Selected quad for the lemma: law_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
law_n year_n yield_v young_a 24 3 5.7219 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A46823 A help for the understanding of the Holy Scripture intended chiefly for the assistance and information of those that use constantly every day to reade some part of the Bible, and would gladly alwayes understand what they read if they had some man to help them : the first part : containing certain short notes of exposition upon the five books of Moses, to wit Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomie : wherein all such passages in the text are explained as were thought likely to be questioned by any reader of ordinary capacity ... / by Arthur Jackson ... Jackson, Arthur, 1593?-1666. 1643 (1643) Wing J67; ESTC R35433 692,552 595

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

13. Vers 25. And in the fifth year shall ye eat of the fruit thereof that it may yield you the increase thereof That is abundantly For this last clause hath reference to the whole foregoing Law concerning the first fruit of trees to wit that if they did pluck off and cast away the fruit for three years as uncircumcised and unclean and give the fruit of the fourth year to the Lord and then on the fifth year and not till then gather fruit and eat it themselves the Lord would cause the land to yield the fruit thereof in such abundance as in other things so also in the fruit of their trees that they should have no cause to repent themselves that in obedience to Gods command they had deprived themselves of the fruit of the first foure years Vers 27. Ye shall not round the ●orners of your heads neither shalt thou marre the corners of thy beard It is not easie t● determine what is meant by rounding the corners of their heads and marring the corners of their beards Some conceive that by rounding the corners of their heads was meant the polling of their heads with round curled locks after a nice and effeminate manner and by marring the corners of their beards the shaving away their beards as if they affected to be like women and so they conceive the drift of this Law in both particulars is to forbid all effeminate delicacie and quaintnesse in the trimming of their heads and shaving of their beards after the manner and custome of the heathen Again others hold that by rounding the corners of their heads and marring the corners of their beards is meant the cutting off the locks of their heads and the hair of their beards that they might offer them to Idol-Gods as most certain it is the heathen used to do But last of all others determine that hereby is meant the shaving off the hair of their heads and beards when they were in mourning and extreme heavinesse And inde●d this was a custome amongst the heathen whence is that Isai 15. 2. Moab shall howl over Nebo and over Medeba on their heads shall be baldnesse and every beard cut off and that Jerem. 48. 37. Every head shall be bald and every beard clipped And the more probable this opinion seems because the heathenish customes here forbidden are joyned together with those in the following verse of cutting their flesh c. when they mourned for the dead chap 21. 5. They shall not make baldnesse upon their head nether shall they shave off the corners of their beard nor make any cutting in their flesh Vers 28. Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead As the heathen used to disfigure themselves both by cutting and shaving their hair espe●ially in their mourning so also they used to cut and lance themselves Jer. 16 6. 2. Reg. 18. 28. and to imprint marks upon their flesh cutting themselves and then filling up the place with ink or some other colou● that the marks thereof might remain all which customes God here forbids his people to take up both because they were the desperate effects of immoderate mourning as also because they were the customes of idolaters le●t conforming themselves to idolaters in these things they should also grow to a con●ormity with them in their idolatrous worshipping of false Gods Vers 30. Ye shall keep my Sabbaths and reverence my Sanctuary That is ye shall esteem of it as of the house which I have chosen to be my dwelling-place that accordingly you may be car●full to come thither with an inward aw and fear of my presence and not to approch to it in your uncleannesse or any other way to pollute it To the commandment of sanctifying Gods Sabbaths this of reverencing his Sanctuary is joyned because the Sabbaths were the chief times whereon they re●orted to the Sanctuary Vers 32. Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head Under this all honour d●e to them is included Vers 36. Just ballances just weights a just epha● c. Concerning the Ephah see chap. 5. 11. and concerning the Hin see Exod. 29. 40. And know we must that under these the most usuall measures all other measures are comprehended CHAP. XX. Vers 2. AGain thou shalt say to the children of Israel Whosoever he be of the children of Israel c. Here the punishments are appointed for the transgression of tho●e Laws delivered ●n the former chapter Vers 3. And I will set my face against that man c. That is if any ma● shall sacrifice his children to that idol Molech and his sinne be not known or cannot be sufficiently proved against him in a judiciall way or that you neglect to punish him and through con●ivence forbear to proceed against him according to the former Law then will I set my self against that man to destroy him and cut him off And the reason is added Because he hath given of his seed unto Molech to defile my Sanctuary and to profane my holy name Now these that sacrificed their children to Molech are said to defile Gods Sanctuary 1. Because generally the Land was defiled and so the Sanctuary being in the midst of them was polluted by this as by other their ●innes from which it was therefore purged upon the day of expiation chap 16. 16. 2. Because it was a horrible profanation of Gods Sanctuary that men defiled with such abominable ●innes as idolatry and bloud-shed and that too of their own children should yet come into Gods Sanctuary 3. Because it was a vild debasing and contempt of Gods Sanctuary that they should forsake that to go and sacrifice in the valley of Tophet to that idol Molech Why they are said also to profane Gods holy name is noted before chap. 18. 21. Vers 5. Then will I set my face against that man and against his familie c. That is his po●terity or kindred The word in the originall is sometime translated kindred Gen. 24. 38. But thou shalt go unto my fathers house and to my kindred and take a wife unto my sonne Sometimes it is meant of the whole people of Israel because they came all from one stock as Jer. 8. 3. And death shall be chosen rather then life by all the residue of them that remain of this evil familie and Micah 2. 3. There●ore thus saith the Lord Be●old against this familie do I devise an evil from which ye shall not remove your necks It is here used because they of his own family and kindr●d were most likely to be partiall and to follow his example but all are here threatned that either by solicitation or defending and excusing them or by not accusing them that is winking at their sinne shall further their escaping deserved punishment as likewise all that should tread in his steps and go awhoring after Molech as he had done Vers 6. I will even set my face against that soul and will cut him off from among his people
Israelites which is indeed the main subject of this last book of Moses therefore it is called Deuteronomie or the second declaration of the Law The main objection against this is that it is here said that Moses spake these words In the plain over against the red sea between Paran c. for the plain over against the red sea was farre from the plains of Moab where Moses repeated the law and so also Paran and Hazeroth which are both here mentioned were places farre Southward from the place where Moses now was through which the Israelites had long since passed Numb 12. 16. And indeed they that thus understand this place have no other way to avoid this objection but by saying either that the word Zuph which our Translatours under●●and to be the red sea is not meant of the red sea but of a flaggy place by the sides of Jordan towards the wildernesse the Hebrew word Zuph signifying flagges such as grew by the sea or rivers sides Exod. 2. 3. or else that the plains of Moab are here called the plain over against the red sea because they lay opposite to the red sea though a great way off from it Others again and methinks very probablic do otherwise conceive of the drift of these words namely that the time when and place where Moses repeated the law is set down afterwards vers 3 4 5 and that the drift of these two first verses is to shew that the laws which Moses did now repeat and explain to the Israelites in the plains of Moab were no other but the very same for substance which he had formerly given them at Sinai or in severall places as they travelled through the wildernesse from the red sea to the land of Canaan onely now they were collected into one body and repeated together in the plains of Moab because all that were of age and judgement when the law was first given were now dead and a new generation that was now to enter Canaan was sprung up in their room and so the plain over against the red sea Paran and other places are here named either as pointing out the severall places whe●e in their peregrination these following Statutes had been first given them or at least as the bounds of that huge tract of ground through which they had passed wherein ●od had spoken to the Israelites that came out of Egypt these things which are now repeated together to their posterity Vers 2. There are eleven dayes journey from Horeb by the way of mount Seir unto Kadesh-barnea If the aim of the foregoing verse were to shew the place where Moses repeated the Laws of God to the Israelites which many Expositours conceive as is before noted then we may well think that the aim of these words may be to shew that it was no wonder though the plains of Moab where the Law was repeated by Moses be there called the plain over against the red sea to wit because however the Israelites through Gods judgement upon them were fourtie years in going from the red sea to those parts yet the way of it self was not so long for it was but eleven dayes journey from Horeb to Kadesh-barnea But if the foregoing verse be meant of the places where the Laws were first given that were now repeated by Moses then I conceive this clause is added as a topographicall description of the extent of that wildernesse where these Laws were at first given and withall to imply that it was not the length of the way but their rebellion against God that made them wander so long in the wildernesse that there was now none left alive but that younger brood that had not heard these Laws when they were first given Vers 3. And it came to passe in the fourtieth year in the eleventh moneth on the first day of the moneth that Moses spake unto the children of Israel c. To wit a little before his death for he died in the twelveth moneth Vers 4. And Og the King of Bashan which dwelt at Astaroth in Edrei That is after he had in Edrei slain Og which dwelt at Astaroth for in Edrei he was slain Numb 21. 33. and they were both cities in Ogs land Josh 13. 31. Vers 6. Ye have dwelt long enough in this mount For there they had continued well nigh a full year See the note upon Numb 10. 11 12. Here the Law was given but now they were called thence to journey towa●ds Canaan the figure of their heavenly inheritance by faith in Christ which may put us in mind that the Law is not for men to continue under but for a time till they be fitted for Christ Gal. 3. 16 17 18. Now this readinesse in God to have presently given them the possession of the land Moses doth tell them of as a motive to make them believe the more con●idently that God would now give it them and to make them the more carefull to observe these Laws of God which now he meant to rehearse unto them Vers 7. Turn you and take your ●ourney and go to the mount of the Amorites c. In these following words the Lord did then set forth the bounds of the promised land which he perswaded them to enter beginning with the mount of the Amorites in the South side or border where they were then to enter the land and then adding the sea side which was their West border Numb ●4 6. and then Lebanon was a mount on the North part of the land and then last of all the great river Euphrates which was their Eastern bound in the utmost extent without Jordan and so ●arre Solomon reigned See 1. Kings 4. 21. Vers 9. And I spake unto you at that time saying I am not able to bear you my self alone c. That is about that time for this motion he made by the coun●el of Jethro and commandment of the Lord before they came to Horeb Exod 18 14 c and here he repeats it to let them see how tenderly carefull he alwayes was of the welfare of this people which must needs make his present counsel and exhortations the more prevalent with them Vers 11. The Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many mo● as ye are c. Having professed that he was not able to bear the burthen of the government alone because they were so many lest they should suspect that he envied their number or did in the least degree grudge as it he interposeth these words The Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many moe as ye are c. Vers 13. Take ye wise men and understanding c. See Exod. 18. 25. Vers 15. And officers among your tribes That is under-o●●icers of severall sorts such as executed the magistrates Laws Vers 17. For the judgement is Gods This is added as a reason why the Judges ought not to be respecters of persons nor fear the face of any man whatsoever because
overturn overturn overturn it and it shall be no more untill he come whose right it is and I will give it him 2. That after their return from their captivity in Babylon though in the principalitie of Zorobabel and perhaps of some of his posterity there was a little reviving of the dignitie of Judahs tribe yet within few years the supreme yea the regall power came into the hands of the Macchabees who were of the tribe of Levi and yet ruled many of them as kings over the Jews untill Herod did wholly take away their principality from them Now to this objection some answer That though in the time of the Macchabees who were indeed of the tribe of Levi the chief power was removed from the tribe of Judah yet there was then a Lawgiver from between his feet to wit the Sanhedrin that great Councell of seventy Elders to whom the cognizance of the weightiest causes appertained and the establishing of laws and who were still elected out of the tribe of Judah and continued constantly in the exercise of this power untill a little before the birth of Christ Herod who was a mere stranger became king of Judea and rooted them quite out yet because the chief thing alledged in this answer to satisfie the objection to wit that the Sanhedrin were all chosen out of the tribe of Judah is taken for granted but cannot be well proved a more full answer I conceive is given by others in these following particulars 1. That by Judah here is meant the whole nation and kingdome of the Jews after the ten tribes of Israel were separated from them and became a kingdome apart by it self and that because although there were of the tribes of Levi and Benjamin amongst them yet they were as it were incorporated into the tribe of Judah and the whole commonwealth had their name from Judah and was called the kingdome of Judah insomuch that in the eleaventh chapter of the first book of the kings three severall times to wit vers 13 32 36. it is said that there should be onely one tribe reserved to the kings that were of the posteritie of David and 1. King 12. 20. it is said There was none that followed the house of David but the tribe of Judah onely yea and after their return from the captivitie out of Babylon they were all chiefly planted in the lot and territory that appertained to the tribe of Judah whence it is that though after Nehemiahs time the chief government was in the hands of the priests yet because the whole people were called by the name of Judah the kingdome and commonwealth of Judah therefore still the government may be said to be in Judah yea and this therefore may well be thought to be the main thing intended in this prophecie that whereas those of the kingdome of the ten tribes of Israel after they were carried away captive into Assyria did never return thence again to become a kingdome and commonwealth as before yet those of Judah after seventy years captivity in Babylon returned again into their own land and became a kingdome and commonwealth as before though not so glorious living under the government of their own lavvs and the command of their own rulers and so continued untill a little before Christs coming the government vvas vvholly taken from them and not long after the death of Christ their kingdome and commonvvealth vv●s by the Romanes utterly destroyed 2. That even at that time vvhen the supreme povver vvas in the priests they had it by the choice and appointment of the people of Judah vvho conferred this honour upon the Macchabees because of their zeal and valour in fighting against their enemies 3. Though all the Sanhedrim vvere not of the tribe of Judah yet doubtlesse the greatest part of them vvere of that tribe as it is evident because the greatest part by farre of those that returned from Babylon vvere of that tribe vvhich is sufficient to make good this prophecy That there should not cease to be a Lawgiver from between Judahs feet that is of his seed and progeny untill the Messias came And unto him shall the gathering of the people be That is vvhereas a little before the coming of Christ Judah shall seem to have lost his authority in Christ it shall be recovered again to vvhom not onely the Jevvs but all other nations shall come in as to their king and submit themselves to his sceptre Vers 11. Binding his fole unto the vine c. This last passage of Judahs blessing is vvholly a prophecy concerning the vvondrous fruitfulnesse of that part of Canaan vvhich should fall to Judahs lot and portion to vvit that it should abound vvith vines and fat pastures insomuch that vvine and milk should be as plentifull and common in a manner as vvater amongst them Vers 13. Zebul●n shall dwell at the haven of the s●a Though Issachar vvere older then Zebulun yet Jacob blesseth him first because his lot vvas next in the division of the land Josh 19. 10. And the third lot came up for the children of Zebulun c. and prophesieth of his dvvelling by the sea alluding to his name which importeth dwelling Gen. 30. 20. Now will my husband dwell with me c. and she called his name Zeb●l●n and indeed his borders were both to the main sea Westward and to the sea of Galilee Eastward Josh 19. 10. And their border went up toward the sea c. Isa 9. 1. When at the first he lightly afflicted the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali and afterward did more grievously afflict her by the way of the sea beyond Jordan in Galilee of the nations Vers 14. Issachar is a strong asse c. Jacob here foresheweth how different the disposition of this tribe of Issachar should be from that of Zebulun whereof he had before spoken as Moses also doth Deut. 33. 18. Rejoyce Zebulun in thy going out and Issachar in thy tents to wit that whereas those of Zebulun should be altogether for tradin gand trafficking abroad at sea these of Issachar should be wholly for a quiet life and countrey imployments at home Issachar is a strong asse c. The meaning is that this tribe should be of great strength but of a more servile disposition that his portion should fall in a fertile and fat soil and that accordingly his strength should be imployed in tilling the ground and other countrey labours and last of all that he should rather undergo any tributes and taxes that should be laid upon him then be drawn from that quiet which at home he did enjoy But then withall we must know that this is spoken onely concerning the condition of this tribe for the generall for even in this tribe there were sometimes some that were of a more noble and a more heroicall spirit Judg. 5. 15. it is said That the princes of Issachar were with Deborah even Issachar and also Barak and 1. Chron. 12. 32. it
