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A85667 An exposition continued upon the sixt, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. Delivered in severall lectures in London, By William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1649 (1649) Wing G1854; Thomason E577_1; ESTC R206361 436,404 591

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of it the like doe these the Prophets they seduce soules that is Men and Women with a false hope of peace and good dayes and so the evill day comes upon them unthought of and they are made a prey Will you hunt the soules of my people By this Interrogation the Lord manifests his displeasure they thought it was free for them to deceive the people with their Pillowes and Kercheifes with their flattering words false promises and to make gaine of them but the Lord would not let things passe so will you hunt their soules spoyle and prey upon them you shall be hunted your selves and taken in your lying Prophefies Will you save the soules alive of them that come unto you The Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Animat vobis vivificebitis will you make alive soules unto you these words may referre either to the false Prophetesses or to others if to the false Prophetesses the sense is this will you delude my people with vain hopes with promises of life and happy days that you may get from them meat and drink that so you may quicken and keep alive your owne soules what will you destroy your soules with your errours to feed your owne with bread and so Piscator reads the words Doe you hunt the soules of my people Vt animat vobis vivas conservetis if to others the sense is thus you hunt the soules of the people you insnare them with your lyes divinations and fained visions and will yee save them alive that come to you and beleeve what you say No while you perswade them they shall live you take away their life from them the very taking of them with your falshoods is their death you serve them as hunters their game when it s taken they kill it And will yee pollute me among my people c. This Verse containes severall sins also of these wicked Prophetesses 1. Their pollution of Gods Name 2. Their covetousnesse Handfuls of Barley and pieces c. 3. Their cruelty Slaying of Soules 4. Their partiality they slew those should have lived and spared those should have dyed Then the manner how all these were done By their lyes Will yee pollute me c. They pretended they were sent and authorised of God to prophesie that they had the spirit of God and were true Prophetesses that what ever they delivered should come to passe they crossed the true Prophets they strengthened the people in their finfull practises they made Prophesie contemptible and so prophaned the Name of the Lord caused many to fall to Atheisme and Apostasie This God would not beare at their hands therefore saith Will yee For handfuls of Barley and pieces of Bread This is a kind of proverbiall speech setting out the meannesse of that worke which is so cheape Prophesie with them was at a vile and low price if any brought never so meane a reward as a little Barley in his hand or a crust of bread with him to these deluding Prophetesses presently they had a pleasing answer had these Women set their lying Prophesies at the highest rate it had not been warrantable to have prophaned Gods glorious Name for great rewards but for such petty gaine to expose his Name to scorne was extreamly wicked Cato upbraided Marcus Coelius as Gellius hath it Quod frusto panis conduci possit ut taceat vel loquatur To stay the soules that should not dye c. By soules you must understand Persons for soules are not to be slaine Matth. 10.28 They prophesied against the godly that they should dye and so deprived them of their peace comfort and apprehensions they had of Gods favour filled them with fears griefes and sad th ughts if they harkened to Jeremiah and submitted to Nebuchadnez●ar Or thus they stirred up the people against them were godly and would not adhere to them beleeving their Prophesies and provoke the Magistrates to restraine them yea to cut them off and so slew them before their time they should have lived longer by the course of nature had not these blood thirsty Prophetesses hastened their death To save the soules alive should not live They promised life peace happinesse to those they should have threatned Warre misery death Zedekiah and many with him had broken the bath made with Nebuchadnezzar to be tributaries to him and so deserved death upon that ground others oppressed filled the Land with bloody-crimes were notoriously Idolatrous and not worthy to live yet these were justified pleaded for and protected against the power of any would have had Justice executed It s not against the judgement of some learned ones to understand death and life here of eternall death and life these Women teachers threatned the righteous with eternall death shut Heaven upon them and opened Hell wide enough upon them and what lay in them slew their soules and for the others they promised Heaven and all joyes of it to them and so saved them alive they should not That its an old practice of Satan to trouble the Church as with false Prophets Obser 1. so with false Prophetesses God raysed up Women Prophets to honour that Sex and to helpe his people and the Devill rayses up Women to spread lyes to deceive and damnifie the people and to gaine by that Sex the more to his Kingdome Satan imitates God if he will have hee or shee Prophets the like will he have In the Church of Thyatyra was a Jezabel which called her selfe a Prophetesse to teach and seduce the servants of Christ to commit fornication and to eate things sacrificed to Idols Revel 2.20 Jezabel disturbed Israel opposed and sought the death of the true Prophets maintained Idolatry so did this other Jezabel c. Nehem. 6.14 There is mention of one Noadiah a Prophetesse shee with other false Prophets prophesied against the building of the Temple incouraged Sanballat Tobias and others to hinder it laboured to possesse Nehemiah and the builders with feare Such there have been in former dayes and such will be Women that take upon them to teach and deceive unwary people such were Prisca and Maximilla the companions of Montanus the Heretick such are the Jesuitesses 2. It s the Character of false Teachers of what kinde soever Women or Men to flatter sooth insinuate and speak pleasing things the false Prophets cryed peace c. these false Prophetesses sow pillowes to all armeholes c. yea their scope is to please all sorts they observe the humours of men and so apply themselves to please answerably Isa 30.10 this was the disposition of the people Prophesie not unto us right things speake unto us smooth things prophesie deceit 2 Tim. 4.3 People would have Teachers after their owne lusts 3. False Prophesies flattering and erroneous Doctrines are the Snares and Nets with which false Teachers doe hunt soules Prov. 6.26 An Adultresse hunts for the precious life and these for the precious soules Ephes 4.14 They lye in wait to deceive Revel 20.8 It s the Devils
Idolaters to know the true God from the false When Gods hand is upon the Mountaines Hils Valleys Cities High places Altars and their slain fallen then shall they know that I am the Lord Jehovah not an Idoll god but the true the living God that have being of my selfe that give being to my promises and threats that take being from others you would not beleive my Prophets but you shall know there was truth in their threats and power in me to make them good CHAP. VI. 8. Yet will I leave a remnant that yee may have some that shall escape the Sword among the Nations when yee shall bee scattered through the countries 9. And they that escape of you shall remember me among the Nations whither they shall be carryed captives because I am broken with their whorish heart which hath departed from mee and with their eyes which goe a whoring after their Idols and they shall loath themselves for the evills which they have committed in all their abominations 10. And they shall know that I am the Lord and that I have not said in vaine that I would doe this evill unto them HERE is the second part of the Prophesie viz. A promise of mercy The eighth Verse is of the nature of the third Verse in the fifth Chapter where the Prophet was bid to bind up a few haires in his Skirts And here GOD would leave a remnant the Sword and dispersion should not devoure all Gods wrath is never so hot against his people Obser but he will shew mercy to some God would bring a sweeping Judgment lay Mountaines Hils Rivers Valleys Cities High places Altars Idols Images waste and desolate yet he would leave a remnant preserve some when in the midst of their enemies amongst Babylonians and other Nations In the fifth Chapter verse 12 God would scatter them and draw out a Sword after them It was great wrath to be driven out of their Countrey to be in banishment which Lawyers call a civill death because men in it are divided from their friends liberties and comforts which sweeten their lives but to have the Sword at their heels added to the weight of wrath threatens all their lives yet notwithstanding this condition God reserved some from the Sword in their banishment They might upon this severe prophesie thinke what will become of the Church shall all perish and Gods faithfulnesse faile No God would have a care of that a remnant he would save Stormes may be so terrible and lasting that the C urch may be brought low not be visible yet it shall never be extinct when the Prophets were cut off by Jezabel there were a hundred hid in Caves by Obadiah 1 Kings 18. When Elijah thought himselfe alone and his life at the stake too the Lord told him there were seven thousand in Israel lay dormant which had not bowed their knees to Baal 1 Kings 19.18 When Herod slice all the children in Bethleem and all the coasts