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A85666 An exposition of the five first chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. / Delivered in severall lectures in London, by William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1645 (1645) Wing G1851; Thomason E272_1; ESTC R212187 422,046 514

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of a people defending them that is the glory and excellency of a kingdome 2 Chron. 13.25 saith Abijah God is with us for our Captain this was more then all the strength of Judah beside when Jeroboam came against him with 800000 chosen men With you are the golden calves vers 8. you have a great number but God is not with you to be your glory and defence you have the calves which is your shame and nakednesse but God is with us who is our glory and defence And when Jerusalem fell to Idolatry God tels them that they had changed their glory for that did not profit Jer. 2.11 they had driven away their glory and here was the beginning of their woe That 's the misery of a kingdome to have God depart from it then publike enterprises prosper not 2 Chron. 22.24 then counsell failes 1 Sam. 28.15 protection is gone Isa 5.5 then peace loving kindnesse and mercies go Jer. 16.5 This is as taking the Sun out of the firmament the eyes out of the head or soul out of the body now a kingdome and people lie exposed to all evils and mischiefs Hos 9.12 Wo to them when I depart from them all mischiefes presently step croud in upon a people left of God famine wars captivity a perverse spirit and treacherousnesse one to another came upon this people when God left his place And so after Christs dayes when God left them and that voyce was heard in the Temple Migremus hinc Joseph de hel Jud. l. 7. c. 2. L●b 11. which Tacitus in his Annals also mentions Audit● major hum ma vox ex●edere Deos simul ingens motus excedentium after this dreadfull misery befell them war famine dispersion was their portion they are without God Christ and mercy to this day an undone and most unhappy people Wee had almost driven away God by our sins specially by our Idolatry superstitions but God and his glory are not quite gone Jer. 14.9 Yet thou O Lord art in the midst of us and we are called by thy Name leave us not 4. God is glory or glorious there is nothing in God inglorious as in the Son is only light so God is light and in him is no darknesse hee is all light all glory his Attributes are glory his Essence is glory his Life is glory God is only glory Blessed be the glory the Lord. 5. Under the Law God confined himself to a particular place to the Temple there he dwelt appeared received sacrifices gave answers c. So that the Temple was not only locus but medium divini cultus the Jewes were bound to set their faces towards it when they prayed 1 King 8.48 Dan. 6.10 it being also a type of the body of Christ Joh. 2.19 that sanctified their Assemblies and sacrifices Matth. 23.19 But it 's otherwise now under the Gospel neither Jerusalem nor Samaria is the place where God is fixed Joh. 4.21 but Gods habitation is in all places where hee hath Saints Matth. 18.20 Where two or three are gathered together in my name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am there in the midst of them 2 Cor 6.16 Yee are the Temple of the living God and what saith God I will dwell in them and walk about in them that is in the Church of Corinth and so in all Congregations Now the Congregations are Gods habitation he walks amongst the golden Candlesticks there is the glorious God seen the glorious God heard But the place now where the meetings are be neither means nor parts of worship no types of Christ nor do they sanctifie the people or service done in them rather do the people and Ordinances while they are there sanctifie them and yet when the Ordinances are ended and people gone no holinesse abides in them but they are as other places 6. The Lord is worthy of praise when he is in a way of judgement Blessed be the glory of the Lord from his place now he was departing from Jerusalem all woes and miseries taking hold of them yet was he a God deserving praises Gods judgements are deep we oft know not the reasons of them see not the equity of Gods proceedings in them yet wee should be so far from murmuring that we should count him worthy of honour and praise when he deserts Churches and kingdomes Exod. 15.11 God is fearefull in praises 7. It 's the work and office of Angels to praise God the living creatures here said Blessed be the glory of the Lord from his place and Rev. 5.10 11. There were many Angels about the Throne and what did they they sang Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power and riches and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and blessing So the Seraphims in Isa 6.3 their song was Holy holy holy is the Lord of Hosts the whole earth is full of his glory Angels are musicall creatures and make the best melody Arias thinks it was an Angel dictated the Song of Deborah unto her A. Lapid on Judg. 5.23 Luke 2.13 14. there was a heavenly Chorus and sang a heavenly song Glory to God in the highest on the earth peace and good-will towards men this was a short but a sweet song when great things have been done by God the Angels have been brought in praising God as when God created the world Job 48.4.7 Where wast thou saith God to Job when I laid the foundations of the earth When the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy that is the Angels as Interpreters observe who at the sight of that great and glorious work were much affected and sang the praises of God so at the birth of Christ and here at the departure of God out of the Temple the great God doing great works must have great praises even the praises of Angels praise is an Angelicall work and the office of Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theod. and the Spirit calls for it at their hands Psal 148.2 Praise him all his Angels and they do it when he is in his judgements The Jewes thought God dealt hardly in punishing them but Angels saw cause to praise God for his departure from them and vindicating his glory in the punishment of hypocrites 8. God doth his works without motion or mutation Here it 's said from his place there is a shew of motion and change but no such thing befalls God his works make motions and changes in the creature not in himself he is infinite fils heaven and earth and never removes from one place to another he is immutable and not subject to changes For the 13th Verse of the wings wheels and noyse of them I have spoken in the first Chapter largely yet a little I shall speak of the Verse it 's said that the living creatures touched one another The Hebrew is from Nashash to kisse and each other in the Hebrew is a woman to her sister Observ 1. God makes use of Angels
dismay confound us if wee feare men Jer. 1.17 Be not dismayed at their faces lest I confound thee before them or break thee in pieces Jeremiah saith God If thou dost feare them and betray the truth I have committed to thee I will forsake thee leave thee to the hands malice cruelty and breake thee to pieces before their faces fearefulnesse doth much provoke God hee that sees not sufficiency in God to support him shall find enough to daunt and crnfound him but if wee go on with courage discharge the place and trust committed to us Stellae in nocte lucent in die latent Bern. in Cant. Videbis me plus posse dum torqueor quam ipse dum torques if wee should fall into the hands of wicked men and suffer God will own us let out himself unto us support us sympathize with us deliver us or make us and our sufferings glorious Stars shine in the night they are obscur'd in the day when Vincentius was tormented by the Tyrant hee said Thou shalt see mee more couragious in suffering then thy self in tormenting Some helps against feare 1. Let your feare be exercised about God he is an object fit to be feared all flesh is grasse all nations are a drop of the bucket and the small dust of the ballance Inhabitants of the earth are as a swarm of Flies a troop of Grass-hoppers and shall wee feare these little things the world is nothing unto God there is no greatnesse beside God himself hee hath made the world Nihil magnum nisi magnus Deus Psal 119.120 he hath dried up the Seas hee sends out the mighty winds hee changes times and seasons hee brings Princes to nothing makes Judges vanity hee tumbles nations into hell and can destroy the soul and body eternally him feare saith Christ Luke 12.4 5. not men that can but kill the body but feare him who after the body is dead can kill the soul and cast into hell I say unto you feare him and Isa 8.13 Sanctifie the Lord of Hosts himself and let him be your feare let him be your dread let there be such a frame of spirit in you as becomes the Lord of Hosts sutable to his greatnesse his soveraignty and authority over you and all creatures then you will not feare when the feare of God is strong in your heart then the feare of man ceaseth when the Dictator rul'd at Rome then all other Officers ceased and when this feare of God rules all other feares will be husht and that 's not all if God be sanctified by us hee will be a Sanctuary unto us 2. Set faith a work men in publique place should have their hands at work on earth and their faith in heaven the just live by faith and will not die by feare Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32.7 8. when Senacherib was coming against Jerusalem and troubled the whole land hee set his hands awork to fortifie the City and his faith to fortifie himself Be strong and couragious be not afraid nor dismayed for the King of Assyria and his multitude for there be more with us then be with him with him is an arm of flesh but with us is the Lord our God to help us and to fight our battell here was an army of 185000. to affright him but here was faith in the Lord of Hosts to establish him Heb. 11.27 Moses feared not the wrath of the King for he endured as seeing him who is invisible by faith hee saw the invisible God and that made him hold out against the King though his wrath was hot his looks fierce his words terrible his face cruell Moses knew that what ever hee lost for God he should finde in God Prov. 29.25 The feare of man bringeth a snare but who so putteth his trust in the Lord shall be safe mans feare brings a snare and so death had Moses feared Pharaoh hee had compounded with him and so ruin'd himself and others but hee that puts his trust in the Lord shall be safe The Hebrew is set on high like a bird upon the wing that is out of the reach of every snare and fowler though never so cunning Cardinall Borromaeus being told of great danger from some who lay in wait for him Si Deus mei curam non habet quid vivo said An Deus est in mundo pro nihilo Is God idle in the world and Jahannes Silentiarius being in the like case said If God take not care of mee why do I live 3. Labour for purity and holinesse the most holy men are the least fearing men Paul was of great courage hee had much holinesse 1 Thes 2.10 and when the Viper leapt upon his hand he feared not it could not kill him but he could kill it he shook it into the fire Adam at first no creature could harm him because holy in the lives of the Fathers mention is made of one Abbas Paulus who handled Serpents and Scorpions and cut them in pieces without any hurt and being asked how he came to this condition said If a man be holy all things are subject to him as to Adam before his sin in Paradise if our hearts and consciences be polluted we shall feare if not flie 1 Sam. 18.12 Saul was afraid of David hee had great riches many forces yet feares David a poor man a banished reproach't man and Herod feared John he was a holy man Magnas vires habet pietas Job 17.9 The righous shall hold on his way and he that hath clean hands shall be stronger and stronger Prov. 28.1 The righteous is bold as a Lion a man that is truly and thorowly godly that knowes nothing by himselfe that hath purged out every spot and gotten off all guilt and needs not blush at any thing past or present hee is a Lion hee is a brasse wall nothing shall daunt him but the wicked flie when none pursue Nehemiah was a holy man and hee would not flie but Manasseh a wicked King hides himself among the thornes and Adam runs to the thickets they had prickings without and worse prickles within 4. Value not life too much let us be willing to lay out our lives in Gods service to spend and be spent for God Acts 21.13 Paul said I am ready not to be bound only but to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus he prized the name of Christ above his life and if wee would prize something above our lives wee should not so over-rate them as through feare of man to lose better things to keep them the Devill tels us skin for skin Job 2.4 and all that a man hath will he give for his life true all to save life but there are some things of more worth than mans life as the glory of God the favour of God the peace of God truth of God the name of Christ c. and wee should so account of them and be ready to sacrifice our lives for them Nehem. 6.11
them in Babylon Besides those Eastern countries were not without Lions Daniel was put into the Lions den and certainly there were Lions and other evill beasts to make good what was threatned whensoever divine pleasure would I the Lord have spoken it They looked at Ezekiel as a meer man and what ever he threatned yet it could do little and therefore were like to regard neither him not his prophecy To prevent this and to adde the greater weight to the Prophecy the Lord takes all upon himself and saith It is not Ezekiel but I that am Jehovah who gave being to all creatures and will give being to my Word It is I the Lord have spoken it Here the Lord subscribes his own Name acknowledges all his and that is enough to make all authentike This Lord who is dreadfull in threatnings mighty and faithfull in execution of threats let all the world fear and give glory unto before he cause darknesse FINIS A Table containing the principall things in the precedent Expositions A ABominations what sins are so call'd 444 Account Angels and others must give an account 120 Actions done according to Gods will have glory and efficacy in them 110 actions cannot be otherwise then they are 160 Admonitions they are usefull 361 God admonishes before he destroyes 391 Afflictions of themselves subdue not corruption 42 235 376 in greatest afflictions oft come in the strongest comforts 62 God can afflict from any quarter 73 time of affliction is seasonable for instructions 304 Angel Angels very knowing 84 observe us and our wayes 83 used in the government of the world 87 136 the services good Angels are imployed in 77 88 c. Why likened to men Lions Oxen Eagles 94 95 96 they are fit for great services 98 172 they serve their inferiours 99 they depend upon Christ 100 101 of their wings 104 105 they are loving and harmonious in their operations 106 171 314 they cover their feet 107 171 their wayes are streight 108 they are constant in their resolutions 109 of their hands 111 they do their work rationally wisely ibid. Angelicall vertue is hid from us 114 they persevere in their work 116 they minde the work in hand 117 appprehension of death upon sight of Angel● whence 119 glorious terrible in their services ibid. unweariable in their work 120 seek Gods glory 121 not at their own dispose 122 they are ducible 123 have new influence from Christ 127 how said to stand 155 they attend Christs Throne are willing to do his will 170 reverence him 171 noyse of their wings 172 not heard by all 175 they sympathize with us 310 they are musicall 313 whether every one have a tutelar Angel 91 Anger Wrath makes men bungle in their own and in Gods businesse also 325 326 how in God 457 Antiquity The true antiquity 5 it 's no rule for worship 234 Christ our antiquity 235 Apostasie A great evill 357 four evils of it ibid. Appointment Divine appointing makes things and actions mean in themselves weighty and usefull 388 Arme. Vncovering of it 399 B Babylon Now called Badget 31 Bands What bands they put upon Ezekiel 373 what God put on him 399 Blandina came to suffer as to a marriage supper 157 Blood What requiring of blood is 340 Businesse Our own businesse to be done 118 God maks stands and stops in businesses 158 Bread Staffe of bread what 408 of breaking this staffe ibid. 409 C Calamities common to good and bad 330 Caldea Of it and the Caldeans 30 31 Call A divine Call hath divine assistance 300 those are called to publike service have need of the Spirit 310 those Christ sends hee gives his Spirit 371 Casuall Nothing is so 155 Chasmal What 79 186 backwards is the Messiah ibid. Cherub and Cherubims Whence and what 83 84 Christ An object of admiration and adoration 102 his service is honourable 103 the vertue from him is active 128 all things are under Christ 167 hee seeth all things 169 his voyce is efficacious 173 176 he hath kingly Majesty 180 is the chiefest of Kings 181 he is glorious 182 187 hath judiciary power 183 ruleth the world 184 hears the cause complaints of his ibid. dreadfull in judgement 188 Christ his divine nature too glorious for our eyes 190 his judiciary actions are glorious 191 hee mingles mercy with wrath 196 he is Jehovah 203 compassionate 213 his command is powerfull 215 hee is encouraging to duty ibid. his Word comfortable to the dejected 216 what Christ commands he gives 221 it's Christs priviledge to set up and send officers 228 he puts forth vertue to effect what hee speaks 283 hee opens mysteries 286 hee authorizes not Ministers to condemn or absolve at their pleasure 342 Christ tels his before-hand what they must expect 374 Christians call'd Goiim by Jews 226 all are not Christians seem so 230 Children they imitate their fathers 233 Church it 's subject to dangers enemies 334 why set among the wicked 430 Cities God an enemy to sinfull Cities 379 nothing secures them from ruine 389 390 it's honour to be the chiefest and what will make them so 429 430 Cloud The nature of it 69 armies compared to a cloud in three respects ibid. clouds rain wind at Gods dispose 71 Coniah What it signifies 38 Conviction Wicked shall know they have had means 461 Crystall Whence so call'd 166 how terrible 166 D Dayes The 390. dayes where to begin 395 396 of the forty dayes ibid. Decree Mens wills and weaknesses cannot hinder Gods decree 328 Degenerate Those do it God owns not 305 their former righteousnesse not remembred 255 358 Delegation Of power in Church officers unlawfull 229 Desertion God doth not leave his long 329 Designes Publike and great ones meet with difficulties 263 Dispensations God dispenseth with some commands of his and when 514 Distempers They oft fasten upon and abide with the servants of God 325 unfit for service ibid. Doubts Through doubts we oft stick at things lawfull 414 E Egge A standing measure among the Jewes 406 407 Eyes Referring to God 15 eye not sparing what 452 Example not to be followed 279 280 Ezekiel Antiquity of his Prophecy 4 what his name signifies 6 nature of his prophecy 15 seasonablenesse of it 16 scope and occasion of it 11 how long he prophesied 43 his end ibid. F Faces Why men fall upon their faces at visions 204 what setting the face against means 386 Faith The mouth and stomack of the soule 293 Famine It 's a sore judgement 445 examples of it 410 God can send it at his pleasure and blast all our comforts 415 416 nature of it 456 arrowes of famine what 467 Fearfulnesse Why it should not be in Magistrates or Ministers 269 270 c. helps against it 273 Firmament Why so call'd 166 G Gerah How much it weighed 406 Glory Glorious things awaken incourage 64 65 Gods glory should be much minded 121 glorious things are dreadful 168 Christ as man is glorious 187 whether
a chiefe praise in Israel and fit you for an eternal weight of glory Your Highnesse most humble servant VVILLIAM GREENHILL To all Wel-willers of TRUTH Especially to the Authours and Fautors of the Expository Lectures in this Citie IN most Arts and Sciences are difficulties in Divinity are depths Plato Aristotle Euclid have their nodos and the Scriptures have their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in them are dark sayings Psal 78.2 Riddles Ezek. 17.2 Parables Matth. 13.35 Wonders Psal 119 18. great things Hos 8.12 things hard to be uttered Heb. 5.12 hard to be understood 2 Pet. 3.16 Mysteries Mat. 13.11 hidden manifold Wisdom 1 Cor. 2.7 Ephes 3.10 the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2.10 Much is in it that God hath intermixt the holy Scriptures with some difficulties Hereby we are led up to conceive there be infinite depths in God which eternity must take us up to study They convince us of our incapacity of high things Joh. 16.12 They prevent our undervaluing of divine Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 flesh and blood is very apt upon reading and apprehension of easiness to lay aside choyce Workes God hath therefore hid some truths under the rocks laid them deepe that so there might be digging and searching Prov. 2.4 as for treasures Difficulties quicken and whet endeavours sloth is a great gulfe which hinders men from coming at the truth and it made the Father fear Ego vereor ne per nimiam negligentiam stoliditatem cordis non solum velata sint nobis divina volumina sed etiam signata Origen In Verbo Dei abundat quod perfectus comedat quod parvulus sugat Falg lest thereby the Lords Book should not only be shut but also sealed up Ingenuous spirits when they heare of hard things stir livelily and what they get by sorest labour is most precious The rocky and knotty things in the Prophets and Apostles suffice to exercise the greatest abilities and graces which are seated in humane nature they keepe mens thoughts from swelling into a conceit of omnisciency they make us long to be where wee shall know as we are known 1 Cor. 13.12 and in the mean time to pray with David Open thou our eyes Sine Deo impossibile est discere Deum Iren. that wee may see the wonders of thy Law hard things drave David to the Lord he knew that without God hee could not understand the things of God whose glory it is both to conceale and reveale a thing Prov. 25.2 Mat. 16.17 Many have sued to God for further discovery of his minde and have attempted to help us in Scripture difficulties but all dark things are not yet cleared nor all depths yet sounded To this day a vaile is upon the heart of the Jewes in reading the old Testament 2 Cor. 3.14 15. and surely the vaile is not fully removed from the hearts of us Christians we have seen very dimly into sundry things not only of Paul Peter and John but of Moses and the Prophets especially of this Prophet Ezekiel who hath therefore been past over both by Writers and Readers as dark difficult and lesse usefull Robert Stephen mentions one Respons ad censu Theol. Paris in praef and that a Sorbonist who had liv'd above fifty yeeres and knew not what the new Testament meant and have not sundry persons among us lived their fifty yeeres and not known what Ezekiel meant Hath he not been a Book clasped and sealed unto them If this Hieroglyphicall Prophet have been a wonder to all for his Visions yet he hath been known to few by reason of the abstrusenesse of his Visions which have kept off great Rabbies from imploying their talents to open them If weaknesse and error be found in these poore labours of mine J intreat you to remember J have beene among propheticall deepes and difficulties which may plead for him who knowing his own insufficiencies came invita Minerva to this taske If any light appeare for the better understanding of these aenigmaticall things I must say with Daniel There is a God in Heaven which revealeth mysteries to him be all the glory My prayers shall be to him inlightneth every man which commeth into the world Dan. 2. that he would anoint your eyes with eye salve whereby you may daily see more into the great and glorious truths of God and those things which may strongly make for your eternall peace and comfort So prayeth Your Friend and Servant in the Lord W. G. The Introduction to the Work ALL Scripture being the breath of Gods Spirit 2 Pet. 1.21 2 Tim. 3.16 none can be Judge or Expounder of it but the same Spirit Men are only Indices veritatis they cannot bring a sense but shew you what is the sense of Scripture Those are called to be Expositors must not fetch senses ab extra but take what is in the bowels of the Text and hold forth unto others A work which requires ability wisdome diligence and faithfulness Ability to inquire into the originalls wisdome to compare Scriptures consider circumstances and to discerne the verity spirituality and propriety of Texts and Phrases diligence to dig and search after truth which lieth deep and hid faithfulness to give out Truths being found with their own lustre not humane tincture Whosoever doth thus shall purchase favour in Heaven if not esteem on earth Expository work is ancient and honourable Ancient as Nehemiahs time Chap. 8.8 the Levites gave the sense of the Law they expounded it In those dayes the Jewes had their Perushim Interpreters which was above five hundred yeers before Christ what wayes they interpreted Scripture Helvicus you may reade in Shindl. Pentagl page 1491. and in Weems his Christian Synagogue 2 book chap. 1. pag. 221. It 's also Honourable for the Lord Christ was an Expositor Mark 4.34 hee expounded all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 24.27 hee interpreted and vers 32. hee opened the Scriptures Paul also was an Expositor Act. 28.23 he expounded This work being so ancient and honourable let it finde the more acceptance with you Some would have Expositors only give the literall sense without observation or application of any thing if all people could prophesie were skilfull in Scriptures as Ezra mighty as Apollo I could like it But because many truths lie so deep and so closely couch'd as all cannot easily discern or extract them it is necessary to give the sense and draw forth points observable yet with a brievous perspicuity and perspicuous brevity The literall sense may be strong meat for some when observations may be milk for others That course shall I take and so I come to the Title The Antiquity Scope and Occasion of Writing Nature Benefit and Parts of this Prophecie handled in the Title The Book of the Prophet Ezekiel FEw of the other sacred Books have this Title in the originall prefixed The word Sephar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a book signifieth any writing
