Benjamites that pursued the Israelites little thought of this or that evil was so near them For on a suddain the flying Israelites turned head and with the main body of the Army that stayed at Baal-tamar renewed the battel with great Courage and Violence The Benjamites looking back saw the smoke of the City ascending at which being much terrified they fled before the Israelites who destroyed eighteen thousand † V. 15. The Children of Benjamin were twenty six thousand and seven hundred Of these the Israelites slew when they prevailed against them twenty five thousand and one hundred v. 35. six hundred of them only saved themselves in Rimmon It seems therefore that the other thousand was slain in the two first battels wherein the Benjamit●s overcame the Israelites for 't is not like they could conquer them in two battels without some loss of them in the chase those that came out of the Cities to assist the Israelites hemming them in on every side vers 42. and vers 44. and five thousand more of them they killed in the High-ways as they found them in the pursuit scattered here and there vers 45. and two thousand more they slew at Gidom vers 45. and the odd hundred * Vers 46. Here the greater or round number is only expressed and not the odd 100. which is not expressed in particulars was slain as it seems some in one place and some in another so that of the Benjamites there fell that day twenty five thousand and one hundred six hundred of them only escaping who fled to Rimmon a City built on a Rock betwixt Gibeah and Bethel and abode there four months The Israelites not satisfied with the slaughter of the men of Gibeah and the Benjamites that came to fight in their Defence they fell upon all other Cities in that Tribe because they had sent Aids and had assisted their Brethren in this War and in their Rage slew Man Woman and Child and even the very Beasts and setting fire on their Cities spared no living thing that came in their way being transported with Fury that the Benjamites had undertaken the Defence of so horrible a Villany and that they had slain no less then forty thousand of the Israelites in this War Thus when the Lord had made use of Benjamin to execute his Justice upon Israel for not punishing Idolatry and for their other sins He then uses Israel to punish Benjamin for not delivering the men of Gibeah up to justice Judg. 20. whole Chapter SECT CXXXII THe Israelites having thus destroyed all the Men Women and Children of Benjamin excepting only those six hundred that fled to Rimmon they now began to consider into what a strait they had brought themselves For having slain all the Women of Benjamin and having made a Vow that none of them should give their Daughters in marriage to the Men of that Tribe either those six hundred men must take themselves Wives from the Heathens which was unlawful and the holy Seed would be thereby polluted or else a Tribe must perish from Israel and so their Body Politick which God had formed would be dismembred or themselves must break an Oath which they had solemnly taken in the presence of God Being exceedingly perplexed about this matter they thereupon went with their whole Army to the House of God in Shiloh there to bewail their Case and to inquire of the Lord what they should do in these Difficulties They rose therefore early the next morning and built there an Altar and offered thereon Burnt-Offerings and Peace-Offerings because the Altar in the Tabernacle was not sufficient for the Offering up such a vast multitude of Sacrifices as were now brought in by the people after they had prevailed against the Benjamites see a like thing done 1 Kings 8.64 and the rearing Altars upon such extraordinary Occasions was not unlawful see Exod. 20.24 Then they began to consider what City or Town in all their Tribes had sent none to help them against the Benjamites For there had been a solemn Oath sworn by them all at Mizpeh before they engag'd in this War and it was taken with a severe Execration against any that should break it that whatsoever City or Town did not come in to help and assist them in this Quarrel should be destroyed Upon inquiry they found that Jabesh-Gilead on the other side Jordan had sent none to their assistance Hereupon they sent twelve thousand valiant men to destroy that City giving them order that they should destroy all the Men and all the Women thereof that had known man but the Virgins that were marriageable they should spare not doubting but of those there would be enough found to make Wives for the six hundred Benjamites But it seems there were were only four hundred such found in that City So that there being not Wives enough for them the Israelites much blamed themselves that they had in their rage destroyed all the Benjamitish-Women see vers 22. These four hundred Virgins being brought to Shiloh the Israelites sent a kind Message to the Benjamites at Rimmon to come to them who accordingly coming they gave to four hundred of them these four hundred Virgins to make them Wives wherein they conceived that they broke not their Oath because they were not their own Daughters But these being not enough for the remaining Benjamites the Israelites much repented their
due time to perform what God commanded them in driving out the Canaanites out of the Land Now the Canaanites that were left in the Land and not cast out were these viz. five Lords of the Philistines viz. the Lords of Ashdod Gaza Askelon Gath and Ekron and the Canaanites Sidonians and Hivites that dwelt about Libanus and from Mount Baal-hermon on the East of Libanus to the entring in of Hamath a City in the North of Canaan afterwards call'd Antiochia The Children of Israel dwelling thus among the Canaanites grew extreamly corrupt so that they served their gods and the Idols which they set up and worshipped in Groves and made interchangeable Marriages with them Upon which great Provocations the Lord gave them up into the hands of Chushan-rishathaim King of Mesopotamia 'T is like he first brake in upon the Tribes that lay on the other side of Jordan and then incroached upon those within Jordan by degrees And this was their first Servitude (g) First Servitude under Cushan eight years Othniel first Judge which continued eight years Then returning unto the Lord and crying unto Him for Mercy and Forgiveness He was pleased to raise up for them a Saviour and Deliverer namely Othniel the Son of Kenaz Caleb's Nephew and Son in law see Ch. 1.13 so that to the great Honour of the Children of Judah the first Judge after Joshua was of their Tribe Thus that Prophesie was made good Gen. 49.8 Judah thou art He whom thy Brethren shall praise thy Hand shall be in the Neck of thine Enemies thy Fathers Children shall bow down before thee Othniel being thus raised up by God to this high Office The Spirit of the Lord came upon him that is he was furnished with those Gifts and Graces that were requisite to make him a wise and valiant General in War and a prudent Governour in Peace and the Lord gave Cushan into his hands so that he prevailed against him and delivered the Israelites out of their Bondage under Him And so the Land had rest forty years Not as if there were forty years of Peace in the Land uninterrupted from this time but the Land had Rest till forty years were expired from the first Rest wherein it was setled by Joshua before his death And then Othniel died Judg. 2. from 11. to the end Ch. 3. from 1. to 12. SECT CXXXIV AFter the death of Othniel the Israelites again did evil in the sight of the Lord and He stirred up Eglon King of Moab and gave him Courage and Resolution to go against Israel and he joyning with the Ammonites and Amalekites overthrew them and took Jericho that is possessed himself of the Lands and Territories thereabout where the City of Jericho once stood and possibly built some great Fortress there that he might have the Command of the Fords of Jordan that being the passage over to his own Country Second Oppression under Eglon eighteen years Ehud second Judge And this second Oppression continued eighteen years The Israelites then crying unto the Lord for help he raised up for them Ehud Son of Gera of the Tribe of Benjamin which was but a little before almost wholly destroyed a man left-handed By Him the Children of Israel sent a Present to Eglon which Opportunity he readily embraced having a design to kill Him And being stirred up as 't is probable by the Spirit of God to do it He accordingly provided himself of a Dagger fit for the purpose Then going with the Present to Eglon and humbly presenting it to Him He with those that brought it take their leave and depart When they were come as far back as the Quarries by Gilgal He himself returns again to the King who was in his Summer-Parlour and addressing himself to him tells him He had a secret Message to him The King bids him forbear delivering his Message till his Servants and Attendants were gone out of the Room They being gone Ehud tells him He had a Message from God to him Eglon hearing this rose up as if he would give some respect to such a Messuage Ehud then drawing out his Dagger thrust it into his Belly and gave him such a deadly blow that he left him who had so long oppressed the people of God wallowing in his own blood and dung Then shutting the door after him and locking it having as 't is probable a Spring-lock he quietly and with a composed Countenance passed away The Servants finding the door shut and locked they concluded that the King covered his feet in his Summer-Chamber that is that He had laid himself down to sleep because when they did so they used to cast some covering over their feet as it is said of Ruth when she went to lie down by Boaz as he lay sleeping at the end of his heap of Corn Ruth 3.7 That she uncovered his feet and laid her self down So when Saul went into the Cave where David and his men were 1 Sam. 24.3 't is said Saul went in to cover his feet that is to lie down and sleep there for a while else how could David cut off the Skirt of his Garment and not be perceived if he had not been asleep The Servants having staid a great while and finding the King did not open the door they began to be ashamed they had stayed so long and not looked after their Master sooner fearing that some evil had befallen him Then taking a Key it being usual in Kings Houses for the Servants to have Keys to their Masters doors and opening the door they found their Lord dead Ehud thus escaping He came to Mount Ephraim and there blew a Trumpet and gathering the Children of Israel together He tells them what he had done and that the Lord had delivered the Moabites into their hands Then bidding them follow him he went down with them and took the Fords of Jordan that neither the Moabites now in Canaan might escape to their own Country nor those in the Land of Moab pass over Jordan to aid their Brethren in Canaan Then he fell with his Forces upon the Moabites and the Israelites slew ten thousand of them at that time even lusty and stout men So Moab was subdued that day under the hand of Israel and the Land had rest fourscore years to wit after the former rest and Deliverance procured to them by Othniel In the time of those 80 years the Philistines making some Inroads into the Lands of the Israelites Shamgar the Son of Anath who seems to be some Country-man or Farmer of Note did on a suddain raise the Country thereabouts and they (h) Some think that this Victory of Shamgar's was miraculous and that he himself slew 600 as Sampson slew a 1000 of them with the Jaw-bone of an Asse Ch. 15.15 16. with their Ox-goads set upon the Philistines and slew 600 of them So that He was a Deliverer though not a Judge Judg. Ch. 3. from 12. to the end SECT CXXXV The Book of Ruth
of divers Colours of divers Colours of Needle-work so wrought that both sides are alike and of equal beauty and fit to be worn about the Necks of those to whom the best Prey belongeth as great Officers and Commanders and such as have done best Service in the Fight But alas she will find her self miserably deceived and her Son to be in another condition So let all thine Enemies perish O Lord but let them that love thee become Prosperous Glorious and Renowned and let their Prosperity grow and increase daily as the Sun when it riseth in a clear Morning doth shine brightly and gloriously and that more and more until it shew it self in its greatest strength and brightness at Noon-day Prov. 4.18 And upon this Victory the Land had Rest until forty years were up since the former Rest or Peace restored by Ehud Ch. 5. whole Chapter SECT CXXXVIII Fourth Oppression under the Midianites seven years THe Children of Israel falling again to Idolatry and doing evil in the sight of the Lord He delivered them into the hands of the Midianites who oppressed them seven years We read not indeed that they brought them into such Bondage as other Oppressors had done but only made every year Inroads into their Land and so robbed and pillaged their Country The Midianites though the Posterity of Abraham were always deadly Enemies to the Israelites and in the latter days of Moses the Israelites had destroyed multitudes of them as we may see Numb 31.17 Possibly the Midianites resolved now to take Revenge on them for it However when the Lord intends to punish a people for their sins he can raise up against them what Nation he pleases And in this time that the Midianites thus vexed Israel many of those Dens and Caves and strong Holds in Rocks which were in the Land of Canaan were made by the Israelites to hide themselves and their Goods from the Midianites These Midianites having got as it seems some of those Eastern Nations that bordered upon them as the Ishamelites Arabians c. to join with them who dwelt not in Cities or Towns but in Tents only which they used to remove from one place to another every Spring when the Israelites had sown their Corn these Midianites and their Confederates came with their Tents and Camels and Cattel that they might eat up the increase of the Land and therefore are compared to Grashoppers or Locusts vers 5. And they entred on the East passing over Jordan and went quite through the Land even as far as Gaza that lay on the Western-Sea destroying all as they went leaving in a manner no sustenance for Israel or very little and driving away their Cattel So that the Israelites were hereby greatly impoverished In this their Distress they cried unto the Lord and he sent a Prophet unto them his Name is not recorded who said to them Thus saith the Lord I brought you out of Egypt and delivered you from all those that oppressed you and drave out the Canaanites before you and gave you their Land and said to you I am the Lord your God See that you Worship not the gods of the Amorites in whose Land you dwell Because Religious Worship is always accompanied with fear and reverence of that God whom we worship therefore fear is often put for the whole Worship that we give to God but you have not obeyed my Voice and therefore you need not wonder at what is come upon you Sometime after this the Angel of the Covenant the Son of God called Jehovah vers 24. appeared unto Gideon the Son of Joash of the Family of Abiezer of the Tribe of Manasseh at Ophrath where he dwelt and not desiring to seem to Gideon any other than some Prophet sent to him by God He sate down under an Oak as a man wearied with travel and that desired to rest himself having as a Traveller a Staff in his hand Thus the Son of God did often in the Old Testament take on him an humane shape to prefigure his Incarnation And accordingly now he appeared unto Gideon who was threshing Wheat by the Wine-press to hide it from the Midianites By which it appears that Gideon though a man of Note and having many Servants under him vers 27. yet was a man also of an humble spirit and disdained not to employ himself in any honest labour The Angel salutes him thus The Lord is with thee thou mighty man of Valour Gideon the Fourth Judge this He spake as pre-signifying that great Courage and Valour the Lord intended to endow him with Gideon reply'd Oh my Lord if the Lord be with us why then is all this befallen us where are all the Miracles our Fathers told us of but the Lord hath now forsaken us and delivered us into the hands of the Midianites The Angel replies Thus saith the Lord go in this thy might which I have given thee and rely on my Promise to assist thee in this great Work which I call thee to and thou shalt save Israel from the hands of the Midianites Have not I sent thee and therefore having both Authority from Me and a Promise of Success thou maist without all scruple undertake this Service And he said unto him O Lord wherewith shall I save Israel These words of Gideon seem to proceed from weakness of Faith but do not argue a total want of it for his Faith is commended Heb. 11.32 but as a man apprehensive of his own weakness he desires Direction how to carry on so great a Work and what means he should use for the atchieving so great a Design Alas says he the thousand that I belong to is poor in Manasseh I am not only weak in my self but also in Friends and Allies The Lord said unto him I will be with thee and I am All-sufficient and able to give thee such Wisdom and Power as is requisite for thee to effect it I will surely be with thee and thou shalt smite the Midianites as easily as if thou hadst to do but with one man Gideon said If I have found Grace in thy sight I pray thee shew me a sign that thou talkest with me from God and art sent of Him thus to speak unto me and tarry I pray thee a little that I may entertain thee with such Provisions as I can on a suddain make So Gideon went in and made ready a Kid and unleavened Cakes of which he provided a large quantity * V. 19. Of an Ephah of flour intending possibly to oblige this Stranger to take some of them with him to sustain him in his Journey see Gen. Ch. 18. 19. and Judg. 13.15 The Flesh and Cakes he put in a Basket and the Broth in a Pot and brought it out to Him sitting under the Oak and presented it to him For apprehending Him at present to be only a Prophet sent of God to him He desireth to give Him such Entertainment as was fit for him to