thereof from two yeares old and under yet Christ escaped he was preserved And as in that storme God preserved the head so in every storme he will preserve the body At the Massacre in France all Protestants were not cut off and the Warres of Ireland have not devoured all The Church shall never cease being the gates of Hell shall never prevaile against it 9. And they that escape of you shall remember me c. In this verse is the fruit of divine mercy towards them First They shall remember me Secondly Loath themselves for the evils they have committed Thirdly the ground of both these Because I am broken with their whorish heart and whorish eyes Fourthly the place where they should doe it Among the Nations Remember me They shall know then that I am God infinitely differing from the gods that they have chosen that my wo●ship is spirituall and admits not mixtures of men they shall remember my holinesse that I hate all false wayes of worship my Justice that I have not done any wrong to them in ruining their Countrey and Temple and scattering them in all quarters they shall remember my bounty and love to them and how they forgate me and abused all they shall remember my mercy in preserving them from the Pestilence the Famine the Sword and their taunting Adversaries and say we all deserved to have been destroyed and rooted out for ever but the Lord is gracious ha●h had compassion on us and spared our lives we will therefore repent of our ways returne to him trust in him and give glory to his name all which are implyed in the word Remember So it is used Psal 137.1 There is remembrance and we●ping joyned together Psal 22.27 there is remembrance and ●urning Psal 20 7. Remembrance is there for trusting Psal 63.5 6. Praising and remembring goe together and when men fall to Idolatry they are said to forget God Judges 3.7 implying that remembring of God is to worship him his owne way and so to glorifie his name Broken with their whorish heart The Vulgar reads it Actively I have broken their heart The word is Passive Nishbarti I am broken Here is great difference and the Vulgar is cor●upt and the Greek mistakes which reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have sworne to their hearts the ground of which error is they took it to be Nishbagnti for Nishbarti Some would have it I have bought their whorish hearts that were for Idols and any thing but me because the word is twice or thrice in the Scripture used in that sense Gen. 41.57 All Countries came into Aegypt to Joseph for to buy Corn. Hishbar ad frangendum Montanus reads it Hammashbir faciebat frangere Montanus And 42.6 Joseph sold to all the people of the Land and so in the fifth verse But the common sense of the word is to break and it s truly rendred I am broken with their whorish heart God had taken this people to be his as a Man takes a Woman to be his Wife but they had whorish hearts and went out from God to Idolls they had a spirit of whoredomes in them that caused them to erre and goe a whoring from under their God Hos 4.12.9.1 They were not content with Gods love his Ordinances his worship but they would try what the gods of the Heathen were what their way and worship was prostitute themselves to them and this troubled the sight of God afflicted hi● soule brake his heart as a mans is by the whorish acts of his Wife We say a Man or Woman break much that have much trouble jealousie care sorrow God was troubled with jealous of carefull and sorrowfull for his people above all others and this even brake the heart of God Their courses grieved him exceedingly great griefe vexeth the heart and lyeth like a mighty weight upon it Hence that in Amos 2.13 Behold I am pressed under you as a cart is pressed with sheaves The griefe God took at their courses was as a
preserved they being under heavy pressures from God and man yet they are brought to know God to loath themselves and their former wayes these were times wherein they had no sacrificing little or no helpe for their soules but lay in darknesse and notwithstanding all this God shewed mercy neither their sinnes nor the sinnes of the place both which were great nor the time of wrath they were under for so it s cal'd Isa 54.8 could obstruct the free grace of God but some he spares some he touches with the lively sense of their sins and puts into a state of grace in the midst of enemies of sins of judgements God could shew mercy in Babylon as well as Zyon let the holy Land holy City holy Temple holy Altar holy Sacrifices and all the holy things be layd waste and persons be brought to the greatest improbabilities of finding mercy be as great sinners as any living as these were and in Babylon yet God is free can will doth shew mercy even to such in such a place and at such a time when his wrath is powring out Manasseh was a great sinner a Murtherer an Idolater a Sorcerer carryed into Babylon and in the eye of all in a hopelesse condition yet there God visits him his spirit breaths and blows upon him 2 Chron. 33.11 12 13. he humbles his soule greatly prayes effectually is returned to Jerusalem and knowes the God of his Fathers Nothing could keep off God from shewing mercy God tooke Abraham the Father of the Faithfull from Vr of Chaldaea he found favour among Idolaters and God shewed mercy to his Posterity Gen. 6. Acts 2. even in that Land When all flesh had corrupted its wayes yet mercy was showne to Noah Yea those put Christ to death had their hearts pricked To the Gentiles that had lived in abominable Idolatries God granted repentance unto life Acts 11.18 There is nothing in man in any place or time that can impede God from shewing mercy that is an act of his will nothing in us moves him to it nothing in us hinders him from it I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have comp●ssion on whom I will have compassion Rom 9.15 Obser 3 3. That often God shews the choisest mercy when he hath cause to execute the sharpest judgement they shall remember me because I am broken with their whorish hearts had they broken Gods heart he had cause to have broken their bones and destroyed them utterly but the Lord would deale graciously with them and in stead of destruction cause them to remember him to loath themselves and to come in to feare and serve him They would not feare remember and honour God in Zyon where they had the Prophets the Ordinances of God and mercies of all sorts but provoked God to plague them and when they were ripe for destruction and nothing to be expected but severity even then doth God deale graciously with them Isa 57.17 18. saith God For the iniquity of his covetousnesse was I wroth and smote him I hid me and was wroth and he went on frowardly in the way of his heart He adds sin to sin in a presumptuous manner and what could be looked for now but destruction Doth the great and glorious God smite and doth man sin more Yes he doth and God sees it and what then I have seene his wayes and will heale him Not wound him more not destroy him but I will heale him I will lead him also and restore comforts to him and to his mourners Isaiah 43.24 25. Thou hast made me to serve with thy sinnes thou hast wearyed me with thine iniquities And what then I even I am hee that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Gods thoughts are not as mans that which is argument of death in mans apprehension is argument of mercy and life in Gods Psal 25.11 David knew it therefore presseth God with an argument might have undone him in the judgement of reason O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great God might have said therefore will I not pardon thee because thy sinne is great I have suffered much by thee by thy murther and adultery and thinkest thou that I will pardon such great sins Is this an argument to come to mee withall I have as great wrath as thou hast sins thou art a man of death for what thou hast done thou shouldest dye by the Law for thy murther and dye for thy adultery and thou hast given the sentence thy selfe The man that hath done this shall surely dye and bound it thou hast with an Oath as the Lord liveth 2 Sam. 12.5 and therefore dye thou must thou shalt Such language as this might David have looked for but he heares of pardon and that from the mouth of a Prophet and when he mov'd God with the argument of the greatnesse of his sinnes he did it in the judgement of faith knowing it would be much for the honour of God to pardon great sinnes that he was as ready to shew mercy as his sinnes had made him ripe for judgement Hosea 2.13 14. Israel followed Baalim and forgate God had hee not now cause to destroy her It was Gods way to destroy such Psal 73.27 Yet it follows Therefore behold I will allure her and bring her into the Wildernesse and speake comfortably unto her Because shee had fo●got God God would remember her because shee had been drawne away by Idols God would allure her from Idols because shee had vexed God he would comfort her Here God lets out choise mercy when he had cause to execute severe wrath When Peter had denyed Christ thrice and forswore him and the knowledge of him was there not cause that Christ should have renounced him smitten him with some great Judgement Matth. 26.72 74. and made him an example for Selfe-confiders and Christ-denyers to the end of the World Surely Christ had cause enough and the opportunity for it was faire before him but Christ turned and look't upon Peter and in stead of ruining him rayses him Obser 4 4. False worship doth most afflict God I am broken with their whorish heart Their Idolatries Superstitions and corruptions did not simply displease or grieve God but oppressed afflicted broke the heart of God great injuries enter deep worke strongly eate up the spirits of any they are done unto and what greater wrong can be done to God then to set at naught his counsels to forsake his Worship to withdraw from his Government and to proclaime to the World that there are better ways then his and better Gods then himselfe Those are Idolatrous and worship God a false way they doe so by God therefore Jer. 3.5 it s sayd of them that they did speak and doe evill as they could men cannot doe more to breake God then to worship Idols wrong gods or the true God a wrong way Such sins breake Gods Covenant Deut. 31.16 This
