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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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the Mountain for the Elders ver 1. the Top of the Mountain for Moses and the bottom of it for the People ver 2. Secondly The Manner how Wherein is related what 1st Moses did who 1. Wrote all God's Statutes in a Book ver 4. Heb. 9.19 2. In the Morning the very next day after the fiftieth Day whereon the Law was given he erecteth an Altar to represent Christ and twelve Pillars to represent the twelve Tribes who were both the Parties in the Covenant 3. He sent the First born who were the Sacrificers till the Levites were taken in their stead Numb 3.41 c. to offer up burnt offerings and Peace-offerings both Types of Christ to sanctifie the People for entring into Covenant with God ver 5. 4. With half of the Blood he besprinkled the Altar and the Book that lay upon it to be sanctified thereby ver 6. Heb. 9.19 5. He took the Volume of the Covenant and read it in the Audience of the People that he might bring them into the Bonds of the Covenant ver 7. Ezek. 20.37 6. He took the other half of the Blood and besprinkled the People or the twelve Pillars or the seventy Elders that did represent them ver 8. all which were Patterns of those heavenly Things done by Christ sanctifying us by the Blood of a better Covenant Joh. 17.19 Heb. 9.13 14 18 23. 1 Pet. 1.2 2dly What both Moses said and the People too 1st Moses explained the Covenant and Commands of God to the People ver 3 and 8. as if he had spoke thus This whole People thus besprinkled with the Blood of the Covenant are received into God's Covenant Care and Custody yet upon that Condition If they will exactly keep the Law of their God and in Truth obey all his Commandments 2ly The People Promise their Obedience to all these Conditions of the Covenant ver 3 7. as they had done before Exod. 19.8 and 20.10 Thus the Covenant betwixt God and Israel was establish'd by a mutual and willing Consent though as yet they knew not the Impossibility of the Law which is weak through the Flesh Rom. 8 3. nor did Mind the twelve Pillars of Stone representing to them how their hard stony Nature was thereby resembled to them as the two Tables of Stone did resemble their hard stony Hearts Exod. 31.18 2 Cor. 3.3 3ly The Issue and Effect of this entring into Covenant The Elders of Israel that before might not come near the Lord now see his Glory eat and drink before him and he layeth not his avenging Hand upon them c. ver 9 10 11. Great Joy it was also to all the People ver 15 17. But Moses is call'd up into the Mount with his Servant Joshua ver 12 13. where he must abide to receive the Tables of Stone and the Pattern of the Tabernacle with all the Utensils of it c. In whose absence Aaron and Hur must manage all matters of Controversie in the Camp ver 14. The Glory of the Lord on Mount Sinai appearing all that Time in their sight like consuming Fire ver 15 16. Six days God prepares Moses for receiving the Law as in six days he created the World and rested upon the seventh Gen. 2.2 The same number is here at the giving of the Law wherein God manifested as much Wisdom as in making the World Psal 19. per totum Upon the Seventh day God calls Moses alone into the Cloud who stood at a distance with his Servant till called of God That Seventh Day is supposed to be the Sabbath being call'd the Seventh Day by an Emphatick Article as the Christian Sabbath is emphatically also call'd the Lord's Day above others Rev. 1.10 The People had but three Days of Preparation to receive the Law Exod. 19.10 11. But Moses must have Six to shew what singular Holiness is required of Ministers The Measures of the Sanctuary as the Shekel Cubit c. were double to the ordinary among the People Ministers must wish with Elisha a double Portion of the Spirit that they may save themselves and those that hear them Moses abode in the Cloud Forty Days and Nights ver 18. without eating Bread or drinking Water Deut. 9.9 The like number of days Elias fasted for Reviving the Law which in his day was lost 1 King 19.8 And Christ did the same when he entred into his Ministry of giving the Gospel Matth. 4.2 and it must be supposed that the Lord enabled Moses to abide there forty days as well as to enter the Cloud which he could not do Exod. 40.35 N. B. If it be asked What became of Joshua all this time for he came down with Moses and knew nothing of the Calf set up in the Camp Exod. 32.17 when Moses brought the two Tables It is thus answered Tho' it be expresly said That Joshua went up with Moses and came down with him yet is it not mentioned in Scripture how high he went or whether he heard what God said to Moses c. It seemeth he staid still with Moses during the six days preparation till God call'd his Master from him into the Cloud and like a faithful Servant he staid in some place where his Master appointed and knew how to find him upon his Return Exod 32.17 18 not knowing any thing of Israel's Idolatry so had no meat from the Camp nor did he fast the forty days as Moses did but was as some say sustained all that time with Manna c. in some extraordinary manner by the Lord. In this forty days and nights Conference which the Lord held with Moses in the Mount God gave him the Ceremonial Law which was the Shadowed Gospel for this Infant Church as before he had given the Moral and the Judicial Laws The Ceremonial Law was to direct this Church in the External Worship of God As 1. That a place be prepared for his Publick Worship called then the Tabernacle which as Josephus saith was a portable Temple 2. That the People now in Covenant with their God must offer voluntarily all materials for the making of this Tabernacle both for the outward Fabrick and all the inward Utensils thereof Exod. 25 26 27 and 30. chapters 3. God ordains the Persons to attend the Service of this Sanctuary and they are Aaron and his Sons of the Tribe of Levi who are directed both as to their Garments and as to their Sacrifices and Ceremonies of their Consecration chap. 28 and 29. 4. God calls forth and qualifies the Persons for the whole workmanship of the Tabernacle within and without as Bezaleel and Aholiab with others whom he filled with the spirit of Wisdom and made them meet for the making of all sorts of the Manufacture thereof chap. 31. All which materials must be exactly made according to the Pattern or Model that God now shewed in a Vision unto Moses in the Mount giving him as is supposed an Aetherial Idea or Platform both of persons and things as God afterward
Works hath a double respect The 1. Respecting Gods part ma the 2. Respecting Man 's As it 1. Respects God who is Unchangeable so that Covenant must in some sense be Unchangeable also to wit in the substantial part of it which is as Unchangeable as Gods Justice by this all the Sons of Adam that do not Believe are Condemned and by this Christ was brought from Heaven to be made under the Curse of that Covenant Gal. 3 13. that he might fufil it for all that Believe in him 2. As it Respects Mans part so it is Changeable as to its accomplishment by Man with whom it was made it being not built upon Gods Unchangeable purpose within himself that it should stand for ever in that first Paradise Dispensation and not be changed but it was left to the Liberty and Free Will of Man either to keep it or break it as he himself best pleased God neither purposed nor promised to give Adam any additional Grace of influence whereby he should be caused to keep this first Covenant as he doth in the second Covenant but only Life is promis'd him on condition of his obedience by that Grace he was created with That God never intended the first Covenant Dispensation in Paradise to stand for ever is evident three ways 1. The Scripture saith nothing of Adam after his Fall save only his begetting of Children and of his Dying but little of his Life and as little of the Place of Paradise where it was is not well known which intimates God had a farther design to lay aside that first Law-Dispensation and to set up the Covenant of Grace given therefore to Adam in Paradise immediately after his Fall 2. God no where saith that he would be the God of Adam as he oft saith the God of Abraham for in the first Covenant he was to win this Honour by his Obedience and so to wear it This Royal Charter thus dated expired at his Disobedience God the Creator never said he would be Adam's God in the first Covenant so as to grant him influences to obey and to obey to the end as was to him and to us by God the Redeemer in the Covenant of Grace Ezek. 36.27 Deut. 30.6 Jer. 32.39 40. c. The 3. Evidence is The Lord did purposely give Adam that positive Law of prohibiting his Eating the Fruit upon pain of Death and did purposely suffer the Serpent to tempt him although he foresaw the Tempter would Master the Tempted All this was a Divine design to have the first Covenant abolished and then to deal with faln Man in the Dispensation of a better Covenant They first Covenant gave way for the Theatre of Grace to be Acted in the second to be short the Law Covenant is abolished not only the Ceremonial Law under which the Galatians were not but also the curse of the Moral Law in sundry Respects 1. It remains not for Justification for no Man is justified by the Law in the sight of God Gal. 3.11 for the Law promiseth Life only on condition of compleat Obedience and this is not to be found in any Man save in the Man Christ Jesus 2. It remains not for Condemnation for Christ is the end of the Law for Righteousness and he Redeemeth us from the curse of it so that there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 A Believers first Husband as to judging and condemning him is Dead and if he to wit the Law Covenant will he cursing and condemning any one in Christ that soul may say Uxori lis non intenditur the Law cannot commence a Suite against a Wife under Covert Baron I am Married to Christ Go Sue my Husband Rom. 7.2 3 4. Nor 3. Doth it remain in its commanding any more than in its condemning Power as it hath lost its Damning so its Domineering Authority Thus the Apostle argues Ye are not under the Law but under Grace that is not under the First but under the Second Covenant you are not under the Rigour and Irritation under the Curse and Coaction of the Law as Slaves under a Tyrant forcibly provoking or Compelling and Cursing you by Vertue of Sin therefore saith he sin shall not have dominion over you Rom. 6.14 rebel it may but reign it shall not in any under the Covenant of Grace Sin may have a Being and also a Dwelling in a truely Believing Soul but like those Beasts in Dan. 7.12 hath its Dominion taken away though its Life be prolong'd for a Time and a Season Although it be dejected from its regency yet it is not ejected from its inherency By this Men may know under what Covenant they live If you be led by the Spirit as your Tutor into all goodness righteousness and truth Eph. 5.9 and fetching you home from all your outstrays you are not under the Law or Covenant of Works Gal. 5.18 but are Sons of God Rom. 8.14 and have received the Spirit of Sonship or Adoption Gal. 4.6 Rom. 8.13 15. mortifying the Flesh c. Thus the Law as a Covenant Christ becoming sin for us and a curse for us and satisfying for all that ever the first Covenant required of us in our stead and as our Surety hath taken out of the way and Nail'd it to his Cross with the same Nails wherewith himself was Nailed Col 2.14 So we are dead to the Law and it is dead to us by the Body of Christ Rom. 7.4 his Body bearing our sins upon the Tree 1 Pet. 2.24 So that now 't is only the Rule of all Righteousness in the Hand of a Mediator Gal. 3.19 and in the Hand of his Spirit also Rom. 7.9 and 8.9 without which subserviency the Law is but a dead and a killing Letter 2 Cor. 3.6 when Christ is not the Writer his Spirit the Ink and Mans Heart is the Table whereon it is written by the Finger of God Rom. 2.15 and 6.17 and Heb. 8.10 To have the Law from which is our only fear a Servant to the Gospel is our great comfort now through the over-ruling Grace of the second Covenant the Law Covenant is become David's delight Psal 119.92 And Oh how he loved Gods Law ver 97. as his Rule and Counsellor ver 24. above Gold ver 127. yea as his Comforter against the sting of Death which is Sin and against the strength of Sin which is the Law not made by the purchase of Christ subservient to the Gospel 1 Cor. 15.56 57. where Blessed Paul Christs chief Herauld proclaims Victory over Sin and Death with a World of Solemnity and Triumph through Christ who had disarm'd Death and unsting'd Sin by satisfying the curse of the Law as he hath taken away not Sin it self but the Guilt of it so not Death it self but the Sting of it it may now be safely put into our Bosoms How the second Covenant is Everlasting though the first be abolished both à parte ante and à parte post will
upon the Sea Shore this latter call'd also the Dust of the Earth Gen. 13.15 resembles his Carnal Seed which with the Cursed Serpent did seed upon Dust but the former the Stars of Heaven Gen. 15.5 holds forth his Seed of Believers all Heaven Born and shone as Stars in their Generation accordingly the Lords design was Double in giving his Law on Sinai First Unto the Carnal Seed it setteth out the Old Covenant of works which they had broken and which God would not have wholly blotted out of the Mind and Memory of Men thus the Law strictly or absolutely taken as it was given to Adam as his way to Life in his first Estate so it shut up all these Jews under it as legally Dead except they would slee to Christ seeing they could not attain to any righteousness or Life by the Law simply considered for so 't is the sum and substance of the Covenant of Works and begets Children to Bondage which shall have no Inheritance with the Children of the Promise who all lay hold on Christ in the New Covenant as Gal. 4.21 to the end of the Chapter demonstrateth where Paul speaks of the Law absolutely and properly as a Law Covenant strictly taken in a contradistinction from the Gospel affirming how its Children as those of the Bond-Woman come short of Righteousness and Salvation are cast out of the Kingdom being Persecutors of the Spiritual Seed the Children of Promise as now all reprobates are The Second Design was for the Start of Heaven the Spiritual Seed or Believing Jews to whom the Law on Sinai did darkly shadow out the Covenant of Grace therefore did it bind them to the observation of the Ceremonial as well as Moral part the former being a Metaphorical or Figurative Gospel as the latter was a Literal Law the Letter whereof was not so much killing even to the carnal Jews in Gods Intention as by their own Corruption whereby they scorn'd Christ and his Righteousness in the New Covenant thinking to save themselves by their own Righteousness in a Covenant of Works Rom. 10.3 whereas this Covenant on Sinai was not otherwise designed upon a Damning but only upon a proving Design hence Moses saith there Exod. 20.20 Fear not for God is come to prove you he saith not to damn you and therein as Israel avouched the Lord for their God so God avouched them for his people Deut. 26.17 18. and 29.10 11. which could not be done with Man faln out of the Covenant of Works but by a Covenant of Grace and had this Covenant on Sinai been a Covenant of Works then was God injurious to Israel in calling them back from that Covenant of Grace given to Abraham their Father four hundred and thirty years before Gal. 3.17 to this worse Covenant as if God having begun with them in the Spirit would now perfect them by the Flesh Gal. 3.3 whereas 't is Gods plain method to lead his people from Faith to Faith Rom. 1.17 and from Grace to Grace John 1.16 Job 17.9 and Prov. 4.18 but never from Grace to Works Object 3. But then why was the Moral Law being the sum of the Covenant of Works given to Israel at Sinai or Horeb Deut. 29.1 if it were not that very Covenant Answ 1. Besides all the aforesaid for farther clearing this great Truth I shall add 1. The Law was not given to Israel as intended they should seek Justification and Salvation thereby but for a fuller discovery of Sin and a further conviction of Conscience 'T is true the very Law of Nature did discover Murder to be a sin in Cain Gen. 4.9 Whoredom to deserve burning Gen. 38.24 with 34.31 and the Patriarchs could say God forbid that we should steal Gen. 44.7 Yea those two Heathen Kings abhorred Adultery yea looking and lusting after any Woman Gen. 12.17 20.3 the same I might add concerning the breach of all the other Commandments as 1. Gen. 35.2 2. Gen. 31.34 35.5 3. Gen. 4.26 4. Gen. 2.3 Exod. 16.23 5. Gen. 27.41 All these were discovered to be sins before the Law was given by Moses even by the light of Nature but in Moses time this light was almost extinguish'd and this Law was obliterated and blotted out by Israel's conversing so long among the Idolatrous as well as Ignorant People of Egypt Indeed Adam's Fall broke this Law and Light in pieces and afterwards it grew dimmer and dimmer daily yea the Sheards of Gods Image wherein Man was created and being broken by his fall became smaller and smaller every Age after so that they could hardly be put together Men successively marring their own Consciences more and more and the Devil stepping in to promote it the Superseminator sowed Tares to choak the good seed wherefore lest it should be lost for ever as a Law in the heart God caused it to be written for the eye as well as spoken to the ear The End why is expressed by the Apostle The Law entred that the Offence might abound Rom. 5.20 to wit where it hath abounded in the Conversation it might now by the light of the Law abound also in the Conscience in great Grief for it and due Detestation of it as the greatest evil He saith also that he had not known sin but by the Law Rom. 3.20 and 7.7 and therefore was the Law added because of transgressions Gal. 3.19 which are discovered by it Ubi Lex ibi Lux. Torah Or Hebr. Gods Law is Mans Light Prov. 6.23 laying all open as 1 Cor. 14.25 and threatning destruction to transgressors Rom. 3.20 23. Answ 2. The Law on Sinai was not given to stand as Covenant of Life 'twixt God and Israel by which they might live for when it was given in its Thunders and Lightnings they were so affrighted that they saw they could not come near the Lord by that Law wherefore then saith the Apostle serveth the Law Gal. 3.19 he answers himself it serveth to chase us to Christ v. 24. whom he calls the End of the Law being accommodated to that Insantstate of the Church which though an Heir of the Promise in the Covenant of Grace made to Father Abraham yet while under Nonage was also under Tutorage and so the Law was her School-master to scourge her to Christ who was able to give her life which the Law could not give her Gal. 3.18 21 24. but rather clapt her up close Prisoner as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies as also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 3.22 23 from whence she could not possibly escape unless delivered by her Goel or Redeeming Angel Gen. 48.16 Christ Jesus the Avenger of blood being at her heels she must flee for her lite to this City of Refuge The third Consideration is That the Apostle in those chapters 3d. and 4th of his Epistle to the Galatians doth not make the Covenant on Sinai a distinct Covenant from that of Works and that of Grace to make a third Covenant but he
resting on their own Revelations of a pretended Spirit The Prophets and Apostles making but one Foundation he that stands besides the one must stand besides the other also because both be but one and we must Build upon both or we can Build upon neither It may be said that Antin●mians truely so called deal with the Prophets as Papists do with the Protestants who condemn that in Calvin c. which they commend in Augustine c. so these seem to receive truth from an Apostle yet dare reject the same truth from a Prophet what is this but to regard Names more than Things in them both which indeed 〈◊〉 no better than to disregard the Writings of both the Old and the New The ninth Argument If the Doctrine of the Law and of the Prophets must abide for ever then none may presume to despise them c. but the foregoing is true therefore the following is so This is plainly proved Mat. 5.17 18. all the Scriptures of the Old Testament are comprehended under these two Names the Law and the Prophets Mat. 7.12 the Prophets being all the Interpreters of Moses Law and certainly none can abrogate that Law but Christ who is our Law-giver Isa 33.22 yet Christ saith expresly he came not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to dissolve or loose the Law but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to accomplish it and so to establish it in the hand of a Mediator better and greater than Moses Gal. 3.19 as that Heaven and Earth should sooner pass away than one Jot or one Tittle should pass from the Law This was a needful Doctrine in Christs Time because the Pharisees would then have made void some part of the Law with their Traditions Mat. 15.3 4. Mark 7.13 Mat. 23.4 How much more needful is this Doctrine in our own Time when Antinomians now would make all the whole Law vo●d and not obligatory to any Believer The Blessed Apostle Paul who was a pure Gospel Preacher and a most strenuous asserter of Free-Grace saw in his Day an Emergent Necessity of affirming this great Truth saying We establish the Law Rom. 3.31 which yet some men cry down calling Repentance a Legal Grace Humiliation a back-door to Heaven and grieving that they have grieved so much for their sins c. undoubtedly the Moral Law is in the hand of a Mediator as an Everlasting Rule of Righteousness to the end of the World yea and the Ceremonial Law is rightly called an Ordinance of Eternity Exod. 12.14 as it stands firm for ever in the things those Ceremonies did signifie let us not then think to build some New fine yet false Golden Bridge to Heaven Promising Pardon and Paradise to Sinners as Sinners and freeing Men from Doubting while in the Bonds of Iniquity This is a fair easy step and like the finding out of the new North VVest passage to the Indies which hath brought shipwrack upon all its undertakers The Law must be our School-Master to bring unto Christ Gal. 3.24 't is to us what Paul's Sister 's Son was to him Act. 23.16 17 18. to shew us our Danger and to send us to the chief Captain of our Salvation Heb. 2.10 who came not to destroy but to fulfil the Law The tenth Argument 'T was the practice of Christ and all his Apostles to make use of the Scriptures of the Old Testament This is obvious in all parts of the New Testament to every ones eye and observation Neither can we stop the Mouth of any gain-saying Jew but by Testimonies drawn from the Old Testament as Paul did Act. 9.12 c. which the Jews do acknowledge and not from the New which he acknowledgeth not for principles must be granted by both parties contra negantes principia non est disputandum Besides it might further be urged that many great Truths taken for granted by all sober Minds have yet no grounds of a Divine story but what is drawn out of the Old Testament as that it is lawful for Magistrates to punish Sabbath-breakers that it is unlawful for a Man to Marry his Sister c. or that the People may upon Emergency ordain without Officers according to Numb 8.10 These and many other Truths have no other proof but from the Old Testament all which do declare that it 's Divine Authority continueth still under the New and that rules may be drawn from it in all matters which are not Ceremonial or Judicial but of a Moral and Common and so of a continuing equity Whatever is unrepeal'd stands still in full force and vertue 't is a sufficient proof in such cases though out of the Old Testament to justifie many practices under the New they are both useful for Rules and therefore Christ calls him a good Scribe or Teacher of the Church who brings forth the precious treasure of Truth out of the treasury of both the Old and New Testament Mat. 13.52 ☞ It follows hence We must take heed of all Novel Notions which hold no Harmony with the Antient Truths We should contend for the Doctrine of Faith which was once that is of old delivered to the Saints Jude ver 8. 'T is one of the Sins of our Times and that none of the least Sins to despise Antient Truths The Lord complains how the False Prophets had led his people from the Antient paths Jer. 18.13 14 15 16. which he calleth a leaving the Snow of Lebanon whereby the thirsty Traveller used oft to be cooled and comforted and therefore in no wise to be left This Sin God calls not only a forsaking but also a forgetting of God and of all things in the World God cannot abide to be forgotten this he calls a very horrible thing and filthiness in a Virgin which is most abominable in as much as they had forsaken the Antient paths Heb. paths of Antiquity or of Eternity such paths as were chalked out by the Law of Moses and walked in by the Patriarchs and Prophets God tells them plainly their Sin was no less than a Land-desolating Sin Should not we then shun untrodden paths as dangerous and beware of new Lights that never bring new Hearts and avoid such new Notions as rather indulge than mortifie old Corruptions We should have an holy Jealousie or a Jealous Eye upon that which is Novelty No Man saith Christ having drunk old Wine straightway desireth new for he saith the old is better Luke 5.39 importing that the Rule of Gods Word is Antient and Eternal but the Dreams and Dotages of the Pharisees were New Upstart Mushroom Earth-sprung yea Hell-sprung Opinions and the Old Heaven-born Institutions of God must needs be far better than whatever Novel Inventions of Men obtruded on the Church either by Jewish or Popish Pharisees God therefore calls us to enquire after the old way which is the only way to give right Rest to our Souls Jer. 6.16 and even in Gospel times the Apostle John commends to us that which was from the beginning 1 John 2.7 and
25. They must be Pharaoh's Slaves and Drudges in Building Treasure Cities for him Exod. 1.11 At this Juncture Moses is born brought out of Eminent Danger brought up a Courtier by Pharaoh's Daughter banish'd thence into Midian and there Married c. Exod. 2. from Midian God calls Moses sends him Embassadour to Pharaoh with small Success Chap. 3.4 5 6. Pharaoh harden'd his own Heart adding Sin to Sin the Devil hardened it as God's J●ilour and as a Spirit tempting to Sin but God harden'd it in a Judiciary way as a Punishment for his Sin Then came the ten Plagues upon him and his People Chap. 7.8 9,10 11. each higher and deeper drenching than other Secondly The Concomitants when God had by his ten stroaks at Pharaoh's hard heart extorted a Dismission of his People out of the Tyrants hands Israel began his Journey out of Egypt having first the Law of a yearly Passeover ordained for their Observance Chap. 12. and the Consecration of the first-born Chap. 13. They depart from Succoth not the right way to the Mediterranean Sea by Palestine but to the Red Sea by the Wilderness thence coming to Aetham c. Pharaoh pursues them Chap. 14. and is Drowned for which was Sung a Song Chap. 15. At their coming to the Wilderness of Sin they want Meat Chap. 16. at Rephidim They want Drink and are Assaulted by the Amalekites Chap. 17. Moses complains of the Burden that the Government of Six hundred thousand Men c. should lay upon his Shoulders Chap. 18. Then they came to Mount Sinai the place designed for meeting God Exod. 3. and Chap. 19. Thirdly The Consequents are two great things First The Giving of the Law And Secondly The Erecting of the Tabernacle As to the first There was 1. The Preparation for it Chap. 19. 2. The Promulgation of it Chap. 20. not only of the Moral but also of the Ceremonial and Political Laws Chap. 21 22 23. Then 3. the Confirmation of all by a Solemn Covenant entred into betwixt God and Israel Chap. 24. and when forseied by the Golden Calf was again renewed with the two Tables of Stone c. Chap. 34. As to the Second the Pitching of the Tabernacle The Form 1. was shewed to Moses in the Mount. 2. The Matter And 3. The Makers of it all prescribed by God and described in his Word Chap. 25.26 27 31. 4 The Worshippers in it the Priests Habits Ordinations and Offices Chap. 28 29 and 30. Next follows the Obstruction of this work by the Idolatry of the Golden Calf Chap. 32. but 't is removed by a Reformation Chap. 33. Upon which the Materials of the Tabernacle are brought together and all placed in their due form and order for erecting the Tabernacle Chap. 35 36 37 38 39. And Lastly When the Tabernacle was compleatly Erected God himself comes and Consecrates it Chap. 40. Now come we to make Remarks upon all these three Premises The first Rank is from the Antecedents of Israel's Deliverance out of Egypt The first Remark from hence is That Divine Compassion is the Foundation of the Churches Deliverance out of her deepest distresses and not any Desert on her part c. The Church of God had lain long even two hundred and fifteen years in a distressed state God having turned the Egyptians Hearts to hate his people Psal 105.25 as much as they had loved them before during all the time of Joseph's Government This fault we may not father upon God as if he were the Author of this Sin for he is not of any Jam. 1.13 14 15 as it is impossible to be so 't is abominable to think it Man's Inclination to Good is properly and peculiarly from God but his Inclination to Evil is from his own depraved heart drawn out by Satan's Suggestions and must be ascribed to God only by Accident God did this saith David that is not positively but permissively in giving the Egyptians an occasion to hate his People for by his multiplying them so marvellously through his Blessing c. They conceited that the Israelites would soon grow stronger than themselves c. Psal 105.24 One and the same Fire softens Wax but hardens Clay God did not infuse this Envy into them the Sun setting is only by Accident the cause of the Night whereof the shadow of the Earth is the proper Cause c. All Hearts are in God's Hands who fashioneth them as to their liking or disliking of others at his pleasure yet without Sin This was a Judiciary Act in God to suffer the Egyptians thus hardly to handle the Hebrews 1. Because some of them were faln to Idolatry Ezek. 20.5 7 8. and 23.3 8. Josh 24.14 2. To wean them from Egypt and to make them long for Canaan 3. That by a just Title they might spoil their spoilers 4. That God might glorifie himself by pouring forth his ten Plagues upon Egypt 5. Because the Sins of the Amorites as well as of the Egyptians were not yet full Gen. 15.16 And 6. Because the Hebrews were not brought to a true and due Humiliation for their Sins till their long and hard Affliction handed them to a saving sense thereof How remiss they were in their Repentance and how hardly wrought up to it God's Complaint of them doth Demonstrate Ezek. 20.7 8. that is I might say what I would they would do what they list so that God was so highly provoked with their obstinacy as his Justice made him say I am just ready to Resolve your Ruin in Egypt and never Redeem you out of the House of Bondage God had as much ado to forbear Killing them as he had Moses in the same Country for neglecting to Circumcise his Child Exod. 4.24 the designed Law giver must not be a Law-breaker But behold how God's mercy triumphs over his Justice Jam. 2.13 but I wrought for my own Names sake c. Ezek. 20.9 10. No sooner were Israel brought to a right sense of their Sins so as they sighed groaned and cried to God but immediately Divine Bowels began to yern and to be broached and bleeding over them Exod. 2.23 24 25. and 3.7 8 and 6.5 and 22 23 27. When Israel understood that God had a seeing Eye an hearing Ear and a commiserating Heart together with his Promise of an helping Hand They fall down prostrate to adore him Exod. 4.31 c. And then began Divine Bowels to yern and to flow forth freely and fully in order to their Deliverance Thus saith God When Israel was a Child then I loved him and called my Son out of Egypt Hos 11.1 that is not so much 1. Because all young things be lovely especially Children not only for their pretty features but for their Innocency ignosceney c. But rather when Israel was unlovely a mere Child having nothing of worth in him to make him desirable while he was an Infant in his Birth-blood Ezek. 16.6 c. the Church's Infancy takes Date from her being in Egypt's