out with her importunity he at length opened his heart unto her and told her that he had from his mothers womb been a Nazarite unto God and no razor had come on his head therefore if he were shaven and his locks * His strength did not lye in his hair but was the free gift of God conferred on him particularly and not upon another Nazarite and it seems God had bestowed it upon him upon condition of his strict observing this Law of the Nazarite in keeping his hair uncut and probably God had some way or other revealed this to Samson himself cut his strength would depart from him and he should be but like other men Behold here the weakness of man when left to himself Samson one of Gods great Worthies commended for his faith Heb. 11.32 and innobled by his Glorious victories who with his bare hands rent a roaring Lion as if he had been a Kid and slaughtered and routed an whole army of his enemies is now become so weak as to reveal a secret that concern'd his life to a treacherous Harlot Thus God did justly leave him to fall into the following miseries that thereby he might severely yet deservedly correct him for his former uncleanness and relapsing again into the same sin But to proceed when Dalilah saw by his serious carriage in this relation that he had told her his very heart she sent for the Lords of the Philistines to come to her once again assuring them that though before they had lost their labour yet they should not do so now for Samson had discovered his whole heart to her Hereupon they came up and brought the money with them they had promised to give her to engage her to be faithful to them Then Dalilah getting Samson upon a time to lay his head and sleep upon her lap she caused a man to cut off his seven locks she might have suddenly dispatched him by cutting his throat but God did not permit her to take away his life that he might have space to repent and having his strength renewed might destroy more of the Philistines at his death than he had done in his life Dalilah now jogging and rouzing him out of his sleep and telling him the Philistines were upon him he suddenly awoke and thought to have gone out and to have shaken up himself and rouz'd up his spirits to do as he used to do but he soon found the case altered with him for his locks being cut God had withdrawn his supernatural strength from him whereof his hair was a sign Being thus deprived of his strength the Philistines that lay in wait came and took him and put out his eyes and brought him down to Gaza and bound him with fetters of brass and made him grinde in their Prison-house See Exod. 11.5 Herein the Philistines had their ends and God had his unto which he made theirs subservient Samson had by the wanton and lustful glances of his eyes upon Harlots highly offended God and now God permits the Philistines to put out his eyes they carry him down in triumph to Gaza and that must be the place of his punishment where he first acted his sin of uncleanness and he that had inslav'd himself to an Harlot is now condemn'd to that mean and abject slavery to grind in a mill It seems it was a good while * Per tres forte aut quatuor menses in carcere fuit that Samson continued in this slavery before they brought him forth to make them sport at Dagons (d) Dagon was an Idol-god of the Philistines his Image was in the upper part like a man and in the neather like a Fish as may be gathered from 1 Sam. 5 4 perhaps the Philistines whose land lay on the Sea-coast worshipped him as the God of the Sea As the Heathens did their Neptune or Triton Dagon seems to be derived from the Hebrew word Dag signifying a Fish Feast During which time reconciling himself to God by unfeigned repentance his hair the sign of his strength began to grow again After some time the Lords of the Philistines and their chief men met together at Gaza to offer a great sacrifice to Dagon their god for delivering Samson their enemy and the destroyer of their Country into their hands and to feast and rejoice together When they were frolick and in their cups they call'd to have Samson brought forth to them out of the Prison to make them sport and that they might laugh at him Samson being brought into that magnificent house and Idol-temple where there were gathered together all the Lords of the Philistines from the several Lordships of the Country with a vast number of other persons of note both men and women and about 3000 people having got up to the roof of the Temple that was flat (f) Tecta in Palaestina Plana erant ut in illis commode ambulare liceret habebantque fenestras ita dispositas ut videre possent quidquid erat in inferiori domus parte Menoch that they might thorough the windows and lattices that were thereon see the sport Samson desiring the Lad that led him to suffer him to feel the Pillars on which the house mainly leaned he prayed unto the Lord and said Remember me now O Lord I beseech thee and strengthen me this once that I may be avenged on the Philistines for my two eyes for they have not only done me a private injury in my own person but have thereby disabled me to fight in thy quarrel for the deliverance of thy people Then being moved by an extraordinary instinct (g) Ut patet a viribus ei a Deo subministratis ad patrandum hoc miraculum of the Spirit of God not to murder (h) Quamvis directe primario per se suam ipsius mortem deligere procurare non liceat Licet tamen indirecte secundario per aliud quod per se bonum honestum cum sit non potest nisi morte nostra obtineri Patet in quotidianis bellicae fortitudinis Martyris exemplis Lessius Non eligitur inquit Cajetanus in hujusmodi casibus mors propria in seipsa sed per se eligitur mors hostium concomitans propria mors toleranda admittitur propter bonum ultionis Non proprie physice seipsum occidit Samson sed tantum indirecte permissive se in eadem clade quam evadere non poterat involvit quod sicut magnae fortitudinis fuit sic magna pro praeteritis culpis poena fuit A Lapid himself but to undervalue his own life so he might thereby as a Judg and publick person execute Gods vengeance upon his and his peoples enemies he took hold on the two Pillars by which the house was born up of the one with his right hand and of the other with his left and bowing himself with all his might and crying let me die with the Philistines the house fell upon the Lords and all the
mean condition yet when he hath finished the work of mans Redemption he shall then be exalted above all Principalities and Powers and shall sit down at the right hand of his Father all power being given unto him both in heaven and earth he shall gather his people from all Nations and govern them by his Word and Spirit and destroy his and their enemies Hannah having ended her Song Elkanah and she departed to their house at Ramah and left their young Son Samuel to minister unto the Lord before Eli the Priest to wit in such services of the Tabernacle as by degrees he grew able to perform The Levites indeed did not enter on that service till they were twenty-five years old as we shewed before but Samuels case was extraordinary because by the special vow of a Nazarite he was even from his tender years consecrated to the service of the Lord. And though by the Law there were no linnen Ephods appointed for the Levites but for the inferior Priests only Exod. 39.27 either therefore afterwards when the Tabernacle came to be setled in the land of Canaan it was so ordered by the Lord that the Levites should also wear such linnen Ephods when they attended upon the service of the Tabernacle or else Samuel was by special dispensation because of the Nazarites vow or some other reason appointed to wear this holy vestment which yet seems not very probable because the linnen Ephod was so commonly worn by all that were employed in holy services that even David when he danced before the Ark 2 Sam. 6.14 was girded with a linnen Ephod But however it was 't is plain that Samuel in his younger years did attend upon the service of the Tabernacle viz. in such services as he could then perform and that before Eli the Priest that is as he was ordered and directed by him who undertook it training of him up and upon whom he chiefly attended in the service he performed And his mother when she came to Shiloh with her husband to offer the yearly Sacrifice used to bring him a new coat as a pledg of her motherly love to him and there Eli blessed Elkanah and his wife and said unto him The Lord give thee seed of this woman for the Son thou hast lent to the Lord. And the Lord visited * Visitare hic sumitur in bonam partem Hannah in mercy and according to Eli's blessing made her fruitful so that for that one Son she had given to the Lord he gave her three Sons and two Daughters more so powerful are the prayers of such good men as Eli was And the child Samuel as he grew in years so he grew in grace and godliness whereby he became acceptable both to God and man see Luk. 2.52 1 Sam. Ch. 2. from v. 1. to 12. and v. 18 19 20 21. SECT CLIII ELI was at this time as we have shewed Judg of Israel and he was High-Priest also but how he came to be so (a) Quomodo ab Aarone oriundus sit Eli nondum liquet ut ejus ex industria videatur obliterata genealogia Tantilla est solius loci non doctrinae morumque successio Anonym in loc we cannot give any certain account the Scripture being therein silent He had two Sons Hophni and Phineas who as Secondary Priests did the service of the Sanctuary under their Father but these were very wicked men Sons of Belial that had no lively knowledg nor apprehension of God nor did fear and honour him as God For though they did profess to worship God yet in their works they denied him being abominable and disobedient and unto every good work reprobate The sins and provocations of these Sons of Eli are set forth in several particulars they were not content with the breast and shoulder and the checks * See Deut. 18.3 with the tongue which only were the Priests portion of the Peace-offerings Levit. 7.31 32 c. but they used to challenge of that which was seething for the Sacrifices as their just fees all that their flesh-hook could take out having no Law of God for it and this they did not only now and then but constantly practised it unto all the Israelites that came to Shiloh to worship v. 14. And sometimes they would have this their overplus-portion before the flesh was put into the pot or kettle that they might roast it yea before the fat was taken off and burnt and so before the Lord had his due directly against the Law Levit. 7.31 which may be the reason why v. 29. they are said to have made themselves fat with the chiefest of the offerings and if any denied to give them what they required they threatned to take it by force and violence God was very angry at these miscarriages of these young men whereby they caused the people to neglect the Worship and service of God and even to abhor his Sacrifices when they saw them profaned by such abominable courses Eli was very old and heard of these great miscarriages of his Sons and of some other abominations that they were guilty of viz. that they lay with the women that came to the door of the Tabernacle to offer Sacrifices and to perform other duties of worship and service unto God which wickedness was the more abominable because they had wives of their own as we may see Ch. 4.19 Old Eli did indeed reprove his Sons for these their scandalous miscarriages but he did it too mildly and gently saying to them Nay my Sons it is no good report I hear of you ye make the Lords people to transgress by your wicked example and to forbear bringing their Sacrifices to the Lord being so highly scandalized at your ill managing of sacred things But Eli being not only a Father but also a chief Magistrate and Judg should not only have reproved them sharply but should have punished them severely by casting them out of the Priests Office which they had so shamefully profaned yea should have put them to death for their adultery according to the Law Levit. 20.10 but he only mildly reproved them for such great enormities He told them that if one man sin against another the Judg shall judg him that is an umpire may come and take up the controversie and the offending party may be adjudged to make satisfaction and so there will be an end of that quarrel but if a man sin against the Lord who shall entreat for him that is no mediation or satisfaction of man can here make his peace with God no reconciliation can here be hoped for but upon his repentance and turning to God and resting on the alsufficient merits and intercession of the Messias But let Eli say what he would they hearkened not to the voice of their father which plainly shewed that the Lord determined to destroy them for being grievously provoked by their sins he resolved as a righteous Judg to leave them to themselves and to the wickedness of
they knew that Idolatry and many other gross sins were at this time rife among them as we may learn from the Psalmists words Psal 78.58 speaking of these very times yet they were so blind and stupid that because they were the seed of Abraham they wondered that God should take part with the uncircumcised Philistines against them not being sensible of their own great wickedness which had provoked him to bring that calamity upon them And vainly they thought to mend the matter by fetching the Ark of God the sign of his presence to be among them For not repenting of their sins whereby they had forfeited their interest in God nor seeking to make their peace with him as they ought to have done their confidence in the Ark was vain and groundless However without consulting with God or advising with Samuel they resolve to fetch it into the Camp by which in former times their Ancestors had prevailed against their enemies as at the taking of Jericho Josh 6.4 5. and they hoped it would now help them also And thus they trusted more in the visible presence of the Ark than the gracious presence and assistance of God which they could not rationally hope for whilst they continued impenitent and unreform'd The Ark being sent for the two Sons of Eli Hophni and Phinehas came along with it either to carry it as Numb 4.15 or to attend it And when it came into the Camp all Israel shouted with a great shout so that the earth rang again with the rebound or Eccho of their shout The Philistines understanding this were sore affraid for they said God is come into the Camp thinking it seems the Ark to be some representation of the God of the Israelites and having the same opinion of it that they had of their own Idols at least they conceived some Divine power went along with it which was the reason they were so afraid And they said Wo unto us there hath not been such a thing heretofore that is in former conflicts which we have had with them they used not to bring their Ark into the Camp and by this unwonted shout of theirs we may perceive how much greater their hope and confidence now is than it hath been formerly Wo unto us who shall deliver us out of the hands of these mighty Gods Thus they speak of the true God after their Idolatrous manner who worshipped many Gods or Idols They further said These are the Gods that smote the Egyptians with all the Plagues which fell upon Pharoah and his people in Egypt and at last drowned them in the Red-Sea which joined to the desert or wilderness of Etham Exod. 13.20 upon which many of their dead carcasses were cast up and hereupon they name this as the consummation of all the former Plagues Therefore they encouraged one another saying Let us be strong and quit our selves like men and fight valiantly that we be not servants unto the Hebrews as they have been unto us Judg. 13.1 Accordingly the Armies encountring each other the Philistines fought stoutly and the Israelites were discomfited and there fell thirty thousand Footmen for they had no Horse and the rest were miserably scattered so that they fled to their own houses or dwellings See Ch. 13.2 1 King 12.16 And the Ark of God was taken (a) The Ark being in the Tabernacle at Shiloh it was now taken thence and never came into it again It was carried now to Ebenezer a place ominous now but a monument of Gods help soon after into the Camp Ch. 5.1 that it might save them out of the hands of their enemies as we read the Philistines themselves in the days of David brought their Images into their Camp 2 Sam. 5.21 1 Chron. 14.12 The Ark being taken there by the Philistines they carried it about to Ashdod into the house of Dagon thence to Gath thence to Ekron and after they had kept it seven months they sent it to Bethshemesh a City in the Tribe of Judah and it was fetcht thence to Kirjathjearim a City likewise of Judah It was there placed in the house of Abinadab a Levite 1 Sam. 7.1 it abode there twenty years till the time of the Repentance and Reformation wrought by the Ministry of Samuel 1 Sam. 7.2 And after in the days of Saul it seems to be fetched thence to Gilgal 1 Sam. 10.8 and after to Gibeah of Benjamin compare 1 Sam. 13.9 and Ch. 14.2 18. so that it seems it was fetched into extraordinary assemblies upon extraordinary occasions both in War and Peace But being returned to Kirjath-jearim to the house of Abinadab it was fetched thence by David 1 Chron. 13.5 Sixty-seven years after it was first brought thither It was brought by him to the house of Obed-Edom a Lev●te 2 Sam. 6.10 the Ark was there three months and then fetched thence by David with great solemnity into the Tent which he prepared for it in Jerusalem 1 Chron. 1.5 and thence seems to be carried into Joab's Camp before Rabbah 2 Sam. 11.11 and began to be carried with David in his flight from Absalom 2 Sam. 15.24 And being returned to David's Tent prepared for it at Jerusalem Solomon as soon as he had built the Temple brought it thence with great Solemnity and placed it in the Holy Oracle 2 Chron. 5.2 about 112 years after it first left Shiloh What became of it at the destruction of the Temple by Nebuchadnezzar is uncertain and the two Sons of Eli Hophni and Phinehas were slain according to the Prediction Ch. 2.34 and a man of Benjamin ran from the Army and came to Shiloh the same day with his Clothes rent and with earth upon his head see Josh 7.6 2 Sam. 1.2 to signifie the sad news he brought and Eli sat upon a seat by the way-side near the Gate of the Tabernacle watching and earnestly expecting news from the Camp and the success of the fight For his heart trembled for the Ark of God lest that should fall into the hands of the Uncircumcised Philistines and be profaned by them and lest the Israelites should be deprived of the comfort of it (b) Ante adventum arcae tantum 4 millia occiduntur post adventum ejus 30 millia Tantum abest ut improbi ex praesentia arcae adjuventur ut potius in majus exitium devolvantur Mendoz. And when the man had told his sad story in Shiloh all the City cried out with most bitter and loud lamentation Eli who was ninety-eight years old and blind hearing this dreadful out-cry inquires what the matter was whereupon they brought the messenger to him that came out of the Army who told him that Israel was fled before the Philistines and that there had been a great slaughter among the people that his two Sons Hophni and Phinehas were slain and lastly that the Ark of God was taken no sooner did the Messenger make mention of the loss of the Ark but old Eli's heart died within him and being
convinced that the keeping of the Ark among them was the true cause of their present calamities they resolved to send it back and thereupon called for their Priests and Diviners to advise them in what manner they should do it that they might appease the wrath of the God of Israel and that he might heal their land and remove their plagues The Priests advise them that if they did resolve to send it back they should not send it without some gift or present or trespass-offering because they had trespassed against the God of Israel by carrying away his Ark captive and had not given it that honour and respect that was due to it And then say they ye shall be healed if his hand has been upon you by reason of your detaining his Ark but if it were upon you for any other cause it will be upon you still after the Ark is sent home Thus the alwise-Providence of God causeth these Idolatrous Priests who were enemies to him and his true Worship to give such counsel as tended to his honour and the shame of their Idols and false worship The Philistines ask their Priests what Trespass-offering they should send They answer five golden Emerods and five golden Mice according to the number of the Princes of the Philistines and the five principal Cities with their villages that were under their command For one and the same plague was on them all see v. 17 18. even on all the land of the Philistines which extendeth unto the great stone of Abel that is mourning see v. 19. so called from the peoples great lamentation for the slaughter God made among them upon an occasion which we shall speak of afterwards By these presents they acknowledged that the God of Israel brought upon them those plagues of the Emerods and Mice for their detaining his Ark and so by them they gave glory to his great name see Josh 7.19 'T is possible Satan might instigate these Diviners to send such absurd and ridiculous gifts as these with the Ark in contempt of God but if it were so that which Satan intended as a dishonour the Lord by his over-ruling Providence so disposed of as tended to his glory seeing the Philistines themselves were made to send into the land of Israel such things which would there remain as perpetual Monuments and Memorials of those shameful punishments wherewith God had humbled them However this is the course these Priests advise them to take at this time and peradventure say they God will hereupon lighten his hand from off you and from off your Gods so that it seems not only Dagon but several other of their Idol-gods were thrown down and broken to pieces by a secret hand of God in all their Cities whither the Ark was brought as 't is probable the like was formerly done in Egypt see Exod. 12.12 and Numb 33.4 But though many of the Philistines were for sending back the Ark presently yet it seems some of them were of a contrary judgment and stiffly opposed it wherefore the Priests blamed them for thus hardning their hearts against the means which God had afforded them to convince them of their sin why will you say they retain the Ark after you have suffered such great and grievous punishments by it herein resembling Pharaoh and the Egyptians who held the people of Israel in cruel bondage notwithstanding Gods hand was so heavy upon them till at last going on in their sin their whole Army was drown'd in the Sea If you would avoid the like heavy Judgments do not imitate them in their sin Now therefore take our advice make a new Cart which hath never yet been put to any common use and take two young heifers on which there hath come no yoke and fastning the Cart to them shut up their Calves at home from them and take the Ark and put it into the Cart and put those Jewels of Gold viz. those Golden Images of Emerods and Mice which ye return for a Trespass-offering in a little Coffer by the side thereof and send it away that it may go and by this experiment ye shall discern whither the God of Israel hath inflicted these punishments upon us or no. If these young heifers untamed and untrained quietly bear the yoke and carry the Ark directly in the way that leadeth to Bethshemesh a City belonging to the Priests † Josh 21.16 of Judah and if the kine do carry the Ark thitherward not offering to go out of the way or to return to their sucking Calves shut up at home it will then be evident that their natural love and affection to their young ones is restrained by a Supernatural power and that the kine would never have done it if Gods hand had not been in the business and so we may conclude that it was he that smote us whilst we kept the Ark. But if things happen otherwise then we may conclude that it was not his hand that smote us but it was only a chance that happened to us The Philistines agree to do as their Priests directed them and all things being prepar'd the Kine went directly to Bethshemesh as if they had been sent thither by God to deliver the Ark into their hands to whom it belonged to take care of it But yet by a natural instinct they sometimes lowed after their Calves left behind them but notwithstanding went on directly in the way towards Bethshemesh not turning to the right hand or left into any cross or by-ways being moved to go on with the Cart and to carry the Ark thither by the all-powerful Providence of God And the Lords of the Philistines went after them unto the borders of Bethshemesh to observe the issue of this experiment and then returned home v. 16. The men of Bethshemesh were at this time reaping their Wheat-harvest * Wheat-harvest in that Country used to be in our May at the Feast of Pentecost Lev. 23.16 whence we may gather that the Ark was taken about November before seeing it was seven months in the custody of the Philistines but lift up their eyes to their great astonishment and joy they saw the Ark coming towards them and the Cart came into the Field of Joshua a Bethshemite and stood there where there was a great stone and the Priests who were of the Tribe of Levi came and took down the Ark of the Lord and the Coffer that was with it and set them on the great stone and they clave the wood of the Cart and offered the Kine as a Burnt-offering to the Lord. 'T is true the Law did command that only males should be offered in Burnt-offerings Levit. 1.3 but this seems to be an extraordinary act of devotion whereunto the Priests were led by reasons grounded upon this strange and extraordinary work which God had wrought and perhaps by a special instinct of his Spirit and is not therefore to be judged of according to the rules of ordinary Burnt-offerings They considered