he said I have been a stranger in a strange land Gershom is by interpretation a desolate stranger Now so he named his eldest sonne both to testifie his faith concerning the land of promise which he looked upon because of Gods promise as his true countrey and the inheritance of his children and professed therefore that his children were but strangers in the land of their nativitie and likewise to expresse his thankfulnesse to God for affording him this comfort to support him in the time of his affliction when he lived after the manner of a banished man in a strange countrey Another sonne Moses had by his wife Zipporah whom he called Eliezer as we may see chap. 18. 4. but the first-born onely is mentioned here Vers 23. And it came to passe in processe of time that the king of Egypt died and the children of Israel sighed c. The death of the king of Egypt is here mentioned to shew the misery of the poore Israelites who were no way eased of their burdens upon the death of the former oppressing tyrant but had as much cause of sighing under their burdens as ever they had before CHAP. III. Vers 1. NOw Moses kept the flock of Jethro c. the Priest of M●dian Either this Jethro was the same that is before called Reuell chap. 2. 18. or else if Jethro were the sonne of Reuell he also was Priest of Midian as his father had been the sonne succeeding in his fathers office and that happely because Reuell was now dead this being fourtie years after Moses coming thither as we see Acts 7. 30. And when fourtie years were expired there appeared unto him in the wildernesse of Mount Sinai And came to the mountain of God even to Horeb. Horeb is called here by anticipation the mountain of God both because of this following vision wherein God appeared to Moses in so miraculous a manner and also especially because there afterwards the Lord came down to Moses and delivered him the law and made a covenant with his people Exod. 19. for it is said expressely that this apparition was at mount Sinai Acts 7. 30. And when fourtie years were expired there appeared unto him in the wildernesse of mount Sinai an angel of the Lord in a flaming fire in bush and there we know the Law was given Exod. 19. 1. It seems therefore that the whole mountanous track or circuit where mount Sinai stood was called Horeb or else as some of the Jewish Rabbins hold this mountain was formerly called Horeb but after this apparition of God in the bush it was called Sinai from the Hebrew word S●neh which signifieth a bramble bush Vers 2. And the angel of the Lord appeared unt● him in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush c. It is ●vident that it was the Lord God himself that now appeared unto Moses for vers 7. it is said that the Lord Jehovah spake unto him and verse the fixth he saith I am the God of thy father c. and which is most to be observed vers 5. he that appeared to Moses required that worship and honour which is due onely to God namely that he should present himself before him bare-footed as a poore caytiffe not worthy to stand in the presence of so great a Majestie Nor is there any just cause why we should question this because it is said here The angel of the Lord appeared unto him since it is evident that Christ the eternall sonne of God is called the Messenger or Angel of the Covenant Mal. 3. 1. Now as concerning the burning bush wherein the Lord appeared to Moses it was doubtlesse intended not onely to cause Moses with the more reverence and humilitie to attend to what should be said unto him but also to be a signe representing to him the state and condition of his people concerning whom the Lord now gave him a charge to wit that though his Israel had been long in the fire of affliction the enemie seeking with all possible fury to destroy them yet hitherto they had been miraculously preserved and so still should be and that because the Lord was amongst them to preserve and defend them and would now rescue them from the power of their oppressours Vers 3. And Moses said I will now turn aside and see this great sight c. It is hard to say which some affirme that Moses concluded that this was some secret of nature that the bush burned and was not consumed and so out of curiosity did rashly resolve to approch nearer that he might search out the cause of it No such thing can be concluded from these words rather his calling it a great sight may seem to imply that he thought it some vision But indeed the most probable opinion is that he neither concluded the one nor the other but being suddenly stricken with admiration at the sight and not knowing what to think of it he determined at last to approach nearer hoping thereby to be the better informed and waiting with reverence to see what the issue would be Vers 4. God called unto him out of the midst of the bush and said Moses Moses c. This calling of Moses by his name and the redoubling of his name in such a familiar and loving manner was both to make him know that the vision he saw was of God thereby to stirre him up the more carefully to intend what was done and said and also to intimate the great love and favour of God to him and indeed considering how strange and terrible the apparition was and that Moses though all alone and in a desert place was not yet so astonished but that when he heard himself called by name from the midst of the burning bush he could answer so readily here am I we may well think that it was this gracious manner of Gods calling upon him that did thus farre encourage him Vers 5. Put off thy shooes from off thy feet The putting off of shooes was used as a signe of mourning and humiliation Ezech. 24. 17. 23. Forbear to crie make no mourning for the dead c. and put on thy shooes upon thy feet c. 2. Sam. 15. 30. And David went up by the ascent of mount Olivet and wept as he went up and had his head covered and he went barefoot c. Esai 20. 2. 4. Go and loose the sackcloth from off thy loyns and put off thy shooe from thy foot c. So shall the King of Assyria lead away the Egyptians prisoners and the Ethiopians captives young and old naked and barefoot c. And upon this ground no doubt is Moses here enjoyned it both that this outward ceremonie might strike him with the greater aw and reverence of Gods Majestie into whose presence he might not be suffered to approch but in so lowly and submissive a manner and also that it might be an outward expression of the inward religious affection of his mind that he did
ground at the mill Exod. 11. 5. Even unto the first-born of the maid servant that is behind the mill Vers 30. And there was a great cry in Egypt for there was not a house where there was not one dead Either therefore the eldest and chief of the family was slain in those houses where there were no children or else the words must be taken figuratively there was not a house where there was not one dead that is there was not a house that had a first-born where there was not one dead or there was scarce any house without one dead in it generally the first-born were slain in every house as elsewhere the Scripture useth the like expression Jer. 5. 1. Runne ye to and fr● through the s●reets of Jerusalem and see now and know and seek in the broad places thereof if ye can find a man if there be any that executeth judgement that seeketh the truth and I will pardon it John 12. 19. Perceive ye how ye prevail nothing behold the world is gone after him Vers 31. And he called for Moses and Aaron by night c. That is Pharaoh sent messengers to Moses and Aaron to call them up and bid them presently to go away with the Israelites as they had desired For that Moses and Aaron went not now to Pharaoh may be probably gathered from that which Moses had said to Pharaoh a while before chap. 10. 29. Thou hast spoken well I will see thy fac● again no more Yea indeed so violent were the people in hastening them away that it is not likely they would allow the delay of their going to Pharaoh Vers 33. And the Egyptians were urgent with the people c. With humble and earnest entreaties Exod. 11. 8. And all these thy servants shall come down unto me and bow down themselves unto me saying Get thee out c. Vers 35. And they borrowed of the Egyptians jewels of silver c. To wit at that time when they were going away I know that many Expositours hold tha● this was done before betwixt the plague of the three dayes darknesse and this last of the death of their first-born But I see no reason why we should not think it was done in the order as here it is related especially considering that when the Egyptians were now in such distraction of sorrow and thereupon so importunate with the Israelites to go they were most likely to lend them whatever they would desire to borrow that they might hasten them to be gone Vers 36. And they spoyled the Egyptians To wit by carrying away their jewels and other ornaments which they had borrowed of them It is evident according to our translation that the Israelites alledging that they we●e to keep a solemn feast unto the Lord in the wildernesse desired of their neighbours the Egyptians their jewels of silver and gold for their use at that time and that the Egyptians lent them those things as not knowing nor believing any other but that they intended onely a three dayes journey into the wildernesse there to sacrifice unto the Lord yet withall as evident it is that they never intended to restore them again but to carry them quite away and that not onely by Gods permission but by his expr●sse command for he had enjoyned them by Moses to do so chap. 11. 2. and had told them that by this means they should spoyl the Egyptians chap. 3. 22. So that the most that can be conceived in the behalf of the Israelltes herein is this that they did not say they would bring these things again but onely desired them of the Egyptians for their use in keeping a feast unto the Lord concealing and dissembling what farther they intended to wit to carry them quite away with them Now in all thi● notwithstanding we cannot charge the Israelites with sinne because they therein obeyed the commandment of God whose word to obey can never be ●●il And much lesse can we charge God with unrighteousnesse God forbid His will is the supreme rule of all righteousnesse and needs it must be good and just which he commands Besides all that is in the world is Gods and is it not lawfull for him to do what he will with his own Matth. 20. 15. The riches of the Egyptians were more Gods then theirs and most just it was with God by this means to recompence the Israelites for the hard service and injuries they had suffered in Egypt and as it were to pay them their wages which the Egyptians had most unjustly detained from them Vers 37. The children of Israel journeyed from Rameses to Succoth Which signifieth boothes so called because there the Israelites made them boothes of the boughs of trees in remembrance whereof was the feast of tabernacles Levit. 23. About six hundred thousand foot that were men besides children This shews the virtue of that promise Gen. 46. 3. I am God the God of thy father fear not to go down into Egypt for I will there make of thee a great nation Vers 38. And a mixed multitude went up also with them c. That is strangers men of severall Nations both such as were servants to the Israelites and others sojourning there who were moved by Gods mighty works to go out of Egypt with them and that doubtlesse the rather because Egypt must now needs be in a sad estate by so many grievous plagues as God had brought upon them Vers 40. The sojourning of the children of Israel who dwelt in Egypt was foure hundred and thirty years The speech is figurative for the meaning is that from Abrahams calling out of Chaldea to sojourn in the land of Canaan unto this departure of the Israelites out of Egypt was foure hundred and thirty years as S t Paul explains it Gal. 3. 17. And this I say that the Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ the Law which was foure hundred and thirty years after cannot disanull c. See the notes upon Gen. 15. 13. Vers 46. Neither shall ye break a bone thereof This was enjoyned the Israelites as most other of the ceremonies that were to be observed in eating the Paschall lambe that it might put them in mind in what haste they were at their going out of Egypt when they were first commanded to keep this ordinance and that because they that eat in haste do not use to stand breaking of the bones that they may pick out the marrow from thence But withall God intended hereby the more manifestly to discover that the Paschall lambe was a type of Christ our Passeover or Paschall lambe as the Apostle calls him 1. Cor. 5. 7. in whom there should be an exact accomplishment of the truth of this figure for when the souldiers had broken the legges of the two thieves that were crucified with Christ which they used to do to them that were crucified before they were yet dead thereby to mak● their sufferings the greater coming to Christ and finding
after they had bought them Lev. 25. 40 41. but otherwise they were to serve them six years as here is expressed Many learned Expositours indeed the most conceive that the seventh year wherein the Hebrew servants were to be set free was the Sabbaticall year or the year of release which was every seventh year at which time they were to set free their servants how lately soever they had bought them And if we thus understand this place then the meaning of these words is this If thou buy an Hebrew servant six years he shall serve that is six years is the utmost he shall at any time serve thee and in the seventh he shall go out free for nothing that is when the seventh year the Sabbaticall year comes then however he shall go out free for nothing But 1. because where the Scripture speaks of this Sabbaticall year or year of release as in the 25. chapter of Leviticus and in the fifteenth chapter of Deuteronomie we find no expresse Law given for the setting free of servants and 2. because according to this exposition of this Law their servants could never serve them six years unlesse they were sold to be servants immediately after the end of the Sabbaticall year and it seems manifest that this clause six years he shall serve is more generall then so therefore I rather think that the setting free servants before they had served six years was the peculiar priviledge of the year of Jubile which was every fiftieth year and that the seventh year in this Law intended when they were to be set free was alwayes counted from the year when they were first sold to be servants Now the reason why the Lord would not have the Israelites serve any longer is expressed elsewhere Lev. 25. 55. to wit because they were Gods servants and so the Lord would teach them to put a difference betwixt his people and others that were not his people And though there is mention made here onely of servants bought with money yet if they became any other way servants to their brethren as by being taken in the warre when there came to be any civill warre amongst them it is probable that by the rule of Analogy this law was extended even to them also Vers 3. If he were married then his wife shall go out with him And so also by the rules of Analogy we may gather that if he brought children with him those children should also go out with him Vers 4. If his Master have given him a wife c. Here is an exception added to the former law concerning the setting free of the wife together with the husband to wit that if his Master have given him a wife in the time of his service namely one of his maidservants either an Hebrew woman or stranger both the manservant and maidservant consenting thereto and she have born him sonnes or daughters in this case the man was to be set free alone by himself and his wife and children were to continue still servants to his Master Nor yet can we hence inferre That God approved any mans forsaking his wife for doubtlesse that Law stood firm which God had established from the beginning that a man must leave all and cleave to his wife Gen. 2. 24. and that the bond of marriage should be kept alwayes inviolable What God hath joyned together let no man put asunder But for the resolving of this doubt we must consider first that in some cases this might be onely a parting with mutuall consent for a time because if his wife were a daughter of Israel bought with money she also was to be set free at the end of her six years service if the year of Jubile did not happen before Deut. 15. 12. If thy brother an Hebrew man or an Hebrew woman be sold unto thee and serve thee six years then in the seventh year thou shalt let them go free from thee and then might she return unto her husband Secondly that no man was by this law forced to leave his wife by continuing in his former service he might still enjoy her onely God takes order that when himself is set free he must not think under that pretence to deprive his Master of her that was his lawfull servant but should rather endure the inlarging of his own bondage that he might enjoy her Thirdly that this liberty given to a servant set free to go away and leave his wife behind him was not an approbation of his forsaking the wife he had taken at the most it was but a part or branch of that scope wherein this people were left to themselves for the hardnesse of their hearts as Christ saith in another case Matth. 19. 8. and fourthly That if the wife given him in the time of his service was a stranger of another nation and happely of another religion these marriages were never pleasing to God and it was his fault that he would yield to marry such a one Vers 6. Then his Master shall bring him to the judges he shall also bring him to the doore c. To wit that his Master might prove it fairly and openly that it was his servants free and voluntary act to continue with him His Master shall bore his eare through with an aul and he shall serve him for ever That is all his life time to wit unlesse the yeare of Jubile fall in the mean time for then indeed all Hebrew servants were absolutely set free together with their children Levit. 25. 40 41. Now for the boring of his eare to the doore or to the doore-post of his Masters house it was happely partly to shadow forth how blame-worthy they are that preferre not the liberty of the Gospel before the bondage of the law but doubtlesse the main reason was that his bored eare might be an evidence concerning such a servant that he had voluntarily disclaimed the priviledge that God had granted him of being set free at the end of six years service it was not so much a punishment inflicted as a mark set upon him to witnesse his consent to perpetuall service and the misery thereof And indeed a fit signe it was to signifie this The eare is the embleme of obedience because they that are obedient are willingly ready to hearken to the commands of their superiours that so they may do what is enjoyned The boring therefore of his eare was to signifie that he was now tyed to his Masters house and that as a servant he would be ready alwayes to hearken to his voice in all he should give him in charge whence is that phrase concerning the obedience of Christ Psal 40. 6. Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire mine eares hast thou opened or bored through as the word in the originall signifies Vers 7. If a man sell his daughter to be a maidservant she shall not go out as the menservants do That is she shall not alwayes be tyed to six years service as the