should be no advantage to them Quest But why did Jeremie purchase land after this time In Jer. 32. you shall finde hee bought land in the tenth yeare of Zedekiah when Jerusalem was besieged when himselfe was in prison vers 2. He bought Hanameell sold subscribed and seal'd the evidences which Baruch put into an earthen vessell and hid for many dayes Answ 1 1. The right of Redemption belonged to him he being the nearest kinsman was to doe it see Levit. 25.24 Ruth 4.4 But there were Wars in the gate and when Wars are awake Inter arma silent leges the Laws do sleep 2. Hee had speciall warrant for it vers 8. Hee saith then I knew that this was the Word of the Lord that Hanameel came to him and bade him buy his field hee knew that it came from God and it had been sin in him not to have done it 3. He purchased this Land by faith knowing that the Captivity should not exceed 70. years and that there should be a repossession of houses fields Vineyards after the captivity ver 15. and believed that the holy seede should return Ezekiel spake of those present in Jerusalem that should be caried away perish and not return For the Vision is touching the multitude thereof which shall not returne These words must be cautiously observed the multitudes returning must not here be understood but the vision shall not returne The Hebrew is the vision to the multitude thereof shall not return or the vision shall not return to the multitude thereof there is no which in the Hebrew which makes the doubt in the English and alters the sense The vision shall not returne that is the propheticall threatning I have had touching the besieging and destroying of Jerusalem and the whole Land shall not be in vaine the Prophesie denounc'd against them shall not return void be without successe it shall not be recalled but stand firme not be reiterated once shall suffice by that time the truth of this prophesie is executed and weight of it fallen upon you there will be no thought of possessions or place of inheriting lands Some read it the vision to all the wealth making the sense to be a threatning of their estates to be plundered and spoyled which they trusted so much unto this is supposed in the other for the Prophesie taking hold upon them their estates could not be safe Neither shall any strengthen himselfe in the iniquity of his life The Hebrew is a man in his iniquity of his life shall not strengthen or thus a man shal not strengthen himself whose life is in his iniquity it 's so in the Margin Not comfort saith the Vulgar where there is comfort there is some strengthning men have thoughts to strengthen themselves in their wicked wayes but it shall not be not their Councels not their multitudes not their riches not their priviledges not their confederacies with others not their Military preparations not their serving of false Gods nothing shall strengthen them against the Chaldeans to withstand them The iniquity of their lives is stronger to ruine them then all the strength they have besides can make to defend them It 's not their art policy power that shall deliver them from the Judgement decreed and threatned sometimes mens iniquities their malice violence blasphemies stubbornesse makes others forbear them and loose their right rather then they will meddle with them But here it shall not be so the greater their Iniquities the rather the sooner would God punish them Or thus you have heard many threats and heavy judgments against the City and Land but you are secure you repent not you goe on justifying your wayes thinking all well that we the Prophets are lyars that there is no danger or feare but you shall know that your wayes are sinfull and will not afford comfort or strength to stand it out in the evill day no man ever got strength by or in Iniquity Observ 1 That the things of this life are litle to be valued we should not be solicitous about them for the time may come that wrath may be upon them and what are they then worthlesse comfortlesse vexing things it vexed many of them that their estates should fall into Chaldeans hands and the price of desirable things was abated the buyer was not to rejoyce nor the seller to mourn for neither the one or the other had got or lost much and what ever they had should come to nothing If men magnifie temporals and exalt the price of them God will vilifie them and make them at a low rate all the wealth of Judah and Jerusalem was now to be a prey to the Adversary yea their Gardens Orchards Vineyards Lands Houses Wives Children and what ever was considerable amongst them should be taken from them Now there was no Terra firma in that Kingdom all things were moveable in fluxe upon the wing and little cause had they to laugh or weepe for those things the like is our condition at this present all uncertain much in the Enemies hand therefore as the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29 Let them that have wives be as though they had none they that weepe as though they wept not they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not and thou that buy as though they possessed not Now let mens hearts be off from all so looke upon all conditions all possessions as uncertain as nothing as taken from you as departing from them Let your thoughts be upon the inheritance that is incorruptible undefiled and that sadeth not away which is reserved in heaven 1 Pet. 1.4 Observ 2 2. Covetous men are glad of good bargains though wrath be upon them they look at the gains not the wrath necessity danger made men sell all and covetousnesse made others buy all and because they had much for a little they rejoyced but little cause had they for the wrath of God was upon all they bought Covetousnesse is watchfull for advantages of gaine but blind in discerning wrath accompanying that gain Josh 7. Achans covetousness caused him to take the Garment the sheckles of Silver and wedge of Gold But it blinded him so that hee saw not the cursednesse of them nor the stony death that followed them In Lots dayes there was buying and selling till the fire consumed what was bought sold together with the buyer and seller Luke 17.28 29. Covetousnesse is greedy of its prey even when death is in it it wil buy houses when fire is kindled in them and land when the curse of God is upon it beware therefore of this sinne saith he Luke 12.15 For a mans life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth his death and his destruction may be in them they cannot adde to his life or the true comfort of it but they may take away from it James 5.3 The rust of their gold and silver shall witnesse against them and eate their flesh as fire Observ 3 3.
of calamity and destruction is towards them nay destruction is upon them No sooner doth God turn away from a Nation but destruction steps into that Nation Deu. 31.17 I will hide my face from them they shall be devoured many evils and troubles shall befal them so that they will say in that day Are not these evils come upon us because our God is not amongst us Where you may see that Gods hiding his face is departing from them and his departing lets in all miseries when God is gone nothing is left but sinne and judgment and they make fearful work in all places If God would pity people under destruction it were something but he wil not pity them then not hear their groans receive their prayers or mind their tears wounds blood death Jer. 18.17 I will shew them the backe not the face And when In the day of their calamity when they are in their greatest distresses necessities without councell help comfort even at the height of misery I will not vouchsafe them one look but goe away from them in fury leave them without hope my back shall be toward them and not my face Jer. 14.12 3. When the holy God goes away from his holy places then prophane polluting wretches come into them I will turne away my face and robbers shall pollute my secret place Thither should they come whether none but the holy God and High Priest were to come and whereas before it was filled with a Cloud with Incense with Glory and the presence of God now it should be filled with Burglers Idolaters oaths and all prophaness which could not but affect the Jewes that were so zealous of preserving the Temple unpolluted by strangers Acts 21.27 28. A great stir was made against Paul by the Jews because he had brought Greeks into the Temple and polluted it Joseph l. 7. de Bell. c. 4. and in his 5. booke of Anti. c. 14. he saith capitale erat Gentili ingredi Templum And when the Jewes were under the Roman Emperours they obtained of them that none no not a Roman should enter into the Temple under pain of death yet themselves polluted it with false worship drave God out of it and of the holiest of holies and made way for the worst of men to come in and defile the same CHAP. VII 23. Make a chaine for the Land is full of bloody crimes and the City is full of violence IN this Verse is another calamity and the cause of it laid downe The calamity is a chaine the cause blood violence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Make a Chaine Trouble saith the Sept. a Conclusion the vulgar the Hebrew is a Chaine and so it 's rendered in 1 Kings 6.21 Chaines and so the Rabbies take it here we may extend it to a roap a wyth a chaine any thing that a man may be bound with A chain is an embleme of bondage Nabum 3.10 Her great ones shall be bound in chains Psalm 107.10 Acts 12.6 Jerem. 