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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

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commanded them not and so were severely punished for it as is afterwards expressed Now that this happened that very eighth day whereof mention is made Chap. 9. 1. immediately after those first sacrifices were consumed by fire from the Lord may be gathered by that which follows from vers 12. to the end of the chapter which plainly concerneth those sacrifices whereof we reade in the former chapter And thus God taught them betimes the weaknesse of the Leviticall priesthood and withall with what fear and exact care it was fit they should carry themselves in the service of God Vers 2. And there went out fire from the Lord and devoured them That is killed them as the sword is said to devoure 2. Sam. 2. 26. Then Abner called to Joab and said Shall the sword devoure for ever For that neither their bodies nor clothes were burnt to ashes appears verse 5. So they went near and carried them in their coats out of the camp Vers 3. Then Moses said un●o Aaron This is it that the Lord spake saying I will be sanctified c. The substance of these following words is in many places to be found as Exod. 19. 22. And let the priests also that come near to the Lord sanctifie themselves lest the Lord break forth upon them again Levit. 8. 35. Therefore shall ye abide at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation day and night seven dayes and keep the charge of the Lord that ye dye not and this is sufficient Yet happely these very words also at some other time were spoken by God though not written As for the words themselves I will be sanctified by them that come nigh me and before all the people I will be glorified the meaning of them is that God will have those that come nigh him carry themselves as become those that serve so holy a God with all possible care and reverence and fear and that God will else manifest his holinesse in punishing them Ezek. 28. 22. Behold I am against ●hee O Zidon and I will be glorified in the midst of thee Two arguments are therefore herein couched to keep Aaron from murmuring 1. because the punishment was just 2. because God should be glorified hereby and both the people and his posterity receive good by it And Aaron held his peace That is though happely at first he began to take on pitifully and to give too much liberty to his passions yet hearing those words of Moses he presently checked himself laid his hand upon hi● mouth and not a word more would he speak And doubtlesse this is noted as a notable instance of his piety and quiet submission to Gods good will and pleasure and that his carriage was herein most singalarly remarkable we shall see if we note these particulars First that he had now lost two of his sonnes yea his two eldest sonnes together at a clap We know what Rebeckah in great angaish of soul said to Jacob when his brother Esau had resolved to kill him Gen. 27. 45. Go ●lie to Paran why should I be deprived of you bo●h in one day Secondly that they were cut off suddenly by an untinely death as we use to say when neither themselves not their poore father did ever dream of any such danger Thirdly that they were cut off by a way which might seem to testifie Gods hot displeasure against them for they were devoured by fire from God the Lord by the manner of their death pointing out the sinne for which they were stricken and what father had not rather lose all his stock of children in an ordinary way then have execution done upon any one of them by Gods immediate hand in such a terrible manner Fourthly that it was at a time when ●heir hearts no doubt were as full of joy as ever they could hold it being the first day of their entring upon that high honour of their priestly function and in such a sunshine of Gods favour to be so suddenly thunderstruck must needs adde to their calamity And last of all that they were cut off with such severity for so small an offense as reason might judge of it onely for taking fire to burn the incense from one place when they should have taken it from another and that not purposely done but onely through mistake an errour into which when they had so much to do and were yet unacquainted with the service they might easily fall Vers 4. And Moses called Mishael and Elzaphan the two sonnes of Vzziel the uncle of Aaron c. The nearest kindred it seems used to perform this office of carrying the dead to be buried and their brethren the priests might not leave their ministery therefore Aarons cosin germans are appointed to do it Vers 6. Vncover not your heads neither rend your clothes c. The severall laws that concern the priests mourning for their dead friends we have largely set down in the one and twentieth chapter of this book where the inferiour priefts are allowed to be mourners at the buriall of a brother though the high priest is forbidden it But this is a speciall charge for this present occasion onely and so here not onely Aaron but also his sonnes that remained still alive are forbidden all the usuall solemnities of mourning for Nadab and Abihu not to uncover t●eir heads nor to rend their clothes nor to go out from the doore of the tabernacl● 〈◊〉 the congr●gation and that first bec●use it was an extraordinary judgemen● of God that was fallen upon their brethren and they were to testifie their ●●bmissi●● thereu●●● by not lamenting their death Secondly because the solemnity and service of the d●y might not be interrupted being newly anointed and now at this time prepared for their first entring upon the execution of their priestly office they might not break off this service to attend the buriall of their brethren But why are they injoyned not to uncover their heads since it may seem by other places that it was not the custome of mourners amongst the Jews to uncover their heads but rather to cover them as we may see 2. Sam. 15. 30. David went up the ascent of mount Olivet and wept as he went up and had his head covered and he went barefoot and all the people that was with him covered every man his head and they went up weeping as they went up and so again chap. 19. 4. But the king covered his face and the king cried with a loud voyce Oh my sonne Absolom O Absolom my sonne my sonne See also Jer. 14. 3 4. The answer is that the priests are here injoyned not to uncover their heads that is not to take off their miters and bonnets which they wore on their heads to the end they might not addresse themselves in the way of mourners to attend the buriall of Nadab and Abihu to wit by covering their heads with the usuall vail or covering of mourners The chief aim of this command was to intimate
mill That is grinding at the mill se● chap. 12. 29. Now those that did thus work at the mill were said to be behind it because they used to thrust the mill before them as they wrought Vers 7. But against any of the children of Israel shall not a dog move his tongue Which yet are wont to bark in the night at the least noise The speech is proverbiall and signifies that they should not have the leas● disturbance among them but should all quie●ly take their rest in their beds This is spoken as it were in opposition that which Mos●s had immediately before said concerning the Egyptians when as there should be a great cry amongst them because of the death of their first-born amongst the Israelites all should be still and quiet not so much as a dog should amongst them move his tongue either against man or beast CHAP. XII Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake unto Moses and A●ron in the land of Egypt c. It is not precisely expressed when the Lord spake this which here followeth to Moses and Aaron concerning the institution of the Passeover yet most probably it may be gathered ●hat it was before the three dayes darknesse wherewith the Lord punished the Egyptians for the Passeover was kept on the foureteenth day the day after the first-born of the Egyptians were slain and it seems it was but the day before the thirteenth day when Moses being sent for to Pharaoh immediately after that darknesse was over and finding he would not dismisse the Israelites denounced that last plague the death of the first-born and that it should befall them the night following chap. 11. 4 5. Thus saith the Lord About midnight will I go out into the midst of Egypt and all the first-born in the land of Egypt shall die Now these directions concerning the Passeover were given before the tenth day of this seventh moneth for upon the tenth day they were enjoyned as we see her ver 3. to set apart the lambe which was to be eaten at the Passeover Vers 2. This moneth shall be unto you the beginning of moneths That is the moneth Abib See chap. 13. 4. This day came ye out in the moneth Abib which in the Chaldee tongue was also called Nisan and contained for the most part some of our March and some of our April whereas formerly they began their year with the moneth Ethanim or after the Chaldees Tisri which agreeth with our September as is evident Exod. 23. 16. where we may see that one year ended and another began at the feast of in gathering which was after all their harvest Now in remembrance of this their miraculous deliverance they were appointed to begin it with this moneth which was formerly the seventh in number And yet this account was af●erward kept onely in Ecclesiasticall affairs for the Jubilees and such other civil affairs it began as it had done before Lev. 25. 8 9 10. Vers 3. In the tenth day of this moneth they shall take to them every man a lambe c. To wit the very day whereon afterwards the Israelites entre d the land of Canaan Josh 4. 19. The people came up out of Jordan on the tenth day of the first moneth Now a lambe or a kid for that is added ver 5. Ye shall take it out from the sheep or from the goats was appointed to be set apart on this day for the Passeover and that no doubt as a significant type and figure of Christ who is therefore called our Passeover sacrificed for us 1. Cor. 5. 7. and by the Baptist John 1. 29. the lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of ●he world For as these lambes were taken away from the rest of the flock so was Chri●t taken from among men Hebr. 5. 1. and was indeed a man as other men are and sent into the world by his bloud to save us from death and the lambe being of all creatures the most harmlesse meek and profitable it was the fitter to be a shadow of him in whom the truth of these things was transcendently eminent Vers 6. And ye shall keep it up untill the foureteenth day of the same moneth There is no mention made of this separating the Paschall lambe from the flock foure dayes before the feast in other places where the Passeover is commanded At this time it was thus ordered both that it might be in a readinesse and not be to seek when they were encumbred with businesse about their going away especially that in this as in other things it might be a type of Christ who was holy harmlesse undefiled and separate from sinners and that there was such a degree of perfection required in him who was to be offered up as a sacrifice of propitiation for us as was no where amongst men to be found And the whole assembly of the congregation of Isra●l shall kill it in the evening In the Hebrew it is between the two evenings The meaning of this may thus be understood The naturall day from sunne to sunne the Jews used to divide into foure parts the first was from sunnerising to nine in the forenoon the second contained the three following houres from nine to twelve and was called the sixth ho●re the third contained the three next from twelve to three in the afternoone and was called the ninth houre the fourth reached from thence unto sunsetting so that between three a clock in the afternoon which was the first evening and sunsetting which is here reckoned the other evening was the time appointed for the killing of the Passeover at which time also Christ the true Paschall lambe dyed for us as is evident Matth. 27. 46. 50. And about the ninth houre Jesus cryed with a loud voyce Eli Eli c. vers 50. Jesus when he had cryed again with a loud voice yielded up the Ghost And so Once in the end of the world appeared to put away sinne by the sacrifice of himsef Heb. 9. 27. Vers 7. And they shall take of the bloud and strike it on the two sideposts c. In the 13. verse the reason is expressed why the Lord enjoyned the Israelites thus to strike the bloud of the Paschall lambe on the two sideposts and on the upper dore-post of the houses wherein they did eat it The bloud saith the Lord shall be to you for a token upon the houses where you are and when I see the bloud I will passe over you and the plague shall not be upon you to destroy you And hence we may probably gather that this also was ordained onely for this Passeover in Egypt when the destroying angel was to passe over the Israelites houses that had their doores sprinkled with the bloud of the lambe and not for future times 2. That hereby also was signified the applying of Christs bloud by faith to the hearts of believers which is called the sprinkling of the bloud of Jesus Christ 1. Pet. 12. 3. That where two smaller households
were laid upon this bullock and that the true sacrifice for our sinnes should suffer without the gates of Jerusalem Heb. 13. 11 12 13. For the bodies of those beasts whose bloud is brought into the Sanctuary by the high priest for sinne are burnt without the camp wherefore Jesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the gate c. It is a sinne-offering And therefore thus to be ordered as is above appointed Vers 15. And thou shalt take one ramme c. That is one of those two rammes before mentioned verse 1. The sacrifice for sinne being first offered without which no other offering could have been accepted for God heareth not sinners now followeth the burnt-offering which was first a shadow of Christ who after that he had offered himself to God as a sacrifice for sinne did then ascend up into heaven there to prepare a place for his ●edeemed ones secondly a signe of our regeneration as the other was of the expiation of our sinnes by Christ signifying that through him we shall and must be clensed from sinne crucified to the world and present our whole man bodies and souls a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God Rom. 12. 1. And thirdly to teach the priests for whose consecration it was offered that being purified by the Spirit of God they must deny themselves and consecrate themselves wholly to God to serve him in their office holily and faithfully all the dayes of their life Vers 16. And thou shalt take his bloud and sprinkle it round about c. It figured the sprinkling of Christs bloud as for our reconciliation so also our sanctification 1. Pet. 1. 2. Through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the bloud of Christ Vers 19. And thou shalt take the other ramme c. This was for a congratulatory or peace-offering Now these were offered usually either to obtain some blessing or to give thanks for something already received in both respects was this offered at the priests consecration both by way of thankfulnesse for the honour done him in his calling and to beg of God that he would prosper him in the execution of it And Aaron and his sonnes shall put their hands upon the head of the ramme c. Signifying that from God in Christ figured in that ramme they expected not onely justification and sanctification as in the two former sacrifices but also consecration to their office and ability to perform the same Vers 20. And take of his bloud and put it upon the tip of the right eare of Aaron c. The eare hand and foot are anointed with bloud to intimate the sanctifying of all their parts by Christs bloud to make them fit for the priesthood And these are put for all because the eare is the signe of obedience Psal 40. 6. Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire mine ears hast thou opened especially in hearing the word from Gods mouth which they should teach unto the people And again the hands and feet are the instruments of action not onely in their ministery but in their whole conversation And sprinkle the bloud upon the altar round about c. See the notes upon vers 10. for this tended to the same end Vers 21. And thou shalt take of the bloud that is upon the altar and of the anointing oyl c. Though this bloud and oyl mingled together was sprinkled upon the holy garments of Aaron and his sonnes yet we may well think it was done so that it might not marre the beauty and glory of their garments and then some little drops of bloud sprinkled here and there would rather be for the honour then the defiling of their garments Now this was done to signifie that by the bloud of Christ and the oyl of his graces they were sanctified for the work of their ministery Vers 22. For it is a ramme of consecration That is offered as a peace-offering in liew of his consecration Vers 24. And thou shalt put all in the hands of Aaron c. To wit all those things mentioned in the two former verses amongst which the right shoulder is also named In other peace-offerings the breast and the right shoulder were set apart from the rest of the sacrifice and given to the priests for their portion Levit. 7. 31 32. The breast shall be Aarons and his sonnes and the right shoulder shall ye give unto the priest for an heave-offering of the sacrifice of your peace-offerings But here the breast onely was given to Moses as he that extraordinarily did now the priests work the shoulder was together with the fat and other things waved by the priests and then by Moses burnt upon the altar and the reason was doubtlesse because there were many priests among whom the breast and shoulder were in future times divided whereas here onely Moses executed now the work of the priest and therefore the breast alone was given unto him for his portion and the shoulder was burnt upon the altar and offered to the Lord. And shalt wave them for a wave-offering before the Lord. By shaking it thus to and fro they did as it were disclaim all their interest in that offering and resigne it as a thing wholly consecrated to God and besides this waving it to the East West North and South might imply that all Nations should in Christ have cause to praise God Vers 26. And it shall be thy part Because he was now in the stead of the priest yet he hath not all viz. not the shoulder which was afterward the priests portion because this breast was enough to imply that he had done the priests work Vers 27. And thou shalt sanctifie the breast of the wave-offering c. This is not spoken of the present but is an ordinance for the future what shall be then the priests because Moses had now the breast onely therefore this is now Inserted that the priests were to have both breast and shoulder Vers 29. And the holy garments of Aaron shall be his sonnes after him c. And thus though the man was changed yet the high priest seemed in a manner the same appearing before God in the same garments a sweet type of that one high priest after the order of Melchisedec Vers 30. And that sonne that is priest in his stead shall put them on seven dayes So many dayes were the solemnities of Aaron and his sonnes consecration at the present to continue ver 35. Seven dayes shalt thou consecrate them during which time they were to abide at the doore of the tabernacle day and night to keep the watch of the Lord Levit. ● 33 35. And ye shall not go out of the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation in seven dayes untill the dayes of your consecration be at an end for seven dayes shall he consecrate you Therefore shall ye abide at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation day and night seven dayes
miracle And yet I think not that the ground was all over covered two cubits thick as farre as a dayes journey reached round about the camp for where then did they spread them abroad when they had gathered them but that they lay here and there scattered the heaps being in many places two cubits thick Vers 32. He that gathered least gathered ten homers That is a hundred bushels for an ephah was near the same with our bushel and an homer contained ten ephahs Ezek. 45. 11 14. The ephah and the bath shall be of one measure that the bath may contain the tenth part of an homer and the ephah the tenth part of an homer and indeed hereby we may see how miraculously abundant this flight of quails was which makes the Psalmist say that God rained flesh upon them as dust and feathered fouls as the sand of the sea Psal 78. 27. And they spread them all abroad for themselves round about the camp To preserve them from putrifying to which end it is likely that they used art also in salting and drying them or else they were as miraculously preserved as sent for they eat of them a moneth together Vers 33. And while the flesh was yet between their teeth c. It is evident in the twentieth verse of this chapter that the people did eat of these quails a moneth together ere the wrath of the Lord brake out against them and therefore we may well conceive that it is thus expresly noted that the wrath of the Lord was kindled against the people and that he smote them with a very great plague while the flesh was yet between their teeth ere it was chewed to imply first the insatiable greedinesse of the people who after a moneths feeding on these quails were still so eager upon them secondly how opportunely the Lord punished them that they might see the Lord punished them for lusting after flesh and for their murmuring against Moses because they had it not he made the very flesh they had desired to be the cause of their destruction and while they were glutting themselves with these dainties they lusted after his wrath brake forth upon them and thirdly how fully he made good what he had before threatned vers 20. that they should eat flesh till it came out of their nostrils and it became loathsome unto them What this great plague was wherewith God smote them it is not expressed but it may seem probable by the expressions here used that the Lord caused them to surfet of this their feeding without fear and so hereof many of them dyed CHAP. XII Vers 1. ANd Miriam and Aaron spake against Moses because of the Ethiopian woman c. Miriam is here named first and that as it may be probably conceived because she it was that began the quarrell and Aaron was stirred up by her and therefore also afterwards we see that she onely not Aaron was ●tricken with leprosie However by the providence of God doubtlesse it was the better to clear it that Moses was exalted by Gods speciall favour not by any compa●t amongst themselves that his own brother and sister did thus rise up against him What the ground or occasion of that quarrell was may seem questionable onely thus much is more then probable first that one main ground of their quarrell was their envy at the preheminence of Moses above them as appears by that their expostulation vers 2. Hath the Lord indeed spoken onely by Moses Hath he not spoken also by us Because Miriam was a prophetesse Exod. 15. 20. and Aaron the high priest and imployed by God together with Moses in fetching the Israelites out of Egypt therefore they grudged that the supreme power of government should be solely in Moses And perhaps this envy was newly stirred in Miriam because she being a prophetesse was not one of those seventy of whom mention is made in the foregoing chapter that were chosen to be assistants to Moses in the government of the people And secondly that whatever was the cause of this their quarrell against Moses yet the onely cause they alledged was that he had married an Ethiopian woman or a Cushite as it is in the margin not one of Abrahams holy stock and this was doubtlesse no other but Zipporah the Midianitesse for of her death we reade not and ordinarily in the Scriptu●es the Midianites and other neighbouring nations that inhabited Arabia Cush his land are called Cushites or Ethiopians as Hab. 3. 7. I saw the tents of Cushan or Ethiopia in affliction and the curtains of the land of Midian did tremble Vers 2. Hath the Lord indeed spoken onely by Moses hath he not spoken also by us That is have not we the gift of prophecy as well as he and what reason then that he should be all in all who hath matched himself to one that is a stranger to the holy seed of Israel Vers 3. Now the man Moses was very meek c. Implying that first he had given them no cause thus to quarrell with him and secondly that he was now content to swallow these affronts patiently and made no complaint but the Lord took his cause in hand Nor is it strange that Moses should thus commend himself if we consider that he did it by the immediate inspiration of the holy Ghost that his meeknesse might be a pattern for the Church in all ages and therefore elsewhere we see also that he relates his sinnes and weaknesses and thus also doth S. Paul speak of himself as 1. Cor. 11. 1. Be ye followers of me even as I also am of Christ and 2. Cor. 11. and 12. But withall it may be held without wronging the authority of Moses writings that here and there by Joshua or some other of the prophets after him some passages were inserted which Moses himself wrote not such as that Deut. 34. concerning the death and buriall of Moses Vers 5. And the Lord came down in the pillar of the cloud and s●ood in the doore of the tabernacle and called Aaron and Miriam Before God had commanded Moses and Aaron and Miriam vers 4. to come all three together to the tabernacle of the congregation where being all three together and the cloud being withall descended to the doore of the tabernacle the Lord now from thence calls to Aaron and Miriam to stand forth both because he was now particularly to speak to them and not to Moses as also that this separating them from Moses might intimate their folly in going about to make themselves equall with him Vers 7. My servant Moses is not so c. That is I do not make known my will to him so as to other prophets in dreams and visions but with him will I speak mouth to mouth even apparently and not in dark speeches and the similitude of the Lord shall he behold But what is the meaning of this doubtlesse God is invisible Col. 1. 15. No man hath seen God at any time
stood within behind the vail or else in the most holy place before the ark for upon such extraordinary occasions we need not doubt but Moses used to go into the most holy place and evident it is that after they were bro●ght forth again and Aarons rod was found to flourish the rest continuing dry sticks or staves as they were before that was carryed into the most holy place and therefore the Apostle Heb. 9. 4. mentions Aarons rod that budded amongst those things that were within the vail and yet it is said to be returned to the place where they were all laid before vers 10. Bring Aarons rod again before the testimony However this laying of these rods up before the Lord was to signifie that it was referred to him to determine this controversie concerning the priesthood Vers 5. And I will make to cease from me the murmuring of the children of Israel That is in this particular concerning Aarons priesthood Vers 6. And the rod of Aaron was among their rods That is there being twelve rods brought for the twelve Princes of the twelve tribes which were it seems according to the custome of those times made of the almond tree for such Aarons was vers 8. that bloomed blossomes and yielded almonds they were all laid together and Aarons was put also amongst the other twelve Vers 8. And behold the rod of Aaron for the house of Levi budded c. Hereby the Lord did discover miraculously that he had chosen Aarons and his posterity to be the onely priests that should serve at his altar and withall the flourishing of this rod signified first the budding of Aarons posterity together with the flourishing glory and fruitfulnesse of the priesthood which continued in his posterity secondly the miraculous flourishing glory of Christs priesthood of which Aarons was a type to wit how he that rod out of the stemme of Jesse and branch that grew out of his root Esa 11. 1. though at first he was as a dry and withered s●ick so that there was no beauty nor comlinesse in him Esa 53. 2. and especially in his death and bur●all when he was indeed withered in the eye of reason without hope of recovery and dryed up like a potsheard Psal 22. 15. should yet suddenly sprout forth again to wit in his resurrection and so his priesthood should become an eternall priesthood and l●●e Aarons budding fruitbearing rod should bring forth fruit to man believing on him remission of sinnes righteousnesse and eternall li●e and by the preaching of the Gospel that flourishing rod or sceptre of righteousnesse should become glorious all the world over to the great joy of all those that have interest in him and thirdly that all those that in the dayes of the Gospel were truly set apart to teach the people as Aaron was though in themselves but dry and withered sticks yet by the speciall grace of God should bear and bring forth buds and fruit and that their fruit should remain John 15. 16. Vers 12. And the children of Israel spake unto Moses saying Behold we die we perish we all perish Being by this miracle fully convinced of their sinne and then calling to mind how severely God had punished this their murmuring against Moses and Aaron how some had been burnt with fire some swallowed up into the earth alive some consumed with the plague they are stricken with an apprehension of the like danger the first step to repentance and therefore cry out as men that might justly expect to be every one of them destroyed as they were indeed in danger to be presently taken away by some judgement had not the Lord been the more mercifull to them Vers 13. Whosoever cometh any thing near unto the tabernacle of the Lord shall die This is an amplification of their wofull condition to wit that though God should spare them now yet they should alwayes be in danger if they did never so little presse beyond the limits allowed them whosoever say they cometh any thing near that is nearer then they should and keep not off at their full distance wherein we may easily transgresse we see God will not spare them yea happely as men terrified are indeed wont to conceive their danger greater then it is they complain as if it would be perilous to come near the tabernacle at all Shall we be consumed with dying This may be a deprecation Shall we be consumed that is of thy mercie let us not be consumed for so questions are often used in earnest deprecations as Psal 85. 6. Wilt thou not revive us again that thy people may rejoyce in thee and Esa 64. 12. Wilt thou refrain thy self from these things O Lord wilt thou hold thy peace and afflict us very sore But I rather take it as a bemoaning of their condition CHAP XVIII Vers 1. THou and thy sonnes and thy fathers house with thee shall bear the iniquity of the Sanctuary Because of the peoples astonishment chap. 17. vers 12. Behold we die we perish we all perish the Lord here tells Aaron that he the priests and Levites must bear the iniquity of the Sanctuary that is that if any pollution came to it by the people they should answer for it and therefore it must be their charge to watch over it Thus the Lord shews himself reconciled and makes the priests watch a ground of appeasing the peoples both fear and envy And thou and thy sonnes with thee shall bear the iniquity of your priesthood That is shall be punished if the priesthood be polluted either by your selves or the Levites intruding upon it which your watch should prevent Vers 3. Onely they shall not come nigh the vessels of the Sanctuary and the altar that neither they nor you also die To wit for not preventing the errour of your brethren the Levites by your care Vers 7. Therefore thou and thy sonnes with thee shall keep your priests office for every thing of the altar and within the vail That is for all things that concern the altar of burnt-offerings and for all things that are to be done within the vail that is within the outer vail either in the holy or most holy place Vers 8. Unto thee have I given them by reason of the anointing c. That is for the office sake whereunto thou art anointed because I have separated thee from worldly employments to attend upon mine holy things therefore thou shalt have mine holy things to live upon Vers 9. Every oblation of theirs every meat-offering of theirs c. The particulars are here mentioned of the most holy things reserved from the fire that is the sacrifices whereof part was burnt upon the altar which were allotted to be the priests portion for their maintenance to wit oblations meat-offerings sin-offerings trespasse-offerings and this last is expressed thus every trespasse-offering of theirs which they shall render unto me because trespasse-offerings were brought as by way of recompence for some trespasse committed
