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A63066 A commentary or exposition upon the books of Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther, Job and Psalms wherein the text is explained, some controversies are discussed ... : in all which divers other texts of scripture, which occasionally occurre, are fully opened ... / by John Trapp ... Trapp, John, 1601-1669. 1657 (1657) Wing T2041; ESTC R34663 1,465,650 939

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Christ hath written for us also the great things of his Law And should they then be counted a strange thing Hos 8.12 See the Notes there His Gospel likewise he hath written to you that beleeve on the name of the Sonne of God 1 John 5.13 and ponder his Passion especially which is therefore so particularly set downe by four faithful Witnesses Sphinx Philos that men may get it written not on the nailes of their hands as one once did but upon the tables of their hearts there to abides as a perpetual picture Non scripta solùm sed sculpta as He said that we therein beholding as in a glasse the love of our Lord might be changed into the same image till our hearts became a very lump of love to him who loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his owne blood and made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father Rev. 1.5 6. Ver. 2. The Lord God of heaven hath given me This good language Cyrus might well learn of Daniel who flourished under his reign Dan. 6.28 probably acquainted him with the prophesies that went before of him Isa 44.28 and 45.1 Jaddus the High-Priest did the like many years after to Alexander the Great who not only thereupon spared the Jewes but highly honoured them as Josephus relateth Here then we see this Potentate of the earth giveth unto the Lord the glory due unto his Name Psal 29.1 2. acknowledging him the blessed and onely Potentate 1 Tim. 6.16 One that both is in the heavens and also doeth whatsoever he pleaseth both in heaven and in earth Psal 115.3 and 135.6 The God of heaven saith He hath given me all the Kingdomes of the earth This was farre better then that of Alexander the Great whom when Lysippus had pictured looking up to heaven with this Posie Iuppiter asserui terram mihi tu assere coelum c. Alexander was so delighted with it that he proclaimed that none should take his picture but Lysippus Plin. lib. 6. cap. 16. All the Kingdomes of the earth i. e. Many of them so that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a mighty Monarch an absolute Emperour But to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sole Lord of the whole world was never yet granted to any though the great Cham of Cataia is reported to cause his Trumpets to be founded every day assoone as he hath dined Heyl. Geog. in token that he giveth leave to other Princes of the earth whom he supposeth to be his vassals to go to dinner And the proud Spaniard who affecteth to be Catholick Monarch was well laughed at by Sir Francis Drake and his company Camd. Elis for his device of a Pegasus flying out of a Globe of the earth set up in the Indies with this Motto totus non sufficit orbis But he affecteth an universal Monarchy and so perhaps did Cyrus which maketh him here speak so largely And he hath charged me Et ipse commisit mihi so Junius rendereth it The word signifieth to visit one either for the better or the worse But according to the Chaldee and Syriack use it signifieth to charge or command as it is here and 2 Chon 36.22 fitly rendered But how knew Cyrus this charge of Almighty God otherwise then by books Like as Daniel who probably shewed him those Prophesies of Esay concerning him understood by Jeremy 25.12 and 29.10 that the seventy years captivity were accomplished and by Ezekiel chap. 31.1 2 3. c. which he had read likely and revolved he was the better able to give a right interpretation of Nebuchadnezzars dreame Dan. 4. To build him an house at Jerusalem i. e. To rebuild that which had beene once built by Solomon whence Hegesippus not having the Hebrew tongue will have Hierusalem so named quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solomons Temple a stately house indeed and one of the seven wonders of the world For albeit it was but one hundred and twenty foot long and fourty foot broad whereas the Temple at Ephesus was two hundred fourty and five foot long and two hundred and twenty foot broad Yet for costly and choyce materials for curious and exact workmanship for spiritual employment and for mystical signification never was there the like edifice in the world And happy had it beene for Cyrus if laying aside all his warlike expeditions and atchievements he had wholly