28.13 14. The yoke of Iron that the Prophet was to make noted the imbondaging of the Nations unto Nebuchadnezzar King of Babylon Whether by the Chaine be prefigured the siege of Jerusalem as some interpret it or leading into captivity as others will have it Bondage is included in both Some thinke the Lord here alludes to Malefactors that in chaines answered at the Bar of Justice as Paul did Acts 26.29 They had freely and fully runne out in vitious courses but now they were to answer it to God who was set in judgement and sentencing them to suffer heavy things This also notes bondage which is the sense of the Prophet In a Chain 4 things are considerable First It 's burthensome heavy 1 Kings 12.10 Thy father made our yoake heavy And yokes chaines fetters about neckes armes legges are grievous when Peter was bound with two chaines Acts 12.6 it was troublesome unto him and so was the condition of these Jewes the siege their captivity was very burthensome therefore Lam. 3.7 the Church saith hee hath made my chaine heavy Shee cals her bondage a chaine and a heavy one 2. It 's restrictive a mans liberty of going and doing is taken away by a chaine Acts 21.23 When Paul was bound with chaines whither could he goe what could he doe and bondage by a siege captivity Imprisonment sicknesse or otherwise is a restraint of a man which are threatned here Jehoahaz was put in bands at Riblath that hee might not reigne in Jerusalem 2 Kings 23.33 3. Reproachfull 2 Tim. 1.16 Onesiphorus was not ashamed of my chaine There is shame and reproach attending chain● and therefore Paul at the Bar when he wished Agrippa and others were such as he was excepted his bonds as reproachfull things Acts 26.29 This is threatned here and was made good Jerem. 39.7 Zedekiah had his eyes put out and was bound with two brazen chaines and so the thing he feared came upon him mocking and reproach Jer. 38.19 And not only he but all of them should be for a curse an astonishment an hissing and a reproach among all Nations Jer. 29.18 4. Tendency to further punishment Paul was bound Acts 21.33 with two chains And Acts 24.27 two yeares hee lay in bonds and to what end that he might come to judgement and have further punishment and he was to that purpose brought before Agrippa and Festus Acts 26.29 and that in bonds they tend to other and sorer judgements Hence the Devils are said to be in chaines of darknesse reserved unto judgement 2 Pet. 2.4 Jude 6. They have not their full damnation they are semi-damnati halfe condemn'd and kept in chaines for the rest and here God would chain up these Jewe with bondage and rese ve them in bondage to further pun●●hment even eternall destruction Job 21.30 The wicked are reserved to the day of d●struction they shall be brought forth to the day of wrath The Land is full of bloody crimes The Hebrew is the judgement of bloods they gave out unjust sentences that had power and condemn'd the innocent guilty men were spared and the good suffered 2 King 21.16 Manasses filled Jerusalem with innocent blood Athaliah slew all the Royal seed 2 Kings 11.1 Naboth is falsly condemn'd ston'd to death 1 King 21.13 Zechariah is slain by an unjust sentence 2 Chron. 24.21 Joash the King was slain by his servants vers 25. Hence it s said Isa 59.3 That their hands were defiled with blood that they were full of blood Isa 1.15 And here that the land is full of bloody crimes Ezek. 22.6 Every Prince in Israel to his power did shed blood By bloody crimes some understand heinous sins capitall offences such as deserv'd death and the shedding of mens blood as Idolatry Deut. 13.6.9 Blasphemy Levit. 24.16 Witchery sorcery Lev. 20.27 Buggery Levit. 20.15 16. Sodomie vers 13. Adultery vers 10. Rapes Deut. 22.25 False witnessing to take away a mans life Deut. 19.16.18 19.21 Stealing any man
days Verse 14. the Temple and worship of it were polluted Thirdly Trusted too and sent for Aegiptians to help him Jer. 37.7 he would not hearken to Gods counsell to the true Prophets to those advis'd him well Jer. 36.25 Chap. 37.2 but to false Prophets and wicked Counsellors Fourthly He hated imprisoned and persecuted the Prophets 2 Chron. 36.16 Jer. 37.21 Fifthly Injust and cruell let Jeremy be put to death say the Princes Jer. 38.4 Then Zedekiah sayd Hee is in your hands the King can doe nothing against you c. verse 5. He was overpowred by the Princes and durst not displease them but it cost dear at last Look upon other Kings they had their sins and their sorrows Rehoboham hearkens to ill Counsell oppresses his people and looses ten Trib●s at once for it Jeroboam upon wicked advice sets up Calves restraines the people from the true worship at Jerusalem Gods sends him a dreadful message by Ahij●h 1 King 14.6 7 8 c. Ahab did not execute Justice upon Benhadad a man appointed to death and therefore sayth the Prophet Thy life shall goe for his life and thy people for his people 1 Kings 20.42 The Court was very wicked then Jezabell had the greatest power in it she stir'd up Ahab to work wickednesse she set the Elders and Nobles awork to accuse and stone Naboth to death but there was a time of mourning for them 1 Kings 21.23 24 27. Ahaz was wicked and the worse for his affl ctions but God had a sad day for him when he lost 120000 valiant men in one day and had 200000 Women carryed away Captives 2 Chro. 28. Asa who was a good King yet he is branded with trusting in an arme of flesh 2 Chron. 16.7 With oppression of some of the people Verse 10. and therefore Hanani tels him he should have Warres and besides he was greatly diseased in his feet Vers 9.12 Manasses was the great oppressing King he shed and filled Jerusalem with innocent blood 2 Kings 21.16 and as he sound times to shed blood so God found times to have him in the thornes in Fetters in Captivity in mourning and humbling himselfe Oppression is the common sinne of Princes because they have greatnesse and power in their hands they think its warrantable for them to doe what they list Ephraim loveth to oppresse Hos 12.7 The Kine of Bashan the great ones that were strong and fat that had hornes and hoofs they opprest the poore and crush'd the needy a man and his house a man and his heritage Micha 2.2 Naboth and his Vineyard went both at once Hence the Princes of Jerusalem are called Roaring Lyons Zeph. 3.3 they are greedy of their prey they scare scatter and devour the flock but God will hunt these Lyons and judge these men of the Earth Psal 10.18 whose trade is oppression and hath promised a time when his Princes shall oppresse no more Ezek. 45.8 My Princes shall oppresse no more Either this Prophesie is not fulfilled or the oppressed in these dayes are not Gods people or the Princes who oppresse are not Gods Princes and if so say to the oppressing Kings and Queens of the Earth Humble your selves sit downe for your Principalities shall come downe even the Crown of your glory Jer. 13.18 See Acts 12.23 Rev. 6.15 Secondly That God hath apparrell for Princes and Nobles and what is it Desolation The Prince shall be cloathed with desolation God had an eye to the cloathing of the Great ones and their sin about the same and fits Garments for them such as they were not formerly used unto Great ones sin in their variety of Garments they have many lye spoiling by them when the nakednesse of others is seen for want of cloaths therefore God threats to take away their changeable Suits of Apparrell Isa 3.22 They sin in the strangenesse of them they will have strange fashions therefore Zeph. 1.8 God threatens to Punish the Princes and Kings Children and all such as are cloathed with strange Apparrell The Jewes had peculiar Garments appointed them Numb 15.38 Deut. 22.12 but they fetcht in Forraign garments made after the manner of the Heathens and Nations about them The Courtiers and great ones then as now affected strange and costly apparell were prodigall of their estates that way had their chests and wardrops fill'd with rich garments which at pleasure they put on to draw respect from men but wrath from God who cloath'd himself with vengeance that he might cloath them with desolation which was a strange Garment never put upon their backs before Isa 59.17 an unchangeable garment which lasted to their death God stripped them by the Chaldeans of their proud attire rich suits yea of all they had and cloath'd them with desolation hence Lam. 4.5 They that did feed delicately are desolate in the streets and they that were brought up in scarlet embrace the dunghill 3. Wheresoever is a generality of sinning there shall be a generality of suffering The King shall mourn the Prince shall be cloathed with desolation and the hands of the people of the Land shal be troubled The whole Nation was rebellious Ezek. 2.3 From the greatest to the least they were guilty Jer. 6.13 and therefore they should dye from the least to the greatest Jer. 44.12 God is impartiall in his judgements hee will not spare Kings Princes Nobles people but if their hearts heads hands be joyn'd in wickednesse they shall be joyn'd in punishment All flesh had corrupted it's wayes Gen. 6. and all flesh was drown'd in the floods of Gods wrath Gen. 7. The Sodomites were all guilty and none escaped the vengeance of eternall fire Jude 7. And here having all sin'd the wrath of God seiz'd upon them all Isa 65.12 You shall all bow down to the slaughter because when I called yee did not answer when I spake yee did not heare but did evill before mine eyes and did chuse that wherein I delighted not 4. That God smites sinners in that they have much offended with and should stand them in most stead in times of affliction The hands of the people c. They had sin'd with their hands severall wayes in making Idols Isa 2.9 Hosea 14.3 In shedding blood Isa 59.3 In acts of violence vers 6. They did evill with both hands earnestly Mich. 7.3 Even Princes and Judges had covetous hands God therefore smites them in their hands and whereas they should have been serviceable unto them now in their distresse they were troubled faint unuseful Before they had hands for the Queene of heaven Jer. 44.25 but now they had none for the God of heaven They had hands for the service of Aegyptians and Assirians Lam. 5.6 But now they had none to serve themselves in their personall callings or military affaires 5. The Lord observes the ways and works of all no Church no State no Person but what ever they doe comes under Divine cognizance their wayes and deserts were knowne to the Lord