the 26th to the end Some others put them all together and make them one Vision these being all parts of it Before I come to open this Vision or any parts thereof it will be needfull to shew you the scope of this Vision which will helpe us in the understanding of the same The scope of this Vision is to set forth the glory of God and this appeareth from the last verse of the Chapter where it is said This was the appearance of the likenesse of the glory of the Lord. The Spirit interprets all to be a manifestation of the glory of God This glory of God is evidenced two wayes 1. By his powerfull providence in the administration and ruling of all the creatures in the world For all creatures are under the command of God and he doth dispose of them for what services he pleaseth and not onely in the world but specially in the Church is his active providence preserving destroying as seemeth best in his owne eyes so that nothing is done there rashly or without his will nothing otherwise sooner or later then he hath decreed all creatures actions events come under his will rule and power 2. By a representation of Jesus Christ the Judge and Governour of this world who is the brightnesse of the glory of God and the expresse image of his Person and this from the 22. verse to the end of the Chapter as the other is from the 4. verse to the 22. This glory of God is presented to Ezekiel in this Vision for these ends 1. To breed in him an high reverence of divine Majestie The sight of great and glorious things doe awaken our dull heavie sensuall spirits naturally we are indifferent to the things of God and unlesse something transcendent and glorious be presented to us like Gallio we care little for other things therefore in Exod. 19.16 when the people saw the lightning and heard the thunder when God came downe upon the Mount in that glorious manner this awakened them and bred an awfull reverence in them of divine Majestie All the people that were in the Campe trembled 2. To prepare and fit him for entertainment of what God should speake unto him We are not alwayes in a frame to heare God speake there are great distempers in our spirits you have all experience enough of the truth of this therefore it is said Psal 46.10 Be still and know that I am God Be still let not your spirit be in a rage taken up with the world the cares feares pleasures and businesses of it be not parling with a lust but be still and know that I am God 3. It is to incourage him to his work and to frame his spirit to a ready execution thereof Ezekiel was to enter upon a heavie taske he was to deale with the stubborne Jewes a rebellious people He knew that Jeremiah had preached 35. yeares and other Prophets in times better then he was in and little or no good had been done upon this hard-hearted people Therefore lest Ezekiel should be discouraged that his heart might not faint but be quickned to the worke the Lord doth shew him his glory in these Hieroglyphicks his glory in these creatures his glory in his Sonne that so seeing the glory of God he might be warm'd oyl'd and incourag'd to run about this worke For the sight of glory is potent with a gracious heart to make it active for God We cannot says Peter and John in Act. 4.20 but speake the things which we have seene and heard Joh. 1.14 Mat. 17.1 2. Now they had seene his glory as the glory of the onely begotten Sonne of God They had been in the mount seene Christ transfigured and his face shine as the Sunne And having seene his glory and heard his voice this incouraged them notwithstanding all difficulties to be active for him This was Gods way to appeare to his servants to incourage them to the worke he would set them about Exod. 3. God appeared to Moses in a burning bush To Joshua in a vision like a man with a sword in his hand Josh 5.13 2 King 6.17 Act. 10. To Elisha by horses and chariots of fire Peter being confirmed by a vision of a sheet let downe from heaven goes and preacheth to the Gentiles And Ezekiel here hath vision upon vision that so being strongly confirmed he might not feare the faces of Jewes or Babylonians but proceed with life and spirit about the worke he was sent Note The sight of Gods glory is very efficacious upon the spirits of men If God let out his glory it will worke strangely upon good and bad When they came to apprehend Christ saith he to them Joh. 18.6 I am he It is conceived that Christ let out some glimpse of his glory this did so astonish them that presently they recoyled and fell to the ground Isaiah when he saw the glory of the Lord Isa 6.5 6. he cryeth out Woe is me I am undone I am a man of uncleane lips and I dwell among a people of uncleane lips And then God manifesting his glory so farre for his good that his lips were touched by an Angel Now Lord saith he here am I send me I am ready to goe though it be on a message of death though it be to root up Nations and Kingdomes So it was with Job I have heard of thee saith he by the hearing of the eare Job 42.5 6. but now mine eye seeth thee that is thy glory Wherefore I abhorre my selfe in dust and ashes I will speake no more against God I will doe whatsoever thou shalt command or expect at my hands So Isa 40.5 6. The glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it together And what then All flesh is as grasse and all the goodlinesse thereof is as the flower of the field There is no greater or more efficacious way to take off your hearts from the creature Videnti Deum omnis creatura est angusta then to behold the glory of God There was no man that ever saw the glory of God but he looked upon the creature as nothing afterward I looked and behold a whirlewind came out of the North c. In this Verse we have the first part of the vision and it is of a Tempest A whirlewind is a sudden wind which takes up what is obvious and carrieth it in a circular motion wheeling it about and hurling it here and there Theodoret calls it the blast of a storm the Septuagint a wind which takes away trees houses lesser things A Lapid and disperseth them Some have been eye-witnesses of whirlewinds in Italy which have taken away stabula cum equis stable with horses carried them up into the aire and dashed them against the mountains so mighty are these whirlewinds in some countreys Out of the North. The Northern winds are very piercing and if we respect the Prophet in this whirlewind it was to
give us in Satan here and make him the god of the world Exemplo imperio suggestione and that by example command and suggestion and Christ doth thrice call Satan the prince of the world Joh. 12.31.14.30.16.11 and Eph. 2.2 according to the Prince of the power of the aire the spirit that now worketh Vnaquaeque res v sibil●s habet Angelicam potestatem sibi praepositam Aug in l. 83. qu. 79. q. In hoc mundo visibil nih●l n si per creaturam nv●sibilem d sponi potest Thom. 1. part qu. 110. The devill hath great power in the aire to raise winds to cause storms thunder lightning which is the power of the aire and the same power hath he in the spirits of the children of disobedience and by that spirit whereof he is Lord he can move them any way as the winds and clouds and carry them against Christ and his truths Now hence I infer that if Satan and ill Angels be as gods princes in this world have power in the aire and hearts of wicked men then must it needs follow that good Angels are as Gods and princes and have as much power in the world and hearts of good men as they otherwise devils should gain by their fall more then ever they had by their standing and it 's not credible that wicked damned spirits should have more honourable titles and larger power then the holy and glorious Angels What be those services the good Angels are imployed in Answ 1. To inform us of Gods will and God of our wayes They acquaint us with Gods mind Gen. 18.19 Angels told Abraham and Lot what God would do to Sodome an Angell tells Elijah 2 King 1.3 what to say to the Messengers of the King of Samariu● an Angel tels the Apostles Act. 1.11 that Christ shall return in that manner they had seen him go up to heaven Christ tels John Rev. 22.16 that he had sent his Angels to testifie those things in the Churches the Angel tels Daniel that he came forth to give him skill and understanding Chap. 9.22 Mat. 1.20.2.13 An Angel informs Joseph of the minde of God touching Mary and Christ So to inform God what is done here among men the Angels went up the ladder as well as came down Zach. 1.11 The Angel sent out by the Lord certified the Angel Christ that stood among the Myrtle trees Per M●nistros more potentisst●m regis omnia faci● Bonav that they had travelled up and down the world and behold say they all the earth sitteth still and is at rest This God doth for honour and not necessity he knoweth all things but he will have them witnesses of his will 2. In opposing the great enemies of Christ and his Church whereupon they intermedle with Kings and Kingdomes and the great affaires thereof Dan. 10.20 Knowest thou wherefore I come unto thee now will I return to fight with the King of Persia and when I am gone forth lo the Prince of Grecia shall come This Angel Gabriel oppos'd the cruell Edicts of Cambyses King of Persia who laboured to keep the Jewes in captivity longer and to oppresse them sorer then others had done but Gabriel kept them from execution and brought his kingdome to ruine by degrees and therefore he saith the Prince of Grecia shall come I will leave Persia and go into Greece and stir up Alexander to come into Persia and spoile the King of his kingdome when Princes are stirred up by flatterers and prophane wretches to oppresse the godly to hinder the work of the Temple then Angels do fight against them Elesbaan King of the Ethiopians being in armes against Dunaam a Tyrant his army was much oppressed with famine and the power of the Tyrant whereupon he dyed to God for help and presently heard Gabriel Gabriel Gabriel thrice he heard that voyce from heaven intimating that Gabriel would help him whereupon he joyned battell with the Tyrant overcame kill'd most and took the Tyrant King of the Homerites Baron anno 523. Ammonius de gestis Francorum l. 3. c. 87.88 Vbi non est contrarietas voluntatis non est pugna and bound him in chaines At a great battell between Clotharius and Theodoricus was seen an Angel with a drawn sword and many were slain on both sides Some understand these Princes to be Spirits if good there is no discord between them good Angels are without sin and so no opposition in their wills to Gods or one another if of evill Angels it 's that wee aim at the good Angels oppose and contend against the evill with all their strength Rev. 12.7 Michael and his Angels fought against the Dragon and his There was a great battell in heaven the Devill and his angels were cast out which is for the great comfort of Sion certainly devils and devillish men would over-run all if there were not Angels imployed in the four quarters of the world to keep the Church and people of God when Balaam and Balak would have curst Gods people an Angel cometh forth and fights against them Numb 22.22 This is one great office of the Angels to fight against Princes Potentates and men of the earth that seek to oppresse the people of God and labour to hinder Temple work and the welfare of Sion 3. To execute the judgements of God upon wicked men the death of their first-born in Egypt which was the chiefest of the plagues and touched them neerest was done by a destroying Angell who therefore is called Hammaschchit Exod. 12.23 the destroyer shall not come into their houses but into the Egyptians he did come the singular number is put for the plurall a thing usuall in Scripture and so the sense is that Angels were the destroyers of Egyptians and the Psalmist in the 78. Psalm 49. saith God did this work by sending evill Angels among them not that these Angels were wicked spirits as some have thought but Angels or messengers of evill of death unto them The Egyptian Sorcerers used the help of wicked Angels to oppose Moses and harden the Egyptians and God used the help of good Angels to punish evill doers they have been and are imployed in such service the Angels that came to Lots house smote the Sodomites with blindnesse great and small which were at Lots door Gen. 19.11 They fetched fire from heaven and destroyed the place ver 13. When seventy thousand died of the plague 2 Sam. 24.17 in Davids dayes it is made the work of an Angel ver 17. he saw the Angel that smote the people it was an Angel that slew 185000. Assyrians Isa 37.36 Psal 35.5 6. It 's their work to chase and persecute wicked men often Angels of God do suddenly destroy them Act. 12.23 And immediately the Angel of the Lord smote him Lorinus thinks it was the Devill did it but it was some good Angel that being zealous for God did vindicate his glory which was given to a mortall
may heare and not heare c. What 's the reason Christ knocks at the dore so oft and is not let in the heart is dead asleep or abroad 4. Ad transitum facici suae aut tractum faciei suae objectum So Piscat That Angels have the scope and marke in their eye which they aime at They went every one streight forward the Hebrew is to the way or passage of his face that path was before his face that is they went thither where their eyes or faces were fixed as they looke not back nor aside so they alwayes looke upon the marke each goeth forward to that is before him this keeps them on to the work and in the work they have the marke in their eye Pro. 4.25 Let thine eyes look right on and let thine eye-lids looke streight before thee looke to the charge appointed to that is right to that is set before thee of God and this will quicken thy industry Phil. 3.13 14. Forgetting those things which are behinde and reaching forth unto those things which are before I presse towards the marke Paul had not his eye upon what was done bygone or on what was upon either side of him but upon that was before him the marke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heaven eternall life was the marke in his eye and he pressed after them he was as intent upon them and as pursuant of them as he was in the work of persecuting the Saints he reached after them as the one thing necessary Assequitur nulla qui sequitur multa Is Angelicus qui nec multus nec varius est we set not the mark before us in stead of heaven Christ eternall life we have the world our pleasures and a multitude of things in our eyes and so we are divided and doe nothing 5. That Angels minde and pursue every one his own work not others They went forward to the worke object mark set before their faces he that had his work designed him in the East minded not his work lay in the West each acted his own part and fell not upon any thing concern'd another although their imployments lay the same way what was before their faces that they did and nothing else Devills compasse the earth and medle with all men and with all matters it 's not so with the good Angels they kept their station and doe keep order they intermedle not with ought concerns them not The Apostle would have Christians to be Angelicall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Thes 4.11 Study to doe your own businesse those things concerne our generall and particular calling if men will with their wit and curiositie run out of their bounds they are extravagant and busi-bodies Some think because they are Neighbours they may medle in all contentions because Subjects they may interpose in all State-affaires because Christians deale with others sinnes but this is to break the hedge to break out of our own callings into others and such though they seeme great doers doe nothing 2 Thes 3.11 There are some among you that walke disorderly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working not at all they are busie-bodies What busie and doe nothing Yes because they doe things impertinent unto them unfruitfull unprofitable out of place When Peter medl'd too far in Johns matters What shall this man doe Christ takes him up sharply What is that to thee Joh. 21.22 And some thinke this made Peter so sharpe against that sinne afterwards and to looke upon it as bad as theft and murther 1 Pet. 4.15 Let none of you suffer as a murtherer or as a thiefe or as an evill doer or as a busie-body in other mens matters They ran and returned Here is the qualitie of their motion it was swift they had wings to fly and feete to run much hath been spoken of the Angels swiftnesse I shall here therefore touch upon their returne when their work is done they make no stay they linger not at all but returne with all speed when God sends them out or calls them in their motion is very speedy it 's set out here by a flash of lightning that is the soonest into the world and out againe of any sensible creature in a moment it is in your houses and out againe in a moment it shines from East to West and is gone it 's very glorious and marvellous active Angels are Cherubims of glory Heb. 9.5 and the most active of all Gods works and when their work is finished they retire immediately as lightening when it 's come to its period doth reciprocate and fall back into its selfe without delay so doe the Angels returne to him sent them out to know his farther pleasure and to doe him more service Obs 1. That Angels in their services are glorious and terrible They are like the lightning which shines dazles and doth dreadfull things Judg. 13.20 When Manoah and his wife saw the Angel goe up to heaven in a flame of fire they fell downe on their faces to the ground and thought they should dye ver 22. It was a received opinion among the Jews that if they saw God or an Angel they should dye upon it Judg 6.22 23. Gideon a mightie man of valour cryes out Alas O Lord God because I have seen an Angel of the Lord face to face and the Lord said Feare not thou shalt notidye If they had a vision being awake they apprehended death but they never had experience of any that dyed upon any such occasion this rose rather from the apprehension of glory majesty in God and Angels and consciousness of their own weaknes guilt as not able to abide the presence of those glorious creatures that came immediatly from the presence of the glorious God and we finde that some have been much affrighted and almost struck dead at the presence of the holy Angels Mat. 28.2 3 4. An Angel comes from heaven whose countenance was like lightning and his rayment as the Sunne and for feare of him the Keepers of the Sepulchre did shake and became like dead men there was no spirit left in them the glory of the Angel did exanimate them they are glorious and terrible in their ministrations and so should the Ministers of the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Angels of the Church be Nazianz. saith of Basil his speech was thunder and his life lightning Such were James and John Boanerges sonnes of thunder Mark 3.17 They were terrible to sinners in their preaching like thunder and lightning 2. That account is to be rendered to God of all our services whom God sets awork he will reckon with Angels returne and become responsable to God their Lord and Master those mightie and glorious creatures when their work is finished doe willingly and chearfully returne and give in their answer God looks for it and they delight to doe it and account we must all give of our work in the world Rom. 14.12 Every one of us