yea but when Sir for he went not Mat. 21.29 The Eighth Remark is The variety of Laws given to the Church in the Wilderness the lively Oracles or life giving Oracles of God Acts 7.38 First The Moral Law spoke by God himself in the audience of all the people which is call'd our Life or the Rule of an Holy and Spiritual Life Deut. 32.46 47. Secondly The Judicial Laws which were meerly Judaical and peculiar to the People of the Jews and which cannot fit every Nation no more than any Shoe can fit every foot tho' Carolostadius would have all Magistrates to govern their Subjects by them in all Nations The end of giving the Judicial Laws was to teach Natural Equity to which Judicial Laws mentioned in Chapters 21 22 23. of Exodus must be added those Directions that Jethro gave Moses for substituting Inferiour Magistrates Exod. 18. which choice of Elders was not made till Israel's departure from Sinai Deut. 1.7 8. Nor could Jethro offer Sacrifices as he did Exod. 18.12 before the Law was given Nor could Moses make known God's Statutes to the People as he doth Exod. 18.13 16. before himself knew them So 't is misplaced for weighty Reasons as Dr. Lightfoot observes Harmony of Old Testament Pag. 65.66 Thirdly The Ceremonial Laws were all Typical and therefore Temporary call'd a Yoke too heavy for our Fathers Act. 15.10 Yet their end and use was to prefigure and shadow out the Gospel in its divers Truths in which sense they continue still though not in respect of Observation or Practice yet in respect of Instruction Direction and Testimony to Christ and his Truths The Ceremonial and Judicial Laws are a Commentary and a kind of outwork to the Moral Law The Ceremonial to the first Table and the Judicial to the Second And they are call'd a Wall of Partition betwix● Jews and Gentiles because they are made up of Laws that are hard as so many Stones in Nature and that are so many in number as make up a Wall The number of both being reckoned fifty seven when the Moral Law or Decalogue was given by the Son of God Vivâ Voce by his own audible Voice with such Terrour that the People were not able to abide it but desire Moses to be a Mediator He hereupon draws near to God in the thick Darkness receiveth seven and fifty Precepts Ceremonial and Judicial which when he came down from the Mount He telleth the People of and writes them in a Book namely in his Pentateuch The Moral Law sheweth Man what he ought to do and with the same sight he seeth that he cannot do it This makes Man seek to the Ceremonial Law for some Sacrifice or Ceremony to satisfie for his not doing his Duty to the Decalogue wherein Man may see soon that burning a Dead Beast is but an inconsiderable satisfaction for the Sins of a living Man and that outward Purisfyings of Mens selves can avail but little to the cleansing of a soiled Soul the Prophet tells us Thousands of Rams and ten thousand Rivers of Oil will not do it nor can the Fruit of the Body expiate the Sin of the Soul Mic. 6.6 7. The Jews wearied God to the Soul with their Sacrifices and Ceremonies Isa 1.13 14. And David could say Sacrifices thou would not but a broken Heart Psal 51.16 17. The Consideration of this Deficiency in the Ceremonial Law delivers sinful Man up to the Judicial Law which holds forth the Penalty of obstinate Offenders and discovereth to him what he deserveth by the Law of Retaliation This Law is contained in the three Chapters Exod. 21 22 and 23. And thus all those three Laws the Moral Ceremonial and Judicial are as a Schoolmaster to whip us home to Christ Gal. 3.24 None of those Laws of Mos●s can save us It was not Moses or the Law but Joshua or Jesus that brought Israel into the Land of Promise Hereby we are constrained to seek out for a Saviour the Lord our Redeemer For there is no other Name under Heaven whereby we can be saved but by Jesus Christ Act. 4.12 N.B. The Parable our Lord himself propounds tends something to this purpose as Luk. 10.30 31 32. Concerning the Man Travelling from Jerusalem to Jericho and falling among Thieves c. Wherein the Man mentioned is Travelling the wrong way He should have travell'd from Jericho the Place of God's curse● to Jerusalem the Place of God's Worship and Blessing not from Jerusalem to Jericho As the Man went out of God's Precincts and so out of God's Protection no wonder then if he falls among Thieves Thus the Original Sinner Adam went the wrong way when he listened more to the Serpent's Promise and to his Wife Eve's proffer than he did to God's Precept He went from the Tree of Life to the Tree of Knowledge there hearkening after Honour of the Devil 's giving and not God's he falls among Thieves that stopp'd him stripp'd him and strip'd him so that he was half Dead of his wounds 1. Satan dismounts him of his State of Innocency which should sustain him 2. Sin strips him of all Righteousness which should aray him And 3. Death was the third Thief that strip'd him striking fall'n Man with his own guiltiness and miserably wounding him here is Man in a woful Condition By comes a Priest that is the legal Priesthood or Moral Righteousness This passeth by him but does not cannot help him By also comes a Levite with the Ceremonies of the Levitical Law or formal Holiness This also passeth by and relieveth him not Both these are Physicians if no value miserable Comforters the Eyes of neither of the two did pity him But by comes a good Samaritan our Saviour himself whom they call'd a Samaritan c. he Pities him Salves him Mounts him Lodges him and Pays all for him This Christ the second Adam did for the first Original Sinner N.B. Oh that he may do so for us Adam's Children who are all Actual Sinners and whom the Thieves Satan Sin and Death have wounded Oh that Christ may 1. Pity us when no other doth so Ezek. 16.8 Jer. 31.20 c. 2. Salve us pouring in the sharp Wine of Reproof to search our wounds as well as the sweet Oil of Comfort to supple them 3. Mount us upon his own Righteousness or we never reach the new Jerusalem 4. Lodge us in his own Chamber his Church here and in his Fathers Bosom hereafter 5. And pay all for us by his Active and Passive Obedience which is the two Pence here As our first sinning was without us in Adam so our full satisfying is without us in Christ his Justitia Personae Justitia Meriti pays all c. The Ninth Remark in this twelvth Station at Mount Sinai is the Promulgation of the Law is confirmed by bringing the People into Covenant with God whereof we have an account Exod. 24. which relateth First The Place where according to God's appointment the side of
Israel And 2. Cozbi Hebrew signifies a Lye her Father Zur being a King of Midian Numb 25.15 and 31.8 and Balaam a Figure of Antichrist all which join together to seduce the Christian Church to their Abominations of Fornication and Idolatry by the Doctrine of Balaam Rev. 2.14 As the Wisdom of God in Christ sends forth her Maidens to invite to the Gospel-feast Prov. 9.1 to 5. so the foolish Woman the Whore of Babylon enticeth many yea strong ones out of the way to her stolen Waters ver 13 18. and Prov. 7.26 2 Pet. 2.1 Rev. 16.13 14. and 17.1 5. though she pretends to be the Daughter of Zur or Rock Christ yet is she departed from the Faith of Abraham their Father The Sixth Remark is That which shuts up Chap. 25. in ver 17 18. namely God's charge to Israel that they execute his Vengeance upon the Midianites which was done by Moses before his Death Numb 31.2 c. Jehovah said Tsaror distress that is War against them ver 17. first God punisheth his own People for their Sins and now Decrees Vengeance against their Enemies Thus the Lord saith to the Nations that were his Church's Adversaries Lo I begin to bring evil upon the City called by my Name and should ye be utterly unpunished ye shall not be unpunished Jer. 25.29 Israel shall ruine those that would ruine them The Seventh Remark is This Vengeance is not doomed also against the Moabites though they were faulty in corrupting the Israelites ver 2. For 1. Moab was now spared for Lot's sake Deut. 2.9 as was also Ammon ver 19. 2. Because Christ was to come of Ruth the Moabitess 3. Yet their Doom was only delayed for it was again declared Deut. 23.3 4. and at last executed by David 2 Sam. 8.2 4. The Midianites were more Malicious and Mischievous than the Moabites 1. In detaining of Balaam when Balak had dismiss'd him in high displeasure Numb 31.8 for tho' Balaam gave that Pestilent Counsel to Balak Rev. 2.14 yea and the Daughters of Moab did prostitute themselves Numb 25.1 2. yet Balak at first did not much regard that Counsel but turned Balaam off with shame Numb 24.11 25. but the Midianites retained him and amongst them He was slain Numb 31.8 But 2. Cozbi a King's Daughter of Midian was Meretrix meretricissima the Grand Whore that was the principal Instrument of Evil unto Israel as God sheweth ver 18. and no doubt but other Midianitish Women were as malignantly wicked as she taking her a Princess for their wicked Pattern Therefore the Midianites were first in the Punishment The Eighth Remark is God writes the Sin upon the Punishment in his giving them Vexing for Vexing by the Law of Retaliation The Amity pretended by Enemies is oft-times but Counterfeit Courtesie and Cut-throat Kindness those Adversaries of Israel vexed them more by their Wiles than by their Wars the Devil himself will be content to Compound when and where He cannot Conquer and too oft his Compounding is the most effectual means of his Conquering all this feigned friendship of Moab and Midian was but a diabolical Plot to destroy Israel which they bid fair for in the matter of Baal-peor ver 18. Midian for distressing Israel was distressed yea and destroyed by Israel Numb 31.2 c. which is call'd the Vengeance of Jehovah ver 3. for wrong done to his Church is done to Himself and Moab though now spared because no better for being spared at this Time was after both distressed and destroyed also 2 Sam. 8. and Jer. 48 c. N. B. The Vengeance or Doom that was decreed against the Midianites was not executed till we come to Numb 31.1 2 c. before which The First Remark is The last numbring of the Israelites who were to possess the Land of Promise Numb 26. in which Muster the Tribe of Simeon was diminished thirty seven thousand for whereas it the first Muster they were fifty nine thousand and three hundred Men of War Numb 1.22 23. there remained only at the next Muster Numb 26.1 14. but twenty two thousand and two hundred Men Because Zimri being a Prince of that Tribe and bringing that Harlot Chozbi unto his Brethren Numb 25.6 15. 't is probable that many of the Simeonites took part with him and perished in the Plague aforementioned and Moses Blessing all the other Tribes before his Death maketh no express mention of the Simeonites in Deut. 33. N. B. Those Sinners were cut short by the Plague and Death who thought to excuse their Sins by the Example of their Superiours c. The second Remark is The Law of God for the Female Sex to inherit in the failure of Males Numb 27. from v. 1 to the 12th Tho' the Tribe of Manasseh quite contrary to the Tribe of Simeon so notoriously diminished was increased since the first Muster Numb 2.21 above twenty thousand Men of War Numb 26.34 such a fruitful Vine was Joseph according to Jacob's Prophecy Gen. 49.22 none of all the other Tribes had half so much increase yet Zelophehad of that Tribe left no Sons but all Daughters Numb 26.33 This occasioned the Question concerning the Right of Succession Whether where Male-Issue is failing the Female may be her Father's Heir or be put off with a Portion only Zelophehad's Daughters in this case do sue for their Father's Inheritance who died in his own sin not drawing others into it as Korah c. did ver 3. but by a natural and ordinary death the common wage of all Mortals Rom. 6.23 so made no forfeiture as other Rebels hang'd up in Gibbets in Terrorem did neither modesty shame or sorrow made them silent but they plead for their part in Canaan a Land not yet conquered which was a proof of their Faith and could not but encourage others ver 4. Oh that we may do so for our part in Heaven whereof Canaan was a Type The Lord approves of their Suit and settles a Divine Law for it ver 7 11. diametrically apposite to the Salick Law of the French Souls have no Sexes besides male and female both be one in Christ Gal. 3.28 29. The third Remark is Joshua's Inauguration into Moses's place Numb 27. from ver 12 to the end God granted Moses to see Canaan before his death but not to enter it which he earnestly desired but it could not be Deut. 3.23 26. because of his pang of Passion in smiting the Rock twice to which he should but have spoke once Numb 20.8 11 12 24. for this Rebellion Moses must die short of Canaan here ver 13.14 but before his death he prays that God would give Israel a good Governour to succeed him ver 15 16 17. God appoints and qualifies Joshua who is ordained by Moses c. ver 18 19 20 21 22 23. The fourth Remark is The Institution of Ceremonial Laws for several Sacrifices upon their Sabbaths and Solemn Feasts as Passover Pentecost or First-fruits and on the Feast of Trumpets of
was at the first startl'd at his appearance as the Bethlemites had been at the coming of Samuel chap. 16.4 because David came so unlike himself more like a poor Vagrant Beggar than like a Son-in-Law to the King and his Captain General Hereupon Ahimeleck asks him Why art thou alone c Whereas David had some faithful Servants whom probably Jonathan had sent to guard him for his Companions as appeareth from v. 4 5. and from Matth. 12.3 4. Yet were they left at some other place at this time as David himself affirmeth v. 2. The Third Remark is The means whereby David obtained success in his double Errand which was by telling a loud Lye v. 2. extorted from him by the prevalency of his distrustful fear and the pressures of his present necessity which two cases do not a little extenuate David's sin for Hunger as we use to say will break through Stone-Walls and Necessity hath no Law yet ought not David to be excused for telling two Lies at one Breath v. 2. and addeth a third Lye to them v 8. and all deliberately as Jacob had done before him uttering three Lyes at once Gen. 27.19 20 both which are Examples of Humane Frailty in the best Believers teaching us N. B. Note well That the best of Men are but Men at the best and if left in the hands of their own Counsel Satan's Temptation and their own Corruption meeting together they will not stick at this blushful sin of Lying how unlike was David here to a Man after God's own Heart who is the God of truth in his telling so many Untruths tho' it was an Officious Lye to himself through Ahimelech's Credulity to David yet it proved a most pernicious Lye to the High-Priest and to eighty four more of the Priests of the Lord and to the whole City of Nob in the next Chapters whereof David's Lye was the occasion which he could not but suspect when he saw that dogged Sycophant Doeg there present Therefore David doth not excuse himself for this great sin but like a true Penitent lays load upon his own Conscience ch 22.22 and did greatly bewail this sin of Lying long after earnestly praying both for pardon of it and for power against it Psal 119.28 29. The Fourth Remark is David's asking and obtaining v. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. Two things David asks here as recorded omitting his consulting with God's Oracle not mentioned here and he obtains them both through Ahimelech's Candour and Kindness to him The first was for Alimony for the present And the second was for Arms for the future The first was for his present Sustenance and the other for his future Safeguard The first is Alimony 'T is probable Jonathan had sent away David's Servants in such haste after him that they had no time to procure and bring along with them any necessary Provisions therefore David was constrain'd to beg his Bread at the hands of Abimelech N. B. Note well This helps us to a right sense of his own words I have been Young and now am Old yet never saw I the Righteous forsaken nor his Seed begging Bread Psal 37.25 which must not be taken in the strictest sense seeing himself was forced to beg his Bread at two several times once here and again of Churlish Nabal chap. 25.8 9. Yet he could plead with God saying I am thy Servant and the Son of thy Handmaid Psal 116.16 and again Psal 143.12 And as Nabal there gave him a flat denial so Ahimelech makes a double Objection here against granting his begging Request in proposing two Cases of Conscience that seem'd to tie his hands The first was he had no bread there though undoubtedly he had Bread enough at Home in Anathoth where he dwelt save only the Consecrated Shew-bread which was appropriated for the Priests Sustenance Exod. 25.30 and Levit. 24.5 to v. 10. N. B. Note well This Shew-Bread which was alway before the Lord from Sabbath to Sabbath was a Type of Christ that Bread of Life who alway appeareth at his Father's right hand to make Intercession for us Heb. 9.24 The second Doubt was Whether David and his Servants were ceremonially hallowed to eat of this Holy Bread in case he should be satisfied to give it to them As to both Objections David answers v. 5 6. The Bread is in a manner common as if he had said I am in such danger of this dogged Doeg that I dare not stay here so long until common Bread or other Provisions be sent for by thee to Anathoth and this Holy Bread hath accomplish'd the Law in standing six Days upon the Table hence some suppose that David came upon the Sabbath when fresh hot Bread was to be set in the Room of the old and cold Loaves that on that Day were to be removed and employed for the common use of the Priest and his Family now seeing it is a ruled case that in all matters of weighty importance Ceremonials ought to give place to Moral Duties when both cannot consist together and thus our Lord Interprets it in all the three Evangelists Matth. 12.3 4 7. Mark 2.23.26 and Luke 6.2 3 4. teaching that the Law of Necessity and Charity must have the precedency above Ceremonial Duties because God will have Mercy preferr'd before Sacrifice As to the second Objection David Answers That he and his Servants were clean according to that Law Exod. 19.15 for none of them had been with their Wives for three Days N. B. It seems from hence That though the distance from Gibeah to Nob was but about Twelve Miles as is aforesaid yet David had spent most of three Days in hiding himself from Saul after he and Jonathan parted and in hovering about to meet his Men whom Jonathan sent to attend him and now having satisfied the High-Priest in both his Doubts he obtains his Loaves v. 6. which he asked v. 3. and hugs them away saith Sanctius to his Hungry Men. But before he doth this he doth want a Weapon to defend both his Person and Provision Therefore doth he ask for a Spear or a Sword v. 8. N. B. It may well be wondered at that David could expect to find any Arms among those Godly Priests who were conversant with no Weapons save only with the Sword of the Spirit the Word of God yet so Providence ordered it that Goliah's Sword was then laid up in the Tabernacle for a Memorial of David's Victory and Ahimelech said There was none but that to which David Answered None like it v. 9. N. B. Note well Oh that we could say so of the Word of God Preached None so fit for David at this time as this Sword for he could carry it about him as a Sacrament to confirm his Confidence in God when meeting with the like difficulties and dangers Yet may it rationally be affirmed that no Sword was so unfit for David as this was because he was flying into the Countrey of the Philistines to hide himself
and take most Liberty to gaze upon Wanton Objects their fulness of Bread producing Ease and Idleness c. Ezek 16.49 N. B. 2. That she so willingly came with the First Messenger without any Jealousie of a snare to her after such too open a Washing her self in the view of the Court. N. B. 3. That she so easily yielded unto David's Tempting her without any Reluctancy forgetting her Fidelity to her Honourable Husband chusing rather to be a Base Harlot to a King than an Honest Wife to a good Subject N. B. But others think that seeing the Scripture doth report her to be a Vertuous Wise and Modest Woman as appeareth by all that Sage Counsel she gave to her Son Solomon Prov. 1.8 and 6.20 and 31.1 2 3 throughout as a Woman that feared the Lord v. 29 c. Therefore they judge that she did not Bathe her self in her open Garden but in her private Chamber and that David spy'd her through a Casement accidentally left open Yet this must be acknowledg'd that Bathsheba being a Woman so honourable both by Parentage and by Marriage wanted both the fear of God and faithfulness to her Husband in prostituting her self at all to David's Lustful Insinuations though she now wanted Vriah being at this time with Joab besieging Rabbah and was now freed from her Menstruous Pollutions which made her Apta Viro apter to Conceive upon David's congresse The Seventh Description and Character of her Person is She immediately Conceived after her dealings with David v. 5. and finding the certainty hereof by the Cessation of the Custom of Women she writes for Letters blush not to let David know that she was with Child by him Or she sent before to signifie her coming that she might have the more free and private Access that they two might secretly consult together of the most likely means to hide their Sin and Shame Therefore saith she consider what to do for thy Honour and for my Safety having brought me into a double danger both of the Rage of my Husband at his returning home and of the Lash of God's Law which commands that every Adulteress must be Stoned Deut. 22.21 Joh. 8.5 yea both thou the Adulterer and I the Adulteress must both be put to Death by Moses's Law Levit. 20.10 'T is an Iniquity to be punished by the Judges Job 31.11 12 c. and therefore take effectual Advice what to do in such Dangerous Sinful and Shameful an Emergency N. B. See what Snares Sinners involve themselves into by their rash precipitancy into Acts of such a Luscious Sin No doubt but Bathsheba was more blameless than David for he was the Enticing Agent and she only the Enticed Patient He sought to her The weaker Vessel who probably might now have Natural Desires to Conjugal Benevolence in the absence of her Husband yet did she not seek to him Nor could David lie under any such need for he might have Drunk Water out of his own Cisterns and Running Waters out of his own Wells Prov. 5.15 having so many Wives of his own and was at Liberty as Nathan from God afterwards told him to have taken more chap. 12.3 4 8. therefore it could be no Natural Want but a Lustful and Sinful Wantonness in David thus basely to abuse the Wise of so Honourable a Neighbour and so Loyal a Subject N. B. No doubt but Satan provoked David as 1 Chron. 21.1 that is dogg'd him daily and duly without respit till he had put him to the foil and gave him this foul fall But as David through the Sure Mercies of God's Covenant of Grace 2 Sam. 23.5 Isa 55.3 Act. 13.34 happily recovered from his Down-fall by unfeigned Repentance so undobtedly did Bathsheba as appeareth both by the Birth of Solomon of her Body For as God's Anger was declared by the Death of that Child which was begot in Adultery so his Reconciliation to them both was demonstrated in the Lord 's delighting in a Child born in Wedlock of the same Woman called Jedidiah the Lord 's Beloved and it also appears by that choice Poem his Mother taught him for the Choice of a Wife Prov. 31. c. So Bathsheba was the other Bush that burnt but was not Consumed This was another wonder The Second Part of this Chapter is David's adding Murther to his Adultery instead of Repenting for his sin Remarks hereupon are First David's contrivement to conceale his sin from the Eyes of Men in the mean time not regarding the All seeing Eye of God c. Wherein Mark well First David's sending for Vriah to come home in all haste from the Siege at Rabbah v. 6. which was the result of David and Bathshebah's secret Consult Chrysostom on Psal 51. doth bring in Bathsheba to David crying out O King I am undone I am with Child the fruit of my Sin buddeth I carry my own Accuser within me my Betrayer is in my Womb my Husband will kill me c. v. 5. From whence that Father inferreth N. B. Admire my Brethren what bitterness ariseth out of the sweetest sins Oh bless God for your freedom from such foul offences Bathsheba had made Conscience of the Ceremonial Law in purifying her self from Natural Uncleanness yet made a desperate venture to break the Moral Law and defiled her self with Moral Pollution both of Soul and Body Smart Reflections upon the Fact and fear of a fatal Issue caused her hideous out-cry Wherefore David to calm her crying and to prevent her suffering whereof he also was sure to have a great share of shame at least now casts about how to Colour and Cover his Sin with some seeming fair and plausible pretences though all would not do God so disposing that David's sin should come to Light However he drives his design so far as it would go without Rubbs Mark 1. He sends for Uriah that he returning home and Lying with his Wife might believe this now Begotten Child to be of his own Begetting Thus David not unlike the Devil Matth. 13.25 had Sowed another Man's Ground and he would now fain Father his Bastard-Brood upon him This was high Injustice and Theft saith Peter Martyr here in David to intrude a Child of his Begetting into the Inheritance of Vriah and thereby to Rob the right Heirs if he had any after lawfully Begotten of their own due Patrimony Mark 2. The Discourse betwixt David and Vriah upon his return at Royal Summons v. 7. 'T was determined before hand by David to Discourse him about the state of the Camp and the safety of the Army before Rabba and accordingly David did so wherein he shew'd himself but a Bungler both in Committing and in Covering his Sin Lust was but a stranger to him as Nathan calls it in his parable 2 Sam. 12.4 He asks him such Frivolous Questions which any Common Messenger could have Answered and no doubt but this was done by daily Posts that passed between the King and the Camp and there was no neeed