the people spared him (c) Saul now spared Agag whom God had by an absolute command devoted to destruction but shewed himself afterwards so bloody and barbarously cruel that he caused Gods Priests to be slaughtered whom he should have preserved and that upon a meer suspicion Ch. 22.11 either to make their triumph more glorious or out of covetousness * Ecce quantum abstrahit homines avaritia ab obedientia mandatorum Dei to get a great ransom for him or out of foolish pity because he was a King (e) So Ahab spared Benhadad 1 King 20.35 They spared also the best of the sheep oxen and lambs pretending to reserve them for Sacrifice but doing it out of a covetous desire to enrich themselves but God having anathematiz'd and devoted them all to destruction he would have esteemed it as a pleasing sacrifice if they had thus offered them unto him as he required in the case of Jericho Josh 6.17 but they following their own reason and not Gods command spared all that was good and every thing that was vile and refuse they destroyed Then the Lord spake to Samuel saying It repenteth † Dicitur Deus resipiscere cum id agit quod resipiscentes agunt homines nimirum cum opus suum demoliri statuit vid. Jacob. 1.17 me that I have set up Saul to be King for he is turned from following me and hath not performed my commandments God is said to repent when he does as men do that repent and are grieved for what they have done men are said to repent when they undo what they have before done so God now resolved to alter the course of his dispensations towards Saul and to retract and revoke the benefits he had bestowed on him Samuel hereupon was exceedingly grieved for Saul and prayed earnestly all night for him hoping to have obtain'd of the Lord not to cast him quite off But the Lord would not hear his prayer see v. 23 26. However Samuel going out early in the morning to meet Saul it was told him that he came to Carmel a Town belonging to Judah lying in the way from Amalek Josh 15.55 and that there he had set up a Monument of Triumph for this victory obtain'd over the Amalekites having the picture of a hand upon it to signifie that by his hand and sword he had conquered his enemies V. 12. Et paravit sibi manum i. e. fornicem triumphalem nam trophaeis imponebatur manus ad significandum quod homines valida manu essent profligati Freidlib They further told him that from thence he was gone to Gilgal Samuel going thither to him Saul hearing of his coming went out to met him and said Blessed be thou of the Lord I have performed the commandment of the Lord. How hypocritically and vain gloriously doth he boast of his obedience to God when he was so great a transgressour Samuel said if thou hast obeyed the Commandment of the Lord what meaneth this bleating of sheep in mine ears and this lowing of oxen which I hear Saul replies the people saved the best of the sheep and oxen to sacrifice unto the Lord thy God that is to the Lord whom thou intirely lovest and servest and therefore canst not sure but allow of the means of his Worship but the rest we have utterly destroyed Samuel answers that he would tell him what the Lord had said to him that night Saul bids him say on as expecting possibly some good message from him so far doth hypocrisie blind men even then when they have done that which is notoriously evil Samuel said when thou wast little in thine own eyes and but of mean condition as thou didst confess Ch. 9.21 God advanced thee to be King over all Israel and the Lord sent thee on an expedition against the Amalekites peremptorily charging thee to destroy those great and notorious sinners who had so much malice in them against his people and to fight against them till they were consumed wherefore then didst thou not obey the voice of the Lord but didst fly upon the spoil as an hungry hawk doth upon his prey converting that to thy own use like Achan which God had devoted to destruction see Josh 7. Saul justifies himself and says he had obeyed the voice of the Lord he had gone the way the Lord had sent him and had brought with him Agag King of the Amalekites and had destroyed all the rest of the Amalekites he could light on but indeed the people had saved the chief of the sheep and oxen which should have been destroyed to sacrifice unto the Lord in Gilgal * Qui locus erat ad sacra facienda idoneus if this says he be a fault 't was they not I that committed it But it seems to me to be no fault at all seeing they did it out of a good intention and reserved the best of the spoils to sacrifice them to the Lord in token of their thankfulness for this great victory Samuel answers hath the Lord as great delight in Burnt-offerings and Sacrifices as in obeying his voice Behold to obey is better than sacrifice and to hearken to the voice of God than to offer the fat † Adeps hic ponitur pro victimis adipatis pinguibus of Rams or present to him the best of Sacrifices And the reason is plain for obedience preserveth from sinning whereas sacrifices were ordained only to cleanse us from the guilt of sin when committed and 't is much better to prevent a disease than to be cured of it when contracted And further God always accepted of obedience (a) See Jer. 7.22 23. Isa 1.13 c. and 66.3 Psal 50.8 14. Prov. 15.8 Hos 6.6 Mat. 12.7 and is well pleased with it but rejecteth sacrifices as but a dead carcass when obedience which is as it were their life is wanting He further tells him That rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft and stubborness is as iniquity and idolatry for an act of rebellion against any command of God though had it not been for that command the thing would not have been of its self unlawful is as manifestly a sin as as those things are that are against the law and light of nature and contrary to the truth and glory of Gods Essence as Witchcraft and Idolatry are And such was this act of Saul's in sparing Agag and the best of the Cattel for being done expresly against the command of God it was no less than rebellion and stubborness against the Almighty which is as hateful to him as any wickedness or iniquity is yea as Idolatry it self whereby men forsake God and serve Idols Lastly he tells him Because thou hast rejected the word of the Lord therefore he hath rejected * Denuntiat ei privationem regni cujus executio Paulo post faciendae erat Saulem enim post●a Regem mansisse patet quia eum ut Regem suum habuit populus ipse David
in his mind a (d) So we read of Adonijah affecting the Kingdom of David by the like practise 1 King 2.22 Abner was exceedingly provoked and enrag'd at this and angerly reply'd What am I a dogs-head am I so mean and vile a person in thine eyes that I should be school'd and reprehended for such a matter as this I that have shewed such kindness unto the house of thy Father and to his brethren and friends and have so strenuously stood up against the Tribe of Judah who made David King and have made thee King over the rest of Israel and hitherto supported thee in thy Kingdom and have not delivered thee into the hands of David as I might have done What! am I so mean and contemptible a person that thou shouldst think it a disgrace to thy family that I should lye with one of thy Fathers Concubines God do so to me and more also if I do not translate the Kingdom from the house of Saul to the house of David and make him King over all Israel even from Dan to Beersheba as the Lord hath sworn he should be So that it is plain that Abner knew very well that God had chosen and appointed David to be King and yet all this while he had opposed him against his own knowledg and conscience for his own worldly and wicked ends But though he behaved himself thus insolently yet Ishbosheth being a low and poor-spirited man durst not answer him a word he stood in such fear of him Abner pursuant to what he had threatned sent messengers to David by whom he made his acknowledgment that the whole land did indeed belong to him whom God by Samuel had anointed to be King over Israel and therefore he resolved his hand should be with him to bring all Israel to be subject unto him provided he would make a League and Covenant with him to pardon all that was past and to receive him into his favour David returned him an answer that all that he desired was granted only he must not expect to see his face except he brought Michal Saul's daughter along with him That David insisted upon this condition needs not seem strange if we consider first that she had beeen his first wife and had been faithful to him in preserving his life 1 Sam. 19.11 12. and had been forced by her father to marry another man when he was fled 1 Sam. 25.44 And 2ly David could no way better express his love to her than by rescuing her from the sin and misery of living in adultery 3ly He saw in policy it imported him to ingratiate himself with and gain the love of Sauls kindred and allies which he could no way better do than by this means 4ly He thought he should hereby try the fidelity of Abner Abner it seems hereupon advised David to send to Ishbosheth for his wife and then he would second the motion and procure it to be done David accordingly sent Messengers to Ishbosheth desiring to have his wife Michal delivered to him which he had espoused to him for an hundred (e) David was enjoined only to bring an 100 but he brought 200 1 Sam. 18.25 27. foreskins of the Philistines Ishbosheth being perswaded by Abner to gratifie David therein immediately sent and took her away from Phaltiel her husband who went along with her as far as Bahurim a Town in the Tribe of Benjamin weeping and lamenting that a wise so noble and beautiful should be taken away from him But Abner bad him return and comfort himself for 't was in vain to weep for that which could not be helped Then Abner in pursuance of his design to come in to David had communication with the Elders of Israel and said to them Many of you long ago sought to have David to be King over you now then I pray let us all agree to it for the Lord (f) We do not read in the Sacred story where this is expresly spoken but Josephus saith it was spoken by Samuel and commonly known among the people hath spoken of David saying by the hand of my servant David I will save my people Israel out of the hands of the Philistines and out of the hands of all their enemies He having thus spoken received a satisfactory answer from them viz. that they would receive David for their King Then he addresseth himself to the Tribe of Benjamin speaking to them to the same purpose and he thought it needful to address himself in an especial manner to them because Saul had been of their Tribe and so was chiefly in their favour and therefore if they gave way to Davids Title and submitted to his government little doubt was to be made but that the rest of the Tribes would submit also Having therefore received such an answer from the Elders of Israel and Benjamin as satisfied him he to shew his great diligence and faithfulness in managing Davids business went himself to carry the news of his good success to David at Hebron reporting to him all that Israel and especially Benjamin had said being attended with twenty men and as 't is probable carried Michal along with him David received him very graciously and made a great feast for him and his company when that was over Abner told him he would go and endeavour to get all Israel to accept him for their King and to make a league with him to be subject to him that he might reign over them all even according to his own hearts desire so David dismissed him in peace Joab with a Brigade of his Souldiers now returning home from pursuing a Troop of the Philistines or some other enemies that had invaded the land and bringing a great spoil along with them he was told that Abner had been newly with the King and had been graciously received by him and honourably dismist Joab was enraged at this and therefore in a bold and insolent manner he came to the King and asked him what he had done He wondered at his imprudence in sending away so dangerous an enemy as Abner was when he had him in his hands Thou mightest well have known says he if thou hadst considered it that Abner is a subtile and politick man and came not for any good end but to deceive thee and as a spy to discover thy counsels and the course of thy actions and proceedings Thus he pretends only David's good but 't is like he feared lest Abner by this important service of coming in to him himself and bringing in the other Israelites should insinuate himself into David's favour and so prove a corrival to him in his honours and preferments and besides the death of his brother Asahel killed by Abner stuck in his stomack David it seems was not much moved by what he said wherefore Joab flinging away in a discontent when he was come out from the King he sent Messengers after Abner and possibly in the Kings name who knew nothing of it who brought him
punishments on them putting some of them under Saws some under Harrows of iron some he ordered to be cut in pieces with Axes and some he caused to pass through the fiery brick kiln to express his detestation of their inhumane Idolatry who caused their own children to pass through the fire to their Idol Moloch 1 King 11.7 and thus he did to the Elders of every City who were the chief offenders and that not only because they had so abominably contrary to the Law of Nations abused his Ambassadours but had also hired the Nations round about them to make war upon him intending if they could utterly to destroy the Israelites These things being done David and his people returned to Jerusalem 2 Sam. Ch. 12. from v. 26 to the end 1 Chron. 20. from 1 to 4. SECT CXCIV IN Section 192 we had the sad History of David's fall to be dreaded by all good men now we come to give an account of his repentance and the manner how he was brought to it And first we may take notice that David did not seek to God and turn to him by an act of his free-will before God touched his heart by his grace David had now for the space of near ten months continued in his sin without repentance viz. from the conception to the birth of the child and possibly something longer during all which time he had as 't is probable in a formal manner frequented Gods Ordinances taking care only to hide his sin and not to be cleansed from the guilt of it and to cover his shame which yet he could not do for by reason of his sudden marrying of Bathsheba and her so soon being brought to bed it began now by some to be suspected and talked of that all was not right between them and so by this deed he gave great occasion to the enemies of God to blaspheme God therefore now sends the Prophet Nathan to him to rouze him out of the dead sleep he was in and to bring him to a sense of his sin and to repentance for it Nathan having received a command from God to go to David on this errand he began to think with himself that he was to deal with a great King whom he was directly to accuse sharply to reprehend and severely to threaten from the Lord he resolves therefore to make his address to him in such a way which he thought most likely to work upon such a great person Accordingly coming to him he tells him that there was a certain rich man in that Country who had exceeding many flocks and herds and there lived by him a certain poor man who had only one ew-lamb which he had bought and tenderly brought up and nourished and it lay in his bosom and was to him as a young and tender child (a) In these Parables we are to look at the main scope and drift of them and not to every circumstance many of them being added only as Ornaments to set them off and there came a Traveller to the rich mans house and he spared to take of his own flock to dress for this stranger but took the poor mans lamb and dressed it for him David hearing this and apprehending it to be a true relation of a matter of fact done in his Country his anger was greatly kindled and he said as the Lord liveth the man that hath done this shall surely restore the lamb fourfold (b) In Solomons time it seems there was required sevenfold restitution Prov. 16.31 unless it be meant there that the thief shall make such a perfect restitution in which sense the number seven is often taken according to the Law Exod. 22.1 and I declare that he is worthy to die because he had no pity Thus David unwittingly passeth a heavy sentence upon himself Nathan replies thou art the man thou art he who hast committed this heinous wickedness For thou art the rich man whose many flocks and herds are thy many wives and concubines Vriah is the poor man and his ew-lamb was Bathsheba his wife the traveller that came to thee was the sinful lust of thy heart for the satisfying whereof thou wouldst not take one of thy own wives or concubines but tookest the wife of Vriah therefore the Lord hath commanded me to say thus to thee I anointed thee King over Israel and delivered thee out of the hand of Saul I gave thee thy Masters house viz. the Kingdom of Saul who was thy Lord and Master and have exalted thee to such royal dignity and greatness that all generally that belonged to Saul is come into thy power yea his very wives and concubines whom I have so far brought into thy power that none can hinder thee from taking them into thy bosom (a) V. 8. In sinii i. e. potentiae subjeci tuae neque enim soceri conjuges huic ducere licebat did not my Law forbid it Levit. 18.8 And if all this had been too little I was ready to have given thee more wherefore then hast thou despised the commandment of the Lord to do this heinous evil in his sight Thou hast killed Vriah one of thy worthy and valiant commanders who did thee faithful service and hast made way for thy marrying his wife by murdering of him yea thou hast slain him by the sword of the children of Ammon treacherously betraying him with divers others of thy faithful subjects into their hands and thereby hast encouraged and given occasion to the enemies of my people to insult Now therefore know to thy sorrow that the sword shall never * V. 10. In sempiternum sumitur pro subjecta materia diverse depart from thy house that is as long as thou livest but those of thy family shall with the sword kill one another (b) Three of Davids Sons came to a violent death viz. Amnon Absalom and Adonijah And because thou hast despised me and my Law behold I will raise up evil against thee out of thy own house I will afflict thee with many evils even by thy own children giving them over to commit rapes murders and unnatural rebellions and will take thy concubines before thine eyes that is in thy life-time and thou knowing it and give them unto thy neighbour that is to one near unto thee not only in habitation but in blood and he shall lye with them (c) Absalom did it openly in the sight of all Israel Ch. 16.22 in a Tent which they spread for him in Jerusalem upon the top of the house and probably the same house or Palace from the roof whereof David did first cast a lustful eye on Bathsheba in the sight of the Sun For thou didst it secretly as fearing shame more than sin but I will punish thee openly in the view of all thy people David was so convinced and his heart so deeply wounded with what Nathan had spoken to him that he cried out I have sinned yea heinously sinned against the Lord.