shall give account of himselfe unto God God will say to us Come give account of your Stewardships Luk. 16.2 Every one hath a talent is a Steward hath some trust committed to him and he must not thinke to run and never returne let men act how they will returne they shall be they never so great be they Princes Magistrates Commanders c. Eccles 12. God shall bring every worke unto Judgement with every secret thing whether it be good or evill both the work and the workman must be questioned Mat. 12.36 Of every idle word that men shall speake they shall give an account of in the day of Judgement 3. That Angels are lively and unweariable in their negotiations they run and returne as a flash of lightning when they had done great service in the world they were as lively at the end of it as at the beginning they return back with as much life and speed as they went forth and were ready for new imployments they return'd as to give account of what was done so to receive new commands and worke This is a good patterne for us all that in the workes of God those imployments he calls us to we grow not weary of one sinne fits for another and men are unweariable in that trade So one dutie should fit for another and wee should never be tyred in our spirits Ad laetitiam et animi pacem magnum pondus habent rectae actiones though we be in our bodies Gal. 6.9 Let us not be weary in well-doing the wicked are weary of and in well-doing What profit is it say they that wee keepe his Commandements and that we walke humbly before the Lord of Hosts Mal. 3.14 When will the new Moone be gone that we may sell corne and the Sabbath that we may set forth Wheat Amos 8.5 Psal 36.3 He hath left off to be wise and to doe good Mal. 1.13 They said What a wearinesse is it and snuffed at it and brought that was torne lame sicke but the godly are never weary of Gods work Desidia est mors superstes Vacua est vita though sometimes they are weary in it through the strength of the flesh weaknesse of grace and other discouragements but they having tasted how gracious the Lord is are not will not cannot be weary of his service his Commandements are not grievous to them 4. That they seek not themselves but the honour and glory of their Master they stay not when their work is done upon pleasure curiositie to see or know any thing but immediately returne and are taken up wholly with the glorifying of God they are attent watching his Commands for they look up they are intent upon his work they turne not to either side look not backe but goe streight forward they contend for his glory they runne returne and give account and would have new Commissions be at work againe and have God to be glorified to their utmost abilities Isa 6.3 Holy holy is the Lord of Host the whole earth is full of his glory they see God so glorious excellent and holy in himselfe so glorious in all his works that they minde not themselves but God and make it their onely and great designe to glorifie God Rev. 4.8 9. And this is our duty and comfort if done 1 Cor. 10.31 Whether you eate or drinke c. The glory of the infinite holy wise and great God should be precious to us we should attend his commands intend his worke contend against all lets within or without and promote his worke and glory to our utmost That worke is not referr'd to Gods glory but our gaine credit or profit is a dead work Omnibus operibus nostris coelestis intentio adjungi debet Aquinas The School-men call for a right intention in every work as that which animates and inlivens the same and though we cannot actually intend Gods glory alwayes in every thing yet there should be a vertuall intention of it A bowle runs an arrow flies by vertue of that arme first sent them forth and all our actions should proceed in the strength of a morning or primary intention of Gods glory One thing yet remaines touching the motion of Angels namely the efficient cause of their motion and it 's the Spirit set down in these words VER 12. Whither the Spirit was to goe they went SOme doubt there is what is meant by the Spirit here not the counsell or will of the Angels and so the sense to be that they went which way they had a minde whither their own wills and spirit carried them and my reason is because they are brought in here as servants and officers and therefore not to be left to their own wills but to be under command and at the will of another Souldiers goe not where they please but where their Generall pleaseth By Spirit we are to understand neither the will of Angels nor winds nor the soule of man for Spirit in Scripture doth signifie all these but the essentiall and eternall Spirit of God and this is evident by the 20th verse Whithersoever the Spirit was to goe they went it 's not said whithersoever their Spirit was to goe they went but whithersoever the Spirit that is the Holy Ghost coessentiall and coequall with the Father and the Sonne whither that Spirit of wisdome and power led them thither they went when that Spirit bad them returne they returned as that Spirit moved them so they moved Object The Spirit of God neither goes nor moves from place to place being infinite how then can this be meant of the Spirit Ans This is spoken humanitùs after the manner of men in regard of the vision Ezekiel had Non mutatione loci aut essentiae sed declaratione potentiae gratiae it seemed so to him but the Spirit being infinite neither goes nor moves by reall change of place or essence but by declaration of its power and grace When the Spirit or God doth that is unusuall then they are said to come and be present Againe the Spirit went in the Angels not simply in it selfe there was in the Angels imperium impetus Spiritus the imposition and impression of the Spirit which carried them on Observ That Angels although exceeding wise full of knowledge active and able to doe great service yet are not at their own dispose they move not at their own pleasure they went not where they listed Let the abilities of the creature be never so rare excellent they must be under the power of a Superior they must be ordered and directed by a higher cause Angels themselves are not Lords of themselves they are not sui juris much lesse men that are lower then Angels 1 Cor. 6.19 Men are bought and they must be his servants at his dispose that hath bought them and that is God And therefore they must not abuse their bodies and soules to fornication any sinne but glorifie God with both 2. That it
precedent parts of this Vision there is yet more and higher glory to be spoken of and that is the glory of God in the person of Christ This Vision of the firmamen is preparatory to the Vision of Christ upon the Throne it 's described 1. From the place of it it was upon the heads of the living creatures 2. From the colour it was like Crystal and terrible Crystal 3. From the n●yse came thence vers 25. In the 23. and 24. Verses wee have a renewed and intermixt description of the living creatures from their wings the situation the number the office and noyse of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 d stendere expandere To begin with the Firmament the Hebrew word is Rachiah from a word signifies to draw out and make thin as metals are and wooll to stretch out as Curtains and Tents are Isa 40.22 whence heaven is called expansum because it is stretched out over the whole earth the Greeks call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of the firmnesse and permanency hereupon wee call it the firmament not from the hardnesse or solidity as if it were like Iron or Stone but from the firmnesse of it that it hath endured many thousand yeers and is not melted by its motion nor at all changed it 's taken sometimes for the ayre sometimes for the clouds and sometimes for heaven it self and so wee may take it here even the starry firmament This firmament was over the heads of the living creatures the wheels Angels were under it and it was between the Lord Christ and these creatures and did the office of that pair of wings which did cover the faces of the Seraphims in Isa 6.2 great was the glory of Christ and through this vail of the firmament presented to them The colour and likenesse of it was as the terrible crystal We must a little explain these words it was the likeness of the firmament not the firmament it self The Hebr. words run thus the ice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the terrible or the terrible ice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is ice water hardened by cold whence Crystal hath its birth for though ice be not Crystal yet Crystal is from ice when ice is hardened into the nature of a stone it becomes Crystal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nat. hist l. 37. c. 2. more degrees of coldnesse hardnesse and cleernesse give ice the denomination of Crystal and the name Crystal imports so much that is water by cold contracted into ice and Pliny saith the birth of it is from ice vehemently frozen and so you see the originall of Crystal The Epithet here added terrible hath some difficulty in it that heaven a visionall firmament should be terrible seems strange terriblenesse ariseth from newnesse greatnesse or the glory of a thing Things new and strange do cause fear as when the earth opened and swallowed up Corah Dathan and Abiram there was great feare it was a terrible thing and this is called a new thing Numb 16.30 If the Lord make a new thing so when new sights are seen in the heavens they cause astonishment to the beholders as comets the standing of the Sun and the like 2. Things great are dreadfull great waters great mountains great armies Deut. 1.19 he calls the Wildernesse a great and terrible wildernesse Joel 2.11 the day of the Lord is great and terrible and so the Lord great and terrible Nehem. 4.14 from the greatnesse of it therefore might this Crystal be terrible 3. The glory of it that might make it terrible for glorious things are so lightning is glorious and dreadfull when Gods glory appeared in the mount it was terrible unto Moses and made him to quake Heb. 12.21 At Pauls conversion there was a glorious light which stroke feare into all were with him Act. 9. And this Crystalline firmament was full of glory Crystal is a cleer thing receives the light so as to affect the eyes much in like manner this firmament had a great cleernesse and transparency being the foot-stool of Christ sitting upon the Throne Suppedaneum Christi sedentis in throno 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Septuag sometimes translate the Hebrew word for terrible glorious Deut. 10.21 Who hath done for thee these great and terrible things great and glorious things say they so Isa 64. ver 3. Thou diddest terrible things they render it glorious things Tam vehementer nitebat ut form dinem aspicienti afferret Pol. Divinitatem quandam praese fer●bat Mald. for they are terrible and here from the gloriousnesse of this Crystal or Crystalline visionall firmament it may be called terrible and this I conceive to be the true cause of its terriblenesse it was so glorious that none could behold it without being dazled astonished and put into a trembling Observ 1. That all creatures are under Christ even Angels themselves they and the wheels are under the firmament where Christ is he walks above his feet are where creatures heads are all are subject to the power of Christ and hee sits above and hee rules them and over-rules their actions Angels and all wheels stoop to him the Prophet saw the wheel on the earth the Angels under the firmament but Christ was above 1 Cor. 15.27 All things are put under him all Angels all men all devils God hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name Phil. 2.9 2. That heavenly things are pure and glorious and hold forth the glory of God Rev. 22.1 they have the cleernesse splendor and lively colour of the Crystal The higher wee ascend the more purity beauty and glory there is more in the ayre then in the earth and waters more in the Sun more in the stars and firmament then in the inferiour things Gods glory is every where the earth is full of it If wee look downwards we may see it but if we look upwards we shall see more excellency and glory How much glory is in the Sun who can tell how many wonderfull things it hath in it and so the firmament Psal 19.1 The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy work The out-spread firmament that is so vast so transparent so beset with stars that darts down such sweet influences it holds forth Gods glory exceedingly the glory of his wisdome power goodnesse There is much of Gods glory seen in it Job 37.18 The sky or firmament is compared to a looking-glasse not because you may see severall species of things as we see severall faces in the water and birds in the ayre but chiefly because in it wee see so much of the glory of God even most of his attributes we should be oft looking in this glasse and observe the glory of God 3. That the things above are dreadfully glorious so glorious that our weak eyes cannot behold Incu●iunt sacrum quendam honorem the glory of the firmament was as the
terrible Crystal such as caused dread in a Prophet what eye can look upon the Sun in its glory and strength could we see an Angel in his glory Jud. 6. Jud. 13. Sensibile excellens destruit sensorium it would terribly affright us when Angels vayl'd up their glory in humane shapes it made great Worthies of God to quake as Gideon Manoah and others glorious objects work strongly upon our spirits and quickly scatter them And if the glory of creatures be such what is the glory of God himself 1 Tim. 6.16 God dwels in the light which no man can approach unto it 's such exceeding glorious light that no created eye can endure that light or glory is Gods habitation and so glorious a one it is that wee cannot look upon it Act. 22.11 Paul could not behold that glorious light shined about him The earth heavens and world which are Gods out-house we may behold but his glory which is himself his inmost roome we may not wee cannot eye this light is darknesse unto us there is so much brightnesse in it that it will put out our eyes and whether this glory be accessible by the Saints or Angels may 〈◊〉 disputable because God is invisible and his glory inaccessible and besides the Angels they had wings to cover their faces Isa 6. And here they are presented to Ezekiel under the firmament with that upon their heads which shewes that they and all creatures are distanced from God and capable of seeing his glory only in that way he thinks good to propound it That in Mat. 18.10 seems to speak the contrary where it 's frid that in heaven their Angels do alwayes behold the face of my father it 's true they are in the speciall presence of God have sweet and satisfactory communion with God stand ready to do his will but God hath no face in heaven and whether they see his essentiall glory I leave to farther inquiry 4. That all things here below are expressed to the eye and view of Christ the firmament is so cleere that Christ sees through it It 's the window of heaven and through it hee looks into the world it 's a molten looking-glasse Job 37.18 and as wee may see Gods attributes and glory in it so Christ sees our shapes thoughts distempers and motions he saw Saul when he got the Letters to Damascus to persecute the Saints the Lord Christ saw him and knew the bloodinesse of his mind and said unto him Saul Saul Acts 9. many are Atheisticall and say in their hearts as hee in Job 22.13 How doth God know can he judge through the dark clouds Esa 29.15 they do evill in the dark and say who seeth us and who knoweth us there is one in the heavens that seeth through the clouds and darknesse it self they are as the Sun and Firmament to him darknesse is no darknesse the firmament is as light it self all things done in Armies Councels Markets Shops Families Closets Beds Hearts are naked and open to the eyes of him with whom wee have to do Heb. 4.13 I come now to the 23. Verse where the glory of Christ is set out from his Ministers or Officers and they are the living creatures VER 23. And under the firmament were their wings streight the one toward the other every one had two which covered on this side and every one had two which covered on that side their bodies I Have spoken before of the wings yet somewhat I shall adde four wings they had and more wee may not give them though it may seem in this Verse they had more for it 's said their wings were streight that is stretcht out and then that they had two on this side and two on that side but the meaning is when they did flie those wings that did cover upward were stretcht out and the other did still cover their bodies or feet The scope of the verse is to shew that the Ministery of the Angels doth refer to and set out the glory of Christ and that may be seen in the observations to be given Obser 1. That where Christ is there the Angels are neer unto him he was above the firmament and they just under it the firmament was upon their heads there was only a glorious transparent firmament betweene Christ and them distanced from Christ they are but not far 2. The Angels wise strong serviceable swift and glorious creatures attend Christs Throne and are subject unto him they were under the firmament about his Throne Is it not for the honour and great glory of a King to have Nobles Potentates and Princes under him attending in his Court It was much for Ahashuerus his glory and honour when he had the Nobles and Princes of the Provinces before him and under him Est 1.3 And so it 's much for the honour of Christ that hee hath Angels which are greater then the Kings of the earth attending him 3. They are ready to exercise the will and pleasure of Christ this farther advances the honour of Christ their wings were stretched out and they willing to move in any service if their Lord gave out the word when the Centurions servants were so willing to go and come at his bidding it made much for his honour Matth. 8.9 ready cheerly active servants are an ease and honour to their Masters unreadinesse and unwillingnesse in inferiours do disparage authority and stain the glory of it Angels that serve at Christs Throne are never unready or unwilling for any service 4. They are unanimous in their Ministrations they fall not out by the way their wings are streight the one towards the other they cary on the work put into their hands with love sweet agreement peace and constant At the birth of Christ they sung all one song and sung without division Glory to God on high on earth peace good will towards men as they sung so they act there is no disagreement amongst them Can two walke together except they be agreed Angels do flie together and act together they are so agreed that no devill no creature can divide them they have all but one minde and serve the Lord Christ with one consent and what honour is this to Christ that hath so great so many servants and all minding the same thing 5. They reverence the greatnesse and Majesty of Christ though they be high and glorious yet they see so vast a distance between Christ and themselves that they cover their faces Isa 6. and their bodies here they come not into his presence rudely but with great respect and reverence As God is to be had in reverence of all that are about him Psal 89.7 so Christ is reverenced by all the Angels that are about him Women are to be vail'd in the assemblies because of the Angels 1 Cor. 11.10 to shew their reverence and subjection to them being present and Angels are covered to shew their reverence and subjection unto Christ it 's an honour to
according to his humane nature hee should sit upon the Throne of God and judge the sonnes of men hee was administrator Patris the great Agent of his Father Whether Christ in this Vision sate or stood is doubted because it 's said above upon it neither standing nor sitting being expressed but my inclinations are to conceive that the Lord Christ sate and stood not 1. Because Thrones are not for standing but sitting and we never find in Scripture that any stood in Thrones but sate they have sitting in Thrones is the usuall phrase of Scripture 1 King 2.12 Solomon sate upon the Throne of David his father and in the 22th Chap. 10. The King of Israel and the King of Judah as they sate each upon his Throne and Isa 6.1 Isaiah s●● the Lord sitting upon a Throne Rev. 4.10 The twenty four Elders fell down before him that sate on the Throne 2. Kings and Judges here on earth do not use to stand but sit which doth more fully set out their State and Majesty and if Kings on earth do so how much more this King in heaven Besides standing is a servants posture Deut. 17.12 and Ch. 10. v. 8. but sitting is not Luke 17.7 8. that is the Masters the Lords posture Obser 1. The wisdome of Gods Spirit in laying down things to prevent the corruptions and mistakes of man wee are apt to think grosly of the divine nature that God is visible corporeall contained in place sitting as man but see how the Spirit of God carries it here and takes off from all such conceits here is mention of likenesse appearance of things not that they were materially so it 's the likenesse of a Throne the appearance of a Saphire and upon the likenesse of the Throne was the appearance of a man no true body The Anthropomorphites thought God to be like unto us to have his Throne in heaven and sit in it and so far did these men proceed in this opinion of Gods corporeity and circumscription that they assembled into troops and threatned to stone all opposed it So tenacious of and violent for errors are men even the deluded sons of men 2. That man is not capable of immediate accesse to and converse with God Here be many steps and degrees before the Prophet comes to see Christ and then it 's not in his Divine nature but in the appearance of a man Here be the living creatures in the way by the firmament over their heads and then a Throne and that of Saphirine colour and afterward a sight of Christ in the form of a man and then converse If the Lord should not condescend to our weaknesse and mantle up his Majesty there could be no communion between him and us 3. That the Lord Christ who appeared like man hath Kingly Majesty Here is a Throne and a Throne set before him Thrones present royall Majesty unto us and this Throne presenteth Christs when on earth he was in the forme of a servant but in heaven he appeared to the Prophet in the form of a King Neither hath he a Throne only but what ever appertains to Kings Vnction he had and such as other Kings had not hee was anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power Act. 10.38 Promulgation Zach. 9.9 O daughter of Jerusalem behold thy King cometh unto thee A Crowne Hebr. 2.9 Wee see Jesus crowned with glory and honour the Jews crowned him with thornes the Lord with glory A Scepter hee hath also and better then of Gold Hebr. 1.8 A Scepter of righteousnesse is the Scepter of thy Kingdom A royall guard of Angels they are under the firmament stand ready at his foot-stool he hath his Agents and Ambassadors in the kingdome of the world to declare his pleasure to transact his appointments Ephes 4.11 Apostles Prophets Euangelists Pastors Teachers these negotiate the great affaires of this King they dispense the mysteries of his Kingdome he is not a titular King but hath large Dominions Dan. 7.14 There was given him dominion and glory and a Kingdome that all people nations languages should serve him and Psal 2.8 The heathens are his inheritance and the ends of the earth his possession He hath a Legislative power he makes and abrogates Lawes at his pleasure Gen. 49.10 He came of the Princely Tribe that made the Lawes Judah bare the Scepter and gave the Lawes and therefore by David is called The Law-giver Psal 60.7 and Christ descending thence and being typified by the King of Judah he is the true Law-giver Jam. 4.12 there is one Lawgiver and therefore Matth. 28. last Teach them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you hee hath a pardoning and punishing power he pardoned Mary Magdalene and punished him had not on his wedding garment 4. That Christ is not only King but the chiefest of Kings his Throne is not on earth but in heaven it 's above the firmament that was over Angels heads and Christs Throne is above them both so that all power in heaven and earth are under Christ his Throne is exalted above them all Heb. 1.6 Let all the Angels of God worship him the greatest Archangel must do it those Thrones for so they are termed Col. 1.16 must stoop to this Throne Ephes 1.20.21 God hath set Christ in heavenly places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among the heavenly thrones yea in supercelestiall places for it followes hee hath set him far above all Principalitie and Power and Might and Dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come and hath put all things under his feet even Angels are under the firmament where his feet stand and all the Princes of the earth are under him Rev. 1.5 Hee is the Prince of the Kings of the earth The inscription of his vesture and thigh is King of Kings and Lord of Lords this title is not Xerxes Nebuchadnezzars nor Alexanders but Christs alone the kings of the world when they sit upon their thrones they have their expansum over their heads some cloth of state made of the richest stuffe that the brains of men can reach unto bedeckt with Diamonds and Pearles that are most costly but this over their throne intimates their subjection to some higher power but it 's not so with Christ hee is above the Expansum nothing is over his head Angels Kings Devils are under his feet and unto him must every knee bow 5. That the Lord Christ who hath such a glorious Throne is exceeding glorious himself his Throne is like Saphires of a Saphirine colour which is very beautifull it 's like the glory of the heavens if an earthly throne be a Throne of glory as Hanna styles it 1 Sam. 2.8 what is this throne a resemblance of the Throne of his glory which hee speaks of in Matth. 19.28 and Chap. 25. vers 31. The cloathing of the Kings daughter Psalm 45.13 was wrought Gold a glorious outside but there was more glory