applyed himself to the building of this holy house and to the study of those things that there he might have learned for his souls health Jerusalem which is in Judah Jerusalem was part of it in Judah and part in the tribe of Benjamin The house here mentioned viz. the Temple stood in Benjamin as was foretold it should by Moses four hundred and fourty years before it was first built by Solomon Deut. 33.12 And of Benjamin he said The beloved of the Lord that is Benjamin his darling shall dwell in safety by him and the Lord shall cover him all the day long and he shall dwell betweene his shoulders that is betwixt those two mountains Moriah and Sion wherein the Temple was built Now because Benjamin was the least of all the tribes of Israel and because so much of it as lay within Judah Josh 19.1 9. was comprized under Judah 1 Kings 11.13 therefore is the Temple here said to be in Jerusalem which is in Judah Hereby also this Jerusalem in Judah is distinguished from any other Jerusalem if there were any place in the world so called besides We reade of Pope Sylvester the second who sold his soul to the Devil for the Popedome that saying Masse in a certaine Church in Rome Funcc Chronol Jacob. Reu. pag. 109. called Jerusalem he fell suddenly into a Fever whereof he died the Devil claiming his owne For the bargaine betwixt them was that he should continue Pope till he sang Masse in Jerusalem and now intellexit se à Diabolo amphiboliâ vocis circumventum little dreamt the Pope of any other Jerusalem but this in Judah and this cost him his life Lib. 5. cap. 17. Anno Dom. 1003. Eusebius telleth us that Montanus the Haeresiarch called his Pepuza and Tymium two pelting parishes in Phrygia Jerusalem as if they had beene the only Churches in the world Hist David George p. 3. Hofman the Anabaptist had the like conceit of Strasburg in Germany and Becold of Munster both which places they called the new Jerusalem Ver. 3. Who is there among you of all his people Many there were among them that affirmed deeply of being the people of God who yet tanquam monstra marina passed by this Proclamation with a deaf eare and preferring haram domesticam arae dominicae a swinesty before a Sanuctary chose rather to abide in Babylon and there to dwell amongst plants and hedges 1 Chron. 4.23 making pots for the Kings garden then to go up to Jerusalem So that besides this O yes by the King God was faine to cry Ho Ho
●e He perfectly understandeth that there is no way of wickedness in me Psal 139.24 no sin that I do favour allow and wallow in but that the way that is called ●loby is my delight and endeavour that I am upright for the main that my heart is not turned back neither have my steps declined from his way Psal 44.18 I cannot see him but he seeth me and mine uprightness When he hath tryed me sc With favour and not with rigour for then who should abide it Psal 143.2 God promiseth to refine his People but not as silver Esa 48.10 that is not exactly lest they should be consumed in that fiery tryal This David knew and therefore prayed Examine me O Lord and prove me try my reins and my heart Psal 26.2 and 139.23 I shall come forth as Gold Which is purged in the fire shines in the water as on the other side clay is scorched in the fire dissolved in the water Verse 11. My foot hath held his steps I have followed God step by step walking as I had him for an example and pressing his footsteps This Job speaketh of himself not as vaunting but as vindicating and defending his own innocenty and as giving Eliphaz to know that he had already done and still continued to do as he had in the former Chapter exhorted him verse 21 22. Acquaint now thy self with God c. That 's not now to do saith Job for my foot hath held his steps Be at peace I am so saith he for his way have I kept and not declined Now can two walk together and they not be agreed Receive I pray thee the Law from his mouth What else have I done faith Job when as I have not gone back from the commandment of his lips Lay up his words in thine heart this I have done ex instituto saith he vel pre demenso more than my necessary food have I esteemed the words of his mouth So exact a pattern of the rule was Job so consonant to Eliphaz his good counsel Plain things will joyn in every point one with another not so round and rugged things so do plain spirits close with holy counsels not so such as are proud and unmortified Let these be touched never so gently nettle-like they will sting you Deal with them roughly and roundly they swagger as that Hebrew did with Meses saying Who made thee a man of Authority c Exod. 2.14 Good Job was of another spirit with God as it is said of Caleb Numb 14.24 and