manifest by this Gesture Abigail fell at David's Feet 1 Sam. 25.24 but she catches hold of Elisha's Feet as the Disciples did of Christ's Matth. 28.9 being loth to lose him again when risen from the dead This passionate Posture intimated in Deeds what she durst not presume to express in Words saith P. Martyr Gehazi would have removed her because as Lavater saith he knew his Master's Modesty and Humility not willing to be touched much less adored by a Woman and he would not have his Master so molested saith Piscator but Elisha forbids his Man to molest her lest he add Affliction to her Affliction the cause whereof he confesseth himself ignorant of acknowledging without shame that the Spirit of Prophecy was not inherent in him but God gave it to him according to his Pleasure as to Nathan 2 Sam. 7.3 c. Remark the Sixth The Shunamite's Passion● moves the Prophet to Compassion she presseth upon him with a most pathetical and moving Expostulation saying Did I desire a Son of my Lord did I not say do not deceive me ver 28. As if she had said saith Piscator was I over desirous of a Son or unduly immoderate for him then the loss of him had been just upon me but I did not so much as desire him but it was thou that freely promised him in God's Name as a special Favour and therefore thou art obliged to preserve him with thy Prayers to which P. Martyr adds As thou didst promise me a Son when I did not desire him so now at my Petition thou oughtest to restore to me thy gift when I have lost him nay farther she charges the Prophet with Deceit which here she doth mince for she had said Do not lye to me ver 16. which were words not fit for a Man of God N. B. Behold here saith P. Martyr the marvelous Meekness of God's Prophet he was not moved into Passion but into Compassion by her uncomely Expressions for he knew her of a troubled Spirit a good Patter 〈◊〉 he is to all pious Pastors who should deal tenderly with such though they speak incongruously Remark the Seventh Elisha sends Gehazi ver 29. bidding him haste away and not stand tattling in the way and lay my Staff upon the Face of the dead Child The Prophet was as much afflicted for her sake as she was for her own He speaks not one word to her but all these words to his Servant for a speedy Remedy before the Death of the Child be divulg'd to the great Grief of its Father and his Family yet all this satisfies her not she will have himself to go as well as his Servant and by her Importunity prevails with him ver 30. He arose and followed her N. B. As Jesus on the like occasion followed Jairus Matth. 9.18 19. not taking offence at his weak Faith nor turning him off for presuming to prescribe what the Lord should do However Gehazi was gone before but Elisha's Staff could not drive away Death from the Child the Servant can do nothing ver 31. The Rabbins render this reason because Gehazi stood boasting by the way to Passengers that he was going to raise a dead Child with his Master's Staff but it rather seems that the Mother's Unbelief made those means ineffectual and Elisha overcome to go with her did not pray that his Man might prevail otherwise Elisha's Staff might have had as much power as had Moses's Rod or Elijah's Mantle Exod. 14.26 2 Kings 2.8 14. Now come we to the Concomitants of this Seventh Miracle Remarks hereupon are First Elisha goes to the House finds his Chamber taken up with this dead Child all Gehazi had done being disappointed ver 32. The Fathers have many Descants upon this disappointment some say 1. That Elisha did seemingly ill in delegating his Gift of Miracles to his Servant which God gave him no Commission to do 2. God did designedly disappoint Elisha's Expectations in sending his Servant to no purpose that the Master might be humbled thereby and not think too highly of himself c. But 3. this happened so for an Allegorical Mystery N. B. The Staff Gehazi laid on the dead Child signifies the Law of Moses which like a Staff both sustains and smites Man but cannot quicken those that are dead in Sin Gal. 3.10 11. But Elisha signifies Christ who in his Incarnation after a sort applied his Body to our Body and his Parts to our Parts as Elisha did here ver 34 35. and thereby he delivered us from Death and Damnation 1 Thes 1.10 Remark the Second The means Elisha made use of for reviving this dead Child were twofold First Invocation and Secondly Incubation First He betakes himself to Prayer as soon as he had shut the Door upon himself and the dead Child ver 33. not so much as the Mother or Gehazi must be admitted that he might call upon God without distraction whatever use he made of his Wooden Staff that proved so ineffectual in his Servant's Hands we Read not but he well knew his Staff of Prayer could reach Heaven being long enough to beat ope those Gates with earnest and repeated knocks and thereby could beat away Death out of the dead Child And Secondly he applied his warm Body to the cold Body of the dead Child ver 34. Peter Martyr asks How durst Elisha touch a dead Carkass seeing it was forbid by the Law He answers Though some Ceremonial Pollution might be contracted by the touch of a dead Body yet that was justly to give place to a Moral Duty and to such an eminent Act of Charity as this was especially when it was done by the Direction of God who could dispence with his own Laws N. B. Here must needs be disproportion of Mouth to Mouth Eyes to Eyes and Hands to Hands betwixt a Man and a Child Yet the like Application was made by Elijah 1 Kings 17.21 yea and by Paul also Acts 20.10 and all in a Figure teaching that there be great Disproportion betwixt Christ and us yet when he applieth himself to us our dead Souls are quickned Remark the Third When Elisha felt the Mercy coming and the Corps warming He sets to Work with more vehemency in variety of Postures and Actions ver 35. sometimes improving the fervency of his Soul to recover the Child's Soul by earnestly praying for it And sometimes applying the fervour and warmth of his Body to warm the Child's cold Body This he did again and again N.B. To teach us not to faint in Prayer if not speedily answered but to continue instant therein Gal. 5.9 Rom. 12.12 Col. 4.2 1 Thess 5.17 we as well as Elisha shall prevail at last pull Isa 45.11 19 c. Remark the Third is The Consequences of all which 1. Concerns the Child And 2. The Mother 1. The Child revived which is demonstrated by Effects 1. He sneesed seven times whereby he expell'd those Humours wherewith he was suffocated out of his Brains saith Lavater for he died
years Remark the Third At the end of those years she returns ver 3. and cryes to the King for her House and Land which for her so long absence were seized on either by the King's Officers as confiscate to the King saith Grotius or by some of her Kindred saith P. Martyr who had taken possession as if she had been dead N. B. Gehazi's Conference with the King at this Juncture ver 4. hath raised many doubts about timing this Story Among Learned men some say this was done before Gehazi had got Naaman's Leprosie for the King might not talk with a Leper c. but P. Martyr c. will not allow of any Historology or altering the Order of these Histories without good ground affirming 1. The Law forbad not that a Leper should not be talk'd with for this King had talk'd with Leprons Naaman and Christ did so Matth. 8.2 Luke 17. ver 12. 2. He might upon his Repentance be cleansed from his Leprosie and there is some probability here that his white Body with Leprosie was sanctified in helping him to a white Soul seeing he speaks so honourably of his Master tho' he had so severely punish'd him And 3. This bad King was not so studious of the Law but at a due distance durst talk with a Leper his Curiosity might conquer him to break a Ceremonial Law who made no bones of breaking God's Moral Law in worshipping Idols c. Remark the Fourth The marvelous Providence of God brings in this Shunamite with her Son crying to the King for help just at that Juncture while Gehazi was telling him the mighty Miracles his Master had wrought ver 5. wherein he gave Elisha such due and true praises as is some Argument of his Remorse for his dear-bought Lye he once told his Master N.B. God sanctifies our Sins to promote our Salvation if all things shall work for our good c. Rom. 8.28 some of those twenty Miracles this King himself had seen Chap. 3.20 and 7.6 c. he had only heard a Rumour of the rest and being desirous to know them all distinctly out of his Curiosity he enquires after them of this Eye-witness of so many And as he was telling the King how he had restored the Dead to Life which to a meer natural Mind was altogether incredible therefore God's Providence so disposed of Matters as to bring in infallible Evidence of the Truth thereof so that Gehazi said This is the Woman and this is her Son c. Remark the Fifth The wonderful Effects of this Providence of God ver 6. Though Gehazi had told King Joram the Truth yet for his more full Assurance the King asks the Woman's self being present who confirm'd the Truth of Gehazi's Relation then the King was so affected with God's Power and Favour to her that he readily granted her request and could not but favour her whom God himself had so highly favoured The King calls for the High Steward of his House commands him to take Order that all be restored to her again yea the very Rents and Revenues of the past seven Years Famine saith Menochius so just was Joram here though unjust enough to his God as not to suffer any of his Courtiers to be enriched by the Calamity of a Woman and now supposed to be a Widow her Husband being Dead because we hear nothing of him here as in Chap. 4.13 14 c. He was then old Peter Martyr notes excellently here N.B. We see Elisha both present and absent is profitable to this his Hostess Now she could not but think that her Bed Table Stool and Candlestick were well bestowed upon such a Guest He is a Niggard to himself that narrows his Bounty to a Prophet whose very cold Water shall not pass unrewarded Matth. 10.42 The second Oracle of Elisha Recorded here which makes his fourth Oracle having foretold 1. Plenty in almost famish'd Samaria 2. The Death of the distrustful Lord. 3. The seven Years Famine Now this 4th Concerns the Death of Benhadad that wicked King of Syria a Pest to Israel c. Remark the First Elisha by Divine Direction now departs to Damascus the Metropolis of Syria ver 7. His Errand thither saith Peter Martyr was to anoint Hazael according to the Command of his Master Elijah 1 Kings 19.15 there he found Benhadad sick not of any Mortal Disease but Josephus tells us he was only sick of the Sullens fretting at the shameful flight of his huge Host from the Siege of Samaria caused only by a causeless fear whereat he was so sorely vexed that it makes him sick of the Fret c. there is a marvelous Sympathy betwixt the Body and the Mind saith Peter Martyr Remark the Second Benhadad being told Elisha was in Town whose many Miracles had made him famous even in Pagan Nations especially in Syria for his healing Naaman Chap. 5.13 14. for his discovering the Syrians Secret Counsels Chap. 6.12 and disappointing their Troops ver 20. Chap. 6. and putting to flight their Host from the Siege Chap. 7.6 7. all these things made this Man of God famous among them So sick Benhadad sends to Elisha ver 8. he sends not for him but sends the greatest Man in his Kingdom Hazael to him N.B. 'T is supposed this Hazael had the Place of Naaman who if not now Dead would not wage War against God's People and therefore was displaced and as Benhadad a great King thought it not below him to send not for but to a Prophet so nor Hazael a great Prince thinks himself undervalued to be the Messenger Both being desirous saith Peter Martyr of the Prophet's Prayer Remark the Third This great Prince must not go from a King to a Prophet empty-handed 1 Sam. 9.7 therefore saith the sick King to Hazael Take a present with thee c. ver 8. and it was a right Royal Present ver 9. even forty Camels Burden which will bear more than an Horse or an Ass of the choicest commodities of Damascus and surely that rich Countrey of Syria afforded abundance of pleasant and precious choice Commodities so that this present was more precious and nobler than that of Naaman Chap. 5.5 N.B. 1. What will not Kings and the greatest of Mortals spare for procuring Life and Health even all a Man hath said the old Lyar truly Job 2.4 By this rich Present Benhadad thought to purchase the Prophet's Prayers We are not told whether Elisha receiv'd it as he did that Chap. 4.42 but because the same Reason of his refusing Naaman's Present was still in force therefore 't is probable he receiv'd it not though Presents were wont to be presented to Prophets as above c. 1 Kings 14.3 N.B. 2. Behold how the Hearts of Kings are in the Hand of the Lord Prov. 21.1 the Lord changeth both the Words and the Hearts of Kings Dan. 3.28 this same Benhadad who before persecuted Elisha as an Enemy Chap. 6.13 14. doth now in his extremity Court him
other not express'd so signally were stigmatiz'd as to need healing ver 20. they smarted for their coming unprepared to the Passover either by some sudden Sickness a Disease of the Body or by Guilt of Conscience a Disease of the Soul say some Learned Men here Mark 2. Hezekiah's Prayer for this unprepared Priests and People that God would pardon both the one and the other when he saw some visible Sign of Divine Displeasure upon them Pleading with God for them after this Manner The good Lord pardon every one of us what is wanting in any of us for want of Time or Means c. and out of thy wonted goodness graciously accept of our though weak yet willing Services c. Vatablus and Piscator make this the sense of the King's Prayer for the unprepared People that he urgeth for an Argument The People had prepared their Hearts to seek God to wit with a Moral and Internal Purity though they wanted that Ceremonial and External Purification which the Law required in such as serve God in his Sanctuary they have prepared their Hearts as well as they were able though far short of what they should be Remark the Fourth God's Answer to Hezekiah's Prayer ver 20. Mark 1. Junius and Piscator c. say that God heal'd them on both sides Psalm 103.3 both their Souls of the guilt of Sin and their Bodies of the Pain of Sickness otherwise it could not have been known that the Lord had heard the King's Prayers for them Mark 2. The Rabbins say some of the People God slew for their unpreparedness but at Hezekiah's Prayer the Plague stayed Others not improbably say seeing God is said here to hear his Prayer and to heal his People this was manifested by some Visible Sign and possibly by Fire from Heaven consuming the Sacrifice the usual token of God's acceptance Whatever it was it gave great satisfaction to their Minds which made them keep the Feast with gladness ver 22 25. N. B. From this famous History learn these Mysteries 1. The Passover was an Old-Testament-Sacrament instituted in memorial of Israel's Deliverance from Egypt and particularly in memorial of God's passing over Israel when he destroy'd all the first born of Egypt Exod. 12.12 13 14. Now if God was so severe in branding those that came unprepared to this Passover How much more ought we to tremble at coming unworthily to the Lord's Supper He that came in to the Wedding Supper without the Wedding-Garment on his back was carried out but not without Iron-fetters on his Feet Matth. 22.11 12 13. and for this Cause many are Sick and some dead outright 1 Cor. 11.30 N. B. 2. Hezekiah here represents First The Work of every Gospel Minister who must make an Atonement for their People as the Vine dresser did for sparing the unfruitful Vineyard c. Luke 13.8 c. Happy are that People who have praying Vine-dressers to intercede for them at which God when most angry will yield somewhat God forbid saith Samuel I should cease to Pray for you 1 Sam 12 23. this is to fulfil our Ministry Col. 4.17 to stand with our Incense 'twixt God and our People as Aaron did Numb 16. ver 46 47 48. Secondly Hezekiah resembles our Blessed Mediator praying both for Priest and People Heb. 9.24 our High-Priest for Expiation Exod. 30.10 Lev. 16.2 24. our Surety Gen. 43.9 and 44.32 Heb. 7.22 to whom God will not say nay 1 Kings 2.20 but hears him always John 11.41 nor will he forget us as the Butler did Joseph Gen. 40.23 but makes up all our defects Rev. 8.5 c. Remark the Fifth Hezekiah spake comfortably to the Hearts of all the Levites to encourage them in working lustily under that laborious employ of teaching the good Knowledge of God ver 22. promising them his best Assistance which few Princes do at this Day N. B. Hereby the whole Assembly was so transported that as the Priests on the one hand had most loudly sounded out the High Praises of the God of Israel for giving them such a seven Days Holy Feast as had not been since Solomon ver 21 26. so the People were willing to keep other seven days over and above what God's Law required ver 23. that those of the ten Tribes saith Osiander might have time enough for full Confirmation in the true Religion c. Remark the Sixth and Last The Management of this solemn Festival to the end 1. The King gave a thousand Bullocks c. whereon beside Sacrifices c. a publick Feast was made to refresh those Strangers of Israel saith Osiander that they might not think the fourteen Days Time of absence tedious but Jom be Jom Heb. Day by Day they might serve the Lord with gladness 2. The Princes follow this good Pattern of the King and gave as many Bullocks as he did and three thousand Sheep more than he gave ver 24. for they were many and Ahaz had exhausted the Royal Treasure 3. This nonesuch Solemnity was carried on and concluded with great Joy the Priests praying God to bless the People which Prayers Numb 6.23 God heard in Heaven c. ver 25 26 27. 2 Chron. CHAP. XXXI THIS Chapter consists of two Parts First The Actions of the People And Secondly Of Hezekiah after this Passover Remarks upon the First in ver 1. The Subjects of King Hoshea joyned with those of King Hezekiah to break down the Images of Baal c. even in Ephraim and Manasseh which were out of Hezekiah's Jurisdiction but belong'd to Hoshea looking upon him either as an Vsurper or an Atheist rather than an Idolater or if an Idolater yet confined to Calf-worship and not so zealous for Baal as his Predecessors had been However this zealous Act saith Osiander was done without Hoshea's Consent for now the Men of Ephraim and Manasseh having heard the Law receiv'd the Sacrament and had their Hearts fill'd with the Joy of the Lord which was their Strength Neh. 8.10 they were divinely transported and would not return home till they had Reform'd thus far in the Kingdom of Israel which as Junius saith was now tottering toward it's final fall The Second Part is the Actions of Hezekiah after this also Remark the First Hezekiah distributes the Offices of the Priests that every one might know not only what was his Office but also what was his time to be present at the Temple ver 2. which is fitly compared to a Camp saith Junius for the Watch and Ward there kept c. Remark the Second He reviveth those Laws for the Ministers maintenance which his Father Ahaz had null'd that those Godly Priests being plentifully provided for after a long famishing Persecution might serve the Lord without Distraction 1 Cor. 7.35 and therefore out of his Princely bounty he bestows liberally of his own proper Goods and particular Cost unto this Publick Fund ver 3 4 5. that so his People who had been much polled and peeled in his Fathers
Shushan upon some important Errand doubtless for the good of their Countrey because they took that tedious Journey in the d●●th of Winter in the Month Chisteu the middle of our November ver 1 2. of these he asked how it fared with God's Church which was his chiefest Care and Hanam a Gracious Man according to the Notation of his Name relates to him the afflicted Estate of the City of God Its Walls remain'd still broken down and its Gates that had been burnt down by Nebuchadnezzar were still unrepaired ver 3. N. B. Juniu● and others observe that Cyrus gave them Power to build the Temple but not the Walls c. for fear of a new Rebellion and though the Jews Adversaries accus'd them to the King that they were Building the Walls Ezra 4. yet was it a false Accusation Therefore may it well be wondred at how so many thousand Levites besides many Citizens of all Sexes and Sizes could live there in safety from the Samaritans their deadly Enemies without casting up some Bulwarks saith A Lapide because to keep a continual Watch and Ward round about the City seemeth too great a Charge for such few Citizens as yet did inhabit it seeing so many Jews were not yet returned and Comestor adds here that many Murtherers broke in upon them in the Night-Time and slew many of them plundering their Houses c. Remark the Fifth Nehemiah's Sympathy with his Suffering Holy City Jerusalem ver 4. this good Man no doubt had as he was a Courtier in the King's Palace a whole Confluence of all Creature-Comforts for himself yet could he find no more Content in them all than Haman did in all his but with a baser Mind Esth 5.11 13 〈◊〉 this avail'd him nothing so long as it went ill with Sion he was even sick of the Affliction of Joseph as well as Grieved Amos 6.6 N. B. No sooner had Nehemiah heard from these Messengers the Malady of the returned Jews how they were the Samaritans scorn for their living in an unwall'd City and would have been their ruine but for fear of offending the Persian King then he puts himself in the posture of a Mourner sitting down upon the ground covering himself with Ashes saith Masius and mourn'd Rabbim Jomim Hebr. many Days with Weeping and Fasting to shew his deep sorrow of Heart and to prepare himself the better for Prayer Before the God of Heaven which shews saith Wolphius how much he differ'd from the Religion of the Persians who worship'd the Sun c. and with his Face turned toward the Temple saith Sanctius see 1 Kings 8.44 48. Dan. 6.10 N. B. 1. From It came to pass c. Humane Affairs fall not out by Hap hazard or by Chance as the Vulgar saying is but by the Wise All-disposing Providence of God which was a special Cause that these good Men met together here and by mutual Conference kindled like Live-Coals one anothers Affections and that thereby a Remedy might be provided by that Divine Providence against the Malady c. N. B. 2. So great was this good Man's Grief for the Churche's Calamity that he could not stand under it but sinks down to the Earth yet hath his Heart lift up to Heaven that high Hill from whence he look'd for help Psalm 121.1 2 3. The reproach of the solemn Assemblies was such a burden to him Zeph. 3.17 18. that it kept him in this mournful Posture not only many Days but for three Months or more in preparing himself to Petition the King Chap. 1.1 2. and 2.1 Remark the Sixth Nehemiah's Prayer to God for an effectual redress of that great Grievance and for an acceptable Address to the King for it Mark 1. The Preface of his Prayer ver 5. Anna Jehovah Hael Hagadol Hebr. I beseech thee most great God c. Wolphius observes this Word Anna implies a pressing Necessity as well as a bare intreaty and that he might be Trusting as well as Trembling he describes God by his Goodness as well as by his Greatness saying Lord thou hast ever kept Covenant with thy People surely thou wilt not break it now with those that have but a spark of Love to thee in them Thus hath he here Faith in God as before he had Love to God's Church Mark 2. He sheweth himself a true Member of the Church of God ver 6. If one Member suffer all the Members suffer with it 1 Cor. 12.26 so did Nehemiah here in the substance of his Prayer pressing hard upon God for his Audience to his Servant while he was spreading the sad Case of his distressed Brethren and Confessing his own Sins and the Sins of his Fathers as well as the People's This he insists upon with earnestness that having got off the Guilt of all their Sins he might with more Courage and Comfort deprecate God's Judgments and more easily desire and obtain God's Mercy c. Mark 3. He prevents an Objection ver 7. acknowledging it very true that they were altogether unworthy of any Divine Favour for he saith in corrupting we have corrupted our selves against thee Hebr. Chabul Chabalenu Lak we have bedirtied our selves most filthily as Chabul signifies 1 Kings 9.12 13. so have bound over our selves unto thee to be punish'd as Dirty Sinners deserve no better for we have broke all thy Bonds Moral Ceremonial and Judicial Laws and cast all thy Cords from us as Psalm 2.3 thus he lays load on their Sins to preoccupate God as it were from saying I will shew Mercy no more c. Judg. 10.13 14. Mark 4. He confirms his Faith in Prayer with God's Promise ver 8 9. putting him in Mind of what God had promised by Moses Deut. 4.29 30 31 32. and 30.4 and by Solomon 1 Kings 8.48 N. B. Man cannot carry God's People farther than that God can fetch them back again even from Indea c. now Nehemiah doth not cry here Remember Lord c. as if God could really forget N. B. 'T is only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dictum but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Intellectum 't is spoken Metaphorically after the manner of Men but must be understood according to the Majesty of God who only seems to forget as Man really may when highly provoked by his People as if they never had been his People nor made them any Promises N. B. In this Case God gives his Prophets and People leave to be his Remembrancers Isa 62.6 7. Thus David did with success Psalm 119.49 and thus Nehemiah doth vigorously and speeds accordingly Mark 5. He pleads not only God's Interest in his Church and his Relation to them but also it was God's Honour to save them saying as Wolphius saith seeing Thou art our Lord and we thy Servants thou art our King and we thy Subjects ver 10. therefore thou art concern'd in Point of Honour to save us so every Master will Work to his Power for saving his Servants and every King will do no less for his Subjects And if
beyond Jordan v. 40 c. to Bethabara where John first Baptized John 1.28 39. not so much for his own comfort for there he first heard from Heaven This is my beloved Son c. Mat. 3.16 17. as for the Peoples Conversion and Confirmation who there call'd to mind what John had some years before Preached of Jesus and then they believed John 10.41 42. N. B. Note well Which teacheth that though the Word of God seems for the present to be Preached in vain yet in due time tho long after it may fructifie c. when it is made Prolifical and Generative by the Spirit of God c. a long time after c. The 3d Remark concerns the Consequents or what followed this Feast which brings in Mat. 19.1 Mark 10.1 where Christ's passing beyond Jordan is mentioned in both places as it is in John 10. and 3. last verses and in Luke 13.22 where it is said after his stay some time at Bethabara as above He passed again through many Cities and Villages teaching c. N. B. Note well As John hath helped out the briefness of Matthew and Marks History about this Time of the two Feasts that of the Tabernacles and that of the Dedication so Luke supplies their omissions as they do some of his at other times with some signal passages both before and after this feast First Luke supplies with some stories before this Feast As 1. With that of a Doctor of the Law asking Christ the greatest of Questions How shall I be saved c. Luke 10.25 to 38. occasion'd as may be supposed from his hearing those words Rejoice that your Names are writ in Heaven ver 20. This Letter-Lawyer knew nothing of the Spirit and would have gone to Heaven by his own good doings Therefore Christ cuts this Tempter's Coxcomb with the Parable of a Citizen Journeying from Jerusalem to Jericho and being wounded in his way by Thieves neither Priest nor Levite pitied him but a Samaritan whom the Jews abhorr'd John 4.9 and 8.43 had compassion and cured him Herein Christ doth not give a direct answer to his question saying Thou must be saved by Faith in me c. as Rom. 10.9 c. then would this Tempter have accused him for being contrary to Moses but appeals to and convinces this doating and doing Doctor 's Conscience by this Parabolical Discourse that all his doing the Deeds of the Law would not do seeing his own Heart condemned him of coming short of this compassionate Samaritan in love to his distressed Neighbour and therefore must take sanctuary in the Grace of the Gospel Rom. 8.3 3.20 7.7 5.18 Gal. 3.21 22 23 24. This Parable of the Man fallen among Thieves is Related in its Circumstances Luke 10. from ver 25. to ver 38. Wherein Mark 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Lawyer comes to Tempt Christ ver 25. to try whether Christ delivered any Doctrine contrary to the Law of Moses to prove him an Apostate he askt what he must do to be saved As the Jaylor did Acts 16.30 but not with so good a mind This is a question that ought to trouble all persons in the World this Captious Questionist however was no Sadducee for he here enquires after Eternal Life which the Sadducees denyed c. That young Man came running to Christ Mar. 10 17. to move this Question Oh how rarely do Men run upon this weighty Errand 't is said our Lord loved him for so doing Mar. 10.21 alas how few go so far as he did yet went he not far enough he had a good mind to Heaven he cheapens it but would not go up to the price of it he would have been saved by his own good Meanings and Doings as Mat. 19.20 c. whereas when we have done all we can we are but unprofitable Servants Luke 17. ver 10. Mark 2. Christ shapes his Answer ad Idem to the question not directly but by referring the questionists Conscience to the Law of God which only shewed him his Sin Rom. 3 10. and 7.7 Gal. 3.10 21 22 c. whereby he might be whipt home to Christ Gal. 3.24 or at least left inexcusable Rom. 1.20 Christ shews him that Salvavation is not impossible because the Law cannot give it but because Man by the weakness of flesh Rom. 8 3. cannot fulfill the Law ver 28. Here now when this Lawyer was found willing to justifie himself as a right Lawfulfiller which did discover his Hypocrisie ver 29. Christ propounds this parable to this purpose of teaching those great Truths in the general 1. That the first Adam and in him all Mankind fell among Thieves c. by his Travelling the wrong way from the Tree of Life to the forbidden Fruit-Tree this was as going from Jerusalem to Jericho from the Holy City to a Cursed Town c. 2. In order to Help and Heal this wounded Man Christ propoundeth a Legal Priest which Represented the Moral Law to him This Law shews Man what he ought to do and with the same sight shews him likewise that he cannot keep the Law to fulfill it c. 3. This makes Man look out to the Legal Levite signifying the Ceremonial Law for some Sacrifice or Ceremony to make satisfaction for his falling short so far of fulfilling the Moral Law but when Man comes to see that the burning of a dead Beast is but a sorry satisfaction for the Sins of a living Man and the External washing of the Body can but signifie very little to the Internal purifying of a soyled Soul Hereby Man still finding no Relief or Cure from either the Moral or Ceremonial Law is turn'd over to that Law which is called Judicial and which passeth Judgment upon Man saying the Soul that Sinneth shall Dye Ezek. 18.4.20 30 And Cursed is every one that continues not in all things c. Gal. 3.10 c. but 4. when all these three Laws Moral Ceremonial and most of all the Judicial like Jobs three Friends do prove Physicians of no value Job 13.4 and miserable Comforters are they All Job 16.2 then is Man constrained to look forth for a better Helper and Healer even to that Jehovah Rophekah Hebr. that all healing Jehovah Exod. 15.26 Ps 103.3 even for that sweet Jesus who healed all sick Persons that came to him taking upon himself our Infirmities and bearing our Sicknesses Mat. 8.16 17 c. and who is called here the Compassionate Samaritan doing all the Offices of a Friendly as well as of a skilful Physitian for this wounded Man from ver 33. to 36. Christs Name was Jesus a Saviour for saving us from our Sins Mat. 1.21 and there is no other Name by which we can be saved Act. 4.12 It was not Moses or the Law but it was Jesus or Joshua that brought Israel into the Land of Promise c. Now more particularly in the whole Parable there is a prospect of two principal parts First Mans Malady and Secondly Mans