within shee was all glorious within so if Christs Throne the outside of it be so glorious what is hee in the Throne all glorious all glory Joh. 1.14 Wee beheld his glory the glory as of the only begotten If Apostles saw glory in him being on earth in his low condition what did our Prophet see in him being above the firmament in his Throne and glorious condition The Scriptures set him out not only to be glorious but glory Psal 24.8 King of glory Jam. 2.1 Have not the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ the Lord of glory in respect of persons The word Lord in the second place is not in the originall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but thus it stands there have not the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ the glory so that Christ is glory and the glory the glory of heaven the glory of the world the glory of Sion the glory of the soul and not only is Christ glorious and glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but hee is Heb. 1.3 the brightnesse of glory that is spotlesse perfect intense exceeding glory hee is the brightnesse of the glory of the Father or the Fathers glory shines out most brightly and intensly in the Son the Fathers glory in the whole creation is but darknesse to his glory in Christ and therefore he is brightnesse of glory and every thing that comes from Christ hath some beames of glory in it his works are called glorious Luke 13.17 they rejoyced for all the glorious things done by him the liberty he purchased is glorious liberty Rom. 8.21 his Church is glorious Ephes 5.27 his Gospel is glorious 1 Tim. 1.11 6. That Christs Throne must not be of common stone but precious ones of Saphires the pavement of God was of stones or bricks of Saphire Exod. 24.10 and Christs throne must be of Saphires the Church is Christs Throne visible and conspicuous as the heavens Jerem. 3.17 Jerusalem is called the throne of the Lord and the Churches under the Gospel are the throne of Christ hee sits in the Congregations and bears rule in them Rev. 2.13 I know where thou dwellest where Satans seat or throne is there was a congregation of persecutors Idolaters and unclean parties for such sinners are mentioned in the 13. and 14. verses and this company was the seat and throne of Satan many congregations are thrones of iniquity and shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee Psal 94.20 But godly congregations are the Seat and Throne of Christ Now as the conscience which is the invisible seat of Christ must be pure 1 Tim. 3.9 holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience so must the visible Seat of Christ be pure the congregation where hee will sit and reigne therefore the promise is Isa 54.11 12. that the state of the Church under the Gospel shall be better then it was under the Law there all stones were laid in the building but here should be a difference made God wll lay stones with faire colours Saphires Agats Carbuncles and pleasant stones and that it 's meant of Gospel-times and Churches the words following in the 13. verse shew All thy children shall be taught of the Lord which Christ applies to these times Joh. 6.45 So then the Churches now are to be of Saphires such as have a heavenly vertue and purity in them not of Sand-stones Tode-stones or any High-way-stones they are fitter to make Satan a seat then Christ a Throne 1 Pet. 2.5 they are called lively stones not dead stones that have no true grace in them but lively ones they must be that make a house a throne for Christ Stones that it may be a solid building lively that it may be a usefull profitable building and Saphire that it may be a pure and glorious building 7. Judiciary power is put into the hand of Christ not only as God but as man there was the appearance of a man above upon the Throne there sate the Sonne of man Acts 23.3 and sitting upon the Throne imports power and power judiciall therefore when Christ tels his Disciples of sitting upon the twelve thrones hee tells them also of judging the twelve tribes of Israel Mat. 19.28 and that Christ had such power and that as Sonne of man appeares Joh. 5.27 The father hath given the Son authority to execute judgement because hee is the Son of man verse 22. hee hath committed all judgement to the Son both judgement of actions things and persons Acts 17.31 God will judge the world in righteousnesse by that man hee hath ordained the last judgement shall be by Christ even that great judgement So particular judgements here as now Christ sate in judgement upon Jerusalem and sentenced them to death and captivity And because judgement is opus potestatis an act of power therefore Christ himself tels us that all power in heaven and earth is given unto him Mat. 28.18 8. The Lord Christ actually ruleth the world and all things in it hee sits upon the Throne and exerciseth his power and authority 1 King 2.12 There sate Solomon upon the throne of David his Father that is hee ruled the kingdome and all the affaires of it so Christ sitting upon the Throne presents to us his active ruling the Prophet might see hee held the globe of the world in his hand that hee raised tempests out of the North sent abroad the four living creatures in the severall parts of the world that hee orders the wheels and causes them to stand or go at his pleasure the Lord Christ is not out of office or idle now in heaven though hee sits upon a Throne of glory at his Fathers right hand hee is not neglective of the world he upholds it by his power Heb. 1.3 hee sends out his Angels to minister unto his verse the last hee still gives gifts to men and provides for his Church Ephes 4. and makes the Word the favour of life or death to men hee restraines the wrath of enemies and hedges up their wayes hee makes use of them as rods to drive his stragling sheepe into the fold hee subdues hearts and spirits to himself and protects them being subdued hee discovers confounds the enemies plots and persons 9. The Lord Christ doth govern all with great tranquillity and with great facility hee sits upon the Throne and doth all that imployes quietnesse of mind A sedate temper there is no passion or perturbation in him hee is a Lion for his power a Lamb for his meeknesse hee rules by counsell and wisdome in much quietnesse Act. 17.31 he judgeth in righteousnesse and what hee doth is done without difficulty let him speak the word and presently it 's done if hee bid Nebuchadnezzar go and sack Jerusalem carry them away to Babylon hee goes hee accomplisheth his will fully 10. That Christ is ready ever to heare the causes and complaints of his Church he sits upon the Throne other Judges are of the Bench and Throne and parties agrieved
may come unseasonably to them but it 's not so here Christ sits upon the Throne and that constantly to assure us that he is alwayes willing and ready to heare the motions his shall make and to execute judgements upon their enemies which is matter of great comfort to poor afflicted soules that they may at any time finde this Judge sitting and open their grievances unto him and have audience other Judges are absent from their seats or not at leasure or stately and will not give way to poore oppressed ones to ease themselves and acquaint them with their suits none of these are to be feared here 11. Christ sitting on the Throne prompts unto us that Christ should accomplish the whole work of mans redemption which the Father had appointed him and so sit downe in glory upon the Throne He appeared as man in that nature hee did and suffered the will of God on earth and in that nature he sate down at the right hand of God had not Christ been to fulfill all righteousnesse he had not appeared as man sitting on the throne and had he not done it hee should never have returned to heaven and sate down in glory hee hath satisfied the Law is freed from the guilt of our sins and hath presently finished the work undertaken and therefore told his Father he had glorified him on earth he had finished the work he had given him to do and thereupon desired him to glorifie him and set him upon the Throne Joh. 17.4 5. which is done and this may be of singular comfort against all our imperfections corruptions temptations and death it self VERS 27. I saw as the colour of Amber as the appearance of fire round about within it c. HEre the man that sate upon the Throne is described unto us 1. In generall 2. More particularly 1. In generall I saw as the colour of Amber 2. Particularly upwards and downwards upwards as the appearance of fire round about within it from the appearance of his loynes upward so that this fire was more latent and then downwards the fire was more visible and had brightnesse about it Touching the word Hashmal or Chasmal I have spoken largely in the 4th verse Quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 festinanter consumens and it signifies a coale intensly hot and as it were presently consuming what ever it touches such coals are most fierie and lively and they that render the word color vividissimus a most lively colour or as the colour of a burning coal give the truest sense of the word Before it referred to the Angels here to Christ the word Chasmal read backward is Lammashach or Lammashiach which is interpreted the Messiah it 's the Cabalists observation and the summe in generall is this I saw as the colour of Amber I saw Christ that sate upon the Throne all of an intense fierie colour like the most hot burning coals and so the Lord Christ is set forth Rev. 1.14 15. His eyes were as a flame of fire his feet like unto fine brasse as if they burned in a furnace so here from head to feet Christ is presented in a fiery colour and it 's frequent in Scripture when acts of power and judgement are to be executed against kingdomes or churches to have Christ presented in a fierie way so Rev. 10.1 the mighty Angel Christ is brought in there with his face shining as the Sun and his feet at pillars of fire and presently there were great thunders and dreadfull things so Rev. 2.18 hee is brought in with eyes like fire and feet like brasse and then tels Thyatira hee hath a few things against her so Rev. 19.11 12 13. In righteousnesse he doth judge and make war and then his eyes were as a flame of fire and his vesture dipt in blood thus is he described when some great designes are afoot as sentencing a church warring against his enemies c. The particular description is next which falls into farther inquiry from his loynes upward was as the appearance of fire within it there is a difference between the fire in the upward parts of Christ and that in his lower the one is externall the other internall Within it within what within the colour of the Amber or according to the word as we have interpreted it within that fire of burning hot coals there was as the appearance of fire in the concave of it round about Ignis latens igniens intrinsecus Sanct. so that there was a fire in a fire a secret hidden fire burning inwardly this fire did not put forth its vertue so apparently as the other did but burnt inwardly and reflected upon it selfe What this fire was is our work to open unto you By fire within Gregory in his seventh Homily understands Christ before his incarnation he was ignis in Judaea tantum there only hee shined the Gentiles knew him not but after his incarnation hee shined from his loynes downward and was made known unto all but by it wee understand the divine nature of Christ which being full of perfection too bright for humane eyes was more inward and remote from sense and it 's likened unto fire in regard of the lustre and efficacy of it which none can indurc By the burning hot coales wee may understand the burning zeale of Christ to the glory of God in executing judgement upon the wicked and at this time hee sate in judgement upon Jerusalem From his loynes downward there was as the appearance of fire and it had brightnesse round about it this fire and brightnesse was more apparent visible and enlightning then the other and it represents to us the great glory and Majesty of the Lord Christ as it is exhibitive to and comprehensive by creatures it 's the glory of humane nature which was the lower part of Christ lesse glorious the strength of the divine natures glory shining through it and giving out it self in that way and degree as man is capable of the Sun in a cloud may be beheld by the weakest eye in it self not by the strongest the glory of both Christs natures are shadowed out unto us in this verse And it had brightnesse round about Splendor ei circum that fire produced a brightnesse and a brightnesse on every side it sets out the glory of Christ in execution of justice upon those are delinquents or the glory of his presence and actions hee dwels in light and all his actions are lightsome Observ 1. That the Lord Christ as man is very glorious hee was here in the appearance of man and the Prophet saw him having the colour of Chasmal that is like unto the most burning and hottest coale or coales not those in common fires but those that are in a furnace which glow and shine most Dan. 10.6 Rev. 1.16 in his transfiguration which was a Praeludium to his glorious condition in heaven Christs face shined as the Sun Mat. 17.2 What a glorious creature is the
is too glorious for mans eyes to behold and therefore is presented here more remote and hidden from the Prophets sight There was the appearance of fire in the colour of Amber or within the outward fire this was glorious that exceeding glorious the fire in the fire here is infinite glory shut up obscured by that is lesse glorious You heard before of Christs humane nature that it is very glorious much more the Divine that communicates the lustre glory to the humane 2 Pet. 1.17 a voyce came from the excellent glory glory that excell'd all the glory of the creature that excell'd all the apprehensions of creatures 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the glory greatly becoming or great becoming glory it 's glory that greatly becomes the great God and such is the glory of the Divine nature of Christ it 's excellent glory and if it were let out a little in the strength and fulnesse of it wee should be sunk by it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Glory is a weighty thing the Hebrew word for glory signifies gravitas pondus onus intimating that glory as it 's a bright so a heavie thing brightnesse and weightinesse are in it 2 Cor. 4.17 it 's call'd a weight of glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the glory of Christs divine nature would oppresse us if fully opened to our view Moses made a request to God which if he had granted would have been his death Exod. 33.18 I beseech thee saith he shew me thy glory God tels him in the 20th verse no man can see me and live my glory will be a consuming fire unto thee yet God is pleased to communicate the glory of his divine nature here to Moses in that way might do him good and not destroy him hee puts him into the cleft of a rock and shewes him his back parts vers 23. which was some glorious body as Testatus thinks some humane shape as others conceive and not unlikely to be Christ Oluaster Osiander as hee appeared in his transfiguration full of glory and Majesty thus God condescended to Moses and so here to the Prophet Non cadit sub sensum corporis Juxta possibilitatem humanam Fulgor ille tantae majestatis nos in nihilum redigeret hee sees the glory of the divine nature in the humane which in it self is not subject to mans sense but through divine dispensation is made visible according to mans capacity If wee cannot behold the Sun for its brightnesse nor one creature behold another without prejudice to it self how can wee behold the exceeding glory of the Creator of the divine nature without great danger without death the glory of such Majesty would turn us into nothing 5. That Christs actions even judicary ones are glorious there was brightnesse round about his presence sitting in judgement and his actuall punishing of the Jewes with war famine captivity are all full of glory This supreme Majesty executing judgement fils all with brightnesse and glory when the Angels came with power to judge Babylon Rev. 18.1 2. it 's said the earth was lightned with his glory Acts of judgement and justice are glorious and shining Ribera saith this is meant of judgement upon Rome which shall be evident to all and fill the world with the glory of it when it shall be fulfilled God was glorious as well in destroying the Egyptians as delivering the Israelites there is so much beauty and brightnesse in works of justice and judgement that they are call'd the glory of the Lord Numb 14.21 The people upon the ill report brought upon the Land of Canaan murmured thought to make a captaine and go back to Egypt whereupon God threatned to smite them with the pestilence and to disinherit them Moses interposes intercedes for them God answers him and saith Rev. 14.11 The fire and brimstone they are tormented with is vindicta Dei ex qua quasi sumus produt Dei laus gloria Alcazar At thy request I have pardoned them but as truly as I live all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord what 's that the glory of his just judgements upon them in the Wildernesse and shortly after Corah and his confederates were swallowed alive by the earth Zimri and Cosbi were run thorow for their wickednesse and in these and other particulars was the glory of the Lord seen evidently Would Magistrates and those have power in their hands shine and be glorious let them execute judgement and see justice done Solomon by that act of judgement between the two Harlots touching the dead and the living childe became renowned What a glorious act was in it when Darius set Daniel at liberty and caused his accusers to be cast into the den of Lions If men in place would punish delinquents executing justice in the feare of God without respect of persons distemper of affections or any sinister respects they would be like Angels and enlighten the City and Kingdome with glory such a one is Sol justitiae and fils the world with the beams of righteousnesse hee is dextra Dei and relieves Kingdomes Cities Families with equity VER 28. As the appearance of the bowe that is in the cloud in the day of rain so was the appearance of the brightnesse round about HEre is a description of that brightnesse or glory which compassed him that sate upon the Throne himself was glorious the brightnesse of glory and he had circumferentiall brightnesse and this is resembled unto the Bowe in the cloud that which we call the Rainbowe first mention of it is in the 9th of Genesis verse 13. where God puts double honour upon it 1. He ownes it for his I do set my Bowe in the cloud and 2. Makes it foederall a token of the Covenant between him and the earth and so by divine institution is exalted to a supernaturall work a sacramentall signe I shall speak something of this Bowe Philosophically and something Theologically 1. Philosophically the generation of it is in the wombe of a cloud and the cause naturall viz. the reverberation of the Sun-beames in a moyst cloud for when there is a moyst cloud opposit to the Sun fitly disposed to receive the Sun-beams and to reflect them then is the Rain-bowes birth and appearance the figure of it a semicircle sometimes lesse but never greater sometimes there hath been a Rain-bowe in the night from the beames of the Moone which is weak and like a white cloud Mylichius observes In lib. 2. Plin. that from the Sunne hath sometimes been a white Rain-bow but constantly the Rain-bowe is of divers colours specially blew green and red all very glorious Thaumantis filiam propter admirationem In Theaeteto and wonderfull drawing the eyes of the world to behold it whereupon Plato thinks it 's called the daughter of Wonder it 's so admired The naturall signification of it is rain and moyst weather Scaliger saith if it be in the morning it
flesh then went out glory John 1.14 and grace Vers 16. Then was Sol in nube the most glorious Rain-bow that ever was or shall be in the world he was not a signe of peace but our Peace Ephes 2.14 By his blood we are brought nigh for he is our peace 2. God hath his dayes of Rain When the flood was then there was rain to purpose forty dayes together If God hath rained bread Exod. 16. he hath rain'd wrath Job 20.23 snares storms fire brimstone Psal 11. God rains blood upon kingdomes Ezek. 38.22 I will plead against him with pestilence and with blood and I will rain upon him and his bands and the many people with him over-flowing rain great hailstones fire and brimstone 3. That the Lord Christ in wrath remembers mercy he mingles mercy with judgement hee sits as Judge upon the Throne hee pronounces s●●tence against a sinfull kingdome executing the vengeance written against sinners and yet here hee is compassed with the Rain-bow shewing that hee will not utterly destroy the Jewes a remnant should be spared When the great deluge of water was drowning the world yet Noah and his were saved there was mercy in the midst of judgement and here is a Judge with a Rain-bow over his head to assure the godly they should not perish in this flood of wrath now powring out upon the Jews Jerome saith of the Bowe it is a sign of mercy and the covenant which God made with man that when it appeared in the cloud we might know we should not perish by a flood and much more when Christ sits in judgement with the Rain-bow about him may the godly know that they shall not perish by the wrath of God if the glory of his Majesty statelinesse of his Throne terror of his Justice and the greatnesse of his Power do at any time discourage us wee must looke at the Rain-bow round about him and remember his Throne is compassed with mercy It 's said of the Jews when they see the Rain-bow they go forth confesse their sins but will not look upon it Confession of sins or any duty whatsoever will do us no good unlesse wee look upon the Bowe the mercy of Christ now was a storm and in it a Rain-bowe for the Prophet and godly to looke at it 's said in the Text the Bowe in the cloud in the day of rain then it 's a rainy day when God rains snares fire and brimstone and horrible tempest upon the wicked even then the bow is in the cloud and the righteous should look for it and look to it they should remember the covenant and mercy of it Is it not a rainy and stormy time now is not this great Prince angry with the kings and kingdomes of the earth doth he not frown chide and smite and that with deadly strokes in many places Let us look at the Rainbow now and know if there should come an overflowing scourge a deluge of wrath upon the world yet the Noahs shall be arked and safe the righteous shall be hid Christ will manifest mercy to them Saith John Rev. 4.2 I was in the Spirit and behold a Throne was set in heaven and there was a Rain-bow round about the Throne no sooner was John in the Spirit but he saw the Throne and the Rain-bow let us now be in the Spirit look with eyes of faith and wee shall see the Throne him sits on it and the bow round about him and then though kingdomes lie under the floods of errors superstition and ungodlinesse though drown'd in troubles and blood yet wee shall see God and Christ in a way of love and mercy towards us 4. That Justice and Mercy do compasse the Throne of Christ there was brightnesse round about and the bow was round about go to Christs Throne any way there is nothing but justice for the sinner unlesse penitent and believing and if such nothing but mercy This was the appearance of the likenesse of the Glory of the Lord and when I saw it I fell upon my face and I heard a voyce of one that spake Here is the conclusion of the Vision and in it wee have the scope of all was presented to the Prophets view and it is to manifest the infinite glory of God and then followes a double effect First upon sight of it he fell upon his face And Secondly He heares a voyce and so a fit pass … is made to that which followes The first thing is the manifestation of Gods glory a●● 〈◊〉 glory of God is considerable 1. In God himself in the Divine 〈◊〉 and there it is infinite glorious exceeding glory 2. In the creation as it is expressed and opened in the volume of the creatures there Gods glory is greatly seen Isa 6.3 The earth is full of his glory the Hebrew is the fulnesse of the earth is his glory the world is glorious and filled with Gods glory it 's nothing else but Gods glory interpreted and opened unto us in the creatures Quid est mundus nisi Deus explicatus and divine providence about them 3. In divine dispensations towards his Church and people Gods glory is in the firmament in all the creatures but more specially and fully in the Church Psal 29.9 In his Temple doth every one speake of his glory there it is most visible affecting and provoking of every one to speak In the world few take notice of it but in the Temple every one sees it and speaks of it the world is God opened and so glorious the Church is Christ opened and so very glorious this made David long to be in the Sanctuary when hee was in the Wildernesse and why so to see thy power and thy glory Psal 63.2 Could not David see them in the heavens in the mountains in the goodly Cedars and other works of God Yes but not as in the Sanctuary and therefore hee saith to see thy power and glory so as I have seen thee in thy Sanctuary there I have seen thee otherwise then ever elsewhere there he saw the King upon his Throne and in his glory The glory of God in each of these is held forth in this Vision in some measure there was the Spirit in the wheels a fire within by which the glory of the divine nature appeared there was a whirlewind a cloud fire brightnesse living creatures wheels moving severall ways which represent the glory of God in the world and government of it there was a firmament and a throne one sitting upon it surrounded with a Rain-bow which sets out the glory of God in his severall dispensations towards his Church both in his judgements mercies and government thereof A Question is moved Whether our Prophet saw the glory of God The Answer is It was the appearance of the likenesse of the glory of the Lord he doth not say hee saw God in his essence it 's acknowledged by most that we cannot see Gods essence while wee are Pilgrims on earth In