followed him fully ornavit doctrinam coelestem piis ●fficiis heavenly doctrine was as the mould and he as the metal which takes impression from it in one part as well as another His constant endeavour was to express God to the world and to preach forth his vertues or praises by a sutable practise 1 Pet. 2.9 Gressum ejus retinuit pes mens His way have I kept and not declined sc In excess or defect and therefore I am no such flagitious person as thou Eliphaz wouldst make of me Verse 12. Neither have I gone back from the commandement of his lips i.e. Ab ip sissimo Dei verbo from the very word of God that sure Cynosura which he that holdeth straightly to may truly say Lord if I be deceived thou and thy word hath deceived me But of that there is no danger sith the Scripture is the invariable Canon or Rule of Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In Reg. 3. saith Irenaeus the Cubit of the Sanctuary the Touchstone of Errour the divine Beam and most exact Balance as Austin and Chrysostom stile it yea the very heart and soul of God as Gregory And if Job lived before the word was written yet not before the Law of Nature and the Traditions of the Patriarchs which whiles they remained uncorrupted were the commandement also of Gods lips as having been received from his very mouth and might far better be called ipsissimum Dei verbum than the Popes pronunciata which Cardinal Hosius prophanely and blasphemously pronounceth to be the very Word of God I have esteemed the words of his mouth more than my necessary food I have preferred Heb. I have hi● or laid up as men do precious things as house-keepers do Provision for their Family them before my bodily food my daily bread and we see what pains men take what shift they make V● bene sit ventri ut lateri for food and raiment and other things requisite to the preservation of this life present Now Job knew that Gods holy word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Athanasius calleth it the Souls nourishment and that the promises are pabulum fidei the food of Faith as another calleth them that we may better want bread than that bread of life Hence he esteemed it more not only than his dainties or superfluities but then his substantial food without which he could not live and subsist more than his appointed portion so some render it set out for him by the divine Providence which cutteth out to every man his allowance I had rather be without meat drink light any thing every thing saith One then that sweet Text Come unto me all ye that are weary und heavy laden c. I would not for all the world saith Another Selneccer Mr. Baxters Saints everlasting Rest p. 24. that that one verse John 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world had been left out of the Bible And again There is more worth saith the same Authour in those four Chapters John 14 15 16 17. Ibid. 708. then in all the Books in the world besides Luther said Tom. 4. Oper. Lat. p. 424. He would not live in Paradise without the Word as with the Word it were no hard matter to live even in hell it self Of old they were wont to say It were better for the Church that the Sun should not shine then that Chrysostome should not preach to the people The Jewes at this day will not omit prayers for their meat or labour They divide the day even the working-day in three parts the first ad Tephilla for prayer Weensie the second ad Tara for the reading of Gods Law and the third ad Malacca for the works of their Calling And when they have read one Section they begin another lest they should seem to be weary of their task Whereas if we read but a Chapter not a quarter so long as one of their Sections or Paragraphs O what a wearinesse is it his neither begin we till we have looked over the leaf to see how long it is so soon sated are we with this heavenly Manna Verse 13. But he is in one mind and who can turn him He is ever like himself not mutable inconstant or various as men who are as Tertullian saith of the Peacock all