Keep thee farre from a false matter c. Though all lying be sinnefull and may be here implicitely forbidden yet I conceive that which is here directly and principally forbidden is lying in or at the seat of justice as is manifest by the following clause and the innocent and righteous slay thou not which must needs be meant of innocent mens being put to death by means of unrighteous judgement so that the principall thing intended in this Law is that judges should be marvellous shy either to admit of a false testimony from others or to give false judgement themselves especially when it is against the life of a man For I will not justifie the wicked These words imply two reasons why judges must take heed of false judgement and of condemning the innocent and righteous 1. Because the judge is not to do in Gods name what the Lord will not do and God will not justifie the wicked and so condemne the righteous 2. Because the Lord will not justifie such wicked judges as condemne the righteous when they come before his Tribunal Vers 11. But the seventh year thou shalt let it rest and lie still That is neither plow it nor sow it nor gather those fruits which should this year grow of themselves for so we find this Law more fully expressed Levit. 25. 20. And if ye shall say What shall we eat the seventh year Behold we shall not sow c. Where their distrust of want of food is answered with a promise that in the sixth year the Lord would cause the earth to yield enough for three years Then will I command my blessing upon you in the sixth year and it shall bring forth fruit for three years Now God appointed this Sabbath year first to give rest to the land and it was a signe of a very fruitfull countrey if it lay fallow but once in seven years secondly to give rest to the servants who had by this much ●ase every seventh year Thirdly to provide for the poore who now gathered freely of the fruit of every mans ground for their present use and this was given to the Lord who gave them the land Fourthly that they all might have the more liberty to exce●cise themselves in holy things as the learning of the Law which was this year with more then ordinary solemnity to be read in the audience of all the people Deut. 31. 10 11 12. And Moses commanded them saying At the end of every seven years thou shalt reade this Law before all Israel c. And fifthly that it might be a memor●all of the creation and Gods rest on the seventh day and a shadow of our rest in Christ and that the rest of the land might teach how exact God is in requiring his Sabbaths That the poore of thy people may eat Namely such corn as grew this year of it own accord as it used to do in some good store in those countreys of the grains scattered in the former harvest as also the fruit of their vineyards and oliveyards c. and of this the owners might eat as well as the poore Levit. 25. 6. And the Sabbath of the land shall be meat for you for thee and for thy servant c. though they might not gather and store it up Vers 12. Six dayes thou shalt do thy work and on the seventh day thou shalt rest c. One reason of repeating this Law here may be well thought to be this to let them know that they were not exempted from the peculiar sanctifying of the seventh day on this Sabbath y●ar but were rather bound more religiously to keep it holy and also besides by placing it amongst the judiciall Laws the magistrate was enjoyned to see that it was kept Vers 13. And make no mention of the names of other gods c. That is let them be so abominable to you that you may detest to make any mention of them that it may be irksome to you to name them or hear them named We must not think that it was to the Israelites or is to us a breach of this Law any way or upon any occasion to name the gods of the heathens for we see they are often named in the Scripture The meaning of this Law we may gather from that place of the Apostle Eph. 5. 3. But fornication and all uncleannesse or covetousnesse let it not be once named amongst you For as the Apostles meaning there is onely that those horrid sinnes should be an abomination to them so here the Lords meaning is onely that they should abhorre all false gods so as to d●test their very names and of this detestation of Idols is that spoken Hos 2. 17. I will take away the names of Baalim out of her mouth and they shall no more be remembred by their name Vers 15. And none shall appear before me empty To wit at the feast of unleavened bread and so also at neither of the three feasts whereon they were all bound to appear before the Lord. See Deut. 16. 16 17. Vers 16. And the feast of harvest Called also the feast of weeks or of sevens Exod. 34. 22. And thou shalt observe the feast of weeks c. To wit because it was seven weeks after the former feast upon the fiftieth day following called thereupon Pentecost and it was celebrated not onely in remembrance of the giving of the Law which was given the fiftieth day after their going out of Egypt but also by way of thanksgiving for their harvest and therefore the first bread or loaves of the new fruit was then offered Levit. 23. 16 17. Even unto the morrow after the seventh Sabbath shall ye number fifty dayes c. Ye shall bring out of your habitations two loaves c. as in the end of the Passeover the first eares of corn And the feast of in-gathering which is in the end of the year c. The feast of in-gathering to wit of all the fruits not onely corn which was before inned but all other fruits as wine and olives c. It was also called the feast of boothes or of tabernacles Levit. 23. 24. The fifteenth day of this seventh moneth shall be a feast of tabernacles c. and the time allotted for this feast is said here to be in the end of the year because though Abib was appointed to be the first moneth for the computation of those things that concerned religion as their holy fea●ts c. yet the moneth Tisri the seventh in this account was yet the first moneth for their civill affairs and so the feast of tabernacles being kept in this moneth when one year was ended and another began therefore it is said to be in the end of the year Now this feast was kept first in remembrance of Gods favour to them in the wildernesse when they dwelt in boothes Levit. 23. 43. I made the children of Israel to dwell in boothes when I brought them out of Egypt c. And
secondly to shew their thankfulnesse for the fruits which in this moneth they reaped Deut. 16. 13 14. Thou shalt observe the feast of tabernacles seven dayes after thou hast gathered in thy corn and thy wine And thou shalt rejoyce in thy feast c. And thirdly to figure out Christs coming into the world at this time of the year to dwell in the tabernacle of our flesh John 1. 14. And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us c. and their being strangers and travellers here in this world Vers 17. Three times in the year all thy males shall appear before the Lord thy God That is at the three great feasts before mentioned the feast of unleavened bread the feast of harvest or Pentecost and the feast of in-gathering called also the feast of tabernacles then all the males were enjoyned to appear before the Lord and that in the place which he should choose Deut. 16. 16. namely all that were able for those that were sick infants and aged men were doubtlesse excused And though onely the males were by this law tyed to this service because women had many occasions to keep them at home yet even the women might if they pleased go up unto these feasts and often doubtlesse did for so it is sa●d of Hannah the mother of Samuel 1. Sam. 2. 19. She came up with her husband to offer the yearly sacrifice and of the virgin Mary Luke 2. 41. Now his parents went to Jerusalem every year at the feast of the Passeover As for the place where they met together it was doubtlesse first the tabernacle and afterward the temple because there God dwelt as it were amongst his people and therefore there it is said they should appear before the Lord. And though it may seem somewhat questionable where they met to keep these feasts all the time the ark was in one place and the tabernacle in another as it was for many years after the ark was taken and carried away by the Philistines yet upon good consideration I think we may well conclude that they were kept where the tabernacle was because there was the altar of burnt-offerings and the offering of sacrifices was a main part of the holy service of these feasts Vers 18. Thou shalt not offer the bloud of thy sacrifice with leavened bread c. Because the very same words almost are repeated Exod. 34. 25. onely there the Passeover is expressely mentioned Thou shalt not offer the bloud of my sacrifice with leaven neither shall the sacrifice of the feast of the Passeover be left unto the morning therefore the most and best Expositours do understand this place particularly of the Paschall Lambe to wit that they might not eat any leavened bread with the Passeover and that they might not leave any part of the Paschall Lambe untill the morning the fat being here by a Synecdoche put for all and specially mentioned because this in all sacrifices was offered to God Yet I see not why this place may not be understood generally of all sacrifices since it is evident first that leaven was forbidden in all meat-offerings which were alwayes offered together with their sacrifices Levit. 2. 11. No meat-offering which ye shall bring unto the Lord shall be made with leaven for ye shall burn no leaven nor any honey in any offering of the Lord made by fire And secondly that though the flesh of some sacrifices might be eaten the next day yet the fat thereof was to be presently burnt upon the altar See Levit. 7. 2 3. Vers 19. Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mothers milk Either this must be literally understood according to the very words that they might not seethe a kid or a lambe c. in the milk of the damme because this had some appearance of cruelty which the Lord by this ceremony taught them to abhorre and indeed upon the same ground other like laws were given this people as Deut. 22. 6 7. If a birds nest chance to be before thee in the way c. thou shalt not take the damme with the young Or else rather it must be understood concerning the age of the kid to wit that they might not offer a kid to the Lord or eat it themselves whilest the flesh was onely ●erely a milky frothy substance thereby to teach them to avoid all foolish intemperancie and delicacie in their feeding and upon this ground they were forbidden to bring the first-born of their cattel or any other sacrifice till they were eight dayes old because so long they were but as the dammes milk Vers 20. Behold I send an Angel before thee to keep thee in the way c. That is the promised Messiah the sonne of God and Angel of the covenant Mal. 3. 1. Who led them by day in the pillar of a cloud and by night in a pillar of fire and at last brought them into the land of Canaan of whom it is said 1. Cor. 10. 9. that the Israclites in the wildernesse tempted him and so were justly destroyed by him therein finding that verified which the Lord here saith vers 21. that he would not pardon their transgressions Vers 21. For my name is in him That is he is the Lord Jehovah as I am of the same Essence Power Majesty and Authority for so it is said of Christ Heb. 1. 3. that he was the brightnesse of his Fathers glory and the expresse image of his person and one God with him The Father is in me and I in him saith Christ John 10. 38. God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself saith the Apostle 2. Cor. 5. 19. And so it was prophecied of him Jer. 23. 6. This is his name whereby he shall be called The Lord our righteousnesse Vers 28. And I will send hornets before thee c. This may be meant of stinging terrours wherewith God struck the hearts of the Canaanites or it may be understood literally of true hornets sent before the Israelites and the rather because first God had spoken of the fear wherewith the Canaanites should be stricken in the former verse and it is not usuall in the Scripture to expresse any thing plainly first and then afterwards figuratively and obscurely And secondly he tells the Israelites that God had done this for them which he had promised See Josh 24. 12. Vers 31. And I will set thy bounds from the red sea c. The bounds of the promised land are here set down to wit first their Eastern bound which was the red sea and secondly the sea upon which the land of the Philistines lay called the Mediterranean sea which was their West border and thirdly the desert which lay on the South of Canaan to with the desert of Shur or Paran which was their South border on which side ran the river of Sychar Josh 13. 3. called the river of Egypt Gen. 15. 18. for it runs out of Nilus into the Mediterranean sea and therefore this also
should be cut off from their people that is put to death if they did it unvvittingly a sacrifice of atonement vvas appointed for them chap. 5. 2. but if they did vvilfully and presumptuously thus profane Gods holy things they vvere to be cut off by the civill Magistrate And hereby also vvas shaddovved forth that those that bear the name of Christ and professe themselves Christians and yet continue in their sinnes and hate to be reformed destruction shall be their end neither vvill God reckon them amongst his people and more particularly vvhoever partake of the signes and seals of grace unvvorthily do eat and drink judgement to themselves 1. Cor. 11. 27 28 29. Vers 23. Ye shall eat no manner fat of ox of sheep or of goat See the note upon Levit. 3. 17. Vers 24. And the fat of the beast that dieth of it self c. may be used in any other use Herein I conceive is implyed that such fat of beasts fit for sacrifices when killed at home for their private uses might also be imployed in other uses though i● might not be eaten for else what did they do with it It were absurd to think it was cast away and lost so that I understand these words as if it had been said even the fat of such beasts when they die of themselves c. may be used in any other use not onely when they are killed for meat but when they die of themselves And hence some conclude that though the touch of such carcases did render a man unclean yet the touch of the fat of those dead beasts that died of themselves did not defile them Vers 29. He that offe●eth the sacrifice of his peace-offerings unto the Lord shall bring his oblation c. That is he that shall offer a sacrifice of peace-offerings unto the Lord he shall himself with his own hands present that part which is to be un oblation unto the Lord to wit the fat with the breast and the right shoulder as is expressed in the following verse Because their peace-offerings they might eat i● the camp and afterwards in any part of Jerusalem so the place were cl●an there might be some danger lest the people should think that their peace-offerings might be killed in any place and therefore for prevention hereof this law is here added that they must bring their peace-offerings unto the Lord and there the Lords and the priests portion must be gi●en them before they themselves eat of them CHAP. VIII Vers 6. ANd Moses brought Aaron and his sonnes and washed them with water Namely at the brasen laver which was made for that purpose Vers 7. And he put upon them the coat c. That is the undermost garment which was made of fine linen and girded to him with a girdle of needle-work concerning which and the rest of the holy garments of Aaron here mentioned there is already noted what is requisite to be known in the notes upon the 28. chapter of Exodus There was also linen breeches made for the priests Exod. 28. 42. b●t those were not appointed to be put on at their consecration Exod. 29. but the priest was to put them on himself when he was to execute his office and therefore they are not ●ere mentioned Vers 10. And Moses too● the anointing oyl and an●●nted the ●aber●●cle c. See the notes upon Exod. 30. 26. Vers 11. And he sprinkled thereof upon the alt●r seven times c. He did not onely anoint the altar as he did other things but also sprinkle it seven times with the oyl of consecration because it was consecrated to more speciall use then other parts of the taberhacle namely for the holy sacrifices Vers 14. And he brought the bullock for the sinne-offering c. Concerning those rites of consecrating the prie●●s see the severall notes upon the 29. chapter of Exodus Vers 15. And poured the bloud at the bottom of the altar and sanctified it c. See the notes upon Exod. 29. 12. After this the altar sanctified the gifts and oblations upon it Mat. 23. 19. Here is no●mention made of sprinkling bloud seven times before the Lord nor of the altar of incense as in other sinne-offerings for the priest Levit. 4. 7. The reason is because there the sacrifice was intended for some speciall sinne of the priest being then consecrated but here for sinnes in generall of priests not yet consecrated and indeed not so much for the expiation of their sinnes as the consecration of their persons CHAP. IX Vers 1. ANd it came to passe on the eighth day that Moses called Aaron and his sonnes c. That is on the very next day after the seven dayes of the priests consecration were ended whereof mention was made in the 33. verse of the foregoing chapter as is evident also by that which the Prophet Ezeklel saith in his allusion to this Ezek. 43. 26 27. Seven dayes shall they purge the altar and consecrate themselves and when these dayes are expired it shall be that upon the eighth day and so forward the priests shall make your burnt-offerings upon the altar c. What day of the moneth this was done is not expressed Evident it is that the tabernacle was erected on the first day of the first moneth in the second year after their coming out of Egypt Exod. 40. 17. and immediately the Lord spake unto Moses out of the tabernacle and gave him the severall Laws concerning the sacrifices set down in the first chapter of this Book as is noted Lev. 1. 1. After this Moses performed all that was injoyned him for the consecrating of Aaron and his sonnes and for the anointing and sanctifying of the tabernacle and all that was therein wherein seven dayes were spent and then the next day after Aaron and his sonnes entred upon the executing of the priests office as is here related Indeed some hold that the seven dayes of the consecration of Aaron and his sonnes were before the first day of the first moneth when the tabernacle was reared up by Moses and that because the Princes offered on that very day when the altar was anointed by Moses Numb 7. 1 10. which they conceive was done at the same time when the tabernacle was erected and the priests could not have offered the Princes sacrifices if they had not been before that time consecrated and settled in their priesthood But this opinion is grounded upon a double mistake to wit that the altar was anointed by Moses the same day the tabernacle was erected and that the Princes sacrifices were offered on the same day whereon the altar was anointed which indeed cannot be truly inferred from that forecited place in the 7. of Numbers as shall be shown in the notes there All that can be said concerning the day when Aaron and his sonnes entred upon the execution of their priesthood is that it was the very next day after the seven dayes of their consecration were ended Vers 2.