Is the young man Absalom safe Ahimaaz answers that when Joab sent away Cushi the Kings servant and him to bring tidings he saw a great tumult but knew not what the matter was He knew undoubtedly of Absalom's death but through humane frailty fearing to displease the King he here miserably faulters Then came Cushi who cried out Good tidings my Lord the King for the Lord hath avenged thee this day of all those that rose up against thee Then said the King is the young man Absalom safe Cushi replied let the enemies of my Lord the King and all that rise up against him be as that young man is David was smitten with a wonderful consternation at this news and his grief and passion brake out so violently that it almost overwhelmed him he now retires into the Chamber over the Gate there in secret to pour out his sorrow and as he went up he cried out O my Son Absalom my Son Absalom would God I had died for thee my Son Absalom if my temporal death would have saved thee from eternal misery 2 Sam. Ch. 18. whole Chapter 15. The King taking on so immoderately for the death of Absalom his excessive grief came to be known in the Army and caused great trouble of spirit among them also so that the victory was turned into mourning neither came they up like a victorious army with joy and triumph to the City but dispersing themselves secretly stole into it not as if they had been Conquerours but rather as if they had been beaten and fled away from their enemies The King still took on excessively and covered his head in token of extream sorrow and cried out O my Son Absalom O Absalom my Son my Son Joab understanding this and seeing in what a discontent the Souldiers were hereupon and how their hearts began to be alienated from the King so that they were even ready to fall quite off from him he comes in a great rage to him and highly expostulates with him and tells him He had shamed the faces of all his faithful servants that day who had saved his life and the lives of his wives and children with the extreme hazard of their own and had frustrated them of their deserved praise and reward this strange carriage of thine saith he sheweth as if thou lovedst thy enemies in that thou mournest so excessively for this Traytor Absalom and hatedst thy friends seeing thou dost thus discountenance their faithful service Thou seemest not to regard thy faithful subjects let them be of what degree or quality they will I perceive that if that Arch-Rebel Absalom had lived thou hadst not much cared if all we had died I solemnly protest to thee if thou wilt not give over thy whining for that Rebel and go forth presently and speak comfortably to thy people and congratulate their victory and give them thanks for their venturing their lives for thee I believe they will all forsake thee as a person unfit to govern them who canst not govern thine own passions and possibly they will think of chusing another * Prospicient sibi de alio rege site aequum habere non possint and that will be worse to thee than all the afflictions thou hast hitherto met with in all thy life David being startled at this bold speech of Joab's which though harsh and tart yet was needful at this time he took his counsel and went and sat in the Gate and there shaking off sorrow manifested his kindness and grace to his Souldiers to win their hearts again to him As for those that had followed Absalom and escaped in the battel they were fled to their own houses 2 Sam. Ch. 19. from v. 1 to 9. 16. The people now through all the Ten Tribes of Israel began to blame one another for siding with Absalom against his Father and to call upon one another and upon their Elders and Officers to submit themselves unto David and to go and fetch him back again to the City of Jerusalem with honour they began to recount the great and manifold benefits they had enjoyed under his Government and how he had saved them out of the hands of their enemies especially the Philistines And they saw that God was against them in that attempt of making Absalom King and therefore there was great reason they should go and seek reconciliation with David whom they had so highly injured and offended This resolution of the Israelites to fetch their King home with honour coming to his ears and he perceiving that the men of Judah who had been first and chief in siding with Absalom and had delivered up to him the City of Jerusalem and the strong fort of Sion being conscious to themselves of their great ingratitude against him were now afraid to address themselves to him or to go to fetch him home therefore he sent to Zadock and Abiathar who had stayed all this while at Jerusalem that they should acquaint the Elders of Judah how ready he was to pardon them and to forget all that was past They were also to assure them of his singular affection to them they being his brethren and of the same Tribe therefore he would not have them to be the last in fetching home their King who ought to be the first He sends also unto Amasa whom Absalom had made General of his Army and who if he should despair of pardon might draw a great party of the Israelites after him to assure him that he was ready to receive him into his favour and to regard him as his nephew nay he intended to prefer him and to make him General of his Army as long as he lived in the place of Joab Indeed Joab had incurred his displeasure by killing Abner and several other unjustifiable acts yet he had also done him great services and had been always faithful to him whereas Amasa had been faithless and rebellious Besides the place of General belonged to Joab both by Davids promise and his own purchase he having hazarded his life in that dangerous service of assaulting and taking the strong fort of Sion However David being now offended with him for killing Absalom he resolv'd to prefer Amasa before him thinking by that policy to reduce all Absaloms party that stood out against him under his obedience By this kind message to the men of Judah and to Amasa David bowed the hearts of the men of Judah even as the heart of one man so that they sent this word unto the King Return thou and all thy servants we are most willing to receive thee and submit unto thee David considered that it might cost a great deal of blood to subdue them by force therefore he thought it best by these tenders of grace to bow their hearts to him and it happened according to his desire for the men of Judah now agreed to meet together at Gilgal and from thence they passed over the river Jordan to meet the King and to bring him
surprize me before I was aware so that I should not escape so Achitophel contrived but the Lord was my stay and upon him I did relye and trust The Lord also freed me from the great straits I was in and set me at liberty and that not for any merit in me but of his own free grace and mercy and that he might graciously reward me according to my innocency and integrity so that I may with great thankfulness say The Lord hath rewarded me according to my righteousness † He doth not here speak of his righteousness in reference to God for in this sense he prayeth Psal 143.2 Enter not into judgment with thy servant but of his righteousness as to his enemies though the obedience of Gods servants is a due debt which they owe to God and it is God that enables them to do what they do yet God of his free grace rewards them for their works when they are performed with sincerity though they be far short of what they should be the Lord rewards men according to their works that is acding to the nature and quality of their works though not for any merit in their works If their works be good they shall have a good reward if their works be evil their reward will be accordingly according to the cleanness of my hands hath he recompensed me that is according to the righteousness of my cause and the innocence of my intentions and actions as to my enemies I being clear of those faults and crimes they slanderously charged me with I have kept the ways of the Lord that is I have desired to walk in his precepts and the ways by him prescribed and though I have had many slips and failings yet I have not wickedly and presumptuously resolved to go on in them and so to make a desperate defection from God For all his judgments and statutes were before me that is I have set the whole Law of God before me as the rule of my life and actions and do endeavour to observe them one as well as another And though I have had many failings yet what I have done in Gods service hath not been in hypocrisie or dissimulation I was upright before him and kept my self from mine iniquity I restrained my self from that sin * Cavi ne scelus admitterem quod antea admississē unto which I was otherwise by nature prone to fall into Therefore the Lord hath recompensed me according to my righteousness according to my innocency which he saw in me He now by an elegant Apostrophe turns his speech to God extolling his goodness and mercy towards the godly and his equal and just dealing with the wicked With the merciful thou wilt shew thy self merciful with the upright thou wilt shew thy self to act uprightly with the pure thou wilt shew thy self to act purely and holily but with the froward and perverse thou wilt shew thy self wayward (†) V. 27. Perverse ages i. e. retribues illi secundum perversitatem ejus and unpleasing inflicting sharp judgments upon them As they walk contrary to thee so thou wilt walk contrary to them crossing them in all that they go about according to Levit. 26.27 28. The afflicted people thou wilt save and preserve but as for the haughty thy eyes are upon them to bring them down He now comes to shew how the Lord was his lamp that enlightened his darkness that is that shined upon him and comforted him in the darkness of his afflictions and directed him what course to take He declares also that it was the Lord that enabled him to run thorough the thickest troops of his enemies and by his assistance he had scal'd their walls and taken their Cities And from his own experience he infers that the Lord is perfect in all his ways not failing in any of his promises and that his word is tried and hath been prov'd to be true by unquestionable proof and experience That he is a buckler and shield to defend all that trust in him Then in a way of thankful admiration he crys out Who is a God save the Lord And who is a rock save our God As for me I do declare that I have had all my stre●gth and power from him He hath made my way perfect or plain removing impediments and prospering my attempts and undertakings so that I have not failed to perfect what I went about He makes my feet like hinds feet that is swift to escape danger and to stand safe upon my high places as hinds speedily run up to the top of inaccessible rocks and there are safe He teacheth my hands to war he hath given me skill in military affairs and to skill he hath given me strength of body fit for war so that I am able not only to draw a strong and stiff bow of steel but if I please I can break it in pieces Yet I ascribe nothing to my self for thou O Lord hast given me the shield of thy salvation that is thou hast been as a shield to me to defend me against mine enemies and thy gentleness (a) V. 36. Et ex exauditione tua magnum reddebas me Heb. per respondere tuum Pisc hath made me great that is by thy right hand thou hast upholden and strengthened me in the day of battel and by thy hearing of my prayers thou hast made me great and victorious Thou hast enlarged my steps under me or widened my passage given me room to walk steadily and safely in so that I was prosperous and successful in my marches so that I have pursued mine enemies and destroyed them and they are fallen under my feet Thou hast girded me with strength in battel those that rose up against me thou hast subdued under me Thou hast given me the necks of mine enemies and I have prevailed against them when they were in extremity they looked for help from man but there was none to save them and then they cried unto God but he did not answer them Thus being helpless I have beaten them to pieces as the small dust of the earth and stamped them as the mire of the streets and dispersed them as men spread dung on the ground By which Hyperbolical expressions he intimates that he had not only subdued his enemies but in a disgraceful manner trodden and trampled upon them Then he acknowledges how God had delivered him from the strivings of the people viz. in the insurrections of Absalom and Sheba and had brought many Nations of the Heathen to be in subjection to him and to acknowledg him for their Lord and head Strangers * This is true both of David and of Christ of whom David was a type viz. in respect of the conversion of the Gentiles who were aliens and strangers from the Common-wealth of Israel says he will now submit themselves unto me and neighbouring Nations will become Tributary to me as soon as they hear of my coming against them they will yield
the plea of an Elder Brother and has Abiathar and Joab on his side if he can strengthen himself by this marriage he will not then fear to shew himself and endeavour to get the Kingdom for himself and then Abiathar and Joab will King it under him Then falling into a passion he said God do so to me and more also and bring upon me greater misery than I dare now mention see Ruth 1.17 if I do not make it appear to all the world that Adonijah hath spoken this word against his own life For as the Lord liveth who hath set me on the Throne of my Father and made me a family and Court according to the dignity of a King as he promised 2 Sam. 7.12 13. Adonijah shall surely this day be put to death So he immediately gave order to Benaiah Captain of his Guard to fall upon him and kill him which accordingly he did * Thus what Nathan threatned against David 2 Sam. 12.10 viz. that the sword should not depart from his house was fully verified Then sending for Abiathar he told him He was worthy to be put to death also for thus joining with Adonijah in this conspiracy but says he I will not at this time put thee to death because thou didst bear the Ark of God before my Father David and hast been a great sharer with him in all his afflictions and sufferings therefore get thee to Anathoth a City in the Tribe of Benjamin which with the fields about it belongs to the Priests and there live a private life and meddle no more with the Priesthood or Civil affairs And thus Solomon by thrusting out Abiathar from his office and placing Zadok in his room fulfilled the word of the Lord which he spake concerning Eli 1 Sam. 2.31 when the Tabernacle was at Shiloh and concerning Phineas Numb 25.13 These things being thus transacted tidings came presently to Joab that Adonijah was slain and Abiathar confin'd to Anathoth whereupon being conscious of his own guilt in joining with Adonijah in his aspiring to the Crown though he would not join with Absalom in the like case he fled to the Tabernacle at Gibeon and there laid hold on the horns of the Altar thinking possibly by that means the rather to escape because Adonijah had there not long before found favour 1 King 1.52 Solomon hearing where he was presently sends Benaiah and commands him to kill him there Benaiah coming to the Tabernacle would have perswaded Joab to come forth thence but he utterly refused it saying if he must die he would die there which possibly he spake hoping that by hanging on the horns of the Altar he should save his life and not imagining that they would put him to death there And thus it seems he forgot what God himself had said Exod. 21.14 That he that hath slain a man wilfully shall be taken from the Altar Benaiah being loth of his own head to shed blood at the Altar went back to the King and told him what Joab said The King replied Do unto him as he hath said that is seeing he resolves to die there let him die there and there fall upon him and kill him and then bury him decently for the honour of his place and his former services and so thou wilt take away from me and my fathers house the guilt of that innocent blood which he so barbarously shed and so the Lord will return blood upon his head who fell upon two men more righteous and better than himself for in that cause for which he killed them they were innocent He slew Abner for fear lest David should prefer him above himself And he slew Amasa because my Father had preferred him to the place of General in his room So that they were both innocent and not worthy of death upon that account he shall die therefore that their innocent blood may return upon his head and that the blot and stain of it may remain upon his posterity and accordingly they shall feel the sad effects of it for many generations And I doubt not but that upon the house of David and upon his Throne and upon his family there will be peace and prosperity for a long time from the Lord. For by executing judgment on murderers guilt is taken away from the Magistrate and from the Land Numb 35.33 So Benaiah went up to the Altar at Gibeon and as 't is like dragging Joab from thence he slew him and buried him in his own house in the wilderness and the King made Benaiah General of the Army in his room Then the King called for Shimei and said to him Build thee an house in Jerusalem and dwell there and go not forth thence any whither for it shall be that the day thou goest out and passest over the Brook Kidron (a) Solomon would not permit him to go over Kidron which was the way to Bakurim his own city lest he should raise some sedition there where was his own inheritance 2 Sam. 16.5 Kidron was about a mile from Jerusalem so that Shimei had room enough thou shalt surely die and thy blood shall be upon thine own head thou thy self wilt be the only cause thereof Shimei said unto the King The saying is good thy command is just and equal As my Lord the King hath said so will I do and I do bind my self by a solemn Oath which I now make unto thee in the presence of the Lord That I will not go out of the limits thou hast set me v. 42. But how he performed his Oath and promise we shall see afterwards Sect. 221. 1 King Ch. 2. from v. 12 to 39. SECT CCXV HAdad the Edomite who in the days of David had fled into Egypt and had been there for a great while kindly entertained when he heard that both David and Joab were dead he returned into his own Country and proved afterwards a great enemy to Solomon as we shall see hereafter 1 King Ch. 11. v. 21 22. SECT CCXVI SOlomon now contracts affinity with Pharaoh King of Egypt by marrying his Daughter and he brought her into Sion into the Palace of David intending afterwards to build a stately house for her when he had finished the Temple the wall of Jerusalem and his own Palace And he preferred her before the rest of his wives they being of Nations that were his subjects but she the daughter of a potent King And by this match and affinity with such a great neighbour Prince he designed to secure himself the better against foreign enemies 'T is not said whether she had embraced the Religion of the Israelites when he took her to wife yet considering that he is no where blamed for this marriage 't is most like she forsook her Idolatry and that either before or after her marriage she became a Proselyte and worshipped the true God because Solomon in this marriage is made a type of Christ wooing the Gentiles to make them his Spouse and calling them