penned by David for private use but for publick Assemblies to be sung by the Congregation on the Sabbath and such like times It may very well be that they began their morning Sacrifice with this Psalm as the Latine Church also afterwards did their Mattens or Morning Service Let us make a joyful noyse With a clear and loud voyce as of a Trumpet singing with grace in our hearts unto the Lord. Vers 2. Let us come before his presence Heb. Prevent his face be there with the first Let us go speedily I will go also Zech. 8.21 Let praise wait for God in Sion Psal 65.1 Rabbi Gaon Praveniamus ante diem judicii Let us make haste saith he to do it before the Day of Judgement and lest we be taken with our task undone Others let us anticipate his face that is prepare our hearts at home before we come into the publick or let us give thanks for mercies already received that we may make way for more With Psalmes Oratione prorsà vorsâ Vers 3. For the Lord is a great God Understand it of Christ as the Apostle also doth Heb. 3. 4. 1 Cor. 10. Above all Gods Whether reputed so or deputed as Kings Vers 4. In his hand are the deep places Heb Searching that is much searched aster but sound to be unsearchable A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vo'ucris volan in altum R. Solom The strength of the hills Heb. The heights such as will sport a bird to get to the top of them Depths and heights are his Vers 5. The Sea is his c. Canutus confuted his Flatterers who told him that all things in his Dominions were at his beck and check by laying his command on the Sea Hen. Hunting●on to come up no higher into his Land but it obeyed him not And his hands formed the dry land Worship him therefore Rev. 4. Vers 6. O come let us worship and fall down With our whole bodies prostrate on the ground Kimchi our hands and feet stretcht out The Jews gesture of adoration at this day is the bowing forward of their bodies for kneeling they use none no more do the Graecians neither stir they their Bonnets in their Synagogues to any man Spec. Eur. but remain still covered The Lord our Maeker Who hath not only created us but advanced us as hee did Moses and Aaron 1 Sam. 12.6 Vers 7. The people of his pasture Whom he turns not out into Commons and Fallows but feeds among Lillies Cant. 2.16 And the sheep of his hand His Cades brought up at hand eating of his meat and drinking of his cup and lying in his bosome as Uriahs Ewe-Lamb did 2 Sam. 12.3 To day if ye will hear his voyce i.e. Whiles the day of grace lasteth which is not long 2 Cor. 6.2 Qui paenitenti veniam spofpondit peccanti crastinum non promisit saith Gregory Vers 8. Harden not your hearts by unbeleef and the deceitfulness of sin Heb. 3.12 13. which gradually obfirmeth the heart against God As in the provocation As your fathers did at Massah and Meribah be not you as good at resisting the Holy Ghost us they were Act. 7.51 Vers 9. When your Fathers tempted mee The times all along the wildernesse Num. 14 2● though They saw my works Both mercies and judgements Psal 98.8 yet they were refractory and unmalleable Vers 10. Was I grieved Litigavi vel cum taedio pertuli That do erre in their hearts Wandering though not so wide as to misse of Hell They have not known viz. practically and savingly Vers 11. Vnto whom I sware When put past all patience Patientia lasa fit furor If they enter c. This God sweareth cum reticentia to shew how greatly hee was incensed PSAL. XCVI VErs 1. O sing unto the Lord a new song For this new mercy of the Ark now brought into Jerusalem from the house of Obed-Edom I Chron. 16.23 but especially of Christ typified by the Ark who should bee preached unto the Gentiles beleeved on in the World received up to glory I Tim. 3 16● Sing unto the Lord all the earth Which they could not do aright till they had heard beleeved and were sealed Ephes 1.13 Unbeleevers can have no true notion of God but as of an enemy and therefore all their verball praises are but a black sanct is suitable to such Saints Vers 2. Sing unto the Lord c. David was at this time full of affection and exultation of Sprit insomuch as Michal mocked him for it 1 Chron. 15.29 and thence this heap of holy expressions to the same purpose Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Shew forth his salvation Evangelize Preach the Gospel of salvation by Christ see Psal 40.10 2 Sam. 18.18 Isa 61.1 where the same word is used Form day to day Other news delights us only at first hearing but the good news of our redemption is sweet from day to day ac si in eodem die redemptio fuisset operata saith Kimchi here as if it were done but to day Tam recens mihi nunc Christus est saith Luther ac si hac horâ fudisset sanguinem Christ is now as fresh unto mee as if he had shed his blood but this very hour Vers 3. Declare his glory Hob. S●pher it up in the particulars that God be no loser by you His wonders among all people There is a world of wonders in the work of mans redemption by Christ and all other mercies meet in this as the lines in the center streams in the fountain Vers 4. For the Lord is great Vere magnus est Christianorum Deus said Calocerius an Heathen he is omni laude major merito mituendus saith David here and elsewhere often Sound out therefore and send abroad his worthy praises the others may hear and fear Vers 5. For all the Gods c. Deunculi deastri Those petty Gods