and Votaries hereby hindring them of that mutual Help that God ordained them and of that Remedy against Sin If God thought it not good for Adam in his Pure state to be alone how much more for his Posterity in the Corrupt state who have more need of that Remedy This forbidding to marry to their Clergie at all times and to their Laity at some times of the year is one of Romes Doctrines of Devils 1 Tim. 4.1 3. and they are Devils rather than Divines that speak disgracefully of Marriage and call it a Defilement Though Paul saith it is not good to marry 1 Cor. 7.26 28. yet doth he neither contradict Moses here nor himself elsewhere Heb. 13.4 for the Apostle speaks not there of Moral good which onely is opposite to sin but of Expedient good or Secundum quid in respect of present Persecutions under the ten Heathen Emperours Therefore it was not expedient Had he spoke of Good simply he could not have said If he marry he sinneth not The 2 Note this holy Ordinance of God Marriage Prov. 2.17 how holy should it be contracted and accomplished Adam did not steal the Woman when formed but receives her from God when he brought her to him Alas how many entreth into God's holy Ordinance at the Devils Portal either by Theft or Fornication This is the way to bring a Curse upon them and not a Blessing As Adam did not snatch Eve by force so neither did Eve come running to Adam but is brought to him by God They be holy and happy Couples whom hearty Prayers and holy Means bring together The last Blessing partly external and partly internal was that of the Sabbath instituted in Paradise both before the Fall of Man and before the Promise of Christ as Mr. Perkins saith in his Cases of Conscience about the Sabbath even in the state of Innocency Therefore the History of the institution of the Sabbath is mentioned immediately after the finishing of the Creation as is expressed both in Gen. 2.1 3. and Exod. 20.11 before the History of Adams Fall 'T is true our first Parents did not stand in that state of Innocency to keep the first Sabbath therein but did fall upon the sixth day the very day of their creation yet God makes mention of his Sabbath Gen. 2.3 before he made mention of their Sin Gen. 3.1 c. to shew that they should have kept the Sabbath though they had never finned If Man had continued in the pure state seeing he was appointed to dress the Garden and not to live idly even in Paradise it self 't is enough probable that even then and there he should have kept the Sabbath as a Rest and Intermission from even such a labour as became that place and state and as a Symbol or Sign unto him of a more compleat Perfection to be attained unto in Heaven far beyond that Perfection and Happiness he had on Earth The first point to be Discussed is that the Sabbath was Instituted from the Creation as the Prophet Malachi gathers an everlasting Rule and Law from a Foundation grounded on the first Creation saying Did be not make one And wherefore one that be might seek a Seed for God Mal. 2.15 so may we argue accordingly Did not the Lord rest upon the Seventh day and why upon the Seventh day that he might sanctifie the Seventh day to himself and his Worship Indeed Tostatus and Pererius two Popish Writers do assert that the Sabbath was not Instituted till the time of Moses at Sinai and that the Sanctifying of the Sabbath spoken of in Gen. 2.2 is mentioned by Moses there by way of Anticipation onely But this must needs be a gross mistake in both those Popelings For 1 no such Anticipation can be exemplified in either Testament for so great a distance of time as was betwixt the Creation of the World and the giving of the Law by Moses See Phil. ● 5 2 Suarez another Popish Author doth grant that some observation of the Seventh day began from the beginning of the Creation Suarez De Diebus Festis and all the best Interpreters do unanimously affirm that the Seventh day was Sanctified from the beginning of the World 3 The ancient Jews never dreamed of any such Anticipation for it was their received opinion that the Feast of the Sabbath was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for all Nations from the beginning of the World Philo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 14. 4 It is also evident that the holy Patriarchs did keep the Sabbath by a godly Tradition before the Moral Law was given for 't is said Exod. 16.23 To morrow is the Rest of the holy Sabbath to the Lord. This was before the promulgation of the Law Exod. 20. and though here is the Sabbath first mentioned yet here it was not first instituted they had much neglected the Sabbath in Egypt and here a new Rule is given for its renewing and constant observation 5 The Creation of the World in six days and Gods resting on the Seventh was the cause of its Institution for a Sabbath as its effect Now to put off the Institution and Observation of the Sabbath until the promulgation of the Law at Sinai is to cast the Effect behind the Cause above 2544 years and to begin the Memorial that the World was made which certainly most concerned those of the first Age thereof to regard and remember not until above 888 years after the World was marr'd by Noahs Deluge which must needs be altogether improbable 6 The very words and Phrases the Holy Ghost uses Gen. 2.2 3. doth convince the contrary for there the compleating of the Creation is twice conjoyned with the Sanctification of the Seventh day and that in the same manner and phrase as the creation of Man and all other Creatures is conjoyned with their Benediction Gen. 1.21 22 27 28. 7 When the Law came to be given by Moses the fourth Commandment doth plainly intimate that the Sabbath was instituted when the Creation was finished for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth and res●ed the seventh day c. Exod. 20.11 where God proposes his own Example for mans imitation That which the Lord himself had done in person the same must man do at Gods Command Thus the Apostle to the Hebrews seemeth to argue 1. From the Sabbath or Rest upon the Seventh day whereof the godly are partakers in this life which he intimates was a Rest appointed from the Creation of the World 2. There is another Rest mentioned in the Old Testament to wit the Rest in Canaan unto which Joshua brought the people of God 3. There is yet a Sabbatism or Rest remaining for them This is 1 Spiritual here as God rests in his love to us Zeph. 3.17 so we rest in our enjoyment of him Psal 116.7 2. Eternal in Heaven where the Sabbath is everlasting Heb. 4.3 4 5 7 8 9. Thus also the Ancient and Orthodox Fathers do universally ground the Institution of the
Sabbath upon Gods own example of resting upon the Seventh day which is rendred as the grand reason of that days Benediction and Sanctification Gen. 2.2 3. and Exod. 20.11 And though there is no mention of the Patriarchs keeping the Sabbath in all the Book of Genesis before Moses yet this doth not invalidate the Original of it to be from the Creation For 1 all and every thing the Patriarchs observed for above Two thousand five hundred years could not possibly be particularized in so short an History as that of Genesis is 2 There is no mention of keeping the Sabbath after Moses had given the Law of the Sabbath in the other Books of Judges Kings c. yet this proves not that the Sabbath was not then Instituted because in all those succeeding Ages the observation of it is not mentioned 3 Upon the same account the Polygamy of those Primitive times which we read of in the Old Testament often may make us question the first Institution of Marriage wherein one man was by the Sacred Laws thereof bound in Matrimony to one Woman onely and they two shall be one flesh Gen. 2.24 4 But Moses speaketh of the Sabbath Exod. 16.23 c. not as of any new thing or as newly instituted but as of an Institution well known to the people otherwise they had never been so ready to have gathered a double portion of Manna on the Sixth day but to prepare themselves the better for the Sabbath 5 The very ceasing of the Manna upon the Seventh day doth plainly demonstrate that the Sabbath was observed from the Beginning what other reason can be rendred for the Manna's cessation on that day seeing then the Law was not given 6 No Nation is so barbarous but they have natural insinuations that there is a Numen or Deity that this Deity who is their Lord their Hope and their Happiness must be worshipped and that a certain time must be set apart for this Worship yea and Eusebius saith that not onely the Hebrews but also the Gentiles both Philosophers and Poets did esteem the Seventh day more holy than the Six Euseb De Prepar Evang. lib. 13. So saith Josephus Clemens Alexandrinus and many others and 't is more than probable that this knowledge they might receive from the Patriarchs whose Posterity they were For the ground of keeping a Sabbath to wit the Commemoration of Gods Creation was general and equally concern'd the Gentiles as well as the Jews having the same moral Equity unto both And though the knowledge and observance or this Day did by a long tract of time wear out of the minds of men yet that rouzing Watch-word in the Front of the Fourth Commandment Remember is a most tart Reproof of that oblivion and negligence of this Natural as well as Moral duty Having discussed the first point That the Sabbath was from the Creation the second point is to shew how it was instituted as a Blessing even a Creation-blessing This is manifest inasmuch as 1 God is said to bless this first Sabbath to Man and whatever God blesseth is a Blessing yea our very Crosses which in their nature are as Curses yet if God bless them to us they are Blessings in their end leaving behind them afterward the peaceable fruit of righteousness Heb. 12.11 How much more the Sabbath thus blessed of God becomes a Blessing to Man both in its Nature and in its End And why God blessed this day is declared in Exod. 20.11 because God himself rested upon the Seventh day therefore he blessed it for Mans good He blessed it so as to make it Malcuth Jemim the Queen of days as the Hebrews call it God bless'd it with many Priviledges above all other days as 1 in separating it from all other days of the Week for his own Service 2 In writing down the observation of this day above all other days with his own Finger upon Tables of Jasper-stone 3 In Gods putting his own Distinction upon it as he would rain down no Manna on that day Exod. 16.27 4 The whole Week takes its denomination from it and is called a Sabbath Luk. 18.12 I fast twice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Sabbath that is in the Week 5 It is not bounded with the Evening and Morning as all the other Six days which consisted of Light and Darkness are but this is all Day or Light being a figure of that eternal Sabbath and everlasting Light in Heaven Isa 60.20 Zach. 14.6 7. Revel 21.25 6 'T is call'd above all days a Day of Desires as it was to David crying Oh! when shall I come and appear before God Psal 42.2 4. and as it was to Jochanna who when the Sabbath approached put on his best Apparel and went out to meet it crying Veni Sponsa mea Come my dear Spouse thou art welcome he rejoyced over the Sabbath as the Bridegroom doth over the Bride and as Christ over his Church Isa 62.5 This story Drusius relateth out of Chaskuni 7 'T is a day of Delights as well as of Desires Isa 58.13 we should call it so count it so and make it so which cannot be unless we be in the Spirit on the Lords day Revel 1.10 We must look upon it as a most blessed day blessed of God now Gods Benedicere est Benefacere that is God conferred upon it a singular grace and favour above other days for God blessed the Works of every day but here he blest the day it self wherein he wrought no work but rested not because he was weary with working For the Creator of the ends of the Farth fainteth not nor is weary Isa 40.28 working all things without either Tool of Toil and therefore blessed it either as did Christ the Loaves multiplying the meat to the feeding of so many thousands so God multiplied the Sabbath which began with the first man and shall continue in a weekly renew'd Sabbath to the last man upon Earth or he blessed it so as to make it an effectual means of blessing to the Soul of man Thus the Rabbies understand that place The blessing of the Lord maketh rich Prov. 10.22 that is say they the Holy blessed Sabbath that being blessed of God Gen. 2.3 maketh rich the Souls of men 2 God Sanctified it that is he Consecrated it and set it apart for holy use as Kedesh was Sanctified that is Appointed for a City of refuge Josh 20.7 God Hallowed this day by separating it from common use and work and by setting it apart for his own Service alone but to be spent in an holy Communion with God and in divine Contemplation upon his Works that man might make a thankful Remembrance of the plenty and variety of the most useful Creatures which God had made for him in the foregoing Six days God Sactified it by his own proper Rest and holy Vacation upon that day yet did he not Sanctifie it for himself but for us men hence Christ saith The Sabbath was made for man
it Saint-sabbath in derision of those that pleaded its Morality They were offended saith Mr. Fuller that the Lords day was called Sabbath as if it were a Shibboleth to distinguish from those lisping Ephraimites who call'd it Sunday and as if it had been a spiritual Necromancy to raise up Mosaick Ceremonies yet those same Scoffers could affect those words Altar Temple c. which were words of a Jewish extract Full. Ch. Hist Cent. 17. b. 11. p. 145. The Bishop of Spalato had taught them that the fourth Commandment was abrogated hence they confined the Sabbath-observation onely to those few hours of publick Service and the rest of the day to be spent in Sports This is the more strange seeing 1 their Canons commanded the reading of the Fourth Commandment among the rest and annexed to it this Prayer Lord incline our Hearts to keep this Law And seeing 2 they themselves judged it a prophaning of the Holy place to make any part of the Church a Play-house or to play at Cards upon their High-Altar yet would profane the Holy Sabbath with airy Games as if Time which God hath determined and call'd the Lords-day were of less worth than Places which God hath not determined nor call'd any the Lords House since the Typical Temple The second Inference is As the special gift of God the Sabbath-day should not be looked on as a Ceremonial Yoke or Burthen to any so as to make men clip the Lords Coin so it ought to be conscientiously improved as a peculiar Priviledge otherwise we are like Solomons Fool who had a Prize put into his hand yet had he no heart to it Prov. 17.16 If we fool away Gods precious Sabbaths we fool away our own precious Souls and Christs precious Salvation also The Holy God who was the first Institutor of the Sabbath Gen. 2.2 3. proposeth himself as a pattern for our imitation As our Lord said to his Disciples If I your Lord and Master have washed your Feet ye ought also to wash the feet one of another Joh. 13.13 14 15. This was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Example which Peter calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Copy to write after 1. Pet. 2.21 Thus the great God being our Lord and Master rested on the Sabbath-day and kept it holy as did he so should we do be holy as he is holy 1 Pet. 1.16 Matth. 5.48 this must be endeavoured in quality though we cannot come to an equality This is a writing after a most compleat Copy and perfect Patern if we labour to be suitable to Gods Nature and subject to Gods Law God rested and was refreshed on the Sabbath-day Exod. 31.17 As that is spoken after the manner of men whose rest is refreshing which God never weary needs not so 't is spoken as an Admonition to men that their days of holy Rest may be days of holy Refreshment 1 We should beg for a Spring-tide of Grace that may bring in a great draught of Fish and for the Spirit to move on the Ordinances as he did upon the Waters and brought all to form and life Gen. 1.2 there will be no reviving refreshing and ravishing work till then 2 Bring large Sacks to our Joseph or Jesus the Lord of the Land the Lord of the Sabbath according to the size of the Sacks which the Patriarchs brought to Joseph so were they filled with Corn by him If we bring large Pitchers to wit enlarged Hearts to the Well of Salvation Christ will say Fill up the Water-pots to the brim Joh. 2.7 and Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it Psal 81.10 but alas Israel would have none of God v. 11. God forbid we should surfeit of the chiefest good The third Inference There is 1. Sabbatum Asini a mere external Rest which is given to the Oxe and Ass 2. Sabbatum Vituli as those at the Golden Calf sate down to Eat and Drink and rose up to Play Exod. 32.6 Such as spend the Sabbath in Sports do keep the Sabbath of the Calf 3. Sabbatum Diaboli or Daemonii such as spend the holy Sabbath in unholy works as in Drinking Swearing Carding Whoring c. do keep the Devil's Sabbath 4. Sabbatum Domini such as spend the Sabbath in all holy Duties publick and private do sanctifie the holy Sabbath of the Lord both in the Negative and Affirmative parts of it Such as delight in so doing all the Sabbath-day shall delight in the Lord all the Week-days Isa 58.13 14. CHAP. VI. Of Adam and Eve 's Fall HAving shewn the Dignity of the state of Innocency I come now to shew the Indiguity of the Fain estate Gnashah haelohim eth-ba Adam Jashar God made man Right and Vpright Vehema Bikshu hishbonoth Rabbim but they to wit Adam and Eva sought out many inventions Eccl. 7.29 Solomon doth not mean there such Inventions as are profitable such as many Engines are for promoting Manufactures and artificial Occupations but he meaneth such Inventions as are sinful such crooked Counsels as they sought out of their own accord both to corrupt themselves and all their Posterity For though they were made upright yet were they as Creatures changeable and exposed to the Temptation of Satan yea and they sought out many Inventions or new Tricks and Devices of their own whereby to depart from God and from that blessed state wherein God had placed them For they were not content with that way to Happiness which their Creator had prescribed nor were they satisfied with that perfect state which God had given them but they fancied to themselves an higher Perfection Ye shall be as Gods and followed those new ways to become like God which Satan and their own deceived Hearts did suggest to them whereby instead of becoming like God they became like the Beasts that perish Psal 49.12 and so they involved both themselves and all their Off-spring into many bottomless boundless and endless Miseries The word Rabbim here some reads it of the Mighty ones or Angels as if Adam and Eve had sought out the same Inventions with the faln Angels who were not contented with their own Angelical station but must needs be like the most High Isa 14.13 14 which caused God to hurl them out of Heaven into Hell Jude v. 6. So Adam and Eve inventeth a new way to improve their present and Perfect state by their own Wit they must needs be as wise as God in the knowledge of Good and Evil Gen. 3.6 This causeth them to be expell'd out of Paradise and to live a dying life on Earth ever after as a just fruit of their sherking Shifts and sinful Inventions Jer. 6.19 Here comes in the doleful Catastrophe of the Worlds Creation to wit the History of the Fall which was as the pulling ope a Sluce that let in an Inundation of Evil upon the World It was that Original and Universal Malady which brought a Curse and Confusion upon all created things that the Creator before had both blessed and
Feast of first fruits at the beginning of Harvest and the Feast of Ingatherings at the end thereof About this time 't is more than probable Cain and Abel brought their oblations to the Lord 't is likely what their practice was then did afterwards become a Law Exod. 23.14 15 16. And this custom was not only Mosaical observed by the Jews alone but it was also natural practic'd likewise by the Gentiles for Aristotle in his eighth book of Ethicks telleth us that there was a time observed for publick Sacrifice about Harvest among the Heathen and Pliny records of Numa who was the Roman Moses that he made a Law which enjoin'd the people to take nothing of the Harvest to themselves before they had Sacrific'd their first fruits to God and that at the end of Harvest there should be publick Sacrifice This is reported to be Numa's Law that great lawgiver to Rome Heathen as Moses was to the Church in the Wilderness but it was undoubtedly practic'd before either Numa or Moses for here Cain and Abel performed this service the one brings his Sheaf the first fruit of his ground Harvest and the other his Sheep or Lamb the firstling of his flock All which doth instruct all men 1. That they must Honour God with their substance Prov. 3.9 Though not in that way as they did yet in other ways which the Gospel prescribeth laying out which is but a lending to the Lord who repays all well again Prov. 19.17 in pious and charitable uses as their tribute to the King of Kings 2. It teacheth us that both the Beginning and the Ending both of the year and of our lives should be devoted unto the Worship of God he is our Alpha and Omega the first and last of our lives as well as of our services The first fruit of our youth and the ingatherings of our Old age must be both dedicated to the Lord. The second distinct and definite sense is at the end of the week to wit on the Sabbath-day for that was then the end of the days of the week and at that time there was no other distinction of days yet recorded save only that seventh or Sabbath-day which shut up the six foregoing days So was the end of the days of the week and was after a special manner sanctified by God himself from the beginning for his service Gen. 2.2 3. Therefore 't is very probable this seventh or Sabbath-day must be the most seasonable day on which those two Sons of Adam did honour their Creator with offering to him some of their Creatures he had given them as their Homage to the Lord of Lords when they rested on that day from their works as God had done before from his for seeing the Sabbath had its Institution at the beginning of the World 't is altogether improbable that the observation of it was deterred until the time of the gathering of Manna in the Wilderness Exod. 16.23 which is the first place after its first Institution that mentioneth its observation But the first Ages after God had made the World and before the flood marr'd it did certainly observe the Sabbath and the returns of Gods service were frequent not only yearly but weekly at the end of the Week as well as at the end of the Year because this memorial of the Worlds making concern'd that age and that especially which first lived in the World as well as the following Ages thereof to regard and remember indeed 't is likely enough the Sabbath was much neglected and forgotten before the Law Therefore God solemnly made a revival of it upon Mount Sinai Exod. 20.8 and did often oblige the observation of it after as Exod. 31.14 15. and Levit. 23.3 c. God made known to them his Holy Sabbath Neh. 9.14 Notwithstanding all the neglects of the Sabbath by those Antediluvians or Fathers before the flood who were bad men yet there were other good men the Holy Patriarchs who did from the beginning most conscientiously keep it and who did all along most carefully instruct their Children in the sanctification of the Sabbath and in the service of God by Sacrifice upon the Sabbath-day And I cannot but think not seeing any ●●gent reason to the contrary but that this first Holy Patriarch Adam thus train'd u● his Sons who according to their Education offer'd up to God on the Sabbath-day Hence may be inferred 1. That there hath been a joint and publick worship of Parents and Children at one time and in one place from the beginning of the World Hence the Hebrew Rabbins have a saying that whoever despiseth the publick Worship of God in the true Church here on Earth doth destroy his interest in the Paradise of God hereafter in Heaven which Jewish saying doth not disagree with that of Solomon he that Despiseth the Word shall be Destroyed Prov. 13.13 2. 'T is a most comfortable mercy a blessed Priviledge when Parents and Children do join together in the true Worship of God As Adam and Eve with their Children did So that our first Parents had the help not only of their Sons pains in feeding their Sheep and tilling their ground but also of their Piety in the Worship of God wherein they had educated them as well as in worldly affairs as before 3. Those pious Parents are a pattern to all Parents in taking care for their Sons Souls as well as their Bodies and teaching them their general as well as their particular calling Godly Adam did not only make frequent atonements to God for his Sons as Nonesuch Job did for his day by day continually Job 1.5 But he also taught them to sacrifice for themselves for he well understood his Sons loss by his own fall and therefore he learnt them to repair this loss by sacrifice on the Sabbath which pointed out Christ to them from whence alone they must expect their atonement Alas how many Parents do but discharge the one half of their charge towards their Children while their whole care is to teach them a worldly Trade for the Life of the Body but are altogether careless to learn them the trade of Godliness which is profitable to all things 1 Tim. 4.8 and 6.6 For the life of their Souls This is to take more care for the Shoe than for the foot for the mouth than for the mind whereas Indeed all corporal pains without Spiritual Piety is but unprofitable Sweat This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Parents instructing their Children is an ancient and should be the constant care of all and no duty can be more clear than this both in the Old and New Testament Hereby the Church of God is propagated and the blessing of the Covenant is conveyed from one Generation to another when Parents learn their Children the things of God The 3 circumstance is the place where which the Scripture of Truth mentions not yet the Hebrew Doctors undertake to tell us thus far that in the same place where Adam first