word and performed thy promise to thy servant David in raising me his Son up to build a Temple for thee perform also I pray thee unto my father what thou didst further promise him * 2 Sam. 7.13 to wit that there shall not fail a man lineally descended from him to sit upon the Throne of Israel and to reign in thy sight provided his children take heed to their way to walk before thee with that integrity that he did Now let thy word I pray thee be verified and fulfilled which thou spakest to my father concerning this matter But why do I speak of my building an house for thee Will God indeed dwell on earth Behold thou art an infinite and immense being Thou canst not be contained within any compass or space The Heaven and Heaven of Heavens cannot contain thee much less this house that I have builded But though thou canst not be contained within this house yet I pray thee have regard to the prayer and humble supplication of me thy poor servant which I make to thee in behalf of this house namely that the eyes of thy favour and providence may be open towards it day and night seeing thou hast said of it that thy name † Deut. 12.11 shall be there call'd upon and worshipped I humbly beseech thee therefore when ever either my self or any of thy people shall pray unto thee in this place or towards it (a) V. 30. Versus hunc locum quasi respiciens ad promissionem praesentiae tuae in hoc loco exemplum in Daniele cap. 6. v. 10. that then thou wouldst please to hear in Heaven thy dwelling place where thy glory is most eminently manifested and when thou hearest be pleased to forgive and pardon our transgressions against thee For there is no comfort in obtaining any other mercy if our sins be not forgiven Particularly I humbly request of thee that if any man be charged that he hath trespassed against his neighbour and he be brought before thine Altar (b) Tacto Altare jurare mos omnium prope Gentium Intrepidi quicunque altaria tangunt Juv. in the Court of this house to clear himself by Oath sufficient proof by witnesses being wanting that thou wouldst please to deal with him according to innocence or guiltiness punishing him if he be faulty and bringing his wicked way upon his own head but justifying and acquitting him if he be innocent Or if thy people be smitten before their enemies in the field because they have sinned against thee and shall turn again to thee and confess thy name to wit thy justice in suffering their enemies to prevail against them and shall acknowledg thy mercy and power and so seek to thee for pardon and help and shall make supplication to thee turning their faces towards this house then hear thou in heaven and forgive their sin and bring them again into the land which thou gavest to their fathers Or when the heaven is shut up and there is no rain because thy people have sinned against thee if they shall pray towards this place and confess thy justice in punishing of them and turn from their sin then hear thou in heaven and forgive their sin and teach them the good way (c) V. 36. Et ostende eis viam bonam wherein they should walk and then give rain upon the land which thou hast given thy people for an inheritance Or if any of these great judgments fall upon the land to wit famine pestilence and blasting or if there be any plague or sickness upon thy people what prayer and supplication shall be made by any man singly or by all thy people jointly who shall know every man the plague (d) 2 Chron. 6.29 When every one shall know his own sore and his own grief Grief is put for that which should cause grief viz. Sin of his own heart to wit the sins for which he is punished and shall spread forth his hands towards this house then hear thou in heaven and forgive and do what in thy infinite wisdom seemeth good and give to every man according to his ways not his former sins but his present repentance whose heart thou seest to be sincere and upright For thou and thou only O Lord knowest the hearts of all the children of men And I humbly beseech thee to deal thus mercifully with thy people that they may fear thee and walk in thy ways all the days of their lives Moreover if a stranger that is not of thy people Israel who hears of thy wondrous works and righteous Laws and this holy house shall come from his own Countrey to testifie his high esteem of thy great name and to worship and praise thee and shall pray towards this house (a) Or in this house viz. in the Court of the Gentiles then hear thou in heaven and grant all that he shall pray unto thee for which is agreeable to thy holy will that all the people of the earth may know thy name and learn to fear thee as do thy people Israel and that they may know that thy name is called upon in this house that I have built to wit that it is call'd the Temple of the Lord and the house of God and is so in reality by thy hearing the prayers that are here made unto thee Furthermore if thy people shall go out to battel against their enemies and shall pray unto thee and seek thy favour and help in that enterprize looking towards this City and this house which I have built for thy great name then hear thou in heaven their prayer and supplication and maintain their just and righteous cause by giving them good success But if they by their sins provoke thee for there is no man that sinneth not so that thou givest them up into the hands of their enemies and they carry them away captive either further off or nearer hand however if they shall bethink themselves in the land whither they are carried captive and shall repent and make supplication to thee saying we have sinned and done perversly we have committed wickedness and so shall return unto thee with all their heart and all their soul and shall pray unto thee looking towards this land this City and this house then hear thou in heaven their prayer and supplication and maintain their cause taking part with thy people that repent and pray unto thee against the unjust oppression of their enemies and then turn thou O Lord the hearts of their enemies towards them that they may have pity and compassion on them For remember O Lord they are thy people and thine inheritance (b) This people were to God as a mans inheritance is to him which he hath bought and made his own for ever See D●ut 32.9 which thou broughtest forth out of Egypt even out of an iron furnace (c) Deut. 4.20 And furthermore let the eyes (d) 2 Chron. 6.40 of thy favour be upon me thy poor servant
and upon this thy people and let thine ears be attentive unto the supplications we shall make unto thee and hearken to us in all that we shall pray unto thee for according to thy will For thou didst separate us unto thy self from among all the Nations of the earth to be thy peculiar people and inheritance as thou spakest by thy servant Moses Solomon having ended this his devout prayer rose up from his knees and standing with his face toward the Temple he repeated part of the 132 Psalm saying Arise O Lord and take possession of this house which I have built for thee as a resting place and fixt habitation and not an ambulatory and moving one as the Tabernacle was And let thy Ark whereon thou dost manifest thy glory (e) Psal 78.61 He delivereth his strength into captivity and his glory into the enemies hands strength and power for the good of thy people be here setled and constantly abide Let thy Priests O Lord God be clothed and adorned with such graces as may bring salvation to themselves (f) Psal 132.9 This clause is thus expressed Let thy Priests be clothed with righteousness and may enable them to be instrumental in the saving of others and let thy Saints rejoice in thy goodness and favour manifested unto them O Lord God hear me I pray thee and turn not away the face of thine anointed with shame and confusion by denying me my request but remember the promises thy mercy moved thee to make to David my Father and to his posterity Solomon having ended his prayers the Sacrifices were brought in and laid upon the Altar and immediately fire came down from Heaven and consumed them and the glory of the Lord probably covered with a cloud filled the house and such an orient splendour shone through it that the Priests could by no means enter into the Temple The people seeing the fire came down from Heaven and the glory of the Lord upon the house they bowed themselves with their faces to the ground and worshipped and praised God and sang as 't is probable the 136 Psalm as the Singers had done before the burthen or foot whereof was For he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Then Solomon turned his face and blessed all the Congregation of Israel again as he had done at the beginning and said Blessed be the Lord God who hath given rest to his people Israel as he promised of old And indeed he hath not failed of performing any of his gracious promises which he made to his people by the ministry of his servant Moses Now therefore the Lord our God be with us as he was with our Fathers and let him not leave us nor forsake us but let him incline our hearts to walk in his ways and to keep his commandments * Viz. The Moral Ceremonial and Judicial Laws statutes and judgments which he commanded our Fathers And let my words wherewith I have made supplication to the Lord this day be in his mind and memory continually that he may maintain the cause of me his servant and the cause of his people Israel at all times as the matter shall require and as it shall appear just and equal to him that all the people of the earth may know that the Lord he is the only true God from whom all blessings come and that there is no other God besides him Let your heart therefore be upright and sincere before the Lord and walk in his statutes and keep his commandments as now you do Then the King the Princes and people offered abundance of Peace-offerings (a) They were call'd Peace-offerings because God having bestowed some benefit upon them seemed to be appeased towards them and they were offered as a kind of retribution and to return thanks to God for it And in offering the same they also testified their hope that God was reconciled towards them to the Lord and kept this feast of Dedication seven days During which time they offered unto the Lord two and twenty thousand oxen and an hundred and twenty thousand sheep By a multitude of Sacrifices the pious Jews were wont to testifie their zealous and grateful affection towards God and we never read of any Sacrifice like this And thus Solomon the Princes and people by their joint prayers praises and sacrifices dedicated the house of God and set it apart for his worship and service And they rejoiced before the Lord seven days and seven that is they kept the first seven days as the Feast of Dedication and the next seven as the Feast of Tabernacles And the day after Solomon dismissed the people to their own homes and they blessed the King and prayed unto the Lord for him and went home with joyful and glad hearts rejoicing in the goodness which the Lord had manifested to the house of David and to Solomon and to all the people of Israel 1 King Ch. 8. whole Chapter 1 Chron. Ch. 5. whole Chapter 1 Chron. Ch. 6. whole Chapter 2 Chron. Ch. 7. from v. 1 to 11. SECT III. SHortly after * Some read 1 King 9.1 And it came to pass when Solomon had finished the building of the house of the Lord and afterwards finished the Kings house and all his desire which he was pleased to do that the Lord appeared to him the second time c. Solomon had made that devout prayer before mentioned the Lord as it seems appeared to him in a dream (b) Ch. 6.11 We read that the word of the Lord came to Solomon but that was by some messenger or Prophet sent unto him but this was the second time that the Lord appeared to him in a Vision as he had done before at Gibeon 1 King 3.4 5. and the Lord said I have heard thy prayer and thy supplication which thou hast made before me and I have hallowed this house and set it apart to those holy uses which thou didst intend it for and it shall be called by my name as long as it shall last and mine eyes and mine heart shall be there perpetually I will always be ready to take notice of the prayers there made and the services there performed and will graciously accept them And if I shall shut up heaven at any time so that there be no rain or send the locusts or pestilence among my people that are called by my name if they shall humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways then will I hear in heaven and forgive their sin and heal their land And if thou wilt walk before me in integrity and uprightness as thy Father David did and keep my statutes and judgments then I will establish the Throne of thy Kingdom for ever that is thou and thy posterity shall continue time after time to be Kings over Israel so as no other stock but thine shall sit on that Throne so long as the Kingdom of Judah shall remain as I
much of the Book of Ecclesiastes SECT XVII GOD threatned Solomon 2 Sam. 7.13 14 15. That if he committed iniquity he would chasten him with the rod of men and with the stripes of the children of men but his mercy should not depart from him And accordingly he now stirred up three Adversaries (a) Though Solomon's enemies had herein their own ends yet the Lord us'd them as instruments of his Justice to punish his revolt against him 1. Hadad the Edomite When David subdued the Edomites 't is said 2 Sam. 8.14 He put Garrisons through all Edom and they became his servants And at this time as it seems whilst Joab pursued his victory slaying all the males where he came Hadad then being very young was hid and afterwards secretly carried away by some of his Fathers servants who also took some out of Paran that lay in the way to attend him into Egypt where he was kindly entertained by Pharaoh who gave him an house and lands and appointed him victuals and a constant Table and in time he came to be in so great favour with him that he gave him to wife his own Queens sister who bare him a Son that was educated in Pharaoh's house When this Hadad heard in Egypt that David and Joab were dead he desired leave of Pharaoh to return into his own Country Pharaoh askt him what he lacked there He said nothing However I desire to return to my own Country that I may recover my Kingdom again Pharaoh hearing this kindly dismissed him and he came to his own Country where he was received for their King Yet 't is manifest he attempted nothing against Solomon for a long time after this For till Solomon's fall in his old age his enemies stirred not see 1 King 5.4 so that 't is like Hadad at first made some Covenant with Solomon and was his Tributary for his Kingdom but at last he stirred against him and created him much trouble yet he was not able quite to shake off his yoke for the Edomites continued Tributaries to the Kings of Judah till Jehoram's reign 2 Chron. 21.10 2ly God stirred up another enemy against Solomon viz. Rezon who when David had gotten the better of his Master in battel and had vanquished the Syrians see 2 Sam. 10.18 he gathered together such of them as were put to flight ande made himself Captain over them and for some time t is like lived by robbing and pillaging till Solomon's declining days And though 't is not like that Solomon lost any thing of that which his Father had gotten till himself fell from God yet then it seems Rezon took courage to set upon Damascus into which David had put a Garrison 2 Sam. 8.6 and took it from Solomon and there reigned as King So that Solomon had now one enemy in the North and another in the South 3ly A third enemy whom God stirred up against him was Jeroboam his own servant of the Tribe of Ephraim who had been raised and preferred by him And the occasion of his rise was this Solomon when he built Millo of which see Ch. 9.15 and repaired the breaches in Zion the City of David going out often to see * The Masters eye they say makes the horse fat and the servant to sweat his workmen and to encourage them to diligence he observed Jeroboam who was then but a young man to be very active and industrious in those labours and services he was set about whereupon Solomon taking a liking to him preferred him and in time made him Receiver or Treasurer for all the Kings revenue in the two Tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh Upon a time when he went out of Jerusalem to execute his Office it happened that the Prophet Ahijah † He who with some others penned the Acts of Solomon 2 Chron. 9.29 the Shilonite who had clad himself with a new garment met him and desired some private conference with him and when they were alone he took off his new garment and rent it into twelve pieces according to the number of the Tribes of Israel and gave ten of them to Jeroboam saying Thus saith the Lord I will rend the Kingdom out of the hand of Solomon and will give ten Tribes to thee because they (b) Solomon giving way to his wives Idolatry proved a snare to the people and occasioned their revolt from God and in this rent the people suffered as well as Rehoboam the rent in the Kingdom proving an occasion of continual Wars between Judah and Israel which brought in many miseries from foreign Nations upon both Kingdoms have forsaken me and worshipped Ashtaroth and Chemosh and Moloch and have not walked in my ways to do that which was right in mine eyes and to keep my statutes and judgments as did David my servant Howbeit I will not take the Kingdom from Solomon while he lives but he shall be King thereof all his days for David my servants sake whom I chose because he kept my commandments and my statutes But I will take the Kingdom out of his Sons hands viz. ten Tribes of it and will give them unto thee And unto his Son will I give one intire Tribe viz. Judah with Simeon (a) Ac proinde Synecdochice includitur Nam e Benjamine tantum pars penes eum fuit Jeroboamo cesserunt Bethel Ephraim quae erant oppida Benjaminis that is mixt with it together with the greatest part of the Tribe of Benjamin that David my servant may have a light always before me in Jerusalem that is a Royal glory shining in one of his posterity who as a light may shine before the people and direct them as long as that Kingdom shall last See 2 Sam. 21.17 1 King 15.4 and that in Jerusalem where my Temple is built and where my name is solemnly call'd upon and which is called after my name the City of God And I will take thee and make thee King over the Ten Tribes and thou shalt be a Soveraign King and not under any Superiour on earth so that thou maist reign according as thy soul desireth And if thou wilt hearken unto all that I command thee and wilt walk in my ways and do that which is right in my sight to keep my statutes and commandments as David my servant did I will be with thee and build thee a sure house that is so establish thy Kingdom that it shall continue in thy posterity as I promised to David And though I will by this division of the Kingdom sorely afflict the house of David yet I will not do it for ever For though they shall be carried into captivity yet they shall be brought back again and the Messiah shall at last be born of the seed of David who shall continue to reign most gloriously for ever Ahijah having delivered what God commanded him to Jeroboam took his leave of him How Jeroboam was affected with this surprizing message we may easily imagine It seems he