those dunghill-deities of the Heathens are nullities indeed they are Devils and those Idolls were their receptacles and as it were their bodies from whence in some places they gave oracles but were silenced at Christs comming in the flesh to the great amazement of their superstitious worshipers But the Lord made the Heavens With singular artifice Heb. 11.10 Clem. Ale● Paid l. 1. c. ●● using 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every engine of wisdome Vers 6. Honour and Majesty are before him These are his Harbingers and they go often coupled as Psal 21.45.111.145 Job 40. c. By the former seemeth to be meant outward port and splendour by the latter inward reverence and respect following thereupon Strength and beauty are in his sanctuary Gods glory shineth more in his Church than in all the World besides Vers 7. Give unto the Lord See Psal 29.1 2. One rendreth it Tribuite ponderose unde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onus pondus portate to shew that our praises of God should bee ponderous and substantiall Vers 8. Give
with crest and breast whatsoever stands in the way of their sinful lusts What a shame is it then for Saints not to be zealous of good works valiant for the truth and violent for the Kingdom And the decree was given in Shushan the Palace Pependit saith the Vulgar it hung up upon the posts to be read of all the King not shaming to have his privities seen as the phrase is Ezra 4.14 to traduce himself as it were in a publike theatre for a foolish and oppressive Prince● neither caring what might be the evil consequents thereof so that he may satisfie his own lust and gratifie his minion And the King and Haman sate down to drink So to drown the noise of conscience if not altogether dead and dedolent and so to nourish their hearts as in a day of slaughter Thus Josephs brethren when they had cast him into the pit sate down to eat bread Gen. 37.25 when it had been fitter for them to have wept for their wickednesse So did the Israelites when they had made them a golden calfe Exod. 32.6 Mat. 14. Herod feasteth when he had cast the Baptist into prison The Antichristian rout revel and riot when they had slain the two witnesses Rev. 11. The Pope proclaimed a Jubilee upon the Parisian Massacre The King of France swore that he never smelled any thing more sweet then the Admirals carcasse when it stank with long lying As for his head Epit. Hist Gallic speed he sent it for a present to the Queen-mother And she balming it sent it to her holy Father the Pope for an assurance of the death of his most capital enemy Thua●us writeth that the Pope caused that Massacre to be painted in his Palace Had the Powder-plot succeeded it should have been pourtrayed surely in his Chappel or Oratory Faux was to get into the fields to see the sport for they made no other reckoning but that all was their own No more did the King and Haman here and hence their jollity but it proved somewhat otherwise God oft suffereth his enemies to have the ball on the foot till they come to the very goale and yet then to make them to misse the game He loveth to make fooles of them to let them go to the utmost of their tedder and then to pull them back with shame to their task But the City Shushan was perplexed That is the Jewes that dwelt there together with the rest that loved them and wished well to them These wept saith the Vulgar Latine were in heavinesse say others they were intricated insnarled at their wits end so that they knew not what to do as the word here g●i●●eth only their eyes were toward the hills from whence should come their help Their comfort was to consider that melior est tristitia iniqua patiemis quàm laetitia iniqua faelentes August Better is the perplexity of him that suffereth evil then the jollity of him that doth evil Deliverance would come they believed chap. 4.14 but whence they knew not Hard things may be mollified crooked things streightened Non omnium dierum sol occidit Whiles there is a Sun to set I will not despaire of a good issue as Queen Elizabeth said when she was most perplexed as being to be sent Prisoner to the Tower Engl. Eliz● then the which never went any thing nearer to her heart CHAP. IV. Verse 1. When Mordecai perceived all that was done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Josephus when he had learned or fully informed himself Jadang so that he knew it to be so as the Hebrew text hath it Sollicitous he was of the Churches welfare and sat listening as Eli did once what would become of the Ark. 1 Sam. 3.