vid. ●●b de viden Deum Hom. 2. 2. q. 174. 175. and absent in the flesh Augustine and Aquinas are of opinion that Moses and Paul saw God in his essence but they were men and not without their errors for had they seen Gods essence their faith had ceased being swallowed up in vision The School-man would help it thus the light of glory in them had not a permanent being but was given them transitively Esse perman●ns per modum transeuntis But this answer will not bear up the opinion for faith and vision of glory cannot consist in a larger tract or in the least instant of times as in one man there cannot be a perfect and obscure light together the full light of the Sun and least degree of darknesse cannot at once be in the eye And farther if they saw the essence of God they had not the act of faith but evidence for if a man had seen Rome and after remembers it Non habet fidem sed evidentiam de eo quod vidit he saith not he believes there is such a City but hee hath seen it and so of Gods essence It must not be granted that ever any saw Gods essence you have incontrollable authority for it Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time Durand saith these words are to be understood exclusively 1. Of corporeall vision for with a bodily eye none ever did or shall see God 2. Of intellectuall naturall Vision because a naturall understanding cannot attain unto the cleer vision of God 3. Of the vision of comprehension from all created understandings though Angels and Saints in heaven see God yet not comprehensively and 1 Tim. 6.16 whom no man hath seen nor can see there 's a deniall both of the fact and the possibility Aust himself confesseth in l. 2. de Trin. C. 16 17 18. That the substance of God is not ullo modo corporaliter visibilem not to be seen at all with the eyes of flesh and the rule of School-men touching visions and apparitions is infallible that the nature of God is not seen with the eyes of the body but only some corporeall thing is exhibited which being visibly seen or sensibly perceived God is invisibly represented to the understanding Al. Halcus But Moses saw God face to face Exod. 33.11 So Jacob saw God face to face Gen. 32. Answ Those Patriarchs and Prophets that are said to see God saw him in divers resemblances and this is an unanswerable argument that they never saw Gods essence for that is pure immixt alwayes alike neither standing nor sitting having no parts no shape or likenesse to any thing therefore saith Athenasius those Fathers saw God in some creature Deum non fuiss ab antiquis p●r●bus v●sum nost 〈◊〉 assumptio●e creatu ae secundum Deitatem vero esse 〈◊〉 v sio●●em not in his own nature for it is invisible Again this phrase of seeing God face to face in the Hebrew dialect imports two things First Familiarity Secondly Perspicuity 1. Familiarity they had familiar converse with God Deut. 5.4 the Lord talketh with you face to face you asked him questions and he gave you answers and it 's evident that this is intended in the phrase Exo. 33.11 The Lord spake to Moses face to face as a man speaks with his friend Moses questioned it with God and God most friendly answered him So in Numb 12.8 Mouth to mouth will I speak with him it notes the presentiality and familiarity of God with Moses 2. Perspicuity cleernesse they saw God face to face that is comparatively others saw God in dreames and visions which were more obscure but these saw God more cleerly had more illustrious visions of God they saw Gods back-parts these saw Gods face and the phrase is used in the New Testament 1 Cor. 13.12 Then shall wee see face to face that is more fully and perfectly then here but whether wee shall see the divine essence in patria in heaven is questionable Chrysost Hom. 14. on John saith That before the incarnation the Son of God was Angelis invisibilis and if they in their glory saw not the divine nature of Christ it 's like wee shall not Whether Christ saw the Father or Holy Ghost with the eyes of his body is questionable if some doubt it others deny it Halens grants that the soul of Christ saw God perfectly from his conception but hee saith not the eye of his body saw him Aquinas saith that glorified eyes shall see God in that manner as now our eyes do see the life of man life not seen with a bodily eye as a thing visible by it self but by the intervention of something else and so accidentally becomes sensible it 's our understanding not the eye reacheth life and so in God But in 1 John 3. we shall see him as hee is Answ He speaks of a new and unutterable way of seeing God Wee shall see him as hee is to be seen mediante lumine gloriae the beams of the Sun so fill the eye that wee cannot behold the nature of it and whether it be so in heaven wee shall not know till wee come there let us get holinesse and then wee shall see him will resolve this doubt Observ 1. That all the glory is seen of God in this life any wayes is but the appearance and likenesse of the glory of God There was much and great glory in this vision there is more in the world in the creatures more in the Church and yet all this is only a shadow and a small appearance of the glory of God If we should see ten thousand Torches lighted up in a dark night they make a glorious light yet are they nothing to the light of the Sun when that comes torch-light star-light seem appearances of light rather then light it self So when the glory of God shall be revealed it will darken all other glory and there was not so great a difference between the light in Goshen and darknesse in Egypt as there will be between the glory of God and that glory now appeares in the world The glory of God is neither expressible or comprehensible by any or all the creatures The glory that Isaiah saw on the earth and that Ezekiel saw in the heavens did not expresse the thousand part of this glory and neither heaven not earth are able to comprehend the same 2. See the infinite goodnesse of the Lord that will expose that to the eyes of his servants which is so deare unto him his own glory Precious things of Princes and great ones are not common for the view of all but choyce friends favorites shall see them God hath nothing more precious then his glory yet this shall his choyce friends and favourites see and because they cannot see it in the perfection of it God will draw a picture of it with his own hand and hold forth to the eyes of his here Ezekiel had an appearance of
the glory of the Lord but it 's the greater mercy that God will put forth creating power in a vision and present the likenesse of his glory in variety of things according to the capacity and for the advantage of his servants so Moses saw the glory of the Lord in the Mount so Christ shewed unto Peter James and John his glory in his transfiguration Matth. 17. Isaiah hee had a glorious vision Chap. 6. and so glorious it was that it 's called the glory of the Lord and this did the Prophet Isaiah see in the likenesse and appearance of it not in its own nature for no man you ever could so see the glory of God and live Jehovah this name by the learned Jewes is called 1. Hashsham that name emphatically as the chiefest of all the rest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The name of four letters 3. The great Name 4. The blessed Name for the high Priest did pronounce it only once a yeer and that in the Temple at the feast of Propitiation at the solemne blessing Numb 6.24 25. 5. The glorious Name 6. The name Separate shem Hammephoraash because separate from ambiguity saith Maimon from our knowledge saith the son of Maimon 7. The name appropriated to God because it is most proper to him 8. The name of remembring because it brings to mind the being of God 9. The name of essence or being Shemhaguetzem a name of substance Plebi sub poena mortis ejus pronuntiatio vitita fuit Buxtorf Qui pronuntiat nomen Tetragrammatum non habet partem in suturo seculo The Jewes are exceeding superstitious about this name and say it must not be pronounced they term it The unexpressible Name themselves never utter it but Adonai or Elohim in stead of it they tell us that the womans son in the 24. of Levit. was accused of blasphemy and stoned to death because hee pronounced this name Jehovah And there is a relation of the Priests of the Sanctuary that not knowing how to read this name being written by Moses * Spasmo correpti interiorint Gerard. in loc Shindl. they laughed and were smitten to death of God for it It 's strange to think what miracles the Jewes attribute to this name Moses had it writ in a Rod or Staffe Christ got it and put in his thigh and so by vertue of it they both did all their miracles they tell of one David a Magician that by vertue of this name went in one day a journey of ten dayes But to leave Rabbinicall conceits This name Jehovah imports essence Ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fuit est being existence and by it the eternity independency efficacity and truth of God are laid before us together with his being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and here it 's attributed to Christ and tels us that hee hath his being of himself he is compleat in himselfe and an infinite sea of being Eternall Rev. 1.8 Independent Rev. 1.5 Efficacious giving being life and perfection to all creatures Hebr. 1.2 3. Col. 1.16 17. hee is true yea truth fulfilling the promises 2 Cor. 1.20 Observ 1. Jesus Christ who sate upon the Throne here is JEHOAVH of the same essence with the Father and the Holy Ghost hee is not consimilar but consubstantiall with them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alius pater alius filius alius spiritus but not aliud pater aliud filius aliud spiritus not like the Father or like the Spirit but the same the one differs from the other personally but not essentially 1 Joh. 5.7 There be three that beare record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one one in essence one in propriety one JEHOVAH Jer. 23.6 the Prophet speaking of Christ tels us what his name shall be called Jehovah Zidkenus The Lord our righteousnesse and in Mal. 3.1 Jehovah whom you seek shall suddenly come to his Temple by the name JEHOVAH is meant Christ who is God and this is of great concernment it 's the foundation of our faith in Christ of our worshipping of Christ of our salvation by Christ and of all good from Christ if he were not Jehovab the Gospel should be a lie our faith a fancie our worship false the Church a fable all men lost and that for ever 2 Again that the glory here represented in this Vision was not the glory of a creature but of Jehovah there was a man presented to his eye but Jehovah to his faith it was the appearance of the glory of the Lord not only of Christ as man but as God-man and so the glory was glorious glory And when I saw it I fell upon my face Here is the first effect of it when hee had this vision beheld this glory hee was amazed so smitten with the lustre of it that hee could stand no longer but down hee falls and that upon his face There is frequent mention in Scripture that upon visions and appearances of Divine Majesty the servants of God have falne down Dan. 8.17 He fell upon his face and Saul Acts 9.4 hee fell to the earth Abraham hee fell on his face when God appeared to him Gen. 17.3 The three Disciples Christ took up into the mount when they saw the glory and heard the voyce they fell on their faces There is a great difference between falling on the face and falling on the back To fall forward notes respect and humility but to fall backward is a note of sin and guilt Abraham fell twice upon his face the Prophets oft the godly when they are to deale with God fall forwards the wicked backward Cadere in faciem observantiae est humilitatem semper olet sed retro cadere peccatum supponit aut indicat Jer. except old Eli. Wee read not of any good man that fell backward but all those came to take Christ Joh. 18.6 went backwards and fell to the ground So Isa 28.13 Precept upon precept that they might go and fall backwards There be divers reasons or grounds of mens falling upon their faces in visions and apparitions of God 1. The Majesty of God that is present in these visions and some way or other represented to those that have the Visions so Dan. 10.9 2. The lustre of Divine glory that accompanies the same this made Paul and his company fall to the ground Act. 26.13 14. 3. Some new and dreadfull thing that appeares in the Vision as here creatures with four faces and four wings wheels rings full of eyes and so high that they are dreadfull 4. Sense of their owne frailty and weaknesse Visions having divine Majesty Glory and some terriblenesse in them have wrought strange effects upon infirme men they have lockt up their senses and put them in a deep sleep Dan. 8.18.10 Chap. 9. made them sick and faint many dayes Dan. 8.27 much grieved and troubled their spirits Dan. 7.15 taken away their strength and comelinesse Dan. 10.8
smitten dumb Dan. 10.15 breathlesse verse 17. 5. To testifie two things first thankfulnesse for some mercy received or promised upon this ground Abraham fell on his face Gen. 17.23 when God appeared to him and told him that hee would make a covenant with him and multiply him exceedingly hee fell on his face to manifest as his humility so especially the gratefull frame of his spirit towards God for such a mercy 2. Reverence worship and respect unto divine Majesty falling upon the face notes so much in the language of Canaan 2 Chro. 20.18 Jehosaphat bowed his head with his face to the ground and all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell before the Lord and worshiped him so bowing in Psal 72.9 is to note reverence and worship They that dwell in the wildernesse shall bow before him and his enemies shall lick the dust they shall come in to Christ and by bowing their faces to the ground and licking the dust of his feet shall testifie their reverence and subjection unto him so Isa 49.23 That which made our Prophet fall down on his face here was feare and amazement at the apprehension of the Majesty of Christ the great glory that appeared newnesse and dreadfulnesse of things in the Vision Observ 1. See what mischiefe sin hath done unto us it hath disabled us from partaking of our greatest good the sight of glory is the happinesse of the creature when Peter saw Christs transfiguration but dimly hee said O Master it 's good being here but sin hath made us incapable of the sight of glory Peter and the rest fell upon their faces and could not behold it as otherwise they might Cum magno moerore pensare considerare cum lachrymis debemus in quantam miscriam infirmitatem cecidimus qui ipsum bonum ferre non possumus ad quod videndum creati sumus Gregory in his 8th Hom. saith it 's matter of great mourning to consider wee are fallen into such an estate as that wee cannot behold what would make us happy wee cannot indure that good that glory which God created us to behold yea such weaknesse hath sin brought us to that wee cannot bear the sight of the appearance of the likenesse of glory They are weake eyes that cannot indure the Sun-beams they more weake that cannot indure the light which is more remote from the brightnesse and glory of the Sun and so here man cannot indure the glory of the Lord nor the likenesse of it nor the appearance of the likenesse 2. That the sight of glory is an humbling thing when the Prophet saw the appearance of the glory of the Lord hee falls upon his face then hee is conscious of his own weaknesse and worthlesnesse then hee trembles and sees the great disproportion between Majesty and nothingnesse Isa 40.5 The glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it and then followes all flesh is grasse glory will convince us that wee are but grasse it 's not hearing will do it at least not so effectually seeing and seeing of glory doth humble mightily seeing of miserie causeth grief mine eye affecteth mine heart but seeing of glory causeth godly sorrow Job 42.5 6. Now mine eyes seeth thee Nisi aliquid de aeternitate in mente videremus nunquam in facie nostra poenitendo caderemus Gre. I abhorre my self and repent in dust and ashes when hee saw the Lord and his glory then hee abhorred himself his own righteousnesse all his confidences duties and what ever the heart and wit of man catcheth hold of and repented and said What am I unto God the great the glorious God he is so infinitely glorious and distanced from mee that I am no better then dust and ashes Isaiah and worthy to be buried under them out of his sight and so Isaiah when he saw the glory of the Lord then was hee sensible of his own vilenesse and cryes out Wo is mee I am undone because I am a man of unclean lips though a Prophet yet a man of unclean lips for mine eyes have seen the King the Lord of Hosts he had heard the Seraphims cry Holy holy holy the Lord of Hosts the whole earth is full of his glory but this wrought not so powerfully as the sight of his glory now hee saw his sin what a great and soul sinner he was and therefore saith he Wo is me c. 3. That those be throughly humbled with the sense of their own vilenesse and weakness are fittest to hear divine truths and to receive divine mysteries Ezekiel falls on his face and then heares a voyce so was it with Daniel flesh and blood is apt to be lifted up to trust in something of its own men look at and like their own parts their graces some confidence or other we are apt to catch hold of but we must let all go below in our own eyes if we will be fit auditors of Christ we must fall down at the feet of his Throne if wee will heare him speak from his Throne Jam. 4.6 he giveth grace to the humble they finde the choycest favours at his hands Moses a meek man yea the meekest of all living and God shewed himself the most to him and so to him as not to others Numb 12.8 He spake to him mouth to mouth Deut. 34.10 There arose not a Prophet in Israel like to Moses whom the Lord knew face to face Isa 66.2 And I heard a voyce of one that spake This is the second effect following his sight of the glory of God hee first falls upon his face and then hears a voyce this was the voyce of him that sate upon the Throne and was so glorious that the Prophet could not behold him it was not the voyce of the heavens Psal 19.3 nor of the thunder Psal 29.3 but of Christ and the voyce of Christ is taken in the Scripture First for an extraordinary voyce having extraordinary power with it Joh. 5.28 those that are in the grave shall heare his voyce that is the power of his voyce shall fetch them out of their graves Secondly for the doctrine of Christ Joh. 10.27 My sheep heare my voyce that is my Doctrine they do not hear Christ immediately speaking but they heare his Gospel his Ministers opening it unto them Thirdly for the speech of Christ speaking unto others Act. 9.4 I heard a voyce saying Saul Saul c. such is the voyce here Christ speaking himself unto Ezekiel This Vision and Voyce was First to affect the Prophet that hee might be humbled awakened quickned up and prepared to the work the Lord Christ intended him Secondly to confirm him 1. In his call to his Ministery hee was to be a Prophet to this people in a strange Land and therefore hath an extraordinary call to it Christ from heaven appeares 2. In the truth of his Prophecie hee should utter nothing but what he had from Christ the author of all truth hee would put words