of oyl is commonly thought to be half a pint the three tenth deals of fine flowre were for accessory meat-offerings for the three sacrifices afore mentioned Indeed in the fifteenth of Numbers meat-offerings are appointed onely for burnt-offerings and peace-offerings nor do we any where reade of a meat-offering that was to be joyned either with sinne-offering or trespasse-offering And besides where an offering of fine flowre is injoyned for a sinne-offering Levit. 5. 11. to wit to be offered apart by it self not as accessory to any other sacrifice they were forbidden to put any oyl upon it whereas these are appointed to be mingled with oyl And therefore it seems these sacrifices for the cleansing of the leper had peculiar rites and were not in all things performed according to the ordinary way of other sacrifices Vers 12. And wave them for a wave-offering See the notes upon Exodus 29. 24. Vers 1● And he shall slay the lamb in the place c. See the note upon Levit 1. 11. and upon Levit. 7. 7. Vers 14. And the priest shall put it upon the tip of the right ear c. Hereby was signified that by virtue of Christs bloud the leper was now restored to his former freedome of entercourse and commerce with others as also that the whole man was to be renewed and consecrated to Gods service See the note upon Exod. 29. 20. Vers 15. And the pr●est shall take some of the log of oyl The oyl in the hand of the priest fignified the spirit by Christ conveyed unto us Vers 16. And sprinkle of the oyl with his finger c. Figuring our consecra●ion to Gods service by the same spirit Vers 17. And the rest of the oyl that is in his hand shall the priest put upon the tip of the right ear c. This signified the sanctification of the whole man by the same spirit Vpon the bloud of the trespasse-offering That is upon the very same place where the bloud was sprinkled Vers 20. And the priest shall offer the burnt-offering To wit that other he-lamb mentioned vers 10. Now by these rites the lepers were to professe their thankfulnesse to God in and through Christ as for the cure of their leprosie so also for the remission of their sinnes which had brought that judgement upon them and for their sanctification by his spirit Vers 31. And the other for a burnt-offering with the meat-offering That is the meat-offering that was to accompany the turtle dove or young pigeon offered for the burnt-offering whereby it appears that even the smaller burnt-offerings of turtle doves had also their meat-o●ferings as well as the greater of lambs c. Vers 36. Then the priest shall command that they all empty the house c. The priest must before he goeth into the house to view the place in the house suspected of leprosie command all that are in the house to come forth and the reason is given that all that are in the house be not made unclean Whereby it is evident that though the house had indeed the plague of leprosie yet the inhabitants that were in the house were not rendred unclean thereby till the priest had pronounced it to be a leprosie but then all that came i●to the house were thereby unclean And so it seems therefore it was with men too that were infected with leprosie No man was unclean by being in the company of a leprous person till the priest had pronounced him to be a leper Vers 40. And they shall cast them into an unclean place without the citie That by the uncleannesse of the place they may be known to be unclean things that so ●o●emay be defiled thereby Vers 41. And he shall cause the house to be scraped c. To wit lest the plague of leprosie should be in any other part of the walls of the house and being hidden under the plaister should not be discovered CHAP. XV. Vers 3. WHether his flesh runne with his issue or his flesh be stopped from his issue it is his uncleannesse That is he shall for it be counted unclean The issue here spoken of which rendred men unclean is that which we call the running of the reins Now because this disease men have in a different manner for sometime their seed being of a thinne substance runs continually from them and sometimes again being of a thicker substance it slows not so freely forth bu● stops in the passage and so putrifies the place through which it should passe in both these cases they are declared to be unclean Now though by this legall pollution they were taught the filthinesse of all sinne whatsoever yet more especially I conceive it was to signifie that originall corruption and filthinesse of our nature which is conveyed unto us in our first conception by that very seed and substance whereof we are made Vers 4. Every bed whereon he lyeth that hath the issue is unclean These laws following shew the contagion of si●ne which defileth not onely men themselves but every thing besides which a wicked man hath to do with for unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure Tit. 1. 15. Vers 12. And every vess●ll of wood shall be rinsed in water That is of wood or any other such strong matter as silver copper brasse c. Vers 16. And if any mans seed of copulation go out c. This is not meant of the issue forespoken of nor when a man lyeth with a woman whereof vers 18. but of the seed of the healthfull issuing by reason of nightly dreams or any such accident whereof see Deut. 23. 10. Vers 19. And wh●soever toucheth her shall be unclean c. To wit every one that is of years of discretion and so fit to be ordered by this law For it is not likely that infants that lay in the arms and sucked on the breasts of their mothers when they were in this condition were rendred unclean thereby Vers 24. And if any man lie with her at all c. To wit ignorantly for if he did it presumptuously not pollution but cutting off was his punishment Levit. 20. 18. And if a man shall lie with a woman having her sicknesse and shall uncover her nakednesse he hath discovered her fountain and he hath uncovered the fountain of her bloud aud both of them shall b● cut off from among the people Yet some conceive that this place is onely meant of lying in the same bed with a woman and not of carnall copulation CHAP. XVI Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake unto Moses after the death of the two sonnes of Aaron c. That is upon that occasion lest they should again endanger themselves by entring into the most holy place as before by offering strange fire and so also within a short time after that happened for it doth not follow that because the Lord upon that occasion gave this ensuing charge therefore the laws set down in the former chapters are transposed and
eat with them of their peace-offerings because the remainders might not be reserved for themselves but were to be burnt Vers 11. Ye shall not steal neither deal falsely neither lie one to another Though all lying be here forbidden yet principally all lying whereby men are defrauded of their right either in buying or selling or otherwise Vers 12. And ye shall not swear by my name falsely Next after the Law against all false dealing in defrauding this is here inserted because by perj●ry men use to help forward their false dealing Nether shalt thou profane the name of thy God To wit nether by perjury nor vain swearing Vers 14. Thou shalt not ●urse the deaf c. Under these particulars of cursing the deaf and laying a stumbling-block before the blind there is also forbidden all other injuries done to men in confidence that the parties injured shall not be able to know who wronged them and so not have power to defend or right themselves yea even the putting of stumbling-blocks before the consciences of men and that because the Lord will plead the cause of those that are thus wronged which is implyed in the last words but shalt fear the Lord thy God as if he had said Let the fear of God in these cases restrain thee though the deaf and blind need not be feared Vers 16. Neither shalt thou stand against the bloud of thy neighbour Though the doing of any thing against the life of our neighbour is here forbidden yet the evil principally here forbidden is the standing up in courts of Justice to take away a mans life either as a false accuser or a false witnesse and the rather is this subjoyned to the foregoing Law Thou shalt not go up and down as a tale-b●arer among thy people because tale-bearing doth usually tend as in Doegs example we may see to derprive men of their lives according to that of the Prophet Ezek. 22. 9. In thee are men that carry tales to shed bloud Vers 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke c. That is when any man hath wronged you in any thing you shall not go away and closely nourish hatred in your hearts against them or secretly carry tales of them to others and in the mean season never open your mouths to them that did the wrong but quite contrary you shall in a brotherly manner rebuke them for the evil they have done that so you may reclaim them from those evil wayes This I conceive is the drift of this precept yet withall it may imply that he that doth not rebuke his brother when he sees him do amisse doth indeed hate him and not love him and that because he suffers him to runne on in his sinne and seeks not his amendment Vers 18. But thou shalt love thy brother as thy self This clause as thy self doth not denote an exact and perfect equality of love but a certain proportion of likenesse it doth not bind men to love their neighbour with the same degree of love but 1. that they should no more desire or seek the hurt of their neighbour then of themselves 2. that they should endeavour to do all good to their neighbour as to themselves and 3. that they should love their neighbour in the same manner heartily sincerely constantly as they love themselves This expression therefore is not unlike that Joh. 17. 21. where our Saviour prayed that all true believers might be one with him and his father as thou father art in me and I in thee which doth not impart the same union but onely a likenesse of union Vers 19. Ye shall keep my statutes This is repeated and prefixed here to shew that the ordinances following must not be neglected though seeming slight because even these also were Gods statutes Thou shalt not let thy cattle gender with a diverse kind Of this Law there may be two reasons one naturall to teach his people not in vanity or curiosity of mind to alter the shape or nature of the creatures or seem to make more then God created another mysticall to teach them how God did hate both mixture of persons I mean the children of God with infidels as also all mixtures of religions and of mans devices with Gods ordinances and whatsoever hypocrisie or corruption of manners is contrary to that sincerity and simplicity which God requires in his children and this also was intended in the following prohibitions against sowing their fields with mingled seed Vers 20. Whosoever lieth carnally with a woman that is a bondmaid bet rothed c. she shall be scourged And so consequently the man also as being both equally guilty And indeed in the Hebrew there shall be a whipping which may have reference to both because she was a bondwoman a lighter punishment is inflicted for had she been either born or been made free both should have been put to death Deut. 22. 23 34. Thus still the Lord debaseth bond-servants to teach his children to hate the bondage of sinne Vers 21. And he shall bring his trespasse-offering c. Both for himself and the servant with whom he committed uncleannesse if she were an Israelite But because the man onely is appointed to bring a trespasse-offering this seems to imply the former Law was meant of heathen bondwomen which might not bring an offering Vers 23. And when ye shall come into the land and shall have planted all manner of trees for food then ye shall count c. The first-fruit that grew upon young trees newly planted was for the first three years to be accounted as uncircumcised and not to be eaten that is they were to be cut or plucked off betimes and cast away as an unclean thing even as the fore-skinnes of men in circumcision were cut off and cast away as unclean And though herein they were taught to benefit themselves in way of husbandry because if a young tree be suffered to bear fruit too soon neither will the fruit ever be good nor will the tree indure so long this over-early fruit drawing away the nourishment which should make the root and tree strong yet chiefly I conceive it was thus ordained for religious respects as 1. because the first-fr●it was to be consecrate to God to whom it was fit the best should be given and at the best they use not to be till after three or foure years bearing and 2. to shew that through the contagion of sinne all things are rendred unclean to us Tit. 1. 15. To them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure so that we have no right to eat of them till by Christ the seed promised in the circumcision they be r●stored as pure to us again and untill they be sanctified by the word of God and prayer 1. Tim. 4. 5. Vers 24. But in the fourth year all the fruit thereof shall be holy c. That is they shall be given the priests as first-fruits See Numb 18. 12
by every family but provided at the common charge and offered in the name of the whole Church and because that it is said expresly vers 20. that these two loaves of the first-fuits were waved by the priest together with the peace-offerings which could not be if every familie in Israel brought two loaves therefore I onely think that the onely reason why it is said Ye shall bring two wave-loaves out of your habitations was to signifie that the loaves were to be made of the wheat of their own land They shall be of fine flowre they shall be baken with leaven they are the first-fruits unto the Lord. Thusthere is a difference made betwixt the meat-offerings which were in part burnt upon the altar and were therefore ever without leaven Levit. 2. 11. and these of the first-fruits which where wholly for the priests food and therefore allowed to be leavened Vers 18. And ye shall offer with the bread seven lambes without blemish of the first year and one young bullock c. In Numb 28. 27. there is appointed two bullocks and one ramme here one bullock and two rammes the reason of this difference we may conceive was this Those were as the peculiar sacrifices of that feast-day these are a further addition in respect of the two loaves as a particular testimony of their thankfulnesse for the fruits of the earth and of their faith in Christ by whom they were restored to the use of the creatures and their sacrifices of praise made acceptable to God Vers 19. Then ye shall sacrifice one kid of the goats for a sinne-offering c. Lev. 4. 14. a bullock is prescribed for a sinne-offering of the people and nothing was to be eaten thereof it was to be burnt without the camp But this was for some speciall sinne of the congregation whereas the sacrifice here appointed was in generall for all their sinnes and was therefore in the kind of a common sacrifice whence a goat is appointed and the priest to have the remainder Vers 20. They shall be holy to the Lord for the priest Whereas ordinarily the priest had but the breast and the right shoulder of the peace-offerings Lev. 7. 32 33. c. The breast shall be Aarons and his sonnes And the right shoulder shall ye give unto the priest of the sacrifices of your peace-offerings c. Here he had all because this was offered in generall for all the congregation and so no particular man had right to eat thereof therefore it belonged to the priest wholly Vers 21. And ye shall proclaim on the self same day that it may be an holy convocation unto you c. This was the feast-day of Pentecost or of Weeks whereon the two loaves and the sacrifices before mentioned were offered unto the Lord and it was instituted partly as a memoriall of their coming out of Egypt Deut. 16. 10 12. Thou shalt keep the feast of Weeks unto the Lord thy God according as he hath blessed thee And thou shalt remember thou wast a bondman in Egypt and shalt observe and do these sta●utes and of the giving of the Law at this time of the year at mount Sinai Exod. 19. 11. and partly by way of thankfulnesse for the fruitfulnesse of the Land One thing prefigured might be the giving of the Law of Christ by the Apostles when the holy Ghost came down upon them the first-fruits of the Spirit in the likenesse of cloven tongues Act 2. 1 2 3. whereupon they went forth to reap that which the Prophets had sown John 4. Vers 22. And when ye reap the harvest of your land thou shalt not make clean riddance c. Speaking of the feasts in the harvest he repeateth this Law concerning the poore whose relief he joyns with his own service Vers 24. In the seventh moneth in the first day of the moneth shall ye have a Sabbath For Ecclesiasticall businesses God hath appointed the moneth Nisan or Abib to be the fi●st mone●h of the year to the Is●●elites which answere●● to part of our March and Aprill and that in remembrance of their coming then out of Egypt Exod. 12. 2. and so the seventh moneth from that was this here spoken of which they called Tisri and agreeth in part with our September and had been formerly the first moneth of their year yea and so still con●inued for civil affairs and therefore the year of Jubile begun still at this moneth and so was on this moneth proclaimed chap. 25. 9. Then shalt thou cause the trumpet of the Jubile to sound on the tenth day of the seventh moneth c. Now the first day of this moneth God here appoints them to keep a Sabbath that is a solemn feast-day and it was called the feast of trumpets because it was ●olemnized with blowing of trumpets Indeed the first day of every moneth which was their new Moon they kept as an holy day a day of speciall solemnity and thereon the priests did blow with their silver trumpets over their sacrifices Numb 10. 10. In the beginnings of your moneths ye shall blow with your trumpets over your burnt-offerings c. But the first day of this seventh moneth was kept as a farre more solemn festivall and that with blowing of trumpets in way of rejoycing as it may probably be thought throughout all the cities of Israel And the end of this festivall was 1. to be a memoriall that this was the first day the beginning of their New year for civil afairs whereon it was therefore fitting that they should with rejoycing acknowledge the blessings injoyed in the foregoing year 2. to be a memoriall to them when they were come into Canaan of the severall victories which God had given them over their enemies where the priests with the holy trumpets did sound an alarm See Numb 31. 6. 3. That it might be a preparation for the following day of atonement their solemn fast-day on the tenth day of this moneth that so by the sounding of the trumpets they might be put in mind to wake out of the sleep of sinne and with trembling fasting and prayer to turn unto the Lord and 4. to put them in mind of the speciall holinesse of this moneth for as the seventh day of every week was a Sabbath and every seventh year was kept holy as a Sabbaticall year so the Lord would have the seventh moneth of every year to be holy in some singular manner above the rest of the moneths and therefore though it was not wholly spent in sacred festivities yet there were more holy-dayes in this moneth then in all the year besides to wit the feast of trumpets the feast of expiation and the feast of tabernacles Vers 25. Ye shall do no servile work therein but ye shall offer an offering made by fire unto the Lord. What the sacrifices appointed for this feast of trumpets were see Numb 29. 2 6. Vers 27. And ye shall afflict your souls and offer an offering made by fire