Tahath thence to Tarah where it is thought that insolent mutiny began of Korah Dathan and Abiram thence they removed to Mithcah thence to Hashmonah thence to Moseroth thence to Bene-jaakan thence to Horha-gidgad thence to Jotbathah thence to Ebronah thence to Ezion-gaber which was close by the red sea for this was a place for shipping in Edoms land 1. King 9. 26. And King Solomon made a navy of ships in Ezion-Geber which is besides Eloth on the shore on the red sea in the land of Edom then they turned to the North again and pitched as here Moses tells us in another Kadesh which was in the desert of Zin of which Jephthah spake Judg. 11. 16. and this was in the first moneth to wit of the fourtieth year after they were come out of Egypt for at their next station in mount Hor whither they removed from this Kadesh Aaron dyed and that is noted to have been in the first day of the fifth moneth of the fourtieth year Numb 33. 38. So that in their travels from Kadesh-Barnea where the spie came to Moses to this Kadesh in the desert of Zin there were about eight and thirty years spent the most of their fathers that were numbred at their coming out of Egypt being in that time destroyed And Miriam dyed there and was buried there To wit in Kadesh She was the sister of Moses a prophetesse and by her also God guided the Israelites in their travels I sent before thee Moses and Aaron and Miriam saith the Lord to the Israelites Mich. 6. 4. and therefore is the place and time of her death and buriall noted This year Aaron dyed also chap. 33. 38. and Moses Deut 34. 7. and if this was the sister of Moses as it is generally held that was set to watch what would become of Moses when he was laid out in an ark of bulrushes Exod. 2. 4. she could be little lesse then ten years old when Moses was born and consequently she was about a hundred and thirty years now when she dyed for Moses who dyed towards the end of this year was a hundred and twenty years old when he dyed De●t 34. 7. Vers 2. And there was no water for the congregation c. With the same want God tryed their fathers in the first year after their going out of Egypt Exod. 17. 4. who thereupon murmured then also and had water out of a rock for in many particulars these two different stories were alike though not in all but in this these their children were worse then their fathers because the experience their fathers had of Gods succour in the very same extremity did no good upon them nor could prevent these their murmurings against Moses and Aaron Vers 3. Would God that we had dyed when our brethren dyed before the Lord. That is with those whom God did suddenly destroy in the insurrection of Korah Dathan and Abiram chap. 16. and so also at other times This they wished intimating that it had been easier to have been cut off so then to pine away now for want of water but the whilst in a desperate manner they most impudently fl●ght that fearfull judgement of being cut off in Gods fiery indignation as a matter of nothing Vers 6. And Moses and Aaron went from the presence of the assembly c. Namely for fear of the people because of their outrage and that they might go to the tabernacle to intercede as formerly chap. 14. 5. for this rebellious people And the glory of the Lord appeared unto them See chap. 16. 19. Vers 8. Take the rod and gather thou the assembly together c. It is very questionable what rod it was that God here appoints Moses to take for the working of this miracle of fetching water out of the rock Evident it is that Moses took the rod from before the Lord vers 9. that is out of the tabernacle and therefore some Expositours hold that it was Aarons rod which was budded and was laid up before the testimony chap. 17. 10. But more generally it is held that it was that rod of Moses wherewith he had wrought so many miracles in Egypt which seems indeed the more probable first because it is afterwards called his rod vers 11. With his rod he smote the rock and secondly because this was fittest for this imployment the very sight of this rod wherewith God had manifested his almighty power in so many miracles and particularly in fetching water for them out of the rock at Rephidim being enough to make them ashamed of their present murmuring against God And what though he took this rod from before the Lord vers 9. even Moses rod in memory of the great things that had been done by it for which it is sometimes called the rod of God as Exod. 4. 20. might be laid up in the tabernacle as well as Aarons yea and some conceive that Aarons rod which budded and was laid up in the tabernacle was the very same wherewith those miracles were wrought in the land of Egypt the rather because even the rod of Moses is sometimes also called Aarons rod as Exod. 7. 12. They cast down every man his rod and they became serpents but Aarons rod swallowed up their rods And speak unto the rock before their eyes c. Here was no command given to Moses that he should smite the rock but onely that he should take the rod in his hand to wit as a signe of Gods working by him and speak to the rock before their eyes and therefore many hold that herein lay a part of Moses sinne that he smote the rock when he should onely have spoken to it But withall in this command of the Lord to Moses to speak to the rock there was couched a sharp exprobration of Israels hard heartednesse and infidelity for it intimates that the dead creatures would sooner hear and obey God then his own people and therefore also he was appointed to do this before the eyes of all the people whereas the former miracle of the like nature at the rock of Rephidem was onely wrought before the elders of Israel Exod. 17. 5. Vers 10. And Moses and Aaron gathered the congregation together before the rock c. Their return to the enraged people from whom erewhile for fear they withdrew themselves and ready undertaking what God had enjoyned shows plainly that they did not question Gods power to fetch water out of the rock how could they having had experience that he had done it before Exod. 17. 6 nor did absolutely conclude that God would not work this miracle at this time But why then doth the Lord tell Moses and Aaron that they believed him not vers 12 undoubtedly because there was some secret distrust and unbelief in their hearts though it prevailed not so farre against their faith as to make them wholly refuse to do what God had enjoyned them God that sees the heart chargeth them with infidelity and therefore we may be
slain and for the satisfaction of the people that they may know he did it by the speciall motion of my spirit because I the Lord have thus both approved and rewarded the fact say that is make it known that behold I give unto him my covenant of peace where Gods covenant with Phinehas for the settling of the priesthood in his posterity is called a covenant of peace first because they should peaceably enjoy it and secondly because the work of the priesthood was to make peace betwixt the Lord and his people Vers 13. And he shall have it and his seed after him even the covenant of an everlasting priesthood That is a priesthood that shall be continued to his seed as long as ever the Leviticall priesthood shall continue But the dignity of being high priest should have come to him and his by descent may some say because he was the sonne of Eleazar Aarons eldest sonne I answer though he was so yet that it should not be removed to another family for want of his issue that was of Gods goodnesse and is here promised as the reward of his zeal Indeed the greatest doubt concerning this promise is whether it were continued in his posterity or no. Concerning which all that we find in the Scripture is this first that we find the posterity of this Phinehas recorded unto the time of the Israelites captivity in Babylon 1. Chron. 6. 4 15. secondly that if it be true which some hold that in the dayes of the Judges the high priests office was wrested from the sonnes of Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar and conferred upon Eli who was of the stock of Ithamar yet in the dayes of Solomon it was again taken from Abiathar who was of Elies house and settled upon Zadok and so it came again into the line of Phinehas and so continued unto the Babylonian captivity 1. Kings 2. 25. and thirdly that though it be no where expressely said of what stock the high priests were after the Israelites return out of Babylon yet we find that Esra that great priest and scribe was of his line Ezra 7. 1 c. and it may be probably thought that the high priests still continued in that line unlesse it were in those times when there was nothing amongst them but disorder and confusion Neither indeed is there any cause why we should understand this promise to be so absolute but in case of the sinnes of his posterity they might for a time be deprived of this dignity Vers 14. Zimri the sonne of Salu a prince of a chief house among the Simeonites It is particularly expressed how great a man he was whom Phinehas slew because herein the zeal of Phinehas was notably discovered Vers 15. He was head over a people and of a chief house in Midian He is reckoned one of the five Kings of Midian chap. 31. 8. Vers 17. Vex the Medianites and smite them c. These words smite them imply a promise of victory But why are they not to smite the Moabites as well as the Midianites first because he had already forbidden Israel to distresse the Moabites Deut. 2. 9. And the Lord said unto me Distresse not the Moabites neither contend with them in battel secondly because the Midianites had the chief hand in the mischief as seems probable first by Balaams stay amongst them wh●n Balak had left him in displeasure and secondly by this parti●ular fact of Cozbi who was a Kings daughter amongst them c. CHAP. XXVI Vers 2. TAke the summe of all the congregation of the children of Israel c. Of the two first numbrings of the people see Exod. 30. 11 12. and Numb 1. 1 2. But now the reasons of this third numbring of the people as we may gather by some passages were these first because this would make way to the more equall dividing of the land which they were presently to go about according as they found the tribes more or lesse in number see vers 53 54. Unto these the land shall be divided for an inheritance according to the number of names c. secondly to manifest how fully that which God had threatned chap. 14. 29. was now accomplished vers 64 65. But among these there was not a man of them whom Moses and Aaron the priest numbred when they numbred the children of Israel in the wildernesse of Sinai For the Lord had said of them They shall surely die in the wildernesse c. Happely all the old company were not dead till this last plague wherein foure and twenty thousand were cut off and therefore it may seem expressely noted ver 1. that it was after the plague that God gave this charge to Moses and Eleazar for numbring the people because then God had exactly brought that to passe which he had long since threatned as they should now see in taking the number of the people thirdly to manifest Gods power and goodnesse in preserving unto them so many notwithstanding they had wandred so many years through a wildernesse wherein they were encountred with so many difficulties and had so often by their sinnes provoked God to cut off many amongst them as also his truth and faithfulnesse who had so wondrously increased them as he promised their forefathers notwithstanding they had often by their rebellion provoked him to destroy them the more seasonable it was to comfort them in this kind because it was immediately after foure and twenty thousand had been taken away by the foregoing plague chap. 25. fourthly it was because they should hereby see Gods care over them and love towards them as Moses at their coming out of Egypt received Gods flock by tale so now before his death he must deliver them up by tale again Vers 4. Take the summe of the people from twenty years old and upward as the Lord commanded Moses c. That is after the same manner as he commanded Moses to number the people when they were newly come out of Egypt so hath he now again commanded to number them before their entring Canaan Vers 7. And they that were numbred of them were fourtie and three thousand and seven hundred and thirty At their last numbring the Reubenites were fourty six thousand and five hundred chap. 1. ver 21. so that this tribe was decreased two thousand seven hundred and seventy which may in part be ascribed to the conspiracy wherein they joyned with Korah Vers 10. And the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up together with Korah c. This place according to our translation clears it beyond all exception that Korah was swallowed up into the earth together with Dathan Abiram ch 16. And they became a signe That is for an example that others might take warning by them as sea-marks are set up to give us warning of danger 1. Cor. 10. 6. Now these things were our examples to the intent we should not lust after evil things as they also lusted Vers 11. Notwithstanding
coming out of Egypt from twenty years old and upward there was not a man left at this time when they were numbred again but onely Caleb and Joshua So that we must observe that the Levites are not here included for of them there were left Moses and Eleazar and Ithamar and perhaps many others CHAP. XXVII Vers 1. THen came the daughters of Zelophehad c. Because the Lord had said in the foregoing chapter vers 53. that the land should be divided amongst those they had now numbred from twenty years old and upward and so Zelophehad being dead without sonnes his children were like to have no inheritance in the land therefore his daughters came now to Moses and Eleazar desiring that that share of the land might be assigned to them which should have been their fathers had he been then living Vers 2. And they stood before Moses and before Eleazar the priest and before the princes and all the congregation by the doore of the tabernacle c. Whither they were it seems for this very purpose come that they might enquire of the Lord concerning this difficult case for I conceive they had formerly demanded an inheritance of the Judges and were by them appointed to plead for themselves before the doore of the tabernacle where they should have an answer from God himself Vers 3. Our father died in the wildernesse c. This plea of the daughters of Zelophehad is in effect as if they had thus said Our father was one of those whom the Lord carried out of Egypt to go and take possession of the land of Canaan and though he died in the wildernesse yet he was not taken away by any speciall judgement because he had his hand in some insurrection and rebellion such as was that of those that gathered themselves together against the Lord in the company of Korah and this they alledge to make their cause the more favourable because had he been cut off in any s●ch insurrection some might judge that it was no matter though his posterity were excluded from having any share in the land of Ca●aan but died in his own sinne that is he died his naturall death when his time was come as being by sinne liable to death as all other men are Thus Korahs conspiracie is mentioned here either by a Synecdoche this one being put for all other the rebellions of the Israelites and so the meaning must be that their father died in no particular rebellion against the Lord or else because whereas all the other murmurings and insurrections against Moses were especially the sinne of the common sort of people Korahs was chiefly of the princes and great men of every tribe chap. 16. 2. and so happely because their father was one of the chief of the tribe of Manasseh therefore they mention onely the rebellion of the great ones And as for that phrase of their fathers dying in his own sinne though some Expo●itours understand it thus that he dyed not for any speciall insurrection but onely for that sinne wherein the whole congregation was involved as well as he and for which the Lord threatned that they should all die in the wildernesse to wit for refusing to go into the land of Canaan when God had brought them thither yet I rather think it is meant of his own private sinnes which made him liable to death as all other men are for that all have ●inned Rom. 5. 12. Vers 4. Why should the name of our father be done away from among his familie because he hath no sonne That is why should not he be named amongst others in the division of the land which if it be not his name and familie will be quite extinguished as if he had never been and hence some Expositours conclude that as when a man dyed without issue and his brother m●rried his widow to raise up seed unto his brother his first sonne was in their Genealogies reckoned to be the sonne of him that dyed without issue so it was in this case the first sonnes of those that married the daughters of Zelophehad were accounted the sonnes of Zelophehad and so under his name did inherit his land Vers 4. Give unto us therefore a possession among the brethren of our father This pleading for a portion in that land which was not yet conquered was a true act of faith and must needs encourage others and help to strengthen their faith And besides hereby was shown as in a type that even women have an equall share with men in the heavenly Canaan for all inherit through Christ in whom there is neither male nor female but all are one Gal. 3. 28. Vers 7. Thou shalt surely give them a possession of an inheritance among their fathers brethren c. Thus the Lord granted these daughters of Zelophehad their desire which how it was performed by Joshua we may reade Josh 17. 4. According to the commandment of the Lord he gave them an inheritance among the brethren of their father yet withall there was afterwards a caution added to wit that they might not marry out of their own tribe chap. 36. 6. Vers 12. Get thee up into this mount Abarim c. There was a long tract of mountains which were called the mountains of Abarim chap. ●3 47. and into one of these was Moses now sent to wit that which is elsewhere called mount Nebo which was in the land of Moab over against Jericho Deut 32. 49. and Pisgah Deut. 34. 1. Hence Moses might see the land afarre off though he might not enter it and so the Law did shew the Israelites heaven afarre off but not as it is now revealed to us in the Gospel Vers 13. And when thou hast seen it thou shalt be gathered unto thy people c. That they should not enter the land God had threatned before Numb 20. 12. Se● the notes upon that place Vers 14. That is the water of Meribah in Kadesh in the wildernesse of Zin This is added to distinguish it from another Meribah Exod. 17. 7. where water was fetched out also from the rock but there Moses and Aaron displeased not the Lord. Vers 16. Let the Lord the God of the spirits of all flesh set a man over the congregation Moses at this time prayed also earnestly to the Lord that he might go over and see the land but God would not grant him his desire herein Deut. 3. 23 26. concerning this phrase the God of the spirits of all flesh see the note upon Numb 16. 22. This title is fitly in this prayer of Moses given unto the Lord both as implying that he was the searcher of mens spirits and therefore knew best who was fittest for the place and likewise as intimating that he was able to frame and fashion their spirits as he pleased and to give them any gifts or graces requisite for the imployment Vers 17. Which may go out before them and which may go in before them c. That is who
Egypt Gen. 12. 10. so Aram-Naharaim is in Greek called Mesopotamia because it lay between the rivers Vnto the citie of Nahor That is the city where Nahor dwelt so that is called Christs city wherein he dwelt Mat. 9. 1. And he entred into a shippe passed over and came into his own citie And this city here spoke of was Haran whereby it is evident that if Nahor came not to Haran with Abraham from Ur of the Chaldees as it seems he did not Gen. 11. 31. Terah took Abraham his sonne and Lot the sonne of Haran and Sarah his daughter in law his sonne Abrams wife and they went forth with them from Vr of the Chaldees c. and they came unto Haran and dwelt there yet afterwards he removed thither Vers 11. And he made his camels to kneel down That is it being now evening he caused them to lie down to rest themselves This phrase of kneeling down is used because after this manner camels use to lie down first to fall down on their knees and then to cast their bodies on the ground to rest themselves Vers 12. And he said O Lord God of my master Abraham c. It is said this was but a speaking in his heart vers 45. As for that which he now desired of God to wit that the damsel who should when he desired drink of her answer him Drink and I will give thy camels drink also might be the maid whom God had appointed to be Isaacs wife no doubt it came into his mind to desire this by the speciall instinct of Gods spirit yet he chooseth such a token as might be withall a probable signe of an ingenuous disposition in her that did it Vers 17. And the servant ran to meet her He was at the well before Rebekah came thither vers 13. Behold I stand here by the well c. but having stood a little aloof off the well till she had filled her pitcher and was going away he then ranne to meet her c. Vers 28. And the damsel ranne and told them of her mothers house these things It seems that it was the custome of those times and places for the women to dwell apart by themselves vers 67. And Isaac brought her into his mother Sarahs tent Vers 29. And Laban ranne out unto the man to the well By the appointment happely both of his father Bethuel and his mother Vers 48. To take my masters brothers daughter unto his sonne For Rebekah was the daughter of Bethuel the sonne of Nahor Abrahams brother and it is usuall in the Scriptures to call grandchildren sonnes and daughters Vers 49. Tell me that I may turn to the right hand or to the left That is that I may somewhere else look out for a wife for my masters sonne And thus he opposeth the right hand and the left to that right way mentioned in the former verse wherein the Lord had led him to take his masters brothers daughter unto his sonne Vers 50. Then Laban and Bethuel answered The sonne is set before the father because as it seems he spake in the name of them all his father being old and therefore it may well be not so able to return the answer We cannot speak unto thee bad or good That is we cannot speak any thing at all against it he speaks good against any thing propounded that contradicts it upon good ground he evil that speaks against an apparent good motion out of some evil affection Laban therefore in this proverbiall speech acknowledgeth that good could not be said against this motion and evil he would not speak Vers 51. Let her be thy masters sonnes wife as the Lord hath spoken That is we perceive plainly by the whole carriage of this businesse that this match is made in heaven God hath decreed that she shall be his wife and therefore God forbid that we should oppose it Let it be as the Lord hath spoken The same phrase David useth speaking of Gods decree 2. Sam. 16. 10. The Lord hath said unto him Curse David Vers 59. They sent away Rebekah their sister and her nurse Whose name was Deborah Gen. 35. 8. But Deborah Rebekahs nurse died c. Vers 60. Let thy seed possesse the gate of those that hate them See the notes upon Gen. 22. 17. Thy seed shall possesse the gate of his enemies Vers 65. Therefore she took a veil and covered her face A s●gne of modestie as also of subjection 1. Cor. 11. 5 6 10. But every woman that prayeth or proph●sieth with her head uncovered dishonoureth her head for that is even all one as if she were shaven for if the woman be not covered let her also be shorn but if it be a shame for a woman to be shorn or shaven let her be covered For this cause ought the woman to have power on her head c. Vers 67. And Isaac brought her into his mother Sarahs tent and took Rebekah That is having conducted her into the tent of Sarah his deceased mother which it seems had been reserved ever since Sarahs death for Isaacs wife within some convenient time after he took her that is he was in a solemn manner after the rites of those times married to her and so she became his wife CHAP. XXV Vers 1. THen again Abraham took a wif● and her name was Keturah That is after Sarah was dead and that weighty businesse of his sonnes marriage dispatcht But how then doth the Apostle say that Abrahams body was dead in the hundredth year of his age for matter of begetting children if now by another he have so many children fourty years after I answer 1. By the deadnesse of his body is meant his unlikelyhood to have children in regard of great age not that it was absolutely impossible by the ordinary course of nature 2. That grace of God that strengthened him for the generation of Isaac did continue unto him this vigour of nature for many years after for farther procreation of children Indeed considering 1. that there is no mention neither of Keturah nor of her children in all the foregoing story 2. that Sarah caused Hagar and Ishmael to be cast out and therefore much lesse would have endured another 3. that when Isaac was to be sacrificed he is called Abrahams onely s●nne I see not how we can hold that Abraham married Keturah in Sarahs life-time Vers 6. But unto the sonnes of the concubines which Abraham had Abraham gave gifts c. That is unto the sonnes of Hagar and K●turah The Hebrew word signifieth a half-wife or a divided and secondary wife and it seems by this place that not onely they were called concubines who as Hagar were taken after a man was married to be as it were partner-wives for the right of the bed though not for honour and government of the family but also second wives married after the first was dead because their children also had no right of inheritance And sent them away from
to eat and raiment to put on so that I come again to my fathers house in peace then shall the Lord be my God this stone which I have set for a pillar shall be Gods house and of all that thou shalt give me I will surely give the tenth unto thee Vers 8. B●t Deborah Rebekahs nurse died This place makes me without any scruple to conclude that though the coming of Jacob to his father Isaac be not yet mentioned he had been there long before this for who can think that Jacob would be ten or twelve years in Canaan after he was come from Laban with whom he had served twenty years and never go in all that time to see his aged father undoubtedly there was continuall intercourse betwixt them and so Deborah being come at this time to Jacob it may be upon Rebekahs death or some other occasion there died and with great mourning was buried Vers 10. But Israel shall be thy name God had given him this name before Gen. 32. 28. And he said Thy name shall be no more called Jacob but Israel but now the Lord confirmed this name to him the second time as Jacob also ver 15. confirms the name of the place Bethel And Jacob called the name of the place where God spoke with him Bethel Vers 14. And Jacob set up a pillar in the place where he talked with him Whether the pillar set up here before Gen. 28. 18. And Jacob rose up early in the morning and took the stone that he had put for his pillow and set it up for a pillar was defaced or overthrown it is uncertain but this was questionlesse another pillar as appears because it is said to have been set up just in the place where God had this second time appeared to him And he poured a drink-offering thereon See Gen. 28. 18. Ver. 18. But his father called him Benjamin That is the sonne of my right hand to wit because he should be his beloved tendered and especially regarded he should be ever at his right hand according to that expression Psal 80. 17. Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand and thus doth Jacob as it were correct the immoderate sorrow of his wife shown in the name she had given him Benoni the sonne of my sorrow also prevents the frequent renewing of his sorrow by that name which might often have brought to remembrance the losse of his dear wife Vers 19. And Rachel died To wit immediately after she was delivered of her child and thus she that ere while in a passion quarrelled with her husband Give me children or I die now died by her bearing of children And was buried in the way to Ephrath which is Beth-lehem It hath both names Micah 5. 2. But thou Beth-lehem Ephratah c. Vers 29. And Isaac gave up the ghost and died This is here set down by way of anticipation for that which is related in the two follovving chapters fell out before Isaac died CHAP. XXXVI Vers 1. NOw these are th● generations of Esau c. This is related to shevv the accomplishment of that temporall blessing vvherevvith his father blessed him Gen. 27. 39. And Isaac his father answered and said unto him Behold thy dwelling shall be the fatnesse of the earth and of the dew of heaven from above and by thy sword shalt thou live and shalt serve thy brother and it shall come to passe when thou shalt have the dominion that thou shalt break his yoke from off thy neck as likevvise of the promise to Abraham Gen. 22. 17. In multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the starres of the heaven and as the sand upon the sea shore and the oracle given to Rebekah Gen. 25. 23. And the Lord said unto her Two nations are in thy womb and two manner of people shall be separated from thy bowels Vers 2. Adah the daughter of Elon c. The vvives of Esau are here set dovvn by other names then formerly The first is Adah vvho Gen. 26. 34. is called Bashemath and the daughter of Elon the Hittite as here also she is said to be And indeed it vvas usuall in those times to have tvvo names for thus Esau vvas called Edom and Jacob Israel Maachah daughter of Abishalom 1. King 15. 2. is called Michaiah daughter of Uriel 2. Chron. 13. 2. His second vvife here named is Aholibamah the daughter of Anah the daughter of Zibeon the Hivite novv this doubtlesse is the same who is called Judith Gen. 26. 34. onely because her father was called both Anah and Beeri here she is said to be the daughter of Anah and there the daughter of Beeri and because this Anah who was also called Beeri was the sonne of Zibeon therefore Aholibamah is said to be not onely the daughter of Anah but also the daughter of Zibeon because she was his grandchild namely Zibeons and that to distinguish this Anah the father of Aholibamah Esaus wife from another Anah mentioned ver 20. who was the brother of Zibeon and so the uncle of this Anah Indeed Anah or Beeri the father of Aholibamah or Judith though here termed the Hivite yet is said to be a Hittite chap. 26. 34. but this is because the Hivites comprehended also the Hittites as the Brittains the English and Welch Vers 3. And Bashemath This was Esaus third wife called Machalath Gen. 28. 9. Vers 6. And Esau took his wives and his sonnes c. Esau dwelt in Seir whilest Jacob was in Mesopotamia chap. 32. being removed thither as may well be thought either upon some displeasure or for that he was allyed by marriage to the Hivites vers 2. Esau took his wives of the daughters of Canaan Aholibamah the daughter of Anah the daughter of Zibeon the Hivite but this cannot be meant of that removall for now he goes from the face of his brother Jacob and that vers 7. because their riches were more then that they might dwell together Questionlesse therefore after Jacobs return from Mesopotamia Esau not yet having removed his goods c. from Canaan nor fully accomplished his designes in Seir returned also to his father but after Isaac was dead and buried partly because as it fared once with Abraham and Lot the place where they dwelt was too strait for him and his brother both being now grown exceeding rich and partly because no doubt he had already hope to get the possession of the land of Seir he removes thither again with all that he had God in his providence thus disposing it that he should thus leave Jacob as it were in the possession of Canaan which was appointed for his posterity Vers 12. And Timna was concubine to Eliphaz Esaus sonne She was sister to Lotan the sonne of Seir vers 22. And Lotans sister was Timma Thus not onely Esau but Eliphaz his sonne matching into the stock of the Chorites by this occasion they thrust in themselves into the government of Mount Seir Deut 2.