God for ●● as man but he mediated then ut homo promissus now hee mediates ut homo exhibitus Isa 53.5 The Prophet speaking of Christ saith he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed The Prophets faith and in his the faith of the Jewish Church looked upon Christ as already wounded slain and fetched healing vertue from his stripes Christs death was their life his Crosse their crown 2. That the Lord Christ is the chief Commander of all Angelicall and humane forces he was in the midst of these six military Angels that were to bring in the Chaldean forces at the severall gates of the City Hee was their Generall from him they had their Commissions and without a word from him they could not stirre All power in heaven and earth was given him Math. 28. His prerogative it was and is to call forth Angels and send out Armies Rev. 19.4 The Armies which were in heaven followed him that is Christ hee was their Leader and his name is King of Kings and Lord of Lords vers 16. And certainly where Christ goes in the head of Armies there will bee great slaughter 3. When judgements are abroad and the godly are in danger Christ mediates and intercedes for them Now the Jewish Church and State were at the doore of destruction and publ●que calamities ready to involve all Christ he appears like a Priest with linnen cloaths to offer sacrifice on their behalfe and to mediate for them When imminent dangers were at hand or judgments upon the people the P●iests were to appear to stand between the Lord and them making intercession for them Num. 16.47 And so in Joel 2.17 Let the Priests the Ministers of the Lord weepe between the porch and the Altar and say spare thy people O Lord. And here Christ being a merc full h gh Priest shewes himselfe and interposeth for the Saints who were to meet with a terrible tempest The like did Christ when he was in the flesh on earth he saw what a storm was comming upon Jerusalem what persecution upon the Saints and therefore John 17. he intercedes with his Father for Apostles and believers vers 16.20 When Steven was questioned and in jeopardy of his ●if heaven was opened and he saw Christ standing at the right hand of God Christ pleaded his cause propitiated for his sins and incouraged him in his sufferings 4. Christ hath a speciall care of his in times of trouble he appears with an Inkhorn to write down w●●● is said and done against them to make known the mind of G●d to them to seal and discriminate them from others to giv●● m●●●ssi ●s to those he employes to cut off the enemies of ●is peo●l● Rev. 7 2 3. There were four Angels had power given them to ha●● the earth sea but there was another Angell ascending from the East having the seal of the living God viz. Christ for so Expositors understand it and this Angell the Lord Christ cryed with a loud voyce saying hurt not the earth neither the sea nor the trees till we have sealed the servants of God in their fore-heads Christ had great care of his Churches for by Earth Sea Trees some of the learned understand the Church in severall places by Earth the Inland Churches by Sea the Maritime and by Trees the mountaine and woodland Churches Christ would not have these hurt till all the godly in them were sealed It s prophecyed in Mal. 4.1 2. That when it 's a fiery day of the LORD the Sonne of righteousnesse shall rise with healing in his wings to them that feare the LORD Chap. 1.3 4. When the locusts came out of the bottomlesse pit and had power like Scorpions given them to sting and doe hurt there was a command that they should not hurt the grasse of the earth nor any green thing nor any tree That is No Christian that had life in him weak or strong but only those had not the seale of God in their fore-heads that is those had no life no greennesse in them and they were subject to hurt others Mar. 4. when the Disciples were in a grievous storm the waves beat so into the shipp that they fill'd it they were affraid and suspe●ted the care of Christ and therefore said Mr. carest thou not that we perish Yea saith Christ I have a speciall care of you and presently you shall see it he rebuked the winds said to the sea peace he still and immediately the wind ceased and there was a calme And from rebuking the winds Seas he fals to rebuke them for their fear and faithlesnesse they perceiv'd not yet that he cared for them aswell sleeping as waking though his body slept yet his spirit was awake his care for his is constant and intense When he was to leave the world how full of trouble were the hearts of his Apostles and how full of care and compassion was Christ towards them laying down severall grounds of comfort for them in the 14 15 16 and 17. Chapt. of John 5. Those are upon great and publique designs should begin with God consult with him These 7. here go in and stand by the Altar enquire of God what his pleasure is whither he will send them what he had to doe for them and what ever it was that hee would counsell and prosper them So have the Worthies of God done Ezra 8.21 When he was to come from Babylon about the great work of the Temple he sought God extraordinarily for direction assistance and protection which he obtain'd of God vers 23. Jehoshaphat when the Moabites Ammonites and others came out to warre against him hee began with the Lord in prayer and fasting and from him had encouragement and successe 2 Chro. 20. So Asa he began with God when Zerah had a thousand thousand in the field against him he knew that the Lord was the Lord of Hosts and that th●●e uncircumcised ones came against him therefore lookes up to him and saith O Lord thou art our God let not man prevaile against thee and hereupon the Lord smote the Ethiopians 2 Chron. 14.11 12. One reason why Armies miscary is because they confide in their owne strength and policy and leane not wholly upon the Lord seeking to him in the first place Joshuah miscaryed in a great businesse in making peace with the Gibeonites Josh 9. and the reason is given they asked not counsel at the mouth of the Lord vers 14. All businesses for the right managing and successe of them depend upon the Lord it 's he blesses or curses therefore it 's wisdome it 's necessary to looke up to him at the beginning lest through neglect of Divine Majesty wee lay the foundation of our enterprizes in wrath Christ being to choose Apostles which was a great work he prayed all night before Luke 6.12 13. And the Angels that were to powre out the vials
my Text and that is spare in my Text is pitty here And Deut. 7.16 Thine eye shall have no pitty upon them The Heb. is the same word thou shalt not spare upon them spare to execute vengeance upon them so that they are used promiscuously one interprets the other an eye not sparing is to shew no mercy no pitty That in 1 Sam. 24 10. clears it when some bade David kill Saul when he cut off the skirt of his garment saith he but mine eye spared thee that is had pitty on thee and I kil'd thee not if mine eye had not spared thee I had killed thee without pitty without mercy Jer. 21.7 He shall not spare them neither have pitty nor have mercy lo jachum velo jachmol velo jerachem the two first words are in my Text and they are both interpreted by the last not to spare not to pittie is to have no mercy what ever motives be thereunto Slay utterly olde and young In the Heb. it 's the old man the young man the maiden and little child all in the singular number which is put for the plurall Q. Here a great question is moveable how it stands with the justice of God to give charge for the destruction of little children which were innocent A. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for little children some take to be meant of such as could play in the streets and were under 20. years Gen. 47.12 Joseph nourished his Father and his brethren and all his Fathers houshold with bread according to their families 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the little ones Ad os parvuli they were not sucking children but such as could run up and down that Joseph nourished now if the little children be taken for such they might be guilty of great sins as the children that mocked the Prophet and so deserve death But take little children for such as have not committed actuall sinne even babes new born in the womb of which sort many perished in the flood and many in Sodome such God may cut off without impeachment of his justice 1. He hath an absolute dominion over his creatures hee is the potter and we are the clay if he make the vessell hee may break the vessell shall he not doe with his own as he please hee gives life to babes and he may take it from them when and how he pleases 2. They were defiled with originall sin and deserved death the wages of sinne be it originall or actuall is death and it matters not whether a naturall or a violent death therefore he forbade Jeremie to take a wife to have sonnes and daughters in Jerusalem and as for those sonnes and daughters should be borne there they and their fathers and mothers should be consumed by the sword and by famine Jer. 16.2 3 4. 