into his mouth 3. In the whole race and work of his Ministery that hee might not be discouraged seeing that hee had seen such a vision heard such a voyce Thirdly to confirm the Jewes Gentiles all to whom this Prophecy should come of the Majesty reality and truth of it Note 1 God sets one sense awork after another his eye was taken up before with the sight of great and glorious things now his eares come to be exercised and fill'd with as choyce truths as the eye had objects and after there is a roll for his taste and touching God lets in mercy and goodnesse to us through every window and door Note 2 That grat feare doth astonish and hinder judgement hee heard a voyce but knew not whose it was feare doth disturb and surprize Ezekiel Chap. 2. vers 1. And hee said unto mee Son of man stand upon thy feet and I will speak unto thee IN the former Chapter wee met with great deeps and difficulties mysteries of a high nature and if any light have appeared in the opening of them let him that sits upon the Throne have the glory of it by his assistance we have gone over sundry rocks and through some deeps In quibus liberis gressibus locut onis nostrae in●repidum pedem ponamus Greg. Hom 9. in Ezek. and we desire by the same assistance to proceed and now wee are come from the Mountains to the Plains where wee may walk with more safety The glory of the Lord being set out in this government of the world in his dispensations towards his Church in the antecedent Chapter The scope of this Chapter is to corroborate Ezekiel smitten down with the sight of glory and to shew his Call unto his Propheticall Office the parts are the confirming sending and instructing of the Prophet 1. His confirmation and comforting is laid down in the two first verses 2. His sending in the three next to the sixth verse 3. His instructing from the sixth to the ninth after that mention is made of a roll in the two last verses and in the beginning of the next Chapter which is of much concernment as in its place may appeare The confirming of the Prophet is 1. By the Word of God in the first verse 2. By his Spirit in the second verse In the first verse are two things considerable 1. The party speaking 2. The matter spoken where you have 1. The Appellation Son of man 2. The Command Stand upon thy feet 3. The ground of it which is a gracious promise And I will speak unto thee It 's Christ who speakes and unto Ezekiel whom hee calls the Son of man the originall is the sonne of Adam that is of earthly man for as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15.47 The first Adam was of the earth earthly and Adam signifies earth or red earth whereof his body was made and when we read in Scripture this phrase it notes out to us 1. Our base beginning that we are of the earth there is no man be he never so excellent high wise honourable but hee is the son of Adam terrae filius a brat of the earth Psal 49.2 Both low and high Adam and Ish the base man and the noble man as the Chaldee renders it both the sons of Adam and the sons of Jacob are so they have all one father and all one mother and that is the earth 2. Our frailty that wee are earthen vessels and soon broken in pieces Psal 9.20 Put them in feare O Lord that the nations may know themselves to be but men they think themselves gods but shew them thy power thine iron Rod and Scepter bring a War a plague a Famine amongst them and then they will know that they are frail weak men 3. Our worthlesnesse and fitnesse to be rejected who amongst us regards a clod of the earth an earthen vessell silver or golden ones some prize and prize too much but earthly ones are contemptible Nations are as the drops of the bucket and small dust of the ballance Isa 40. and are not they contemptible things this made David to wonder and say Psal 144.3 Lord what is man that thou takest knowledge of him or the son of man the son of earth that thou makest account of him that thou visitest him Psal 8.4 and Job 7.17 What is man that thou shouldest magnifie him and that thou shouldest set thine heart upon him these be high and great expressions to be bestowed upon so poor a thing as man is to take knowledge of him and such knowledge as to make account of him as to minde him visit him magnifie him to set the heart upon him this is exceeding much from an infinite great and glorious God towards worthlesse men and not credible if the Spirit of God had not revealed it 4. Our end that wee are earth thence wee came and thither we must Gen. 3.19 Dust thou art and unto dust thou must return This title of Son of man I do not find given to any but three in the Book of God once to Daniel Chap. 8. 17. Vnderstand O sonne of man forty times and upwards to Christ and above eighty times to this our Prophet but with this difference Ezekiel is called the Son of man by another Christ alwayes calls himself so Ezekiel is four times in this Chapter so called and it 's given him 1. To prevent pride say some Expositers hee had a glorious Vision was among Angels saw the Lord Christ and was to enter upon the Propheticall Function the least of which might stir corruption and make pride blossome when Paul had his rapture into the third heavens and heard things unutterable what saith he 2 Cor. 12.7 Lest I should be exalted above measure through the abunance of revelation there was given to mee a thorne in the flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet me c. Paul was in danger of being lifted up but God prevented it and so here Ezekiel is minded of his mean originall his frailty worthlesnesse and end that he might not be exalted with his Vision or Office we are exceeding apt upon the receit of great mercies to grow proud and confident which are evill in any but worst in a Prophet and therfore to prevent these hee calls him Son of man 2. To frame his spirit to a right estimate of himself through out the whole course of his Office that what ever good was done Nihil supra naturae humanae vires sibi assumeret he should still remember he was the Son of man and it was God not he that did it It 's a hard thing to keep the heart in an humble frame and fitnesse to give unto God the glory of what he doth by us God helps our Prophet by this title which runs through the whole Prophecy and took such interest in his heart that whatsoever was seen heard said or done by him the Son of man the glory of all was given to Christ the Son of
God he could say I am an earthen vessell if there be heavenly treasure in it hee that sate upon the Throne put it in for mine own part I am the Son of man like all the children of Adam and if there be any difference hee made it and if there be any glory hee shall have it so Paul 1 Cor. 15.10 I laboured more abundantly then they all that seems a derogating speech but hee corrects himself for it yet not I but the grace of God that was with mee 3. To let Ezekiel and others see the rich bounty and goodnesse of God in that he would take a Son of man who is earth frail and worthlesse and exalt him to so high and honourable a condition and specially at such a time as this was when God was wroth with his inheritance laid them waste had brought them into Babylon and was stripping them naked of all comforts yet now to give them a Prophet to call out Ezekiel this could not but put his spirit and all their spirits into admiration of Gods goodnesse Stand upon thy feet Here is the Command of Christ Ezekiel I see thou art a frail man stricken with great feare and canst not indure my glory and presence stand up this is not for thy hurt but good I appeare not to confound thee but to comfort thee not to cast thee down but to exalt thee Stantis est div norum auditio non resu pini Apollin Why doth the Lord command standing 1. It 's a fitter posture for hearing then lying on the ground was Stand that thou mayest recover thy spirits and heare the better what I shall say unto thee so the Angel bid Daniel stand upright Dan. 10.11 Oracles are for standers not prostrate ones therefore when Balaam came with the Oracles of God to Balak he said Rise up Balak and heare Numb 23.18 shew thou reverence and respect to the Word of God for Kings were wont to stand when messengers from God were brought unto them so Eglon rose out of his seat when Ehud told him hee had a message from God unto him Jud. 3.20 Eusebius tels us of Constantine the great Nefas esse institutis de Deo disputationibus negligentes aures praebere Euseb de vita Constant that hee did heare the Word standing and being requested to rest himself in his royall throne which was set there for that purpose hee refused and being pressed after long time of hearing to sit down with a sterne countenance hee answered It were a great sin in me not to heare attentively when God is spoken of 2. To shew that all mundane things should be beneath us when wee deal with God wee must not lie down and imbrace them but stand up and have them under our feet Jerome saith the Saints stand and tread all down Sanctorum est stare but sinners they fall and imbrace the earth and furniture of it Rev. 12.1 the Church hath the Moon under her feet all sublunary things are under the Saints feet not in their hearts or over their heads 3. That he might be in a posture for service Ephes 6.14 Stand having your loynes girt prostration on the earth is no posture for imployment but standing is and the Lord Christ would not have his so affected with his greatnesse and glory so reverentiall as to be hindred or disabled from his service holy reverence doth not make idle or inept to service Stand on thy feet therefore saith Christ and be in a readinesse to execute what I command The words being opened now take the Observations Observ 1. That the Lord Christ is full of bowels and comspassions Ezekiel was fallen down upon his face the glory of the Vision and greatnesse of him that sate upon the Throne had conquered and fell'd this our Prophet to the earth and there hee lay as a man wounded and without strength but Christ leaves him not in this condition but speaks and that kindly to him Son of man stand upon thy feet he is affected with his infirmity sensible of his fears and troubles the man that fell among thieves going from Jerusalem to Jericho being plundred and wounded found no pity from the Priest and Levite but much from the good Samaritane when he saw him hee had compassion on him he went to him bound up his wounds put in oyle and wine set him upon his own beast was content to go on foot by him brought him to an Inn and took care of him and paid for his cure Luke 10.33 34 35. This Samaritane was Christ who pitied Adam and in him man-kinde that went from Jerusalem the state of perfection to Jericho a state of change for as Chemnit observes Jericho signifies the Moon and so a changeable condition the Priest and Levite notes the Law with all its additaments they passed by and never reached or healed the wounded soul of man but Christ the Samatitane with the grace of the Gospel and blood of the Covenant with that oyle and wine cured man brought him upon his own shoulders to the Church to Jerusalem again and there took care for him we have not a legall high Priest which is without bowels and can do little for us but we have an Euangelicall high Priest full of bowells and mercy such an one as is touched with our infirmities Heb. 4.15 which should incourage us with boldnesse to come unto his Throne which is a Throne of Grace compassion 2. That those are humble and smitten down with sense of their own vilenesse weaknesse or worthlesnesse through the sight of glory and greatnesse Christ quickly raises to comfort again our Prophet was down in the end of the former Chapter and in the beginning of this he is up again The humbling from the sight of God his glory and greatnesse is the most effectuall humbling and the most speedy effectuall and sweetest comfort doth follow it Job after he had seen God and humbled himself thereupon his captivity is turned his comforts multiplied Job 24.5 6.10.12 So Isaiah being humbled upon the sight of glory presently a Seraphim comforts him touches his lips with a coal from the Altar and saith Thine iniquity is taken away and thy sin is purged Daniel was humbled for his own sins the sins of his forefathers and the afflictions of the Church Dan. 9. and the Lord sent Gabriel to comfort him who told him hee was a man greatly beloved and that he came to give him skill and understanding verse 22.23 God doth not humble and throw down his to leave them but reaches out a hand to raise them 3. That man carries about him principles of humiliation he is the Son of man the son of the earth Isa 31.3 The Egyptians are men and not God Adam velo el they are weak and worthlesse things and so are not only Egyptians but Israelites all men and so have no cause to be puffed up at all but great cause to be humbled Job call'd corruption his father and
the worm his mother Job 17.14 you see what stock and kindred Job came of and wee are all of the same house therefore afterward in the 25. Chap. v. 6. It 's said man and the Son of man is a worm and so David I am a worm and no man Psal 22.6 velo Ish hee was enosh sorry sinfull miserable man he was Adam an earthly man but not Ish a man of worth strength a worm son of the earth weak contemptible Coniah Jer. 22.28 in the vulgar is called vas fictile an earthen vessell a broken Idoll or a vessell in which is no pleasure and then followes O earth earth earth heare the word of the Lord Princes Priests and People he calls them all earth to minde them of their mean originall to bring down their spirits to make them sensible of their weakness and condition they were hastening unto Isai 40.6 All flesh is grasse and all the goodlinesse thereof is as the flower of the field grasse withereth the flower fadeth because the Spirit of the Lord bloweth upon it surely the people is grasse 4. That the command of Christ is powerfull Stand upon thy feet saith hee and it proved efficacious let Christ speak and the thing is done By him were all things made Joh. 1.3 hee said Let there be light and there was light he said Let there be an earth and let it bring forth an it was so hee call'd forth things that were not and gave them a being under the Gospel how powerfull were his commands he bade devils depart the possessed and they did so he bade the winds and waves be still and they were so he called Lazarus out of the grave and he came forth presently there is infinite power in Christ and great yea oft exceeding great vertue goes forth with his commands he said to the Fishermen that were strangers to him Follow mee and they left all and followed him 5. That the Lord loves to incourage man to his duty hee saith not here stand upon thy feet only which might have sufficed but he makes him a promise and I will speak with thee I that am upon the Throne compassed with glory that have the rule of all the world in my hand I will speak with thee here was singular incouragement to this duty and so to other duties it 's mans duty to walk uprighty and to incourage unto it the Word saith No good thing will be with-hold from them that walk uprightly Psa 84.11 It 's our duty to believe and did not Christ tell Martha in a particular case that if she would believe shee should see the glory of God Ioh. 11.40 And told he not another that all things are possible to him that believeth Mar. 9.23 So Christ is lifted up that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Joh. 3.14 15. So for prayer it 's our duty but see what incouragement Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it Psal 81.10 and Whatsoever you shall aske the Father in my name hee will give it you John 16.23 To persevere and overcome is our duty and see Rev. 21.7 He that overcometh shall inherit all things and I will be his God and hee shall be my Son to give alms is mans duty as Luke 6.38 Give and it shall be given unto you good measure pressed down and shaken together and running over shall men give into your bosome 6. That the word of Christ is a sweet comfort to a soul troubled Stand upon thy feet and I will speak to thee thou art amazed cast down but my word will revive thee put life and spirits into thee What a comforting word is that of Christs Matth. 11. Come unto mee yee that are weary and heavy laden and I will refresh you and Ioh. 6.37 Him that cometh unto me I cast out in no wise Christ had the words of eternall life verse 68. and those must needs be sweet and acceptable to afflicted spirits and these words hee hath given us in the Gospel which is glad tidings the savour of life the power of God to salvation VER 2. And the Spirit entred into mee when hee spake unto mee and set me upon my feet that I heard him that spake unto mee THe Prophet being confirmed by the word of Christ in the foregoing verse here he is comforted and confirmed by the Spirit also What is meant by the Spirit must be opened some have conceived that when our Prophet fell upon his face at the sight of him and his glory that sate upon the Throne his spirit left him and hee lay for dead and so here by Spirit to be understood his soul or spirit returned entred revived him and set him upon his feet but this interpretation wee cannot admit for three Reasons 1. We never reade that ever any were stricken dead when God appeared unto them in Visions the utmost wee finde is that of Daniel Chap. 10. v. 17. Neither was there breath left in me through feare he was as a man out of breath but not without a soul hee had a deadly feare but was not dead 2. The Text it self confutes that opinion for in the last words of the former Chapter it 's said I heard a voyce of one that spake if Ezekiel had been spiritlesse soulelesse when hee fell upon his face it had been impossible for him to have heard a voyce 3. Had it been the return of his own spirit the words would not have been he set me upon my feet but I arose we must therefore leave that interpretation 2. By Spirit some understand an Angel and their reason for it is because it 's said He set me upon my feet the Prophet being among Angels and they seeing him down one lifted him up and set him upon his feet but this interpretation although it be Piscators I cannot commend unto you for First how could any of these Angels that had faces bodies wings and feet enter into the Prophet for here it 's said The Spirit entred into mee Secondly if it had been an Angel the words must have run thus rather then as they do one of the Spirits one of the Angels entred into me and not the Spirit By Spirit then understand that Spirit which was in the living creatures and in the wheels Chap. 1.20 Even the eternall Spirit of God and of this judgement is Jerome Gregory Calvin Junius Maldonate c. If their testimonies suffice not take the testimony of Scripture Chap. 3.24 Then the Spirit entred into mee and set me upon my feet and spake with mee and said Go shut thy self within thy house c. Here the Prophet repeating the same words sheweth that it was the Spirit of God he spake of and neither Angel nor his own spirit The meaning is this when Christ spake unto me and I heard his voyce presently I felt divine vertue the Spirit seised upon entred into mee comforted and confirmed me set me upon my feet and fitted mee to heare the
had taken in and so are call'd Goiim Nations as if they had had the wickednesse of all the nations or because they were divided in their false and Idolatrous worship some were for the Ammonitish way some the Moabitish some for other wayes most for wrong wayes and this made them like the Nations who had their severall wayes and to deserve the brand of Goiim Rebellious Hammordim the rebellious ones of Marad which signifies to fall off to apostatize to rebell and resist it 's like the practice of men against States and Princes when they have made Lawes for their Subjects to live by and they have accepted of those Lawes and then fall off with-draw from their subjection obedience and shake off their yoke it 's call'd rebellion Gen. 14.4 the King served Kedorlaomer twelve yeers and in the thirteenth rebelled that is shook off those Lawes and yokes they were under In the Law sense rebellion is a traitorous taking up arms against the State be it by the naturall Subjects or by others formerly subdued or by whomsoever when arms are taken up to overthrow the setled Laws of a Kingdome and Religion setled by those Laws this is rebellion against that State and that State may preserve it self the Law of Nature Reason and Religion warranting the same I am not to speak of rebellion in this sense but Theologically when men will not be under the Laws and Government of Christ but go a whoring after their own lusts and inventions or others then they rebell so the other Tribes told Reuben Gad and Manasseh Josh 22.16 What trespasse is this you have committed against the God of Israel to turn away this day from following the Lord in that you have builded you an Altar that yee might rebell this day against the Lord Turning from God and taking up our own or others inventions is rebelling against God The Vulgar hath it to the apostatizing Nations Ad Gentes apostatrices and the Septuagint renders the word Rebell in Nehem. 6.6 to apostatize thou and the Jewes think to apostatize 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and apostasie is a wicked departing from God and his truth acknowledged and confessed to false wayes of worship and such were the Israelites at this time they had left the God of Israel and chosen other gods and served Idols which made the Lord to say Jer. 2.11 Hath a nation changed their gods which yet are no gods but my people have changed their glory such is the apostasie of Antichrist and his followers they have departed from the true God and his worship and set up false gods and false worship so that he and all his children are Goiim Hammordim a rebellious an apostatizing nation Against mee It 's not against their King their high Priest but against mee In pactum meum Jerom. against my Covenant saith Jerome God had made a Covenant with them not only a spousall covenant I will betroth thee to mee for ever Hos 2.19 But a matrimoniall covenant I am the Lord thy God thou shalt have no other gods before me Exod. 20.2 3. God said hee would have them and no other people to be his God kept the Covenant on his part and was no Polygamist to that day hee took not in any other nation but they brake with him and took in other gods and brought them not into the City only but into the Temple and provoked their God to jealousie Even to this day The Hebrew is to the body strength essence of this day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even this self-same day these very words you have in Lev. 23.14 untill the self-same day had not this people been brutish they might have seen what an unprofitable thing it was to bestow honour upon Altars Idols to set up corrupt invented worship they might have seen what truth and force was in Propheticall threats how powerfull God was to save and to destroy for now they were carryed out of their own Countrey they were in Babylon a most Idolatrous place subject to the nations they so disdained and had been some yeers in bondage yet even here to that present time they were addicted to their old wayes and served false gods night and day Jer. 16.13 Transgresse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew word signifies to sin not ignorantly or of infirmity but wilfully ex superbia Isai 1.2 I have brought up children and they have rebelled it 's the same word is in the Text they have proudly voluntarily sinned against mee the Septuagint therefore render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They have prevaricated with me rejected mee they have taken mee out of the way who was established to be their God and have willingly brought in other gods and this word pashagn is of larger extent then marad say Rabbies but in Scripture they are promiscuously used Hos 14.9 the transgressors shall fall therein those go from under the command of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and oppose him Obser 1. That it 's Christs prerogative to set up and send officers unto the Church I send thee I that fit upon the Throne that am Jehovah that is to come that have all power in mine hand that can save and destroy that am the great Prophet of my people I send thee So Mat. 28.18 19. Christ is invested with all power and therefore sends Officers to all nations Eph. 4.11 He gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Euangelists and some Pastors and Teachers it was Christ gave them and set them up in the Church Hence saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 4.1 Let a man so account of us as the Ministers of Christ we are set up and sent by him who is the Head of the Church the Authour of all Offices and Lord of all Offficers Hence followes 1. That those Offices and Officers are holy and warrantable which depend upon the will and authority of Christ Jer. 1.5 not those are of the wils and authority of men as all are in the Romish Synagogue and too many are amongst us Apostles Prophets Euangelists they were of Christ but being extraordinary are ceased Pastors Teachers Elders Deacons Christ hath given to be standing Officers in the Church and their callings wee acknowledge holy and lawfull but all others of humane institution and so unholy and unwholesome for the Church The Papists deny the calling of Pastors and Teachers in the reformed Churches to be lawfull because they are not sent by the Pope and ordained by his Bishops and so in succession from Christ but it 's cleer that Pastors and Teachers were given of Christ before ever Popes or Prelates were thought on Ephes 4.11 And as for them the Pope and his Clergie wee may safely say that neither himself nor any of his Hierarchy ever had any lawfull calling because none of them are sent of Christ hee will never own it that he sent any of them neither were they ordained according to the will of Christ and his Apostles 2.