within the compasse of three and twenty years they shew thus to wit 1. That Judah might marry and have his three sonnes Er Onan and Shelah by his wife the daughter of Shuah in the first three years after Joseph vvas sold into Egypt 2. That Er might be marriedto Tamar when he vvas sixteen years old Onan also the following year vvhich was towards the latter end of the seven plenteous years in Egypt about eighteen years after Joseph was sold thither and 3. That in the five following years Tamar might by Judah as is here related conceive with child and bring forth Pharez and Zarah a little before their going into Egypt And whereas it may be objected that Pharez had two sonnes Hezron and Hamul vvhen Jacob vvent dovvn into Egypt Gen. 46. 12. The sonnes of Pharez were Hezron and Hamul to this they answer That Hezron and Hamul are there reckoned amongst those that vvent dovvn vvith Jacob into Egypt not because they were then born but because they vvere of Jacobs family in Egypt vvhilest Jacob vvas yet living Thus I say some Expositours understand this place that Judah married this Canaanites daughter contrary no doubt to his father Jacobs mind who vvas himself strictly forbidden to marry amongst them by Isaac that very year that Joseph was sold into Egypt But 2. because Hezron and Hamul are so expresly reckoned amongst those that vvent dovvn vvith Jacob into Egypt Gen 46. 12. therefore many Expositours yea the most conceive that these vvords And it came to passe at that time must not be taken strictly that Judah married thus at that time vvhen Joseph was sold into Egypt but that it vvas done about that time that is say they at Jacobs first coming into the land of Canaan vvhen he left his uncle Laban and the ground of this their opinion is this because Jacobs coming from Laban vvhich vvas when Joseph vvas six years old as is evident if vve compare Gen. 30. 25. And it came to passe when Rachel had born Joseph that Jacob said unto Laban Send me away c. give me my wives and my children for whom I have served thee and let me go c. vvith Gen. 31. 40. Thus have I been twenty years in thy house I served thee fourteen years for thy two daughters and six years for thy cattel c. vvas but eleven years before Joseph vvas sold into Egypt consequently not above foure thirty years at the most ere Jacob vvent dovvn thither to Joseph all vvhich time vvill be strait enough if not too little for all these things to be done in that are here related and for the birth of Ezron and Hamul the sonnes of Pharez vvho are reckoned amongst those that vvent dovvn vvith Jacob into Egypt for though Judah married the daughter of Shuah about tvvo years after their coming into Canaan and yet vvas he then but thirteen years old as being at the utmost but five y●ars older then Joseph and had by her Er Onan and Shelah in the three next years after his marriage and though he then married Er his eldest sonne to Tamar vvhen he vvas also but thirteen years old vvhich vvas sixteen years after their coming into Canaan three years at least after Joseph vvas sold into Egypt to this if you adde but three years for the death of Er the marriage and death of Onan the going home of Tamar to her fathers house Judahs incest with her and the conception and birth of her tvvo twinnes Pharez and Zarah the fruit of that incest and then fifteen years more ere Pharez could be marriageable and have those his two sonnes Hezron and Hamul who are numbred amongst those that went dovvn vvith Jacob into Egypt this vvill make the vvhole number of foure and thirty years from Jacobs coming into Canaan till his removing into Egypt And so they conclude that doubtlesse the time here spoken of vvhen Judah married this Canaanites daughter vvas vvithin a vvhile after their coming into Canaan And indeed neither of these Expositours do suppose any thing impossible yet the first may seem most probable because it were very strange if Judah and his sonnes Er and Pharez should all marry at twelve or thirteen years of ag● Vers 7. And the Lord slew him The like also is said of Onan his younger brother vers 10. and the meaning in both places is that they died not an ordinary naturall death but that they were taken away in an extraordinary manner by some remarkable judgement whereby it was manifest unto others that they were cut off by the revenging hand of God for their notorious wickednesse And this was the fruit of Judahs marriage with a daughter of that accursed nation of the Canaanites that were in time to come to be rooted out that the Israelites might dwell in their room his children that he had by her proved sonnes of Belial and were destroyed by the just judgement of God upon them Vers 8. Go in unto thy brothers wife c. By this it appears that God had given this in charge to the Patriarchs as many other things which was afterward established by the written Law Deut. 25. 5. If brethren dwell together and one of them die and have no child the wife of the dead shall not marry without unto a stranger her husbands brother shall go in unto her and take her to him for wife and perform the duty of an husbands brother unto her Vers 11. Remain a widow in thy fathers house till Shelah my sonne be grown It is evident that in these words Judah thought to assure Tamar that assoon as his sonne Shelah was marriageable he also should take her to wife and raise up feed to his deceased brethren but withall it is most probable that he meant nothing lesse but onely intended to put her off and that as suspecting that she had some way been the occasion of the death of his other two sonnes as the words following do import For he said to wit within himself Lest peradventure he die also as his brethren did And indeed why ●lse did he send her home to her father she might have stayed awhile unmarried with him and when Shelah was grown we see Judah minded not the performance of his promise as is noted vers 14. yea his own confession makes it manifest vers 26. where he accuseth himself of doing her wrong She hath been more righteous then I because that I gave her not to Shelah my sonne Vers 12. Judah was comforted and went up to his sheep-shearers to Timnath A city in the Philistines countrey which also befell Judahs children for a possession Josh 15. 20 57. This is the inheritance of the tribe of Judah c. Cain Gibea and Timnath Vers 14. And sate in an open place Such open places harlots used Ezech. 16. 25. Thou hast built thy high places at every head of the way Jer. 3. 2. Lift up thine eyes unto the high places and see where thou hast
Canaan vvas a type and pledge Vers 31. And Israel bowed himself upon the beds head Namely to God by vvay of thankfulnesse both for those promises in the faithfull expectation vvhereof he had desired to be buried in the land of Canaan and for this present mercy that novv by Joseph he vvas assured that he should be buried in the promised land Novv because he vvas bed-rid through vveaknesse or age or at least lying upon his couch Moses shevveth hovv he bovved himself to vvit that turning his face to the bed and so rearing himself upon the bolster at his beds head he then bovved himself and vvorshipped the Lord. And indeed such vvas the zeal of the good servants of God in those times that vvhen they vvere bed-rid it seems they endeavoured in the best manner they could vvith some devotion and bovving of their bodies to vvorship the Lord for so it is said also of David vvhen he kept his bed by reason of vveaknesse in his old age 1. King 1. 47. that the king bovved himself upon his bed Indeed the Apostle renders this place othervvise Heb. 11. 21. to vvit That Jacob when he was a dying worshipped leaning upon the top of his staff and the ground of this difference all Writers conceive to have been this that the Hebrevv vvord in this place vvhen the vovvel points are not added signifieth both a bed and a staff and that the septuagint Greek Translatours making use of a copie that had not the vovvel points did mistake the vvord and translated this place And Israel bowed himself upon the top of his staff vvhich translation of the Septuagint the Apostle follovved in that place of his epistle to the Hebrevvs But vvhereas it may seem improbable that the Apostle vvho vvrote by the inspiration of the holy Ghost should follovv a corrupt translation to this it is ansvvered 1. That it is no impeachment to the Apostles divine illumination that he should cite a place as it vvas in the Greek translation vvhich the Hebrevvs did most commonly use in those times considering that even according to that translation it served fitly to the purpose for vvhich he alledged it and 2. That it is true that Jacob vvhen he raised up himself upon his pillovv tovvards his beds head that he might bovv ●nto the Lord as is here expressed vvithall the better to help himself in his great vveaknesse he leaned upon the top of his staff and the Apostle knovving this also to be true did not therefore stick to alledge the place according to the Greek translation CHAP. XLVIII Vers 4. I Will make of thee a multitude of people That is thirteen populous tribes Vers 5. And now thy two sonnes Ephraim and Manasseh c. are mine as Reuben and Simeon are mine That is being by birth my grandchildren they shall by adoption be my sonnes and therefore accordingly in the division of the promised land they shall have the priviledge of my sonnes each of them a tvvelfth share no lesse then Reuben and Simeon thus hath Joseph a double portion the priviledge of the first-born 1. Chron. 5. 1. Now the sonnes of Reuben the first-born of Israel for he was the first-born but forasmuch as he defiled his fathers bed his birth-right was given unto the sonnes of Joseph the sonne of Israel Deut. 21. 17. But he shall acknowledge the sonne of the hated for the first-born by giving him a double portion Vers 6. And thy issue which thou begettest after them shall be thine and shall be called after the name of their brethren That is shall be counted of the stock and tribe of Ephraim or Manasseh as if they were their sonnes not their brethren therefore though there be no other sonnes of Joseph mentioned yet that is no proof that he had none for it is here appointed that they should be called after the name of their brethren Vers 7. And as for me when I came from Padan Rachel dyed c. That is though the Lord promised at Luz as I have said that he would so exceedingly multiply my seed yet as for me my hope of having more children by your mother my beloved Rachel was soon taken from me by her death for even a while after she dyed a little short of Ephrath and was there buried by me so that my hope for the accomplishment of Gods promise must be in my childrens children and since I had by her but thee and thy brother therefore thy two sonnes shall be mine c. it may be thou maist have more but as for me Rachel dyed and left me but onely you two Vers 8. And Israel beheld Josephs sonnes and said Who are these His eyes being dimme by reason of age he could not perfectly discern whether they were Josephs sonnes or no and therefore he asked them who they were Vers 12. And Joseph brought them out from between his knees Jacob had hitherto onely testified his love by imbracing and kissing them Joseph therefore doth remove them as it were from the bosome of the old man first the one and then the other that the next work might be done which was of most moment namely the Patriarchall blessing of them which it seems was usually done with imposition of hands And he bowed himself with his face to the earth To wit in reverence to his aged father and by way of thankfulnesse for the work in hand the adoption of his sonnes Vers 14. Guiding his hands wittingly That is though Jacobs eyes were dimme as is before noted vers 10. yet that was not the reason why he laid his right hand upon Ephraim that was the youngest and his left hand upon Manasseh that was the eldest but he did it wittingly why else should he crosse his armes that he might lay his right hand upon the youngest that stood at his left hand and his left hand upon the eldest that stood at his right hand but that he did it purposely as a signe of that which afterwards he foretold to wit that Ephraim which was the youngest should have the preheminence yea this was one of the chief evidences that he did all he did in this businesse by the speciall revelation of the spirit of God because being so ill sighted that he could not discern which was the eldest and which the youngest yet he did purposely crosse his arms that he might lay his right hand upon the youngest and his left hand upon the eldest Vers 15. And he blessed Joseph That is in his children Vers 16. The Angel which redeemed me from all evil blesse the lads That is Christ the eternall sonne of God who is called the Angel or Messenger of the covenant Mal. 3. 1. and of whom it is said Exod. 23. 21. that Gods name is in him And indeed to say that a created angel redeemed Jacob from all evil or might be prayed to by Jacob that he would blesse the sonnes of Joseph and make them grow to a multitude in the midst of
of his utterance and pronunciation and so it seems it was with Moses though he were an excellent speaker for the substance of that which he spake yet some defect he had in regard of his utterance which some conceive to have been that he was of a stammering tongue and thereto apply that which he afterwards said How shall Pharaoh heare me who am of uncircumcised lippes chap. 6. 12. Vers 12. I will be with thy mouth and teach thee what thou shalt say It is evident that the imperfection of Moses speech and utterance continued after this for still we see he complained of his uncircumcised lippes chap. 6. 30. and because of this Aaron was his spokesman in delivering Gods message unto Pharaoh This therefore which the Lord here sayes to Moses I will be with thy mouth is not meant of helping him of that naturall imperfection in his speech but that God would direct him what he should say and so prosper him in his message that his slownesse of speech should be no hinderance to him but that he should with comfort to his people and terrour to their enemies dispatch the businesse which God had imposed upon him Vers 14. And he said Is not Aaron the Levite thy brother I know that he can speak well c. Thus was Moses comforted hearing that his brother Aaron from whom he had been absent now fourty years was still living and well and withall encouraged by knowing that he should have him joyned with him in commission of whose fidelity he could make no question and whom he knew of good abilities for the delivering of their message to Pharaoh Vers 16. And thou shalt be to him in stead of God That is thou shalt as from God and in Gods stead make known to him what he shall say unto Pharaoh Vers 18. And Moses went and returned to Jethr● his father in law and said unto him Let me go c. Moses did not ask his father in law leave to go into Egypt as questioning whether he should obey Gods command in going unlesse he would give him leave but onely as judging it fit that he should acquaint his father in law with his purpose and crave his approbation and not go rudely away with his daughter and her children without giving him any notice beforehand of it espe●ially considering that he had no cause at all to suspect either the wisdome or courtesie of his father in giving him liberty Moses therefore was not herein to be blamed rather his modesty and humilitie herein discovered was worthy admiration who after so glorious a Vision was no way puffed up with it but carried himself in such an humble and lowly manner towards his father in law As for his alledging no other reason to Jethro for his returning into Egypt but onely his desire to visit and see his brethren Let me go I pray thee and return unto my brethren which are in Egypt and see whether they be yet alive therein also his modesty was discovered in that he could forbear to tell his father in law of the glorious vision he had seen and the honourable imployment which God had put upon him and likewise his wisdome in managing this businesse for doubtelesse he did purposely conceal this that hewas sent to fetch the Israelites out of Egypt both because he judged it not fit to impart this secret to Jethro who was not of the stock of Israel though a godly man before he acquainted the Israelites themselves with it and likewise especially lest the difficultie and danger of the work should make his father in law unwilling to let him go Vers 19. And the Lord said unto Moses in Midian c. To wit either before he had asked his fathers leave or after that The other appearing of God to Moses was in Horeb this in Midian but whether this his appearing to Moses in Midian were before he asked leave to go or after we cannot certainly conclude if it were after that then either Moses even after leave obtained from Jethro yet hastened not his journey as was fitting and therefore by this second apparition God quickned him again or else he took it that in the first vision in the burning bush God had onely called him to the work of going into Egypt for the deliverance of the Israelites but had not expressely told him the time when he should go and so he waited till now that in this second vision in the land of Midian God again appeared to him and commanded him immediately to go thither adding this encouragement to what he had said before that all the men were dead which sought his life And doubtlesse all the time of his sojourning with his father in law in Midian he thought of what God had formerly revealed to him in Egypt concerning the Lords imploying him in that service onely he waited to see when God would call him thereto and that happely might be the reason why in so many years he did not send to know in what condition his brethren were in Egypt because he was resolved wholly to cast himself herein upon the providence of God and to do nothing without direction from him Vers 20. And Moses took his wife and his sonnes c. Hereby it appears that Moses either carryed his wife and his children into Egypt or at least that he was upon his journey intending to carry them with him thither Indeed as evident it is when Moses went with the Israelites out of Egypt his wife and children were with his father in law in Midian for Exod. 18. 5. it is said that Jethro his father in law met him in the wildernesse when he encamped at the mount of God and brought his wife and his sonnes thither to him It seems therefore that either when he was upon the way going thither he sent them back again to Jethro perhaps upon the occasion of the following story of the circumcising of his sonne or at least that when he was in Egypt finding some inconvenience in their being there he took order to return them to the safe custodie of his father in law that himself might the more freely and wholly intend the businesse he had undertaken And Moses took the rod of God in his hand It was doubtlesse the same rod or shepherds crook which Moses used at other times to carry in his hand and which he had in his hand when God spake to him out of the burning bush onely it is here called the rod of God because it was that wherewith God had appointed that Moses should work so many glorious miracles and so to intimate that it was meerely of God and not of any power in Moses or in the rod that so many strange things were done by it Vers 21. But I will harden his heart that he shall not let the people go See ch●p 7. 13. Vers 22. Thus saith the Lord Israel is my sonne even my first-born c. Many severall reasons may be given why
oppressed they were with sorrow by reason thereof that they could not mind what Moses said to them nor believe any thing that was spoken concerning their deliverance as deeming their condition desperate and past hope of recoverie Vers 12. How then shall Pharaoh heare me who am of uncircumcised lips That is if the Israelites would not regard what I said to them what hope can I have that Pharaoh should mind my words especially considering that I am a man that have an imperfection in my speech for doubtlesse it was with respect to his bad utterance that Moses called himself a man of uncircumcised lips Because circumcision was with them the first badge of Gods people and therefore those that were not circumcised were counted profane and their uncircumcision was counted a grievous blemish hence it was that in a figurative kind of speech they called those things that had any naturall or morall blemish uncircumcised as a heart a mind or tongue uncircumcised Vers 14. These be the heads of their fathers houses Moses his chief intention is no doubt to shew the naturall stock of himself and Aaron that he was a true Israelite of the tribe of Levi though he was brought up in Pharaohs court and afterward ●led into the land of Midian yet for order sake he begins first with the children of Reuben and Simeon Levies elder brethren Vers 16. And the years of the life of Levi were an hundred thirtie and seven years This expresse mention of their age is of great use in Chronologie especially for the opening of that speech concerning Israels peregrination Exod. 12. 40. The sojourning of the Children of Israel who dwelt in Egypt was foure hundred a●d thirtie years It is evident in the 30. chapter of Genesis that Joseph was not above foure years younger then Levi. If therefore Joseph was 39 years old when Jacob went down into Egypt as may be clearly gathered from Gen. 41. 46. because Joseph was thirtie years old when he stood before Pharaoh and when the seven yea●s of plentie were gone and two years of the famine then Jacob came down into Egypt consequently Levi was then three and fourtie years old and since he lived as it is here said an hundred thirtie and seven years it must needs follow that he lived in Egypt ninetie and foure years or thereabouts CHAP. VII Vers 1. I Have made thee a God to Pharaoh Not onely because by Aaron as God is wont to do by his prophets he should in Gods name decla●e his will unto him for the delivering of his people but also because of the divine authoritie given unto him in bringing those great plagues upon Egypt which made Pharaoh to fear him as God c. Vers 7. And Moses was fourescore years old c. The age of Moses and Aaron is here inserted 1. for the further evidence of the truth of the story and the computation of the Chronologie of those times 2. to set forth Gods glorie the more by this intimation of the weaknesse of his instruments 3. to shew how long God in his wise providence had suffered the Egyptians to oppresse the Israelites with such cruel bondage even from before the birth of Moses till he came to be fourescore years old and 4. the more to commend the obedience of Moses and Aaron that did not because of their great years shrink from this weighty employment which God had imposed upon them Vers 10 And they did so as the Lord had commanded c. that is 1. They again required Pharaoh in the name of the Lord to let the children of Israel go out of his land for this God had commanded Moses and Aaron chap. 6. 11. and it was a notable evidence of their faith and courage that they durst again desire this of that proud king notwithstanding they had so enraged him formerly by the first deliverie of this their message that in a furie he oppressed the people more then he had done before and 2. when Pharaoh hereupon either by way of derision or out of a captious device to trie what they could do or because he had heard of the miracles wrought and the Israelites did will them to shew him some signe if they would have him know that their God had sent them Moses thereupon spake unto Aaron to cast his rod upon the ground and said it should become a serpent which Aaron accordingly did For though it be not here expressed that Pharaoh asked a signe yet may we justly conclude it from the foregoing verse where the charge given to Moses was When Pharaoh shall speak unto you saying Shew a miracle for you then thou shalt say unto Aaron Take thy Rod and cast it before Pharaoh and it shall become a serpent and then it follows in this verse And they did so as the Lord had commanded c. Vers 12. They also did in like manner with their inchantments That is they caused their rods in outward shew and appearance to become serpents These or the chief of these were Jannes and Jambres whereof S. Paul speaks 2. Tim. 3. 8. But Aarons rod swallowed up their rods And thus the Lord discovered that the power whereby Moses and Aaron had wrought their miracle was infinitely fa●re above that of Satan whereby the Magicians had endeavoured to equall the work which Moses had done Vers 13. And he hardned Pharaohs heart that he hearkned not to them Though hardnesse of heart be a grievous sinne yet the hardening of the heart is not alwayes sin and therefore is it here said of God who cannot be the authour of sin that he hardned Pharaohs heart to wit not by making his heart hard that was soft before nor by infusing any evil into him whereby his heart should be hardned but in a way of judgement and punishment for his former sinnes 1. by withdrawing and withholding that grace whereby he should be wonne to repent and yield unto the Lord as the sunne causeth darknesse by withdrawing his light 2. by delivering him up to the power of Satan and leaving him to his own corrupt lusts and affections 3. by doing those things to him which the Lord knew well would prove occasions actuating and exciting the evil that was in him and cause him more and more to harden his heart against God Vers 17. I will smite with the rod that is in mine hand upon the waters c. and they shall be turned into bloud They had shed the bloud of the Israelites children and drowned them in the river and now God in his just judgement makes the river to yield them nothing but bloud Vers 18. And the fish in the river shall die and the river shall stink This is added to shew the greivousnesse of the plague for first it deprived them of that which was in Egypt their chief food fish as may easily be discerned by comparing these places together Num. 11. 5. We remember the fish that we did eat in Egypt freely Esai 19. 8.
where the Lord threatens this as a great judgement to Egypt The fishers also shall mourn and all they that cast angles into the brooks shall lament and they that spread nets upon the waters shall languish and Exod. 8. 26. where it seems that the Egyptians did abhorre to eat of such cattel as the Israelites used to sacrifice It is not meet for us so to do saith Moses for we shall sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians c. Secondly it deprived them of drink for they used to drink the waters of Nilus in Egypt Jer. 2. 18. What hast thou to do in the way of Egypt to drink the waters of Sihor c there being very seldome any rain in that countrey Deut. 11. 10 11. The land whither thou goest in to possesse it is not as the land of Egypt from whence ye came out where thou sowedst thy seed and wateredst it with thy foot as a garden of herbs But the land whither ye go to possesse it is a land of hills and valleys and drinketh water of the rain from heaven And the Egyptians shall loath to drink of the water of the river The Israelites were therefore free from this plague also as from others after Exod. 8. 22. And I will sever in that day the land of Goshen in which my people dwell that no swarms of flies shall be there c. Vers 22. And the Magicians of Egypt did so with their inchantments But whence had they waters since already they were all turned into bloud surely either from the land of Goshen where it was likely the waters were not turned or rather from the pits which the Egyptians digged ver 24. And all the Egyptians digged round about the river for water to drink for it is unlikely they stayed for the doing of this till water could be fetched from the land of Goshen CHAP. VIII Vers 3. ANd the river shall bring forth frogs abundantly which shall go up into the house of thy servants and upon thy people c. By expressing these persons that should be plagued with these frogs the exempting of Israel seems to be implyed as after it is plainly expressed ver 22. And I will sever in that day the land of Goshen in which my people dwell c. Vers 4. And the frogs shall come up both on thee c. The despicablenesse of the creature wherewith they were annoyed did no doubt aggravate the plague Vers 8. Intreat the Lord that he may take away the frogs from me and from my people Though the turning of their water into bloud all the land over was doubtlesse a very grievous plague yet this of the frogs was more grievous then that against the first they found some help though not without great trouble by digging for fresh water round about the river chap. 7. 24. and perhaps Pharaoh and the richer sort of his people had other sorts of drink in store for their own use but now against this plague of the frogs they could find no way to help or ease themselves no not the greatest of them all and therefore this forced Pharaoh to stoop a little and to desire Moses and Aaron to pray unto the Lord that he would take away their frogs from them Vers 9. And Moses said unto Pharaoh Glory over me The most conceive this to be spoken of the honour which should be done unto Pharaoh that he should prescribe the time himself when the frogs should be taken away But I rather think that it is such a kind of yielding to his desire wherein Moses doth also imply his fear concerning the event that Pharaoh would brag and boast when he had got the frogs removed and not keep promise with him in letting Israel go When shall I intreat for thee c. That is that you may know that it is the mightie work of God and that it is not by chance or by any naturall means that the frogs are destroyed prescribe the time your self when they shall be destroyed and at that very time it shall be done Vers 10. And he said To morrow He was so loth to be beholding to God or Moses that he rather chooses to endure th● plague till next day that he might make tryall whether they might not go away of themselves hoping that they came by some naturall cause and so would again go away Vers 14. And they gathered them together upon heaps God could have driven them into the river again or have caused them to vanish away but thus it pleased him to let them remain as a spectacle unto the Egyptians both to shew that it was a true miracle and by their ill favour to put them in mind of their sinne that made them stink before God Vers 16. And the Lord said unto Moses Say unto Aaron c. Because Pharaoh had mocked God promising and then not performing the Lord to manifest his indignation commands his servant to strike now without giving him warning beforehand as at other times what he meant to do Stretch out thy rod saith he and smite the dust of the land that it may become lice c. and thus again too he trampleth on the pride of the Egyptians punishing them by such base and contemptible creatures Vers 17. All the dust of the land became lice c. That is the dust in every part of the land for it is an hyperbolicall speech Vers 18. And the Magicians did so with their inchantments to bring forth lice and they could not The Lord disables them in making this smallest and basest creature for their greater confusion and so the folly of these their Wisemen was made manifest to all men 2. Tim. 3. 9. Vers 20. Rise up early in the morning and stand before Pharaoh lo he cometh forth to the water c. It seems to have been usuall with Pharaoh in the morning to go forth unto the waters either for his health and pleasure or rather of a superstitious mind as attributing divine honour to the river Nilus There therefore Moses is appointed to meet him both because he had no accesse into Pharaohs presence in his palace and also that withall his threatning him with the ensuing plague might be the more publick Vers 21. Behold I will send swarms of flies upon thee c. That is mixt swarms of wasps hornets and all kind of flies Psal 78. 45. He sent divers sorts of flies amongst them The houses of the Egyptians shall be full of swarms of flies and also the ground whereon they are That is the ground whereon the Egyptians are the meaning is that they should be on all the land whereon the Egyptians dwelt but not in Goshen where the Israelites dwelt as in the following verse is expressed and this exemption of Israel is here first mentioned to put Pharaoh in mind of it as a most remarkable thing which if he would well think on must needs work upon his conscience Vers 24. And the Lord did so and there