when Jonathan the Heir of the Crown would vouchsafe to enter into Covenant with him a poor Shepherd 1 Sam. 20.11 16 c. that was much but this is a million more This made Abraham abase himself as one unworthy to touch the Hand of the most high God held out in tendring this Covenant and abasing himself even below himself to such an unworthy Worm hereby lifted up above it self thus his Children must lye at Gods Foot Isa 41.2 and cry VVho am I Lord 2 Sam. 7.18 Second Object Was not the Covenant God made with Moses and with Israel as 't is expressed Exod. 34.27 upon Mount Sinai a Covenant of Works not of Grace in the Moral Law Answ 1. 'T is call'd indeed a Subservient Covenant by great Divines yet this may not be understood so as to constitute it a third Covenant distinct from both the other two of Works and of Grace as if that of Works were a Natural that on Sinai were Legal or Mosaical and that of Grace were Evangelical But Melancthon Chron. lib. 4. assures us that this three-fold Covenant was an old Monkish Dream whereon the Doctrine of Merits was Designedly as well as Dotingly grounded The truth is the Mosaical Covenant is a compound of both the two Covenants as to its Inward Essence and Constitution 't is a Covenant of Grace but as to its Outward Form and Dispensation 't is a Copy of the Covenant of Works as the sequel will evidence That the whole Doctrine delivered by God to Moses on Mount Sinai was in its Essence and Substance the same with the Covenant of Grace given before to Adam Noah and Abraham appeareth by many Arguments Arg. 1. That Covenant in which God promiseth to be our God since the Fall must be the Covenant of Grace and the Praeface of the Decalogue saith I am the Lord your God c. This God cannot be to Man since he sinned but in Christ Arg. 2. That Covenant as the Law is called Deut. 4.12 13. 5.2 3. which holdeth forth Sin-pardoning Mercy is the Covenant of Grace but so doth the second Commandment set forth God as shewing mercy to thousands where pardoning-mercy stands in opposition to a visiting of Iniquity Arg. 3. That Covenant which is founded upon Mercy must be the Covenant of Grace but such was this of Sinai 't was not a Covenant of Friendship as was that of Works betwixt an holy God and holy Adam in his state of Perfection but it was a Covenant of Mercy with a stiff-necked people Deut. 9.6 wherein he loved them not because they were lovely but because he loved them Deut. 7.7 8. 1 Sam. 12.22 meerly from the good pleasure of his goodness 2 Thes 1.12 Deut. 7.9 12. God joins Covenant and Mercy together as also 2 Chron. 6. v. 14. 2 Kings 13.23 Neh. 1.5 to shew his Covenant did flow from his Mercy Arg. 4. That Covenant which was the same with Abraham is granted by all to be the Covenant of Grace for as that Covenant at first found Adam an Apostate so after it found Abraham an Idolater Josh 24.2 It was not Grace in faln Adam or in Idolatrous Abraham that drew God into Covenant with either of them but it was Grace in God that moved him to take the one and the other into Covenant with himself and thus also took he stiff-necked Israel as before as he was the God of Abraham and so of his Seed by vertue hereof He brought them out of the Bondage of Egypt which Typified their Freedom from the Bondage of Sin so it was the Covenant of Grace whereof Circumcision was given as a Seal both to Abraham and to Israel under this Covenant of Sinai Rom. 4.11 Typing that of the Heart Rom. 2.29 and the Apostle saith he that is Circumcised is Debtor to the whole Law Gal. 5.3 c. which shews it was the Seal of Sinai's Covenant but this of Sinai is so Deut. 8.18 Levit. 26.41 42. Exod. 2.24 and 3.6 7. Deut. 6.10 and 7.12 The fifth Argument That Covenant which was confirmed by the Blood of Sprinkling was a Covenant of Grace but so was the Covenant on Sinai Exod. 24.5 and behold the Blood of the Covenant sprinkled upon the Book which the Lord hath made with you and sprinkled upon all the people ver 6 8. shewing thereby as by all their Sacrifices so many Types of Christ the Grand Sacrifice that without shedding of Christs Blood for us and its sprinkling on us there could be no Remission of Sin Heb. 9.19 20 21 22 23. The sixth Argument All the Ceremonies of Sinai's Covenant were the shadows of good things to come and Types of Christ who is the Body Heb. 9.1 c. All the Ordinances of Worship and the worldly Sanctuary there mentioned belonging to Sinai's Covenant are Expounded as pointing out the Covenant of Grace The Ceremonial Law was no other than their Gospel The seventh Argument That Covenant made with a Mediator is the Covenant of Grace and so was that of Sinai Gal. 3.19 Adam had no need of one before the Fall Israel had Moses their Mediator not Redemptions sed Relationis wherein he was a Typical Mediator only The Second Answer is The Law pressed upon Israel on Sinai was not a Covenant of VVorks but a darker dispensation of the Covenant of Grace for the better understanding of this consider four things 1st That the Law given upon Mount Sinai is taken either Strictly or Largely 1. Strictly as the Moral Law is press'd upon Israel for an exact rule of all Righteousness and promising Life upon condition of personal perfect and perpetual Obedience so it was indeed given in the form and as a copy of the Covenant of VVorks being materially and for substance the same with that to Adam in Innocency thus the Apostle saith Rom. 10.5 6. that in this sense the Law is not of Faith for its Righteousness speaketh in this manner he that doth them shall live in them where such a condition is propounded as neither is nor can be fulfilled by any Man save only by the Man Christ Jesus in the faln estate hence Luther raiseth an Holy Rapture saying the Law speaking thus to any Mortal Man Do and Live may as well say Morere Die out of Hand for there is no Man Lives and Sins not he can as soon cease to Sin as his Pulse to beat or his Heart to pant and his Lungs to breath 2. Largely as the Law contains the whole Doctrine delivered upon Mount Sinai with all the Precepts and Promises which may be reduced thereunto all the Ceremonies and Sacrifices which were Shews and Shadows of our Saviour the Body so 't was a darker dispensation of the Covenant of Grace to Israel 2dly Consider The off-spring of Abraham the Jews were of two sorts there was his Carnal and his Spiritual Seed represented to us in Gods Promise to Abraham Gen. 22.17 I will multiply thy Seed as the Stars of Heaven and as the Sand
People again As before He opened a new way never gone before to deliver them out of eminent Danger at the Red Sea A true and due consideration of this great Truth might have prevented their murmuring but alas they look'd too low at Moses and too little at Jehovah who had taken them into his Conduct pardon'd this Sin also and shew'd Moses a Tree that should sweeten those bitter Waters c. at Moses fervent Prayer Exod. 15.25 Here was a Tree at hand even in this dry Desart as there was a Well of Water nigh Hagar in the Wilderness though she saw it not till God had opened her Eyes Gen. 21.19 nor Moses saw this Tree till God shew'd it him and the Nature and Vertue of it The Hebrew Doctors as Elias in Lexico Chald. say it was a Tree that bore Flowers like Lillies but exceeding bitter it being the manner of the holy blessed God say they to make that which is bitter sweet by that which is bitter Thus Elisha heal'd the Waters of Jericho by Salt 2 King 2.21 which was more like to make them more bitter And Christ heal'd the blind Man with Clay which was more like to put out his Eyes than to open them But herein God shews his Power by healing one contrary with another dulcifying those Waters by a bitter Tree But others judge it more probable that this Tree was like our Liquorice which Ecclesiasticus 38.5 intimates Was not the waters made sweet with wood that the virtue thereof might be known and which might be sweet enough to give a grateful Relish to a particular draught But that the main body of the Waters should be dulcified by casting it in this could not be natural but miraculous God could have given sweetened Waters for so many hundred thousand c. to drink without this Tree yet useth he this external Sign and Instrument to make a deeper Impression upon Israel's dull apprehensions and to teach us that the weans which God appoints may not be neglected either for Soul or Body But the mystical signification of this Tree is redundant in Authors quisque abundat in sensu proprio 1. It signifies say some what we are by Nature even bitter in thought word and deed yet sweetned by grace as the Waters by this Tree 2. Others say it signifies the Law which is a killing Letter in it self unpleasant to the taste c. but 't is sweetned to us by the Gospel c. 3. This Tree was a figure of the Tree of Life or of that Rod which was to spring out of the Root of Jesse Isa 11.1 who sweetens all to us Matth. 11.29 Christ is the Fir-tree Hos 14.8 the Vine John 15.1 whose Leaves heal Nations Rev. 22.2 4. 'T is a Type of Christ's sweet Cross and easie Yoke that sweetneth and facilitateth all our bitter and heavy Afflictions which are compared to VVaters Psal 69.2 yet are hereby made light and joyful Gal. 3.13 1 Pet. 2.21 24. 2 Cor. 1.5 7 10. and 4.17 Rom. 5.3 and 6.3 4. N.B. VVhat then if we meet with the bitter VVaters of Affliction in the VVilderness of this VVorld Despond not so long as we have the Remedy by us to redress this Malady our Antidote is at hand The 6th Remark upon this fifth Station is God proves his Church by bewildering her for gracious ends to do her good at the latter end Deut. 8.2 15 16. VVhat this Law was wherewith he proved Israel at Marah Exod. 15.25 there be several sentiments of it To omit the Jewish Fables As 1. The eating of Swine's flesh was here forbid 2. The Sacrifice of the Red Cow was here commanded 3. The Seven Precepts of Noah 4. The Law of the Sabbath and other Ceremonies c. all Conjectures without ground As to the Sabbath 't is probable they kept it in Egypt tho' remisly as both the number of the Seventh Day Passover and the manner of keeping that Day with an Holy Rest Exod. 12.16 do intimate The Law of the Sabbath was immediately given after the Creation not here but their Opinion is more probable who say that First The Lord renew'd his Covenant made with the Patriarchs of old and now reviv'd it with their posterity at Marah or Secondly It may relate to that summary Statute expressed in the next verse If thou wilt keep all my Commandments c. v. 26. which God premiseth as a preface to the Law to be after given on Mount Sinai within the space of little more than a Month as may be gathered by comparing Exod. 16.1 with Exod. 19.1 So there appeared no necessity here to prevent that time and place yet this preface premised as a preparation for that dreadful Day hath annexed to it a most gracious promise of healing all Diseases by an Almighty Physician both those of the Soul forgiving their Iniquities and healing their Souls Psal 41.4 and 103.3 and those of the Body also Ibidem Which sheweth that obedience to God's Law is the best preservative against sickness 1 Cor. 11.30 31. and 2 Chron. 30.20 c. The Last Remark from the connexion of Marah Israel's fifth station to Elim their sixth Exod. 15.27 sheweth that instead of all their discouragements at the former they are better treated with better and more pleasant encouragements and accommodations in the latter place where they met with twelve Wells plenty of Waters for every Tribe one and seventy Palm-Trees made a Badge of Victory Rev. 7.9 or Date-Trees alluding to the seventy Elders the Jewish Sanedrim those abounding with refreshing shade and pleasant Fruit Thus sadness endures an Evening but joy comes in the Morning to bewildred ones Psal 30.5 c. Now come we to Israel's Eighth Station in the Desart of Zin their seventh having nothing memorable being omitted Exod. 16.1 Oh how changeable were the Churches Affairs here no sooner was one impediment master'd but another starts up and stares her in the face Plenty at Elim where Palm-Trees signifie the Righteous Psal 92.12 and were a sign of Victory Rev. 7.9 over that tentation at Mara thro' the Cross of Christ did not last long They are again conducted to the Red Sea on the Arabian shore Numb 33.10 11. and from thence hither where they meet with new and more wants the want of Bread their third hinderance for which they murmured again as before for want of water forgetting all the fresh Experiences of Divine favours behind them and not looking unto Jesus who went before them Heb. 12.3 their joy dwindles This happened one Month after their leaving Egypt in which thirty days time all the provisions they had brought thence upon their shoulders were quite spent though eating sparingly thereof all that time also Now Famine pincheth them having no prospect of more provision in a barren Wilderness unless they had fain upon their own Flocks and Herds which would not have serv'd such an Host for above a Month Numb 11.22 and which they peculiarly preserved for an increase
sufficiency not superfluity enough for each and no more v. 17 18. and 3. That God will not give them a year or month or weeks provision before hand no 't is only bread for the Day They are inured in diem vivere as Birds do depending upon God de Die in Diem for their Daily Bread as our Lord taught us in his Prayer The Eighth Remark is God's Bounty to Israel abounds in giving to every individual Person an Omer of Manna the tenth part of our Bushel enough for the strongest Man and the hottest Stomach to satisfie one day This measure is supposed to be double to that allowance which the Roman Emperours afforded daily to their Souldiers in their Camp God's bounty is more and greater than Man's No small gift can fall from so great a hand 1 Tim. 6.17 The Ninth Remark is God's Care and Providence is over the Poor as well as the Rich to both which there was here an equality ver 16 17 18. tho' he with ten Servants might gather more than he with five or fewer secundum proportionem Arithmeticam yet as a Man had more or less mouths in his Family to feed every one had enough according to a Geometrical proportion And from hence the Apostle Argueth to persuade unto liberality and communication of God's blessings one to another 2 Cor. 8.14 15. that the full Cups of the Rich may overflow into the empty dishes of their poor Brethren who should have supplies from the others superfluities Some were nimbler at gathering Manna than others yet he that gathered more than his Neighbour was to supply his Neighbour out of his over-plus that every one might have enough his Omer Now the moral equity of this Law being common universal and perpetual Paul draws his Argument from it as if Riches were as Manna The more Men gather the greater is their annoyance in disposal thereof yet have they no more than will serve their turns So such as gather the least have no want when God's blessing makes up the little so Solomon accordingly makes the Rich the poors Steward Prov. 3.27 The Tenth Remark is This Manna melted not putrefied not nor bred worms of its own nature for it kept sweet in the Ark many hundred years after they came to Canaan Heb. 9.4 but by God's Curse upon it for their distrust and disobedience v. 20.21 Nor did that stink which was laid up at God's command upon the sixth Day for provision for the Sabbath Day v. 24. To shew not only God's rebuke for their curiosity c. but also what a sweet thing the grace of obedience is that sweetens persons and actions of Men to God Gen. 8.21 Exod. 29.18 2 Cor. 2.15 and the Creatures to Man Prov. 15.16 c. The Eleventh Remark is As Manna was a mysterious gift of God they wist not what it was v. 15 so Worldly and Wicked Men know not nor acknowledge God's gifts to them The Men of this World are said to have their bellies filled with hid Treasure Psal 17.14 a confluence of all Creature-comforts while many better Men want them Psal 73.7 yet the Author and Giver of them is hid from them and they neither perceive nor praise him for feeding their Bellies as well as for filling their Bags in this respect the Prophet makes them worse than the Ox that knows his Owner and the Asse which knows his Masters Cribb c. Isa 1.2 so they not only become worse than those bruit Beasts but their Wealth also breeds the worm of an Evil Conscience in it as this unknown and abused Manna did v. 20. See Habak 2.10 11 12. Whereas the Godly do know the gifts of God John 4.10 and do thankfully acknowledge the giver of them As Moses told the People This is the Bread which Jehovah hath given you to eat v. 15. so the word of God tells us that every good gift comes from a good God Jam. 1.17 to whose glory we must improve all c. The Twelfth Remark is Here the Law of the Sabbath had its new Restitution tho' not its first Institution Israel in their Egyptian Slavery had much neglected the Sabbath and since their departure thence they had marched upon the Sabbath but now it is revived and a rule is given for its constant observation before the Law was given at Sinai The observation of the Sabbath is urged upon several Reasons First Upon the Example of God himself who rested after the Creation c. Gen. 2.2 3. which undoubtedly was observed from Adam by the Patriarchs as well as Sacrifices the Church then having places for publick Worship must have this prefixed time for it which God had consecrated by his own pattern no other time could be better appointed A Second Reason inforcing it Is Israel's Deliverance out of the Bondage of Egypt Deut. 5.15 which in the letter was peculiar to the Jews yet was it a figure of our Redemption by Christ but here Thirdly 'T is pressed upon the Church by a Reason drawn from God's bounty and liberality to them in giving them upon the sixth day sufficient food for two days v. 5. and 22. Thus God confirm'd it by a Miracle upon their preparation to the Sabbath telling them the Lord hath given you the Sabbath v. 29. and a great gift it was Nehem. 9.14 for were it not for a weekly Sabbath the World would run wild and the ceasing of Manna upon the seventh day shews that the Sabbath was observed from the beginning before the Law c. The Thirteenth Remark is That which Origen observeth here concerning the excellency and prerogative of our Christian Lord's Day above the Jewish Sabbath His words translated run thus If the Manna were gathered six days together as the Scripture affirmeth and that it ceased from falling upon the seventh day the then Jewish Sabbath It must follow without controversie that it always began to rain down Manna upon the first day of the Week which is our Lord's day when none at all had faln the day before tho' some out of curiosity sought it on the seventh day yet they found none v. 25 27. How oft hath Manna faln on our Lord's day The Fourteenth Remark is The excellency of this Manna which is set forth by comparing it in Holy Writ to Five Excellent Things as First To the Hoary Frost v. 14. to shew the quantity of it oh how liberal a giver is God thus to cover the Desart herewith as the Hoary Frost doth cover all the ground Thus the Psalmist saith He scattereth the Hoary Frost like Ashes Psal 147.16 multiplying this Meat for 600 thousand Mouths Secondly 'T is likened to Coriander-Seed v. 31. as to the figure and proportion of it prepared of God so that they might presently eat of this Corn of Heaven so call'd Psal 78.24 25. tho' they might grind or pun or bake or boil it also They might do any thing with it as they might with Meal this Seed being unto them instead of
back 4. They are doomed to wander in the Wilderness Forty Years till their Carcases were all consumed ver 33 34. Children bear the Whoredoms of Parents and wander so long with them including the Year past and part of the second Numb 10 11. All must know to their cost God will not be charged with breach of Promise which was upon a Condition broken by them so could not be whole on God's part Then did Moses Pen the nintieth Psalm for God's shortening Mens Lives c. to cut them the sooner off in the Wilderness Then the seventh and last Observable is Some of Israel's unhappy War with their Adversaries without God and the Ark going with them after their Mourning greatly for this sad Sentence c. ver 34 40 41 42 43 44 45. They in a blind Zeal as the Hebrew signifies rashly climb the Mountain confess they had finned when God gave them cause to cry yet resolve to Sin again in going up against the Command both of God and Moses and without the Ark This Presumption pushes them out of God's Precincts and so out of God's Protection Their Adversaries smote them to Horma which signifies a Curse or utter Destruction After this they wept but God would not hear so they abode in Kadesh many Days Deut. 1.45 46. Thus the Jews dealt with Jesus and John Baptist as those with Caleb and Joshua till Wrath came without Remedy 1 Thess 2.15 16. Because Israel abode at this fifteenth Station Kadesh-Barnea for many Days Deut. 1.46 according to the Days they had abode at Sinai ver 6. which contained one whole Year as they spent a whole Year at Sinai wherein a great deal of Work occurred as before so here we have many Occurrences in this whole Year following also And whereas God bids them upon their Murmuring c. To turn back to the Red Sea Deut. 1.40 The Lord's meaning was that at their next March whensoever it was which came not till long after that Divine Decree of their wandring so long in the Wilderness They should not go forward towards Canaan but right back again towards the Red Sea from whence they came During their long Station at Kadesh after the old Generation were doomed to dye short of Canaan c. sundry other Occurrences happened besides those before mentioned before their Retrograde Motion In the next place after the Judgment upon the disobedient Parents to be worn out in the Wilderness God remembreth Mercy and suffereth not his whole Wrath to arise but sealeth up his Love again to those late Revolters-Children whom He teacheth what to do when they came to Canaan Numb 15.1 to 12. in the Laws of Sacrificing wherein God promiseth to smell a sweet Savour from the Herd and from the Flock and the same Privilege is promised to all the Stranger Proselytes that embrace the true Religion The Sins of both committed by Errour and Ignorance should be equally expiated when they offered up their Homage to the Chief Lord of all from ver 12 to 27. By all which was figured their Reconciliation unto God and his Grace towards them in Christ Thus after the Curse of the Law for Sin succeedeth for our Comfort the Grace of the Gospel by Faith Checkered Work of Black and White proportionably intermingled is look'd upon as very beautiful Work This comely mixture of the black of Justice and of the white of Mercy God often exposeth to publick View upon Scripture-Record not only here but elsewhere In like manner after the Destruction of twenty four Thousand for the Sin of Baal-peor Numb 25. The Lord causeth the Children of Israel to be numbred again Numb 26. and anew appointeth the Land of Promise to be given to them for an Inheritance and repeateth again the Laws of sacrificing at the solemn Feasts in Numb 28. 29. That upon the Example of Wrath upon the sinful Parents He might discover his remembrance of Mercy in Christ unto the Penitent Believing Children Another remarkable Occurrence happened here at Kadesh-Barnea which was the Severity of God's Justice and Judgments against all proud and presumptuous Sinners in General Numb 15.30 for though there be a Pardon ready Sealed in course by God in Christ for all such as Sin by Infirmity Incogitancy Inadvertency or oversight c. Lev. 4.2 13. else we might die in our Sins while the Pardon is providing yet no such remedy is promised or provided for such as Sin with an high hand proudly and presumptuously with an uncover'd face as Onkelos in Chaldee expoundeth it openly and boldly as not ashamed their Sin should be seen of Men. This is call'd the great offence Psal 19.11 And the Reason is rendred because it reproacheth the Lord as if he wanted either Wisdom to observe or Power to punish such presumptuous Sinners who proudly conceit themselves to be out of the reach of God's Rod Ezek. 20.27 There is no Sacrifice for this Sin but the Sinner is to be cut off either by the Hand of the Magistrate where his Deed deserveth Death by the Law or by immediate Vengeance of the Hand of God as Numb 14.37 And this Severity against such Sinners is exemplified in particular upon a Sabbath-breaker Numb 15.31 32 33 34 35 36. where we may observe 1. The Perpetration of one particular presumptuous Sin together with its circumstances as what where when and how The Fact was seemingly but a small Matter namely gathering a few sticks c. and possibly he might pretend some necessity or conveniency to himself thereby c. but because really is was done with an high Hand in contempt of God and his Law and a prophaning of his Holy Sabbath though in the Wilderness wherein the Sabbath in respect of Cessation from Works was precisely observed but so were not the Laws about Sacrifices for it was written about their Meat and Drink Offerings c. When ye be come into Canaan c. that then and then only they were to be observed yet the Sabbath was to be strictly kept both within the Land and without even in the Wilderness 2. The Punishment for this perpetrated Fact of prophaning the Sabbath wherein 1. The Sinner is apprehended 2. Accused 3. Imprisoned because it was not yet known what Sentence to pass upon him For though the matter of the Fact was twice Doomed with Death Exod. 31.14 and 35.2 Yet was it not declared what manner of Death such a Sinner should dye Therefore God is consulted about this who expresly declareth it ver 35. Besides though the Law be in the rigour of it a killing Letter yet might it admit of some favourable Construction from Necessity c. Which might make the Offender capable of pardon So Moses did not rashly doom him nor ought Magistrates be hasty in matters of Life and Death as in other Cases of an Inferiour Nature They ought to be wary God and his Word ought to be consulted 4. He was Condemned God himself passing the Sentence that he should be
respect of the Priest's Office and this Covering of the Altar with those Censers of polished splendid Brass was as a Looking-glass for all to behold that none might after as Korah presume to the Priesthood The second Consequent is The new notorious Rebellion of the whole People surviving those sad Judgments raised the very morning after which was pacified by a Plague begun but stopp'd by Moses sending Aaron in haste to stand betwixt the living and the dead with Incense a clear Type of Christ ver 41 to 50. Those Rebels after such a severe double Conviction so soon to murmure against Moses who had saved them by his prayer for them ver 22. for his killing the Lord's People seem to be acted and driven by the Devil into this prodigious contumacy Tho' the miraculous strangeness of both the Judgments did declare them to come from God yet Moses must be blamed for killing both ways even while the carkases of the late Rebels lay before their Eyes As the Devil had set the Sorcerers of Egypt against Moses Exod. 8. so he sets this People against him here to make their Rebellion as marvelous as were God's Judgments upon the Rebellious Some say such a furious Devil agitated the People that they offered to assault Moses and Aaron with violent hands whereupon they fled for their own safety as Vaiphenu in ver 43. is translated to the door of the Tabernacle Then Deus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God as out of an Engine appeareth to Relieve his Distressed Servants and threatned to consume the new and more formidable Rebels because more universal with a third deadly Plague which was in part executed ver 45.46 Moses was quick-sighted by his familiarity with God and early discerns Divine Wrath at its first setting forth He spies the Plague running on like fire in a Corn field he bids Aaron run to stop it by making an Atonement Aaron interposeth and therein exposeth himself to the Wrath of God for saving the People yet living God favourably accepts his Atonement Deut. 33.10 11. wherein he figured Christ who poured out his Soul an Offering for Sin and made Intercession for Transgressors Isa 53.12 Luke 22.34 The Hebrew Rabbins observe well how that Aaron made no Atonement for the dead for they cannot hope for any Portion Eccles 9.4 5 6 10 Psal 115.17 Isa 38.18 for after death cometh Judgment Heb. 9.27 therefore there was no estimation nor price of the dead who could not personally appear before the Priest for any Vow in Israel Levit. 27.8 as Maimonides in Erachin cap. 1 well observeth Aaron could not be so quick for staying the Plague but God was as quick in slaying the People fourteen thousand and seven hundred more died of this speedy Pestilence and tho' Incense was to be offered now only upon the Altar of Incense within the Tabernacle yet Aaron offers it betwixt the dead and the living without the Tabernacle in the open Wilderness and God accepts if as done upon an extraordinary occasion so by a Divine extraordinary Dispensation the Plague was stayed here by ver 47 48 49. All which not only sheweth how prevalent with God are the Prayers of his faithful and fervent Servants Jam. 5.16 1 John 5.14 c. but also fore-shewed the efficacy of Christ's Mediation whom the Father heareth always John 11.42 who is our Atonement 1 Joh. 2.2 our Paschal Lamb that stops the destroying Angel from touching us Exod. 12.23 Heb. 11.28 as also 2 Sam. 24.16 Thus the Smoke of Aaron's Incense figuring Christ's Intercession for us Psal 141.2 Rev. 8.4 stayed the Plague from the surviving Israelites for which Moses praised God at the Tent door ver 50. Lastly To prevent all such like Murmurings for the future Numb 17.5 10. God superadds a miraculous Approbation of Aaron's Priesthood by causing his Rod laid up in the Tent of the Testimony with the Rods of all the other Tribes to bud blossom and bear ripe Almonds all in one night's time ver 6 7 8 9. and Numb 20.9 Heb. 9.4 Here are three Miracles in one 1. That a dry Rod made of the Almond Tree should bring forth buds in a moment 2. That those buds should presently become blossoms and flowers 3. That these should immediately become ripe fruit and that all at once or at least in a little space Natura non facit saltum Nature makes no such leaps All this was supernatural to these ends 1. For a Testimony of God's calling Aaron to the Priesthood 2. For a Type of Christ the branch Isa 11.1 3. For a figure of the fruitfulness of a Gospel-Ministry And 4. For a lively representation of a glorious Resurrection N.B. This Kadesh Barnea where this Miracle was wrought was the more famous a Mansion of Isral there because they not only had their Station at this place many days Deut. 1.46 even a whole year as at Sinai as above for tho' they were commanded to remove their Tents the very next day of their murmuring upon the Return of the Spies and the ten reporting falsly of Canaan Numb 14 25. yet they obeyed not that Command but affaulted the Canaanites in the Mountains and were discomfited by them whereupon they returned to their Tents where they mourned as they had good cause many days and there were permitted to linger and loiter a long time wherein those occurrences afore-mentioned fell out For at their first Station here they received those Laws which are Recorded Numb 15. as also that they stoned him that gathered sticks on the Sabbath day ibidem Here it was likewise that Korah and his Complices for aspiring to the Priesthood of Aaron being of Levis Tribe and Dathan and Abiram c. for aspiring to the Principality of Moses being of Reuben the first-born all perished and that 14700 died of the Plague Numb 16. and that Aaron's Rod budded c. Numb 17. that divers Services for the Priests are appointed to save the People from perishing as they complained ver 12 13. Numb 18 and 19. After which Moses mentioneth no more occurrences from this beginning of their third year or the last six months of the second year after their Redemption from Egypt until the first day of their fortieth year Numb 20. where Israel is come after thirty seven or thirty eight years wandring in the Wilderness to this unhappy place Kadesh-Barnea again where they had received their doom of the Divine Decree that their Carcases should fall in the Wilderness and not enter into the Land of Promise accordingly that sad Decree was executed during their many Marches and Stations from this Kadesh towards the Red Sea Deut. 1.40 and back again to this Kadesh some seven or eight and thirty years after All those Wandrings during this tedious Time are barely mentioned by Moses Numb 33. from ver 18 to 36. having no remarkable occurrencies The first Remark concerning those intercurrent years 37 or 38. is That when Moses saw the old Generation fall so fast in this