3. They are parts of their parents part of their family part of their substance and God may punish the sinning parent in his child as well as in his stock 4. Had they lived it 's likely they would have trod in their fathers steps and sinn'd those great sinnes they did like them in Jer. 7.18 Children gather wood and the fathers kindle the fire and the women knead the dough Neither doth God punish upon prevision of future sinne but takes them away from present and future pollution 5. God might notwithstanding this outward temporal judgment have mercie on their soules questionlesse many children dye more terrible deaths then by the sword and yet perish not eternally Come not neare any upon whom is the marke Q. If this marke were not a visible marke how should they know them and spare them A. The Lord knew who were his though men knew them not and it 's probable such is the rage of the wicked against the godly that if they had had a little distinguishing character from others they would the rather have fallen upon them and cut them off but the Lord ordered the judgement so and their spirits so that they came not neare them The mark was inward in the fore-heads of their consciences and providence watched and wrought for them without God might dart a feare into them disable them from doing the mark'd ones any hurt divert them to other families and persons and this manner of speech is more then if he had said doe not kill them they might doe much hurt to them yet not kill them but when he saith Come not neare them God doth make a fence about them and compasseth them with this command and his favour in it as with a shield against all evill and wrong This deliverance of the mark'd ones from the slaughter-men is a type of Gods preserving his in all great and generall calamities and especially of freeing his Elect ones from hell and the furies thereof The Chaldeans must not come-neare the mark'd ones to destroy them and Devils must not come neare those Christ hath sprinkled with his blood to ruine and destroy them They are freed from the power of Sathan and eternall death Begin at my Sanctuary This was the holy place the habitation of God where his worship was where he gave out gracious answers unto them yet here they must begin Why here 1. They trusted in the holinesse of this place Jer. 7.4.10 When they had sin'd grievously they thought that if they came and worshipped there all was well they were delivered and cried out the Temple of the Lord God would begin with their confidence 2. They had greatly polluted that holy place there was the Idoll of Jealousie there was the forme of every creeping thing and abhominable beast pourtraied upon the walls there were men offering incense to those Idols there was the filthy Idoll Tammuz and women weeping for it there were men with their backs towards God the Arke and worshipping the Sun Eastward there they put the branch to their nose great abhominations were gotten into the Temple they must therefore begin there 3. The sins of the Priests and Prophets who belonged to the Temple were exceeding great they were messengers of God to the people and mouths of the people to God and above others should have been cleane holy gracious free from the sins of the times they should have been exemplary unto others but if you observe the Scripture a little you shall find they were patterns of all impiety to the people they were ignorant blinde dumb drunken Isa 28.7.56.10.12 Unclean filthy strengthening the hands of the wicked Jer. 23.14 Covetous cruell Isa 56.11 Micah 3.5 Conceited of their owne abilities Jer. 8.8 Flatterers and dealt falsely with the people Jer. 6.13 14.27.15 They perverted the word of the Lord Jer. 23.36 They rejected his word Jer. 8.9 They prophecyed their own dreames Jer. 23.7 and put it upon God saying he saith v. 31. They ruled with rigour Ezek. 34.4 They reproached slandered and complain'd of the true Prophets stirring up enemies against them and seeking their liberties and lives Jer. 26.8 9.11
them that feare the Lord Psal 34.7 They are invisible guards and do invisible things for us their hands work when we feel them not so the hand of providence is doing when wee slumber and discern it not Joseph is sold into Aegypt and it was not discern'd by the sellers or the sold what work God was about the hand of providence was secret but wrought strongly for the raising of Joseph and safety of Jacob and many thousands besides Mordecai will not bow to Haman was the hand discern'd here which was working Hamans ruine I believe not Haman goes on plots the death of all the Jewes had almost accomplished his desire but providence acts in an unexpected way and cuts off this bloody man A secret hand of heaven hath done the great things in all ages invisible vertue hath done more then all visible instruments In our Counsels Armies undertakings had not Gods hand of Providence wrought we had been ruin'd Was it not a strange hand of Providence that began the work in Scotland If ought be done in the work of Reformation amongst us is it not the hand of God rather then the hand of man Isa 1.25 I will turne my hand upon them and purely purge away their drosse Math. 8.3 Jesus put forth his hand and healed the leper If our leprosie he healed or healing it 's by the hand of Christ put forth The safety of this Nation is from a secret hand we are held and hid in the hollow and shadow of an invisible hand So the hand of the Spirit doth secret work in Sion Christ by the finger of God Luk. 11.20 by the spirit of God Mat. 12.28 cast out Devils It s this hand that mortifies and kils the lusts Rom. 8.13 It 's this hand which quickens and brings life Job 6.63 It 's this hand works holinesse in you that comforts and supplyes you that guides and seales you it s this hand that brings you out of the ways of sin errour death into the ways of Christ truth and life it s this hand makes all ordinances effectuall 2 Cor. 10.4 Our weapons are mighty through God to the pulling downe of strong holds Through God that is through the spirit of God weapons must be in some hand or other these were spirituall weapons and in the hand of the Spirit as well as in the Apostles hand else had they not been able to pull down strong holds 4. When Gods work is done we should hide up our hands that doe it the Cherub stretched out his hand took fire put it into Christs hand and what then the hand is hid under the wing Angels are not vain-glorious they seek not themselves but the honour of him they serve they say not this have I done hath my hand wrought they hold not forth their hand for mortals to admire or adore but rejoyce the work is done and hide up their hands This is a good president for us who are apt to be puft up with what we doe and to expose not onely the work but the hand also too much to view If actions be done and others reap the good thereof without selvish respects of ours it is Angelicall Paul was of this judgment and practic'd answerably 1 Cor. 15.10 I laboured more aboundantly then they all yet not I. See here how he hides up himselfe and puts all upon God Not I but the grace of God which was with me It was not Paul but Gods grace that did all the work So Isa 26.12 Thou hast wrought all our works in us we have done nothing but thou hast done all VERS 9 10 11 12 13. And when I looked behold the four wheels by the Cherubims one wheele by one Cherub and another wheele by another Cherub and the appearance of the wheels was as the colour of a berill stone And as for their appearances they four had one likenesse as if a wheele had been in the midst of a wheel When they went they went upon their four sides they turned not as they went but to the place whether the head looked they followed it they turned not as they went And their whole body and their backs and their hands and their wings and the wheels were full of eyes round about even the wheels that they four had As for the wheeles it was cryed unto them in my hearing O wheele IN these verses and most of the rest to the end is a description of the wheels and Cherubims which represent things earthly and heavenly and both under the command and dispose of Divine Majesty take things below in States or Churches they passe not without the interposure of Providence the hand of heaven acts in them takes things above they are not absolute there is one in the Throne over-rules them For the wheels which are the Principall subject of these verses and note out inferiour things and causes unto us they are 1. Described 2. Explained They are described 1. From their number four wheels 2. By their reference dependency or scituation they were by the Cherubims 3. By a particular and speciall distribution of one to another the 4. wheels were not altogether by the 4. Cherubims but one wheel by one Cherub another wheel by another Cherub 4. From their appearance or likenesse which was as the colour of a berill stone and those foure are in the ninth verse 5. From their likenesse and coherence among themselves they 4. had one likenesse c. vers 9. 6. From their motion vers 11. They went which is set out 1. From the way they went to those parts were upon their sides into those quarters of the world which were next them whither the head looked 2. Their progresse they turn'd not backe but went on 7. From their eyenesse vers 12. Their whole body backs hands wings were full of eyes 2. The explication of the wheels and that is in the 13. verse it was cryed O wheel O world I have spoken largely of the wheeles in the first chapter and therefore now shall say little of them the most will be of those particulars wherein there is difference from what is there set downe In the first Chap. mention is made 1. of the living creatures and then of the wheels Here the wheels are first set down and after them the Cherubims or living creatures Why there is a great inversion and change made in the vision I finde no reason given neither do I conceive any satisfactory reason can be given but the will of the Lord it pleased him to represent the vision in that way to the Prophet and that may suffice us Yet if we may conjecture the wheels are set first here for that changes motions of 2d causes in the world are more obvious unto our eyes wee observe them first and that vertue acts them is more out of sight In the first Chap. v. 15. there is one wheel upon the earth by the living creatures here in the 9. vers are 4. wheels by the Cherubims