to require of him Look to it saith he for evil is before you if you trouble me further I shall make you smart for it Vers 13. The east-wind brought the locusts Or grashoppers and with them caterpillars Psal 78. 46. He gave also their increase unto the caterpillar and labour to the locust Psal 105. 34 35. He spake and the locusts came and caterpillars and that without number and did eat up all the herbs in their land and devoured the fruit of their ground Vers 16. I have sinned against the Lord your God and against you To wit against Moses and Aaron by using them so scornfully and reprochfully by threatning them for the faithfull discharge of their dutie and driving them away out of his presence as in the 10. and 11. verses or else the Israelites in generall by the cruel bondage under which he had held them and by refusing to dismisse them and to grant them that libertie of going forth to serve the Lord which by Moses and Aaron they had so often desired of him Vers 17. Now therefore I pray thee forgive me my sinne onely this once That is pardon the wrong I have done you and procure that the Lord may not further be offended with me and if this be done this once I require no more for if I fail you any more and not do what I promise I desire not that you should ever any more afford me the least favour Yet withall we must know that the main thing which Pharaoh intended in desiring that his sinne might be forgiven was that the plague might be taken away which now lay upon them for he was farre from a sincere desire of reconciliation with ●od Vers 17. Intreat the Lord your God that he may take away from me this death onely That is this deadly plague or destruction And so he calls this plague of the locusts not onely because it killed and destroyed all the fruit of the ground but also especially because by this means it deprived them of that which was to be food both for man and beast it was likely if it continued to bring a grievous famine and so death and mortalitie amongst them As for that opinion of some Expositours that these locusts with their biting killed even men themselves it is altogether uncertain and cannot be concluded from these words Yet probable it is that there were sometimes in those countreys some kind of locusts that killed men with their biting and that therefore Rev. 9. 5. it is said of those cruel enemies of the Church that are compared to locusts ascending out of the bottomlesse pit that their torment was as the torment of a scorpion when he striketh a man Vers 21. Even darknesse which may be felt The darknesse threatned is here called darknesse that may be felt either by way of an hyperbole to signifie what an exceeding great darknesse it should be or else because the aire should be so thickned with grosse mists and vapours that it might be felt which in such an extraordinary horrid darknesse as that was might indeed well be Vers 23. They saw not one another neither rose any from his place for three dayes They saw not one another because neither it seems had they any light by sunne moon or starres from above nor yet from fire or candle beneath the thick clouds wherewith the aire was darkned being such that either they did put out the fire or at least wholly hide and cover it from the sight of men And being thus deprived of all light whatsoever and that by a divine hand of judgement no marvell though with the terrour thereof they durst not so much as move from the places where they were as is here expressed How easily the Israelites that had light in their dwellings might have gone away with all that they had whilest the Egyptians lay thus for three dayes together imprisoned in darknesse we may easily conceive but they had learnt to depend and wait upon God and would not stirre but by his appointment Vers 24. And Pharaoh called unto Moses and said c. Pharaohs sending for Moses and charging him not to see his face any more ver 28. argue plainly that this was done after the three dayes darknesse was over But is it likely that when the plague was removed he would relent To which I answer And is it likely that lying bound in the chains of darknesse he would not have yielded to let the cattel go or at least have desired the help of Moses prayers as at other times Onely let your flocks and your heards be stayed And this he desired chiefly that they might be as pledges of their return again Vers 28. I will see thy face again no more That therefore which follows in the next chapter concerning the death of their first-born was spoken immediately by Moses at this time before he went from Pharaoh and therefore it is said chap. 11. 8. that he went out in a great anger CHAP. XI Vers 1. ANd the Lord said unto Mo●es yet ●ill● I bring on● plag●e more upon Pharaoh That is the Lord had said unto Moses yet will I bring c. for this message Moses r●ceived from the Lord immediately before Pharaoh sent last for him chap 10. 24. when he charged him not to see his face any more and it is here added as the g●ound of Moses confidence in answering so readily as we have it in the last verse of the former chapter that he would come to him no more the reason was because God had before that last coming to Pharaoh told him this which is here recorded It is true God had told Moses at first somewhat of the Israelites borrowing of the Egyptians jewels of silver and gold Exod. 3. 21 22. And it shall come to pass● that when y● go ye shall not go empty but every woman shall borrow of h●r n●ighbour and of her that so●ou●neth in her house jewels of si●ver and jewels of gold c. as also of this plague of slaying their first-born Exod. 4. 23. Let my sonn● go that he may serve me and if thou refuse to let him go behold I will slay thy sonne even ●hy first-born But this message which is here related he received from the Lord immediately before that his last going to Pharaoh whereof mention is made in the 24. verse of the former chapter and therefore he saith Yet will I bring one plague more upon Pharaoh c. Vers 3. The man Moses was very great in the land of Egypt in the sight of Pharaohs servants c. Implying tha●the reverend esteem the Egyptians had of Moses was a furtherance to the enclining of their hearts thus to lend their jewels to the Hebrews Vers 4. And Moses said Thus saith the Lord c. That is immediately after he had told him that he would see his face no more chap. 10. ver 29. Vers 5. Even unto the first-born of the maid-servant that is behind the
is doubtlesse meant that land of promise where God had long since promised to seat his people and there to dwell amongst them by the gracious signes of his presence not in the tabernacle onely but especially also in the temple which God chose to be his resting place Psal 132. 14. and where the promised Messiah did afterwards dwell amongst them and accomplish the work of mans redemption and though they were yet but newly gotten out of Egypt yet Moses saith Thou hast guided them unto thy holy habitation both because this was the place whither the Lord was now leading them for this purpose had he brought them out of Egypt that he might carry them to Canaan and plant them there as also because it was most certain that God would at length carry them thither and usuall it is with the prophets to expresse the certainty of that which shall afterwards be by speaking of it as if it were done already Vers 15. The mighty men of Moab trembling shall take hold of them See Numb 22. 3. And Moab was sore afraid of the people because they were many and Moab was distressed because of the children of Israel Vers 17. Thou shalt bring them in and plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance c. That is in mount Sion which the Lord had chosen to be the place of his habitation where his temple and sanctuary should be built wherein he would dwell amongst his people yet figuratively under this one the most eminent part of the land the whole countrey of Canaan is comprehended and it is called the Lords inheritance because he had prepared it for the habitation of his first-born Israel Vers 20. And M●riam the prophetesse the sister of Aaro● c. Though Moses and Aaron were brothers and so Miriam was the sister of Moses as well as the sister of Aaron yet she is peculiarly called the sister of Aaron because through Moses absence when he fled out of Egypt her reference to Aaron was best known Vers 21. And Miriam answered them Sing ye to the Lord c. When the men had sung a verse or staff of the former song then she with her women took her course and sung it over again or at least she still repeated this one clause here expressed Sing ye to the Lord for he hath triumphed gloriously the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea which was happely the burden of the song as in Psal 136. For his mercy endureth for ever Vers 22. And went out into the wilderness●of Shur Called also the wildernesse of Etham Numb 33. 8. One might be the generall name of the whole desert the other of some part of it where the Israelites pitched their tents It is said indeed chap. 13. 20. that they were in the wildernesse of Etham before they passed over the red sea but it seems the wildernesse on both sides the red sea was called the wildernesse of Etham Vers 25. And the Lord shewed him a tree c. This may seem to imply that there was in this tree a naturall virtue of sweetning the waters it was cast into because it is said that God shewed it him yet I see no reason why we should thus conclude for why may it not be as well that God shewed him a tree that was likely in its own nature to make the waters bitterer that so the miracle might be the more manifest The changing of the waters taste was rather by the mighty power of God then any virtue in that wood There he made a statute and an ordinance and there he proved them Some Expositours conceive that hereby is meant that in this place God gave the Israelites certain generall laws and statutes necessary for the well ordering and governing of the people untill at Sinai they should be more perfectly afterwards taught concerning the whole law and will of God which happely may be true But yet doubtlesse the statute and ordinance chiefly if not solely here intended is that which followeth in the next verse where the Lord enjoyned the people to obey him and moves them thereto with a promise that if they would so do he would then protect them from the plagues of Egypt So that this clause There he made a statute and an ordinance and there he proved them hath reference to that which immediately after is expressed in the 26 verse And said if thou wilt diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God c. and the meaning is that after God had thus tryed them with want of water and upon their murmuring had so miraculously healed the bitter waters of Marah he then admonished them by Moses hereafter to take heed of this sinne they had fallen into and to carry themselves more obediently towards him and so made this as a statute and ordinance that if they would thus do that which is right in his sight then he would be a gracious God unto them and thus there he proved them to wit not onely by their former want but also byhis present favourable dealing with them not punishing them for their murmuring butonely admonishing them so making proof whether they would thereby be wonne or no. Vers 26. I will put none of these diseases upon thee which I have brought upon the Egyptians That is none of the plagues see Deut. 28. 60. Moreover he will bring upon thee all the diseases of Egypt which thou wast afraid of and they shall cleave unto thee The meaning is that he would not deal with them as with the Egyptians but as at present he had done for the present mercy in healing the bitter waters which is the ground of this speech sheweth plainly that all externall plag●es are implyed and thus likewise all externall blessings are comprised under health See Prov. 4. 22. For they are life to them that find them and health to all their ●lesh Psal 103. 3. Who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy diseases Vers 27. And they encamped there by the waters Staying there at Elim as it seems many dayes because the place was so pleasant and convenient for them by reason of the waters CHAP. XVI Vers 1. ANd all the congregation of the children of Israel came unto the wildernesse of Sin c. From Elim they turned back to the red sea Numb 33. 10. And they removed from Elim and encamped by the red sea which no doubt the Lord did that he might try them again but this remove is not here mentioned because no memorable matter happened in that place and so he passes over it and onely mentions the next station for from the red sea they turned back again to the wildernesse of Sin Vers 3. Would to God we had dyed by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt when we sat by the flesh-pots c. That is when we had dayly plenty of flesh and might peaceably and freely ta●e our fill of it Doubtlesse considering their hard bondage we
may well think that though they had flesh in Egypt yet they had no such plenty at least that they had no such liberty to ●it by it having such tasks dayly imposed upon them that the day scarce afforded them time to dispatch their dayes work But thus those that are discontented at their present condition are wont beyond the bounds of truth to extoll what they formerly enjoyed For ye have brought us forth into this wildernesse to kill this whole assembly with ●unger Their provision being so farre spent which they brought out of Egypt that they saw no means to sustain themselves in this wildernesse where no food could be gotten Vers 4. And the people shall go out and gather a certain rate every day c. That is as verse 16. an omer for every man and thus God fed them from hand to mouth giving them still no more but provision for one day that they might be still kept in dependance upon God to which also agreeth that petition which our Saviour taught us Matth. 6. 11. Give us this day our dayly bread Vers 6. At even then ye shall know that the Lord hath brought you out from the land of Egypt When God should give them quails in such abundance then they should know that the Lord had brought them out from the land of Egypt and not Moses and Aaron of their own heads as was objected by the Israelites verse 3. For ye have brought us forth c. Vers 7. And in the morning then y● shall see the glory of the Lord. That is the Manna that glorious work of his for so Moses expounds himself in the next verse and glory is oft used for glorious works See Numb 14. 21. All the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord. John 11. 40. Said I not unto thee that if thou wouldst believe thou shouldst see the glory of God For that he heareth your murmurings against the Lord. Thatis by reason of your murmurings this the Lord will do to justifie us his servants Thus he puts them in mind of their sinne and wisheth them to observe that this message which God had sent them concerning the Quails and Manna did shew that God had heard their murmurings and therefore they had need take heed it may be he would not alway deal with them as he had now And what are we that ye murmure against us That is we durst never of ourselves have undertaken this great work of bringing you out of Egypt from the bondage of Pharaoh nor can you think that we by our own power have done those miraculous works which you have seen done in this b●sinesse and which now you shall yet further see since therefore it is the almighty God that hath done these great things for you and we onely his instruments your murmurings are not against us but against the Lord. Vers 10. They looked toward the wildernesse and behold the glory of the Lord appeared in the cloud Aaron having given charge to the Israelites as is expressed in the former verse to come near before the Lord and there being at that time before the tabernacle was built no other visible signe of Gods presence amongst them but onely the pillar of the cloud toward that therefore they turned their faces and perceived that God did in a more glorious manner then ordinarily therein manifest the brightnesse of his presence Now because the cloud was in the forefront of their armies leading them still farther into the wildernesse therefore it is said that they looked toward the wildernesse Vers 11. And the Lord spake unto Moses c. This the Lord had said to Moses before onely here it is repeated to shew that he did nothing without a warrant and that as God had spoken it came to passe Vers 13. At even the quails came up and covered the camp Being happely brought in by a wind as those afterwards vvere at Kibroth-hattaavah Numb 11. 31. where God again gave them quails to eat and that for a vvhole mone●h together vvhereas novv they came in onely this one evening before the Manna vvas given them Vers 15. And when the children of Israel saw it they said one to another It is Manna Which is all one as if they had said vvhat is this for so the Hebrevv vvord may signifie or this is a meat vvhich God hath prepared for us vvithout our labour for Manna in the Hebrevv signifieth prepared and therefore it is added in the next vvords For they wist not what it was that is they knevv not vvhat more particular name to give it Vers 16. Gather of it every man according to his eating Proportionably as he hath more or lesse in his family Vers 18. And when they did mete with an omer he that gathered much c. All were imployed in gathering and some as more able gathered more some as lesse able gathered lesse but when all was laid together in the common heap whether of the family or of the tribe c. and then afterward it was measured to every man an omer ●ccording to the Lords direction there was nothing wanting for which they should pinch him that had gathered lesse nor nothing over for him that had gathered much but every one had his just omer And hence it is that S. Paul by this example of the Israelites one helping another and conferring what they had gathered in common exhorts the Christian Corinthians in like manner to supply the necessities of their brethren 2. Cor. 8. 13 14 15. For I mean not that other men be eased and you burdened But by an equality that now at this time your abundance may be a supply for their want that their abundance also may be a supply for your want that there may be equality As it is written He that had gathered much c. Vers 19. Let no man leave of it till the morning Though every one in each family had an omer allowed him whether great or little men or women old or young and none might reserve any of their portion till the next day yet it cannot be thought that every man was enjoyned to eat or did eat the same quantity but what they left they either burnt it or cast it forth or some other way consumed it and might not keep any of it to be eaten the next day See above ver 4. Vers 22. On the sixth day they gathered twice as much bread two omers for one man and all the rulers of the congregation came and told Moses To wit that the people had gathered as they were appointed twice as much on that sixth day as they had on other dayes and of this they informed Moses both as desiring thereby to glorifie God in the confession of this wonderfull work that he had sent Manna so abundantly that day as before he had promised ver 5. And it shall be twice as much as they gather daily and also chiefly that they might receive directions from Moses
how to order this their double portion Vers 23. Bake that which ye will bake to day and seethe that ye will seethe c. It may seem questionable whether in these words the Israelites were enjoyned to bake and seethe so much of the Manna as they d●sired to eat so dressed on the sixth day and then to reserve the rest unto the morning or to bake and seethe both for that day and the next day which was the Sabbath But yet this last seems the most probable and that because it was not likely they onely eat of it undressed as it was gathered on the Sabbath day and expressely afterwards it was enjoyned in the law that they should kindle no fire throughout their habitations on the Sabbath day Exod. 35. 3. Yet I make no question but that some part of it was reserved for the Sabbath not onely because they did so eat some part of it on the other dayes but especially also that the hand of God herein might be the more evident seeing they could no way keep it whether baked or sodden on other dayes untill the next morning but they found it putrified and which way soever they reserved it whether dressed or undressed for the Sabbath day it did not corrupt but continued good and sound Vers 31. And it was like coriander-seed white and the taste of it was like wafers made with hony We must not so understand these words as if the Manna were said to be like coriander-seed because it was white for the coriander-seed is blackish but that it is compared to coriander-seed in regard onely of its quantity and proportion and then besides that it was of a whitish colour So that we must reade these words as expressing three qualities of the Manna 1. That it was little and round like the coriander-seed ver 4. There lay a small round thing as small as the hoar frost 2. That it was for the colour of it white like Bdellium as it is expressed Numb 11. 7 3. That it was sweet like hony-wafers namely unbaked for being baked the taste of it was as the taste of fresh oyl Numb 11. 8. In that Apocryphall book called the Wisdome of Solomon chap. 16. 20 21 it is said of this Manna that it was able to content every mans delight and agreeing to every taste and that serving to the appetite of the eater it tempered it self to every mans liking whence it hath been by some conceived and maintained that the Manna rellished according to every mans desire and had the savour of any kind of meat which they had a desire to eat of But this is a weak conceit for first there is no evident ground for it in these words and then besides though it had been entended by that Author yet it is directly contrary to this description of the Manna which Moses gives us and again if God had given this miraculous bread such an extraordinary gift to satisfie every wanton appetite that it should taste like any meat they desired to tast of why did the Israelites murmure afterwards against Moses lusting for flesh and fish and repining because they had not the cucumbers and melons and leeks and onyons and garlick which they had in Egypt Numb 11. 4 5. Vers 33. And Moses said unto Aaron Take a pot c. It was a golden pot See Hebr. 9. 4. Wherein was the golden pot that had the Manna Moses rehearseth these things here to make a full end of the history of Manna but they were not done till afterwards when the Tabernacle was built wherein it was laid up before the Lord. Vers 35. And the children of Israel did eat Manna fourty years untill they came to a land inhabited To wit till they were gone over Jordan into the land of Canaan and then it ceased This Manna called by the Psalmist Angels food Psal 78. 25. Man did eat Angels food c. was a notable type of Christ and is therefore called Spirituall meat 1. Cor. 10. 3. And did all eat the same spirituall meat for Christ indeed is the true bread that came down from heaven Joh. 6. 33. upon whom feeding by faith our souls are nourished unto life everlasting White in regard of his purity and innocency and sweeter then the hony to the souls of believers bruised for our transgressions and conveyed to us in the dew of the word as the Manna lay in the dew upon the ground and so is our spirituall nourishment all the time of our travelling towards the heavenly Canaan when there shall be no more use of this food but God shall be all in all to us Vers 36. Now an omer is the tenth part of an ●phah And ephah by the judgement of the best Writers was much like to our English bushel Whereby we may conceive how bountifull the allowance of Manna was which God allotted them for their daily food CHAP. XVII Vers 1. ANd all the congregation of the children of Israel journeyed from the wildernesse of Sin after their journeyes c. This clause after their journeyes is added to imply that Rephidim was not the next station after they went from the wildernesse of Sin no they went from Sin to Dophkah from thence to Alush and from thence to Rephidim Numb 33. 12 13. 14. Vers 2. Wherefore do ye tempt the Lord To wit by their mutinous requiring of water as a signe of Gods presence among them saying Is the Lord among us or not as it is afterward expressed verse 7. when men not believing the promises of God will boldly prescribe God the time when and the manner how he shall perform his promises this is called a tempting of the Lord because thereby they do as it were try whether he be able and faithfull to do what he hath said And thus are the Israelites here said to tempt the Lord. Having Gods promise for their safe convoy through the wildernesse to the land of Canaan and having had already evidence enough of Gods almighty power and fatherly care over them yet being now in some distresse for want of water they came in a bold manner and expostulated with Moses and Aaron and cried upon them to give them water that they and theirs might not perish with thirst and herein they did tempt the Lord because as the Psalmist saith Psal 78. 41. They limited the holy one of Israel they said Is the Lord among us or not that is the want they were in made them question Gods presence and they resolved now to put it upon this tryall Let Moses give them water and they would acknowledge it but if that were not done they would not believe it And hence was this place afterward called Massah that is temptation Vers 4. What shall I do to this people they be almost ready to stone me Though there be no mention made in the foregoing expostulation of the people with Moses that they threatned to stone him yet perhaps some intimation hereof might fall from some of
is there made the Southern bound and fourthly the river which is the great river Euphrates which was the North bound CHAP. XXIV Vers 1. ANd he said unto Moses Come up unto the Lord c. God having given Moses those judiciall laws set down in the former chapters and Moses being now to carry them to the people upon their consent to make a covenant betwixt God and them the Lord before his departure gives him this command for his coming up again with Aaron Nadab Abihu and seventy of the Elders of Israel appointing him to leave the people at the foot of the mount but to bring up Aaron and his two eldest sonnes and the seaventy Elders into the mo●nt that is a little way up into the mount where they might be eye_witnesses of part of Gods glory as is expressed afterwards vers 9 10. being to approch nearer to the Lord then the people were and then there to leave them also to worship afarre off whilest Moses went up higher to the top of the mount into the dark cloud vers 18. for so it followeth vers 2. Moses alone shall come near the Lord but they shall not come nigh It is questioned by Expositours who these seventy Elders were W● reade of seventy Elders that w●re chosen to bear part of the government with Moses and received therefore from the Lord an extraordinary measure of gifts of Gods spirit to enable them thereunto as you may reade Numb 11. 16 17. but that was done after the camp was removed from Sinai and pitched in Kibroth-Hattaavah as it is Numb 11. 34. which was the next station beyond Sinai Numb 33. 16. And they removed from the desert of Sinai and pitched at Kibroth-Hattaavah Nor can it be meant of those Judges chosen by Moses before this by the counsel of Jethro as you reade Exod. 18. 25. they were doubtlesse farre more then seventy seeing there were amongst them Rulers over every ten families amongst all the tribes I● sufficeth us therefore to know that whereas there were alwayes even when they were in Egypt certain Elders in every tribe that were principall men amongst them God now appointed that of these seventy should come up with Aaron and his sonnes into the mount and these happely were chosen both now for witnesses and afterwards at Kibroth-Hattaavah for helpers to Moses in his government yea some adde that God appointed seventy rather then any other number as a memoriall of the seventy souls that went down with J●cob into Egypt and consequently of Gods blessing upon them in bringing them within a few years to so great a multitude Vers 2. Neither shall the people go up with him That is they shall not at all go up into the mount as Aaron and the Elders did Vers 4. And Moses wrote all the words of the Lord c. To wit in a book See Hebr. 9. 19. The ten commandments in the stone tables were written by the finger of God himself but the judiciall laws Moses wrote in a book And thus covenants agreed upon betwixt party and party are usually committed to writing And builded an altar under the hill and twelve pillars c. Both the altar and the pillars were outward sacramentall signes of the covenant which was now to be established betwixt God and his people the altar representing God in Christ the first and chief party in the covenant and the twelve pillars the twelve tribes Vers 5. And he sent young men of the children of Israel which offered burnt-offerings c. The common opinion of most Expositours is that the first-born were the priests and sacrificers amongst the people untill the Levites were taken in their stead Numb 3. 41. And thou shalt take the Levites for me in stead of all the first-born c. and consequently that these were the young men here spoken of And indeed the word here used in the originall doth not alwayes signifie youths in regard of years not yet grown up to mans estate but young men fit for service and ministery to their Elders as Gen. 14. 23 24. I will not saith Abraham take from a threed even to a shoe-latchet c. Save onely that which the young men have eaten and Exod. 33. 11. His servant Joshua a young man departed not out of the tabernacle And so in many other places But because it is I think unquestionable that before the people of God came to be a body politick the chief and governours of every family were the sacrificers neither do we ever reade that the first-born were set apart for publick sacrifices since the Lord challenged them for his upo● the coming forth of his people Sanctifie unto me all the first-born Exod. 13. 2. It is rather probable that Moses and Aaron and their chief Governours had as yet the chief hand in offering publick sacrifices and that then young men perhaps of the first-born were onely chosen to minister to Moses and Aaron in fetching and killing the sacrifices and other services belonging thereunto and are therefore said here to have offered burnt-offerings and sacrificed peace-offerings of oxen unto the Lord. Where by oxen other sacrifices are also implyed these being named as the principall i● stead of all for Heb. 9. 19. the Apostle speaking of this place addes also calves and goats Vers 6. And Moses took half of the bloud and put it in basons c. Which was so reserved to be sprinkled upon the people This bloud was to signifie the bloud of Christ by which we are reconciled to God and by virtue whereof the covenant of grace is established betwixt God and us and the dividing of this bloud half being sprinkled upon the altar which represented God and half upon the people signified that the performance of the covenant by both parties Gods favour and grace to his people and the peoples faith and obedience to God was to be ascribed to the bloud of Christ And half of the bloud he sprinkled on the altar And so also on the book Heb. 9. 19. Which as it seems was laid on the altar making use herein also of water scarlet wooll and hyssope Heb. 9. 19. though Moses here nameth them not because so the legall sprinklings were usually done for there was water intermingled with the bloud because the bloud otherwise growing cold would have been thick and not fit to be sprinkled nor perhaps enough for the use Vers 8. And sprinkled it on the people and said Behold c. That is all the people that stood about him some for all or all as they came to him or the Elders in stead of the people See Levit. 4. 15. Vers 10. And they saw the God of Israel That is the signes of Gods glori●us presence for never man saw God nor can see him 1. Tim. 6. 16. Whom 〈◊〉 man hath seen nor can see And there was under his feet as it were a paved work of saphir stone c. Not that the Lord shewed himself in any humane shape
corner for otherwise we cannot say whether the corner pillar was to be numbred amongst the twenty pillars appointed on each side for the length of the court or the ●●n appointed for the breadth Vers 16. And for the gate of the court shall be an hanging of twenty cubits c. See the note chap. 26. 36. Vers 18. And the height five cubits c. This court therefore of th● tabernacle was but half so high as the tabernacle and therefore the tabernacle might be easily seen yet these hangings were so high that men could not overlook them Vers 19. All the vessels of the tabernacle c. shall be of brasse That is such as were onely for the taking down and setti●g up of the tabernacle as the pinnes or stakes which were driven into the ground to fasten it Vers 20. And thou shalt command the children of Israel that they bring pure oyl olive beaten c. It seems that oyl which was first gotten out of the olives by beating or stamping of them was farre purer ●nd clearer from dregges then that which was afterward crushed out with a presse This therefore th e children of Israel were appointed to provide for the lamp in the golden candlestick even pure oyl olive beaten wherewith the priests were to maintain the lamps to cause the lamp to burn alwayes that is every night by renewing them still at the appointed times As the daily sacrifice is called a continuall burnt-offering Exod. 29. 42. and yet it was offered but twice every day at morning and evening And so this word alwayes is explained in the following verse Aaron and his sonnes shall order it from evening to morning before the Lord. At the East end of the ta bernacle either abov● the vail or at the opening of it there might come in light sufficient in the day time and therefore I conceive then the lamps burnt not but in the night onely and were put out in the morning which some inferre also from that 1. Sam. 3. 3. where it is said that the Lord appeared to Samuel ere the lamp of God went out in the temple of God to wit before the break of day Now by this pure oyl was signified the gifts and graces of the Spirit whereby the ministers of God are fitted to be as lights among the people Vers 21. In the tabernacle of the congregation c. The ●abernacle is here called the tabernacle of the congregation because though the people did not enter into this place yet to the doore of this tabernacle they brought their offerings and there did the Lord meet with the people and make known his will to them Aaron and his sonnes shall order it c. Signifying that the priests lippes should preserve knowledge CHAP. XXVIII Vers 1. ANd take thou unto thee Aaron thy brother c. Because Aaron was the brother of Moses to prevent any envy amongst the people this is in the first place expressed that it was by the Lords appointment and command that he and his sonnes were set apart to the office of the priesthood Vers 2. And thou shalt make holy garments for Aaron thy brother for glory and for beauty That is glorious and beautifull And hereby was signifyed 1. the insufficiency of Aarons priesthood that there was not in him if you look on him in his own person sufficient worth that he should mediate between God and man for th●refore was this holinesse in his garments to cover the pollution of his own p●rson 2. the more then angelicall purity and holinesse of Christ whose type Aaron thus attired was Heb. 9. 14. Christ through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God By whom also his Church is clothed with garments of beautifull glory Isai 52. 1. Put on thy beautifull garments oh Jerusalem the holy citie Rev. 19. 8. To her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen clean and white for the fine linen is the righteousnesse of the Sain●s 3. to shew the extraordinary degrees of holinesse required in those that serve at the altar Vers 3. And thou shalt speak unto all that are wise-hearted c. that they may make Aarons garments to consecrate him c. That is to be a signe of his consecration and sanctification from God therefore it was death to minister without these garments Vers 6. And th●y shall make the ephod of gold c. It was called the ephod of an hebrew word which signifieth to close compasse or gird about because it compassed fitly the body and was tied thereto it was the outmost of all Aarons garments and covered his whole body both back and breast from the shoulders down to the loyns excepting onely the breast where the breast-plate was fastened Vers 7. It shall have the two shoulder-pieces thereof joyned at the edges thereof and so it shall be joyned together These shoulder-pieces were either the pieces which went up both before and behind from the body of the ephod and so met together on the top of each shoulder and were joyned together in the edge thereof a hole being left in the midst through which the priests head went when he put on the ephod or else it is meant of certain wings as we call them which were joyned to the ephod in the edge round about each shoulder Vers 8. And the curious girdle of the ephod which is upon it shall be of the same c. By this is meant two pieces or slaps which came from the back part of the ephod under the arm-holes and are called the curious guard or girdle because the nether lappets served as a girdle to fasten it below and it is said that it should be upon it that is is joyned as a part of it which is added to distinguish it from the girdle mentioned ver 39. Thou shalt make the girdle of needlework which was not a part of the ephod as this which is therefore called often the golden girdle Vers 9. And thou shalt take two onyx-stones and grave on them the names of the children of Israel These two onyx-stones whereon were graven the names of the twelve sonnes of Jacob signified the firm and perpetuall love of Christ toward his Church and also how precious they be to him how continually mindfull he is of them Cant. 8. 6. Set me as a seal upon thy heart as a seal upon thy arm for love is strong as death See also Hag. 2. 23. In that day saith the Lord of hosts will I take thee O Zorobbabel my servant c. and will make thee as a signet Vers 10. Six of their names on one stone and the other six names of the rest on the other stone according to their birth That is first Reuben then Simeon and so the rest according to their age And this signified the like precious faith and dignity which all have obtained before God in Christ 2. Pet. 1. 1. To them that have obtained the like precious faith So Gal. 3.