of his reign and destroyed all the house of Jeroboam Ch. 15.27 over Israel that shall cut off the house of Jeroboam If thou askest when or at what time this shall come to pass I answer very quickly and sooner than you do expect And the Lord will smite Israel as a reed is shaken in the water He will afflict both Prince and people with uncessant wars and troubles both intestine and forreign so that they shall never abide long in any setled condition but as reeds that grow in the water are continually shaken so shall it be with this Kingdom partly by the frequent transferring the Crown from one family to another and partly by the frequent invasions of the men of Judah or some other neighbouring Nation And the Lord will root up (b) First by Tiglath-pilesar in the days of Pekak King of Israel 2 King 15.29 the greatest part after by Salmanassar in the days of Hoshea 2 K. 17.6 Israel out of this good land which he gave to their Fathers and will scatter them beyond the river to wit Euphrates into the land of Assyria Mesopotamia and Media whither they shall be carried captive because they have made Groves for Idols thereby provoking him to anger And he will give up Israel into the hands of their enemies because they consented to the Idolatry of Jeroboam who did sin highly against God and made Israel to sin by causing them to leave the Temple of the Lord and to worship the calves he hath set up Ahijah having thus spoken Jeroboam's wife departed and as she came to the door of her house her Son died And they buried him and all Israel lamented for him as God had foretold by the ministry of his Prophet There were many bickerings and continual hostility between Jeroboam and Rehoboam all their days and the borderers on both sides did continually invade one another but after Rehoboam's death Jeroboam in the eighteenth year of his reign gathered together a vast army of eight hundred thousand men to set upon Abijah Rehoboam's Son newly come to the Crown and Abijah met him with four hundred thousand and with them discomfited his mighty Army and slew five hundred thousand of them and pursuing his victory took from him Bethel and two other Cities as may be more fully seen in the life of Abijah Neither did Jeroboam recover strength again during Abijah's reign Jeroboam at last was stricken with some extraordinary sickness or disease from the Lord in the days of Abijah but he died not till the second year of Asa Son of Abijah and it seems he died not an ordinary death He reigned 22 years and Nadab his Son succeeded him 1 King 12. from 12 to the end 1 King 13. wh Ch. 1 King 14. from 1 to 21. 2 Chron. 13. wh Ch. NAdab began his reign in the second year of Asa Second King of Israel Nadab and reigned only two years namely in part of the second and third year of Asa He did evil in the sight of the Lord and walked in the way of his Father Gibbethon a City belonging to the Tribe of Dan Josh 19.44 was in the days of David and Solomon in the Israelites possession but now it seems the Philistines had gotten it Nadab therefore and all Israel with him went and laid siege to it to recover it and here during the Siege he was treacherously slain by Baasha of the Tribe of Issachar and so the siege as it seems was raised for twenty six years after or thereabouts the Son of Baasha did again lay siege to this City as we may see Chap. 16.15 Baasha now setting up himself in the Throne he smote all the house of Jeroboam according to the Prophesie of Ahijah 1 King 14.10 Behold I will bring evil upon the house of Jeroboam and will cut off from Jeroboam him that pisseth against the wall and him that is shut up and left in Israel and will take away the remnant of the house of Jeroboam as a man taketh away dung till it be all gone So with Nadab the Regal power in Jeroboam's house ended And thus the Idolatry wherewith Jeroboam thought to have established the Kingdom to himself and his posterity was the very cause of the ruin of his family and the transferring the Kingdom to another 1 King 15. from 25 to 32. BAasha the Son of Ahijah of the Tribe of Issachar began his reign in the third year of Asa Third King of Israel Baasha and reigned twenty and four years He did evil in the sight of the Lord and walked in the way of Jeroboam In the thirty sixth year of Asa's Kingdom as it stood divided from the Kingdom of Israel but in the sixteenth year of Asa's own reign and about the fourteenth of Baasha's he perceiving Asa to grow potent and that many of his subjects fell off to him he began to arm against him and never ceased from henceforward to make war upon him all his days and he went up to build Ramah which lay between Samaria and Jerusalem that he might suffer no man to come out from or go unto Asa King of Judah but he was fain to give it over being recalled by an invasion made into his Country by Benhadad King of Syria hired thereunto by Asa 2 Chron. 16. from 1 to 7. and 1 King 15.32 Jehu the Son of Hanani the Prophet delivers him a sad message from the Lord concerning the destruction of his house for his Idolatry and killing of Nadab (a) For though Baasha did herein what God had decreed yet he had no command from God to do it but did it only to serve his own ends and to get the Kingdom Saepe Deus decreta sua exequitur per malos homines qui longe aliud agentes sua quaerunt ideoque poena digni sunt Impii saepe imprudentes serviunt voluntati Dei quam in lege patefactam scientes oppugnant This Jehu was that Prophet that was sent afterwards to Jehoshaphat to reprove him for his league with Ahab 2 Chr. 19.2 and he that wrote the Chronicles of those times 2 Chron. 20.34 And his father Hanani was the Prophet that reproved Asa for seeking to Benhadad for aid against Baasha so that both Father and Son were eminent Prophets of the Lord at the same time and both sent to the Kings of Israel to whom the Lord was pleased to send many Prophets to reclaim them Jehu coming to Baasha tells him Thus saith the Lord forasmuch as I exalted thee out of the dust and from a mean condition made thee Prince (b) For it was the Providence of God that made Baasha's attempt against Nadab so successful Collatio regni Deo doll vero parricidium Baasae attribuuntur over my (c) They were Gods people by Covenant and outward profession and they retained still Circumcision and the Laws of Moses and there were many pious Prophets and some good people among them people Israel and thou hast walked in
the ways of Jeroboam and hast made my people to sin by thy example and hast provoked me to anger behold I will cut off thy posterity and will make thy house as the house of Jeroboam And as this judgment was pronounced against Jeroboam 1 King 14.11 viz. that such of his house as died in the City the dogs should eat and such as died in the fields the fowls of the air should eat that is they should die unhappy deaths and not come to an honourable burial the very same judgment must I pronounce against thee and in the same words see v. 4. because thou persistest in the same sins Baasha died in the twenty fourth year of his reign and was buried in Tirzah and his Son Elah reigned in his stead 1 King 15.33 34. 1 King 16. from 1 to 8. ELAH began to reign in the 26th year of Asa Fourth King of Israel Elah and reigned two years though not compleat Being upon the Throne his servant Zimri Captain of half his Chariots conspired against him and as he was drinking himself drunk in the house of Arza his Steward he slew him in the second year of his reign his forces lying then encamped against Gibbethon and then Zimri immediately by the assistance of the Souldiers that were under his command slew all his kindred and near relations and so destroyed all the house of Baasha he left him not one that pisseth against a wall by which Proverbial speech an utter destruction of all that belonged to him is to be understood Thus the Lord dealt with the house of Baasha For as Baasha slew Nadab when he had reigned two years and that whilst he was laying siege to Gibbethon and then immediately destroyed all the rest of his family so Zimri slew Elah the Son of Baasha in the second year of his reign and then immediately cut off the rest of his family and friends and that whilst his army lay encamped against Gibbethon And thus God destroyed both the house of Baasha and Elah for their great sins and transgressions whereby they had provoked him and particularly by their vanities that is Image-gods and Idols 1 King 16. from 8 to 15. ZIMRI having thus wickedly made himself King Fifth King of Israel Zimri his reign continued but a week for notice that the King was slain coming to the Camp at Gibbethon all the host of Israel that were there encamped presently made Omri their General King over Israel Omri hastens with his Army to Tirzah to besiege Zimri and so the siege of Gibbethon was a second time raised Zimri when he saw the City was taken by storm betook himself to the Kings Palace and burnt himself with it that he might not fall into the hands of his enemies Thus those that are cruel to others are oftentimes given over to be cruel at last to themselves But though Zimri reigned but seven days before Omri was proclaimed King by the Soldiers yet perhaps it was longer e're he was forced to burn himself And besides within the space of those seven days he might by his Edicts make known to the people his resolution to continue the worship of Jeroboam's Calves and might destroy the family of Baasha 1 King 16 v. 17 18 19 20. Things being now at this pass the people of Israel were much divided some of them misliked that the Souldiers should choose a King for them and they chose Tibni for their King Between Tibni and Omri there were continual wars for about four years till at last Omri prevailed and Tibni dying Omri reigned alone 1 King 16. from 15 to 23. OMRI reigned twelve years Sixth King of Israel Omri reckoning from his first election whereof six years in Tirzah Zimri having burnt the Royal Palace in that City he removed the Seat of his Kingdom from thence to Samaria which he built in the hill which he bought of Shemer for two Talents of Silver * A Talent of Silver was reckoned at 375 l. sterling but a Talent of Gold at 3750 l. so he paid 750 l. sterl for the Hill and so made that his Royal City and the Metropolis of his Kingdom He did evil in the sight of the Lord and worse than all that went before him For it seems he did not only obstinately continue in the Idolatry of Jeroboam himself but with violence forced and pressed the people thereunto notwithanding all the judgments he had seen on all the former Kings of Israel for that sin In Micah 6.16 we read of the Statutes of Omri to wit concerning their Idolatrous worshipping of the Golden Calves He was buried in Samaria and Ahab his Son succeeded him 1 King 16. from 23 to 29. AHAB in the thirty eight year of Asa began to reign Seventh King of Israel Ahab and reigned two and twenty years over Israel He did evil in the sight of the Lord above all that went before him and as if it had been a small thing for him to walk in the sins of Jeroboam he took to wife Jezebel * Who was a most wicked woman Jehu complain'd of her Witchcrafts and Whoredoms 2 King 9.22 and she is often mentioned as a great persecutor of Gods Prophets and a great promoter of the Idolatry of Baal and therefore St. John calls that false Prophetess who in his time had seduced many to Uncleanness and Idolatry in the Church of Thyatira Jezabel Rev. 2.20 the daughter of the King of the Sidonians and served Baal the Idol-god of that people and built an house and an Altar for him in Samaria Now this Idolatry was far worse than that of Jeroboam's for in that though they had Idols to wit the Golden Calves yet they pretended still to worship the true God but in this they worshipped Baal as their God In his days did Hiel the Bethelite which shews the horrible prophaneness and contempt of God at this time adventure to rebuild Jericho which though belonging to the Tribe of Benjamin yet it seems was at this time under the power of the King of the Ten Tribes notwithstanding Joshuah's curse pronounced against any that should attempt it and therefore it had continued a heap of rubbish from that time till this but now that bold wretch Hiel that dwelt at Bethel undertook the work and paid dear for it as Joshua had threatned for it cost him the loss of all his sons of the first-born when he began it and of some more of them as he went forward with the work and of the youngest when he finished it and hung up the Gates of it Josh 6.26 And Joshua adjured them at that time saying Cursed be the man before the Lord that riseth up and buildeth this City Jericho he shall lay the foundation thereof in his first-born and in his youngest Son shall be set up the gates of it Though the Israelites were at this present fallen to the horrid Idolatry of worshipping Baal † 〈◊〉 was the God of the Sidonians Ahab
captives that were almost naked and clothed them out of the spoils that were taken and gave apparel and shoes to them that wanted and gave them to eat and drink and refreshed them and anointed * Or possibly anointed some of the better sort of them to revive and refresh them according to the custom of those Eastern Countries such of them as were wounded and then setting all the feeble of them upon asses carried them back to Jericho and there delivered them to their Brethren in Judea Thus the Lord inclin'd the hearts hearts of the Israelites to deal mercifully with the men of Judah Shortly after as it seems the Edomites invaded Judah and carried from thence many captives The Philistines also whom Vzziah whilst he trusted in God had subdued 2 Chron. 26.6 now brake in upon the Cities of Judah in the low Countries and the South parts thereof and took six of them and dwelt therein Thus God gave the people of Judah over to the spoil and brought them low because of the sins of Ahaz their King who made them naked that is depriv'd them of the help and protection of God by his great transgressions in practising Idolatry himself and drawing his people also into it Ahaz being thus forsaken of God and sore distressed on every side he takes the gold and silver that was in the Lords house and in the Treasures of his own house and sends it for a present to Tiglath-pilesar King of Assyria saying to him I am thy servant and thy son that is I am willing to be Tributary to thee and to serve thee and will be obedient to thee as a Son to his Father if thou wilt come and deliver me out of the hands of the King of Syria and the King of Israel The King of Assyria being an ambitious Prince and affecting rule and domination over all Nations about him readily embrac'd this occasion of invading Syria and coming with a great Army to Damascus he took it and carried away the inhabitants thereof to Kir a City of Media and put to death Rezin King of Syria fulfilling therein the forementioned Prophecy of Isaiah Ch. 7.16 Before the Child shall have knowledg to refuse evil and choose good the lands which thou abhorrest shall be forsaken of both their Kings * Of Pekah's death see 2 King 15.30 Hoshea conspir'd against him and slew him about the fourth year of Ahaz See more in the life of Pekah And Chap. 8. Before the child shall have knowledg to cry My Father and my Mother the riches of Damascus and the spoil of Samaria shall be taken away before the King of Assyria that is it shall be plundred and wasted in his sight and by his command And Ch. 9.11 Therefore the Lord shall set up the adversaries of Rezin against him and join his enemies together Amos also prohesied of these things Ch. 1.3 4 5. Thus saith the Lord for three transgressions of Damascus and for four I will not turn away the punishment thereof but I will break the bar of Damascus and cut off the inhabitant from the plain or Aven and him that holdeth the scepter from the house of Eden and the people of Syria shall go into captivity unto Kir saith the Lord. Thus the Kingdom of Damascus and with it that of Hamath of which as being then in a flourishing condition mention is made Isa 37.13 and Jer. 49.23 which was begun in Rezon 1 King 11.23 24. now ended in this Rezin after it had continued about ten Generations Ahaz now goes to Damascus to Tiglath-Pilesar to congratulate him for his late victory obtained over the Syrians he seeth there an Idolatrous Altar the fashion and pattern of which with all the workmanship thereof he took and sent to Vrijah the Priest at Jerusalem with command that he should make the like there which he accordingly did against his return And Ahaz took a resolution as it seems to sacrifice to the gods of Damascus which he vainly thought had smitten him and helped the Syrians against him whereas he saw they could not defend their own worshippers from the power of Tiglath-Pilesar However he said because the gods of the Syrians help them I will sacrifice unto them that they may also help me But this Idolatry proved fatal to him and to all that joined with him therein for thereby they provoked God to give them over into the hands of their enemies Ahaz being now return'd to Jerusalem and this new Idolatrous Altar provided for him he commanded Vrijah to remove the Brazen Altar which Solomon had made from the forepart of the Priests-Court where it stood and to set it on the North-side as it were in a corner out of the way and to place this new Altar in the place of it telling him that Solomon's Altar should be for him to inquire of the Lord by when he thought fit Then on this new great Altar he offered a burnt-offering and a meat-offering and poured out a drink-offering to dedicate it He commanded also Vrijah to offer the morning and evening-sacrifice on this Altar and all other sacrifices that either King or people should offer * R●cte Tertullianus oportet nos in omni obsequio esse subditos Principibus Magistratibus potestatibus sed intra limites disciplinae Peccavit Uriah malens placere Regi qu●m Deo Secus fecit Ambros Epist 5.32 Vrijah like a wicked false hearted wretch and a fellow that would do any thing even forsake God and his Religon to please his Prince readily did what Ahaz commanded him Ahaz then proceeded further and defaced and cut in sunder many of the Sacred vessels and utensils of the house of the Lord that they might never be used again in his service He cut off the borders of the bases and removed the lavers from them and took down the Molten Sea from off the stately Brazen oxen on which it stood and set it aside And the Covert of the Sabbath viz. the retiring place for the guard and watchmen that on the Sabbath-day and whole week were to keep the watch of the Temple which they had built in the house he removed and put by or stopt up the Entry and stately Gallery whereby the Kings us'd to pass from their Palace to the house of the Lord. And he shut up the doors of the covered Temple that the Priests might not enter into it to perform the services there requir'd and it seems it was not opened again till his sons days See 2 Chron. 29.3 Further he made him Altars in every corner of Jerusalem and in several Cities of Judah he set up high places to burn incense to other gods and so provoked the Lord exceedingly against him And all this it seems he did to ingratiate himself with the King of Assyria and that he might shew that he had forsaken the Religion of his Fathers and had embrac'd Heathenism And because he did all this when he had been lately so heavily afflicted of
Nations that God had cast out before the children of Israel And moreover Manasseh shed much innocent blood viz. of the Prophets that condemned his wicked courses and of others that opposed his evil ways insomuch that he filled Jerusalem with such kind of slaughters And among others whom he put to death he caused the Prophet Isaiah to be sawn asunder with a wooden saw as the Babylonish Talmud Justin Martyr Jerome and others report who suppose so much may be gathered from Heb. 11.37 They were stoned they were sawn asunder were tempted were slain with the sword Manasseh being guilty of such high and great abominations God sent his Prophets * Thus merciful was God to send his Prophets both to Judah and Israel even in the worst of times to draw them from their impieties to him to declare that because he had done these abominable things which the Lord abhorred and had exceeded the very Amorites and worst of the heathens in their impieties whom God cast out of the land of Canaan for their sins and had made Judah to sin with his Idols therefore he would bring such evil upon Judah and Jerusalem that whosoever heard of it both his ears should tingle with the affrighting news thereof He would stretch over Jerusalem the line † That is the line of confusion as 't is Isa 34.11 whereby he would meet out what was to be pulled down And the plummet of the house of Ahab that is a line with a plummet at the end of it The Prophets in their similitudes have more respect to the things signified by their similitudes than to the things from which they take them and so it is here of Samaria and the plummet of the house of Ahab that is would deal with Jerusalem as he dealt with Samaria and with the house of Manasseh as he had dealt with the house of Ahab And he would wipe Jerusalem as a man wipeth a dish wiping it and turning it upside down that is would utterly overthrow the state of Jerusalem turning it upside down and would clear that City of all her wealth and of all her inhabitants and would forsake the remnant of his inheritance that is the two Tribes of Judah and Benjamin which only remained of the children of Israel in whom he did formerly delight as a man doth in his inheritance and would deliver them into the hands of their enemies and they should become a prey and spoil to them and all this because they had done that which was evil in his sight and had one generation after another provoked him to anger even ever since he first brought them out of Egypt 2 King 21. from 1 to 17. 2 Chron. 33. from 1 to 11. 2 King 24.3 4. The King of Assyria now sending fresh Colonies into the land of Israel and with them possibly some forces to settle them there it seems some of his chief Commanders with a party of Souldiers made a sudden inrode into the land of Judea with an intent to surprize Manasseh and they came so suddenly upon him that he was forced to fly and hide himself in some wood or thicket to save himself but thither they pursued him and took him and bound him with fetters and carried him prisoner to Babylon (a) So that it seems the King of Babylon was now King of Assyria When he was in this affliction he besought the Lord his God and humbled himself greatly (b) What the word of the Prophets could not do the rod of God did before him and prayed (c) There is a prayer of his set down in the Apocrypha but 't is doubtful whither it be his or no. earnestly unto him and the Lord was intreated of him and heard his supplication and brought him again to Jerusalem into his Kingdom whereby he was convinced that the Lord was the only true God For the Lord by his all-powerful providence so moved the heart of the King of Babylon that he was content to set him free upon condition that he would oppose the King of Egypt which may be the reason why Josiah some years after would needs fight against Pharoah Necho 2 Chron. 35.20 'T is probable that Manasseh's captivity lasted not long because 't is said 2 King 21.1 That he reigned fifty five years in Jerusalem and there is no mention there made of this his captivity After his return he took away the strange gods and the Idol out of the house of the Lord which himself had before set up and all the altars he had built in mount Moriah and in Jerusalem and cast them out of the City This is a good evidence of the truth of any mans repentance when he puts away those evils that formerly he had done with detestation Furthermore Manasseh repaired the Altar of the Lord and sacrificed thereon peace-offerings and thank-offerings and commanded Judah to serve the Lord. As by his example and command he had before caused them to sin so now by both he labours to reform them Yet the people did still sacrifice in the high places but to the Lord only They were brought to embrace the true Religion though they had still a mixture of will-worship with it Manasseh also fortified Jerusalem and other places and put Captains of war into all the fenced Cities of Judah So that he who was before a monster for all manner of evil and wickedness proved now a very commendable Prince so great and happy a change does true conversion make in men 2 Chron. 33. from 11 to 20. The Prophet Habakkuk The Prophesie of HABAKKUK seems about this time to have Prophesied for he speaks of the coming of the Chaldeans against Judah yet not so plainly of the captivity of the Jews in Babylon as Jeremy did Therefore 't is supposed he might be somewhat before him His Prophesie is called the burden * There are four Prophesies in the Volume of the lesser Prophets whose Prophesies are in whole or part called burdens viz. Nahum Habakkuk Malachi and Zachary which Habakkuk the Prophet did see that is his Prophesie was a burdensome Prophesie first to the Jews and then to the Chaldeans His Prophesie is set forth Dialogue-wise between the Prophet and God himself wherein the Prophet first as jealous of Gods honour complains of the extream wickedness of the Jews Ch. 1. from 1 to 5. 2ly We have Gods answer to this complaint wherein he declares that he will punish them by the Chaldeans whom he describes by their bitterness hastiness tyrannicalness and power to bear down all before them as the East-wind and by their pride and haughtiness upon their success robbing God of the glory due to him and ascribing it to their Idols from v. 5 to 12. 3ly We have the Prophets replication to Gods answer wherein he expresses his hope that the Jews should not perish by those threatned calamities grounding his hope on Gods Covenant power and providence and he hoped the Lord ordained the Chaldeans