brethren as they did this day by releasing their servants and restoring to every man their possessions again A great dispute there is amongst Expositours when the year of Jubile began Some hold that though it were proclaimed on the seventh moneth the moneth Tisri yet it began not till the spring following in the moneth Nisan but this is no way probable for the time of sowing was about the seventh moneth and it is not likely they sowed that which because of the following Jubile they might not reap I make no question therefore but the year of Jubile began on this seventh moneth but whether it began on the first day of this moneth as the Jews generally hold or not till the tenth day is somewhat questionable yet the last seems to me most probable because it may seem strange that it should begin ten dayes before it was proclaimed Vers 10. And ye shall hallow the fiftieth year and proclaim liberty throughout all the land c. That is ye shall set it apart to be an holy year and shall proclaim liberty throughout all the land to wit to your brethren that had been sold to you for servants who shall hereupon be set at liberty Now the year of Jubile was called an holy year because it was separated from the ordinary imployments of other years in tilling and sowing their land c. that they might be at more leisure to spend it in holy imployments and that it might be to them a year of holy rejoycing before the Lord and withall because it was to be a type of that evangelicall Jubile at the coming of Christ when by the trumpet of the Gospel first sounded by the Baptist and after by Christ and his Apostles there should be great joy proclaimed unto all nations whence it is that the time of the Gospel is called the year of Gods redeemed Esa 63. 4. and the acceptable year of the Lord Esa 61. 2. the accepted time and the day of salvation 2. Cor. 6. 2. One of the main priviledges of this year was that which is here mentioned that all their servants were set at liberty Ordinarily when their brethren were sold to them for servants they were to serve them six years but if the year of Jubile came after the first or second year they were presently set free yea even those that at other ordinary times did refuse to be set free and so had their ears bored through and were by the Law thereupon to serve for ever Exod. 21. 16. were yet set free at the year of Jubile And herein was the year of Jubile a notable type of the evangelicall Jubile at the coming of Christ when all Gods redeemed ones were set free from the bondage of the Law Satan sinne and death Joh. 8. 36. If the sonne shall make you free you shall be free indeed It shall be a Jubile unto you and ye shall return every man to his possession This was another priviledge of the year of Jubile That when that year came all the land that had been sold returned to the owners that had sold it or to their heirs for no man might sell his land for ever ver 23. but onely for so many years as were behind from the sale to the year of Jubile and then the owners entred upon the land again And this was the reason why Naboth would not sell his vineyard to Ahab to wit for ever 1. King 21. 3. The Lord forbid it me saith he that I should give the inheritance of my fathers unto thee Now the reasons of this Law were 1. that it might prevent the confusion of the tribes by the alienation of their severall portions in the land of Canaan from one to another 2. that it might be a barre in the way of the rich that they might not hope to swallow up the inheritance of their poore brethren and so to enlarge their own 3. that it might be a perpetuall memoriall to them that God had planted them in the land because they might not sell it the Lord challenging the land to be still his by a peculiar right and willing them onely to esteem themselves as sojourners therein with him whence it is called the Lords land Hos 9. 3. They shall not dwell in the Lords land and Esai 8. 8. The stretching out of his wings shall fill the breadth of thy land O Immanuel And fourthly That it might be a figure of our recovering by Christ at the evangelicall Jubile that heavenly inheritance which we had lost by sinne and that the heavenly Canaan which God had prepared for his in Christ c●nnot be utterly alienated from them but is surely confirmed in his bloud and reserved in heaven for them so that though by their sinnes they may for a time deprive themselves of the comfortable use of this their inheritance in the Church yet they shall return thereto at the great Jubile of Christs second appearing when the trumpet of God shall sound 1. Thess 4. 16 17. The Lord hims●lf shall descend from heaven with a shout with the voice of the Archangell and with the trump of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the aire and so shall we be for ever with the Lord. Vers 12. Ye shall eat the increase thereof out of the field And not out of the barn The meaning is that they might not gather and lay up the encrease that grew of the land in the year of Jubile but what they did eat hereof in common together with others they must take it immediately out of the field Vers 14. And if thou sell ought unto thy neighbour or buyest ought of thy neighbours hand ye shall not oppresse one another That is the seller shall not exact more of him that buyes then the use of the land is truly worth from the time of the sale to the year of Jubile nor shall the buyer seek to get the land for lesse then it is truly worth taking advantage of the necessity of him that is forced to sell Vers 20. And if ye shall say What shall we eat the seventh year c. An objection is here made and answered concerning the rest of the Sabbaticall year enjoyned vers 4. The objection is how they should live the seventh year if they should therein neither sow nor reap And the answer is vers 21 22. That God would command such a blessing upon the sixth year that it should bring forth fruit for three years that is from the sixth to the ninth not for three years compleat but for part of three years as Christ is said to have been three dayes in th● grave because he was in the grave part of three dayes for the increase of the sixth year served them first for part of the sixth year to wit from barly-harvest that year which was about the Passeover till the seventh moneth
God is in exacting purity in those that consecrate themselves to his service And this must be done on the day of his cleansing on the seventh day for this last clause on the seventh day shall he shave it is added by way of explaining the clause before in the day of his cleansing for the seventh day was the usuall day of cleansing for those that were defiled by the dead as we may see chap. 10. 11 12. Vers 11. And the priest shall offer the one for a sinne-offering c. Though it were no fault in the Nazarite that a man should die very suddenly by him yet because it was contrary to the Law that enjoyned the Nazarite not to come nigh any dead body therefore he was to bring a sinne-offering for his cleansing Vers 12. And he shall cons●crate unto the Lord the dayes of his s●paration That is he shall begin anew to consecrate unto God the very same number of dayes which before his defiling he had vowed unto God And he shall bring a lambe of the first year for a trespasse-offering By this trespasse-offering which also figured Christ he was prepared for the observations of his renewed vow because all grace and ability to do good is of God obtained by Christ Jesus our Lord. Vers 13. And this is the Law of the Nazarite That is this that follows is the Law that must be observed by the Nazarite when he hath fulfilled his vow and is to be discharged thereof in an orderly manner Which Law it is conceived the Apostle Paul was perswaded to observe to decline the offence of the Jews Acts 21. 26. Vers 14. And he shall offer his offering unto the Lord one he-lambe c. Those offerings the Nazarite was to offer when he had fulfilled the dayes of his separation and was now to be freed from his vow 1. by way of thankfulnesse to God as acknowledging that it was through his grace that he had been enabled to fulfill his Nazarites vow and 2. to make atonement thereby for his sinnes committed under his vow thereby also confessing that notwithstanding his strictest endeavours after holinesse he had failed many wayes if God in Christ should not be mercifull to him Vers 15. And their meat-offering and their drink-offerings That is beside● the cakes and wafers before mentioned enjoyned as an extraordinary meat-offering he was also to bring the ordinary meat-offerings and drink-offerings appointed for appendances to all sacrifices whereof see Numb 28. Vers 18. And the Nazarite shall shave the head of his separation c. All the time of his separation he was to keep his hair uncut but now he was to shave his head called here the head of his separation because the hair on his head was the signe of his separation and that at the doore of the tabernacle to shew that his vow was now at an end whereby he had consecrated himself to the Lord and then afterwards he was to put it in the fire which is under the sacrifice of the peace-offerings that is not the fire on the altar of burnt-offerings for there onely the fat of the peace-offerings was burnt but the fire under the ca●drons or pots wherein the peace-offerings were boyled and all this was done as by way of thankfulnesse to God to signifie that he had the perfection of his Nazariteship from him Vers 19. And the priest shall take the sodden shoulder of the ram c. That is the left shoulder the right shoulder was due unto him raw of all peace-offerings Levit. 7. 32. And the right shoulder shall ye give unto the priest for an heave-offering of the sacrifices of your p●ace-offerings this gift of the sodden shoulder was peculiarly given from the Nazarites ram onely and taught them that as they had received more speciall grace of God so they should give him more speciall thanks then other men Vers 21. This is the Law of the Nazarite who hath vowed and of his offering unto the Lord for his separation besides that that his hand shall get That is besides that which of his own free will he shall vow to give according to the estate wherewith God hath blessed him That which is formerly prescribed was necessarily to be done both by rich and poore when they took upon them this vow of Nazariteship if being able they vowed more offerings they must perform their vow but this before prescribed must by all be brought the poorest are not allowed lesse Vers 23. On this wise ye shall blesse the children of Israel c. This blessing thus pronounced by the priest did include a promise of Gods blessing them delivered as it were out of Gods own mouth and that by and through Christ of whom they were types Acts 3. 26. Unto you first God having raised up his sonne Jesus sent him to blesse you in turning away every one of you from his iniquities and so again Luke 24. 50. And he led them out as farre as Bethany and he lift up his hands and blessed them Therefore when Christ was to come the priest of Aarons seed was speechles Luke 1. 22. to teach them to look for another priest in whom all nations were to be blessed Gal. 3. 8. Vers 24. The Lord blesse thee and keep thee c. Some conceive that the repeating of this word the Lord or Jehovah three severall times in this blessing did imply the mystery of the Trinity But whether so or no sure w● are it was pronounced in the name of God who is one in essence but three in persons the Father Sonne and holy Ghost and evangelically we have this very blessing explained by the Apostle 2. Cor. 13. 14. The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Amen Vers 25. The Lord make his face shine upon thee and be gratious unto thee That is the Lord be favourable kind and loving to thee and let him so manifest his love and grace to thy heart and conscience that thou mayest plainly perceive it A chearfull loving countenance we call lightsome as on the other side we call an angry countenance cloudy In the sight of the kings countenance is life saith Solomon Prov. 16. 15. So that by the Lords making his face to shine upon his people nothing else is meant but his love and the manifestation of his love and favour to them according to that Psal 44. 3. They got not the land in possession by their own sword neither did their own arm save them but thy right hand and thy right arm and the light of thy countenance because thou hadst a favour unto them Vers 26. The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee and give thee peace By this clause of the Lords lifting up his countenance upon them two things may be implyed 1. the Lords love and favour as in the former clause for as the hiding and casting down and turning away of the face testifies the
mixed people with them Exod. 12. 37 38. and they journey●d in severall troops and armies Vers 2. And Moses wrote their goings out according to their journeys by the commandment of the Lord. That is Moses by the commandment of the Lord wrote this following journall of the Israelites travels from Egypt to the land of Canaan wherein are set down not all the severall places the Israelites came to or all their severall removes from one place to another but all the severall stations of their journeys that is the severall places where they pitched their tents and abode for some time And this was done first the better thereby to assure posterity of this miraculous deliverance of their fathers out of Egypt and of the Lords leading them through the wildernesse to the land of promise this expresse description of the names of their severall stations being a strong evidence of the certainty of this story and s●condly that here in a short compasse as in a little map by the mention of the severall places where such things were done they might be put in mind of the rebellion of their fathers of Gods severity in chastising them for their rebellion but especially his goodnesse and faithfulnesse to the seed of Abraha● notwithstanding the many provocations wherewith they had provoked him to displeasure agains● them Vers 3. And they departed from Rameses in the first moneth c. Whither they assembled by direction of Moses from all parts of the land of Go●hen Vers 4. For the Egyptians buried all their first-born which the Lord had smitten amongst them This intimates the cause why the Egyptians did not at present oppose their going thence to wit because God had pulled down their pride by slaying their first-born Vpon their gods also the Lord executed judgement See the note upon Exod 12. 12. Vers 6. And they departed from Succ●th and pitched in Etham Here the Lord began first to go before them by day in a pillar of cloud and by night in a pillar of fire Vers 7. And they removed from Etham and turned again unto Pi-hahiroth c. A narrow passage between two ledges of mountains into which being entred Pharaoh overtook them with a mighty army and thought they could not now have escaped him but God divided the red sea which the Israelites passing the Egyptians assayed to follow them and were drowned Vers 8. And pitched in Marah Having travelled three dayes journey from the red sea through the wildernesse without any water and finding the waters here very bitter they began to mutiny against Moses but God sweetned the water with a tree Exod. 15. 23. Vers 11. And they removed from the red sea and encamped in the wildernesse of Sin So called from Sin a city in Egypt over against which this wildernesse lay Hither they came a just moneth after their departure from Rameses In this wildernesse they murmured grievously for want of food and God gave them quails and rained manna from heaven which was still continued till they came into Canaan Vers 14. And they removed from Alush and encamped at Rephidim c. A place famous first for the mutiny of the Israelites for want of water wherein they had almost stoned Moses secondly for the water fetched miraculously out of the rock in Horeb thirdly for the victory they had over the Amalekites who there set upon them fourthly for Moses his meeting with Jethro his wife and sonues and the counsel he had of Jethro for the government of the people Vers 15. And they departed from Rephidim and pitched in the wildernesse of Sinai Hither they came the beginning of the third moneth Exod. 19. 1. and stayed there till the twentieth day of the second moneth of the second year Numb 10. 