and keep the charge of the Lord that ye die not and were every day to be consecrated with the same sacrifices and ceremonies as they had been the first day as methinks it is evident Levit. 8. 34. As he hath done this day so the Lord hath commanded to do c. And the continuance of these solemnities seven dayes signified 1. that perfect holinesse which should be in Christ and 2. that the whole course of the priests lives should be consecrated to Gods service See Exod. 12. 15. Vers 31. And seethe his flesh in the holy place That is in the courtyard of the Sanctuary at the doore of the tabernacle for there it was both boyled and eaten Levit. 8. 31. And Moses said unto Aaron and his sonnes Boil the flesh at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation and eat it with the bread c. See Exod. 28. 43. Vers 33. But a stranger shall not eat thereof c. That is none but themselves in other peace-offerings the offerer did eat of it here was no offerer but the priest Vers 34. Then thou shalt burn the remainder with fire Which was done 1. to maintain the peoples reverence toward them by letting them see that they were not to be usedbut in holy uses 2. to prevent the superstitious abuses of them Some peace-offerings might be eaten the next day Levit. 7. 16. But if the sacrifice of his offering be a vow or a voluntary offering it shall be eaten the same day that he offereth his sacrifice and on the morrow also the remainder of it shall be eaten Onely those which were offered for a thanksgiving were to be eaten the same day whereby it may seem that these of the priests were principally for that end See Exod. 12. 10. Vers 35. Seven dayes shalt thou consecrate them See the note above upon ver 30. Vers 36. And thou shalt offer every day a bullock for a sinne-offering for atonement c. This is meant of the same bullock mentioned before ver 10. which was offered for a sinne-offering for the priests Nor doth it follow that there were not two rammes also offered on each of the seven dayes of the priests consecration because it is here onely expressed that there should be a bullock offered on each of these seven dayes For this concerning the sinne-offering is onely repeated to shew that this sinne-offering was not onely for the priests but also to purifie the altar to make an atonement for the altar and to sanctifie it as it is expressed in the following verse Now an atonement is said to be made for the altar not because there was any sinne in the altar but because it was hereby now so perfectly purified and sanctified according to Gods institution that men might without sinne offer sacrifices thereon Vers 37. Whatsoever toucheth the altar shall be holy Some understand this clause thus that none but holy persons might touch the altar but rather it is meant of the sacrifices that were to be offered on this altar that whatsoever should according to Gods institution be offered thereon should be accepted as holy to the Lord the altar sanctifying the sacrifice that was laid thereon according to that which our Saviour saith Matth. 23. 19. Ye fools and blind whether is greater the gift or the altar that sanctifieth the gift Vers 38. Two lambs of the first year day by day continually This was the daily ordinary sacrifice and it was 1. to signifie that the death of Christ the true lambe was available to the Church from the first morning of time to the evening of the same 2. to shew what continuall need they had of reconciliation through Christs bloud applied by faith 3. to sanctifie the morning and evening prayers of the Church by the interceding sacrifices of the Mediatour Vers 40. And with the one lambe a tenth deal of flower mingled with the fourth part of an hin of beaten oyl c. By a tenth deal of flower is meant the tenth part of an ephah or bushell as is expressed Num. 28. 5. which is called an Omer Exod. 16. 36. and by the fourth part of an hin of oyl wherewith the floure was mingled and the fourth part of an hin of wine which was for a drink-offering a pint and an half of each is meant for the hin contained six pints and so the fourth part of an hin was a pint and half Now this meat-offering and drink-offering added to the dayly sacrifice was to shew that Christ by his oblation of himself for us becomes not onely redemption but also food gladnesse and chearing comfort to us yea all in all And the sweetnesse of these things floure and oyl and wine signified both how pleasing to God the sacrifice of Christ should be and also what care was required of Gods people to make their sacrifices by true faith and repentance wherein God delights a sweet savour unto God without which their externall sacrifices must needs be unsavory and such things as could not be likely to please him Vers 42. Where I will meet you to speak there unto thee That is in the tabernacle from the mercy-seat Exod. 30. 6. Before the mercy-seat that is over the testimony where I will meet with thee Wherein we have the reason given why it was called the tabernacle of the congregation namely because there the Lord did by glorious signes witnesse his presence and make known by Moses his will unto them meeting them and making a covenant with them See Exod. 40. 34. Levit 9. 13 24. Vers 43. And the tabernacle shall be sanctified by my glory That is the glorious signes of his glorious presence CHAP. XXX Vers 1. ANd thou shalt make an altar to burn incense upon c. Besides that the Lord did hereby adorn the service of the tabernacle to work the greater reverence in the hearts of the people and did teach them how carefull they should be of defiling their service with any unclean thing it did also signifie that by Christ not onely the whole legall service but particularly also the Saints prayers are wondrous sweet and pleasing to God Revel 8. 3. And another Angel came and stood at the altar having a golden censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne Psal 141. 2. Let my prayer be set forth before thee as incense Rev. 5. 8. And golden vials full of odours which are the prayers of the Saints Vers 2. The horns thereof shall be of the same See the notes upon Exod. 27. 2. Vers 3. And thou shalt overlay it with pure gold c. Shadowing Christ in both his natures his deity yielding glory to his humanity hence it is called the golden altar Numb 4. 11. as the other is called the brazen altar Exod. 38. 30. And thou shalt make unto it a crown of gold round about Which served as an edge to
thousand seventy one pound weight of silver which at five shillings the ounce comes to thirty six thousand two hundred and thirteen pounds in sterling money Vers 29. And the brasse of the ●ffering was seventy talents and two thousand and foure hundred shekels That is allowing three thousand shekels to a talent two hundred and twelve thousand and foure hundre● shekels of brasse and this counting twenty five shekels to a pound weight amounts to eight thousand foure hundred ninetie six pound weight of brasse whereby it is evident that there was not so much brasse as silver and therefore surely the pillars were made of wood and onely covered over with brasse See chap. 27. ver 9. CHAP. XXXIX Vers 1. ANd of the blew and purple and scarlet they made clothes of service c. See chap. 31. 10. Vers 43. And Moses blessed them That is he not onely commended both the people and workmen and prayed God to blesse them but also as Gods publick minister he pronounced a blessing on them from the Lord. CHAP. XL Vers 9. ANd thou shalt take the anoynting ●yl and anoynt the tabernacle c. The performance of this see in Levit. 8. 10. Vers 10. And thou shalt anoynt the altar c. And sprinkle thereof upon the altar seven times See Levit. 8. 11. Vers 15. For their anoynting shall surely be an everlasting priesthood c. So that their children after them shall not need to be anoynted but shall execut● the office by reason of this unction of their fathers onely the high priests were anoynted in the generations following Vers 17. And it came to passe in the first moneth c. They went out of Egypt the fifteenth of the first moneth and now the next year upon the first day of the moneth the tabernacle is erected so that there wanted now but fifteen dayes of a full yeare since they left Egypt Vers 27. And he burnt sweet incense thereon c. As supplying at present the priests office ANNOTATIONS On the third book of MOSES called LEVITICUS CHAP. I. ANd the Lord called unto Moses c. This word and sheweth the immediate connexion of this book of this story upon that wherewith the foregoing book of Exodus was concluded namely that after the tabernacle was reared Aaron and his sonnes consecrated to the office of the priesthood and the cloud descended upon the tabernacle immediately God spake to Moses from the mercy-seat out of the tabernacle for into it Moses was not able to enter because the glory of the Lord filled it and so informed him how Aaron and his sonnes should carry themselv●s ●n the priesthood c. Vers If any man of you bring an offering unto the Lord c. That is any sacrifice whatsoever This is a generall rule concerning all sacrifices to wit that none must be offered but of the herd or flock that is if they were cattel they intended to offer for if they intended an offering of birds what they must be is expressed afterwards vers 14. Vers 3. If his offering be a burnt-sacrifice of the herd let him offer a male without blemish Here the Lord first gives directions for burnt-offerings which were indeed the chief of all their sacrifices and so called because they were all wholly burnt upon the altars whereas of other sacrifices some part onely was burnt upon the altar and the other parts were otherwise disposed of And the direction that is here first given concerning these is that if a burnt-offering were to be offered of the herd it must be a male without blemish that it might be the fitter to figure forth Christs perfection in himself and ours in him who being perfectly holy and free from the least blemish of sinne He did no sinne neither was guile found in his mouth 1. Pet. 2. 22. did yet notwithstanding by suffering death for us perfectly satisfie the justice of God on our behalf that so he might present the Church to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish Ephes 5. 27. for saith the same Apostle Heb. 9. 13 14. If the bloud of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God And so again Saint Peter saith Ye know that ye were redeemed with the precious bloud of Christ as of a lamb without blemish and without spot 1. Pet. 1. 18 19. Yet withall hereby the Lord taught both them and us to give God the best in all our services Vers 3. He shall offer it of his own voluntary will at the doore of the tabernacle That is he that will offer a burnt sacrifice he must do it voluntarily of his own mind and not be forced to it and when he brings it he must present it to the priest at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation that is at the doore of the court close within which the brasen altar for burnt-offerings stood The first of these might signifie the freedome of Gods grace in giving his sonne and the willingnesse of Christ in giving himself to be a sacrifice of propitiation for our souls but principally doubtlesse it was to teach them that in all service done to God it must be done freely and willingly or God will not accept of it The second was appointed to signifie that their sacrifices and so consequently any service that we perform were onely in and through Christ sanctified and made acceptable to God The tabernacle was a type of Christ that greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands Heb. 9. 11. and he is the onely doore by whom we have accesse unto the father Vers 4. And he shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering This was to testifie First that he acknowledged himself guilty of death Secondly that he desired and believed that that sacrifice should be accepted of God as a ransome for his soul that all his sinnes should be laid upon it and so it should suffer death as it were in his stead in all which notwithstanding they that did this had not respect so much to the beast slain in the death whereof there could not be an equall compensation given to the justice of God for the death of sinners as to Christ of whom these sacrifices were types who took upon him our sinnes and the curse due to our sinnes when he died for us Thirdly that he desired and would indeavour to consecrate himself wholly to Gods service as now he gave this sacrifice wholly to be offered upon the altar to the Lord crucifying all his sinnefull lusts and affections and yielding up his whole man to the obedience of Gods will in all things whatsoever And it shall be accepted for him to make
atonement for him Though burnt-offerings were usually given in signe of thankfulnesse to God and so betokened a new creature and holy life Psal 51. 18 19. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Sion build thou the walls of Jerusalem Then shalt thou be pleased with sacrifices of righteousnesse with burnt-offering and whole burnt-offering and Gen. 8. 20. And Noah builded an altar unto the Lord and took of every clean beast and of every fowl and offered burnt-offerings on the altar yet they were also for atonement and remission of sinnes to wit generall sinnes Job 1. 5. And it was so when the dayes of their feasting were gone about that Job sent and sanctified them and rose up early in the morning and offered burnt-offerings according to the number of them all for Job said It may be that my sonnes have sinned c. whereas for speciall sinnes there was a speciall sacrifice and sinne-offering Levit. 4. Vers 5. And he shall kill the bullock before the Lord. That is the priest in the name of the offerer for this was usually the work of the priests and therefore Moses did it when he supplyed the priests office Exod. 29. 10 11. though sometimes the Levites also helped herein when there were not priests enough to do it 2. Chron. 25. 10 11. The priests stood in their places and the Levites in their courses and they killed the Passeover that is the Passeover-offerings and the priests sprinkled the bloud from their hands as being given of God to be assistant to the priests in such services Numb 8. 19. I have given the Levites as a gift to Aaron and to his sonnes to do the service of the children of Israel in the tabernacle of the congregation and to make an atonement for the children of Israel Now the sacrifice was killed to signifie the death of Christ Who was slain that he might redeem us to God by his bloud Revel 5. 9. and the mortifying of Gods people by the word and spirit and it was killed by the priest to signifie that Christ should offer up himself unto God as being both our priest and sacrifice and that there is no possibility for men to please God by any service they do him but onely in and through the mediation of Christ of whose priesthood the Leviticall priest was a type and figure As for the place where it was killed that may be gathered by the rule of Analogy from that which is expressed verse the 11. concerning the second sort of burnt-offerings namely that it was killed at the north-side of the altar And the priests Aarons sonnes shall bring the bloud and sprinkle the bloud c. And this was done in a large measure so that the corners of the altar were filled with bloud Zach. 9. 15. to teach the people that this bloud of their sacrifice should not be lost as spilt upon the ground but should be accepted of God as a propitiation for their sinnes as being a figure of the bloud of Christ which should be offered up to God and accepted by him in our behalf as for our reconciliation so also for our sanctification who are elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the bloud of Jesus Christ 1. Pet. 1. 2. Vers 6. And he shall flay the burnt-offering That is the priest for the flaying of the sacrifice was also ordinarily the work of the priest who had therefore the skinne for himself Levit. 7. 8. though upon extraordinary occasions as is before noted concerning killing the burnt-offerings even in this also the Levites sometime helped them 2. Chron. 29. 34. The priests were too few so that they could not flay all the burnt-offerings wherefore their brethren the Levites did help them Because the sacrifices were offered as I may say as a holy feast unto the Lord whence the altar is called the table of the Lord and the sacrifice offered thereon his meat Mal. 1. 12. therefore nothing but what was usually eaten by men was burnt upon the altar and hence it was that the skinne was alwayes flayed off Yet withall it is commonly held by Expositours that this flaying of the sacrifice did also signifie First the sufferings of Christ who being first stripped of his garments Matth. 27. 28 they did afterwards most shamefully intreat so that there was no beauty in him why men should desire him Secondly the afflictions of Gods people under the rage of cruell oppressours and persecutours Who as the Prophet speaks Micha 3. 3. eat their flesh and flay their skinne from off them And thirdly the mortification which God requires in those that give up their names to him even that They put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts Ephes 5. 22. Vers 7. And the sonnes of Aaron the priest shall put fire on the altar c. Here the Lord gives direction for the burning of these sacrifices by the inseriour priests enjoyning them first to put fire upon the altar Now because they were to use no strange fire in burning the sacrifices but onely that fire which was continually nourished upon the altar Levit. 6. 12 13. and which at first came down from heaven Levit. 9. 24. therefore by putting fire upon the altar is meant onely the laying of the fire together or laying it on again when they had laid it by for the clearing of the altar Secondly to lay the wood in order and then all the pieces of the sacrifices in order upon the wood which was so appointed because the discreet laying of the wood doth much conduce to the well burning of the fire And then lastly thus to burn all upon the altar The mistery of this might be twofold First to signifie the consecrating of Christ and his members by afflictions and sufferings for as he the Captain of our salvation was made perfect by sufferings Heb. 2. 10. so must his members also be ready alwayes through these fiery trials to enter into glory for every one shall be salted with fire and every sacrifice shall be salted with salt Mark 9. 49. Secondly to signifie that holy zeal whereby we should wholly give up our selves to God through the operation of Gods holy spirit which is often in the Scriptures compared to fire as Matth. 3. 11. He that cometh after me is mightier then I he shall baptize you with the holy Ghost and with fire for as Christ through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot unto God Heb. 9. 14. so likewise it is the spirit whereby we must be enabled to consecrate our selves to Gods service Ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth saith the Apostle Peter through the spirit 1. Pet. 1. 22. to which end we must not onely be carefull not to quench the spirit 1. Thess 5. 19. but also by prayer holy meditation and all other things conducing thereto we must do what we can
There was a meat-offering that was alwayes to be joyned with their burnt-offerings for which direction is given elsewhere but here direction is given onely for voluntary meat-offerings and therefore it is said When any will offer a meat-offering c. neither is there any set quantity here appointed but it is left free to the offerer to bring what he pleased whereas for the meat-offering that was brought together with their burnt-offerings of the herd or of the flock there is an expresse law how much there should be of it to wit a tenth deal of flower mingled with the fourth part of an hin of oyl Numb 15. 4. Now these voluntary meat-offerings were for the same end that the burnt-offerings were both to make atonement for them and also to testi●ie their consecrating of themselves to God but withall particularly they were by way of acknowledgement that all their provision they had of his bounty So then the meat-offering signified First Christ his oblation of himself of which the Apostle speaks Ephes 5. 2. Christ hath loved us and given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour and again Heb. 10. 8 9 10. When he said Sacrifice and offering and burnt-offerings and offering for sinne thou wouldst not neither hadst pleasure therein which are offered by the law Then said he Loe I come to do thy will O God! He taketh away the first that he may establish the second By the which will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Secondly Christians wonne to God by the Gospell and then consecrated to his service Esay 66. 20. They shall bring all your brethren for an offering to the Lord out of all nations to my holy mountain Jerusalem saith the Lord as the children of Israel bring an offering in a clean vessel into the house of the Lord. Thirdly all our Evangelicall sacrifices of prayer and praysing God with other services done to the Lord and to his saints for his sake Mal. 1. 11. In every place incense shall be offered unto my name and a pure offering And last of all more particularly their acknowledgement of Gods bounty in all the food they injoyed and therefore it was that in all these meat-offerings they are appointed to bring fine slowre without any mixture of branne to signifie the purity of all Evangelicall sacrifices He shall poure oyl upon it and put frankincense thereon The oyl poured upon the flowre figured the graces and comfort of the holy Ghost whereby we serve God with a willing mind and a chearfull spirit Ye have an unction from the holy one saith the Apostle speaking of this oyl of Gods spirit 1. John 2. 20. and the sweetnesse both of the oyl and frankincense signified how sweet and acceptable their services were unto God in and through the mediation of Christ who hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Ephes 5. 2. whence it was that the Prophet told the Jews that their incense was in vain when God regarded not their sacrifices Jer. 6. 20. To what purpose cometh there to me ●ncense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre countrey your burnt-offerings are not acceptable nor your sacrifices sweet unto me Vers 2. And the priest shall burn the memoriall of it upon the altar That is the handf●ll which he had taken out of the meat-offering which should in stead of all put God in mind which is spoken of God after the manner of men of all this offering which the offerer had given to the Lord and of the covenant which he had made to accept it and withall be a memoriall to the offerer that he acknowledged all the store he had to be from God and therefore to be consecrated wholly to his service and that God would take in good part the offering he had now brought him Vers 3. And the remnant of the meat-offering shall be Aarons and his sonnes To eat the same in the Sanctuary Levit. 6. 16. And the remainer thereof shall Aaron and his sonnes eat with unleavened bread shall it be eaten in the holy place in the court of the tabernacle c. It is a thing most holy of the offerings of the Lord made by fire And therefore onely to be eaten by the priests that offer it Of other offerings others might eat but of the most holy things whereof part was burnt on the altar onely the priests Vers 4. And if thou bring an oblation of a meat-offering baken in the oven These were prepared and baked within the Sanctuary as it seems by Ezekiel 46. 20. This is the place where the priests shall boil the trespasse-offering and the sinne-offering where they shall bake the meat-offering and 1. Chron. 23. 28 29. Their office was to wait on the sons of Aaron c. both for the shew-bread and for the fine flowre for meat-offerings and for the unleavened cakes and for that which is baked in the pan and for that which is fried It shall be an unleavened cake of fine flowre mingled with oyl or unleavened wafers anointed with oyl See the notes upon Exod. 29. 2. and upon the 11. verse of this chapter Vers 11. No meat-offering which ye shall bring unto the Lord shall be made with leaven This must be understood onely of these voluntary oblations part whereof was to be burnt upon the altar for with some eucharisticall or thank-offerings they might bring leavened cakes Levit. 7. 13. as also in the first-fruits Levit. 23. 17. but these were not burnt upon the altar And where leaven was not to be used in the oblation the part remaining the priests might not eat with leaven Levit. 6. 16. because part of the offering was burnt upon the altar Now leaven was thus generally forbidden First to put them still in mind of their deliverance out of Egypt a type of their redemption by Christ Secondly to teach them to worship God as he had appointed and to know that all humane devices therein are an abomination to God Thirdly to shew the perfect purity of Christ in whom there was not the least leaven of sinne and the sincerity that must be in our evangelicall sacrifices for leaven signifieth sinne of all sorts in doctrine and manners distastfull to God and infectious to men Luke 12. 1. Beware ye of the leaven of the Pharisees which is hypocrisie 1. Cor. 5. 8. Let us keep the feast not with old leaven neither with t he leaven of malice and wickednesse but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth For ye shall burn no leaven nor any hony in any offering of the Lord made by fire Not onely leaven but hony also is forbidden First because it hath a kind of leavening nature Secondly the more fully to exclude all humane devices in Gods worship the sweetnesse of hony might be a pretence of mixing it with their sacrifices when neither
burning upon the altar all night unto the morning c. Not onely all day but all night also for as the morning burnt-offering burnt till the evening so the evening burnt-offering burnt all night untill the morning And the fire of the altar shall be burning in it That is shall be nourisht continually Vers 10. And the priest shall put on his linen garment c. That is not onely the linen breeches but also the linen coat And take up the ashes which the fire hath consumed with the burnt-offering c. Ashes are said to be consumed when the wood and sacrifices are consumed and turned to ashes as meal is said to be ground when the corn by grinding is turned to meal Esai 47. 2. Take the milst●ne and grind meal And he shall put them besides the altar See the Notes upon Levit. 1. 16. Vers 11. And carry forth the ashes without the camp unto a clean place The contrary is said to●ching the stones and dust of a leprous house Levit. 14. 40 41. Then the priest shall command that they ●ake the stones in which the plague is and they shall cast them into an unclean place without the city c. Becau●e these came from the Lords holy house therefore they were to be laid in a clean place where no dead carkases dung or other filth was laid Vers 12. And the fire upon the altar shall be burning in it c. That so the ●ire which first came from heaven might in a m●nner by the continuall supply of wood be still preserved upon the altar which might signifie 1. the excluding of all humane devices in Gods worship wherein nothing is allowed but is given by direction from heaven And secondly that no sacrifice is accepted with God but what is offered by the spirit that fire from heaven Matth. 3. 11. He shall baptize you with the holy Ghost and with fire And withall the continuing of this fire which at first came from heaven to testifie Gods favourable acceptance of that sacrifice was to teach them that as at first so still he did continually accept of their sacrifices and service as long as they did it according to the direction of his law And the priest shall burn the wood on it every morning Questionlesse they laid on wood upon the altar to maintain the fire thereon not onely in the morning but all the day long especially at even when the evening burnt-offering was to be burnt upon the altar onely there is a particular direction here for laying on wood in the morning because then having cleansed the altar and taken away the ashes they made the fire anew Vers 16. And the remainer thereof shall Aaron and his sonnes eat The males onely because these things being most holy might not be touched but by consecrated persons With unleavened bread shall it be eaten in the holy place That is in the co●rt of the Sanctuary for so it is explained concerning the sinne-offering verse 26. In the holy place shall it be eaten in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation Other holy things as the tithes and first-fr●its and the shoulder and breast of the peoples peace-offerings c. might be eaten elsewhere and the priests daughters were to have a share therein Numb 18. 11. The heave-offering of their gift with all the wave-offerings of the children of Israel I have given them unto thee and to thy sonnes and to thy daughters with thee by a statute for ever every one that is clean in thy house shall eat of it But those things that were most holy to wit the priests portion of all sacrifices whereof part was burnt upon the altar were onely to be eaten by Aaron and his sonnes and that in the holy place 1. That by their eating in Gods presence they might be put in mind to use these holy things with all sobriety 2. To put them in mind of that singular purity and holinesse which God required in them that were honoured above the people and 3. To signifie perhaps that none but those within Gods holy Church shall have any benefit by Christ As for this charge not to eat it with leavened bread see the note upon chap. 2. 11. Vers 20. This is the offering of Aaron and his ●onnes c. That is this is the offering that Aaron shall offer unto God in the d●y 〈◊〉 he is an●inted and which his sonnes successively that shall come to be high prie●●s shall offer unto the Lord in the day that they are anointed for it is evident that this meat-offering i● appointed for the high priest onely for he onely was anointed in succeeding 〈◊〉 as is shown before upon Exod. 29. 7. to wit Aaron for the present and that son of his successively that should be anointed high priest in his stead as it is expressed ve●se 22. The tenth part of an Ephah of fine flowre for a meat-offering perpetuall c. That is ever to be offered when any of them came to be high priests Vers 23. For every meat-offering for the priest shall be wholly burnt The priests eating of the sinne-offering sigured the bearing of the sinners iniquity Levit. 10. 17. but because no priest being a sinner could make atonement for himself therefore his meat-offering might not be eaten but is all burnt on the altar to teach him to expect salvation not by himself but onely by Christ Vers 26. The priest that offereth it for sinne shall eat it Except in the case mentioned verse 30. when the bloud thereof was carried into the tabernacle Vers 27. And when there is sprinkled of the bloud thereof upon any garment thou shalt wash c. viz. casually Now these ordinances peculiar onely to the sinne-offering because that in speciall sort figured Christ who was made sinne for us shadowed the contagion of sinne and our care to cleanse our selves by repentance and faith Vers 28. But the earthen vessell wherein it is sodden shall be broken and if it be sodden in a brasen pot c. Because the liquour wherein the sin-offering was sodden might soak into an earthen pot therefore that must be broken the rather because the losse of breaking it was not great but if it were sod in an iron or brasse pot that was onely to be scoured and rinsed all which was still to shadow forth the contagion of sinne Vers 30. And no sin-offering whereof any of the bloud is brought into the tabernacle c. Namely the sin-offering for the priest and the congregation See Levit. 4. 16. which were burnt without the camp and this might signifie that men cleaving to the legall priesthood and not seeking for the better priesthood of Christ could not be saved CHAP. VII Vers 1. LIkewise this is the law of the trespasse-offering c. For what transgressions the sinne-offering was appointed and for what the trespasse-offering it is hard to determine Some think the trespasse-offering was for smaller sinnes but I rather conceive
And he said unto Aaron Take thee a young calf for a sinne-offering Before Aaron might be suffered to offer up any sacrifice he is commanded by Moses to offer up a young calf as a sinne-offering for himself And hence the Apostle proves the weaknesse and insufficiency of the Leviticall priesthood to wit that those priests were not fit in themselves to stand as Mediatours betwixt God and the people being sinners themselves but were types and shadows of another to come to wit Christ who was holy harmlesse undefiled and separate from sinners c. Heb. 7. 26 27. But since a young bullock is appointed for the high priests sinne-offering Levit. 4. 3. Why is Aaron here commanded to offer a young calf for a sinne-offering I answer between a young calf and a young bullock there was no great difference the one happely was as the Hebrews say of the first year the other of the second but yet of that difference the reason we may conceive to be this because in the fourth chapter a sinne-offering is appointed onely by way of atonement for some particular sinne of ignorance committed by the high priest but this sinne-offering here injoyned was for the sinnes of the priests in generall and that also in a particular case for their first entrance upon the execution of their office and therefore here not a young bullock as there was injoyned but a young calf was offered for their sinne-offering and that by the Lords speciall direction Vers 3. Take yee a kid of the goats for a sinne-offering c. Here also as in a speciall particular case the very same sacrifices are not injoyned either for the sinne-offerings burnt-offerings or peace-offerings of the people that are injoyned by the generall Laws in the former chapters onely respect is had that some of every kind should be now offered by the priests at their first entrance upon their office Vers 4. For to day the Lord will appear unto you See ver 24. Vers 9. And put it upon the horns of the altar c. That is the brasen altar herein also this sinne-offering for the high priest seemeth to differ from others that followed after whose bloud was to be carried into the Sanctuary Levit. 4. 5 6 7. and it was because Aaron as yet had not accesse into the holy place till he had prepared away by this first sacrifice into the court the like is to be observed in the peoples sinne-offering ver 15. compared with Levit. 4. 13 17 18. Vers 10. But the fat and the kidneys and the caul above the liver of the sinne-offering he burnt upon the altar That is he offered them upon the altar and so they were afterward burnt by that fire which came down from heaven ver 24. Vers 15. And he brought the peoples offering and took the goat c. and offered it for sinne as the first That is in the same manner as that for the priest ver 8. and so he burnt it also without the camp as the other was ver 11. for which he is reproved by Moses Lev. 10. 17. Wherefore have ye not eaten the sinne-offering in the holy place seeing it is most holy and God hath given it you c. Vers 17. Beside the burnt sacrifice of the morning That is this was not the burnt-offering and meat-offering which was every morning to be offered as God appointed Exod. 24. 38 39 40. but an extraordinary offering besides which by speciall direction was offered at this time Vers 22. And Aaron lift up his hand toward the people and blessed them This was a kind of applying the sacrifice to them and to make known that God did gratiously accept of those sacrifices from them and it was done according to the manner set down Numb 6. 23 c. Speak unto Aaron and his sonnes saying On this wise shall blesse the children of Israel saying unto them The Lord blesse thee and keep thee the Lord make his face shine upon thee and be gratious unto thee the Lord lift up his countenance upon thee and give thee peace So also it is said of our Saviour that a little before his Ascention he lift up his head and blessed his disciples and indeed Aaron was in this a type of Christ in whom all the Nations of the world are blessed Gen. 18. 18. Vers 22. And came down from offering of the sinne-offering c. That is from the bank or hilly-place of the altar which was higher then the other ground Vers 23. And Moses and Aaron went into the tabernacle c. Hitherto the priests had onely made entrance upon their office in the court of the priests Now Moses went with Aaron into the tabernacle that he might there instruct him concerning the service he was there to perform both about the lights the table of shew-bread and the altar of incense And the glory of the Lord appeared unto all the people That is somme visible signe of Gods glory and favour as by the cloud Exod. 16. 10. Vers 24. And there came a ●ire out from the Lord and consumed upon the altar the burnt-offering and the fat That is either from heaven as 2. Chron. 7. 1. or else out of the tabernacle Which when all the people saw they shouted and fell on their faces With astonishment and joy giving thanks for this signe of Gods favour and of his accepting their sacrifices CHAP. X. Vers 1. ANd Nadab and Abihu the sonnes of Aaron took either of them his c●nser c. No doubt Moses had taught them and enjoyned them that after they had offered the sacrifices on the altar of burnt-offerings then they should go into the tabern●cle and there should light the lamps and burn incense on the altar of incense as God had commanded Exod. 30. 7. Aaron shall burn thereon sweet incense every morning when he dresseth the lamps he shall burn incense on it that is on the altar of incense but withall doubtlesse he had given them direction to use in this service onely the fire of the altar of burnt-offerings which was kindled by fire from heaven for though this be onely implyed covertly Levit. 6. 13. The fire shall ever be burning upon the altar it shall never go out yet I make no question but that it was more fully given them in charge as afterward again Levit. 16. 10. where direction is given for Aarons going into the most holy place He shall take a censer of burning coals of fire from off the altar before the Lord and his hands full of sweet incense beaten small and bring it within the vail But now Nadab and Abihu rashly and inconsiderately forgetting or neglecting their duty in this particular took some other ●ire in their censers that perhaps wherewith they had sod and dressed the ●lesh of their sacrifices and putting incense thereon to carry it and lay it upon the altar of incense and so offered strange fire before the Lord that is the fire which he