accept of mee a tender father men go on a long time in a carelesse sleepie or scorning way but when sicknesse comes death is before them and they ready to take possession of an eternall condition then their conscience stings them and they feel what an evill it is that they have opposed neglected undervalued the Prophets and Sons of the Prophets The Adulterer will be roused out of his pleasing dream and soft bed at last Prov. 5.12 13 and say How have I hated instruction and my heart despised reproof and have not obeyed the voyce of my teachers nor inclined mine eare to them that instructed me there will be strong convictions in the bosome of such a finner and conscience will sound in his eares and set upon his spirit those truths of his teachers that formerly have been despised When Pharaoh and the Egyptians were in the red sea and the old world had the flood about its eares what languages did their consciences speak did they not tell them they had had Moses and Noah Prophets and Preachers of righteousnesse and gave no ear to them did they not sting them to death and make them cry out and say O that wee had hearkened to those servants of the living God whilest wicked men are hearing sometimes their consciences are netled and gall'd Act. 5.17 The high Priest and all with him when they heard and saw what was done by the Apostles they were filled with indignation and John 8.59 the Jewes were so vexed at Christ that they took up stones to cast at him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 disserrabatur Super Martyrem Stephanum dentibus colubrinis stridebant quem quasi serpentem in corde habebant Aug. Serm. 6. de sanct and those that heard Stephen Act. 7.54 they were cut to the heart and gnashed on him with their teeth with the Saw of anger malice and envie they were even sawn in sunder and gnashed on him with their teeth and if the Word were so terrible while they had shifts to evade the stroke of it and comforts to allay the power of it what would it be to them at last when all shifts and comforts should fail them Some have confessed their consciences have been so cudgell'd at the hearing of some men as they never were in all their dayes before others that truths have been so darted into them they could not get them out in a week or moneth after they have stuck like arrowes in their livers and have been half-deaths unto them Mortes dimidiatae what will the Word be at last unto rebellious sinners it will arrest them and be most terrible unto them Zach. 1.6 Did not not my words take hold of their fathers it did and will do in these dayes John 12.48 the Word of Christ will judge and condemn sinners be an Anathema Maranatha unto them and they shall know it 8. That the Prophets shall be witnesses at last for or against their hearers they shall know there hath been a Prophet amongst them his person his pains his truths his life his sufferings his death will all come in for witnesses one day every Prophet every Preacher that Christ sends is a witnesse as well as an Officer or a Minister Acts 26.16 I have made thee a Minister and a witnesse all faithfull Ministers are Christs witnesses Act. 1.8 They beare witnesse of Christ and his Doctrine and if wee receive not him and his doctrine they will be Christs witnesses against us when the Lord Christ shall say to a people I have knockt at your dores many yeers together but yee would not open unto me I tendered life and salvation grace and glory in my Gospel and Ordinances but you would none of them you had your Farmes Oxen Wives to take up your thoughts Mammon to serve honour and praise to seek of one another examples of men to follow c. as for mee and my Prophets my Ministers you despised or only gave the hearing and that was all and my charge is not false here are my witnesses What say you to it Speak you Ministers of such a City and such a place What did you not preach many a Sermon shed many a teare swet many a drop make many a prayer for them did yee not earely and late watch for the good of their soules c Yea Lord but they would not receive us they would not believe our report wee made of thee they would not take thy yoke upon them c. wee shook off the dust of our feet against them This will be dreadfull when such witnesse of the Prophets comes in against hearers VER 6. And thou Son of man be not afraid of them be not afraid of their words though bryers and thornes be with thee and thou dost dwell among Scorpions be not afraid of their words nor be dismaid at their looks though they be a rebellious house THe Prophet being struck down with the sight of his glory which sate upon the Throne in the former Chapter is lifted up and comforted by the Spirit in the two first verses and call'd to publique service in the three next and that among a wreched rebellious people In this and the two next Verses the Lord Christ gives him instruction concerning his Office First negatively in the 6th verse Be not afraid of them I have made thee a Prophet and it 's not for a Prophet to feare the face of man Secondly positively in the 7th verse where hee informs him whose words he must speak unto them Thou shalt speak my words unto them it 's not for a Prophet to speak his own words but the words of him that sends him Thirdly both negatively and positively in the 8th verse Be not thou rebellious like the rebellious house they will not heare me submit to my Lawes walk in my wayes they go after their own counsels wils lusts but be not thou like them and then positively open thy mouth and eat that I give thee In the 6th verse you have 1. The Appellation Son of man 2. The Instruction Prohibition or Duty Be not afraid which is often repeated in the Verse 3. The causes and grounds of feare are specified which are divers First the quality of their persons thou maist pretend they are great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Princes and Nobles but be not afraid Mehem from them The second cause is their words they will reproach thee and seek by evill speeches to discourage thee but Be not thou afraid of their words The third is their looks they will look strangely frown bitterly swell against thee and brow-beat thee Be not dismaid at their looks The fourth is their disposition 1. Metaphorically by Briers Thorns and Scorpions they will scratch and teare sting and kill 2. Literally They are a rebellious house Feare not be not afraid be not dismaid c. These words are four times mention'd in the verse to shew our aptnesse unto fear and to shew the forwardnesse of the Lord Christ
soul hateth they were the Lords people hee appointed the new moons and feasts but because they had corrupted them hee owns them not but calls them theirs so in Exod. 32.7 God bids Moses get him down from the mount what was the matter Thy people thou broughtest out of Egypt have corrupted themselves their corrupting themselves with Idolatry made God disclaim them they are thy people go look after them I will destroy them else he calls them Moses his people there and here he calls them Ezekiels to let them see how his heart was estranged from them while they were faithfull to God hee counted highly of them they were precious in his sight honourable beloved but when they went a whoring from God Isa 43.4 hee accounts not of them he calls them not his owns them not they had shamefully dishonoured God by their sins and he will not honour them with the title of his people 3. The servants of Christ must execute their Functions without respect of persons or regard to successe Speak to them what ever they be and tell them Thus saith the Lord that one greater then themselves hath sent thee and will call them to account and whether they will heare or forbeare let not that trouble thee do thy duty be not troubled at the oppositions of men or successesnesse of thy labours VER 12. Then the Spirit took mee up and I heard behind me a voyce of a great rushing saying Blessed is the glory of the Lord from his place 13. I heard also the noyse of the wings of the living creatures that touched one another and the noyse of the wheels over against them and a noyse of a great rushing 14. So the Spirit lifted mee up and tooke mee away and I went in bitternesse in the heat of my spirit but the hand of the Lord was strong upon mee 15. Then I came to them of the captivity at Tel-abid that dwelt by the river of Chebar and I sate where they sate and remained there astonished seven dayes THese words are the second part of the Chapter and contain in them a Declaration of what befell the Prophet being so call'd and the particulars are these 1. The work of the Spirit in taking and lifting him up ver 12th 2. The voyce he heard vers 12. and what it was Blessed c. 3. The noyse of wings and wheels vers 13. 4. The ablation of the Prophet vers 14. In the 12th was a sublation in this an ablation 5. The journey he went in the 14. and 15. verse And 6. His condition hee was in bitternesse of spirit hee sate and mourned seven dayes vers 14 15. The Spirit took me up By Spirit here we understand not the wind as if some great wind should take up the Prophet nor an Angel as if hee had been lift up by Angelicall vertue nor his own spirit as Jerome would have it but that Spirit which was in the living creatures and wheels Chap. 1.12 20. and led them that Spirit entred into Ezekiel and set him upon his feet Chap. 2.2 That Spirit which led Christ into the Wildernesse Matth. 4.1 even the eternall Spirit of God This taking up of Ezekiel by the Spirit of God was 1. To perfect and ratifie his Call to the Propheticall Office the Lord Christ had spoken much unto him about it and now the Spirit lifts him up and seals the same unto his soul strengthening him in the full assurance thereof when hee had heard Christs voyce and found his Spirit working so extraordinarily as to lift him up this could not but mightily prevail with and satisfie the soule of the Prophet 2. That hee might have a more cleer and full view of the glory of him that sate upon the Throne when wee would have one see things distinctly and fully wee set or lift him up on high The Devill carryed Christ unto an exceeding high mountain and shewed him the glory of the kingdomes of the world Matth. 4.8 3. To put honour upon him in letting him see that he was to be an organ of the Spirit for the future he was to be imploy'd in great service by the Spirit and that was a great honour Hee was to be the mouth of the Spirit unto that people to be wholly at the dispose of the Spirit 4. To avocate his thoughts from things below and to settle them upon contemplation of things divine a Prophet is not to look downward his heart should be lifted up to heaven and heavenly things And I heard behind me the voyce of a great rushing It was not the voyce of thunder or of an earth-quake but of the living creatures and the voyce some make to be the words Blessed is the glory of the Lord from his place which words are in the originall the blessed glory of the Lord from his place that is the glory of God is now going out of his place and it troubles the Angels that they lament and make a great noyse to behold so dreadfull a judgement to befall Jerusalem and the Jewes and so the voyce to be differing from these words If it be granted that these words were the voyce uttered yet may they be taken in that sense as is expressed to shew their sorrow for the ruine of the Church The blessed glory of the Lord is departing from its place God is leaving his habitation and people and all is hastening to spoyl and desolation this affected the very Angels when some great man that hath been a great Patron and friend to a place is going away what lamentation is made what a noyse and stir is there at it as in these dayes when some Ministers Magistrates and other eminent Christians are forced from their place by the enemies what complaint doth it cause what a noyse doth it make and so when God leaves a people that were beloved and deare unto him it fetches sighs and complaints not only from men but even from angels also the soul finds it a sad thing when God departs from it and oft mourns bitterly Some take the words for a Doxologie and make the sense this Blessed be the glory of God which is seen in punishing the wicked and delivering the Church God shewes himself just and righteous that he will no longer stay among a sinful people but be gone from them and render to them according to their wayes The Quere will be in what sense we may take the words both senses may without prejudice be admitted while the Angels looked upon the great losse the Jews should have by Gods departure the great evils would follow therupon they sympathized and were so affected with it that they brake out into these expressions The blessed glory of God is going out of its place and so it was vox lamentationis but when they look'd at Gods Justice and holinesse they said Blessed is or be the glory of the Lord. Though men be ruin'd Cities and Nations destroyed and God driven from his habitation yet let
his Name be glorious and so it 's vox laudis and brought in to answer the Objections and Cavils the people might make they might say What will God leave us expose us to the people of forain enemies shall we and ours be cut off will he thus deal with his people is it come to this What equity is in it The Angels to prevent such murmurings and vile speech said Blessed c. even when hee is in a way of judgement hee is to be honoured and made glorious Blessed is the glory of the Lord from his place Wee must make some search into these words and inquire after the person the place and the glory The person here is taken to be Christ who appeared unto the Prophet in the Vision The place the Throne where Christ sate and the glory that 's mentioned in the end of the first Chapter And Christ now being about to go off his Throne and put an end to the Vision the Angels cryed Blessed be the glory of the Lord from his place This is not all wee must expect from the words they type out unto us the departure of the Lord from the Temple that God would be gone and take away that which was the chief glory of it From his place God is illocall and the Rabbins use that word to signifie Gods illocality which notes place Makom is a space or place because all things subsist in them Hammakom per Antiphrafin is illocalis infinitus one that subsists or is comprehended in no place and so is an attribute of God How then is God here said to have place Nimekomo From his place God properly hath no place it 's sensu metaphorico that place is given to him where hee in any speciall manner doth manifest his glory power grace and goodnesse that is said to be his place And three places God is said to have in the Scripture 1. The heavens Isa 66.1 Heaven is my throne and 1 King 8.30 heare in heaven thy dwelling place 2. The humble heart Isa 57.15 that is Gods dwelling place And 3. The Temple in Sion Psal 132.13 14. Sion was his habitation there was his rest and abode that is in the Temple being in Sion in the Temple and Sanctuary were his voyce his Way Psal 18.6 Psal 77.13 That was the place where his honour dwelt Psal 26.8 The habitation of his glory The words are in the originall the place of the habitation or Tabernacle of his glory alluding to that in Exod. 40.24 25. where it 's said The glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle So the glory of the Lord filled the Temple there was the presence of God there was manifestations of his glory there hee heard Prayers and there he gave out many gracious answers there he accepted of their sacrifices and communicated himself unto them there was the Ark and sign of Gods presence and the Cherubims from between which God gave out the answers In these things lay the glory of the Temple but now God would be gone and all the glory of the Temple should depart God moved not from place to place being infinite illocall immovable but he is said to depart when he ceases to do as formerly hee did in the soul when you find not God acting and manifesting himself you say hee is gone Here now God would answer them no more not accept their sacrifice nor heare their prayers c. hee would not do as formerly he had done he would not protect them any longer but look upon them as being unworthy of his presence glory protection and hope and in his wrath leave them to ruine and spoyl of their adversaries and this was Gods departing according to that in Hos 5.15 I will go and return to my place till they acknowledge their offence That phrase blessed glory of the Lord you may for the better understanding conceive thus Blessed be the glorious Lord or the glory the Lord or if you will take it as it 's read the meaning is that the glory of the Lord is to be celebrated Observ 1. That those that are call'd to imployment in the Church of Christ have need not only of Christs word but Christs Spirit also Christ had spoken largely unto Ezekiel and here the Spirit lifts him up and doth in especiall manner animate and arm him to the work when the Apostles had been long with Christ heard his Sermons seen his Miracles life joyned with him in prayer all this would not do it though Christ had forty dayes spoken to them in pa ticular of the things of the Kingdome Acts 1.3 till they had the Spirit and were fill'd with that therefore Christ bid them wait for it he knew they had need of it ver 4. and that it would do more in them then all he had said unto them the Spirit would be Doctor intus and acquaint them with all truth The Spirit would purge out their feares and distempers it would warm heat seal ratifie and make them resolute in the work 2. That the Angels do sympathise with the Church and people of God in their miseries This voyce was as I shewed in the opening the voyce of the living creatures and they made a noise lamenting the state of Jerusalem God being upon the leaving of it and exposing it to great misery Ah said they the blessed and glorious Lord is going from his place and all miseries are now stepping in upon his people this affected them wee know that the Angels reioyce at the conversion of sinners and by the Law of contraries we infer they are sadded at the destruction of sinners of States and Churches they have been imployed to comfort in trouble and where there is no sympathy there is little solace Do you not think that the Angel seeing Christ his Lord and Master in his agony that hee did sympathise first with him and then strengthen him Angels being without sin are as full of pity as the Devils are of cruelty God Christ and the Spirit are full of pity and it cannot be that Angels which are so neer them should be voyd of it no they have a holy sympathy with us in Gods departure from a place is sad newes even to Angels 3. The happinesse of a people is to have the Lord and his glory amongst them and their greatest misery is to have God depart from them most think the happinesse of a people to lie in liberty honour plenty of all things David once subscribed to it Psal 144.15 Happy are the people are in such a case but he quickly crosseth out that subscription and said yea happy is that people whose God is their Lord there 's the happinesse to have God amongst them hee is the glory of a people Zach. 2.5 hee was the glory in the midst of Jerusalem there God dwelt as his worship Laws oracles miracles testified and so hee made Jerusalem glorious among all nations Where true Religion is pure Worship and Ordinances and God working for the good
both they and he shall die if it be not done The second ab utili it may be they will turn upon admonition and so be saved if not yet the Prophet delivers his own soul and there is advantage by it The words in the 16th Verse have little difficulty in them At the end of seven dayes It 's probable the sitting still and silence of the Prophet was from Sabbath to Sabbath on that day he had his glorious Vision and seven dayes after he had a new Revelation Junius The Word of the Lord came to him all the six dayes hee was solitary mourning meditating and silent but on the seventh the Lord appeared again unto him and so after hee had upon Sabbaths revelations from God Observ 1. That God beares with the weaknesses and distempers of his servants Ezekiel declines the Call of Christ shew vs his great ingratitude having had such great favours from Christ seen so much glory and being commanded once twice to go and preach to the house of Israel yet hee sits down is silent and that seven dayes together this might have provoked the Lord to great wrath to have refused him as a stubborn self-willed man and made him to say hee would never admit him to be his Prophet put such honour upon him intrust him with such great matters but the Lord beares with his weaknesse yea his continued weaknesse sometimes Gods anger kindles and breaks out quickly and that for little things in our eyes and opinions as the man gathered a few sticks on the Sabbath hee must be stoned to death those peeped irreverently into the Ark the Lord smote 50000 and upward dead for it presently 1 Sam. 6. Ananias and Saphira a small matter in our conceits it was to keep back a portion of their goods and to excuse it with a lie for this God was wroth and they died Acts 5. but the weaknesses of his children hee beares with and those great ones 2. Mans will and weaknesse cannot hinder the efficacy and execution of Gods decree the Prophets spirit was against this work he refused sate still seven dayes together and would have frustrated Gods intentions if he could but it was decreed in heaven that decree was efficacious his will must be brought off and he must be the man to execute Gods pleasure in a propheticall way to the house of Israel Jonas departs will prejudice Gods designe concerning Ninive but the Lord knew how to humble him to fetch him back being fled and to make him instrumentall to his ends notwithstanding his wilfulnesse and weaknesse Psal 33.9 He commanded and it stood fast and vers 11. The counsell of the Lord standeth for ever let there be contrary counsels wills commands they stand not Gods brings them to nought hee makes them of none effect Prov. 19.21 There are many devices in a mans heart hee thinks not to do this and not to do that and it shall be so and so neverthelesse the counsell of the Lord shall stand he will perfect the work hee hath begun in men and by men notwihstanding their infirmities 3. Spirituall imployments must have sedate quiet well-composed affections and spirits the Spirit of Prophecy came not upon Ezekiel all the time he was distempered and discontented but when time had wrought off the distemper and the il humor was digested then was he stirred by the Spirit of prophecy when the Minstrell was tun'd then the hand of the Lord came upon Elisha 2 King 3.15 Mens hearts and spirits are like Minstrells out of order quickly and long in tuning and right setting but the musick is sweetest when the Instrument is best set then God delights to communicate his Spirit to us to imploy us In the night oft God appeared to the Patriarchs then were they most quiet and fittest to receive instruction In Augustus his dayes when there was peace throughout the world then was Christ given then was hee born When there is peace throughout the little world then are wee aptest for reception of Christ his instructions and readiest for his service God will not commit weighty and great things to men without due fitnesse for them The Prophet had this time deeply to consider of the businesse and to get himself into such a frame as might best sort with the Function he was to be in 4. The Lord doth not leave his long although they be in distempers at the end of seven dayes the Word of the Lord came unto him wee may by our failings and distempers drive away God from us but he will visit us again hee may be gone all the week but come again at the end of it Psal 30.5 Gods anger is for a moment our weeping for a night and joy in the morning it 's not long this good Physician will be absent from his Patient and when he comes he will comfort and cure 5. Our Prophet brought not his own but the Word of the Lord unto the people it 's his Word must be commended unto them Prophets Apostles Ministers are his Ambassadours and must speak what is given them in Commission If they go or speak of their own heads they provoke God and wrong the people Jer. 23.30 I am against the Prophets saith the Lord that steal my word every one from his neighbour the false Prophets would take some sayings of the true Prophets and mingle them with their own lies and errours to get the more credit unto them and sometimes by false interpretations they would wrest the Word to establish their own phantasies they would prophesie for their own glory and profit and this was stealing of the Word they did handle the Word alieno sensu spiritu fine then God or the true Prophets intended so that their word was not conceived to be the Word of God but their own and yet they would fasten it upon God vers 31. I am against the Prophets that use their tongues and say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He saith The word is Lokekim which signifies lenire mollificari dulcorare they flattered and smoothed up the people speaking things pleasing and said He saith they made God the author of their dreams which the Lord reproves in the 32. verse and saith Behold I am against them that prophesie false dreames and do tell them and cause my people to erre by their lies and their lightnesse yet I sent them not nor commanded them therefore they shall not profit this people at all saith the Lord people had need look to their teachers what they are whether sent of God and such as speak the truths of God otherwise they can look for no blessing no profit but when men come in Gods name and with Gods Word you may looke for great benefit you must expect reality for here are two words which note reality and being debar is verbum res 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jehi factum est fuit Gods words are things of great weight and worth VER 17. I have made thee