11 12. Here was the Law given and the tabernacle built and the people punished for making and worshipping a golden calf and Nadab and Abihu take● suddenly away for offering strange fire and the people first numbred and then ordered in their severall camps both for their encamping about the tabernacle and their journeying with it to the land of Canaan Vers 16. And they removed from the desert of Sinai and pitched at Kibroth-hattaavah Here the people fell a lusting for ●lesh God again sent them quails yea for a moneth together in great abundance whereon they surfeted and dyed miserably with the flesh between their teeth Vers 17. And they departed from Kibroth-hattaavah and encamped at Hazeroth Here Miriam and Aaron murmured against Moses and she was smitten with leprosie Numb 12. Vers 18. And they departed from Hazeroth and pitched in Rithmah Which was i● the wildernesse of Paran Numb 13. 1. near Kadesh-barnea whence spies were sent to search the land upon whose report the people murmuring God was wroth and appointed Moses to return again to the red sea as having vowed that not one of that generation should enter Canaan save Joshua and Caleb Vers 20. And they departed from Rimmon-parez and pitched in Libnah This some think is the same which is called Laban Deut. 1. 1. Vers 25. And they removed from Haradah and pitched in Makheloth It is interpreted assemblies so called as some think of the mutinous assemblies of Korah Dathan and Abiram there Vers 31. And they departed from Moseroth and pitched in Bene-jaakan c. Thir Moseroth is called Moserah and Bene-jaakan Beroth-bene-jaakan as likewise in the next verses Hor-hagidgad is called Gudgodah and Jotbathah Jotbath Deut. 10. 6 7. See the note there Vers 35. And they departed from Ebronah and encamped at Ezion-gaber A place by the red sea where was a hatbour for shipping in Edoms land 1. Kings 9. 26. See also 1. Kings 22. 48. Vers 36. And they removed from Ezion-gaber and pitched in the wildernesse of Zin which is Kadesh That is at Kadesh in the wildernesse of Zin Here Miriam dyed the people again murmured for water and had water out of a rock but God was displeased with Moses and Aaron for their unbelief Hither they came in the beginning of the fourtieth year and hence they sent to crave a passage through Edoms land but it was denied them Vers 41. And they departed from mount Her and pitched in Zalmonah Which may be so called of Zelem an image it is thought to be the place where the Israelites for their murmuring were ●tung with fiery serpents and the brazen serpent was by Gods appointment erected for their help Vers 45. And they departed from Iim and pitched in Dibon-gad So called because it was repaired and possessed by the tribe of Gad chap. 32. 34. and to distinguish it from another Dibon which was given to the Reubenites See Josh 13. 15 17. Vers 52. Then ye shall drive out all the inhabitants of the land To wit by destroying them Deut. 7. 12. Vers 54. And ye shall divide the land by lot c. See the note upon chap. 26. 55. Vers 55. Those which ye let remain of them shall be pricks in your eyes
if they were nearer to them then the others yea and if the Lord enlarged their coasts and gave them all the land they were to adde three cities more Deut. 19. 8 9. Vers 16. And if he smite him with an instrument of iron so that he die he is a murderer c. That is purposely and presumptuously for otherwise if he killed a man with an instrument of iron unawares not thinking to hit him he was not to be slain vers 22 23. for this is onely added because a man may strike his neighbour purposely with his fist c. of which he may die and yet not be a murderer because he may not happely intend his death But lest therefore under this pretence wilfull murderers should think to escape the Lord gives these following Laws and this in the first place that if it were proved that he did it willingly he must not think to escape by saying that he meant not to kill him for if he struck him with an instrument of iron whatever it be or with a stone or hand-weapon wherewith in any probability a man may be killed it shall be presumed that he intended hi● death c. Vers 19. The revenger of bloud himself shall slay the murderer c. That is though the revenger of bloud be but a private person yet he shall slay the murderer that is he may slay him he shall have liberty to do it and shall not be accoun●ed guilty of murder if he doth slay him yea some think he was bound to do it when he meeteth him he shall slay him that is he shall not need to bring him before a Magistrate c. but he may slay him himself And this is added to shew how necessary cities of refuge were to wit because the avenger of bloud having this power from God might otherwise abuse it and in the heat of bloud fall upon a man that killed unawares unlesse this course were taken to have the Magistrate a judge in the cause Neither need it seem strange as to some it doth that private men should be allowed thus to meddle with the sword of justice for a man being otherwise a private man no Magistrate being thus armed with power from God is for the time to be es●eemed as a Magistrate more then a private man Vers 20. But if he thrust him of hatred c. Here is another case given wherein the Magistrate should adjudge a man a murderer yea though he struck him onely with his hand or with some little stone or some other thing which was no way likely to kill him for even in this case if it be proved that he lay in wait for him or that he did it in prepensed malice or lived before in open enmity or hostility with him by whatever means he kill him he shall be adjudged a wilfull murderer for there is a difference made here betwixt enmity and sudden displeasure Vers 21. The revenger of bloud shall slay the murderer when he m●eteth him See the note upon vers 19. Vers 24. Then the congregation shall judge between the slayer and the r●venger of bloud c. That is if a man that had killed another fly to the citie of refuge the avenger must then go and desire justice against him the Levites must bring him to the congregation where the man was slain and then if he found a murderer the congregation that is the Magistrates shall give him up into the hands of the avenger but if they found it as we call it chance-medly then they sent him back to the city of refuge Vers 25. And he shall abide in it unto the death of the high priest c. Even a man that killed another unwittingly was to live a while as a man banished from his family and friends both to shew how hatefull the shedding of mans bloud is to the Lord and withall to prevent further mischief that the avenger be not urged nor provoked with the sight of him and the period appointed for his continuance in the city of refuge was till the death of the high priest and that doubtlesse that this releasing of men exiled by the death of the high priest might be a shadow of our freedome and redemption by the death of Christ Vers 27. He shall not be guilty of bloud c. The Lord here freeth the avenger from punishment if he found the man out of the city of refuge and killed him not as allowing his fact but by this to make the slayer the more carefull to observe this law of keeping within his citie of refuge CHAP. XXXVI Vers 1. ANd the chief fathers of the families of the children of G●lead c. Because the Lord had formerly ordered that Zelophehads daughters should have that portion of the land assigned to the tribe of Manasseh which their father should have had for his share had he lived the children of Gilead who were of that tribe con●idering that if they married into any other tribe this part of their land would be quite alienated from their tribe they came now and shewed what inconvenience might follow upon this and because it was their tribe that was now likely to receive detriment by the alienation of Zelophehads portion therefore they made it their suit that some order might be taken to prevent this mischief Vers 2. The Lord commanded my lord to give the land for an inheritance by lot to the children of Israel c. As if they should have said To what purpose was this if now our lot shall be diminished and a part of it wholly alienated to another tribe yea by like accidents the portion of every tribe may in time be changed and disturbed and so all at length may come to confusion and the very end of Gods appointing every tribe to have their portion apart by themselves may be quite made void Vers 4. And when the Jubile of the children of Israel shall be then shall their inheritance be put unto the inheritance of the tribe whereunto they are received c. The drift of these words is to put Moses and the Princes in mind that whereas by the law of God at the year of Jubile which was every fiftieth year whatever land was sold away out of the tribe should return to the tribe and that law of the Jubile seemed purposely intended to prevent the confusion of the inheritance of the tribes the very end of this law by such marriages as these would be quite disannulled Vers 5. And Moses commanded the ●hildren of I●rael according to the word of the Lord c. That is having asked counsel of God he an●wered them as God had commanded him ANNOTATIONS On the fifth book of MOSES called DEUTERONOMIE CHAP. I. THese be the words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side Jordan c. Most Expositours hold that the chief drift of this first verse is to shew the places where Moses repeated and explained the law of God to the
respect to divers parts of this mountain which had severall names and hence it is that Cant. 4. 8. Shenir and Hermon are mentioned together as distinct mountains Vers 11. For onely Og the King of Bashan remained of the remnant of giants That is there was none left of that gig●ntine race in the kingdome of Bashan but Og onely That there were many other giants at this time in other places is most evident for immediately after the Israelites en●●ed Canaan Caleb drove out of Hebron Sheshai and Ahiman and Tal●ai the children of Anak Josh 15. 14. Yea in Davids time there were many giants as Goliah whom David slew Ishbi-benob and divers others 2. Sam. 21. 16. c. But this is spoken onely of the countrey of Bashan Behold his bedstead was a bedstead of iron is it not in Rabbath of the chil-of Ammon How this bedstead which was made of iron that it might be strong enough to bear his huge mass●e body should come to be in Rabbath the chief citie of the Ammonites being not expressed we cannot say sufficient it is that thither it might be conveyed by many severall means as it might be taken in some war between the Ammoni●es and this King and so kept as a glorious Trophic of their victory or it might be given as a present to the Ammonites and so kept as a strange memoriall of the huge stature of thi● King of Bashan Nine cubits was the length thereof and foure cubits the breadth of it after the cubit of a man That is the common cubit of an ordinary man Now the cubit of a man being usually a foot and half according to this measure his bed was foure yards and a half long and two yards broad Vers 13. And the rest of Gilead and all Bashan being the kingdome of Og gave I unto the half tribe of Manass●h c. See Numb 32. 39 40. Vers 14. Jair the sonne of Manasseh took all the countrey of Argob c. See Numb 32. 41. Vers 17. Chinnereth even unto the sea of the plain even the salt sea under Ashdoth Pisgah Eastward What the sea of Chinnereth was which is mentioned here as a part of the bound of that land which was given to the Reubenites and Gadites you may see in the note upon Numb 34. 11 12. As for Ashdoth Pisgah we see vers 27. that Pisgah was a hill and so Ashdoth Pisgah was after the name of a citie there adjoyning in Reubens land Josh 13. 20. at the foot of this hill Vers 23. And I besought the Lord at that time c. To wit after all these things before related when the Lord bad him go up into a mountain and see the land Numb 27. 12. then did Moses intreat the Lord earnestly that he might go into the land of Canaan as knowing that his threatnings are many times conditionall and therefore it might be the Lord would be intreated by him Vers 24. O Lord God thou hast begun to shew thy servant thy greatnesse c. There is here an argument drawn from former mercies to move God to go on and to perfect the mercy begun Vers 25. I pray thee let me go over and see the good land that is beyond Jordan that goodly mountain and Lebanon There is much arguing amongst Expositours to find out what that goodly mountain is whereof Moses here speaks some understanding it of one mountain some of another but I conceive that it is the land that lay next beyond Jordan which they might see from the place where the Israelites now were that is here called that goodly mountain that is that goodly mountanous countrey and that then he adjoyns Lebanon which was in the farther part of the land of Canaan to imply that he desired to see the land quite through Vers 26. But the Lord was wroth with me for your sakes See the note upon chap. 1. 37. Vers 27. Get thee up into the top of Pisgah c. See the note upon Numb 27. 12. CHAP. IV. Vers 1. NOw therefore hearken O Israel unto the statutes c. They that will have a difference put betwixt the two words here used statutes and judgements say that by statutes or ordinances are meant those laws which taught the service of God called by the Apostle ordinances of divine service and by judgements those laws that concerned their duties towards men and the punishment of transgressours As for the promise of life made here to those that kept these laws see the note upon Levit. 18. 5. Vers 6. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdome and your understanding in the sight of the nations c. Seeing other Nations did alwayes deride and despise the Jews way of worshipping God and made a mock of their whole religion it may seem strange why Moses should here say that their keeping of Gods laws should be counted their wisdome and understanding in the sight of the nations But for this we must theref ore know that the drift of these words is onely to shew that the laws which God had given them were so just and righteous that all men unlesse they should wilfully close their eyes must needs acknowledge them to be such and that even the very heathen if ever they came to hear and know their laws must needs in their consciences think so of them and would if ever their eyes were truly opened to judge of things admire the wisdome and understanding of this people above that which was in other nations Vers 7. For what nation is there so great who hath God so nigh unto them c. That is in that which onely makes a nation truly great and honourable namely the speciall interest they have in God there is no nation under heaven to be compared unto ours who have God alwayes dwelling amongst us as is evident by the miraculous signes of his presence with us alwayes ready at hand to hear our prayers and so to protect and defend us from all evils as the strange miracles and wonders he hath wrought for us these many years do evidently prove Vers 11. And ye came near and stood under the mountain and the mountain burnt with fire c. All these things are here repeated to convince and assure the people that the laws he now speaks of were given of God and not of his devising and therefore the more carefully to be regarded Vers 12. And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire c. Moses here addressing his exhortation to disswade the people from idolatry he puts them in mind how that when the Lord at Sinai gave them his law they saw no similitude onely they heard a voice and that God spake unto them out of the midst of the fire which was indeed purposely done thereby to signifie unto the people that the glory of God was incomprehensible and that there was no drawing nigh unto God to behold him with bodily eyes Vers 14. And the