why they might not go out as mourners to the buriall of their brethren to wit because they might not put off their priestly attire and so give over the service they had in hand the rather because they were newly consecrated and there were so few of them to attend the service Vers 9. Do not drink wine or strong drink c. Nadab and Abihu though not through wine had erred not in putting a difference betwixt holy and profane upon this occasion God gives charge that other things which might occasion the like errour may be avoyded Vers 12. Take the meat-offering that remaineth c. Namely the remainder of the meat-offering that is mentioned chap. 9. ver 17. Which Moses calls upon them to eat according to the directions formerly given them 1. Thereby to incourage Aaron and his sonnes to go on in their service lest they should have doubted because of the late judgement upon Nadab and Abihu whether God would ever be pleased that they should any more meddle with his sacrifices 2. Because this sudden destruction of their brethren had let them see how exactly carefull they had need to be that all things were done according to Gods appointment and thirdly Because there was great danger lest being disturbed by this heavy and unexpected accident they should forget or neglect their duty herein especially in this particular of eating the meat-offering it being usuall with men in sorrow to refuse their meat Vers 13. And ye shall eat it in the holy place c. That is the court of the Sanctuary as Levit. 6. 16. And the remainder thereof shall Aaron and his sonnes eat with unleavened bread it shall be eaten in the holy place in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation they shall eat it Vers 14. And the wave-breast and heave-shoulder shall be eaten in a clean place c. Moses here also puts them in mind to eat the shoulder and breast to wit of the peoples peace-offerings Levit. 9 21. And the breast and right shoulder Aaron waved for a wave-offering before the Lord and that in a clean place meaning the camp of Israel and in ages following the citie of Jerusalem where the like holy things were eaten Thou and thy sonnes and thy daughters with thee Namely such as were onely maids widows and divorced returned to their fathers house see Levit. 22. 11 12. where others are also mentioned that might eat of them Vers 16. And Moses diligently sought the goat of the sinne-offering c. Amongst other things wherein Moses feared lest Aaron and his sonnes should offend by reason of the sorrow which God had brought upon them this was one thing he doubted lest they should omit the eating of the sinne-offering and therefore he sought diligently to see what was done with it to wit that goat of the sin-offering spoken of Levit. 9. 15. And he tooke the goat which was the sinne-offering c. as appeareth vers 10. of this chapter where Moses saith it was given them to bear the iniquitie of the congregation Indeed it is clear that the sinne-offering for the congregation was to be carried without the camp and burnt by that law Levit. 4. 21. And he shall carry forth the bullock without the camp and burn him as he burned the first bullock But then the bloud of that sinne-offering was carried within the tabernacle Levit 4. 16 17. Now because Aaron had not yet accesse into the holy place till he had prepared a way by these first sacrifices in the court therefore the bloud of this sinne-offering was not brought into the tabernacle as in an extraordinary case and consequently it was not to be burnt without the camp but to be eaten by the priests by that other law Levit. 6. 26 30. The priest that offereth it for sinne shall eat it in the holy place shall it be eaten in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation c. This Aaron and his sonnes in their grief either forgetting or not duly considering did burn it without the camp which was not according to the law See the note upon Levit. 9. 15. And he was angry with Eleazar and Ithamar c. Though Aaron was also in fault and Moses in reproving Eleazar and Ithamar his sonnes in his presence did also reprove him yet he bends his anger chiefly against his sonnes as sparing what he could the father in reg●rd of his late heavie losse of his two other sonnes his sons faith the text that were left alive which is added to intimate one chief cause of his anger namely that they notwithstanding they had seen what was done to their brethren had exposed themselves to like danger but that God in mercy spared them Vers 18. Behold the bloud of it was not brought in c. Therefore it should have been eaten and not burnt See the former note upon vers 16. Vers 19. And Aaron said unto Moses Behold this day they have offered their sinne-offering c. This apology of Aarons consists of three parts 1. That though they had failed in this particular yet the main had not been neglected the sacrifices had been duly offered 2. That their failing in the rites and ceremonies requisite was by reason of grief occasioned by those dolefull accidents which had so lately befallen them 3. That this might now extenuate his fault though happely he did not omit it upon that reason that if they had eaten the sinne-offering it would not have been acceptable to the Lord because of that heavinesse and sorrow that was upon them which made them unfit and unworthy to eat those holy things for the law requires them that eat before the Lord to rejoyce See Deut. 12. 7. 26. 14. Hose 9. 4. Vers 20. And when Moses heard that he was content Either as approving his fact and allowing his excuse to be sufficient or else rather as finding it a lesse fault then he supposed it had been to wit that he did it not willingly but of humane frailty and perplexed with grief whereupon he passeth it by with pity as loth to adde affliction to affliction and perhaps deferred his further admonition till another time CHAP. XI Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake unto Moses and to Aaron saying unto them c. The former laws concerned the sanctification of the priests and the rites and ceremonies of the sacrifices now generall laws are given concerning the sanctification of the people and first for avoyding that uncleannesse which cometh from things without the man and in giving these laws the Lord spake both to Moses and to Aaron because it belonged both to the magistrate and priest to see these laws executed the priest being to teach the difference between clean and unclean Ezek. 44. 23. And they shall teach my people the difference between the holy and profane and cause men to discern between the unclean and clean and the Magistrate to take care that this difference was observed and hence is that
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
fruitfulnesse of the land wherein God had planted them whereof these severall boughs of goodly trees were a● evident signe Vers 43. That your generations may know that I made the children of Israel to dwell in booths c. S●e Exod. 12. 37. CHAP. XXIV Vers 2. Command the children of Israel that they bring unto thee pure oyl-olive c. This which is given here in charge to the Israelites is for the continuall supply both of lamp oyl and shewbread to wit that as they brought them at first so they must still be supplyed by them either therefore these things were provided by the civil magistrate out of the common s●ock or else rather ●hey were provided as were also the daily sacrifices and whatsoever else was offered in the name of the whole people out of the treasury of the temple into which therefore towards the supply of these things both the Princes and people did ordinarily cast in what they were willing to give So it is noted of Hezekiah 2. Chron. 31. 3. He appointed also the Kings portion of his substance for the burnt-offerings to wit for the morning and evening burnt-offerings and the burnt-offerings for the Sabbaths for the new Moons and for the set feasts and of the people Luke 21. 1. He saw the rich men casting their gifts into the treasury and a certain poore widow casting in thither t●o mites Vers 3. In the tabernacle of the congregation shall Aaron order it from the evening unto the morning c. Or his sonnes by his appointment See the note upon Exod. 25. 37. Vers 5. And thou shalt take fine floure and bake twelve cakes thereof These were the cakes of shewbread concerning which see the note upon Exod. 25. 23. The floure was provided at the common charge as is before said upon ver 1. and brought to the priests but the cakes were made and baked by the Levites of the family of Kohath as is evident 1. Chron. 9. 32. where it is said that some of the sonnes of the Kohathites were over the shew-bread to prepare it every Sabbath Vers 6. And shalt set them in two rows six on a row c. The common opinion is that those twelve cakes of shewbread representing the twelve tribes of Israel were not set one by another but six one upon another and six one upon another But because this way it cannot so properly be said that they were set in two orders or rows and because in the following verse there is order given for the putting of frankincense upon each row I rather think that they were set in order along the table six in one row and six in another Vers 7. And you shall put pure frankincense upon each row that it may be on the bread for a memoriall even an offering made by fire unto the Lord. For the incense was burned upon the altar when they took away the bread and was before-hand laid upon the bread as a signe that God would through Christ remember his people with thoughts of favour and gracious acceptance Vers 9. And it shall be Aarons and his sonnes and they shall eat it in the holy place That is after it had stood a week upon the table before the Lord. For it is most holy unto him of the offerings of the Lord c. Because of the incense which was burnt the bread was reputed most holy as if it had been of the offerings made by fire Vers 10. And the sonne of an Israelitish woman whose father was an Egyptian c. Thus by the providence of God in the party thus blaspheming and thus punished for it as is here related they were taught 1. How the curse of God doth usually follow the issue of such unlawfull mixtures as was this of an Egyptian with a● Israelite 2. How severe God must needs be against this sinne in his own genuine people who would not suffer it unpunished in one that was the sonne of a stranger by the fathers side The inserting of this story in this place makes it more then probable that it was done whilst they were yet in the desert of Sinai even whilst the Lord was giving these Laws to Moses which are before mentioned as is expressed in the next chapter ver 1. Whether the Egyptian had this sonne by Shelomith in marriage or by fornication we cannot say but that this their sonne the blasphemer had embraced the religion of the Israelites it is very likely both because he came away with them out of Egypt and also because he is here said to have gone out amongst the children of Israel which implies more then his going in their company namely that he went out amongst them as one of them And this sonne of the Israelitish woman and a man of Israel strove together in the camp This of his striving is expressed to let us know that a blasphemer though provoked is not therefore to be excused Vers 11. And the Israelitish womans sonne blasphemed the name of the Lord and cursed His sinne I conceive was not rash vain and unadvised mentioning Gods name either in swearing cursing the man with whom he was to contend or otherwise but of an higher nature though even these are blasphemy even some execration or reprochfull speeches uttered in his fury directly against God as if for instance we should suppose this that in the heat of contention the Israelite upbraiding him with his idolatrous father and denying him to be a true member of the Church of God he should thereupon speak scornfully and opprobriously of the God of Israel slighting the priviledge of being one of his people Some such blasphemy I conceive this was and that because the Law which God gave them upon this occasion speaks of cursing God ver 15. Whosoever curseth his God shall bear his sinne not cursing in Gods name but directly and expressely of cursing God And they brought him unto Moses c. According to the order mentioned Exod. 18. 26. The hard causes they brought unto Moses Vers 14. Let all that heard him lay their hands upon his head That is those that heard him were to come forth and laying their hands upon his head to give in evidence against him and so thereupon he was to be condemned and the congregation was to stone him Now this ceremony of the witnesses laying their hands upon his head was 1. to signifie that they did charge this sinne upon him and approve of the punishment that was to be inflicted for it 2. that having witnessed nothing but the truth they were free from his death but his bloud must be upon his own head 3. to imply that he was to be sacrificed as it were to the justice of God for as those that brought any sacrifice to the tabernacle were to lay their hand upon the head of the sacrifice thereby signifying their desire and faith that the death of that sacrifice might and should satisfie the justice of God in their behalf so here the laying
hundred thousand and three thousand and five hundred and fiftie at least if there were some small difference it was under fifty such small numbers being indeed usually not set down in the Scriptures yet then it is most probable that the tribe of Levi was numbred which are here lest out And if so thence it must needs follow that there were then at their first numbring so many young men of nine●een years of age that now were twenty years old as made up the number of the Levites that they might see they should lose nothing by whatsoever was imployed in Gods service Vers 48. For the Lord had spoken unto Moses saying c. His numbring of the tribe of Levi by themselves not amongst the rest some might think did proceed from an ambitious desire to exalt ●●s own tribe and therefore he makes expresse mention that it was done by Gods speciall command and that to shew that God had exempted them both from warres and all other secular imployments and separated them onely to attend upon the service of the tabernacle and besides because consequently their number was to be taken after another manner to wit from a moneth old and upward chap. 3. 15. Vers 51. And the stranger that cometh nigh shall be put to death That is whosoever is not of the tribe of Levi and this the Lord enjoyned both to bring them to the more reverend esteem of Gods holy things and withall to make them ever mindfull of this that there was no drawing nigh unto God without a Mediatour CHAP. II. Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake to Moses and Aaron saying The people being all numbred as God had appointed in the former chapter in this chapter the Lord gives direction for the ordering of every tribe when they pitched their tents and when they marched forward for to prevent confusion in their marching some order was necessary and to cut off all matters of contention the Lord himself appoints unto every tribe their severall place Vers 2. Every man of the children of Israel shall pitch by his own standard with the ensigne c. For the understanding of this we must know 1. that every tribe was to have a particular ensigne or banner called here the ensigne of their fathers house and so where that was displayed all of that tribe were to pitch their tents together as in one bodie 2. that the camp being divided into foure quarters in each quarter there was to be three tribes who besides their severall ensignes had one standard in common for them all which the chief of the three tribes carried and so every man of the children of Israel was ordered to pitch by his own standard 3. that being thus divided orderly into foure quarters they were appointed to pitch their tents about the tabernacle of the congregation to wit three tribes in one quarter in the East and three tribes in another quarter in the West and so three likewise on the South and three on the North and then the tabernacle was in the middest of them So hereby they were taught that God would dwell amongst them as his people to provide for them to protect and defend them c. and withall they were taught to have God still in their mind and so to fear him alwayes and worship him as they ought to do and 4. that though the tribes did thus pitch their tents round about the tabernacle yet it was as the text saith a farre off that is there was a good distance betwixt them and the tabernacle how farre off it was we cannot say yet it may be probably ghessed that it was two thousand cubits which is an English mile because we find that such a distance was between the ark and the people when they passed over Jordan Josh 3. 4. And thus we may conceive what a glorious sight it was to behold the tribes thus orderly ranked in their severall places and that it was no wonder though Balaam was stricken with admiration to behold it Numb 24. 5 6. How goodly are thy tents O Jacob ' and thy tabernacl●s O Israel as the valleys are they spread forth by the rivers side c. Vers 3. And on the East-side toward the rising of the sunne shall the standard of Judah pitch c. Thus the tribe of Judah out of which Christ was to come hath the preheminence and goes foremost as Captain of the rest and is therein a type of Christ the lion of the tribe of Judah who also is Michael that with his Angels fighteth against the Dragon and goeth before his heavenly armies Rev. 12. 7. Thus Judah hath the dignity of the first-born which was taken from Reuben neither can Reuben wi●hstand it because God hath so ordered it Vers 5. And those that do pitch next unto him shall be the tribe of Issachar And with him Zebulun ver 7. both younger brothers to Judah that they might the more willingly be under his regiment Vers 9. And all that were numbred in the camp of Judah were a hundred c. Thus the greatest number were in the first quarter for the more safety of the Sanctuary and all Israel almost thirty thousand mo● then in any other quarter These shall first set forth That is when the camp removes these tribes before mentioned to wit Judah a●d Issachar and Zebulun which went together in one regiment under Judahs standard were to advance forward in the first place whereby it is evident that when they journeyed from one place to another they did not march in that order as their tents were pitched about the tabernacle when they stayed in any place but first those of Judahs standard advanced forward in the forefront then immediately behind followed those of Reubens standard ver 16. then next behind them came the regiment under the standard of Ephraim ver 24. and then in the last place came those that belonged to the standard of Dan ver 31. onely the Levites went some of them betwixt the regiment of Judah and the regiment of Reuben as is expressed chap. 10. 17. and other next after Reubens regiment just in the midst of their armies having six tribes before them and six behind them Vers 10. On the South-side shall be the standard of the camp of Reuben The South was to them that were ranked now with their faces Eastward on their right hand and so the right wing is given unto Reuben because he was the first-born though he lost his birthright Gen 49. which Judah and Joseph had shared between them Vers 12. And those which pitch by him shall be the tribe of Simeon c. Who was his next brother and that by Leah his mother Now his other brother by Leah being already disposed of who was fitter to be joyned with him then Gad the first-born of Zilpah Leahs handmaid Vers 14. Then the tribe of Gad c. See chap. 1. 14. Vers 17. Then the tabernacle of the congregation shall set forward with the camp
of the Levites in the middest of the camp c. It is expressely said chap. 10. 17. that in their journeyings when the camp removed from one place to another the sonnes of Gershon and the so●nes of Merari set forward bearing the tabernacle that is the boards and coverings of the tabernacle next after Judahs regiment between Judahs and Reubens regiment and then afterwards the Kohathites onely bearing the Sanctuary went just in the midst of the camp having six tribes before them and six behind them This therefore that is said here that the tabernacle of the congregation shall set forward with the camp of the Levites in the midst of the camp must either be understood onely of the Kohathites who carried the Sanctuary even all the holy things just in the midst of the camp or else by the midst of the camp must not be meant precisely the just midst of the camp but onely that they went between the regiments of the other tribes some immediately after the regiment of Judah and the rest next after the regiment of Reuben and so these last onely were precisely in the midst of the camp Vers 18. On the West-side shall be the standard of the camp of Ephraim c. Unto Josephs sonnes a double priviledge is here given because he was to have a part of Reubens birthright as it is expressely said 1. Chron. 5. 1 2. for first the posterity of his two sonnes are made two severall tribes which might have been an occasion of much contention had not God thus expressely ordered it and 2. unto them the West quarter is given for their pitching of their tents and that I conceiv● as the second place of honour in the camp for in the same regard is the West quarter amongst the Levites given to the posterity of Gershon the eldest sonne of Levi chap. 3. 23. and so as amongst them Moses and Aaron and the priests pitched immediately before the tabernacle and then the Gershonites that were of Levies eldest sonne just behind the tabernacle so in the ordering of the other tribes Judahs regiment pitched before the tabernacle and the sonnes of Joseph behind it And besides when they journeyed they went in the forefront of those tribes that followed the tabernacle and so both when they marched and when they pitched their tents they had the tabernacle still in their faces as if appointed to take speciall care of it whereto some Expositours conceive the Psalmist alludes in that expression Psal 80. 2. Before Ephraim and Benjamin and Man●sseh stirre up thy strength and come and save us For with the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh in this regigiment and quarter Benjamin is here joyned ver 22. and so all Rachels posterity encamped together But yet Ephraim Josephs younger sonne is appointed to be standard bearer in the camp before his elder brother Manasseh according to Jacobs prophecy of Ephraims superiority Gen. 48. 19 20. where he set Ephraim before Manasseh Vers 24. All that were numbred of the camp of Ephraim c. This was the smallest number of all the armies Vers 25. The standard of the camp of Dan shall be on the North-side by their armies He was the first-born of the handmaids children and Jacobs fifth sonne Gen. 30. 6. and by prophecy he was to judg● his people as one of the tribes of Israel Gen. 49. 16. So God appointed him the standard in the left wing with him are joyned the other two remaining sonnes of the handmaids to wit Asher ver 27. and Naphtaly ver 29. CHAP. III. Vers 1. THese also are the generations of Aaron and Moses c. That is these mentioned and numbred in the sequele of this chapter are of the stock whence Aaron and Moses d●scended to wit of the tribe of Levi for by the generations of such and such persons in the Scripture is meant sometimes their ancestours sometimes their children and posterity and sometimes their whole kindred and family as here it is taken Yet even the children of Aaron and Moses are numbred amongst the rest for though there be no mention made of Moses sonnes as there is of Aarons ver 2. yet even Moses sonnes are included amongst the Kohathites of which family Moses was ver 28. And therefore is A●ron in this place prefixt before Moses because in this regard Aarons sonnes as being priests had the preheminence of Moses posterity who were but ordinary Levites As for that clause in the day that the Lord spake with Moses in mount Sinai that I conceive is purposely added because some of these here mentioned though they were living when the Lord spake with Moses in mount Sinai yet they were now dead in the second moneth of the second year when this command was given for the numbring of the people namely Nadab and Abihu mentioned ver 2. Vers 6. Bring the tribe of Levi near and present them before Aaron c. Aaron and his sonnes entred upon the office of the priesthood in the first moneth of the second year after their going out of Egypt as it is evident Levit. 10. but it seems the Levites were not set apart to enter upon their office till they were now numbred and appointed how they should pitch their tents about the tabernacle and what the severall charge should be of each family of them which was in the second moneth of the second year chap. 1. 1. But yet that they should be set apart to this imployment in stead of the first-born was promised them before when they were appointed to slay those that had worshipped the golden calf as is before noted upon Ex●d 32. 29. How this may be reconciled with that in Deut. 10. 8. see in the notes upon that place Vers 7. And they shall keep his charge and the charge of the whole congregation c. That is they shall pitch their tents round about the tabernacle that they may be near at hand to be subservient and helpfull unto Aaron in the severall duties of Gods worship and the service of the tabernacle which God hath given in charge to Aaron and which God hath given in charge to the whole congregation Vers 8. And they shall keep all the instruments of the tabernacle of the congregation and the charge of the children of Israel c. That is that wherewith the children of Israel must have stood charged but that the Levites are separated to take it upon them in Israels behalf Vers 10. And thou shalt appoint Aaron and his sonnes and they shall wait on their priests office c. That is though the Levites are given unto Aaron and his sonnes for his help that they may minister unto him and be assistants in those things which are fit for them yet with those things that belong peculia●ly to the priests office even the Levites themselves must not upon pain of death intermeddle nor must the priests turn over the work of the Sanctuary to the Levites so to ease themselves they must wait
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
displeasure and wrath of a man the light of my countenance they cast not down saith Job chap. 29. 24. that is they did not anger or grieve me and so turn the smiles of my countenance into frowns so the lifting up the face readily upon a man is an argument of his good liking and favour towards him and 2. the Lords provident care over them to protect and blesse them and so is the same with that Psal 33. 18. Behold the eye of the Lord is upon th●m that fear him upon them that hope in his mercy Vers 27. And they shall put my name upon the children of Israel and I will blesse them That is they shall pronounce them blessed in my name and by my favoùr which shall be upon them as if now given by the priests and this it seems was signified by the lifting up spreading forth their hands towards the people as Aaron did Levit 9. 22. and thus the name of the Lord is elsewhere taken as Prov. 18. 10. The name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous runneth into it and is safe CHAP. VII Vers 1. ANd it came to passe on the day that Moses had fully set up the tabernacle c. In this chapter Moses relates the offerings that were brought by the Princes of the tribes for the carriage of the tabernacle and for dedicating of the altar Now because it is said here that these twelve princes brought six waggons and twelve oxen for the carriage of the tabernacle on the day that Moses had fully set up the tabernacle and had anointed it c. it is much questioned amongst Expositours when this was done Some conceive that they offered these things precisely on the day that Moses had fully set up the tabernacle c. which was on the first day of the first moneth in the second year after their coming out of Egypt Exod. 40. 17. a full moneth before the numbring of the people whereof Moses spake in the beginning of this book for the charge for that was given on the first day of the second moneth chap. 1. 1. and so they conceive that this is here inserted though done a moneth before onely because these things formerly offered by the Princes were now given to the Levites But then others conceive that these waggons and oxen were now offered by the Princes in the order as it is here set down after the tribes were numbred and placed in their severall stations round about the tabernacle and that therefore by these words And it came to passe on the day that Moses had fully set up the tabernacle and had anointed it c. onely thus much is intended that these things were brought and offered by the Princes after that Moses had fully finished the erection of the tabernacle c. and the ordering of all things belonging thereto amongst which we may well reckon the placing of the tribes in their severall stations and the Levites also in their places round about the tabernacle And indeed this exposition seems most probable 1. because it is said here that the Princes that offered these things were those that were set over the numbring of the people ver 2. to wit those mentioned by name chap. 1. 5. c. 2. because it is not likely that these oxen and waggons were offered for the service of the tabernacle a moneth before the Levites were set apart to their service and had their severall charge assigned them for the carrying of the tabernacle and those thing● that belonged thereto and 3. because it is said in the end of this chapter vers 88. This was the dedication of the altar after it was anointed which shews that these things were not done just on the day that Moses set up the tabernacle c. Vers 5. And thou shalt give them unto the Levites to every man according t● his service That is according as the weight is more or lesse of those things which ●re committed to their charge Vers 8. And foure waggon● a●d ●ight oxen he gave unto the sonnes of Merari See the note upon chap. 3. ver 36. Vers 10. And the Princes offered for dedicating the altar in the day that ●t was anointed c. That is for the first imploying thereof in those holy services for which it was ordained Indeed Moses first offered burnt-offerings and other sacrifices thereon seven dayes together for the consecrating of the priests Levit. 8. which was in the first moneth of the second year and the next day after Aaron and his sonnes offered sacrifices thereon for himself and the people in generall Levit. 9. 7. on which day it was that Nadab and Abihu perished But now in the second moneth of the second year when the tribes were all placed about the tabernacle the Princes brought their offerings and because these were the first offerings that were offered for any particular persons or tribes therefore they are said to be offered for the dedicating of the altar and so those following words in the day that it was anointed must not be taken strictly of the very day whereon it was first anointed but more generally as before ver 1. Vers 12. And he that offered his offering the first day was Nahshon c. Here the Captains of the tribes offer every one in his day according to the order wherein God had set them round about the Sanctuary beginning at the East-quarter proceeding to the South and then to the West and so ending at the North. Vers 13. And his offering was one silver charger c. To wit for the use of the altar of burnt-offerings which stood in the court whereon these sacrifices which they brought were to be offered for all that were used in the tabernacle were of pure gold Vers 17. And for a sacrifice of peace-offerings two oxen c. Of these the Princes with the priests c. did eat and so keep a feast with joy before the Lord for his mercy toward his people Vers 88. This was the dedication of the altar after it was anointed See the note upon ver 1. Vers 89. And when Moses was gone into the tabernacle of the congregation c. This may seem to be here added because after that all things were thus ordered concerning the tabernacle and that Aaron and his sonnes were thus farre entred up●n their priestly office Moses went into the tabernacle to receive further direction from the Lord and so the Lord spake unto Moses from the mercy-seat as is here expressed and he spake unto him that is Mo●e● spake unto the Lord propounding such things to the Lord as he desired to be satisfied in CHAP. VIII Vers 2. WHen thou lightest the lamps the seven lamps shall give light over against the candlestick Hitherto I conceive the priests had onely entred upon their service on the altar of burnt-offerings now the dedication of the altar being finished and Moses being now to ent●r the priests into the service of the
that all the nations of the earth that should hear of them should in every place to the great glory of God talk with admiration of the mighty power of God manifested in his doing such things and of the great love that he bears to that people and yet withall he would magnifie his justice and severity against their sinne too in cutting off all those that had now murmured against him before ever their posterity came to inherit the land yea this last according to our translation seems chiefly intended because this particle But seems to oppose this sentence to that which went before concerning his pardoning them The Lord said I have pardoned according to thy word But as truly as I live all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord. Vers 22. And have tempted me now these ten times That is not once nor twice but many times as Gen. 31. 7. And changed my wages ten times and Job 19. 3. These ten times have ye reproched me It may also be taken properly for now they had rebelled ten times First at the red sea Exod. 14. 11 12. Secondly in Marah Exod. 15. 23 24. Thirdly in the wildernesse of Sinne where manna and quails were given when they murmured for want of bread Exod. 16. 2. Fourthly when at the same time they kept of the manna till the morning Exod. 16. 20. Fifthly when they went out to gather manna on the Sabbath Exod. 16. 27 28. Sixthly at Rephidim Exod. 17. 1. Seventhly by the calf at Horeb Exod. 32. Eighthly at Taberah Numb 11. 1. Ninthly at Kibroth H●ttaavah chap. 11. 4. And now the tenth time upon the searching the land Vers 24. But my ser vant Caleb because he had another spirit with him c. The Lord having threatned in the former verses that none of the Israelites that had ●een his wonders in Egypt c. should ever see the land of Canaan he now excepts Caleb and promiseth that he should go into the land whereinto he went to search it and that his seed should possesse it to wit Hebron and the land adjoyning Josh 14. 9. and that because he had another spirit with him that is he was courageous and bold and was not of such a base cowardly spirit as the others were of and followed the Lord fully to do that which God required But why is not Joshua also named seeing he also followed the Lord fully I answer the former judgement was pronounced onely against the people that were in their tents amongst whom Caleb was and therefore he was excepted but there was no need to except Joshua because he was not amongst the people but attended on Moses Ve●s 25. Now the Amalekites and the Canaanites dwelt in the valley That is added both to shew the mischief their sin●e had done them for which they must now return when they were come to the very borders of the land ready to enter into it as also to shew how necessary it was that they should presently be gone now God had resolved not to carry them in because they lay so near to the enemy for the Amalekites and Can●anites dwelt or sat i● the valley that is the valley beyond the mountain at the foot whereof the Israelites now lay see vers 40 c. where by this word dwelt may be meant either that they had their continuall abode there or rather that there they had gathered forces and lay in wait for them for so sometimes this word is used for lying in wait Josh 8. 9. To morrow turn you and get you into the wildernesse by the way of the red sea In this they obeyed not neither and being thereupon discomfited stayed after this at Kadesh many dayes Deut. 1. 46. and that as it is likely for the gathering up of their broken troups Vers 18. As ye have spoken in mine ears so will I do to you That is that which you wished to your selves shall now betide you wherein he alludes to that which they had spoken vers 3. Would God we had dyed in this wildernesse Vers 33. And your children shall wander in the wildernesse fourty years and bear your whoredomes c. That is till they have made up the years of their wandring in the wildernesse from their coming out of Egypt full fourty years so that in these fourty years the time past already since they came out of Egypt is included for one whole year and part of the second were past already Deut. 2. 14. And the space in which we came from Kadesh-Barnea untill we were come over the brook Sered was thirty and eight years Now in this the Lord saith their children should bear their whoredomes because it was their fathers whoredomes that is their forsaking of God that did bring this punishment upon their children Vers 34. And ye shall know my breach of promise That is you shall know to your cost what it is to charge me with breach of promise as you have done by suspecting that I would not give you the land whither I had brought you but meant to give you as a prey into the hand of your enemies you shall find to your cost that it was your infidelity your not keeping covenant with me and no● my breach of promise with you that hath hindered you from the present enjoying of this land whither I had brought you Vers 37. Even those men that did bring up an evil report upon the land dyed by the plague before the Lord. That is dyed by an extraordinary plague from the hand of God either the pestilence threatned vers 12. or some other judgement and that immediately the cloud the testimony of Gods presence still remaining upon the tabernacle And thus by the present judgement inflicted on them the people must needs be stricken with the more fearfull apprehension of the judgement that did abide them also and therefore it is said vers 39. the people mourned greatly having now indeed just cause to weep whereas before vers 1. they wept causelessely Vers 41. And Moses said Wherefore now do yo● transgresse the commandment of the Lord c. To wit being first commanded of the Lord so to say See Deut. 1. 42. And the Lord said unto me Say unto them Go not up ne●ther fight for I am not among you lest ye be smitten b●fore your enemies Vers 43. For the Amalekites and the Canaanites are there before you That is on the top of the hill lying in readinesse to set upon you and therefore are said to come down vers 45. Vers 44. Neverthelesse the ark of the covenant of the Lord and Moses depart●d not out of the camp The ark removed not but at the removall of the cloud Numb 9. 15. which God not taking up now he shewed thereby his dislike of their enterprise Moses therefore obeying the Lord would notgo with them so they went without the Lord without the signes ofhis grace and company of his ministers Vers 45. Th●n the Amalekites came