600000 Soldiers Every Man entering in straight before him there was no need of the falling of the whole Wall nor could that be but Rahab's House which was built on the Wall must fall with it As the peoples shouting did shew their Faith so might it shake the Wall in Gods Hands and no doubt but as it encouraged one another so it did profoundly confound discourage and terrifie the Enemy The Second Consequent is They utterly destroy'd all Mankind young and old and all Be●sts c. ver 21. Some suppose this an Act of Cruelty in the Army especially the Slaughter of all the Infants Answ 1. God had expresly commanded it Deut. 20.16 17. therefore was it Obedience to the Sovereign Lord of every Man's Life and who may do what he will with his own Matth. 20.15 and not Cruelty 2. Israel knew that the Sins of the Amorites were now full Gen. 15.16 They had fill'd up their Epha in Abominable wickedness therefore deserved the severest Punishments 3. As for the Infants they were guilty of Original sin whereof the wage is Death Rom. 6.23 They were at the disposal of their Creatour as the Clay is in the hands of the Potter besides seeing the Reason of God's Judgments are oft times too wonderful for our shallow Understandings Job 42.3 We must not instruct God Job 40.2 nor be his Counsellor Rom. 11.34 and suppose them wholly innocent it was a favour to die in their Infancy rather than be reserved for such Dreadful Calamities as they that survived were exposed unto 't is no true mercy but foolish pity to spare those whom God will have destroyed 1 Kings 20.42 The Third Consequent is The saving of Rahab and all in her House ver 25. according to the Command ver 17. which Exception extended as some suppose to their Goods as well as to their Lives seeing 't is said all that she had ver 23. both the Persons and the Housholdstuff were brought without the Camp as unclean until they were legally purified Numb 31.19 20. and until Rahab and the Women by Baptism saith great Grotius and the Males by Circumcision were Incorporated into the Church unto which Rahab's good Counsel and this stupendious Miracle of God had undoubtedly prepared them All these were the first fruits of the Gentiles saved alive ver 25. notwithstanding those severe Commands to shew none of those Cursed Nations any mercy Exod. 23.32 33. and 34.12.15 Deut. 7.2 which must be moderated by a Common Equity the Life of the Law and taken conditionally if they renounce not their Idolatry and return not by Repentance unto God Thus as the Lord glorify'd his Justice in rooting out the rest of the Amorites as well as this Jericho so was he graciously pleased to glorifie his mercy to Rahab and her Kinsfolk as he did afterward to the Gibeonites Chap. 9 c. in saving them from that general Deluge of Destruction And that which giveth a greater lustre to this Work of Wonder is that here so many Gentiles should be willing to take Sanctuary in the House of so Contemptible a Woman whereas on the contrary Righteous Lot a Man of the greatest figure and Authority could not perswade so much as his two Sons in Law to escape the Flames of Sodom with him though he truly forewarn'd them yet he seem'd as a Mocker to them Gen. 19.14 Nor could great Abraham himself decoy his Kindred to Canaan along with him Gen. 12.3 Acts 7.3 Rahab out shines them both in her Success This seems a Type of our Joshua or Jesus to whom when Rahab that is the Church had submitted presently the Gentiles flock'd in for Salvation The Fourth Consequent is The severe Caution against Israel's Sacrilegiously robbing God of any part of his Right and that under the Penalty of a most direful Curse if any of them perverted any of the Accursed things to their own private use ver 18. according to the Law Deut. 7.26 This was fair warning for that soul Sinner Achan but that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Silver-lover was daring and desperate as appeareth in the next Chapter c. Objection Seems not this too severe to forbid the Soldiers the Spoils of the City Answer 1. It was wonderful Continency in the Soldery now wanting all things of Country Provisions by their so long wandring in the Wilderness for 600000 Mens hands save only Achan's to be tyed up from taking Spoils and the Plunder of the Richest City in Canaan only by one little word of Command But 2. Jericho was the first fruits of that cursed Country so must wholly be devoted to God and offered up a whole Burnt-Offering 3. The hungry Soldiers might have been so glutted with the Spoils of this Rich City that it would in all likelihood have made them sitter for Idleness and Luxury than for marching forward in a Martial Conquest of Canaan 4. The whole Army being thus admonished by the prohibition and so the loss of their expected Prey might understand that the Conquest of Jericho was Accomplished solely by the Almighty Power of God and not by any of their Prowess and Valour as was afterwards done in Subduing all the other Cities 5. This Severity was Exercised upon this City at their first Landing in Canaan to strike the greater terrour upon the other Canaanitish Cities which they had to Conquer and if possible to bring them to Repentance and Submission N. B. But all the Silver and Gold except that of which Images were made that were utterly to be destroyed Exod. 32.20 Deut. 7.25 for preventing future Idolatry were purified by fire Numb 31.22 23. was wholly employ'd for Tabernacle Service and not for any private use ver 19. This Grand History of Jericho's Overthrow I cannot pass over without making some short Inferences in the Mystery thereof As First There is a Jericho within us a Law of Sin a foul Body of Corruption our unrenewed part We should go every Day once about its Walls as Israel did here and on the Sabbath Day seven times if we heartily wish the fall thereof Alas we War against our Corruptions but to half part so Conquer we but to half part Secondly As we should every day once at the least take a full view of those strong holds of Satan in us 2 Cor. 10.4 half about is not enough to tell all its Towers as Psal 48.12 So on the Sabbath Day we should view it seven times as much as on the Week day as God did then honour his Sabbath with the fall of Jericho's Walls upon that day So now our Spiritual Enemies receive the greatest damage upon our Sabbath Day therefore then go ye seven times about and do it not negligently they are cursed that do so Jer. 48.10 God will honour his own Day with their fall and by the help of David's God thou may leap over these Walls Psal 18.29 Thirdly We must in order hereunto frequent the means Gospel Ministers are the Rams Horns that are oft sounding and
Porch and the Courts c Secondly The Cubits by which the Temple was counted were Sacred and Greater each Cubit consisting of twenty four Inches but these Cubits here were the common Cubits and lesser containing only eighteen Inches c. Thirdly The Measures of the Temple are reckoned from inside to inside the thickness of the two Walls and the space of the Porch at the Entry and of the Chambers round about are left out Fourthly Peter Martyr well observeth that the heighth of this House being but thirty Cubits high consisting of two fifteens was equal to the Temple Fifthly 'T is supposed that the three Houses that for the King that for the Queen and a third for Delight were all comprized under the compass of one hundred Cubits yea and the King's Treasury also 2 Chron. 9.16 The Fourth Remark is Solomon's building his Royal City-Palace in Jerusalem when he had built his Summer Country house in Lebanon saith Dr. Lightfoot and an House for Pharaoh's Daughter his Queen and his own Throne so sumptuous as there was not the like in the World for Splendour and Glory ver 7 8. and Chap. 10.18 c. Mark 1. The Porch for the Throne was that before the King's Palace distinct from the former Porch mentioned before the House of Lebanon called the Porch of Judgment capacious enough and convenient to cover those that came to the King for Judgment from Sun and Rain Mark 2. This Throne is called a great Throne described at large Chap. 10.18 19 20. 1. It 's Matter 'T was made of Ivory with some Cavities left in it to be fill'd with Gold and so made more beautiful to the Eye of the beholder 2. It s Form made like a Semicircle so that the King sat upon it saith Grotius almost surrounded with the People that he might sit safer from Assassinates 3. It s Advance by six stately Steps which while the King ascended did Mind him both of his Dignity and Duty in administring Justice as pure as the Gold he sat upon 4. It s Canopy at the Top encircling Solomon's Head for his greater ease and state having stays on each side to rest his Arms upon 5. It 's Ornament both two Lions upon the two staies and twelve Lions upon the six Steps six on a side to shew that his Throne might not easily be overturned as the Lion was the Emblem of the Tribe of Judah Gen. 49.9 And Christ is called the Lion of the Tribe of Judah Revel 5.5 And this was likewise to teach Solomon that both the Valour and the Vigilancy of a Lion is requisite in Royal Judges And 6. It s Footstool was of Gold also 2 Chron. 9.18 Teaching Him to trample under foot the best things of this lower World N. B. Here behold Solomon sitting in the greatest Grandeur and most illustrious splendour of worldly Glory Yet oh how soon did all this pompous Lustre and magnificent Majesty perish and vanish away both in himself and in his Successors Mark 3. The Palace for his Queen Solomon built also ver 8. We find that when he had marry'd Pharaoh's Daughter He placed her in the City of David 1 King 3.1 which then was Solomon's Court but that City being now too narrow a place to entertain so great a Princess with all her princely Train therefore He built a spacious and special Palace for her after he had built for the Lord and for himself and brought her from the strait Palace of David saying My Wife shall not dwell in the House of David because the Places are Holy whereunto the Ark of the Lord hath come 2 Chron. 8.11 which Piscator reads The House of David is too narrow and cannot contain both the King and Queens Court And Solomon had said these Words my Wife shall not c. before he built an House for her and while the Ark was yet in the City of David nor was every place where the Ark came Consecrated to God so as not to return to common use after the Ark's Departure for then the House of Obed-edom and all other Places where the Ark either rested or passed over had been made Holy thereby and not lawful for Men to dwell in But Solomon's Reason was Ceremonial because she was a Woman and so by her Sex was subject to many Ceremonial Pollutions the Law of Moses forbad menstrous Womens ingress into the Temple until they were Purified moreover the Queen being of Egypt might have Heathens at that time for her Attendants so Solomon judg'd it unsuitable that she should dwell in the House of David where the Ark of God was but builds a fair Palace peculiar for her and brought her into it ☜ The materials of all these buildings for civil Uses were very costly and lasting as Marble and Cedar above ground and under ver 9 10 11 12. Now the History having finished the account of those Civil Fabricks returns to the Description of the sacred Furniture of the Temple Remark the First is The Artificer who is commended by his Name and Nation ver 13. and by his Offspring Tribe and Skill ver 14. At the request of King Solomon 2 Chron. 2.7 King Hiram sends him his Name-sake Hiram when he first began his Temple-building though set down here for Order of History This Hiram's Father was of the Tribe of Naphtali here but said to be a Tyrian as Obed-edom a Levite is said to be a Gittite his Mother was of the Tribe of Dan 2 Chron. 2.14 the Place of Idolatry I find Sanctius solving this seeming Doubt saying that possibly the King of Tyre being no Israelite might be misinformed in the Distinction of the Tribes N. B. However it was a singular Providence of God that this Widow's Son a great Comfort to Widows in their great trust in God Jer. 49.11 should join himself to an Artificial Master in Tyre and so become so curious a Workman As this Son was undoubtedly a great Comfort to his Mother so at this juncture he was qualified for this glorious Generation-work God call'd him to whereby his Name is eternaliz'd in Scripture-Record as the chief Instrument in the Temple The Second Remark is this Hiram is said to Work all King Solomon's Work not only in Brass but also in Gold Silver Iron Stone Timber Purple c. 2 Chron. 2.14 upon which account Solomon as Piscator well noteth calls this Hiram Abibu Hebrew his Father as a Father and Master of Arts 2 Chron. 4.16 out of pure respect to him for his universal skill as King Hiram had call'd this Hiram Abi my Father from the like Veneration 2 Chron. 2.13 All the particular most Exquisite and Artificial Works of this most excellent Artificer and Workman are hard to be numbred in due Order seeing they are scattered here and there in divers Places upon Scripture Record but to omitt all those exact Artifices that belong'd to those other Structures for Civil Vse only and likewise those that appertain'd to the Sacred Temple which
were only External whereof mention hath been made already I shall now apply my self to such only as were Internal the Inward Ornaments and Furniture of the House of God and they are reducible to three Heads as to the three Courts of the Temple Mark 1. To begin with the noblest Court first to wit the Oracle or Holy of Holies wherein Solomon settled the Ark of God after all its manifold wandrings in its proper and peculiar Resting Place N. B. The Ark of God before this settlement had been tossed about 1. From the Desart to Gilgal 2. From Gilgal to Shiloh 3. From Shiloh to the Cities of the Philistins 4. From thence to Bethshemesh 5. From Bethshemesh to Kirjath-jearim 6. From thence to the House of Obed-edom 7. From thence to Gib●on 8. To the City of David And Lastly From thence at this Time to the most Holy Place in Solomon's Temple whereof we have an account Chap. 8.1 2 3 to 9. and 2 Chron 5. 1 2 3 to ver 9. N. B. Over the Ark thus settled stood two Cherubims which this Hiram had made c. described in their Number Matter Stature Posture c. Chap. 6.23 to 29. and 2 Chron. 3.10 11 12 13. There were two Cherubims which Moses made of Gold and inseparably fixed to the Ark of God Exod. 25.18 19 20. These Cherubims of Solomon's say Lavater and Peter Martyr did cover the two Cherubims of Moses which were far less and stretch'd forth their Wings East and West being two Giant-like Statues five Yards high stretching their vast Wings North and South and looking with their Faces towards the East as if they had an Inspection upon all that entred into the Temple beside Moses's Cherubims were made of Gold but the Matter of Solomon's was Olive-wood which is most durable and because of their Gigantick Stature were therefore made of Wood not Gold but only overlaid with Gold and all to advance Magnificency And besides these two greater Cherubims of Solomon's and the two lesser of Moses there were many more Cherubims engraven upon the Walls and Doors Chap. 6.29 32 35. and upon the Bases also Chap 7.29 36. N. B. All which was to shadow forth the presence and Protection of Angels in the Worship of God Eph. 3.10 1 Cor. 11.10 And as these two great Cherubims were made of Olivewood which is the Emblem of Peace so it represents the praise-worthy Practice of Gospel-Ministers those earthly Angels who should be at Peace among themselves and promote Peace all they can among others and be like those two Cherubims uniform and unanimous N. B. In what a comely Symmetry hath God placed Man's two Eyes Ears Arms Hands Thi●h● Legs and Feet in the natural Body For the same double Use Christ sent out his Apostles by two and two Their mutual Agreement is a great Grace to that Mystical Body the Church 1 Cor. 12.18 Psal 133.1 Act. 2.46 Mark 2. Concerning the middle Court of the Priests this was divided from the most Holy with a Veil call'd a Partition Chap. 6.21 that hanged upon two Golden Chains 2 Chron. 3.14 with Exod. 26.31 c. This Rent in twain at Christ's Death Matth. 27.51 as is aforesaid The Vessels which Hiram made for the Holy Place were many to furnish the House of God most fully As First The Altar for Burnt offerings whereof no mention is made of Hiram's melting Brass for the making of it in this Book of Kings though of Solomon's using it for that end there is 1 King 8 22 31 54 64. and 9.25 but to supply this Omission The making of this Brazen Altar is expresly mentioned 2 Chron. 4 1. which Book was writ after for that end c. Moses had made a small one for the Tabernacle Exod. 27.1 But this was as much larger as the Temple was than it being fifteen Foot high at the least so that the People might behold the burning and smoaking of the Sacrifice to Mind them of their Sins and of their Saviour offered up on the Cross who is also call'd the Altar it self Hebr. 13.10 The Ceremonial Law was the Jews Gospel N. B. That Law of not going up by steps Exod. 20.26 was a Temporary Law and Vseless when the Priests used Linen Breeches Exod. 28.42 This Altar is call'd Ariel Isa 29.1 That is the Lion of God for as the Lion devoureth Flesh so this Altar of God consumed the 〈◊〉 ●s by a Fire that came down from Heaven N. B. So 't is said by way of Allusion that this Altar was God's Table to Dine and Sup upon to which Psal 50.10 11 12. alludeth more especially in the Chaldee Paraphrast reading it thus My Sacrifices when I am hungry I will not seek of thee to Dine and Sup upon after the same manner is Wine said to chear God Judg. 9.13 Spoken only Parabolically and after the manner of Men. N. B. This Altar was first prophaned by Ahaz who removed it from its Place and set the Altar of Damascus in it's Room 2 King 16.10 11 12 13 14 and afterwards by Pilate who mingled the Blood of the Galileans with their Sacrifice upon this Altar Luk. 13.1 2. The Second Vessel of this Holy Place was the Brazen Laver call'd the Molten Sea the making of this is mentioned 1 King 7.23 though that of the Brazen Altar be not so and 2 Chron. 4.2 3 c. The vastness of this Vessel is described of so great a Capacity and wide Comprehension here ver 26. That it commonly contained two thousand Baths which amounts to five hundred Barrels of Water and if filled to the Brim could comprehend three thousand as 't is said 2 Chron. 4.5 N. B. This prodigious Collection of Waters as the Hebrews call'd it therefore a Sea so it was to signifie to them the exceeding filthiness and sinfulness of Sin Rom. 7.13 requiring a Sea to cleanse it and the infinite Value and Vertue of Christ's Blood c. This vastly weighty Vessel in it self with such a vast weight of Water in it was supported with Twelve Oxen ver 25. figuring forth the Twelve Apostles who likewise look'd every way and went into all parts of the World teaching the Baptism of Repentance for the Remission of Sins This Brazen Altar was set up in the Priests Court Chap. 6.36 at the very entrance of it out of the Court of the People c. N. B. Moses made his Brazen Laver of the Women's Brazen Looking-glasses Exod. 38.8 These devout Women that used to Assemble by Troops at the door of the Tabernacle to pray and serve God see Luk. 2.37 1 Tim. 5.5 did frankly and freely give those Instruments whereby they dress'd their Bodies to make that an Instrument whereby through Faith they might sanctifie their Souls I doubt there be but few such Elect Ladies so devout in our Day 'T was once grave Counsel given to Ladies of Curiosity often viewing their looks in their Looking-glasses Art thou fair Be not like an Egyptian Temple Varnish without and
in his Presence whom afterwards He so sought for to no purpose in all Countreys Chap. 18.10 't is probable this prophane King look'd upon God's Prophet as some Idle Addle-Headed Fellow and so below his Grandeur to regard his Person or Words but slights him N B. Miracles God will not multiply without Cause Elijah's Feet save him Though God could have asswaged Ahab's Phrenzy yet he directs Elijah to use ordinary means of escaping for an example to others Jer. 36.26 Joh. 8.59 Mark 2. God takes Care for his daily Food there commanding the Hagnorebim Heb. to be Caterers for him ver 6. Objection the first Now because Ravens are ravenous Fowls rather snatching Meat from others than bringing it to others by their rapacious Nature therefore some learned Men looking upon it as altogether improbable for such morose Creatures to be the Purveyors read the Hebrew Word Hagnorebim Merchants as Ezek. 27.27 or Arabians as 2 Chron. 21.16 Neh. 4.7 where the like Word is used or the Inhabitants of the City Arabah nigh Bethsan Josh 15.6 52. and 18.18 c. Answer the first The Situation of this hiding Place beside Jordan spoils those Notions nor could Elijah have been hid from Ahab had the adjacent Inhabitants known of his hiding-place Beside had God design'd any of Mankind to provide for this Prophet there was Hospitable Obadiah who kept a private Table in two several Caves for an hundred Prophets of God Chap. 18.4 and there were seven thousand faithful Israelites who in despight of the Devil had never bowed their Knees to Baal doubtless any of these saith Dr. Hall would have had a Trencher ready for Elijah and have thought himself bound to have defrauded his own Belly to supply so noble a Prophet Answer the second God commands the Ravens to do this Office of Love for Elijah rather than any of the Race of Mankind to shew the absolute Soveraignty and Dominion of the Creator over all his Creatures And this was a pregnant proof hereof that whereas Ravens are noted above all other Fowls for their greedy Nature in monopolizing all provision to themselves and for their malignant unnaturalness to their own young scarce sparing any of their prey for them as may be collected out of Job 38.41 and Psal 147.9 yet even those Ravens must forsake their own Nature and forget their own Hunger when their Maker bids them do so Thus the great God is said to command both Inanimate senseless Creatures as Job 38.11 12. Psal 78.23 Isa 5.6 and 45.12 yea and Animate brute Creatures As Amos 9.3 Jonah 2.10 c. The same great God that provideth Meat for the Fowls of the Air Matth. 6 26. can make the Fowls of the Air provide Meat for his Prophet as here and for all his Servants that depend upon him rather than they should be disappointed in their dependency of Trust in him N.B. Were not our Faith wanting to God his Care would not be wanting to us Matth. 6.32 1 Pet. 5.7 A second Objection is The Ravens are an unclean Creature Levit. 11.13 15. as well as Birds of Prey so were very improbable Instruments Answer 1. Though Ravens be unclean Creatures signs both of Man's Punishment and of God's Curse Isa 34.11 and vulgarly ominous to behold hateful almost to all insomuch as in some Countreys there is a Reward appointed for those that can kill them yet are they God's Creatures which God despiseth not but provides Food for them Job 38.41 and for their Young when neglected by their Dams Psal 147.9 and which Christ commands us to consider Luk. 12.24 where out Saviour fetcheth not an example from Eagles Hawks Nightingales c. but from Ravens Answer 2. Though the Flesh of Ravens were unclean for Food yet that Levitical Law doth not tell us that they defiled and made unclean whatever they touched unless they were Dead Beside saith Piscator here was a special Command of God who is a free Agent and may use for his Service what even the worst of his Creatures when He pleaseth as he doth the best of them to serve his Servants Hos 2.22 23. and that Ceremonial Law was over ruled by the Law of Necessity and by the Lawgiver's Dispensation Answer 3. Peter Martyr observeth That the Ravens did more especially owe the Lord this piece of Service because of the Benefit which they singularly above all other Fowls do enjoy by his singular Providence when they are young as above and cry to God not Directly but by Implication only yet being forsaken by the old ones and left bare and unfeather'd the Rabbin's say God feeds them by sending Flies into their Mouths as they gape in crying and by Worms bred in the Nest out of their Excrements which creep into their Mouths as Aristotle saith in Histor. Animal Till they be able to fly abroad and take Meat where they can meet with it Nor will a little satisfie the Appetites of those crying Rooks by Reason of the vehemency of that natural Heat in them N B. If there be such a Magnum Providentiae symbolum So marvelous an Indication of Divine Care attending those contemptible Creatures even while helpless and shiftless yea crying with an Hoarse and Harsh Voice whence they are call'd Gnorebim in Hebrew so unapt to move Pity How much more Compassion hath God for his faithful Servants Mat. 6.26 and for his Dear Children Psal 103.13 that cry to him continually Luk. 18.7 How did God feed Israel miraculously with Manna in the Wilderness and here Elijah by Raven● which was the effect of his Prayer of Faith and so is reputed his second Miracle Oh what will not God do for our faithful Prayers c. Mark 3. Elijah's Meat was Bread and Flesh and his drink was Adam's Ale the Water of the Brook had he been preserved without any Food as after he was in his forty days Fast Omnipotency might have done it N. B. God supplies means when he denies means as he did in the Case of those three Grand Fasters for forty Days and Nights namely Moses this Elias and the blessed Messias all these were miraculously preserved without Meat and 't is nigh as miraculous to find Elijah here preserved when God provided Meat for him by such Mouths as those of Ravens He might have been preserved by Bread only and Water if so his fare had been no worse than his two fifty Fellows in the two Caves of Obadiah Chap. 18.4 13. N.B. But behold God is more bountiful to this Chief Prophet than his Servant Obadiah could be to those of an Inferiour Rank The Ravens must bring him Flesh also and that not raw Gen. 9.4 but Rost or Sod The first Enquiry How came the Ravens to this Rost or Sod Flesh Answer 1. The Rabbins tell us the Ravens did Pillage it out of King Ahab's Kitchin c. Answer 2. This Flesh was prepared by some of those seven thousand upright Israelites Chap. 19.8 whom God made privy to the Secret c.