it is well known to you that he punished the Egyptians for your sakes such as were those boyls mentioned Exod. 9. 10. and the pestilence vers 15 or wherewith you know the inhabitants of that countrey were usually troubled such as that called the botch of Egypt Deut. 28. 27. See also the note upon Exod. 15. 26. Vers 16. Neither shalt thou serve their Gods for that will be a snare unto thee c. That is a cause of thy-ruine it will bring judgements upon thee from which thou wilt no way be able to free ●hy self Vers 20. Moreover the Lord thy God will send the hornet among them c. Against whom the strength and multitude of these nations shall be no defence See the note upon Exod. 23. 28. Vers 24 There shall no man be able to stand before thee untill thou have destroyed them All this is promised upon condition of their obedience to God for when they obeyed not Gods command we reade afterwards of many of these nations that were too strong for them S●e Josh 15. 63. and 17. 12. and Judg. 1. 34. Vers 25. Thou shalt not desire the silver or gold that is on them c. This may be meant either of the plates of silver and gold wherewith their idols of wood and brasse were usually covered over or else of the chains bracelet● jewels garments of silver or gold wherewith they were wont to deck and trimme up their idols Esa ●0 32. yea and under this all other ornaments of their idols though not of gold and silver are comprehended Because the Israelites might out of covetousnesse think that so they destroyed the idols themselves they might reserve the gold and silver that was about them and yet be blamelesse the Lord the better to shew how he detests idolatry forbids them here the reserving of any of the gold and silver that was upon the idols of the land and to that end chargeth them not to meddle with it no not to desire it but utterly to consume that together with the idols themselves lest saith ●e thou be snared therein that is les● by doing otherwise thou becomest guilty before God and so shouldst draw down judgement upon thy self Vers 26. Neither shalt thou bring an abomination into thy house lest thou be a cursed thing like it c. That is devoted to destruction as that was to wit for reserving a polluted and accursed thing which should have been destroyed For it is a cursed thing That is a thing separated from mens use and devoted either to destruction as the idols and ornaments thereof here mentioned or at the Lords appointment to be carried into his treasurie as some conceive the gods of Jericho were because it is said Josh 6. 19 24. that the silver and gold which was in that city was brought into the Lords treasury CHAP. VIII Vers 2. ANd thou shalt remember all the ●ay which the Lord thy God led thee c. To make the Israelites the more carefull to obey the commandments of God Moses wills them here to remember all the way which the Lord their God had led them these fourty years in the wildernesse that is all that befell them in that way to wit both their affliction wants and troubles on the one side and their comforts blessings and deliverances on the other adding withall that thus the Lord had carried them through many troubles though not intending to cast them off that he might thereby humble them and prove them whether they would keep his commandments or no and so to know what was in their heart that is by this trying of them to discover what was in their hearts to wit the infidelity and inco●stancy and stubbornnesse of their hearts for indeed as the fire will try gold from brasse so will afflictions discover whose hearts are upright towards God and who are false-hearted and not such as in prosperity they seemed to be and much vild corruption will shew it self in troubles which before did never appear Vers 3. That he might make thee know that man doth not live by bread onely c. The meaning of this is that God brought them to want bread and then supplyed that want with manna from heaven that he might thereby teach them that though God had appointed bread and such like food to be the ordinary means of sustaining mans life yet it was not that alone that did sustain men but the word that is the decree and command of God in so much that as bread cannot nourish us except God commands a blessing on it so on the other side he can command any thing else to nourish us as well as bread as they had seen in the manna wherewith God had sed them many years yea he can keep men alive without food a long time together as he did Moses Elijah and our Saviour Christ whereupon he retorted this place of Scrip●ure upon the devil when he tempted him to turn stones into bread Mat. 4. 4. Vers 4. Thy raiment waxed not old upon thee neither did thy foot swell these fourty years These are two other miraculous effects of Gods provident care over them by the mention whereof Moses stirres them up to the obeying of Gods Laws The first is that their garments were not the worse for wearing at least they grew not threadbare or torn in fourty years wearing concerning which this is also particularly added Deut. 29. 5. that their shoes which were most likely to wear out with their continuall travelling did not wax old upon their feet To make this good there are some Expositours do adde concerning those that were young when they came out of Egypt that their garments did miraculously grow as ●●●ir bodies grew But there is no necessity of forging thus more miracles then are expressed and that because those that out-grew their garments might be supplyed with the garments of such as died in the wildernesse and then the garments they left off might serve those that grew to their stature The second is that their feet did not swell notwithstanding their continuall travels that because their sho es waxt not old under which also some think is included the health of their bodies in generall unlesse in case when they were extraordinarily stricken with sicknesse because of some rebellion against God to which they apply that of the Psalmist there was not one feeble person among their tribes Psal 105. 37. Vers 5. Thou shalt also consider in thine heart that as a man chasteneth his sonne so the Lord thy God chasteneth thee That is out of love with a gentle hand and with a purpose to do thee good thereby and this Moses adviseth the Israelites to consider in their hearts first because unlesse this be well thought upon afflictions would overwhelm the heart with sorrow and secondly because the serious consideration both of Gods severity in correcting his own dear children and his compassion in doing it in a fatherly manner might well
quantitie that they could not well carry them so farre which to imply that clause is added in the end of this verse when the Lord thy God hath blessed thee then they might sell these things and c●rry the money with them and buy therewith what they were to use there Vers 28. At the end of three years thou shalt bring forth all the tithe of thine increase the same year c. Here is expresse mention made of a third sort of tithe different from tho●e two before mentioned vers 22 and 23. For 1. this was onely paid every third year to wit each third year after the Sabbaticall year when the land lay at rest and so there was then no tithe paid at all but all things were common Exod. 23. 10 11. And 2. this was for another service the first of those tithes mentioned before were wholly the Levites portion and therefore often called the Lords inheritance and the second or the price of them was carried up by the owners to the Lords dwelling place and spent in holy feasting before the Lord but this now was laid up in some publick place in the towns and cities where they dwelt and was not onely for the use of the Levites but also for the stranger the fatherlesse and the widow c. as is expressed here vers 29. So that it seems whereas the two first years after the Sabbaticall year there were two tithes onely separated from their estates the first for the Levites the second to be spent in holy feasting before the Lord on the third year they separated a third tithe which was for the poore in the places where they dwelt and so again the two next years they separated onely the two first tithes and then on the third year three tithes again and so then the next year was again the Sabbaticall year I know there are many Expositours hold that the tithe here mentioned which was at the end of three years laid up for the poore was the very same tithe which the two years before the owners spent in holy feasting the third year they say this second tithe was not carried up to Jerusalem to be spent in their holy feasts there but it was laid up at home for the use of the poore But two arguments may be brought against this opinion from a following passage concerning the third years tithes chap. 26. 12. which cannot well be answered The first is that this third year is there called the year of tithing there being no probable reason that can be given why that year should be called peculiarly the year of tithing but onely this because that year they separated three tithes from their estates one more then on other years If the tithes on this third year laid up for the poore were the same which the two former years they had spent in holy feasting then did they separate no more tithes this third year then on other years and vvhy then should it be called the year of tithing The second argument is that on this third year every man vvas to go up to Jerusalem and there to make a solemn pro●ession that he had faithfully paid all his tithes and it is no vvay probable that vvhen he vvent up to Jerusalem to make this solemn profession he should not then carry vvith him those second tithes vvhich vvere to be spent in holy seasting before the Lord When saith Moses thou hast made an end of tithing all the tithes of thine increase the third year which is the year of tithing and hast given it unto the Levites the stranger the fatherlesse and the widow then thou shalt say before the Lord thy God I have brought away the hallowed things out of mine house and also have given them unto the Levi●●● and unto the stranger c. and indeed vvhat vvere those hallowed things vvhich he had brought with him out of his house if they vvere not that second tithe vvhich vvas to be spent in holy feasting before the Lord and therefore doubtlesse this third year they separated three severall tithes from their increase the first vvhich vvas the Levites yearly livelyhood the second vvhich they carried up vvith them to Jerusalem therewith to feast before the Lord and the third which was laid up for the poor e. CHAP. XV. Vers 1. AT the end of every seven years thou shalt make a release c. That is when the seventh year comes which is the ●nd or last of the seven for we see vers 9. that the seventh year is called the year of release Behold the seventh year the year of release is at hand as likewise Jer. 34. 14. at the end of seven years let ye go every man his brother is explained in the next words thus when he hath served thee six years thou shalt let him go free from thee Now this year of release was that seventh year spoken of Exod. 23. 11. and Levit. 25. 4. to wit the Sabbaticall year when the land was to keep a Sabbath of rest there being that year neither plowing nor sowing nor any work of husbandry used The greatest difficulty concerning these words is what this release was which is expressed in the following verse thus every creditour that lendeth ought unto his neighbour shall release it he shall not exact it of his neighbour or of his brother that is of any Israelite whatsoever because it is called the Lords release that is because the Lord hath ordained it to be a year of release Some Expositours hold that the release here enjoyned was an absolute acquitting and discharging of the debt for ever onely they adde that they were bound thus to forgive the debts of the poore onely and that therefore it is added vers 4. save when there shall be no poore among you intimating that of the rich they might require what was owing them But on the other side many of the best Expositours hold that it is onely meant of a not exacting that year the debts that were owing them and that because vers 8. the people are commanded to lend to their poore brethr●n notwithstanding this law even when the year of release was near at hand and it were strange that it should be called lending when they knew that immediately at the year of release their debt should absolutely be acquitted and made void And indeed because the Hebrew word here translated a release of debts may be rendred a remission or intermission and is the same that is elsewhere used to wit Exod. 23. 11. where speech is of the land that it should be let rest or intermitted from tillage that being onely for the seventh year it cannot be gathered from this word that they were to give an absolute release of their debts for ever but onely that they were not to exact them this seventh year and that because there was neither sowing nor reaping nor other works of husbandry that year and so the poore had not such means to pay their debts
as in other years However as in regard of the Sabbath-rest of this year of which see the note upon Exod. 23. 11. so also in regard of this release of debts at that time this year was a figure or type of that acceptable year of grace which brought us a release of our sinne● which are called our debts Matth. 6. ●● by and through Christ our Saviour and whereby we also are taught to put 〈…〉 ●e bowels of mercy forbearing one another and forgiving one another c. 〈…〉 ●2 13. Vers 3. Of a foreiner thou mayest exact it again The foreiner here intended of whom they might exa●t their debts notwithstanding the year of release is by some thought to be every stranger of another nation yea though he were a proselyte but others think it is meant onely of those strangers that had not embraced the true rel●gion and so indeed this law did the more fully represent that spirituall release whereof it was intended to be a figure or type in that none can have any share in this great priviledge of the remission of sinnes that are alien● and strangers from the commonwealth of Israel that is none but those that are true members of the Church and Christians indeed Vers 4. Save when there shall be n● poore among you This according to our translation is added as an exception that unlesse their debters were poo●e they were not bound to forbear the debt But the other translation which is in the margin of our Bibles seem● the best To the end that there be no poore among you and so it is added as a reason of the former law to wit that there might not be through exacting of debts any man brought to extreme poverty For the Lord shall greatly blesse thee c. These words contain a reason that may induce them thus to shew mercy in not exacting their debts at the year of rel●ase namely because if in this and other things they were obedient to Gods laws the Lord would so abundantly blesse them that they sho●ld be well able thus to forbear the exacting of their debts and it should be no prejudice at all to th●m Vers 12. And if thy brother an Hebrew man or an Hebrew woman be sold unto thee and serve thee six years c. Which they usually did unlesse the year of Jubile happened in the mean time Levit. 25. 40 41. concerning which see the notes upon Exod. 21. 2. for this is not here added as a priviledge of the year of release but as another act of mercy agr●eable to that before enjoyned concerning the remitting of debts every Sabbaticall year for indeed how should the setting free of servants be made one of the great priviledges of the year of Jubile if the like had been done every seventh year which was the year of release or to what purpose had it been to prescribe that no Hebrew servant should serve above six years as is appointed Exod. 21. 2. if they could never serve six years unless● they began their service immediately after the year of release and that because otherwise when their release came they must be set ●●ee Vers 15. And thou shalt remember that thou wast a bond-man c. The Israelites bondage in Egypt and the Lords delivering them is often pressed upon them to make them ●●ew mercy to their servants and to set them free at the time appointed of God both because the remembrance of our own miseries doth naturally incline mans heart to take pity of those that are in the same condition and likewise because it must needs be acknowledged fitting that men should imitate the mercy and compassion of God But b●sides there is covertly a hint given of a further matter to wit that ●s they were not sent empty away out of their bondage in Egypt but came away thence with much of the riches of Egypt so they should not send away their servants empty when they set them free but should give them liberally of that they had which was the thing enjoyned in the foregoing verses Vers 16. And it shall be if ●e say unto thee I will not go aw●y s●om thee c. S●e the note upon Exod. 23. 6. and Levit. 25. 40. Vers 17. And als● unto thy maid-servant thou shalt do likewise Because this follows so immediately upon that which went before concerning the boring of the ear of that man-servant which refused to be set free at six years end there●ore many Expositours hold and most prob●bly there being no other place of Scripture that shows the contrary that even the ears of maid-servants were bored likewise if they refused their freedome at the time appointed yet the Hebrews say that this clause And also unto thy maid-servant thou shalt do likewise hath onely reference unto that which was said in the ●ormer verses concerning the setting free of their men-servants at six years ●nd and the gifts they should give them when they set them free to wit that herein to their maid-servants they should do likewise Vers 18. For he hath been worth a double hired servant to thee c. Not because of the hard service he hath done above the service of an hireling as some think for by the law Hebrew servants might not be u●ed like slaves but like hired servants Levit 25. 39 40. but because hired servants had great w●ges besides meat and drink c. which servants that were sold had not in regard whereof amongst us the service of an appr●ntice is counted more prositable then that of journeymen or hired servants and some adde also because hired servants did us●ally serve for three years which they ground upon that Esa 16. 14. Within three years as the years of an hireling Vers 20. Thou shalt e●t it be●ore the Lord thy God year by ●ear c. I have formerly shown upon Deut. 12. 17. that there were certain firstlings which were not those firstling-males that did first open the matrice and that were the Lords by that generall Law of the firs●-born Numb 18. 15. and that these might b● brought ●nto the Lord as p●ace-offerings and so the owners and their housholds might eat of these before the Lord and of these therefore severall Expositours do understand this place But yet because in the foregoing verse it is said of the firstling males here intended Thou shalt do no work with the firstling of thy bullock nor shear the firstling of thy sheep and this seems to imply that the firstlings here meant are those firstlings which were the Lords due so soon as ever they fell by that generall Law of the first-born and therefore the owners had not power to reap any profit by them therefore others understand these words as spoken to the priests Thou shalt eat it be●ore the Lord that is the priest to whom God gav● all the firstlings of Isra●l as their po●tion for as say they Moses spake all that went before in this chapter to the people of Isra●l