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now therefore as ill newes is swift of foot saith Sophocles and comes like ill weather before it be sent for Mordecai taketh knowledge of that bloody decree though Esther and those about her had not heard of it ver 4 5. Neither sitteth he still at home as desponding and despairing or seeketh by sinister practices to help himself and his people but applieth himself First to God by hearty humiliation and prayer And then to the King by the intercession of Esther A carnal heart would have taken other shifting courses like as a dog that hath lost his Master will follow after any other for relief Mordecai rent his clothes To shew that his very heart was rent with sorrow for Sion This custome of renting their clothes in time and in token of greatest grief was in use not among the Jews only but Persians also and other Nations Herod l. 3. 9. Curt. l. 3 4. 11. as is noted by Herodotus and Curtius And put on sackcloth The courseft clothing he could get as holding any clothes too good for so vile a caiti●● and shewing that but for shame he would have worn none So the Ninivites sat in sackcloth and ashes for more humiliation See Exod. 33.4 c. And 〈◊〉 He put on ashes or dust that is a dusty garment sprinkled with ashes saith 〈…〉 his mouth in the dust as L●● 3.20 acknowledging himself to be of the earth earthy and fit fuel for hell fire Nonè 〈…〉 è terra desumptum pulrerem notar Merlin And went out into the midst of the City That he might be a pattern to others Si vis me flere c. And cried with a loud and bitter cry More ●ar●arico after the manner of that countrey but there was more in it then so It was not his own danger that so much affected him how gladly could he have wished with Ambrose that God would please to turn all the adversaries from the Church upon himselfe and let them satisfie their thirst with his blood as that so many innocent people should perish This made him lift up his voice unto God on High On 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joseph Verse 2. And 〈◊〉 even before the Kings gate Which should have been alwayes open to poor Petitioners as the gate of the Romane Aedilis was but was now shut against such Mourners as Mordecai A night-cap was an ill sight at Court Jolly spirits cannot endure sadnesse so great enemies they are to it that they banish all seriousnesse like as the Nicopolites so hated the braying of an Asse that for that cause they would not abide to heare the sound of a trumpet For none might enter into the Kings gate clothed with sackcloth Behold they that weare softs are in Kings houses Mat. 11.8 and those that are altogether set upon the merry pin Jannes and Jambres those Juglers are gracious with Pharaoh when Moses and Aaron are frown'd upon Baals Prophets are fed at Jezabels Table when Elias is almost pined in the desert 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 14.6 The dancing Damosel trippeth on the toe and triumpheth in Herods Hall when the rough-coated Baptist lieth in cold irons and Christs company there is neither
Death as did Antiochus Herod Philip 2 of Spain c. Dionysius the Tyrant is said to have envyed a beast whose throat he saw cut because he dyed so soon Julius Caesar wished he might dye speedily saith Suetonius Pliny commendeth sudden death as the chief felicity of life M●rs jucunda cujus nulla pracesses expectatio aut me●●● That 's a good death to nature which is neither feared nor expected yet that is the best death which hath been longest expected and prepared for Happy is he that after due preparation is passed through the gates of death ere he be aware Happy is he that by the holy use of long sicknesse is taught to see the gates of death afar off and addresseth for a resolute passage The one dyeth like Eliah the other like Elisha both blessedly Verse 14. Therefore they say unto God Depart from us Lest any should think saith Merlin here that Job speaks of such wicked as used a moderation in sinning and as the Historian said of the Emperour rather wanted vice then were vertuous Magis extra vitia quam cu●● vir●utib●m Tacit He describeth their great impiety by a rhetorical imitation expressing the language of their heart which is most base and blasphemous For first they bespeak God as if he were some low-prized scoundrel Apage Be packing thus they reject his acquaintance and would be rid of his company Porro rejiciunt Deum quot quot verbum e●us contemnunt saith Brentius here Now they reject God who slight his Word and cast his commands behind them Psal 50.17 Hence it follows by way of explication For we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes Lo they prosesse themselves to be of the number of those Qui us liberius peccent libenter ignorant who are wilfully ignorant and like not to retain God in their knowledge