that excellent compound of a Right Hearer 1. The Attention of their Ears appeared in their standing up ver 5. to hear the better and more fully 't is said The Ears of all the People were Attentive to the word ver 3. they even prick'd up their Ears so Montanus saith 2. The Intention of their Hearts The former Phrases import not only their Attention External but also their Affection Internal to what they heard of Truth deliver'd out of the Law this made them to draw up the Ears of their Souls to the Ears of their Bodies that so one Sound might pierce both at once so those good Souls did Luke 19.4 8. where they as it were hang'd their Ears at Christ's Mouth as the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there signifies as being loth to lose even the least part of his precious Language So here their doubling of the Answer Amen and Amen ver 6. was an evidence of great Elevation of their Hearts giving not only Assent but also having assurance that their Prayers would be granted the Septuagint is So be it c. 3. The Retention of their Memories Man's Memory lost its Retentive faculty when wounded by the Fall of the first Adam but the second Adam heals it by his Spirit which so accompany'd the Word here that now they remembred what God had commanded them to do by Moses Deut. 31.11 c. the remembrance of so long a Neglect set them on weeping Mark 5. Hereupon Nehemiah gives them an Amicable Dismission bidding them to break off their Sorrow now out of season and go away to eat the fat and drink the sweet c. for the joy of the Lord was their strength ver 10. intimating that their Rejoicing in God who had now done such great favours for them in restoring their Land City and Worship to them would both please God more and profit themselves better saith Junius for should they indulge their Griefs it would weaken both Body and Mind whereby they will be both unfit for God's service and become an easie prey to their Adversaries The Levites also concurr'd to allay their Passions ver 11. and then they went away and kept an Holy Jubilee of Joy ver 12. Remark the Third Upon the Feast of Tabernacles described in Special Mark 1. After the Day of their Jubilee of Joy call'd so from Jobal Hebr. a Trumpet that was blown in token of Triumph the Princes Priests and Levites came the next Day to Ezra that perfect Scribe Matth. 13.52 for his fuller and further Information of them in the Law of God This was saith Wolphius a good evidence both of their Humility and Piety in not pretending to any more Knowledge than indeed they had preferring rather to proclaim their own Ignorance in order to their better Edification than to preserve their Reputation among the People ver 13. The wisest know but in part here c. 1 Cor. 13.9 Mark 2. Ezra informs them of a farther Feast which ought to be celebrated in this seventh Month ver 14 15 16. Namely the Feast of Tabernacles or dwelling in Booths which God had plainly commanded Levit. 23.34 to 44. Deut. 16.13.14 15. These very Teachers of the People came to be Resolved of their Doubts in cases of Conscience saith Junius by Wise and Holy Ezra who was both Apt to teach the Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 3.2 and no less able to maintain it He Resolves them that none of those great things Hos 8.12 excellent things Prov. 22.20 and marvelous things Psal 119.18 written in the Law of God must be neglected especially this Feast of Tabernacles or Booths built of Boughs and Branches of thick Trees in a grateful Memorial of God's gracious Deliverance of them from Egypt when they Journied from Raamses to Succoth which signifies Booths Exod. 12.37 and 13.20 their first Rendezvouz and where they built Bowers c. and also of their Powerful Preservation in the Wilderness where they dwelt in Tents or Tabernacles N. B. And it likewise signified that the Remembrance of our Redemption by Christ out of this evil World should be perpetuated with Spiritual Joy in all Ages Zech. 14.16 to 20. Mark 3. The Celebration of this Feast here ver 17 18 19. It was a none-such Celebration which relateth not to the Matter saith Masius as if it had been wholly neglected from Joshua to Nehemiah 't is improbable that so many pious Princes Priests and Prophets within that time who were all expert in God's Law and some of them commended for their universal obedience to it Acts 13.36 should be guilty of so gross a Neglect Besides that this Feast had been observed is implied 1 Kin. 8.2 65. 2 Chron. 7.9 and particularly express'd Ezra 3.4 but this Lo-ken Hebr. non taliter respects the Manner only therefore saith he this Particle So is purposely added to shew this exceeded all former in Circumstances As 1st With so much Joy and Solemnity 2dly With so much Vnanimity saith Lyra all as one Man ver 1. 3dly Nor had they ever built Booths on the tops of their flat-roof Houses as now saith Cajetan 4thly Nor with that Religious Devotion say Junius and Piscator for whereas the first and last Day of that Feast were celebrated with an Holy Convocation Levit. 23.35 36. and John 7.37 but here Ezra Preached and the People willingly heard every day of the seven 5thly Nor with such a long reading of the Law which continued seven Days together says Osiander the People refraining all that time from servile Works 6thly On the eighth Day also they had a Solemn Assembly N. B. To prefigure our Christian Sabbath the first Day of the Week as likewise Christ's Tabernacling in our Flesh John 1.14 and Christians travelling toward Heaven having here no Dwelling-place settled on them Heb. 11.18 1 Chron. 29.15 c. Mich. 2.10 Nehemiah CHAP. IX THIS Chapter is a Narrative of a Solemn Day of Fasting and Humiliation wherein they make a most Humble Confession and an Hearty Acknowledgment First Of God's gracious Dealing with them in four Particulars and Secondly Of the great and gross Ingratitude both of their Fore-fathers and of themselves for all God's gracious Dispensations Remark the First The Marks and Signs of Sincere Repentance are set down here ver 1 2 3. as a Preparative to this Solemn Day Sanctius observes well those Fasters now had wept at the Feast of Tabernacles when their Consciences were awakened by hearing the Law Read to them and had been then stilled by Nehemiah and the Levites Chap. 8.10 11. because their Sorrow was then as unseasonable in a Day of Publick Joy and Triumph as the weeping of Sampson's Wife was at her Wedding Judg. 14.16 but so soon as the Solemn Feast was over which ended at the twenty second Day the next Day being a Day of Cessation they begin to keep a Solemn Fast on the 24th wherein they might vent their sorrows for their Sins more suitably and seasonably in order
Keeping carefully and 3. In Distributing prudently to every Priest and Levite their Portion and Proportion Remark the Fourth When Nehemiah had left nothing undone that might become a Vigilant and a Valiant Ruler he shuts up all with this Holy Ejaculation Remember me O my God c. ver 14. that his God saith Wolphius might put a Candid Construction upon all his Kindnesses so the Hebr. is for good Deeds to God's House in Restoring all the Ordinances thereof to be duly observed as he had done before Chap. 5.19 See there wherein N. B. he did what God hade him do Put me in Remembrance Isa 43.20 and 62.6 7. saying Lord forget not my Labour of Love Hebr. 6.10 Not that God needeth any of Man's Memento's but speaking after the manner of Men he alludeth to the wipings out of a Table-Book God is said to have a Book of Remembrance Mal. 3.16 and good Nehemiah would not be wiped out of that Book nor blotted out of the Book of Life Rev. 3.5 as Piscator senseth it here N. B. This good Man was far from that cursed frame of the wretched Monk who in his Dying hour blasphemously belched out these words Redde mihi Deus aeternam Vitam quam mihi Debes God give me Heaven which thou owest me Not like that foul-mouth'd Vega another Popeling who cry'd Coelum gratis non accipiam I scorn to have Heaven as a free gift quite forgetting that Eternal Life is the gift of God and not any wage for Man's work Rom. 6.23 Nor was Nehemiah here like that Third Popish Justitiary who most daringly bluster'd out Non habeo Domine quod mihi Ignoscas which is in the Language of our late Executed Jesuits I die as Innocent as a Child unborn and have no Sins for God to pardon No Nehemiah said thus in the sense of Augustin saying Certum est nos facere quod facimus sed Deus facit ut faciamus Sure it is we do what good we do but 't is God alone who causeth us so to do 't is God that works all our good works in us and for us Isa 26.12 and without Christ we can do nothing John 15.5 and from him alone is our Fruit found Hos 14.8 hereupon the Church in Canticles is no where commended for the beauty of her Hands those Acting Members because her Bridegroom alone wrought all her good works for her and would rather have her to abound with good works in silence than that she should boast of them at all therefore ought we all to say in our loftiest Enlargements and highest Attainments Not unto us O Lord not unto us but to thy Name be the Praise Psal 115.1 This is the Godly Man's Motto and his Daily Practice Gen. 41.16 Acts 3.12 16. 1 Cor. 15.10 'T is not our Pains but Christ's Pounds that gains Ten Pounds Luke 19.16 N. B. I am thus large on this Remark for Refuting that Lying Doctrine of the Romish Merit bolster'd up by these words of Nehemiah See more of this Point upon ver 22. The Third Part of this Chapter consists also of a Malady and Remedy Remark First Upon the Third Malady to wit the Prophanation of the Sabbath are First The Matter that was done in Nehemiah's sight namely Treading of Wine-Presses bringing in S●eaves of Corn lading of Asses c. ver 15. all on the Sabbath-day which were expresly forbidden by God's Law Exod. 20.10 and 34.22 c. As their Asses ought to have Rested on that Day so their Wine-Press treading saith Wolphius might then have been waved without Damage so could not be a Work of Necessity Remark the Second The Persons that Prophaned the Sabbath ver 16. The Men of Tyre who being Infidels saith Menochius gave the Grand Occasion of this grievous Sin for Tyre a near Neighbour to Judea and famous for Fishing because it bordered upon the Sea and a great Mart-Town for all manner of Merchandise Ezek. 27.3 c. yea those Merchants of Tyre had their Factors dwelling in Jerusalem who Sold all sorts of Ware publickly upon the Sabbath-day unto the Jews which they ought not to have done for that was God's Market-day and not Man's Nor ought the Jews to have bought them for thereby they made themselves worse than the Tyrians because they knowing God's Law ought to have been better had there been no Buyers there would soon have been a ceasing of Sellers c. Jeremy condemns it Jer. 17.21 Remark the Third The Place where all this was done 't was in Jerusalem that Holy City whose Citizens saith Vatablus should more conscientiously have kept the Commandments of the Lord they being then the only People of God in the whole World and where the Sanhedrim sate and great store of Priests and Levites to Instruct them N. B. This is added as a notorious Aggravation of their Sin in a City where God's House and Presence was So that this Prophanation of the Sabbath in such an Holy City was a manifest high Affront both to God and Man Remarks in the next place upon the Third Remedy are First Nehemiah was Centoculus had as it were an hundred Eyes an Eye in every Corner to observe whatever was out of Order therefore 't is said He saw this Sin also in Judah ver 15. He sits not down satisfied with Discovering and Redressing the two former Maladies but quickly discerning this Third likewise he smartly sets himself to Remedy this also chusing rather as a Learned Commentator Phraseth it to be accounted a busie Justice than a quiet Gentleman To which I add This good Man was thus Seraphically blown up with such a pious Zeal as if he were resolved it should never be writ upon his Tomb-Stone after his Death This Man did no good among his People Ezek. 18.18 Remark the Second He solemnly protested against these Sinful Actions and admonished them before Witness saith Vatablus to forbear ver 15. but he is more sharp with the Rulers saith Wolphius than he was with the Vulgar Jews or Tyrians the Buyers or Sellers ver 17. because the Sin was committed either by the Countenance or at least by the Connivence of those Rulers who ought to have restrain'd and severely punish'd such notorious Offenders therefore in an high Transport he calls them a Company of Traitors to Church and State ver 18. Abetting their Predecessors Sins which had so lately provoked God's Wrath against them Jer. 17.27 and now daring Jehovah to a Duel as Caligula did his Jove in renewing the same Sins as if stronger than God 1 cor 10.22 c. Remark the Third This Godly Ruler to prevent the Prophaning of the Sabbath Commands the City Gates to be shut when it began to be dark the Evening before the Sabbath ver 19. beginning their Sabbath at the Evening before Levit. 23.32 that there might be due Preparation and that the Sabbath might be Sanctified without any Interruption saith Sanctius and it soon began to be Dark at the Gates even at the Sun-setting
If any Man think to War against the Justice of God with ten Thousand supposed good Works Gods Justice will War against that Man with twenty Thousand really bad Works and overcome him Whoever dare come riding to Christ upon the Dromedary of good Works Christ will say to such I know ye not depart from me ye Workers of Iniquity Math. 7.23 and so be sent empty away 'T is best coming to Christ as Abigail to David saying Let thy Hand-maid be a Servant to wash the Feet of thy Servants this is more meet than to be made thy Queen 1 Sam. 25.41 or as Mephibosheth said to him Will my Lord look upon such a dead Dog as I am 2 Sam. 9.8 The Third Reason to prove the Insufficiency of Moral Righteousness for Mans Salvation is because as Mans first sinning lay beyond him and without him in Adam so Man's full satisfying of Gods Justice for his sinning lies beyond and without him in Christ The first Adam brought all Mankind into Captivity to sin to misery and to Death it self as he was the publick Person and Representative of the whole Race just as a Parliament Man represents his whole Country for which he acts in the grand Counsel of the Nation and so whatever he doth is looked upon as done by them all Thus also the Scripture speaketh as by one Man sin entred into the World and Death by sin and so Death passed upon all Men because all have sinned to wit in Adam Rom. 5.12 Therefore no Man no not the most Refined Moral Man can become his own Redeemer out of this Captivity This is the Work appointed by God for the second Adam whom Jacob calls his Redeeming Angel Gen. 48.16 the Lord Jesus is the other publick Person who Represents likewise all that are chosen in him and delivers them from Wrath to come 1 Thess 1.10 and this is the principal Scope of the Apostle's Arguing in his comparing those two publick Persons the two Adams together shewing at large how the whole Malady of Mankind came by the first Adam and the whole Remedy came by the Second Rom. 5.14 to the end And again the same Apostle argueth to the same purpose saying Since by man came Death by man came also the Resurrection of the Dead For as in Adam all Dye even so in Christ all that are united to him and found in him Phil. 3.9 shall be made alive 1 Cor. 15.21 22. Thus it plainly appeareth by these and many more Scriptures too long to relate that our Blessed Mediator is the only Redeemer of Mankind and that it is impossible for the best of Men to redeem themselves c. Many more Arguments and Reasons might be added to Demonstrate this great Truth which I shall only name As Fourthly The great Doctrine of Repentance ought to be Preached unto all Men both to those that are merely Moral though attained to the highest Degree of Philosophical Morality such as sundry Pagans Cato Seneca Plato c. did shine within the Eyes of the World as well as to those who are notoriously defective in their Morals and are exceeding gross in their ways of Immorality Now these latter are easilyer convinced and reduced to Repentance than the former having no Reed of his own Righteousness to lean upon I have in my Ministry found it hard work to unbottom a mere Moralist c. And it may be added Fifthly That our Lord hath commanded every Man to pray Forgive us our Sins Luke 11.4 which are call'd our Debts unto Divine Justice Mat. 6.9 12. now seeing All men have sinned both Jew and Gentile Rom. 3.9 23 There is no man that sinneth not 1 Kin. 8.46 no not the most Moral man in the World If any say so they deceive themselves and the truth is not in them c. 1. John 1.8 9 10. Who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from my sin Prov. 20.9 some indeed as the Pharisee Luke 18.11 and the Young Man Mat. 19.20 may say so proudly but there is none that can-say so truly save the sinless Son of God John 8.46 which of you convinceth me of sin Pilate his Judge saith I find in him no fault at all John 18.38 he was like Man in all things sin only excepted Hebr. 4.15 1 Pet. 2.22 Where is boasting then Rom. 3.27 seeing all Men are sinners and have need of a Saviour to purchase a Pardon for their sins No Moral Righteousness can save fallen Mankind c. N. B. Note well This is an Observation worthy of all Acceptation that all the Holy Prophets of the Lord yea and the Holy Lord himself were slain by the Jews who made their boast of the Law Rom. 2.23 chiefly because they all unanimously taught that Mans Salvation must be looked for by the free grace of God in Christ and not by the Law of Works c. Thus having done with the Priest in the Parable the Second Physician of no value was the Levite Luke 10.32 where it is said he passed by this sad Object also what is meant by this Levite there be various glosses as well as upon the Priest here omitting all others I mention but that one which interprets this Priest to be Angels and this Levite to be Men and though both Angels and Men behold this Miserable Man dismounted stripped and wounded c. yet neither of the two hath either Will or Power to help him c. but the soundest Sense in my Sentiments is that of Formal Holiness which carries a Correspondency to the Ceremonies of the Levitical Law and which cannot save a Soul out of the State of Sin Enquiry the Frst what is this Formal Holiness signified by the Levite Answer 'T is an outward profession of Religion without the inward power thereof Such a formal professor this Levite seems to be who was more for the Cerenony than for the Substance of Religion Possibly he as well as the Priest might fear Legal Pollution for the Ceremonial Law forbad such to touch the Dead Levit. 11.8 Deut. 14.8 not only the Dead Carcase of unclean Creatures but also the Dead Body of a Man slain in the Field as he might suppose this Man to be Numb 19.16 but the Legal strictness and niceness of this Levite was an Iniquity for the Man was but half Dead therefore to shew Mercy in saving the Life of the Man was his Indispensable Duty by Gods Law Love thy Neighbour as thy self in doing all Offices of Love for him in Distress Isa 58 6 7. whereas he was one that David complaining of such Fail Friends as standing aloof and afar off in stead of helping c. Ps 38.11 Enquiry the Second How may this Formal Levite who hath only the Form and not the Power 2 Tim. 3.5 be discovered Answer By these few following Characters as 1 he is one that is more zealous for the Ceremony than for the Substance of Gods Law whereas Ceremonial Duties should always give place to
and Intention being resolved before hand to have Christ's Life yet will they proceed against him in a Judicial manner and in a Form of Justice under colour of Law pretending to Act. Impartially in this Process though intending nothing less for under this plausible pretence they Condemn the Innocent proceeding upon these three points 1. They Examine Christ 2. They produce Witnesses against him 3. They Adjure him to tell them who he was Of these in order 1. Whereas some Plaintiff should have stood up as the Accuser or Solicitor for Justice but none appearing the Judges themselves began to examine him of his Disciples and Doctrine thinking thereby that seeing they had no Just Crime to six upon him before they had apprehended him they might now pick out some seeming matter out of his Answer to their Interrogatories At the least to have proved him a False Prophet for contradicting Moses and the Prophets with his New Doctrine But he who was the Wisdom of God answers so Wisely as quite cut off all occasion of Advantage from his words for as to his Disciples he discovereth them not though he might have said one of them through your Means hath betraid me and fled but because he could say no more good of them he chuses rather to say nothing at all N. B. Note well would to God we could learn from him to deal thus with our Followers c. But as to his Doctrine he defends it by Appealing to his Common Auditors who heard him Preach publickly in the Temple and Synagogues John 18.19 20 21. N. B. Note well Thus Truth is bold and barefaced He mattered not if they asked his Adversaries while Heresie whereof they sought to accuse him hides it self and loaths the Light and hereby he kept the Bandogs off at staves end N. B. Note well This may teach us that though we should be ready to give an account of the hope that is in us 1 Pet. 3.15 Yet when called to it before catching and cavilling Adversaries we need say nothing of our Doctrine in particular but answer in general Terms as our Lord did here and as Paul did notably after Acts 23.6 Least we intangle our selves thereby and give any advantage to the Adversary for new Accusations out of our Answers c. 2. They Suborned false Witnesses against Christ Matth. 26.59 60 c. When he was thus Convented and Indited in this Spiritual Court with all Injustice Imaginable yet so shameful in it self is an unjust Process that these Monsters of Malice must pretend a Form of Justice and produce their Witnesses c. and though they were notoriously guilty of Injustice yet did they shun the seeming guilt thereof by Rejecting their Witnesses when they heard them disagree in their false Testimonies and like the Babel-Builders whose Language God confounded those must be laid aside and others are sought that were better Instructed Those Remarks arise here 1. They sought those Witnesses not as if these Judges of the Court had leisure to rise from off the Bench at that time to seek them but the Priests had so prepared their matters that something might be picked up out of the Mouth of their Witnesses which might do the Job for Condemning Jesus These mercenary Men would Swear what their Masters would impose upon them being meerly moved by the Favour and Authority of their Imposers 2. 'T is not mentioned in Scripture what those Knights of the Post Swore against this Innocent Lamb probably it was that he destroyed the Law had prophaned the Sabbath pardoned Sin forbid Fasting was an Enemy to the Tradition of the Elders c. 3. This corrupt Court Suborned their Witnesses as was done by them afterwards against the Protomartyr Stephen Acts 6.11 Not only hireing them to Swear but also putting words into their Mouths as well as Money into their pockets what they should say in their swearing work they taught their Tongues to speak lyes Jerem. 9.5 This they had learned from the old Manslayer the first Lyar and the Father of Lyes John 8.44 Though the Devil did but Equivocate to our first Parents yet is he called a downright Lyar there and no better than a Cozener 2 Cor. 11.3 4. Those Ecclesiasticks did lavish Gold out of their Baggs in hireing not one Witness only but many some at one time and some at another that by the Multitude of such kind of Cattel they might seem under a fairer gloss to find out the Truth with much pains and care of Inquiry 5. Yet whatever all those Suborn'd Wretches did Witness against Christ out of his Oracles and Miracles is called a false Testimony though they seemed to seek and say the Truth Their Tongues were so divided by the over-ruling Hand of God that one Swore black another white their Testimonies did trip up the Heels one of another Mar. 14.56 And they confuted themselves with their own Contradictions seeing that which is false may contradict that which is false on the other hand as well as that which is true However they none of them Swore home to the Point in the Judgment of the Court to make Christ guilty of any capital Crime insomuch that the Suborners were ashamed of their own Suborned Creatures and Christs Innocency appeared as bright as a Sum beam 6. When the Adversaries best projects do fail as they oft have done heretofore and will do so for the future they are forced to shift their Sails and take new Measures N. B. Note well Queen Elizabeth wrote in a Window at Woodstock while a Prisoner there much alledged against me nothing proved can be Had this been a Court of Justice indeed they would have punished those False Witnesses according to the Law of Moses Deut. 19.16 19 c. 7. When all their many false Witnesses were foundred and confounded with their own Mutual Contradictions so that the Sanhedrim could find no fault still to fix upon Innocent Jesus out of any of their false Testimonies at the last the Devil did help them at this dead lift they found out by their Divelish Agents two Witnesses that must drive the Nail to the Head by a specious Calumniating of Christ about destroying and repairing the Temple which they knew the People so much Adored as none were allowed to speak against it and for this supposed Crime Stephen was stoned afterward Acts 6.13 14. and 7.58 59. These two Witnesses the other many disagreeing Witnesses being all Rejected they hoped would better hang their matters together agreeing in one story and thereby seem to have some more Evidence of Truth Hereupon when the worst of Christs Adversaries could find no other fault in him then were they forced to make that a fault which indeed was none to wit His foretelling of his own death and Resurrection which in Truth was the Evidence of his Deity and the ground of our Comfort These two as well as all the other foregoing are all equally styled by the Spirit of God to be false
pleasure not at Death's demand N. B. Note well Now it was that Death as the Bee lost its sting upon Christ and can sting no more but hath quite lost its Victory through Christ's Death 1 Cor. 15.54 55 56. Christ hereby hath delivered us from the commanding power of Sin from the condemning power of the Law and from the conquering power of Death Though the redeemed in Christ do die yet can they not be kill'd with Death as Jezabel's Children were Rev. 2.23 the second death hath no power over them Rev. 2.11 20.6 14. 21.8 Our Lord 's strong voice may be the more wondered at considering how he was spent with blows blood c. yet now it was the loud voice of his Triumph over Death c. There be yet four Miracles behind to be discoursed briefly upon all wrought wonderfully by a dying Christ upon the Cross by the power of his Deity The Fourth Wonder is The Rending in twain of the Vail of the Temple from the top to the bottom which the Evangelist puts a Behold upon as a thing very wonderful Mat. 27.51 and as wrought by the force of Christ's last loud cry ver 50. then the Angels Presidents of the Temple departed from it as Jerom saith As Christ's last cry upon the Cross was the sign and symptom of frail Man dying so his promising of Paradise-Happiness to the Penitent Thief was a clear demonstration that he was also the Great God Living for none hath the Key of Paradise but the Great God only Nor did our Lord only demonstrate his Deity as above while he was yet living and while his Humanity was in the way of dying But also when he was verily dead and had given up the Ghost he still declares himself to be a Wonder-Working God in all the following Instances whereof this of Rending the Temple's Vail in Twain c. was the first wonder after his Death The distance of the Temple from the place out of the City where Christ was Crucified could not exempt it from the stroke of this Wonder-working Hand when those wretched Priests had made that House of Prayer a Den of Thieves this Vail now Rent was the Partition-Wall that divided betwixt the Holy Place or the Priests-Court and the Sanctum-Sanctorum into which the High-Priest entered only once in the year Exod. 26.31 33. 1 Kin. 6.19 21 31. 2 Chron. 3.14 c. Heb. 9.3 4 6 7 8 c. N. B. Note well This Wonder to wit of rending this Mid-Wall was wrought upon a threefold Account 1st To shew that Christ's Death was the Accomplishment of the Levitical Law and that now all the Ceremonies thereof were rent down and done away 2dly That now by the Gospel sealed up in his Death a new way to Heaven was opened Heb. 10.19 20 21 22 c. And 3. To shew that the Mid-Wall of Partition betwixt the outward Court of the Gentiles and that of the People of the Jews was broke down by the death of Jesus Eph. 2.14 15. This Vail is call'd the Separation betwixt the Prophane Place and the Sanctuary Ezek. 42.20 Now the Ceremonial Law should no longer divide those two but Christ became the blessed Cement to unite all believing Jews and Gentiles into one Gospel-building himself being the knitting Corner-stone c. The Fifth Wonder Christ wrought upon the Cross which is the second after his Death was the dreadful Earthquake Mat. 27.51 now that our Lord was dead as to his Man-hood he still letteth forth the Power and Glory of his God-head more than he had done before and whereas he had shewed himself the Lord of Heaven by causing an extraordinary Eclipse of the Sun and covering the whole face of the Firmament with a Curtain of Darkness So now he appears to be Lord of the Earth also by causing it to shake and tremble As the Heavens had given their Testimonial and Acknowledged their Homage to his Lordly Dominion over them in hiding their Glory while their Lord was Suffering Shame So the very Earth here payeth her Respect and Reverence in an humble Submission to her Almighty Landlord in her Trembling before his powerful Presence when the Lion that King of Beasts doth Roat all the Beasts of the Field do Tremble Now did this Lion of the Tribe of Judah roar with a loud Voice and we may well suppose what a Trembling seized upon those Beasts of the Temple the Christ-Killing Priests when they saw the Vail of their Temple Rent in Twain from top to bottom at their hastening now to their Evening Sacrifice Thus well prepared with the Tincture of this Innocent blood more especially when they felt that sad sight seconded by an Earth quake this could not but cause an Heart-Quake and a consternation in them fearing that the Earth might now cleave Asunder and Swallow them all up as it had done Korah's Company of Conspirators these as well as they being now become a Burden too heavy for the Earth to bear and as weary of them would bury them quick This Earthquake might also predict the performance of what God had promised that Christ would shortly shake not only the Earth once more as was done in Sinai at the Promulgation of the Law but even Heaven also by the Gospel Hag. 2.6 7 Heb. 12.26 27. especially when the desire of all Nations shall come and shake all Wickedness out of both the Heavens of Church and the Earth of State and then give those promised New Heavens and New Earth wherein dwelleth Righteousness 2 Pet. 3.13 The Sixth Wonder was the Rocks were Rent Mat. 27.51 where the first word Behold doth spread it self over all the parts and several parcels of all those Miracles mentioned in that verse Behold the Vail was Rent c. Behold the Earth did Quake and Behold the Rocks were Rent to denote the marvellousness of those things and mostly in this because herein Rocks are rent by the Rock and one Rock rendeth many Rocks the Rock that rent the Rocks was Christ 1 Cor. 10.4 he was the creating Rock Deut. 32 4.31 1 Sam. 2.2 2 Sam. 22.2.32 that rent all the other created Rocks c. This was a Work of greater difficulty to rend the Rocks than it was to rend the Vail c. yet the Power of the Death of Christ doth effect this Work of Difficulty N. B. Note well To shew that no Heart is so hard and rocky but the vertue of Christ's Death can rend it into Repentance Though those Christ-Killers had made their Hearts as hard yea harder than an Adamant Zech. 7.12 yet when their time of love came Ezek. 16 8. their Month of Christ's finding them Jer. 2.24 and when the Hammer of God's Word Jer. 23.29 began to beat upon them as Animated and Actuated by the power of his Death oh how kindly did their Hearts Thaw Break and Melt into Tears and Tenderness Acts 2.36 37. with 41. 4.4 When Moses smote that Rock upon which God stood with his