hee hates reproof is brutish Prov. 12.1 Prov. 15.10 he is void of understanding a sensuall brutish creature he regardeth it shall be honoured Pro. 13.18 honoured with comfort safety life Noah was warn'd of God and made an Ark to the salvation of himself and his house Heb. 11.7 And when sinners take warning it 's life salvation to them Ezek. 33.5 hee takes warning delivers his soul how needfull then is warning how profitable if souls be saved by it 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is given by inspiration and is profitable for instruction for reproof c. It is so profitable that the salvation of souls depends upon it When David was reproved by Nathan of his sinne it reduced him from the errour of his way and was salvation to him Let us blesse God for his Word and reproofes tendred to us out of it and subject unto them as tending to our present and eternall good Bee not offended with the reprovers but affected with the reproofs VER 22. And the hand of the Lord was there upon me and he said unto me Arise goe forth into the plain and I will there talk with thee 23. Then I arose and went forth into the plain and behold the glory of the Lord stood there as the glory which I saw by the river Chebar and I fell on my face 24. Then the Spirit entred into me and set me upon my feet and spake with me and said unto me Goe shut thy selfe within thine house IN these and the following verses to the end you have directions for the Prophet and events that fell out The hand of the Lord comming upon him hee is directed to goe to the plaine where the Lord Christ promised to speak with him and he going thither the first event was he saw the glory of the Lord standing there vers 23. 2. He is amazed and falls down at it which is implied in the 24. verse 3. He hath the Spirit entring into him and is strengthened by it set upon his feet which is expressed in that 24. verse Then here is a further direction that he should go and shut up himselfe vers 24. And here his silence is declared 1. By this inclusion of himselfe in his house 2. By the bands imposed upon him vers 25. They shall put bands upon thee 3. By the impediments Christ himselfe inferres verse 26. I will make thy tongue to cleave to the roofe of thy mouth and thou shalt bee dumb Lastly the time of his prophesyings mentioned vers 27. which is when Christ should speak unto him I come to open the words The hand of the Lord was there upon me In the 14th verse of this Chapter and in the third verse of the first Chapter you have had these words opened already This hand of the Lord was the Spirit of the Lord which acted the Prophet and shewed him and others that he was not moved in an humane way or by inconsiderate motions but divinely the power and efficacie of the Spirit There That is at Tel-abib in the 15th verse he came thither and sate down there seven dayes And being in his habitation sad and backward unto the work he was call'd unto the Word of the Lord came to him verse 16. and the Hand of the Lord was there upon him Hee thought being shut up in his house that the businesse would fall and that hee should be excused from propheticall service but he was mistaken Gods Hand finds him out and hee is bidden to go forth into the plain not to stay any longer within his dores but to go into the plain or valley 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the word in Hebrew signifies being from a word which is to cut divide break This plain or valley was divided from the mountains and a solitary place free from company and disturbances delightfull fit to refresh and quiet the spirits of men Obs 1. The Spirit is the great agent in divine things it 's the hand of the Lord that doth all it beautifies with gifts and graces calls to office directs whither to go what to do it assists and inables to all divine operations Christ had the chiefest work to do that concern'd the Church and the hand of the Lord was upon him Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon mee and Isa 11.2 it 's a Spirit of might and inabled him to do mighty things Luke 24.19 And so Stephen Acts 6.10 They were not able to resist the Spirit by which he spake it 's the Spirit doth the great things in Religion sanctification and mortification are the works of this hand of the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 6.11 Acts 13.2 Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto 2. The servants of Christ have daily need of new influences of the Spirit to encourage them to and strengthen them in their work Ezekiel was full of feares had many discouragements sate in a doubtfull condition what to doe and the hand of the Lord was upon him he had formerly felt divine vertue seen Christ and heard him yet all this doth not suffice the hand must worke again and help him else nothing will be done The Apostles had been much with Christ seen his miracles heard his doctrine and yet they must stay at Jerusalem till the Spirit fall upon them Acts 1.4 Paul saith of himselfe and others Wee are not sufficient of our selves to think any thing of our selves but our sufficiencie is of God 2 Cor. 3.5 That is all our strength and help lies in him wee daily finde a want in our selves and God as it pleases him le ts out from his sufficiencie unto us now a little and then a little and we are ever receiving from him and enabled by his grace and Spirit to doe what is done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the 1. Phil. 19. is mentioned the supply of the Spirit it 's the administration subministration under-supplying underpropping of the Spirit all which words note the Saints infirmities and need of the Spirit Those things befell Paul would not turne to his good without the Philippians prayers and further supply of the Spirit as a weak house must bee under-propped a sickly man have daily help an Army constant supply so must the servants of God be under-propped helped supplied by the Spirit Therefore we should daily pray as it is in Psalme 68.28 Strengthen O God that which thou hast wrought for us and that which thou hast wrought in us 3. No place can keep off the hand of God from comming upon us There at Telabib shut up in his house divine vertue seised upon him he thought now to heare no more of prophesying and doing publick service of that nature to the Jewes but the Spirit of God found him out that cannot be excluded from any place or limited to any time It 's like the winde that blowes where and when it listeth When the Apostles were shut up in a roome Acts 2.2 3. there was a rushing mighty
winde that filled all the house and the Spirit with it that filled all them So when Cornelius and his company heard Peter preach in a private room the holy Ghost fell on them all Acts 10.44 As no place can include the Spirit of God so can none exclude it There were Saints in Neroes Court and this hand of God had been working there it 's not a dungeon any prison can keep out the Spirit of God from comming to and comforting of his servants Glover found the truth of it when he said O Austin he is come 4. The more separate from the world the more fit for communion with God Ezekiel must goe into the plain and there the Lord would talk with him hee could have conversed with him at Telabib among the people in his own habitation but the Lord declines that intimating that while we are conversant with worldly and wicked men wee are incapable of divine mysteries but when we are remote from them solitary and sedate we are fitter to heare God speake When the Church was allured into the Wildernesse Hosea 2.14 then God would speak and that comfortably unto her It was by the river Cbebar he had his former visions when he was absent from popular noyse domestick troubles his minde serene and contemplative then the Lord opened himselfe unto him Christ oft left the multitude and when he was gotten aside into the mount then was his transfiguration and the voyce This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased heare him Matth. 17. VERS 23. Then I arose and went into the plain c. IF ought have need of opening in this verse it is the glory of the Lord and there is no cloud upon this The verse expounds it selfe it is the glory he saw before by the river Chebar that glorious vision he had there is represented again here unto the Prophet The Vision was not like the Temple fixed to a place but it was moveable it was first presented to him at Chebar and now again in this plain The reasons of this second apparition of the glory of God are First to possesse the heart of the Prophet with greater reverence of divine Majesty hee was unwilling to the service called to by God sought excuses thought to decline it which argued neglect of divine Majesty to strike out such distempers and to strike in a deeper impression of feare and respect to God This glorious vision is set before his eyes and frames him to a fitnesse for that imployment he might now see Christ sitting as Judge compassed about with glory having Angels ready to execute his pleasure power in and over all parts of the world and if hee should refuse the imployment appointed hee ran a manifest hazard of his life Secondly to confirme the truth of the Prophesie and him in it Thirdly to prepare the Church in all ages to an high esteeme of this Prophesie that was ushered into the world with such glorious vision Observ 1. Divine vertue makes men obedientiall unto the command of God The hand of the Lord was upon him hee bids him goe forth and presently he arose and went forth into the plaine If things enjoined suit not with our wills opinions and humours we deny them excuse and take off our selves from the doing of them or deferre them but let God enjoyn what hee will bee it harsh to flesh and blood contrary to our wills carnall reason c. if divine vertue once come upon us and the Spirit move in us wee will doe it God bid Abraham take his sonne his onely sonne Isaac whom he loved goe and sacrifice him upon a mountaine in the land of Moriah Gen. 22. Flesh and blood had much to object here but because hee was acted by divine vertue therefore hee obeyed presently he rose early took his sonne went to the place stretched out his hand to slay him and to make him a Sacrifice we stick oft at small things when nature only workes not at any thing when the Spirit of God works in us 2. They are obedient to God simply upon his command meet with mercies unexpected Ezekiel goes forth upon command not knowing what was to come what was to be done and hee meets with an extraordinary mercy he saw the glory of the Lord a ravishing a satisfying mercy Abraham obeying the command of God heares the voyce of an Angel twice and meets with a multitude of blessings Gen. 22.17 In blessing I will blesse thee and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the starres of heaven and as the sand of the sea shore and thy seed shall possesse the gate of his enemies and in thy seed shall all the Nations of the earth be blessed because thou hast obeyed my voyce So Jacob returned from Laban to his fathers house upon divine command and he meets with Angels Gen. 32.1 hee met with God and like a Prince prevailed with him for a blessing vers 28. No man ever lost by his obedience unto God though we see no reason for things yet if we have the will of God that 's reason enough let us be tractable and forward to do the will of God and wee shall not lose our labour wee may meet with mercies unexpected as some by coming to the Ordinances have done 3. See the goodnesse of the Lord in two things First in that hee will manifest his glory to the view of mortall sinfull creatures his glory is precious a hidden thing and not obvious to creatures yet here as before he is pleased in a Vision to present it to the sight of Ezekiel it was to the Ambassador of a Prince that Hezekiah shewed the house of his precious things Isa 39.2 and it was a great favour to let them see such rarities it was a greater favour from God to let Ezekiel see this rarity of rarities his Glory Secondly that God should act over the same thing again present the same Vision in living creatures wheels eyes firmament a throne and one sitting upon it and give a sight of his glory the second time this sets out Gods goodnesse abundantly men are unwilling to do the same thing twice when as they may do it better the second time then the first and advantage themselves by it but God hath no advantage doth it perfectly at first yet simply for mans good he condescends to do the same thing again So Ezekiel may be brought to a fitnesse for divine dispensations incouraged too and in his work he shall have a sight of glory and a glorious Vision presented to him the second time by Gods own hand wee think repetitions of things in vain a Sermon twice over is stale unwelcome oft neither Minister nor people find any savour in it and so of other things but God repeats the Vision without prejudice to himself or damage to the Prophet 4. Sin makes us uncapacious of happinesse it 's mans happinesse to see the glorious God and have communion with him While Adam stood
he could behold God converse with him in his glorious appearances unto him but after his fall he fled from his presence was disabled and incapacious of the sight of him and his glory so here Ezekiel cannot abide the sight of this glorious Vision but falls down upon his face and hides himself from his own happinesse till sin be purged out of us it will be so therefore God hath appointed purging ordinances that we being purified might at last see him and have fruition of him Two things especially are required to the sight of glory Holinesse and Strength to both which sin is opposite it defiles it infeebles so that we dare not we cannot behold glory see what mischiefe sin hath done us 5. Apprehensions and sight of glory doe much humble gracious hearts When Ezekiel saw the glory of the Lord he fell upon his face the glory of a creature raises a carnall heart but the glory of the Creator humbles a gracious heart Joh. 1.14 We beheld his glory as the onely begotten of the Father and this made John the greatest Prophet that ever was borne of a woman to be so low in his own eyes that he professed himselfe unworthy to loose the lachet of his shooe ver 27. There be some things in the sight of divine glory that works strongly to humble the soule First It is of that lustre and excellency as that it darkens all the glory of the world and makes it seeme no more then the lustre of a Glow-worme to the Sunne Secondly It sets out the shamefulnesse and blacknesse of sinne Thirdly The Insufficiency of all humane motions and duties to attaine unto it Fourthly Shews the infinite distance between God and the creature All which are humbling things and concurring doe humble more throughly Ezekiel was not onely amazed doth not onely fall downe but falls upon his face and that after a second sight of the same glory so that it 's in the nature of glory to humble other things may humble a little but glory most of all that comes by the eare doth something but that is seene by the eye affects most Isaiah had heard the Seraphims crying Holy holy holy the earth is full of his glory but this struck not so deeply into his heart as the sight of glory when he saw the King the Lord of Hosts in his glory then he cryed out woe is me I am undone his holinesse was nothing his propheticall office was nothing all was nothing to him he was an undone man he saw so much sinne in himselfe I am a man of uncleane lips c. VER 24. Then the Spirit entred into mee c. BEing in a dejected condition the Spirit entred It was said before the hand of the Lord came upon him which was the Spirit and here the Spirit entred into mee What difference is there between these two phrases you may observe this difference The hand of the Lord upon the Prophet notes the efficacy and work of the Spirit in generall the common gifts and graces of it which may fit a man for publick imployment The entring of the Spirit notes not onely those but the sanctifying of a man so that he shall imploy his gifts and graces to the glory of God and eternall good of his own soule Of the Spirits entring and setting the Prophet upon his feet I spake in the 2. Chap. ver 2. It was not the ayre his own spirit returning nor an Angel but the Holy Spirit of God This entrance of the Spirit notes not motion from place to place for the Spirit is infinite and fills heaven and earth but it notes operation manifestation impletion when the Spirit doth work efficaciously manifest it self for there may be invisible operations fill the heart of any with divine vertue when it doth any one of these or all these it 's said to be sent to come to enter it comforted the Prophet being amazed sunk in apprehension of his own unworthinesse and manifested its operation by setting him upon his feete giving new strength to goe and prophesie when time should serve Goe shut thy selfe within thy house These words are not ironically spoken or by way of Sarcasme because he had formerly shut up himselfe but they are a command from God to the Prophet it 's true by reason of the rebellious disposition of the people the weightinesse of the calling he was to be in and the infirmitie of the flesh he had withdrawne from his dutie and God beares with him bids him withdraw from the publick view Jerome thinks this shutting up was a type of the besieging of the Citie that as he should be shut up in his house so the Jewes at Jerusalem Others thinke more probably that it was to receive instructions from God and to heare from him before he should speake ought to the people therefore some observe that our Prophet heard and saw much and spake not till the end of the 11th Chap. 23. vers where he saith Then I spake unto them of the captivitie c. This shutting up made way for the credit and authoritie of the Prophet and his prophesie Observ 1. The Spirit affects and visits an humble soule When the Prophet was humbled with the sense of his owne unworthinesse trembled at the sight of glory and majesty was destitute of strength then it pleased the Spirit of God to enter humiliations upon sight of glory and greatnesse are deepest and the Spirit loves to visit them speedily God doth not long leave humble soules without operations and manifestations of his Spirit Jam. 4.6 He resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble he sends the Spirit into their hearts to comfort and strengthen them because they are low vile in their own eyes but destruction is for the proud God is in battaile array against them the Spirit appeared like a dove and is a dove of the valleys not of the mountains while Paul was a mountaine in his owne eyes the Spirit never came neere him but when he was humbled with the sight of glory Act. 9. even the glory of Christ and became a valley then quickly the spirituall dove tooke her flight to him for ver 17. saith Ananias Brother Saul the Lord hath sent mee that thou mightest receive thy sight and be filled with the Holy Ghost the Lord Jesus would not let him want his Spirit to revive him that was so effectually humbled at the sight of his glory 2. The godly before Christ had the same Spirit grace and comforts that wee have since Christ Ezekiel had the Spirit enter into him What Spirit Even the Spirit of God and Christ the third Person in the sacred Trinitie neither doth that in John crosse this truth The Holy Ghost was not yet given because that Jesus was not yet glorified Chap. 7.39 Not given at all is not the meaning but was not given so plentifully so visibly till Christ was glorified You know that Kings when they enter their Kingdomes first or
siege at Ierusalem That is strengthen harden thy face against them be inexorable and this notes out the obstinacie of the Chaldeans that should besiege them they were a resolute people and would not be wearied out with difficulties or easily hearken to intreaties herein the Prophet takes on him the person of the enemie and shewes hee should be sterne against them Thine arme shall be uncovered Souldiers of old were wont to have their arms naked in fight the pictures of the ancient Warriers and Worthies are so painted Gellius l. 7. c. 12. and P. Africanus upbraided Sulpitius Galbus Quod tunicis uteretur manicatis uti foeminae and some Interpreters say that the Indians and Africans do it to this day they fight with their arms naked here it notes out the readinesse diligence of the Chaldeans whom our Prophet doth personate to execute their resolution and shortly to fight against Ierusalem they would not come with faint hearts or feeble hands but as their faces were set against the citie so their arms were naked and prepared against it not in their bosomes in their pockets not folded up but naked and stretched out readie to do service and so the Vulgar reads the word extentum not uncovered but stretched out which implies the uncovering and more a like phrase to this you have in Isaiah 52.10 The Lord hath made bare his holy arme as servants strip up their sleeves make their arms bare and readie for service so the Lord made bare his arme and put forth his power to do some choyce service for his people In this manner was the Prophet to prophesie unto the people Vers 8. I will lay bands upon thee and thou shalt not turn from one side to another c. Some make the bands reall and take the words in a literall sense but we are to look at all herein as visionall and here is commended the cause of the Chaldeans obstinacie and resolutenesse in this siege and ruine of Ierusalem and that is the authority and command of God he commanded the Prophet to lay siege to Ierusalem to lie on his side till he had ended the dayes of his siege and by the band of his power he held him so to it in the Vision that he could not do otherwise and this typed our the authority and power of God in the King of Babylon towards his souldiers who should hold them so to the siege of Ierusalem that they should not depart till they had accomplished it Their going away to meet the Egyptian army and drive that back was in order to the siege of Ierusalem and these military forces were as bands upon Ierusalem whose condition the Prophet here sustain'd and when the Chaldeans compassed the city about they could not turn aside any way till the firm decree of the Lord was accomplished Observ 1. That God beares with the sins of his people though great a long time and forbeares the punishment due to them three hundred and ninety yeers did he suffer them which marvellously commends to us the patience of Cod they provoked him daily most bitterly and did evill as they could Hos 12.1.14 and Ierem. 3.5 yet God held his peace and his hands for hundreds of yeers and therefore saith in Isa 42.14 I have a long time holden my peace I have been still and refrained my self If God had not power in him to punish his suffering with sinners so long were not so much but God hath power enough to be avenged on all the sinners of the earth he could crush them as a moth in his hand every moment he hates sin with a perfect hatred and yet he bears with notorious sinners with all sinners and sins deferring the punishment of them sometimes a long season so that he is not only patient but longsuffering 1 Pet. 3.20 The longsuffering of God waited in the dayes of Noah while the Ark was a preparing What did it wait for even their repentance Noah preached unto them of the flood warn'd them by preparing of an Ark and God expected they should amend and turn to him and it was an hundred yeers at least he waited upon that generation and now the Lord is long-suffering 2 Pet. 3.9 to us-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance if we will not repent of our sin God will repent of his longsuffering his wrath will kindle and we shall perish be inexcusable and have the deeper condemnation for abuse of his longsuffering 2. Though the Lord bear long with sinners yet he forgets not their sins they are in his book sealed up in his bag Iob 14.17 among his treasures Deut. 32.34 it 's a speech borrowed from men that compt up their Money look over their Writings and put them into bags and seal them up that they may be safe and reserved for a long time so God keeps mens sins safe by him and that a long season and then at length when they have forgot them hee unseals the bag and brings them forth and shewes them how their sins have abounded what a treasury of sin they have and what a treasury of wrath he hath Rom. 2.5 God he remembred the defection of Israel which was almost three hundred and ninety yeers before and how ever men think of their sins past God will rub their memories revive their consciences and indict them for old sins Job 13.26 Thou makest mee possesse the iniquities of my youth Job 20.11 His bones are full of the iniquities of his youth Psal 15.7 Remember not the sins of my youth God presented before them their youthfull sins that had been committed many yeers before 2 Sam. 21.1 Saul was dead but his sin was alive there was a triennall famine and for whose sake was it for Saul's and his bloody House because he slew the Gibeonites which was done many yeers before but here God remembers the sin and visits it upon the heads of his sons seven of them suffer for that sin Nab. 1.2 The Lord reserves wrath he doth not presently punish sinners but twenty thirty forty yeers after he reckons with them and powres out the wrath reserved when he hath had the glory of his patience then God visits for old sins Isa 42.4 God had been silent a long time now will I cry like a travelling woman I will destroy and devoure at once patience being ended Gods wrath begins and revives the guilt and sin that hath lain asleep so long Joseph's brethren being in affliction their sins came to mind Gen. 42.21 Wee are verily guilty concerning our brother they had sold him long before above twenty yeers and thought they should never heare of him or their sins in the sale of him but now in a strait God brings that sin to memory sin is not over when it 's acted but may be heard of many yeers after it 's likely now in these afflictive times that many meet with their old sins and they lie hard upon them