is inserted as an instance or example how the foregoing Law was put in execution concerning those that did presumptuously transgresse and refuse to conform themselves to the Law in the outward duties of Gods worship and service so that his punishment was for the willfull contempt of that Law Vers 34. And they put him in ward because it was not declared what should be done to him That the Sabbath-breaker was to die they knew see Exod. 31. 14. and 35. 2. but by what death he should die or whether this gathering of sticks made him obnoxious to that sentence that they were not fully resolved in Evident it seems it was that he had done it presumptuously yet it was doubtfull whether this fact were within the compasse of that Law or no. And therefore Moses inquires not willing to take away his life without certain direction from the mouth of God Vers 38. Speak unto the children of Israel and bid them that they make them fringes c. The main end of these fringes was to put them in mind of the commandments of God as it is afterwards expressed ver 29. that every time they looked upon their garments and saw those fringes they might by the help of this memoriall remember that they were Gods peculiar people consecrated to his service and bound to his Laws and therefore might not walk as others after their own wayes and therefore it was that the Pharisees to the end they might seem religious above others did make the fringes on their garments so very broad Mat. 23. 5. They enlarge saith our Saviour the border of their garments or the fringes of their garments for so the originall word may well be translated Yea and our Saviour himself did conform himself to this Law as appears Luke 8. 44. where it is said that the woman that had the issue of bloud touched the border or the fringe of his garment And that they put upon the fringe of the borders a ribband of blue This heaven-coloured ribband taught them the heavenly affection they should have to all the Law and how holy their conversation should be Vers 39. And it shall be unto you for a fringe that ye may look upon it c. That is this is the end of making these fringes that ye may look upon them and remember all the commandments of the Lord and do them that is that the sight of this fringe may put you in mind to keep them and that ye seek not after your own heart and your own eyes after which you use to go a whoring that is that ye may not find out any superstitious in ventions of your own devising in my worship which who so doth goes a whoring from God but may content your selves with that which is prescribed by the Law So that this was more particularly the end of these fringes that they might be restrained from their own devices in the worship of God and kept to the direction of his Law CHAP. XVI Vers 1. NOw Korah the sonne of Izhar the sonne of Kohath the sonne of Levi c. Moses here names the ring-leaders in a dangerous insurrection that was made against him and Aaron his brother Korah is set in the first place as the first mover of this sedition which is therefore called the gainsaying of Core Jude 11. and ver 23. because it was all occasioned by him shall one man sinne said Moses to the Lord and wilt thou be wroth with all the congregation A Levite he was and cosen-german to Moses and Aaron for Amram the father of Moses and Aaron and Izhar the father of this Korah were brothers the sonnes of Kohath as it is evident Exod. 6. 18. And probable enough it may seem to be which the Hebrews say that this Korah had long since taken offence that Elizaphan was by Moses preferred to be Prince of the families of the Kohathites chap. 3. 30. whereas he was of the youngest brother Uzziel and Korah was of Izhar ●lder then he which grudge however it lay buried for a time yet now it brake forth and nothing lesse then priesthood will content him and his abetters With Korah are joyned here Dathan and Abiram the sonnes of Eliab and On the sonne of Peleth all sonnes of Reuben who were ring-leaders of this rebellion amongst the people as Korah was amongst the Levites and indeed because the Reubenites encamped next to the Kohathites both on the South-side of the tabernacl● hereby Korah had the better opportunity to perswade the Reubenites to joyn with them and besides under a pretence of Reubens birthright they were happe'y the more easily drawn to oppose Moses as intending to challenge that the government belonged to them also Vers 2. Two hundred and fifty princes of the assembly famous in the congregation men of renown That is they were magistrates statesmen famous and renowned whereby the conspiracy was the more dangerous Vers 3. Ye take too much upon you seeing all the congregation are holy c. And therefore may approch to God and offer their sacrifices themselves Hereby therefore they challenge Moses of partiality in tying the priesthood to his brother Aarons posterity It is most probable which is generally held by Interpreters that the Reubenites did intend under the pretence of Reubens birthright to wrest the supreme magistracy from Moses to themselves and therefore might here charge not Aaron onely but Moses also with taking too much upon them But doubtlesse for the present they made the quarrel onely about the priesthood nor was it so much to make all the Levites equall with Aaron and his sonnes though that happely the Levites did hope would prove the issue of it seek ye the priesthood also said Moses ver 10. as that all the people might as priests offer their own sacrifices and therefore all the two hundred and fifty conspiratours who were of severall tribes were appointed to come with their censers to burn incense before the Lord and concerning Dathan and Abiram who were Reubenites it is said ver 15. when Moses sent for them and they refused to come to him that Moses was very wroth with them and said unto the Lord Respect not thou their offerings which must needs be meant of the incense they were to offer yea and in the following chapter the laying up of the rods of all the tribes before the Lord that the Lord might shew that none but Aaron and his family might meddle with the work of the priesthood makes it most evident that the plea of these men was that all the tribes might offer their sacrifices unto the Lord. Wherefore then lift you up your selves above the congregation of the Lord Though at first they pretend nothing but an equall right to the priesthood yet these generall words of expostulation do in a manner intimate that they meant to wrest the government from Moses also Vers 4. And when Moses heard it he fell upon his face See chap. 14. 5. Vers 5. Even
was removed But the text resolves us not Vers 41. But on the morrow all the congregation of the children of Israel murmured against Moses c. The very men whose lives Moses had saved the day before by praying to the Lord for them do now murmur against him and it is expresly noted that this they did on the morrow after they had seen that fearfull judgement that fell upon Korah Dathan and Abiram with all the men of their conspiracy thereby to intimate their horrible wickednesse that after the sight of so strange and fearfull a judgement they durst so immediately again make an insurrection against Moses charging him with the death of those rebells and that under the name of the people of the Lord ye have killed say they the people of the Lord when it was so evident that they were destroyed by the immediate hand of God as wretches not worthy to be numbred amongst Gods people Vers 42. And it came to passe when the congregation was gathered against Moses and against Aaron that they looked toward the tabernacle of the congregation That is Moses and Aaron looked to God as having now no other refuge or shelter to fly to And behold the cloud covered it and the glory of the Lord appeared This signe of Gods having somewhat to say to them for at such times the cloud descended stayed the rage of the people and saved Moses and Aaron Vers 46. Take a censer and put fire therein from off the altar c. No doubt the same spirit of God that informed him the plague was begun directed him to this course of offering incense which otherwise might onely be offered in the tabernacle for the staying of it yea and happely that Aarons offering incense might put the people in mind to pray unto the Lord whereof the incense was a signe Vers 48. And he stood between the dead and the living and the plague was stared That is as a mediatour be interposed himself by his intercession to stay the plague from passing any further and to save those from death that were not yet struck with this judgement of God yet it may be probably thought that this plague did not scatter it self through the whole congregation but beginning in one place did like a fire runne along upon those still that were next adjoyning and if it were thus even literally we may understand this place that Aaron set himself in that place where he was betwixt the dead and those that were not yet smitten as it were exposing himself to the wrath of God in the peoples behalf whereby it must needs be the more evident that those who were preserved were preserved by virtue of that atonement which he now made for them And herein was Aaron a type of Christ our Mediatour who made intercession for transgressours See Esa 53. 12. And he bare the sinnes of many and made intercession for the transgressours Luke 23. 34. Father forgive them for they know not what they do Vers 49. Now they that dyed in the plague were fourteen thousand and seven hundred c. What the plague was is not expressed but to this some apply that of the Apostle 1. Cor. 10. 10. Neither murmur ye as some of them also murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer Vers 50. And Aaron returned unto Moses unto the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation Both to acquaint Moses how he had sped and to return thanks unto the Lord who had so graciously accepted the work of his hands CHAP. XVII Vers 2. Speak unto the children of Israel and take of every one of them a rod c. No doubt the Lord saw that notwithstanding his severe proceeding against those that mutined against Aaron yet the hearts of many amongst them were not sufficiently wrought upon but were still rising against this dignity of Aaron and therefore the Lord in wonderfull mercy by this ensuing miracle labours to overcome their rebellious hearts Now to this end he enjoyns Moses to take of each Prince of the tribes a rod or staff such as men did use ordinarily to carry in their hands as we reade of such a rod that Moses used to go with Exod. 4. 2. And the Lord said unto him What is that in thine hand And he said A rod or rather such as the Princes did use to carry in their hands as the signe of their dignity Numb 21. 18. The Princes digged the well the nobles of the people digged ●t by the direction of the law-giver with their staves for a rod or staff in the hand of governours was a signe of their power and authority from God See Psal 110. 2. The Lord shall send the rod of thy strength out of Zion rule thou in the midst of thine enemies and Jer. 48. 16 17. The calamity of Moab is near to come and his affliction hasteth fast All ye that are about him bemoan him and all ye that know his name say How is the strong staff broken and the beautifull rod and thus the very signe of their authority becomes a signe and witnesse against them that the priesthood belo●ged not to them but to Aaron onely Vers 2. Of all their Princes according to the house of their fathers twelve rods There were twelve severall tribes and twelve Princes of each tribe a Prince and every Prince brought a rod with his name upon it whence to me it seems evident that there were twelve rods besides Aarons as is more fully expressed vers 6. Write thou every mans name upon his rod. Not the name of the Patriar●hs Reuben Simeon c. for we see that not Levies but Aarons name was written on his rod but the name of every Prince who was at present head of the tribe upon his own staff whence also it appears that there were twelve rods besides Aarons else if there were but one rod for the two tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh which of those two Princes names were written on their rod Vers 3. For one rod shall be for the head of the house of their fathers That is though I have distinguisht the tribe of Levi into two parts that of the priests the posterity of Aaron and that of the other Levites yet as in the other tribes there is but one rod for a tribe so must it be for the tribe of Levi and as the head or chief of every tribe hath his name written upon the rod of that tribe so shall Aarons name be written upon the rod of Levi whom I have set in the chief place that hereby my choice of him to serve in the priesthood may be fully made known Vers 4. And thou shalt lay them up in the tabernacle of the congregation before the testimony c. That is before the ark which is called the testimony because therein were kept the tables of the law called the testimony Exod. 25. 26. Either therefore they were to lay these rods in the holy place before the vail where the ark
against the Lord. The greatest difficulty in thesewords is what is meant by the first clause every oblation of theirs But the most of Expositours agree that this is mentioned as a generall comprehending all those particulars after mentioned as if it had been thus expressed every oblation of theirs shall be thine that is every meat-offering every sinne-offering and every trespasse-offering of theirs and indeed I see not of what particular sort of sacrifice it can be meant because they are all besides expressed by name Vers 10. In the most holy place thou shalt eat it That is in the court of the tabernacle or the tents or houses round about it which is called here the most holy place to wit in respect to the camp of Israel and afterwards the citie Jerusalem which were holy places for the like holy things as they were called to be eaten in the Passeover peace-offerings c. yea and in respect to the great court for the people which was without the priests court mentioned 2. Chron. 4. 9. and called therefore the outer court Ezek. 42. 14. Vers 11. And this is thine the heave-offering of their gift with all the wave-offerings c. That is the right shoulder and the wave-breast of their peace-offerings with all other gifts that they were heaved and waved no part thereof being burnt upon the altar Vers 12. All the best of the oyl and all the best of the wine and of the wheat the first-fruits of them c. These things here mentioned were allotted for the priests sustenance Some of the first-fruits of their land were brought to the Lord at their three great feasts as a sheaf of their barley at the feast of Passeover or unleavened bread chap. 23. 10. and two loaves of their new wheat at the feast of Pentecost ver 17. and the first of their wine and oyl at the feast of tabernacles But these were brought in the name of all the inhabitants of the land in generall Besides these there●ore particular men were of their own corn and fruits to bring the first-fruits unto the Lord as is enjoyned in severall places Exod. 22. 29. and 23. 19. c. concerning which there is no other direction given but that th●y should be of the first and of the best as is here expressed the quantity being left to the free bounty of the owner according as he had found the blessing of God upon his grounds and of these first-fruits is this place to be understood Some indeed make a difference betwixt the first-fruits mentioned here ver 12. and the first ripe mentioned in the following verse What soever is first ripe in the land which they shall bring unto the Lord shall be thine which they say is meant onely of those first ripe fruits which the people were to bring to the priests concerning which the Law speaks Deut. 26. 2. But whether there can be any such difference gathered from the Scripture is very questionable Vers 16. And those that are to be rede●med from a maneth old shalt thou redeem c. That is the first-born of men for though in the foregoing verse there is mention made of the redemption of the first-born both of man and beast Neverthelesse the first-born of man shalt thou surely redeem and the firstling of unclean beasts shalt thou redeem yet this hath reference onely to the first-born of men as is evident 1. because it is said here they were to redeem them at a moneth old which was indeed the time for the redemption of the first-born of men but the firstlings of beasts were to be given to the Lord at eight dayes old Levit. 22. 27. and therefore it seems were at that age to be redeemed and secondly because the estimation or price with the priest is here appointed to set upon the first-born that were to be redeemed is five shekels which was indeed the price for the redemption of the first-born of men Numb 3. 46 47. and Levit. 27. 6. But it is no way probable that the same price of redemption was set upon the first-born of men and the firstlings of unclean beasts of the firstling of an 〈◊〉 we reade expressely that it was to be redeemed with a lambe Exod. 13. 13. and therefore the like may be conceived of the firstling of other beasts or else that they were reasonably rated by the pri●st acco●ding to their value Vers 17. But the firstling of a cow or the firstling of a sheep or the firstling of a goat thou shalt not redeem they are holy See Deut. 15. 19. Vers 19. It is a cov●nant of salt for ever c. That is in liew of your service in the tabernacle I have allotted you this for your maintenance by a perpetuall and unchangeable coven●nt Now this covenant in regard of its perpetuity is here called a covenant of salt and so also Gods covenant with David 2. Chron. 13. 5. either in reference to that Law Lev. 2. 13. Every oblation of thy meat-offering shalt thou season with salt neither shalt thou suffer the salt of the covenant of thy God to be lacking from thy meat-offering as if it had been said that this covenant made with the priest for their maintenance in the particulars before mentioned should continue for ever even as that which he had made with the Israelites that every sacrifice should be salted with salt or else because salt having a virtue to preserve any thing from corruption therefore by a cov●nant of salt is meant onely a stable firm and incorruptible covenant Vers 20. Thou shalt have no inheritance in their land neither shalt thou have any part among them That is when the land shall be divided by lot there sha ll be no lot for the Levites Indeed they had cities to dwell in and suburbs but tho se also were given them from the other tribes Numb 35. Vers 22. Neither must the children of Israel henceforth come nigh the tabernacle c. To wit as they offered to do in the rebellion of Korah Vers 23. But the Levites shall do the service of the tabernacle of the congregation and they ●hall bear their iniquity That is the Levites shall bear the punishment of their own iniquity if they transgresse yea and of the peoples if by their not watching over the holy things they be suffered to transgresse Vers 27. And this your heave-offering shall be reckoned unto you as though it were the corn of the threshing floore That is this tenth of your tithes which you shall give to the priest the Lord will accept at your hands no lesse then if having lands you should pay tithe of the increase thereof as the rest of the people do unto you Vers 32. Neither shall ye pollute the holy things of the children of Israel lest ye die Which might be done by the uncleannesse of the priests and many other wayes CHAP. XIX Vers 2. SPeak unto the children of Israel that they bring thee a red hoifer
sure they were herein guilty and that happely upon this ground Heretofore when the people murmured the Lord for the most part shewed great indignation against them and was ready to destroy them but that Moses by his prayer prevailed with God to spare them Moses therefore and Aaron wondring that now the Lord should shew no such displeasure but should presently send them to fetch water for them out of the rock they doubted whether God did seriously intend this supply or did onely command it by way of upbraiding the people for forgetting what he had formerly done for them when they wanted water and so though they came to the rock ready to do what God had commanded yet they were perplexed and in suspence betwixt hope and doubtings questioning still within themselves what God would do and that it seems not so much out of any doubt of Gods power as out of a distrust that such a rebellious people were not capable of such a mercie from God and that it was this which Moses stuck at his words seem to testifie vers 10. Hear now ye rebels must we fetch you water out of this rock But if the infidelity of their hearts were all their sinne why is it said also vers 12. that they did not sanctifi● him in the eyes of the children of Israel I answer that they showed their distrust outwardly also first by Moses his stricking the rock to which he should onely have spoken vers 11. this tended to the obscuring of Gods glory since his almighty power would have been more manifest if by mere speaking to the rock the water had gushed forth s●condly by striking it twice which might well proceed from heat of anger and distrust thirdly by the doubtfulnesse of his words must we fetch you water out of this rock and fourthly by the bitternesse of his rage against the people Hear now ye rebels which happely he expressed also in many other words of discontent and anger which are not here set down for the psalmist saith that they angered him at the waters of strife and provoked his spirit so that he spake unadvisedly with his lips Psal 10● 32. 33. which as in part no doubt it proceeded from infidelity so it must needs much obscure the riches of Gods mercie who was ready to shew such wonderfull favour to such a rebellious people and argued a kind of unwillingnesse that God should be honoured by this miracle which he had determined to work in the eyes of all the people Vers 11. And the water came out abundantly and the congregation drank This was also spirituall drink flowing from the rock Christ 1. Cor. 10. 4. And did all drink the same spirituall drink for they drank of that spirituall rock that followed them and that rock was Christ being smitten for our transgressions Esa 5. 3 4. by the rod of the law from him proceedeth that living water wherewith Gods Israel may quench their thirst for ever But whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life John 4. 14. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and he that hath no money come ye buy and eat yea come and buy wine and milk without money and without price And their beasts also Thus those elements which are signes and seals of Gods grace unto those to whom they are sanctified of God for that purpose out of that use are no other but common and have no inherent holinesse in them Vers 12. Because ye believed me not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the children of Israel That is to glorifie me by discovering that you did not question mine almighty power my faithfulnesse and free grace even to those that do not deserve it for as the believer doth greatly honour God by resting upon his mercie and power and faithfulnesse so he that questions the accomplishment of any mercie which God hath promised his people doth exceedingly dishonour him and therefore it is said chap. 27. 14. that Moses and Aaron did herein ●ebell against Gods commandments See the former note upon vers 10. Therefore ye shall not bring this congregation into the land which I have given them How grievous this chastisement was unto Moses we see Deut. 3. 23 24 25 26. But withall herein a mystery was implyed Neither Moses the minister of the law nor Aaron the priest could bring them into Canaan but this must be the work of Jesus or Joshua his successour so neither the law nor the legall priesthood can bring us into heaven but onely faith in Jesus Christ Gal. 2. 16. Vers 13. This is the water of Meribah c. So was the former place also called in Rephidim Exod. 17. 7. To distinguish them the Scripture calleth this Meribah of Kadesh Deut. 2. 1 2 3. And he was sanctified in them That is amongst the Israelites by giving them water and thereby manifesting his power truth and compassion or in them that is Moses and Aaron by punishing their rebellion for hereby God is sanctified Ezek. 38. 16. I will bring thee against my land that the heathen may know me when I shall be sanctified in thee O God before their eyes Vers 14. And Moses sent messengers from Kadesh unto the King of Edom c. To wit by Gods direction Deut. 2. 1 2 3. Thou knowest all the travell that hath befallen us That is our grievous and wearisome afflictions and troubles have been so famous that they cannot be unknown to thee Vers 16. And when we cried unto the Lord he heard our voice and sent an angel c. This was Christ who appeared to Moses in the burning bush and sent Moses to fetch the Israelites out of Egypt and afterwards led them in their way in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night See the note upon Exod. 3. 2. And behold we are in Kadesh a city in the uttermost of thy border Or by Kadesh to wit in the wildernesse lying near and having the name of Kadesh the citi● Numb 33. 36. Vers 17. Let us passe I pray thee through thy countrey That being now their nearest way and most convenient for their passage in to Canaan We will not passe through the fields or through the vineyards neither will we drink of the water of the wels Meaning that they would not turn aside into their fields or vineyards to do them any damage and that either they would not drink without paying for it as vers 19. or else that they would onely drink of the rivers which were common not meddling with their wells digged for their private uses which were very precious in those hot and dry countreys Vers 18. And Edom said unto him Thou shalt not passe by me c. Fearing questionlesse that an army of six hundred thousand would not be so easily gotten out of his countrey
may guide them and govern them both at home and abroad in times of warre and in times of peace and undertake the charge of defending them against their enemies for under this phrase of going ou● and coming in before them of leading them out and bringing them in all the offices of the supreme magistracy are comprehended and hence Moses being ready to resigne the government useth ●he same expression concerning himself Deut. 31. 2. I can no more go out and come in The similitude is taken from a Captain that marcheth before his souldiers and undertakes to lead them whereever they should go or rather from shepherds whose custome it was to go out and in before his flocks to lead them out to their pastures and to bring them home to their folds and therefore in the next words Moses addes that the congregation of the Lord be not as sheep which have no ●hepherd Vers 18. Take thee Joshua the sonne of Nun a man in whom is the spirit That is a man of eminent gifts and therefore fit for this place and imployment and indeed herein was Joshua a type of Christ concerning whom the prophet foretold that the spirit of the Lord should rest upon him the spirit of wisdome and understanding the spirit of counsell and might the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord. And lay thine hand upon him Or thy hands for so it is said vers 23. that Moses laid his hands upon him and by this ceremony of the imposition of Moses hands was signified first and especially that the supreme Magistracy should be transferred from Moses to him as being the man now consecrated and set apart to this place and service secondly that the hand of God should be upon him to defend him and prosper him in all his wayes and thirdly that God would conferre upon him a great encrease of the gifts of his spirit answerable to the dignity whereto he was advanced and thus it seems upon the imposition of Moses hands was accordingly performed as we see Deut. 34. 9. Joshua the sonne of Nun was full of the spirit of wisdome for Moses had laid his hands upon him The like ceremony was ●fterwards used in the dayes of the Gospel when men were separated and set apart to preach the Gospel and in a manner for the same reasons whence is that of the Apostle S. Paul to Timothy 1. Tim. 4. 14. Neglect not the gift which is in thee which was given thee by prophecy with the laying on of the hands of th● Presbytery Vers 19. And set him before Eleazar the priest and before all the congregation To wit that he first as the chief and the people with him might assent to that which God had dec●eed And give him a charge in their sight That is openly before them all make known to him what his office is and charge him faithfully and carefully to perform that which he undertakes and it may well be that this was the very charge which is afterwards expressed by Moses Deut. 31. 7 8. at which time God himself also gave him a charge vers 14 15. Vers 20. And thou shalt put some of thine honour upon him c. This may be meant of the gifts of Gods spirit which made Moses to be so highly honoured amongst the people as elsewhere it is said concerning the seventy Elders that were chosen to assist Moses in the government that God would take of the spirit that was upon Moses and put it upon them chap. 11. 17. concerning which see the note upon that place Now Moses is commanded to put of this his honour upon Joshua onely because at the laying of Moses hands upon him these gifts of Gods spirit should be imparted to him and it is not said put thine honour upon him but put of thine honour upon him or as it is in our Bibles thou shalt put some of thine honour upon him because though Joshua was to have the same gifts imparted to him that Moses had yet not in the same measure whence it is said Deut. 34. 10. that there arose not a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses Or else rather by Moses honour here is meant his authority and dignity and then it is said that he should put some of his honour upon him in relation to the present time before Moses death to wit that he should presently admit him into some communion of authority with him and so cause the people to give him that honour which was due unto Moses successour the elect Judge of Israel Vers 21. And he shall stand before Eleazar the priest who shall ask counsel for him after the judgement of Urim c. That is upon all occasions he shall present himself before Eleazar to ask counsel of him who shall enquire of the Lord for him after the judgement of Urim What this Urim was see Exod. 28. 30. what is meant by asking counsel after the judgement of Urim is hard to say This I conceive is most probable when any came to enquire of the Lord the priest put on the Ephod whereto the pectorall was fastened in the fold whereof the Urim and Thummim was put by Moses and so the priest in the name of the parties propounded such questions as they desired to be satisfied in from the Lord desiring the Lord to return them an answer according as we find it 1. Sam. 23. 9 10 11 12. whereupon the Lord did either by the illumination of his spirit whereof the Urim was an embleme or outward signe reveal unto the priest what answer he should give the party enquiring or else by an immediate voice from heaven and this was called the judgement of Urim because it pleased the Lord upon the applying or putting on of the pectorall to give judgement in the cause enquired of by the priest CHAP. XXVIII Vers 2. COmmand the children of Israel and say unto them My offerings c. Because they had in a great part omitted their sacrifices and solemn feasts the most part of the eight and thirty years last past by reason of their travels wherein the Sanctuary the altar and other holy things were folded up and removed from ●lace to place and that withall the generation that had been before mustered was now dead chap. 26. 64. But among these there was not a man of them whom Moses and Aaron the priest numbred when they numbred the children of Israel in the wildernesse of Sinai therefore the Lord causeth the Law of sacrificing to be here again repeated thereby giving them to know that when they came into the land they must not any longer neglect Gods ordinances as they had done in the wildernesse Deut. 12. 8. Ye shall not do after all the things that we do here this day every man whatsoever is right in his own eyes c. and so first he gives them charge in generall to be sure that they give him all the sacrifices and offerings that he had at
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
Lord commanded me at that time to tea●h you statutes and judgements c. That is besides the ten commandments written by the Lord himself he at that time also gave me other statutes and judgements which he commanded me to teach you Vers 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves c. Lest again confidence of themselves should make the Israelites slight this warning of avoiding all idolatry in these words he implyes how prone mans nature is to this sinne charging them to be jealous of themselves in this regard and to watch diligently over themselves lest they should be drawn away into this grosse and brutish finne Vers 19. Which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven Moses speaking here against worshipping the sunne moon and starres and then adding this clause which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven he doth therein imply with what admirable wisdome God hath disposed these lights in severall parts of the heaven whereby the sunne moon and starres do according to their severall stations give light sometimes to one part of the earth sometimes to another and some starres do onely shine in some parts of the world and others to other parts B●● withall the chief drift of this clause is to shew what a baseness● of mind it 〈◊〉 be in Gods people to worship such things as are given for servants unto all men even to infidels and heathens Vers 20. But the Lord hath taken you and brought you forth out of the iron furnace c. This is added to imply in what a speciall tie they were bound to be carefull above other people not thus to dishonour God first because God had redeemed them out of the iron furnace that is the furnace wherein iron is melted and so Egypt is called to set forth the miserable and cruell oppression which there they underwent enough to dissolve the spirits of the stoutest and to have wasted and consumed any people and secondly because having thus redeemed them out of Egypt he had taken them to himself as a people of inheritance that is his own people purchased for himself upon whom this blessing should remain from generation to generation Vers 21. Furthermore the Lord was angry with me for your sakes c. This is added first to set forth the wondrous care that God took of them who was angry with Moses for their sakes because he did not sanctifie the Lord in the eyes of the children of Israel Numb 20. 12. secondly to manifest Gods love and mercy to them granting them that favour which he denied his servant Moses to wit of carrying them into that good land of Canaan thirdly to give them a hint how carefull they had need to be to walk uprightly with God who was so farre displeased with him because of his infidelity Vers 24. For the Lord thy God is a consuming fire even a jealous God c. The Lord is here called a consuming fire because of his ex●eeding great indignation against his people when they provoke him by their rebellions and because when he resolves to take vengeance on them he doth many times consume and destroy th●m even as the fire burns up all that stands in its way and again he is called a j●alous God with respect unto the covenant which he made with his people wherein he had taken them to be his spouse and had engaged himself to be as a husband to them and so was as jealous of having the worship due onely to him to be given to any creature as husbands use to be of their wives dealing falsely with them and Solomon we know saith of jealousie that the coals thereof are coals of fire which hath a most vehement flame Cant. 8. 6. Vers 25. When thou shalt beget children and childrens children and shalt have remained long in the land c. That is be not secure and bold to sinne because you are therein settled for if you do God will soon cast you out again Vers 26. I call heaven and earth to witnesse against you c. This obtestation of heaven and earth may be understood of God and the Angels in heaven and men on earth But I rather conceive it to be meant of the dead and unreasonable creatures and that hereby is implyed first that as surely as there was a heaven and an earth so surely should they perish from off the land secondly that the bruit creatures were not so stupid as they if notwithstanding all these warnings given them they should neverthelesse go after strange gods Vers 34. Or hath God assayed to go and take him a nation from the midst of another nation by temptations c. The miracles and wonders which God wrought in Egypt are here called temptations because he did thereby try both the Egyptians to see whether they would be wonne to yield to him and let the people of Israel go and the Israelites to see whether they would be wonne to ●ear the Lord and to trust in him who had done so great and wonderfull things for them Vers 37. And because he loved thy fathers therefore he chose their seed after them c. Not for any thing which he saw in you or in your fathers did he choose you to be his peculiar people but of his own free grace and love and from that love of his it was merely that he brought thee out of Egypt in his sight that is the eye of his providence being still fixed upon them even as a father causes his child to go before him that he may keep his eye upon him and no● suffer him to fall into any danger Vers 44. And this is the law which Moses set before the children of Israel c. He meane●h that which hereafter followeth this therefore is a preface to the next chapter where the repetition of the laws beginneth Vers 49. And all the plain on this side Jord●● Eastward even unto the sea of the plain c. See chap. 3. 17. CHAP. V. Vers 1. ANd Moses called all Israel and said unto them c. That is all the elders and chief of the people It was not possible that so many hundred thousands as the Israelites now were should hear Moses speaking to them But as Exod. 12. 3. where Moses and Aaron were appoined to speak unto all the congregation of Israel vers 21. it is said that they called for all the elders of Israel so it was here Vers 3. The Lord made not this covenant with our fathers c. That which Moses here speaks of is that which he made with the Israelites at Horeb when he gave them the law as is expressed in the former verse The Lord saith he made not this covenant with our fathers that is with our fathers in Egypt or it may be meant of the Patriarchs Abraham and Isaack and Jacob even including all from Adam unto Moses yea and all their ancesters before the giving of