remain all night on the tree but thou shalt in any wise bury him that day c. To wi● whether he were hanged alive or dead as those Kings were Josh 10. 26. And afterward Joshua smote them and slew them and hanged them on five trees and they were ●anging upon the trees untill the evening And this they were enjoyned to do first lest they should by being inured to look daily on the dead carcases of men become merciles●e and cruel and make light of killing men and secondly that the land might not be defiled by that monument of Gods curse remaining upon it visibly And thus were the people taught to look upon death as the wages of sinne the curse of the Law For he that is hanged is accursed of God Since the death of any malefactour might be a monument of Gods curse for sinne it may be questioned why this brand is peculiarly set upon this kind of punishment that he that is hanged is accursed of God To which I answer that the reason of this was beca●s● this was esteemed the most shamefull the most dishonourable and infamous of all kinds of death and was usually therefore the punishment of those that had by some notorious wickednesse provoked God to poure out his wrath upon the whole land and so were hanged up to appease his wrath as we may see in the hanging of those Prin●es that were guilty of committing whoredome with the daughters of Moab Numb 25. 4. and i● the hanging of those sonnes of Saul in the dayes of David when there was a famine in the land because of Sauls perfidious oppressing of the Gibeonites 2. Sam. 21. 6. Nor was it without cause that this kind of death was both by the Israelites and other nations esteemed the most shamefull and accursed because the very manner of the death did intimate that such men as were thus executed were such execrable and accursed wretches that they did defile the earth with treading on it and would pollute the earth if they should die upon it and there●ore we●e so trussed up in the aire as not fit to be amongst men and that others might look upon them as men made spectacles of Gods indignation and cur●e because of the wickednesse they had committed which was not done in other kinds of death and hence it was that the Lord God would have his son the Lord Christ to suffer this kind of death that even hence it might be the more evident that in his death he bare the curse due to our sinnes according to that of the Apostle Gal. 3. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on the tree CHAP. XXII Vers 1. THou shalt not see thy brothers ox or his ●heep go astray and hide thy self from them c. That is thou shalt not upon any pretence withhold thine help yea though he be thine enemy for that is also expressed Exod. 23. 4. If thou meet thine enemies ox or his asse going astray thou shalt surely bring it back to him again and hereby we are taught that much more we must perform this office of love to our brethren even to seek the conversion of them that are out of the way James 5. 19 20. Brethren if any of you do erre from the truth and one convert him Let him know that he which converteth a sinner from the crrour of his way shall save a soul from death and hide a multitude of sinnes Vers 2. And if thy brother be not nigh unto thee or if thou know him not c. Here two cases are resolved that might be questioned to wit what they were to do in case the owners of such cattel as they found going astray did either dwell farre off from them or were altogether unknown to them and the answer is that in such cases they were to drive the cattel home to their own houses till the owners did fetch them away and so in case they knew the owners it must needs also be implyed that they were to send them word of the cattel they had taken up though they dwelt farre off but if they knew not the owners then indeed they were to keep them till the owners themselves did seek out for them Vers 5. The woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man c. Under this all manlinesse is forbidden in women and all effeminatenesse in men either in their attire or in the ordering of their hair of which the Apostle speaks 1. Cor. 11. 4 14. or any thing of like nature as that 1. Cor. 14. 34. Let your women keep silence in the churches for it is not permitted unto them to speak Vers 7. But thou shalt in any wise let the damme go and take the young to thee c. The end of this law was first to teach them alwayes in the least things to have respect to the publick good and to preferre that before their own private satisfaction as here they were forbidden to destroy the damme when it was breeding time because she might ere long have other young ones and so might still continue the store of birds for the good of others and secondly to shew them how well God was pleased that his people should be mercifull and pitifull and how ●e ab●orred all cruelty and hardheartednesse in that he would not allow them to kill the damme when they took away her egges or her young ones because this might seem a kind o● cruelty and unmercifulnesse towards the poore creature that did su●fer enough already in the losse of her young ones that were so precious to her Vers 8. When thou buildest a new house then thou shalt make a battlement for thy roof The houses of the Israelites were alwayes built flat on the tops and so they used to be much on the tops of their houses both to recreate themselves there and for many other occasions Whence is that of our Saviour Matth. 10. 27. What ye hear in the ear that preach ye on the house tops Here therefore they are enjoyned alwayes to make battlements round about their house tops to prevent the casuall falling of any body from thence and consequently also under this one particular they were enjoyned to prevent what in them lay all occasions of bloudshed or of any other evil that through their default might redound unto their brethren Vers 9. Thou shalt not sow thy vineyard with divers seeds c. The main and principall end of this and the two following laws against plowing with an ox and an asse and against wearing garments of linsey-wolsey was I conceive one and the same to wit to teach them what exact p●rity and sincerity God required in them that were his peculiar people and how hatefull to God all mixtures were in spirituall things There was not in it self any evil at all in wearing a garment made of linen and wollen together nor was
let him give her a writing of divorcement But I say unto you that whosoever shall put away his wife saving for the cause of fornication causeth her to commit adultery and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth adultery Vers 4. Her former husband which sent her away may not take her again to b● his wife after that she is defiled To wit by marrying and lying with a second husband her first husband being still living It seems that after a man had given his wife a bill of divorce and sent her away if he repented of what he had done and was reconciled to his wife thus unjustly divorced before she had taken another husband he might with her consent cancell the bill of divorce and receive her again as his wife but after she had once marryed another husband he might not take her again no not after her second husband was dead and that because she was defiled But why is the wife here said to be defiled with lying with her second husband since by the law of God she might lawfully marry him I answer the most of Expositours say that it is because this her second marriage her first husband being yet living was against the first institution of marriage and so sinfull and onely tolerated for a time amongst the Jews because of the hardnesse of their hearts Matth. 5. 31 32. but yet because it is hard to say how it could be sin●e in her who was as it were perforce put away by her first husband especially since the Apostle hath determined in a like case to wit in the case of a wilfull separation that the innocent party may marry again 1. Cor. 7. 15. therefore others think that by being defiled here is meant onely her lying with her second husband which in a naturall way is accounted a pollution without any intimation of the sinfulnesse thereof or else her being defiled in regard of him that is one whom he might no more touch nor meddle with it being as it follows in the next words an abomination before the Lord that a man should deliver up his wife as it were to another mans bed and then take her when he pleased himself again Thou shalt not eause the land to sinne c. That is thou shalt not cause the land to be defiled with sinne and so to be liable to punishment or make others to sinne by thine example Vers 5. When a man hath taken a new wife he shall not go out to warre c. This law was for the exemption of those that had taken a new wife that is those that had newly marryed a wife from being sent forth to warre or from being charged with any businesse to wit any publick imployment that would necessarily cause him to be absent from his wife and the ground of this law was not so much the unfitnesse of such men for publick imployments in regard their minds would still be so much upon their wives as the providing for the settling of their love one to another as is manifest by the following words he shall be free at home one year and shall chear up his wife which he hath taken When a woman is newly marryed and so taken from her fathers house and family and transplanted into a new stock she is subject to grieve much and hath the more need to be tendered and cherished by her husband and besides if the first year by living lovingly together their hearts be once throughly settled one to the other there would be the more hope of wellknit affections for ever after and to give a priviledge to the new-marryed man in this respect was this law given the Israelites Vers 6. No man shall take the nether or the upper milstone to pledge c. For one of the milstones being gone the other is unusefull and by consequence the taking of any thing as a pledge that is of the like necessary use for the exercise of a mans calling or for the sustenance of his life is here forbidden See Exod. 22. 26. Vers 7. If a man be found stealing any of his brethren of the children of Israel c. See the note upon Exod. 21. 16. Vers 9. Remember what the Lord thy God did unto Miriam c. This example is added to render them the more carefull of what he had enjoyned in the foregoing verse to wit that in the plague of leprosie they should observe diligently and do according to all that the priests the Levites should teach them Remember saith Moses what the Lord thy God did unto Miriam that is remember how for her sinne and contempt of Moses the Lord struck her with leprosy and thereby be warned to take heed of sinning against God by slighting the directions of the Levites whom God hath set over you to teach you in all things what ye should do lest otherwise ye provoke God to punish you and to strike you with leprosy as he did her or rather Rem●mber what the Lord thy God did unto Miriam that is remember how she was by Gods speciall command shut out of the camp seven dayes untill she had been purified according to the law If she might not be exempted who then shall plead exemption See that therefore ye carefully observe those laws given concerning the shutting up of the lepers and the cleansing of them when they are healed and whatever else from the law of God the Levites shall direct you to do Vers 10. When thou dost lend thy brother any thing thou shalt not go into his house to fetch his pledge c. Some conceive that the end of this law enjoyning the pledge still to be brought to the doore was to make men carefull so to order their expenses that they might not be put in the sight of their neighbours to pawn their cloaths and to curb the creditour that he might not be too harsh and g●eedy in exacting a pledge But farre more probable that is which is held by most of Expositours namely that God did he●ein provide for the poore man both that the creditour might not pick and chuse his pledge where he pleased though it was that which he was very unwilling to part with but should be content wi●h that which should be brought out to him as likewise bec●●se poore men are usually ashamed that strangers should come in and in every corner behold their penury and want Vers 13. In any case thou shalt deliver him the pledge again when the sunne goeth down that he may sleep in his own raiment and blesse thee Concerning this law see the No●e upon Exod. 22. 26. As there the Lord presseth this work of mercie upon his people by threatning that if by keeping away such a necessary pledge the poore man were provoked to crie unto him he would heare his cries and be avenged on such a hard-hearted creditour so here also by promising that in case they did herein shew mercie to the poore the poore should blesse them
to look to the ark and the other holy things And Moses commanded them saying At the end of every seven years c. The summe of this passage is briefly this that Moses commanded the priests to read this book of the law every seventh year which was the year of release amongst the people and that upon the feast of tabernacles that year Concerning the year of release and the phrase here used At the end of every seven years see the note upon chap. 15. 1. But besides for the fuller understanding of this passage we must note first That the law which the priests were here enjoyned to reade amongst the people every seventh year on the feast of tabernacles was the originall copie of this book of the law which Moses wrote and which he now delivered to the priests to be kept by them Doubtlesse some part of the book of the law was read amongst them by the Levites every Sabbath day Acts 15. 21. For Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach him being read in the Synagogues every Sabbath day nor can it be questioned but that the people had books of the law in the reading whereo● they did dayly in private exercise themselves if this were required of their kings chap. 17. 18 19. much more may we think it was required of them that were of inforiour rank But yet once in seven years God would have this book to be read by the priests from the beginning to the end amongst the people both that being read in such a solemn manner it might take the deeper impression in them and so cause them to fear the Lord their God and to observe to do all the words of this law as it follows vers 12. and perhaps also that it might be made manifest to all Israel that those copies of the law which they had and which were read and expounded to them every Sabbath day did agree with this originall which Moses wrote and secondly that the reason why God appointed this to be done on the year of release was not onely because that year they had most liberty of mind to intend that service the l●nd lying that year at rest and themselves being freed from the danger of having their debts exacted of them but also because it was a holy year the Sabbath of years and so the fitter for this extraordinary duty and thirdly that this was appointed to be done at the feast of tabernacles that year because then all Israel came to appear before the Lord as it is said vers 11. for though the males onely were bound to come up at the feast Exod. 23. 17. yet they did usually carry with them their women also and therefore it is said vers 12. Gather the people together men and women and children c. that they may hear and that they may learn c. Vers 14. Call Joshua and present your selves in the tabernacle of the congregation c. This was thus done that the people might be fully satisfied that he was called of God to this place and that Joshua himself might be put in mind that he was but Gods deputy and so might still acknowledge Gods sovereignty over him and be the more faithfull in discharging the trust which God had put into his hands Vers 16. This people will rise up and go a whoring after the gods of the strangers of the land whither they go to be amongst them The gods whom they have vanquished as it were that could neither preserve themselves nor the people that served them for the worshipping whereof the land had spewed out these her inhabitants Vers 17. I will forsake them and I will hide my face from them c. That is I will cast them off and take no more charge of them as my people and so when all kind of miseries do then come upon them though they seek for me to help yet I will hide my face from them a●d will not regard them Vers 19. Now therefore write ye this song for you and teach it the children of Israel c. To wit that which followeth in the following chapter containing a prophecy of their falling away from God and Gods just judgement upon them for this their apostacy It was given in a song that it might be the better remembred and might the more work upon their affections and the Israelites were to learn and sing it that in time to come when they should so provoke God by their sinnes as is there set forth and God should thereupon punish them with those very evils which are there foretold this song as out of their own mouths might be a witnesse for God against them to wit that the evils they suffered were of Gods sending as being the very judgements which God had long since threatned and that God had in that song given them warning enough and they were therefore inexcusable because notwithstanding this warning they had brought these miseries upon themselves Vers 21. For I know their imaginations which they go about even now That is what they will do hereafter I know now yea I see the false hypocrisie of their hearts and their pronenesse to idolatrie even at this present This I conceive is the drift of these words yet it might be also intended to intimate that there were some amongst them that had base apostatizing tho●ghts already in their hearts Vers 26. Take this book of the law and put it in the side of the ark of the covenant c. That is not the ark for there was nothing in the ark save the two tables of stone which Moses put there in Horeb 1. Kings 8. 9. but on the outside of the ark where was the pot of Manna and Aarons rod. And this was appointed to signifie that it was the law of God though written by Moses and so the people might heare it with the more reverence and attention when it was brought forth thence and read amongst them and withall that God would keep and preserve it and take vengeance on those that should disregard and dispise it Indeed this was that very book which was found in the treasurie of the temple in Josiahs time 2. Chron. 34. 14. and therefore it seems it was removed from the ark in after-ages and kept in some other place of the temple wherein seeing they transgressed the directions which God here gave to the priests no marvell though this precious treasure was for some years lost and not looked after Vers 28. That I may speak these words in their ears and call heaven and earth to record against them See the note chap. 4. 26. CHAP. XXXII Vers 1. GIve ear O ye heavens and I will speak and hear O earth c. That is the song mentioned in the former chapter which God gave Moses vers 19. and commanded him to teach the people And this Rhetoricall expression which Moses useth in the beginning of this song is to imply first of what great importance