contritio aedificemus igitur domus and so Vatablus onely igitur he leaves out Contrition destruction is not near let us therefore build houses this interpretation we condemn not Montanus goeth that way The Sept. have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and addes contritio in the margent Nonne neviter aedificatae sunt domus are not houses lately or newly built The Heb. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not near to build houses here is an infinitive put for an imperative to build for let us build or let houses be built It is not near what is not near the desolation threatned that they said was not near Jer. had told them of the Lords wrath and that a sore captivity was at hand and because God had forbade him to marry and beget children because they should be destroyed as you have it Jer. 16.2 3. Thou shalt not take thee a wife neither shalt thou have sonnes or daughters in this place For thus saith the Lord concerning the sonnes and concerning the daughters that are born in this place and concerning their mothers that bare them and concerning their fathers that begat them in this land they shall dye of grievous deaths they shall not be lamented neither shall they be buried but they shall be as dung upon the face of the earth and they shall be consumed by the sword and by famine and their carkasses shall be meat for the fowls of heaven and for the beasts of the earth These sad tidings had Jeremy made known as being given not only for himselfe but others and hereupon he writ to the captives in Babylon that they should build houses plant gardens Non prope est construantur domus Castal Procul absunt qua minantur vates Idem take wives to themselves and sonnes that they might encrease and not diminish as they were like to doe at Jerusalem Jer. 29.5 6. Because of these things the people were full of feares refused to build and plant hereupon these Princes of the people counselled things contrary to God and the Prophet and said it is not neare what Jeremie threatens or any other Prophet those things they speak of are far off according to that in Ezek. 12.22 The dayes are prolonged and every vision faileth And v. 27. Hee prophecieth of the times that are afar off therefore fall a building plant multiply and increase there is no such danger as you dream of Some carries i● thus houses are not to be built in nearnesse to the City and so make it military counsell as if these Princes would not have any Suburbs or neighbouring villages which might advantage the enemy if hee should come and take them and so shut up the City therefore they conceive these words import thus much houses are not to be built neare that is they are to be pull'd downe and the rubbish removed This Citie is the cauldron and we be the flesh These words have their difficulty in them If you take the last sense of the former words then you may understand these thus wee are threatned to be boil'd in the siege of this City by the Chaldeans as flesh is boil'd in a cauldron but we will take a course to prevent that we will pull down all the houses without the walls of the City and near hand so that the enemy shall not come neare us and then we shall see what truth is in it that this City is the cauldron and we the flesh Had they such an opportunity to sit downe in the houses they would besiege us streightly presse us with famine be as a fire to this City and consume us to nothing Others think these words spoken scoffingly against Jeremiah who Chap. 1.13 had said I see a seething pot it 's the same word is here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and here it 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the cauldron the seething pot Jeremie had prophecyed that the enemy sh●uld come from the North and besiege them in the City that they should be as flesh in a cauldron boiled with the Chaldean fire till they were consumed this they mock at This City is the cauldron and we are the flesh saith that false and lying Prophet for you see wee are as before we ne●d not fear Chaldeans A cauldron 1. is made of strong materials as brasse or the like 2. It will endure the fire many yeares before it be consum'd 3. It conteins the flesh put into it and that is not to be taken out till it be throughly boyl'd Hence upon these grounds they scoffed at Jeremie If the City be the cauldron it 's a strong City and hath brazen walls it will endure the fire let the Chaldeans come as thou sayest if we be a cauldron their fire will not melt us and though they doe boile us yet we shall not be taken out of this cauldron to be eaten before we are throughly boyl'd till old age death it selfe take us out of it Thus did these Princes prophane that Prophesie bred security in the hearts of the people fed them with hopes of liberty and long life Or thus you may take it if this Citie be the cauldron and we the flesh we will rather be boyled in it then be destroyed by the sword we wil rather dye in the fire be boyl'd to death then fall into the hands of our enemies we will rather dye here then yeeld our selves into their hands be slain out of the City or be carryed into Babylon but we feare no such thing Thus these Princes eluded the Propheticall threats hardned the people in their ill waye and ripen'd them for destruction Our Prophet was acted in these visions by the Spirit Obser 1. sometimes it entered into him sometime it fell upon him and sometime it lifted him up Chap. 2.2 Chap. 3.24 The spirit entered into me Chap. 1.3.8.1 The hand of the Lord that is the Spirit came upon me fell upon me and Chap. 3.12 The spirit tooke mee up and here the spirit lift me up The Spirit had much to doe with our Prophet and so with all the Prophets they were acted by the Spirit in all their visions and prophesies they were lift up above themselves and out of themselves when they were to have cognizance of Divine things 2. The Spirit is God it knows men and their ways it discoverd them unto the Prophet Here the Spirit took notice of these men what devises they had in their heads what counsell they gave and acquainted the Prophet with them so before in the 8. Chap. the Spirit shewed him the Image of Jealousie the 70. men that were offering Incens● to the Idolls the women that wept for Tammuz the 25. men that worshipped the Sunne and put the branch to their nose as it 's said of the Sun Psal 19.6 there is nothing hid from the heate thereof So much more of the Spirit there is nothing hid from his knowledge 1 Cor. 2.10 The spirit searcheth all things all in heaven
intentions their actions and hearts layd together would confute one another Herod pretends to worship Christ but intends to murther him but these should have one heart within and without the same they should be inwardly and outwardly as Nathanael no guile was in his spirit in his lipps in his actions but the same heart was in all Col. 3.23 Whatsoever yee doe doe it heartily 2. As respecting God They should look at God as the onely and adequate object of their heart they should be content with him alone they should not aske counsell confide in fetch comfort from or worship any other he onely had made Covenant with that people Cor integrum in veritate solide adunatum Deo● toti corpori Ecclesiae and they should owne him onely for their God Moses told them long before that the Lord their God was one Lord Deut. 6.4 And Samuel told them they must serve him onely 1 Sam. 7.3 And this could not be unlesse their heart was one David who was an one-hearted man sayd Psal 62.5 My soule wait thou onely upon the Lord. 2. One heart in regard of his worship that should be pure immixt and one Zach. 14.9 In that day shall there be one Lord and his name one by Name Interpreters understand Worship and that shall be one and answerable shall be their hearts Jer. 32.39 3. In respect of others First the judgement shall be one they shall agree together in fundamentals and substantiall points of faith though there be differences in circumstantials inferences consequences and points of inferiour alloy Phil. 4.2 they should 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 think the same things be of the same mind 2. Their affections towards one another Acts 4.32 The multitude of them beleeved were of one heart and of one soule By these words One heart and one soule Beza understands Summa tum in doctrina tum in voluntatibus consensio and he ●ells us that in an old Copy he had there were these words more added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there was no d●ff●rence or controversie amongst them they were united in judgement and affections they had common faith and common aff●ctions they beleeved the Gospell and loved Christs truth and one another dearly 3. In their converse and practice together they should be one hearted Acts 2.46 they continued dayly wi●h one accord in the Temple and breaking bread from house to house In rebus omnibus agendis Ferus did eate their meat with gladnesse and singlenesse of heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Budaeus interprets of men sine livore their hearts were without envy or other evills they were single In this sense chiefly I conceive this one heartednesse is to be taken the union and harmony of their judgements affections and practises in spirituall things Quest When was this performed Ans Some thinke at their returne from Babylon they were one-hearted and united in their judgments affections and practises and some phrases in Scripture import it Ezra 1.5 Then rose up the cheife of the Fathers of Judah and Benjamin and the Priests and the Levites with all them whose spirit God had raysed to goe up to build the House of the LORD in Jerusalem They had the same minde and affection to that good worke to build the House of the Lord and Chap. 2.2 They came every one to his City Chap 