then also as it is noted there vers 9. he prayed for the people again as being much afraid of the great anger which the Lord had conceived against them notwithstanding the Lord had yielded to pardon them before he went down the first time from the mount Exod. 32. 14. And indeed assurance that God hath pardoned a sinne doth not make his servants the lesse earnest still to beg the pardon of it Vers 21. And I took your sinne the calf which ye had made and burnt it with fire c. See the notes upon Exod. 32. 20. Vers 22. And at Taberah and at Massah and at Kibroth-hattaavah ye provoked the Lord to wrath c. This is inserted as by way of parenthesis as if he had said Though I insist chiefly upon this sinne at Horeb because it was a most grievous sinne yet alas many other rebellions of yours I might reckon up at Taberah at Massah c. Vers 25. Thus I fell down before the Lord fourty dayes and fourty nights as I fell down at the first The former three verses being inserted as by the way now he returns to speak again of his interceding for them the second time when God was so highly displeased with them for that their foul sinne in making the golden calf for the fourtie dayes here mentioned are the same fourty dayes the second time spent with God whereof he had spoken before vers 18. which was after he had broken the calf and executed justice upon the people for their sinne and many other passages which are largely related in the thirtie second and thirtie third chapters of Exodus CHAP. X. Vers 1. AT that time the Lord said unto me Hew thee two tables of stone c. That is before my going up the second time into the mount at that time when upon your sinne and Gods displeasure I had earnestly sought unto God for you the Lord in testimonie that he was reconciled gave this charge concerning two new tables of stone and indeed at that time it was that he went up with them and stayed in the mount again the second time fourty dayes and fourty nights Now as the breaking of the first tables might signifie that there was no hope for mankind to be saved by the keeping of the law so this providing of two new tables might signif●e that yet notwithstanding the Lord would have the law to be in force as a rule of holinesse and righteousnesse unto his people and that the Lord by his spirit writing his law in their hearts would enable them in some good measure to conform their lives to the obedience thereof and besides Gods appointing of Moses to provide these two tables might intimate to the people that it was by his prayer and interc●ssion that they had this treasure again restored to them See also the note upon Exod. 34. 1. Vers 3. And I made an ark of shittim wood The ark here mentioned may be understood of an ark made onely for that purpose to keep the tables in till the other ark was made whereof God had spoken to him and for the making whereof he had given him direction in the first fourty dayes that he was with God in the mount If so this ark no doubt was made at the same time when he hewed the two tables of stone before he went up the second time that he abode fourtie daye in the mount But if we understand it of the ark of testimony that was not made till he came down after he had the second time abode fourtie dayes in the mount onely it is here joyned with the hewing of the two tables because in this also he did as God commanded him though he did it not at the same time when he hewed the two tables of stone but afterwards when he came down from the mount and this I rather think is the meaning of the words because vers 5. he addes and there they be as the Lord commanded me Vers 4. And he wrote on the tables according to the first writing c. See the note upon Exod. 34. 28. likewise the notes upon the tenth verse of the foregoing chapter Vers 6. And the children of Israel took their journey from Beeroth of the children of Jaakan to Mosera c. In this and the following verse there are many difficulties and such as indeed the words being read as they are in our translation are almost inextricable yet we must see what may be said for the answering of them The first difficulty is in the connexion of these words with that which went before to wit how Moses being in this chapter speaking of those things that befell them at mount Sinai comes here to mention the journeys of the Israelites in places to which they came not a long time after they had been at mount Sinai as is evident Numb 33. 31 32. But this it is not so hard to resolve for we must know that these two verses are not added here as in order of History but are onely inserted by the way as in a parenthesis so that the meaning of Moses is not that Beeroth of the children of Jaakan here mentioned was the next place where they pitched their tents after they removed from mount Sinai for as we may see Numb 33. mount Sinai was but the twelveth station of the children of Israel Beeroth of the children of Jaakan or Bene-jaakan as it is called Numb 33. 31. was the twenty eighth station but his meaning is onely that having gon many journeys forward and backward as the Lord commanded them at length they went from Beeroth of the children of Jaakan to Mosera or Moseroth as it is written Numb 33. 30. The second difficultie is concerning the place of Aarons death to wit because Numb 33. 38. it is said Aaron died at mount Hor and here that he dyed at Mosera and Mosera in that 33. of Numbers is but the twenty seventh station of the Israelites and that as they went back from Kadesh-Barnea towards the red sea and mount Hor is their thirtie fourth station and that as they returned again from the red sea towards the land of Canaan But to this I answer that this Mosera or Moseroth and mount Hor were but one mountain in the root though divided into divers tops as mount Sinai and Horeb were by the West part whereof called Moseroth Moses encamped as he went back towards the red sea and by the East part thereof called mount Hor as he returned again Northward towards the land of Canaan and so though Aaron dyed at mount Hor yet here it is said of Mosera that there Aaron dyed and there he was buried and that because Mosera and mount Hor were both one and the same mountain The third and greatest difficultie is in the seeming contradiction that is betwixt this place and that Numb 33. 31. in that here it is said that the Israelites went from Bene-jaakan or Beeroth of the children of Jaakan to Mosera
one that useth divination is meant one that foretelleth things to come Mich. 3. 11. The prophets thereof divine for money and by an observer of times is meant such as by observing constellations c. ●id pronounce some dayes lucky and some unlucky and undertake to tell men their fortune The diviners were carried much by inward motions these last by outward observations in the creatures So also by a Necromancer vers 11. is meant such as by raising the dead did enquire after secret things Vers 13. Thou shalt be perfect with the Lord thy God That is tho● shalt keep thy self intirely to him and not seek unto any other for help thou shalt in these things before spoken of as in all other things keep thy self exactly to what thy God hath enjoyned thee and not defile thy self with any of these abominations practised amongst other n●tions Vers 15. The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a prophet from the midst of thee c. The heathens that used these unlawfull arts made account that God did by these means reveal himself to them and deemed such high knowledge a high degree of their happinesse lest therefore the Israelites should think much that they were debarred of this the Lord tells them here that he would by prophets raised up to them from amongst their brethren as fully inform them concerning all things necessary for them to know as if God should come down to them out of heaven I doubt not indeed but this which is here spoken is meant first and principally of Christ for the Apostle Peter saith expressely that this was fulfilled in Christ Acts 3. 22. For Moses truly said unto the fathers A Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you and with respect to this place that seems ●o have been spoken by Philip John 1. 45. Philip findeth Nathanael and saith unto him We have found him of whom Moses in the law and the prophets did write Jesus of Nazareth the sonne of Joseph and that by Christ John 5. 46. Had ye believed Moses ye would have believed me for he wrote of me But withall I see not how we can exclude the other Prophets between Moses and Christ the drift of these words being manifestly this to shew that they should have no cause to seek to enchanters and diviners because God would still raise them up Prophets to reveal his will unto them and how could this be a stay to them if it were meant onely of Christ who was not sent unto them above one thousand and foure hundred years after this therefore I think it must be understood principally of Christ as the onely Prophet of his Church but withall inde●initely of all the Prophets as subordinate to Christ sent from him and inspired by him The Jews indeed understand it not commonly of the Messiah but of another notable Prophet besides like unto Moses which was to be sent to them John 1. 25. But herein they were grossely deceived for it is evident by those places Acts 3. 22. and 7. 37. that Christ was the Prophet here principally meant though other Prophets are al●o comprehended as is before said As for that clause a Prophet like unto me though the Prophets afterwards sent to Israel were not equall to Moses Deut. 34. 10. And there arose not a Prophet since in Israel like unto Moses whom the Lord knew face to face yet they were like him men sent from God as he was raised up from amongst their brethren as he was and this is here chiefly intended see vers 16. According to all that thou desiredst of the Lord thy God in Horeb in the day of the assembly saying Let me not hear again the voice of the Lord my God neither let me see this great fire any more that I die not and so was Christ a high priest taken from among men Hebr. 5. 1. yea like him and above him for first as Moses was as a Mediatour betwixt God and the people Deut. 5. 5. I stood between the Lord and you at that time to shew you the word of the Lord for ye were afraid by reason of the fire and went not up into the mount so was Christ Heb. 8. 6. But now hath he obtained a more excellent ministrie by how much also he is the mediatour of a better covenant which was established upon better promises secondly in excellen●y of Moses it is said Numb 12. 6 7. And he said Hear now my words If there be a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known unto him in a vision and will speak unto him in a dream My servant Moses is not so who is faithfull in all mine house and so of Christ John 1. 17 18. For the law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. No man hath seen God at any time the onely begotten sonne which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Thirdly in faithfulnesse for so it is said of Christ Heb. 3. 2. Who was faithfull to him that appointed him as also Moses was faithfull in all his house yea and above Moses vers 5 6. And Moses verily was faithfull in all his house as a servant but Christ as a sonne over his own house Fourthly in that as Moses brought them the law from God so Christ the Gospel out of his Fathers bosome Fifthly in signes and wonders for Christ was a prophet mightie in deed and word Luke 24. 19. as Moses also was yea more mightie John 15. 24. If I had not done among them the works which none other man did they had not had sinne And sixthly as Moses carried the Israelites from their bondage in Egypt to the land of Canaan so Christ delivered his people from their spirituall bondage and opened heaven for them John 6. 40. And this is the will of him that sent me that every one which seeth the sonne and believeth on him may have everlasting life Vers 18. And will put my words in his mouth and he shall speak unto them all that I shall command him This is meant of the faithfulnesse of those Prophets which God would send unto them to wit that they should deliver whatever God gave them in cha●ge and nothing but that which he should put into their mouthes But most eminently was this verified in Chri●t when he came to preach the Gospel unto men for those words of eternall life were the words which God here saith he would put into his mouth and which accordingly he faithfully delivered to the people All things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you John 15. 15. Vers 19. Whosoever will not hearken unto my words which he shall speak in my name I will require it of him That is I will punish him for it and so indeed God did alwayes severely punish those that would not
though their enemies did for a while triumph over them and carrie them captives into a strange land yet they should return again into their own land and out of their stock the Messiah should come All which how it was accomplished we see first in the exaltation of David to be their king which cost him many prayers secondly in the many glorious victories of David Asa Jehoshaphat and other kings of Judah against their enemies who having prevailed more by their prayers then by their swords returned in triumph unto their people of which many understand that clause and bring him unto his people thirdly in the return of this tribe out of the Babylonian captivitie for whereas the tribes of Israel carried captive into Assyria did never r●●urn thence this tribe of Judah and those of Benjamin that were united to them in the ●ingdome of Judah upon their repentance and prayers to God were brought back again into that land of promise and there were settled and so continued unto the coming of Christ and of this doubtlesse those words are principally meant and bring him unto his people and fourthly chiefly in the victorie of Christ that lion of the tribe of Judah over our spirituall enemies of which also as in relation to his prayers we see what the Apostle saith Heb. 5. 7. That in the dayes of his flesh when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death he was heard in that he feared Let his hands be sufficient for him and be thou an help to him c. That is he shall through thine aid be able to make good his part against his enemies without seeking any help from any bodie else Vers 8. Let thy thummim and thy urim be with thy holy one whom thou didst prove at Massah c. In this first branch of Levies blessing is foretold first that the high Priesthood to which appertained the breastplate that had the urim and thummim in it Exod. 28. 30. should be continued in Aarons posteritie and secondly that God would still furnish them with those gifts and graces that knowledge and pietie requisite for their calling and signified by the urim and thummi● As for that following clause whom thou didst prove at Massah and with whom thou didst strive at the waters of Meribah for the fuller understanding thereof we must note first that this is meant of that storie Numb 20. when upon the Israelites murmuring for want of water Moses and Aaron were commanded to fetch water out of the rock but through their indignation against the people did not glorifie God as they ought to have done and therefore were excluded from entring into the land of Canaan for though the place where this was done was called Meribah onely not Massah Numb 20. 13. it was the place where Moses first fetcht water out of the rock in Horeb that was called Massah and Meribah Exod. 17. 7. yet because the Lord did there prove Moses and Aaron even that place is also called Massah that is temptation or proof secondly that it is said that the Lord did prove Levi that is Moses and Aaron at Massah and did strive with them at the waters of Meribah because he did there trie their faith and sharply reprove them for their infidelitie and thirdly that this is here added both by way of commending the zeal of Aaron for zealous for God he then shewed himself though weak in faith and also by way of magnifying Gods mercie in settling the priesthood upon his posteritie though he at that time so greatly offended him through his unbelief Vers 9. Who said unto his father and to his mother I have not seen him c. This may have respect both to that law Levit. 21. 11. Neither shall he go in to any dead bodie nor defile himself for his father or mother or else to that notable fact of the Levites Exod. 32. when at the commandment of Moses they slew their idolatrous brethren that had worshipped the golden calf not sparing those that were most nearest allied to them for therefore it is that Moses here saith of them that he said unto his father and to his mother I have not seen him neither did he acknowledge his brethren nor knew his own children because they did execute Gods judgement upon parents brethren children no lesse then if they had been mere strangers to them Vers 11. Blesse Lord his substance and accept the work of his hands That is though the Levites have no inheritance in the land of Canaan amongst their brethren yet the Lord will provide for them and blesse them in their outward estates and besides the service they do to him and to his people the Lord will take in good part and this we may well think is added to hearten the Levites against the discouragements they might meet with in their calling Smite through the loyns of those that rise up against him c. That is God shall destroy their enemies Because those that are set apart to take care of the peoples souls are usually hated and persecuted by those whose sinnes they reprove Wo is me my mother that thou hast born me a man of strife and a man of contention to the whole earth Jer. 15. 10 therefore is this promise made here to the Levites that God would fight against those that fight against them and sooner or later would surely destroy them Vers 12. And of Benjamin he said The beloved of the Lord shall dwell in safetie by him c. For the understanding of this blessing of Benjamins tribe we must note that the main thing promised herein is that the Temple should be built in that portion of the land which should fall to the lot of Benjamin and in expressing this Moses useth this phrase The beloved of the Lord shall dwell in safetie by him and the Lord shall cover him all the day long and he shall dwell between his shoulders by way of alluding to Jacobs dealing with Benjamin the stock from whom this tribe was descended first because as Jacob kept his Benjamin alwayes at home with him he would not let him go out of his sight so this tribe did alwayes enjoy the speciall presence of God in his Temple and was as it were every day in the eye of their heavenly father secondly because as Jacobs keeping of Benjamin alwayes at home with him was an effect of his tender love to him he was his darling and therefore he would not part with him so this tribes continuall enjoying of Gods presence in his Temple was a speaking pledge of Gods singular love to them the Lord seemed herein to make this tribe his darling as once Benjamin was to Jacob and therefore this tribe is called here the beloved of the Lord and thirdly because as Jacobs keeping of Benjamin at home with him was to make sure as he could that no evil should befall him Gen.
generall and that for the speciall interest that they have in God who hath all the creatures at his command for their help for thence is that phrase of Gods riding upon the heavens in their help whereby is implyed first that look as a man turns and winds the horse he rides on which way he ple●seth so doth the Lord rule the heavens and all the host of them and secondly that when Gods people are in any distresse and present help is necessary for them God will come in to their aid with as much speed as the heavens move Vers 28. Israel shall then dwell in safety alone See the note on Numb 23. 9. The fountain of Jacob shall be upon a land of corn and wine That is the people which flow out of Jacob as out of a well or fountain shall be seated in a fruitfull land so that fountain is here used for a river or stream issuing from a fountain as Psal 104. 10. He sendeth the springs or fountains which runne among the hills and waters often signify peoples Rev. 17. 15. The waters which thou sawest where the where sitteth are peoples and multitudes of nations and tongues And thus this phrase is used Psal 68. 26. Blesse ye God in the congregations even the Lord from the fountain of Israel and Isa 48. 1. Hear ye this O house of Jacob which are called by the name of Israel and are come forth out of the waters of Judah Indeed the Hebrew word here translated the fountain doth sometime signify an eye in which sense some interpret this place that the eye of Jacob should look upon a land of corn and wine c. Vers 29. And who is the sword of thy excellency God is here said to be the sword of Israels excellency because it was by his fighting for them that he became famous and excellent above others for martiall exploits And thine enemies shall be found liars unto thee That is they shall pretend to be friends for fear when th●y are enemies in their hearts or it may be meant that the boasting of their enemies in the help of their idol-gods and their vilifying the strength of Israel through the assistance of their God should in the conclusion be discovered to be lies CHAP. XXXIV Vers 1. ANd Moses went up from the plains of Moab unto the mountai● of N●bo c. Look as the labourer when the night comes goes to his chamber that he may lay himself down to rest so did Moses at the commandmen● of the Lord go up to mount Nebo to die And the Lord sh●wed him all the land of Gilead unto Dan c. That is he shewed him the whole land of Canaan for Gilead was on the outside of Jordan and given to Reuben Gad and Manasseh Deut. 3. 12 13. Dan which wa● called also Leshem Josh 19. 47. or Laish Judg. 18. 27 29. was a city in the furthest part of the land Northward where also the portion of Naphtali lay the land of Ephraim and Manasseh was in the midst of Canaan in Samaria the land of Judah was in the Southern part of the countrey and the midland sea called the utmost sea vers 2. was the Western coast this view therefore which Moses had of the whole land was by the marvellous work and grace of God toward his servant for by the ordinary power of nature it was not possible that in one place and at one time he should behold so large a countrey and therefore God saith to Moses ver 4. I have caused thee to see it with thine eyes And this doubtlesse God did for him to comfort him and to allay the bitternesse of death by shewing him before his death what a rich pleasant and fruitfull countrey God had provided for his af●licted people for though he were never like to set his foot upon it yet it must needs do him good to think that Israel the people whom ●e loved so dearly should enjoy so fair an habitation Vers 5. So Moses the servant of the Lord dyed there c. Though Moses brought the Israelites to the river Jordan yet into the land of Canaan he might not carry them that honour was reserved for Joshua or Jesus the sonne of Nun and so it is also spiritually The law may fit us and prepare us for Christ but it can never bring us into possession of the heavenly Canaan that honour is peculiarly reserved for our Lord Jesus Christ who by his own bloud opened a way into that holy place having obtained eternall redemption for us Heb. 9. 12. and is now gone before thither to prepare a place for us Vers 6. And he buried him in a valley in the land of Moab c. That is Jehovah buried him or M●chael Jude 9. Now this buriall of Moses by Christ was a type of Christs abolishing the ceremoniall law given by Moses for it is he that hath abolished the law and the ordinances he hath blotted out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us which was contrary to us and took it out of the way Coloss 2. 14. But no man knoweth of his sepulchre unt● this day There was never any of Gods Worthyes deserved the honour of being carryed to the grave with the solemnity of a mournfull funerall better then Moses did who had brought the Israelites out of Egypt and had fourty years together endured so much for their sakes in governing them and leading them through the wildernesse yet lest the Israelites should in a preposterous zeal yield any superstitious honour either to his dead body or sepulchre the Lord would not suffer them to bury him but miraculously conveyed away his dead body and buried it nor ever suffered them to know where he was buried Indeed it is said Jude 9. That Michael the Archangel contended with the devil and disputed about the body of Moses whereby it appears that the devil would have had the place of his buriall known that it might have been an occasion of idolatry but the Lord prevented this mischief And besides by burying the dead body of Moses in an unknown place lest the Israelites should take up his dead body again in an unwarrantable manner and carry it with them into the land of Canaan the Lord Christ was pleased to signify though more obscurely that he hath so abolished the legall ordinances that they must be buried in eternall oblivion and never be looked after nor minded any more And indeed they that go about to revive any of those ceremonies of the law their work is no other in Gods eyes then the raking up of Moses dead body which the Lord would not have to be taken ●p again from the sepulchre wherein he laid it Vers 9. And Joshua the sonne of Nun was full of the spirit of wisdome for Moses had laid his hands upon him See Numb 27. 18. FINIS
19. Let not God speak with us lest we dye Vers 13. There shall not a hand touch it but he shall surely be stoned or shot through whether it be beast or man c. Or touch him that is the man or beast that shall touch the mountain for that concerning the beast was enjoyned to teach men the more carefully to avoid it And the reason of this command was first lest apprehending the offenders they transgresse themselves in touching the mountain whence those two sorts of death were appointed of stoning if they were near hand of striking them through with darts if further off secondly to teach them how execrable the offender should be unto them as a thing that would defile them they must not touch it but stone it or strike it through When the trumpet soundeth long they shall come up to the mount By the ministry of Angels there was a trumpet sounded when this trumpet sounded long that is with a long protracted sound as trumpeters use to do when they are about to make an end then they were appointed to come up to the mount that is to the bottome of the mount so farre as their limits and marks extended but not beyond See ver 16 17. It came to passe on the third day in the morning that there were thunders c. and the voice of the trumpet exceeding loud so that all the people that was in the camp trembled And Moses brought forth the people out of the camp to meet with God and they stood at the nether part of the mount Vers 15. Be ready against the third day Come not at your wives Implying that they were to lay by all worldly cares and carnall affections that they might be wholly intent to the hearing of the Law See 1. Cor. 7. 5. Defraud you not one the other except it be with consent for a time that ye may give your selves to fasting and prayer Vers 16. There were thunders and lightnings and a thick cloud upon the mount c. Yea together with thunder and lightnings the earthquake and sound of the trumpet there fell also great showers of rain as David hath expressed it Psal 68. 8. The earth shook the heavens also dropped at the presence of God Now all this terrour was to signifie and set forth the nature of the Law whose work it is to shew the judgement prepared for sinners and so to terrifie and amaze Vers 19. And when the voyce of the trumpet sounded long and waxed lowder and lowder Moses spake and God answered him by a voyce That is they talked together What it was that Moses said it is a weaknesse to enquire since it is not expressed We are onely hereby taught how that promise was accomplished ver 9. that the people should heare the Lord speaking to Moses in a distinct and audible voyce yet withall probable it is that now that was done whereof the Apostle speaks Hebr. 12. 21. So terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake and that the Lord hereupon cheared him up and spake comfortably to him Vers 22. And let the priests also which come near unto the Lord sanctifie themselves c. By the Priests here doubtlesse were meant the first-born of every family to whom the prerogative of the priesthood belonged and who hitherto were imployed in offering sacrifices till by Gods appointment the priesthood was afterwards settled in the tribe of Levi. Now the charge that is here given Moses particularly concerning them is not meant of that which before was enjoyed all the people ver 10. that they might be prepared in a holy manner to present themselves before the Lord which doubtlesse the priests did then observe no lesse then the rest of the people but of a peculiar watching over themselves to keep themselves clean from all pollutions and particularly from being defiled with sinne by touching the mount which happely they might have been the bolder to do in regard of their priesthood if there had not been a speciall charge given to them Vers 23. And Moses said unto the Lord The people cannot come up to mount Sinai c. Thus Moses replyed not by way of contradicting what God had said and to make known that this charge which God now gave him was needlesse but by way of further enquiry concerning Gods will for hearing that charge again repeated Moses began to bethink himself whether he had not omitted something of that which was before given him in charge so in an humble manner professeth how carefully to his best knowledge he had done what God had commanded for the restraining of the people from touching the mount covertly intimating hereby his desire to be further informed if he had hitherto omitted any thing which ought to have been done Vers 24. And the Lord said unto him Away get thee down c. Notwithstanding Moses former answer the Lord again bids him haste away down adding the reasons to wit 1. that he might fetch Aaron thither to him 2. that he might again renew his charge to the people that they should not come near the mount and especially to the priests lest they should presume too farre in regard of their priviledge CHAP. XX. Vers 1. ANd God spake all these words saying c Namely after Moses was gone down to the people and had the second time as God commanded given them straight charge not to passe the bounds that were set them lest they provoked the Lord to break forth upon them to slay them Vers 18. And all the people saw the thundrings c. This word is generally used for seeing hearing or perceiving Thus that which is said Gen. 42. 1. When Jacob saw that there was corn in Egypt c. is expressed Act. 7. 12. But when Jacob heard that there was corn c. Vers 20. Fear not for God is come to prove you God is not said to prove men by any thing he doth because thereby he comes to find out that concerning those men which he knew not before but because thereby he doth that which those do that prove men that is he discovers that either to the men themselves whom he proves or to others which was not manifest before And so Moses here tells the Israelites that the Lord had spoken to them with so much terrour to prove them that is to discover how weak they were and unable to endure Gods glorious majestie and much lesse his wrath and indignation and also to make it manifest whether the apprehension of this majesty of God would make them fear to offend him or no. Vers 21. And the people stood afarre off and Moses drew near unto the thick darknesse where God was That is the people stood aloof from the mount as Moses had enjoyned but Moses went up into the mount to wit together with Aaron for so God had before commanded chap. 19. 24. Thou shalt come up thou and Aaron with thee Yea and after this because
the people were so terrified at the manner of the giving of the Law when the Elders had desired of Moses that he would recieve from God his statutes and judgements that they then afterwards might recieve them from him the Lord consented hereto and so the people were sent away to their tents and Moses went up to the top of the mount Deut. 5. 30 31. Go saith the Lord to Moses say to them Get you into your tents again but a● for thee stand thou here by me c. Vers 22. Say unto the children of Israel Ye have seen that I have talked with you from heaven This is premised as a reason of the following precept because ye onely heard me speak out of heaven ye saw no image therefore ye shall make no image Now it is said here that God spake unto them from heaven though he spake to them from the midst of the fire on the top of Mount Sinai either because it was the voyce of God who dwelleth in the heavens or because the aire is also usually called the heaven as Gen. 1. 20. and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven Vers 24. An altar of earth shalt thou make unto me c. This is meant of such altars as they should be appointed to rear as they were upon the way untill they came to the place which the Lord should choose to settle his worship there and happely of altars reared afterwards upon extraordinary occasions And these they must make either of earth or of rough stone as ver 25. both that the worthlessenesse of the matter and form might shew that God would not have them places of his worship for perpetuity and likewise that they might be types of Christs humane nature for Christ is our altar Hebr. 13. 10. We have an al●ar whereof they have no right to eat which serve the tabernacle and of the mean and contemptible condition wherein Christ lived upon the earth of which the Prophet speaks Isa 53. 2. He hath no form nor comlinesse and when we shall see him there is no beauty that we should desire him See the note also upon Exod. 27. 1. In all places where I record my name I will come unto thee and I will blesse thee Together with that foregoing precept for the service of God he addes a promise of his presence his gracious acceptance of their sacrifices and service as also his blessing that should attend them thereupon onely this is limited to the places that he should choose to put his name there as he speaks elsewhere Deut. 12. 5. But unto the place which the Lord your God shall choose out of all your tribes to put his name there even unto his habitation shall ye seek c. And the reason of adding this here seems to be 1. to restrain them from rearing altars wherever themselves pleased they must do it onely in places which he should choose to record his name there and 2. to restrain them from having any superstitio●s conceits in time to come of these places where altars had been raised for the worship of God for saith the Lord into whatever places you come if I there appoint you to build an altar I will accept of your service and will blesse you in one place as well as in another And for this very cause it was as I before observed that the Lord commanded such slightnesse in making their altars to prevent superstition that the people might see they were not intended for succeeding times Vers 25. Thou shalt not build it of hewen stone See the notes upon the foregoing verses If thou lift up thy tool upon it thou hast polluted it Namely by transgressing the commandment of God Thus that which in mans judgement and art should polish it Gods Law maketh to be a pollution so is it with humane wisdome in preaching the Gospel 1. Cor. 2. 4. And my preaching was not with enticeing words of mans wisdome but in demonstration of the spirit and of power Vers 26. Neither shalt thou go up by steps unto mine altar c. This was also so given in charge concerning altars to be raised upon extraordinary occasions and which were not to continue for constant use for it is evident by the height of Solomons altar which was ten cubits high 2. Chron. 4. 1. that the Priests went up offer sacrifices thereon though doubtlesse they were not such steps as are in ladders whereon whilest they went up there might be danger of discovering their nakednesse to those that were beneath them and though the altar which Moses made for the Tabernacle was but three cubits high yet it is said that the sacrificers did ascend up to it and descend down from it Lev. 9. 22. Aaron came down from offering of the sinne-offering and therefore there was some kind of ascending to this altar also Either therefore it is meant of altars suddenly to be raised of earth or unpolished stones upon extraordinary occasions or else the steps forbidden are not all kind of stairs but such as are on ladders whereon there might be danger of discovering the Priests nakednesse which God would have prevented 1. for comelinesse and honesty sake and 2. lest any uncomely thing in the Priests should impair the honour of those sacred rites CHAP. XXI Vers 1. NOw these are the judgements which thou shalt set before them That is the judiciall laws Vers 2. If thou buy an Hebrew-servant c. Divers wayes the Hebrews came to be sold for servants to their brethren for 1. sometimes being condemned for theft they were sold by the judges that so satisfaction might be made to the owner for the goods they had stollen if otherwise they were not able to make satisfaction chap. 22. 3. If he have nothing he shall be sold for his theft 2. by reason of poverty they might sell their children for servants as is ●vident in the 12. verse of this chapter or themselves Lev. 25. 39. And if thy brother that dwelleth by thee be waxen poore and be sold unto thee c. 3. in case of debt which they were not able to pay they and their children might be sold as servants for satisfaction of the debt whence is that complaint of the poore widow 2. King 4. 1. The creditour is come to take unto him my two sonnes to be bondmen and that in the parable Mat. 18. 25. For as much as he had not to pay his Lord commanded him to be sold and his wife and children and all that he had and payment to be made Now in all these cases here is a law given concerning the time of their service namely that they should serve those that had bought them onely six years and that in the seventh year they should set them free Elsewhere it is evident that if the year of Jubile fell within the compasse of those six years their servants were then also to be set free though it were but a year