brought Light out of Darkness Gen. 1.2 3 4 5 c. Even so did Christ upon the same Day draw his Redeemed People out of that horrible Tohu Va-Bohu or confusion through the Fall out of an estate worse than nothing and brought Life and Immortality to light by the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 By the Power of his Resurrection revealed therein The 2d Reason was to transfer the Legal Sabbath of the Seventh Day to the Evangelical on the First Day because 1. The Old Creation-Sabbath could not hold congruity with this New Creation by Christ who came now to Create New Heavens and a New Earth so as the former should not be remembred nor come into mind Isa 65.17 2 Pet. 3.13 Yea to make all things new Rev. 21.5 c. 2. Nor could it seem any other than Incongruous that this Day of our Lord's Resurrection which began a New Kingdom to wit Christ's Kingdom of the Gospel should pass away into the Old Sabbath that had for its Basis or Foundation the Remembrance of the World's Creation as well as of Israel's Deliverance from Egypt c. And 3. It must be judged very convenient that a peculiar Sabbath should be given to Christians that they might be distinguished from the Jews as they were by their peculiar Rites from the Pagans The 3d Reason was We read in Scripture of four Terrible Earth-quakes the first at the promulgation of the Law of Moses Exod. 19.18 the second was at the Death of our Redeemer the third was at his Resurrection and the fourth shall be at the Day of Judgment when the Law before given shall then be required How can it rationally be rejected that this double Earth-quake at Christ's Death and Resurrection within three days each of other to signifie the shaking of the whole World in both Judaism and Paganism by the Kingdom of the Gospel should not shake the Sabbath from off its old foundation upon a new one especially considering how 't is said I will once more shake not only the Earth as at the giving of the Law Exod. 19.18 but also the Heavens Hag. 2.6 Heb. 12.26 So that there should be a wonderful change both in Church and State and as the Earth-quake at Christ's Death did rend the Vail of the Jewish Temple from top to bottom whereby the Sabbath so far as it was Jewish as well as Sacrifices and Ceremonies were all unbottomed so the Earth-quake at Christ's Resurrection did shake it again unto and upon a new bottom in respect of the Morality and Perpetuity of it For 't is more than probable that as the first famous Earth-quake at God's giving the Law by the Hand of Moses and by the Disposition of Angels Acts 7.53 Gal. 3.19 made such a mighty change and the last at Christ's judging the World by the Law and by the Gospel too will make the greatest change of changes Even of this present evil World into that to come So the two middle Intervening famous Earth-quakes especially being so contiguous touching almost each other as it were and being within the space of thirty six hours one of another so that the Earth had got but a very short rest from the first Convulsion but presently it falls into another quaking fit must necessaily produce this wonderful Alteration seeing they did so nearly conjoin their influences to effect it The 4th Reason of this change of the Sabbath is that Christ's Resurrection was the first Degree or Step of his state of Exaltation whereby he became from the form of a Servant to be an Exalted Prince Phil. 2.7 8 9. Acts 5.30 31. The Lord of All Acts 10 36. and Lord over All Rom. 10.12 yea more particularly the Lord of the Sabbath Mat. 12.8 Though the Son of God by his Incarnation became the Son of Man yet did not this diminish his Divine Authority as he was the Second Person of the God-head and therefore wanted no power to maintain the Authority of the Fourth Command and to appoint any one day of the seven according to the pleasure of his Soveraign Will for the observation of the Command touching Sabbath-Day Duties seeing he is Lord even of the Sabbath and the Moral necessity lies in this point that one day of the seven must be sanctified duly to the Lord and sure I am it only is the Soveraignty of this Lord of the Sabbath to chuse his own out of the seven days for his Service that the Son may be honoured with the Religions Remembrance and Holy observation of his first Resurrection day as the Father till then had been honoured with the like Devotion upon his first Resting day from the work of Creation and he that thus honoureth not the Son by despoiling him of his due day and duty himself saith Honours not the Father at all John 5.23 The 5th Reason is The Emphasis and Extraordinary Accent that the Holy Scriptures put upon Christ's Resurrection as of highest Importance to Man's Salvation For the Great Truth of Christ's Resurrection upon which the observation of our Lord's Day is grounded the word of God gives greater confirmation of than of other Gospel Truths As 1st 'T is confirmed by Figures and Significant Types to wit 1. By Adam sleeping while Eve the Mother of all the Living was formed ex ejus latere and taken out of his side then the Man awaked So the Second Adam fell asleep and out of that large Wound in his side came forth the Church the Mother of us all Gal. 4.26 then He as God Man awakened 2d By Isaac who was bound upon the Altar to be burnt as a Sacrifice but freed from Death by the Angel and restored to his Father who reckoned God raised up his Son as from the Dead Heb. 11.19 Accordingly it was with our Isaac Jesus c. 3d By Joseph who was shut up in Prison where the Iron entered into his Soul Psal 105.18 as the old Translation reads it and then by a mighty hand of God he was restored to his Father with great Joy So it was with Jesus this Joseph our Brother c. The 4th Figure was By Samson whom the Philistines thought they had secured safe enough when they had him inclosed in Gaza a City with Walls and Gates but he rose up before it was day light plucks up the Posts and Gates of the City and carried them away upon his Shoulders to the top of an Hill Judges 16.3 Even so it was with our Saviour whom the Chief Priests thought they had fast enough in a sealed and guarded Sepulchre But he stronger than Samson raised himself up and by his Irresistible power removed all obstructions carrying the Gates of Death and Hell which could not prevail against him Mat. 16.18 away with him c. The 5th Figure is by Jonah a figure that Jesus made of himself as to his Resurrection who was raised up out of the Whale's Belly which Jonah calls the Belly of Hell Jon. 2.2 So our Jesus was raised out of
calls young men 1 John 2.13 14. But the Three are the Fathers whereof there is the fewest number such as beget Souls to Christ Both these latter Christ calls his Sheep yet of a differing degree Note And this Title of Sheep sheweth that Christians must not be ravenous as Wolves not biting as Dogs not crafty as Foxes not dirty as Hoggs not haughty as Horses not stomachful as the Whale c. but meek gentle innocent simple c. as Sheep Note And Christ puts the possessive My to all the Three intimating I have Redeemed them with my Blood I love them and take care of them therefore Peter must be a Pastor to them not an Impostor or Tyrant to Rule over them with Rigour and according to thy Carnal Reason But if I be dear to thee let them be dear to thee also seeing they are dearest of all to me Shew now the love of thy heart to me by the labour of thy hand to them Note Peter was grieved to be ask'd the same Question thrice as if his Lord did suspect his sincerity or did foresee another future fall But by his former he had both learnt more modesty and unlearnt self-confidence thro smarting experience so that he dare no more presume but cautiously commit himself to Christ's Omnisciency who knew what he was and what he would be better than himself None of us should be grieved to be ask'd or to ask our selves Do we love Jesus Christ three times over We are Anathema'd if we do not 1 Cor. 16.22 In the next place Christ confirmeth the truth of Peter's Answer and that he should persevere and testifie the sincerity of his love to Christ by his suffering Martyrdom for him verse 18 19. Peter had presumed before that he could die for Christ but he was then not able chusing rather to deny him by fear than to die for him by love the reason was Christ must die for Peter c. before Peter can be inabled to die for Christ His Humane Temerity was preposterous in daring to say before that he could lay his Life down for his Lord when Divine Verity had decreed another order that is Christ must lay down his life first to purchase a power of perseverance for Peter c. And this being now done Peter may now truly assume such a power of dying for Christ and not falsly presume it as he had done before Christ's death c. Christ now having dispatched his discourse concerning Peter then begins that concerning John occasion'd by Peter's curious Question about the kind of death that his beloved Disciple should die verse 20. Behold what a great change was here in Peter who before durst not ask Christ concerning Judas John 13.23 but beckoned upon John to ask him verse 24 25 26. Now he dareth to ask his Lord concerning John whether he might glorifie God by Martyrdom also verse 21. Seeing it is the glory of the Sufferer to glorifie God in suffering now 't is the great End both of our Creation and of our Redemption to glorifie God 1 Cor. 6.20 and Rev. 4.11 And such as so honour God he will assuredly honour them 1 Sam. 2.30 As Martyrdom is the lowest subjection that can be paid to God so it is the highest honour whereof Peter thought John more worthy of than himself and should not the beloved Disciple have the honour of Martyrdom as well as himself he could not but doubt whether Christ spoke out of love to him in thus foretelling his Martyrdom Christ turns short and sharp upon Peter for this over-curious Inquiry saying If I will that he tarry till I come what is that to thee follow thou me Verse 22. that is look to thy self and trouble not thy self about others He shall live till I come to take vengeance on the Jews City Temple c. but thou shalt be Martyr'd by the Jews before the Destruction of Jerusalem and die the death of the Cross as I died therefore saith Christ here follow thou me as he had said to Peter before Thou canst not follow me now but thou shall follow me hereafter John 13.36 37. to wit in the same kind of d●●th Here Christ re●●●ds Peter of the discourse then intimating as I truly foretold thy thriee denying me then c. so now I as truly foretell thy following me in Martyrdom therefore prepare for it c. As to John's tarrying c. I refer the Reader unto the last end of his life who was the longest liver of all the Apostles c. Now come we to Christ's Eighth Appearance in the Mount of Galilee as before by the deep Sea in the same Country which Matthew only relateth at large Matth. 28.16 c. wherein there be also many famous Remarks to be well observed As 1st The Time when It may well be supposed to fall upon the fourth first-day of Christ's forty days tarrying upon the Earth before he ascended into Heaven For the first first-day he appeared five times to wit upon the day of his Resurrection The last of which five was to the Eleven as they were relating one to another that the Lord was Risen indeed c. Luke 24.33 34. Then the second first-day to Thomas c. then the third first-day after he appeared again to the Seven Apostles at the Sea of Tiberias or Galilee and now upon the fourth first-day he appeared again to the Eleven c. upon this Mountain of Galilee Note Thus it farther appeareth that our Lord did not constantly converse with his Disciples c. partly because they poor mortals were not capable of his continual presence in his now Immortal State and partly that his so long absence from them betwixt one time of his Appearance and another might make them long the more for his Renewed presence the worth whereof they were taught by the want of it He mostly appeared to his Apostles by the Interval of seven days Note Nor only to teach them that it was his pleasure to establish the Eighth day or First day of the Week to be observed as the Christian Sabbath from that time to the end of the World upon Earth but also that when the Seven days of this our Mortal Life which is but seven Years in Law are expired then cometh the Eighth day or the beginning of the Eternal Sabbath in Heaven and then shall we see our sweet Saviour standing upon the Shore of Glory even as he is 1 John 3.1 2 3. Until then we cannot have a perfect sight of him The 2d Remark is The place where it was in the general in Galilee and in particular in a Mountain of Galilee what Mountain this was is not mentioned but supposed to be Mount Tabor the same place whereon Christ had given to Peter James and John a foretast of his future Glory in his glorious Transfiguration Matth. 17 4 5. Note The Lord often manifested his great Grace on a Mountain as there and here his great Glory not only for secret
Aristocracy under Judges verse 20. and that of Monarchy both under Saul verse 21. and under David verse 22. Then 3ly He lays down his Proposition That Jesus is the Christ the Saviour of the World v. 23 4ly The Illustration of the Proposition variously proving it as 1. From Christ's Stock and Family according to the flesh foretold by God verse 23. 2. From his Fore-runner fore-told by Isaiah and Malachy verse 24. 3. From the Testimony of John Baptist himself verse 25. 4. From the Resurrection of Christ verse 30. which he asserts as well fortified with the Testimony 1. Of the Apostles and many Galileans v. 31. and 2 Of the Prophets both David verse 33 35. and Isaiah verse 34. 5ly He anticipates Objections that some might raise against his Proposition as 1. None must look upon themselves to be unconcerned in this Truth for the holding forth of the Messiah was of universal concern to present as well as to past Times verse 32 33. 2. None must be offended at Christ's unjust condemnation whereof the Cause he tells them was only the Jews Ignorance verse 27. nor at Christ's Ignominious Death upon the Cross verse 28. nor yet at his Burial verse 29. 6ly And lastly His Epilogue wherein he excites his Auditory to an hearty Imbracement of the Gospel by two Arguments the first is drawn from the Advantage thereby informing them that many benefits do redound unto those who imbrace the Faith in Christ verse 38. and 39. And the second is drawn from the danger of neglecting it Contemners of Christ saith he God will severely punish at the last day v. 40 41. Having here drawn a Graphical Scheme of Paul's Seraphical Sermon now come we to the particular Remarks The first is It may justly be wondered at how Paul got the liberty to Preach thus publickly as well as powerfully in the Jews Synagogue seeing the Jews generally did so hate him as appeareth by that danger he was in at Damascus through the Jews Machinations against him who had wrought with the Governour of that City to apprehend him and there they would have dispatched him had he not been let down over the City-wall in a Basket Acts 9.22 23 24 25. 2 Cor. 11.32 33. And seeing also that no man might presume to Preach in their Assemblies without lawful Authority and a solemn Calling thereunto by the Governours which God had set over them in their Law and appointed them for ordaining Preachers This Doubt is exprresly resolved verse 14. Acts 13. saying The Rulers of the Synagogue gave him a call to this work But that they should do so is the greater wonder of the two For the difficulty lieth how did those Rulers know that Paul and Barnabas were qualified for Preaching-work It may be answered by their former converse with them for it cannot be imagined that this was the first time they had seen them nor that they came to Town that very day but as Dr. Lightfoot supposeth the Rulers had been conversing with Paul and Barnabas before this some time whereby they understood their Ability to give a word of Exhortation and not only so but probably those very Rulers had by conversing with those Apostles by this time drunk in some Respect for and Affection to the Gospel hereupon they did thus urge them to Preach it to the people The second Remark is 'T is a laudable custom to read some portion of Scripture first and then to expound and apply it before the Sermon begin N.B. This was the practice of the Priests of the Lord in the Jewish Synagogues and this ought to be done in our Christian Churches The Reading of the Law was commanded by Moses and the Rabbins say that Ezra commanded the Reading of the Prophets also in their Synagogues and both the Law and the Prophets were so distributed into parts and so many Sections as by Reading every Sabbath day one of them they might Read the whole of both once a year N B. That the Scriptures were Read in the Synagogues many proofs do demonstrate as Luke 4.16 Acts 13.15 and 27. and Acts 15.21 c. And that they were expounded also is as demonstrable Neh. 8.5 8. Acts 9.22 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there used doth signifie that they proved the proposed Truth by comparing Scripture with Scripture and laying one place to another as Joyners that in order to Erect a Fabrick first fit all the parts of their work together so that each part may perfectly agree with the other c. Thus the Priests in Nehemiah's day Read the Scripture and gave the sense thereof to the people for it was their special Office to Instruct them Deut. 33.10 Mal. 2.7 c. hereupon these Levites Neh. 8.8 did not only Read the Law but also as Tremellius renders it Dabant Intelligentiam per Scripturam ipsam they caused the people to understand the meaning of one Scripture by comparing it with another N.B. Parallel Texts like Looking-glasses placed one against another do cast a mutual Light one to another And thus the Lapidary useth to brighten his hard Diamond with the Dust that is shaved off from it self and so ought hard Scriptures to be opened and explained by those that are plainer But above all N.B. The Example of our Lord himself maketh it a most commendable Custom This was Christ's own Custom to Read and Expound the Scripture Luke 4.16 17 18 19. where we are told that our Lord did not only open the Book to read but he also opened that portion of Scripture which he had Read As he was admitted to be Maphtir or publick Reader of the second Lesson in the Prophets for that day So he became both his own interpreter and paraphrast too tho' for his pinching them too close his life was then indangred The third Remark is The success of that powerful Sermon which Paul preached this first Sabbath-day after the Reading of the Law and the Prophets as aforesaid upon the Auditory The Auditors consisted of two sorts the Jews and the Gentiles N.B. 1st The Jews were some good and some bad The latter were offended at this Apostolical Doctrine at those offence that Solemn Assembly was broken up by the aversness and outrage of those bad Jews against the Gospel but the former took the better part and joyned with the honest Gentiles who were both together wrought upon by the word of God Acts 13.42 43. N.B. Thus God will ●ut in for his part with the Devil and not suffer him to take all Christ as it is promised Isa 53.12 will divide the spoil with the strong with the strong People with the strong Turk and with the strong World yea with the strong Devil he will scramble among the strongest of his Enemies for his share even among the cursed Jews themselves who were his Crucifyers He will out of his gracious Nature Exod. 22.27 pluck some yea many as 't is said here of them as brands out of the fire Zech. 3.2 3.
started by that Do-evil contracted the Devil bred no small dissension and disputation which caused that most Meek Apostle Paul who was willing to become all things to all men to undertake an holy war against them that would Introduce Circumcision into the Christian Church because he could not become sin to any man verse 2. nor could he abate one Inch of the purchase of Christ which was so perfect in it self in order to Salvation that it needed no Eeks or Addittions to it out of the Ceremonial Law Therefore alloweth he not of any works of the Law to be an Ingredient into our Justification and Glorification but he must have the free Grace of God in Christ to be all in all Col. 3.11 N.B. Besides He well knew that the retaining still of Circumcision would have rendred Christ and his Gospel less acceptable among the Gentiles and also have kept possession for all the other legal ceremonies and their Re-entring amongst them for the Circumcised person was obliged by his Circumcision to observe them all Gal. 5. verse 3 4. there being the same reason for the one as for the other This was that which moved this Meek man to contend so earnestly for the Faith of the Gospel as Jude v. 3. being well assured that every small parcel of Divine Truth is pretious none of the least filings of Gold are to be carelesly cast away Oh how Zealous was mild Paul therefore in this Case Gal. 1.7 and 2.5 and 5.12 He wished that those troublers non modó circumcidantur Sed abscindantur not only to have their praeputium or foreskin but their very persons cut off to trouble the Church no more N.B. When these false Apostles pretending the Authority of the Church at Jerusalem for the maintenance of their Heresy had greatly disturbed the peace of the Church at Antioch the Church sends Paul and Barnabas who had chiefly the ministration of the Gospel among the Gentiles from Antioch to Jerusalem that the Apostles of Christ there might decide the Controversy which those Apostles of Satan had started in this New Constituted Church N.B. Humble Paul for he had learnt of his Saviour both Meekness and Humility Matth. 11.29 could be content here to be only a Messenger of this New-Church tho' he was nothing Inferiour even to the chiefest of the Apostles 2 Cor. 12.1 willingly Submitting to the Judgment of those Apostles that were then at Jerusalem hereupon he with Barnabas and other Companions undertake the Embassage who were brought on their way by the Church verse 2 3. not only to shew their due Veneration and Respect to them but also that there was no Dissension betwixt them and the Church which sent them as their plenipotentiaryes to treat about a remedy upon that Emergent mischieuous Scruple and that therefore these were the Ambassadors of Antioch and came not on their own Heads N.B. So they passed thence through Phaenice and Samaria declaring the Conversion of the Gentiles to the brethren in those places who when they heard how the Gentiles were brought from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to the ever living God Acts 26.18 This caused great joy to those believers for nothing can more rejoyce the heart of a gracious man than the hearing how heathenish Souls are brought ●●●e to God and the Increase of the Kingdom of Christ Thence they came to Jerusalem when they had filled Samaria with this second Joy added to that first Acts 8.10 where they were received with all respect and reverence verse 4. Acts 15. for their great labour in the Lord's Vineyard among the Gentiles Acts 14.27 N.B. Paul and Barnabas who had been imployed in the Ministry of the Uncircumcision made their application peculiarly to Peter James and John who were the Ministers of the Circumcision first in private the other Apostles being gone to preach the Gospel in all probability to other parts of the World The result of this private conference was that the three of the Circumcision did kindly concurr with the two of the Vncircumcision without either detracting from what they had done already or super-adding any more things to be done by then hereafter And all was well concluded betwixt them that as the Three should mind their Ministry among the Jews so should the Two among the Gentiles requiring only that the poor of the Circumcision must be charitably remembred by those of the Uncircumcision N.B. Notwithstanding this Amicable Agreement betwixt the three and the two in private The Zealotes for the Mosaick Ceremonies in the Church at Jerusalem who abetted the opinion of the necessity of Circumcision would not be so satisfied but the matter of Controversy must come to a publick Canvasse So the Elders and Brethren met together with the Apostles in a Solemn Synod to debate the point Acts 15.6 12 22 23. The debates that were principal in this Christian Council are Three to wit First That of Peter who defending the cause of Paul and Barnabas Argueth from particulars instancing in the Conversion of Cornelius to an Vniversal namely the Justification of all the Gentiles His Syllogism consists of three Logical parts 1. His Major proposition is There is but one and the same manner of Justification toward all men 2. His Minor is Cornelius with his whole Family was justified without Circumcision which he fortifies by declaring that this was done by the Command of God ver 7. and that God had given his Testimony for approbation in giving them the Holy Ghost so their Justification was evidenced by their Sanctification ver 8. putting no difference betwixt Jew and Gentiles but purifying their Hearts by faith as well as ours having broke down the partition wall c. ver 9. Then 3. Follows this conclusion from these two premises namely that therefore justification cannot come by the works of the Law which was an intolerable and an inefficacious Yoke ver 10. but by the grace of God the Father through faith on Christ the Son by which way all the Patriarks Prophets and the Holy Progenitours were saved ver 11. Thus Peter proposeth that he would have none of Moses's burdens imposed upon the Gentiles because in a word he himself had seen the Gentiles to have been made partakers of the Holy Ghost in as free and full a measure as ever any Jews had been who were formerly the most Mosaical c. The second Speech made in this Council was that of Barnabas and Paul who affirmed that they had seen the same Divine Testimonies in the Justification of the Gentiles so they confirmed the Proposal of Peter by declaring what Miracles and Wonders God had wrought by them among the Gentiles verse 12. which was an Evidence God was pleased with their Ministration among them therefore the Gentiles being as eminent in Gifts as any of the Jews what could these Mosaick Ceremonies add to them and what need was there to trouble them with such Observances N.B. The third Speech in this Council was
Doctrine of Grace into an occasion of Licentiousness Therefore doth he so sharply tax that notorious abuse and insists more fully on matters of practice the Doctrine of Faith having been so largely inlarged upon by other hands N. B. Eusebius out of Egesippus Relateth how this Apostle James suffered Martyrdom at Jerusalem by the then outragious Jews who threw him down from the top of his Pulpit some say from the pinnacle of the Temple and then knocked him on the head with a Fuller's Club as Abet was by Cain's in the ninth year of Nero. The destructive wars of the Jews happening in his twelfth Joseph de boll Lib. 2. Cap. 25. And his Antiqu. Lib. 20. Cap. 8. The second Apostle next to James in order of Time to be discoursed of in this Supplement of the Lives of the Apostles so far as Scripture-Light still leads us is Peter who is likewise named after this James the less last mentioned in this Relation Gal. 2.9 which order of placing these two Apostles doth spoil the Papists Argument for Peter's Primacy Concerning Peter the Scripture mentioneth little of his Motions and Actions after his Deliverance from Prison by the Angel who somewhere absconded till the Angel had also destroyed Herod who had imprisoned him Acts 12 c. Then he appeaned at the Council held at Jerusalem Acts 15 c. After that no more is mentioned of him in the Book of the Acts of the Apostles Yet mention is made of his Motion from Jerusalem to Antioch after this Gal. 2.11 c. where Paul withstood him to the face because he was to be blamed c. N.B. That this happened after the Council at Jerusalem is apparent from the place and time of this Contest for 1. The Place was Antioch And 2. The Time was while Barnabas was with Paul now Paul and Barnabas came from Jerusalem to Antioch with the Decrees of that Council and at Antioch Barnabas parted from Paul as hath been related in Acts chap. 15. after which parting we never read of their being together any more while Paul and Barnabas were together at Antioch Peter came thither N.B. From whom Paul was so far off like one taking Instructions from him as from a Superiour that he withstood him to his face which would have been unmannerly had Peter been the supreme Apostle and had Paul given no better place to his President and his Better as holy Bradford phraseth it Paul reproves Peter and that publickly for his dissimulation and halting betwixt two Opinions as Elijah had reproved the Seed of Halting Jacob Gen. 32.31 1 Kings 18.21 for before the Jews who were Christians yet zealous for the Ceremonial Law Acts 21.20 came from James at Jerusalem to Antioch Peter had freely conversed with the Gentile-Christians at Antioch and had eaten of such meats with them as were prohibited by the Law of Moses but after those Zealots came Peter withdrew from Communion of that Gentile-Church out of fear of displeasing those zealous Jews by the lawful use of his Christian Liberty lest they should upon their return to Jerusalem raise up the Rage of the Jews against him by their Reports N.B. When Paul saw how Peter made not straight paths to his feet lest that which was lame be turned out of the way as Paul saith Heb. 12.13 not walking with a Right foot Gal. 2.14 but giving a great scandal to the Gentiles and no small blow to Paul's Preaching who had taught the Abolishment of Ceremonies and freedom from the Mosaical Yoke by his warping from that plainness and simplicity which the Gospel required Paul rebuked Peter before them all c. The Remarks upon this History are these First That the Scriptures ought to be searched according to Christ's command John 5.39 that the Sacred Stories concerning Christ's Apostles may be gathered up and Recorded together so far as the most wise God was pleased to Reveal them What is not Recorded in one place may be found out in another by comparing one place of Scripture with another as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 9.22 signifies a Metaphor borrowed from Builders who Erecting their Fabricks do sit one piece or part of their work to another and then bring them and joyn them together finding each part then perfectly agreeing with the other c. Thus Paul did prove there that Jesus was the Christ by quoting the Promises and Prophecies of the Old Testament and comparing them with God's Performances in the New c. And thus must we supply out of the Epistles what Luke hath not related in his Acts of the Apostles The second Remark is That the sins of Teachers are the Teachers of sins Great mens faults go as seldom unaccompanied as do their persons The dangerous consequence of the miscarriages of men eminent in the Church as well as in the State is evident here in Peter's Prevarication which had many Aggravations for not only those Christians who were Members of the Church at Antioch being Native Jews followed Peter's Pattern but also Barnabas Paul's Felow-labourer and Joynt-Commissioner with him to bring the Decrees of the Apostolical Council about that very case of Non-Compliance with Legal Ceremonies joyned with Peter in the same Hypocrisie as the Original word is Gal. 2.13 What need then have we to prove all things 1 Thes 5. v. 21. seeing good men yea great men may seduce us And how cautelous ought those that are good and great to walk uprightly lest by their warpings which are of the worst sort they become seducers of others The third Remark is The plaister ought to be so broad as is the wound Peter had prevaricated publickly before them all and therefore is Paul's Reproof of Peter's Offence accordingly according to what Paul taught Timothy 1 Tim. 5.20 The salve must be as wide as the sore Peter here feared not Danger so much as Offence and herein he had not done amiss but that in avoiding a lesser scandal he falleth into a far greater and Peter's practice proved a compulsion to make others yea eminent Professors to comply with it The company we keep do in some kind compel us to do as they do and because what Peter did was not done privately so as to offend some private person only but it was done openly whereby the Church of Antioch was offended N.B. Therefore Paul reproves him openly tho' Baronius be as bitter against Paul for so doing as ever Paul was against Peter for this foul fault And Bellarmin shifts this off saying that it was not Peter but Cephas who was one of the Seventy Disciples Whether Peter made his next Motion from Antioch the Sacred Writ mentioneth not Yet have we upon Divine Record two Epistles writ by Peter which do indeed give us further light concerning Peter's Life and Actions after his being as aforesaid at Antioch as appeareth by these Remarks The first is The place where Peter was when he wrote these Epistles His first Epistle Chap. 5.13 Gives