3.11 All the people shouted with a great shout when they praysed the Lord because the Foundation of the House of the Lord was layd And Ch. 6.16 The children of Israel the Preists and the Levites and the rest of the children of the Captivity kept the Dedication of the House of God with joy These and such like passage● give occasion to thinke that there was a fullfilling of this truth at that time Others conclude it made good in the Apostles dayes when the Beleivers were so united as you read of Acts. 2.42.44.46 Chap. 4.32 The Beleivers yea the multitude of them were of one heart and one Soule Some are of judgement that its not yet accomplished because there were great divisions and contentions among the Churches in the Apostles times The Stick of Joseph and the Stick of Judah are not yet united they were never yet since the division made one Kingdom Vers 17 18 19 21. and therefore refer it to the calling of the Jewes when the two propheticall Mysticall sticks mentioned Ezek. 37.19.21.22.23 are united and made one Nation and have David their King ruling over them then shall there be this one heartednesse amongst them If we should put it upon the times wherein those great and glorious things spoken of Isa 60. shall be given into the Church we shall not much mistake there God saith I will make thine Officers peace and thine exactors righteousnesse violence shall no more be heard in thy Land the Lord shall be unto them an everlasting light and thy God thy glory thy people also shall be all righteous Which time I suppose may fall in with the New Jerusalem Deut. 21. in which should be no leannesse death sorrow crying or paine all things in it should be new having the glory of God Vers 4 5. Quest 2. Whether this union this one heartednesse be attaineable in this life Some judge it impossible that there should be one heartednesse in judgement affections and practice because of the difference of constitutions naturall abilities corruptions and temptations of men and unequall dispensations of grace and therefore referre it to our condition after this life Ans We must distinguish this one heartednes it s either incompleat and inchoative which is to be had in this life or compleat and consummative which is a piece of our happinesse in Heaven the Angels and Saints above injoy the same perfectly we who are here beneath have it onely in part Though there be differences in the lesser things of Religion yet we agree in the weighty things thereof and are one hearted in them and were there no possibility of being so and being more and more so the Lord would not here have promised it nor the Apostle exhorted to it 1 Pet. 3.8 Be you all of one minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idem sentientes consentientes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are they qui 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which thinke the same things yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 comprehends as Gerard observes upon the place Consensionem in fidei veritate vitae sanctitate Paul 1 Cor. 1.10 prayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to be perfectly joyned together in the same mind and in the same judgement let there be no deficiency no redundancy but a sweet coherency as in the members of the body So Phil. 2.2 Be yee like minded having the same love being of one accord of one mind He would not onely have them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in sundry other places the Apostle exhorts unto it
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 4.16 The inward man is renewed day by day There is an addition of more strength more degrees are added to those new qualities the inward man growes stronger and better So Chap. 3.18 Wee are changed into the same image from glory to glory When men are changed and this new spirit is put into them it is glory and there is a Progresse in this glory they goe from one degree of glory to another Obser 1 1. This new spirit is a great mercy it s a renewall of the Image of God in a man knowledge righteousnesse Rom. 8 8. They that are in the flesh cannot please God and true holinesse Col. 3.10 Ephes 4.24 It s that makes a man good and acceptable to God it was the holy Ghost and Faith made Barnabas a good man Acts 11.24 Till a man have some new qualities in him this new spirit he is flesh displeasing unto God Joh. 3.6 That which is borne of the flesh is flesh and that which is borne of the spirit is spirit and so acceptable to God then the tree is good and the fruit good also Matth 7.17.18 It s that sets us at liberty this new spirit is not a spirit of bondage but of liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 not of feare but love power and of a sound mind 2 Tim. 1.7 It 's that weakens and wasts sin in us 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new Creature old things are past away Old customes practises principles corruptions they are decaying the old leaven is purging out It 's an argument of Gods love in the Covenant of grace towards a sinner and evidence that thou art in that Covenant it s the promise of the new Covenant to give this new spirit It 's that makes us honourable and glorious When wee have this new spirit we are partakers of the divine nature and borne of God 1 John 3.9 And that 's honourable v. 1. and glorious 2 Cor. 3.18 It 's a choyce comfort to the man that hath it more then thousands of silver and gold more then a world to him no such comfort to him as this its life Luke 16.24 This my Sonne was dead and is alive againe The dead prodigall when he had this new spirit had a new life and this was a sweet a great comfort to him to his Father to others It 's that gives you title to the Kingdome of Heaven John 3.5 Verily verily I say unto you except a man be borne of water c. How doth this new spirit act and discover it selfe in that man where it is Answ 1. It begets a noble ingenuity in the Soul to maintaine the condition it puts into it will shunne whatever is contrary to it or offensive to the Lord who gave it 1 John 3.18 Whosoever is borne of God sins not but keepes himselfe and that wick-one toucheth him not he hath a noblenes of Spirit and keeps himself from sin and Satan the things they propound are too low for him too base Joseph said How can I doe this great wickednes and sin against God Gen. 39.9 Nehemiah 6. chap. 11. Should such a man as I flee So saith the man indued with this new Spirit should such a man as I sin God hath made me spirituall and I will not imbase my self to carnall things 1 Pet. 1.14 Not fashioning your selfe according to the former lusts 2. A strong impression made upon the soule so that it cannot but follow after Christ before the heart could not but look downwards pursue the Creature but now it doth the contrary Acts 26.18 To open their eyes and to turn them from darkenes to light and from the power of Satan unto God when the turn is once made they cannot but minde the light and follow after God and Christ when Elijah threw his mantle upon Elishah he had such an impresse made upon his spirit that he must leave all and follow him The Needle is unquiet till it come to the Northern point so a soul t●ll it come to Christ when it 's anointed with these new qualities c. 3. Seeth every thing with a new eye there is divine light the light of life in the soul John 8.12 And the life of God Ephes 4.18 Before they are alienated from it but now having this new spirit they pertake of it and not onely live the life of God but looke upon things as God doth they see sin exceeding sinfull Rom 7.13 Grace to be free glorious exceeding rich and abundant Ephes 1.6 Chap. 2.7.8 1 Tim. 1.14 They beheld Christ in another manner then ever before 2 Cor. 5.16 Henceforth know wee no man after the flesh yea though wee have knowne Christ after the fl●sh yet now henceforth know we him no more Since we have had an eye to see spiritually and the eye renewed to see more spiritually into the death of Christ what satisfaction peace life grace Salvation glory it hath wrought and brought we know no m●n after the flesh for their present honour externall exc●llencies no not Christ We looke not upon him as poore meane afflicted contemptible but we see and judge spiritually we looke at what is divine in him in others in all So for God himselfe Jer. 31.34 When he should put his Law in their inward parts then they should all know him that is in another manner then ever they should see not onely what an infinite excellencie he was in himselfe but what a father of mercies and God of Consolations he was in Chri●t 4. It makes a spirituall Warre in the soule this new spirit sets upon the old man the old spirit and maintaines a mighty Warre against the same bringing under and captivating the fl●sh with its lusts members wisedome and strong holds There was a naturall Warre in the man before betweene sin and the conscience but this is a spirituall Warre and it 's knowne thus 1. The whole frame of the soul is against sin not the conscience alone the understanding will affections conscience a drunken man may speake against drunkennesse and yet the frame of his heart be towards it a coveteous man may condemne coveteousnesse yet the frame of his spirit may be to it Col. 1.21 Enemies in your mindes by wicked works a man beeing without this new spirit is an enemie to God Chr●st truth in his minde by wicked workes the frame of his minde is against them but being indued with this new spirit he is reconciled to God and so an enemy in his m●nd to wicked works so for his will Rom. 7.19 The evill which I would no● th●t I do● His will was against evill So for his affection vers 15 What I hate that I doe So for conscience while its naturall all it restraines a man and makes him say I dare not doe it but when sanctified it causes a man to fight against sin and to say I cannot doe it Gal. 5.17 Yee cannot doe the things that yee would The