purple and the inhabitants of Shushan not only Jews but many others also greatly rejoyced at this change of affairs The Jews had now light and gladness joy and honour most men having them in high esteem and account And in all the Provinces and Cities where this new decree came they greatly rejoiced and feasted together and kept a good day And many of the people of the land became Proselytes and embraced the Jewish Religion seeing the wonders God had done for his people and God struck the hearts of the Heathen with such a fear of the Jews that they durst not execute Hamans Edict against them Esther Chap. 8. In the next place we come to describe the full deliverance of the Jews and the destruction of their enemies and how they exprest their thankfulness for so great a mercy The 13th day of the month Adar being come the enemies of the Jews hoped to have had power over them but it turned quite contrary through the gracious Providence of God and the assistance which the Rulers of Provinces afforded the Jews through the dread they had of Mordecai the new and great favourite and through the fear that seized on the hearts of such as bore them ill will For the Jews in all the Provinces gathered themselves together to resist those that sought their hurt and none of them could stand before them In Shushan some of Hamans faction combined together to revenge his death being possibly put on by his ten Sons but they being suddenly daunted the Jews slew of them five hundred and among them Hamans ten Sons but on the spoil though the King permitted it they laid not their hands to shew that what they did was not out of covetousness but for their own defence The number of those that were slain in Shushan by the Jews was that day brought to the King and he acquaints the Queen with it himself knowing it would be acceptable news to her And says he if they have slain so many in Shushan what have they done in the rest of my dominions Thou seest what I have done for thee and yet I am ready to do more therefore tell me what thou dost further desire of me Esther replied If it please the King let it be granted to the Jews which are in Shushan to do to morrow also according to what thy decree allows them to do this day For though 500 were slain in the City yet she understood as it seems that many had escaped who bare a deadly hatred to the Jews and might seek an opportunity another time to be revenged on them for the death of Haman and his Sons therefore to prevent that mischief she desires leave for the Jews to destroy such of their enemies as had escaped She further desires that the bodies of Hamans ten Sons that had been newly slain by the Jews might be hanged on the same Gallows that Haman himself was hanged for their greater reproach and for terror to others The King consented to both her desires and so Hamans ten Sons were accordingly hanged on the same Gallows and the Jews in Shushan gathered themselves together on the 14th day of Adar and slew 300 more of their enemies in that City but on the prey they laid not their hands The Jews also in the other Provinces gathered themselves together on the 13th day of Adar and slew their enemies that assaulted them and then rested and kept a day of feasting and rejoycing on the 14th day whereas those at Shushan slew their enemies both on the 13th and 14th days and so kept not their day of feasting till the 15th day And Mordecai wrote * V. 20. And Mordecai wrote these things c. It may possibly be extended to the whole Book of Esther of which Mordecai in probability was the Penman unto the Jews scattered abroad in all the Provinces and gave them an account concerning the two days which the Jews at Shushan had spent in destroying their enemies and shewed them that that was the reason of their keeping the 15th day as a day of feasting So that though for this time the Jews in the Country kept the 14th day and those at Shushan the 15th day yet in succeeding time year after year Mordecai orders them all to keep both days shewing them that they ought to rejoyce in one anothers welfare and to keep both days as days wherein the Lord gave them rest from their enemies and to remember that month above all months wherein their sorrow was turned into joy and their mourning into gladness and that they should constantly observe them year after year as days of feasting and rejoycing and of sending portions one to another and gifts to the poor and that they should keep those feasts in remembrance of Purim or the lots that were cast for their destruction and fell in that month and how God turned those lots or divinations to contrary issues and made them vain The Jews accordingly as well for the words of Mordecai's letter as also for what they had seen of those things with their own eyes and what had been related to them by others as of Hamans casting lots c. they ordained it for a law and engaged for themselves and their children and such proselytes as should joyn themselves to them that they would keep those two days yearly according to the writing they had received from Mordecai which was registred And lest they should not hold on in their yearly observing this feast Queen Esther and Mordecai wrote a second letter to enjoyn the continuance of this anniversary feast and authoritatively to press upon them the observance of it And in thes● letters he enjoyned them to live peaceably among themselves and with others also and to hold fast to the truth Those days therefore were first enjoyned and afterwards the observance of them confirmed by Esther and Mordecai as the Jews had formerly decreed for themselves and for their seed the matter of the fastings and their cry that is to keep certain days of publick humiliation with fasting and prayer in remembrance of the desolation of Jerusalem and burning of the Temple of which fasts the Prophet Zachary speaks Ch. 7.5 Esther Chap. 9. Ahashuerus now laid a tribute upon all parts both Continent and Islands that were under his dominion which is here set down as an evidence of the good offices that Mordecai did for the Jews for whom he got an exemption as it seems from this tribute so that he sought the weal of his people neither did his greatness though advanced to be the next man to Ahashuerus make him forget them but he was always ready to speak to the King for them and to do whatever might be for their peace and welfare Esther Ch. 10. Ahashuerus having reigned thirty six years dies and leaves the Empire to his Son Zerxes the fourth King of Persia after Cyrus who trusting in his riches as they were indeed exceeding great stirred up his own subjects
therein and possibly gave some special orders for the manner of their attendance Then Ezra proclaimed a fast that they might humble themselves before the Lord for their sins and might seek of him a right way for themselves and their little ones that is that he would please to conduct them in a right way and preserve them and their children and their substance from being a prey to their enemies For he was asham'd to desire of the King to send a band of souldiers and horsemen with them to guard them in the way which favour yet he might easily have obtained because he had declared unto the King the glorious power and goodness of that God whom they worshipped telling him that his hand was upon all them that seek him for their God but his power and his wrath was against all them that forsake him So they fasted and earnestly sought unto the Lord for this thing and he was pleas'd graciously to answer them Then Ezra chose and separated twelve choice men of the Priests and as many of the Levites whereof Sherebiah and Hashabiah were two see v. 18 19. to take care of the silver and gold and the vessels which were offered for the service of the house of God by the King and his Nobles and the Israelites in those parts and to carry them safe to Jerusalem and there rightly to dispose of them So he weighed unto them and committed to their care six hundred and fifty talents of silver and of silver vessels an hundred talents and of gold an hundred talents also twenty basons of gold with a thousand drams a piece * Viz. Three hundred and twelve pounds ten shillings of the value of drams see 1 Chron. 29.7 and two vessels or some excellent and curious shining brass or copper almost as precious as gold And he said unto them ye are persons consecrated to God as these dedicated things are therefore keep them safe till ye weigh them before the chief of the Priests and Levites and the chief of the Fathers of Israel at Jerusalem And the forementioned Priests and Levites took care of this Sacred Treasure accordingly So upon the twelfth day of the first Month they removed from the river Ahava and through the good hand of God upon them they were delivered from their enemies and such as lay in wait by the way to surprize them and arrived safe at Jerusalem and there rested themselves three days Upon the fourth day of the fifth Month the gold and silver they had brought was weighed out and with the other furniture was laid up in the house of the Lord and the account was taken by number and weight of every one and written down and registred And they which returned out of captivity offered their burnt-offerings to the God of Israel viz. twelve bullocks according to the number of the twelve Tribes and 96 rams and 77 lambs and twelve he-goats for a sin-offering Then they delivered the Kings Commissions unto the Kings Lieutenants and Deputies on that side the river who thereupon shewed all favour to the Jews and were assistant to them in all things according to the Kings command and afforded them such things as were requisite for the service of the house of the Lord. Ezra Ch. 8. whole Chapter It being known that the principal cause of Ezra's coming was to reform such abuses as were crept in among them contrary to Law some of the Princes and chief men who were best affected came presently to him and informed him of this as one of the most heinous evils tolerated among them to wit that not only the people but the Princes also yea the Priests and Levites that could not pretend ignorance of the law had married wives of those Idolatrous Nations their neighbours about them and so the holy seed had mingled themselves with the people of those lands and were tainted by that means in many things with their abominations and the Priests themselves who should have restrained the people from this wickedness had a chief hand in it and been boldest in this transgression Ezra understanding this rent his Mantle and pluckt off the hair of his head and beard and sat down on the ground as one amazed at these high provocations It seems the report was quickly carried about how mightily he was afflicted and displeased when he heard how his brethren had taken wives of Idolatrous Nations and thereupon many of the godly inhabitants that heard of it being themselves afraid of the judgments of God threatned in his word against those transgressions came presently to him to advise with him what was fit to be done in that case but till the evening sacrifice he sat like one overwhelmed with grief and astonishment at that which had been told him At the time of the evening sacrifice he rouzed up himself from his great dejection and then falling on his knees * At the time when Sacrifices or incense were offered up pious people used to pour forth their prayers to God and spreading out his hands unto the Lord he prayed saying O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee For our (a) This good man putteth himself into the number of those transgresso●s because he was of the body of that state whereof many of the members had committed that sin so as he might be involved in the judgment that might fall on them see Dan. 9.5 iniquities are increased over our heads that is they are risen so high that like a great flood of waters they are even ready to overwhelm us see Psal 38.4 our trespasses are grown up unto the heavens (b) Beyond Heaven nothing can ascend that is they are so great they can scarce be exceeded and cry to heaven for vengeance against us Since the days of our Fathers and Predecessors before the captivity whose sins caused the captivity we have been great transgressors one generation after another continuing in their sins and for our iniquities have we our Kings and our Priests been delivered into the hands of Heathenish Kings and exposed to the sword to captivity and to spoil and to confusion of face as it is at this day with some of our brethren who are yet in captivity And now it is but a little while since grace and favour hath been shewed unto us from the Lord our God who hath left us a remnant to ●scape and to be brought back again into our own Country and hath given us a nail (c) Significat firmum statum sedes certas fixas stabiles firmam habitationem quae hactenus inconstans erat Pisc in his holy place that is by his providence hath fixed and setled us in Jerusalem his holy City again and hath given us some prop and support of our faith and hath enlightned our eyes and refreshed and cheared our drooping hearts and given us a little reviving in our bondage For we were bondmen yet our God hath not forsaken us in our
excellent prayer are these six things to be observed 1. A description of God v. 6. 2. An enumeration of his mercies from v. 7 to 16. 3ly A confession of sins from 16 to 27. 4ly A declaration of Gods just judgments for them from v. 27 to 32. 5ly A supplication for mercy from 32 to 38. 6ly A solemn binding themselves to God by Covenant that they would carefully observe all his commandments v. 38. He begins his prayer thus Thou even thou art Lord alone thou hast made heaven the heaven of heavens with all their host the earth and all things that are therein the sea and all that is therein and thou preservest them all and the host of heaven worshippeth thee Thou art the Lord God who didst choose Abraham and broughtest him forth out of Vr of the Chaldees and gavest him the name of Abraham And foundest his heart faithful before thee and madest a Covenant with him to give the land of the Canaanites to his seed and hast performed thy words for thou art righteous And didst see the affliction of our Fathers in Egypt and heardst their cry by the Red-sea and shewedst signs and wonders upon Pharoah and on all his servants and on all the people of his land For thou knewest that they dealt proudly against them so didst thou get thee a great name and glory which we celebrate to this day And thou didst divide the sea before them so that they went through the midst thereof on the dry land and their persecutors thou threwest into the deeps as a stone into the mighty waters Moreover thou leadest them in the day by a cloudy pillar and in the night by a pillar of fire to give them light in the way wherein they should go Thou camest down also upon Mount Sinai and spakest with them from heaven and gavest them right judgments and true laws good statutes and commandments And madest known unto them thy holy Sabbath (a) The Sabbath was instituted at the beginning of the world but being much neglected God renewed the command for the observance of it and commandest them excellent precepts statutes and laws by the hand of Moses thy servant And gavest them bread from heaven for their hunger and broughtest forth water for them out of the rock for their thirst and promisedst them that they should go in to possess the land which thou hadst sworn to give them But they (b) That is the Israelites that came out of Egypt and our Ancestors since and our fathers dealt proudly and hardened their necks and hearkened not to thy commandments and refused to obey neither were mindful of thy wonders that thou didst among them but hardened their necks and in their rebellion appointed a Captain to return to their bondage but thou art a God ready to pardon gracious and merciful slow to anger and of great kindness and forsookest them not Yea when they had made them a molten calf and said This is thy god that brought thee up out of Egypt and had wrought great provocations yet thou in thy manifold mercies forsookst them not in the wilderness the pillar of the cloud departed not from them by day to lead them in the way neither the pillar of fire by night to shew them light and the way wherein they should go Thou gavest also thy good Spirit (c) viz. To their Governours to Moses and the 70 Elders Numb 11.17 by whom they were accordingly instructed and directed in the right way to instruct them and with-heldest not thy manna from their mouth and gavest them water for their thirst Yea forty years didst thou sustain them in the wilderness so that they lacked nothing their clothes waxed not old and their feet swelled not Moreover thou gavest them Kingdoms and Nations and didst divide them into corners (d) That is didst plant them in the several parts and corners of the land of Canaan some within Iordan and some without so they possessed the land of Sihon and the land of the King of Heshbon (e) Which was then in the possesssion of Sihon who had formerly taken it from the Moabites Numb 21.26 and the land of Og King of Bashan Their children also multipliedst thou as the stars of heaven and broughtest them into the land concerning which thou hadst promised to their fathers that they should go in to possess it So their children wene in and possessed it and thou subduest before them the inhabitants of the land viz. the Canaanites and gavest them into their hands with their Kings and the people of the land that they might do with them as they would And they took strong Cities and a fat land and possessed houses full of all goods wells digged vineyards and oliveyards and fruit trees in abundance so they did eat and were filled and became fat and delighted themselves in thy great goodness and the plenty thou hadst given them Nevertheless they were disobedient and rebelled against thee and cast thy law behind their backs and slew thy Prophets see 1 King 49.10 which testified (f) And protested that God would not suffer their sins to go unpunished against them to turn them to thee and they wrought great provocations therefore thou deliveredst them into the hand of their enemies who vexed them and in the time of their trouble when they cried unto thee thou heardest them from heaven and according to thy manifold mercies thou gavest them Saviours (g) Temporal deliverers such as the Judges were Judg. 3.9 2 King 13.5 who saved them out of the hand of their adversaries But after they had rest they did evil again before thee therefore leftest thou them in the hand of their enemies so that they had the dominion over them yet when they returned and cried unto thee thou heardest them from heaven and many times didst thou deliver them according to thy mercies And thou testifiedst against them by thy Prophets that thou mightest bring them again unto thy Law yet they dealt proudly and hearkened not unto thy commandments but sinned against thy judgments (h) That is thy righteous ordinances and commandments which if a man do he shall live in them (i) See pag. 158. on Levit. 18.5 and withdrew the shoulder (k) That is were stubborn and refused to submit to Gods Government a Metaphor taken from Cattel that struggle and will not take the yoke upon them See Zach. 7.11 and hardened their neck and would not hear Yet many years didst thou forbear them and testifiedst against them by thy Spirit in thy Prophets yet would they not give ear therefore gavest thou them into the hand of the people of the lands where the Heathen reigned Nevertheless for thy great mercies sake thou didst not utterly consume them nor forsake them for thou art a gracious and merciful God Now ther●fore O our God the great the mighty and the terrible God who keepest covenant and mercy let not all the trouble seem little before