Rom. 1.28 or if they professe to know him yet in works they deny him being abominable disobedient and to every good work reprobate Tit. 1.16 Wicked men cannot abide God such is their evil heart of unbelief Heb 3.12 they get as far from him as they can with Cain and not only desire him to depart out of their coasts with those swinish Gergefires but churlishly say unto him as here Avaunt Room for us They will neither have God in their heads Psal 10.4 nor hearts Psal 14.1 nor words Psal 12.4 nor works Tit. 1.16 See this exemplified in those perverse Jewes lying children children that would not hear the Law of the Lord which said to the Seers see not Get ye out of the way turn aside out of the path i.e. out of this tract of truth in dealing so plainly and reproving us so roundly Cause the Holy One of Israel to cease before us let us henceforth hear no more of him Isai 30.10 11. Now for such miscreants as these who can say it is otherwise then righteous that God should regest one day upon them Depart from me ye wicked He loves to retaliate And that they who now say unto him We desire not the knowledge of thy wayes should hear from him I tell you I know you not Luke 13.27 Verse 15. What is the Almighty that we should serve him Here the rottenesse of their hearts blistereth out at the lips of these rich wretches these fat Bulls of Basan such as was Pharaoh that sturdy rebel who asked this very question in the Text What or Who is the Almighty He seemeth to rehearse the very words of Pharoah Diod. c Exod. 5.2 and had a large Reply made him by one plague upon another till he was compelled to answer himself The Lord is righteous Forced he was to speak fair whiles held upon the Rack if for nothing else yet that he might get off Such Queryings as this carry greatest contempt in them and would lay the Almighty quite below the required duty as if Almighty were but an empty title and that he could do neither good nor evil Zeph. 1.12 that it was to no purpose or profit to serve him that the gaines would not pay for the paines c. And what profit should we have if we pray unto him Hebr. If we meet him viz. by our prayers Jer. 7.16 Am. 4.12 see Mal. 3.14 with the Note Children will not say their prayers unlesse they may have their Breakfast nor hypocrites pray but for some profit They pretend sometimes to meet God but they draw not near with that true heart mentioned Heb. 10.22 in seeking God they meerly seek themselves as Spira said he did In Parabola ovis capras suas quaerunt No penny no Pater Noster And as the Wolfin the Fable having spelled Pater and being bid put together said Agnus so when these pray their hearts are upon their halfe penny Ezek. 33. They follow Christ for the loaves and serve him no longer then he serves their turnes Rarae fumant soelicibus arae Verse 16. Lo their good is not in their hand that is They are not inriched by their own industry Prudence Piety c. but God hath exalted them thus that he may bring them down again with the greater poise So some sense the Text. Others thus Their good is not in their hand that is they are not Masters of them but are mastered by them they are servants to their wealth as the Persian Kings were to their Wives or Concubines Plut. Captivarum suarum caprivi And as those stall-fed beasts in the Gospel the Recusant Guests I mean that had bought Farmes Oxen c or rather were bought of them Difficile est opibus non tradere m●res Others make this the sense and I concur with them These wicked rich men buried in a bog of security contemne God as if they had their happinesse in their own hands and were petty-gods within themselves But they are deceived All is in Gods hand who can take away their wealth when he pleaseth These men may fall sooner then whey rose sith they subsist meerly by Gods manutension and he may do with his own as he listeth The counsell of the wicked is far from me I am so far from envying their prosperity that I cannot approve of their course of life for all their wealth I am not of their judgment I like not of their way Oh my soul come not thou into their secret Let their money perish with them said that noble Italian Convert to a Jesuit Caracciol●● who tempted him with a great sum who esteem all the gold in the world worth one dayes society with Jesus Christ and his Holy Spirit and cursed be that Religion for ever c. Verse 17 How oft is the candle of the wicked put out q.d. Diod. I confesse that which you say concerning Gods judgements upon the wicked to be sometimes true in this world yet it is not so continually nor ordinarily but very oft their lamp is extinguished their comforts damped and hopes of better dashed they are all on the sudden left