together set upon Jerusalem and getting the City into his hands forced Menelaus into the Castle and then made slaughters not as if he had been among his own Countrymen and kindred but among enemies and forreigners yet he got not the Priesthood but was forc'd to betake himself back again into the Country of the Ammonites where being accused before Aretas King of the Arabians he fled from place to place like a Vagabond hated of all men as a forsaker of the Law and publick enemy to his Country and died at last at Lacedemon Antiochus hearing in Egypt that the Jews rejoyced at the report of his death and suspecting by the sedition stirred up by Jason that Judea would revolt in a great rage departed thence and came and sat down before Jerusalem and took it by force and giving no quarter for three days space there were forty thousand slain and as many more taken prisoners and sold and not contenting himself with this he presumed to go into the Temple having that Arch-Traytor Menelaus for his guide and rifled it of the holy vessels particularly he took away the Golden Altar of Incense and the golden Candlesticks with all the vessels belonging to them the Table of the Shew-bread and the Vail and the Crowns and the golden Ornaments that were fastned to the Temple-doors he pulled off the gold from every thing that was covered with it and likewise took the silver vessels and all the hidden treasure which he could find He also killed swine upon the Altar and with the broath of the flesh of them he sprinkled the Temple And having taken 1800 talents out of the Temple he speedily went to Antioch leaving behind him to afflict the people Philip a Phrygian by Nation but by manners a Barbarian and Andronicus and besides them Menelaus more grievous unto and more spightful against his own Countrymen than either of the other Two years after he sent Apollonius a cruel man with an Army of 22000 into Judea commanding him to put to death all the young men he could meet with and to sell the women and children for slaves Apollonius coming to Jerusalem kept himself still until the Sabbath and then taking the opportunity of the solemnity of the day he destroyed all that came to perform Religious duties and marching with his forces about the City he put to death a great multitude and plundering the City he set it on fire in several places destroying the houses and demolishing the walls round about and led away many women and children into captivity seizing on their cattel whilst Antiochus his Master was busie again in his attempts upon Egypt During these horrid outrages Judas Maccabeus departed with some others and liv'd in the mountains three years and six months for which space of time the daily sacrifice ceased and the Sanctuary lay desolate and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fled and their City became an habitation of strangers The Samaritans seeing the Jews so miserably handled professed themselves to be by descent Sidonians and thereupon obtained Letters from Antiochus to Apollonius his President that they should not be involved in the calamities of the Jews and that their Temple on Mount Gerizim as yet not honoured with the title of any God should from thenceforth be called the Temple of the Grecian Jupiter After this in the year of the World 3837 Antiochus by a publick Edict commanded all Nations that were subject unto him to observe the same way of worship that he did and laying aside their peculiar customs to profess the same Religion with the Greeks and to conform thereunto threatning death to all such as should be found unconformable And he appointed Overseers over every people and Nation who should compel them to uniformity 1 Mac. 1.41 c. Into Judea and Samaria he sent an old man of Athens that he should force the Jews to depart from the observation of the Divine Law and defile the Temple at Jerusalem and impose the name of Jupiter Olimpius upon it And upon the Temple of Gerizim he imposed the name of Jupiter Hospitalis or Protector of strangers He also commanded the sacrifices to be left off he prohibited the Sabbath he commanded them to defile the Sanctuary to erect Altars Groves and Chappels to Idols and that they should sacrifice swine and other unclean beasts and should suffer their children to remain uncircumcised and should forget the Law and the Ordinances of God and made it a crime to profess the Jewish Religion Moreover order was sent to the Neighbouring Cities of the Greeks that they should compell the Jews to partake of their sacrifices and kill those that would not come over to their rites so that many of the Jews for fear obeyed and sacrificed to Idols The Temple was now filled with riot and revelling by the Gentiles who within the circuit thereof defiled themselves with women and committed other abominations And on the 15th day of the month Casleu they erected the Abomination of Desolation that is the detestable Idol of Jupiter Olympius upon the Altar and built Idol-altars throughout the Cities of Judah and burnt incense at the doors of their houses and in the streets and some were compelled to go in procession to Bacchus carrying Ivy they cut in pieces the Books of the Law which they found and burnt them in the fire and with whomsoever they were found or whoever approved of them they were by the Kings command to be put to death Yet notwithstanding there were many that stood out and would not conform to the Kings Edict nor defile themselves at which the King being enraged he caused divers to be brought before him resolving to inforce them by torments to taste impure meats and to abjure Judaism and upon refusal he racked them and put them to death Among others Eleazar of the Priestly family an eminent Scribe and expert in the knowledg of the Law of ninety years of age was very eminent for his courage who neither yielding to eat swines flesh nor dissembling to have eaten it chose rather to undergo the most cruel torments than to violate the Law After him seven young men that were Brethren together with their most courageous Mother were brought before Antiochus at Antioch who refusing to eat swines flesh after they had been exquisitely tortur'd with new-invented torments rendred their pious souls unto God The Martyrdom of those persons is described in the seventh Chapter of the second Book of Maccabees The rage of this persecution coming to Modin a Town situate between Rama and Emmaus it there found some opposition Mattathias the Son of Jonathan a Priest of Jerusalem of the family of Joarib which was the first among the 24 courses 1 Chron. 24.7 dwelt here at this time with his five Sons among whom his Son Judas was called Maccabeus and Josephus says their Father Mattathias was the son of Asamoneus * Or rather the Grand●on of Simeon Sirnamed Asomonaeus and from him that Sirname descended
in divers engagements and taking Jazer with the Territories thereunto belonging returned into Judea Timotheus the General of the Ammonites hereat enraged and gathering together multitudes of forreign forces came as if he would devour Judea But Judas and those that were with him having humbled themselves and sought to the Lord for help marched out of Jerusalem against them and being encouraged by an Apparition of Horsemen in the Heavens fighting for them they slew of the enemy 20500 Foot and 600 horse Timotheus himself fled to Gazara a strong Garrison kept by his Brother but that being taken he was pulled out of a cave where he had hid himself and slain with his Brother After this the Gentiles about Galaad and Galilee sorely afflicting the Jews of those parts Maccabaeus divided his Army into three Brigades one whereof consisting of 3000 men he gave to his Brother Simon to relieve them of Galilee the second to Joseph the Son of Zachariah to defend Judea charging them not to fight with any enemy till his return with the third he marched himself to the succour of those of Galaad Simon notwithstanding fought many Battels with the enemy and killed many of them And Judas had the like success taking many Towns and putting many thousand to the sword But those that were left at home desiring upon the report of these things to atchieve some military glory marched to Jamnia whence Gorgias issuing out put them to flight and following the chase as far as the borders of Judea killed about 2000 of them So dangerous a thing is presumption and vain-glory Lysias the Kings Protector and chief Minister was extreamly vexed to hear of Judas's success therefore mustering together near eighty thousand men and all the horse he could make marches into Judea resolving to make Jerusalem an habitation for the Greeks and the Temple Tributary and to set the High Priesthood to sale every year Being entred into Judea he lays siege to Bethsura nigh to Jerusalem But Maccabaeus engaging with him killed 11000 of his foot with 1600 horsemen and forced him with the rest many of them being wounded and disarmed to shift for themselves Lysias considering with himself what loss he had sustained and how God fought for the Jews he sent to them to treat of peace and according to his promise brought the King to yield to such reasonable terms as were demanded by Maccabaeus but this peace was quickly broken by those of the Kings Captains that had the command of the places adjacent who would not suffer the Jews to be quiet And the Citizens of Joppa also having by fair speeches inticed two hundred Jews which dwelt among them into their ships put from shore and threw them all over-board When Judas heard of this piece of villany he came by night to Joppa and fired their Port and Navy And understanding that the inhabitants of Jamnia had some such design against those Jews that lived with them he did the same by night to their Port and Fleet also Judas now marching against Timotheus the Nomades of Arabia set upon him to the number of 5000 Foot and 500 Horse where after an hot dispute the Arabians were worsted but afterwards upon an engagement to supply him with Cattel obtained a peace from him Shortly after this he stormed the City Caspis wherein was such a slaughter made of the inhabitants that a lake thereto adjoyning seemed to be full of blood Removing from thence he came to the Jews called Tobieni inhabiting the land of Tob concerning which mention is made in the Book of Judges Ch. 11. Timotheus was drawn off from that place but had left behind him a very strong Garrison which Dositheus and Sosipater two of Judas's Captains ventured upon and taking it put to the sword about 10000 men Upon this Timotheus levies a new Army consisting of 120000 Foot and 2500 Horse of all Nations round about him and mercenary Arabians sending the women and children into a strong Town called Carnion He incamped against Raphon on the other side the Brook Judas approaching with his forces gave this great Army such a total rout that some fled one way and some another and Judas pursued them with such earnestness that he slew near thirty thousand of them and Timotheus himself falling into the hands of Dositheus and Sosipater obtained his liberty upon promise of setting at liberty such of the Jews as he had in his power Judas then proceeding took Carnion whither many of the enemy had fled he put to the sword 25000 men fired their Temple and demolished their City After this he gathered together all the Jews with their wives and children which were in Galaad to bring them into Judea And being come as far as Ephron which was a great City well fortified through which they were to pass the Citizens denied them passage and shut their gates against them hereupon they assaulted the City and took it after a day and a nights battery and demolished the City to the ground took all the spoil killed all the males near 25000 in number and so marched to Jerusalem to the Feast of Pentecost The Feast being over Judas taking 3000 Foot and 400 Horse along with him went and fought with Gorgias whom Dositheus had once taken but leading him away a Thracian Trooper made up towards him and cut off his shoulder and so rescued Gorgias who made his escape into Marissa After this victory the Jews coming to strip and bury such of their own party as had fallen that day found under their coats certain things dedicated to the Idols of Jamnia which was prohibited them by the Law Deut. 7.25 26. so that it appeared to them that this was the cause of their death they therefore betook themselves by prayer unto God intreating him that this miscarriage might not be charged upon them all After this Judas with his Brethren subdued the Edomites and the Philistines burnt their Idols and overthrew their Altars and then returned into Judea and observing that Antiochus's Souldiers which were Garrison'd in the Tower at Jerusalem did infest the Jews about the Sanctuary he with all the people besieged them close but some of them with certain Jewish fugitives getting out went strait to Antiochus Eupator and perswaded him with expedition to come and give a check to the growing power of the Jews Antiochus gathering together all his friends and Captains and a mighty Army concerning the number of which the two Books of Maccabees differ in a great rage marched thither intending to deal worse with the Jews than his Father had done And with him Menelaus the usurping High Priest joyned hoping thereby to recover the Priesthood Judas hearing of these preparations commanded the people that they should call upon God day and night that he would please to grant them his wonted assistance Antiochus marching into Judea assaults Bethsura or Bethhoron where Judas by night with a choice party fell upon his Camp and piercing as far as his own
ei authoritatem coram populo Conciliet and I will be with thee Moses now commands the Priests the Sons of Levi to put this Book of the Law which he had written in some safe Repository or Chest on the outside of the Ark where was the Pot of Manna and Aaron's Rod see Heb. 9.4 Indeed in the Ark it self were only the two Tables 1 Kings 8.9 but on the outside of it and by it was this Volume of the Law to be kept This Book was many years after found in the Treasury of the Temple in Josiah's Reign 2 Kings 22.8 2 Chron. 34.14 and therefore it seems it had been removed from the Ark and kept elsewhere wherein seeing they transgressed the directions that God here gave to the Priests no marvel if this precious Treasure was for some years lost and not looked after Moses having commanded them to place this Book on the outside of the Ark He said to them O Israel if thou art disobedient this Book shall be a witness against thee wherein thou art sufficiently warned to the contrary and shewed the Judgments that will thereupon insue But alas I know thy rebellious Disposition and thy stiff Neck Ye have been rebellious against the Lord while I was with you how much more will ye be so when I am dead Gather therefore unto me all the Elders of your Tribes and your Officers that I may speak unto them and call Heaven and Earth to witness against them For I know that after my death you will corrupt your selves and turn aside from the way which I have commanded you and evil will befal you in the latter days because you will do evil in the sight of the Lord and thereby provoke Him to anger The Elders and Officers of the people being met Moses spake in the ears of all the Congregation of Israel the words of this following Song Ch. XXXII Give Ear O ye Heavens * See Isa 1.2 and I will speak and hear O Earth the words of my mouth He beginneth this Prophetical Song with a Rhetorical Scheme calling the Heavens and Earth and all the Creatures in them to be witnesses of his word the more to affect the hearts of the people to reprove their hardness and to excite their attention I wish says He my Doctrine which I have received from God might so fall upon your hearts as the sweet and gentle Showers and fruitful Dew falleth upon the Herbs and Flowers and Grass of the Earth and causeth them to spring forth and flourish Isa 55.10 Hear therefore for I will now publish unto you the Name of the Lord that is his glorious Excellencies viz. his infinite Power Wisdom and Goodness and therefore see that ye ascribe Greatness and Majesty to Him and that ye magnifie Him as ye ought to do saying Thine O Jehovah is the Greatness and the Power and the Glory 1 Chron. 29.11 and that ye attend to what is spoken with all humility and lay it to heart and yield Obedience thereunto Know ye therefore that God is the Rock * In times of danger men use to fly to Rocks to shelter themselves 1 Sam. 13.6 He is an All-sufficient stable and sure Refuge for all those that fly to Him neither is there any sure Shelter any where else but in Him His Work is perfect for all his ways are Judgment All his Works are perfect (z) Even in those works of God that seem to have some imperfection in them as Children that are born blind or lame c. yet as they are acts of Providence there is a perfection of Wisdom Holiness and Justice in them and there is nothing at all in them for which God can justly be blamed and without any blemish there is no defect or fault to be found in any of them All his ways are Judgment his dealings with his people have been always right and just He is a God of truth and without Iniquity just and right is He. But as for this people they have corrupted themselves by their Idolatry their spot is not the spot of his Children for it proceedeth not of weakness and infirmity to which all are subject but of wilfulness and perverseness and an impenitent heart They are a perverse and crooked Generation for both their hearts and ways are evil and turned aside from the right Rule of Gods Law Do you thus requite the Lord O foolish people and unwise Is not God thy Father that made thee Is not He thy Father that hath bought thee that is ransomed and brought thee forth out of Egypt with a mighty Hand and the power of Miracles Hath not He made thee his people and established thee by Covenant to continue so if thou art not wanting to thy self and thy duty Remember the days of old and consider the years of many Generations ask thy Father and he will shew thee thy Elders and they will tell thee how God when by his Providence He disposed the several Nations that came out of the Loins of Adam into several parts of the Earth allotting to one Nation one Country and another to another did then set the bounds of the people according to the number of the Children of Israel that is did then chuse the Children of Israel to be his peculiar people and Inheritance and where they were there it might be said was his people and where their bounds ended there was the end and utmost bound of his people and the bounds of the Heathen then began and according to his secret purpose he gave and allotted to the Canaanites such bounds and limits as he knew would serve for the number of the Israelites For the Lords portion is his people Jacob is the lot of his Inheritance that is the Israelites are that portion of Mankind whom he was pleased to make his peculiar people they are his Inheritance and therefore dear to Him as Inheritances use to be to men which are divided to them by lot and they were to acknowledge no other Lord over them but Himself and they and their Children after them were to be His successively He found them in a desart Land in a wast howling Wilderness inhabited only by wild howling Beasts of Prey He found them there in desperate danger but came in seasonably to their succour when they were ready to perish He led them about he instructed them both by his Word and Works by his Spirit and the several Dispensations of his Providence He kept them as the apple of his eye with tender care and love As an Eagle stirreth up her nest that is awaketh her brood or young ones in her nest rousing them up with the Cry that she maketh to signifie to them that she intends to teach them to fly and spreading abroad her wings taketh them up and beareth them thereon so did the Lord carry Israel towards Canaan leading them Himself thither and there was no strange god with him that is no strange God had any hand in