Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n aaron_n abraham_n time_n 31 3 2.7839 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64467 The reconciler of the Bible inlarged wherein above three thousand seeming contradictions throughout the Old and New Testament are fully and plainly reconciled ... / by J.T. and T.M. ... Thaddaeus, Joannes, fl. 1630.; T. M. 1662 (1662) Wing T831_VARIANT; ESTC R33916 334,239 278

There are 22 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

The right of living is one thing the possession another Abraham had the right to the land and he had the possession but it was in his seed and posterity 69. Gen. 13.16 I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth 2 Sam. 24.9 And Joab gave up the summe of the number of the people unto the King The posterity of Abraham which were and are before the numbring David made cannot be numbred nor had David the compleat number of the people from Joab who gave the King a lesse number of the people than they were * 70. Gen. 14.13 And these were confederate with Abraham 2 Chron. 19. Shouldest thou help the ungodly and love them that help the Lord. The Law of God forbids leagues with Infidels and wicked men but not all leagues those are condemned only which are against true Religion Marriages or joyning in armes except in the case of publick necessity as Asa with Benadab Josaphat with Achab c. but such leagues as are concerning the defending of their Countrey preserving neighbourhood of not making inroads of pr●serving the publick peace or mutuall commerce where Religion is not hurt are not forbidden but are adjudged lawfull and necessary such a league was this of Abraham with the neighbouring Cananites * 71. Gen. 15.6 Whereby shall I know this Matth. 12.39 An evill and adulterous generation seeks after a sign It is one thing to ask a sing for the confirmation of temporall promises where the thing was obscure and altogether hid another thing to ask a sign to demonstrate a thing which might otherwise be known Abraham seeking a sign was a speciall motion of Gods Spirit which Christ condemns not for it hath been permitted to some by a peculiar favour as to Gideon and Hezekiah which they did not so much out of incredulity as out of a desire to be forfeited against humane infirmity or he asked this Question not so much doubting of the thing promised as desiring to know somewhat more particularly of the manner of performance Abraham might well seek a sign in a thing which he had no promise on before nor no footstep of the manner of the comming of it discovered there being many difficulties to encounter withall before it could be effected The Jews they might have sought the Scriptures and found so clear evidences that Jesus was the Christ that they need not seek any signes concerning him 72. Gen. 15.6 Abraham believed God and he counted it unto him for righteousnesse James 2.21 Abraham was justified by works Abraham before God was justified by faith and was declared to be just by his works before men offering up his son Isaac upon the Altar 73. Gen. 15.13 Thy seed shall be a stranger in a Land that is not theirs and shall serve them 400 years Exod. 12.40 Now the sojourning of the children of Israel who dwelt in Aegypt was 430 years In the Scripture the years are not alwayes precisely numbred the lesser number is omitted and here under the greater round number the lesse is comprehended * Gen. 15.13 with Exod. 12.40 In a great summe so small a number comes under no particular account as the 72 Interpreters are called the 70 and this account is not to begin lower than the giving of the promise to Abraham to the deliverance of the Israelites out of Aegypt and the giving of the Law were 430 years Exod. 12.40 Gal. 3.13 of which neither 405 nor 400 nor 430 was spent under the Egyptian persecution for though the account end with their parting thence it did not begin with their coming thither but so much of the time was run before Jacob's coming thither and so much after that peaceably passed on untill the death of Joseph so as some account the time of their rigid servitude to an 140 some to a 121 at the most the summe of 430 equally divided the one half spent before their going into Aegypt the other half in their abiding there 215 before their going into Aegypt reckoned thus from the promise given to Abraham to the birth of Isaac 25 from the birth of Isaac to the birth of Jacob 60 years from thence to their coming into Aegypt 130 in all 215 the other 215 thus 94 before the death of Levi 121 betwixt his death and their deliverance out of Aegypt Chrys hom 36. in Gen. 74. Gen. 15.15 Thou shalt go to thy Fathers in peace Joshua 24.2 Terah and his fathers served other Gods To go to his Fathers that is to die it is an Hebrew phrase Also by the name of Fathers here may be understood Adam Abel Noah c. to whom he went by faith * 75. Gen. 15.16 But in the fourth generation they shall come hither again 1 Chro. There are reckoned six in the Tribe of Judah from Abraham Isaac Jacob Judah Phares Hezron Chaleb so in the Tribe of Levi from Abraham to Moses are reckoned six from Abraham Isaac Jacob Levi Cahath Amram Moses Answ In the fourth generation that is in the 400 year 100 year to a generation or somewhat about this which for evennesse and rotundity is not reckoned Or Secondly By the fourth generation is meant the fourth geniture or birth of the Father and the Son so the fourth generation is to be reckoned from the descent of the sonnes of Jacob into Aegypt to their entrance into Canaan as in the Tribe of Judah from Judah to Phares from Phares to Hesron from Hesron to Caleb so in Levi Levi Cahath Amram Moses Thirdly It is one thing to begin the reckoning of four generations from the day that God made this promise to Abraham at which time Abraham had none at all and another thing to begin their account from the time that their servitude in a strange Nation which God foretold should determine before ever God promised the returning of any fourth generations he told Abraham they must first fojourne in a strange Land then in the fourth generation of them whom God brings out thence they shall return to this Land which account Moses set down Exod. 6.16 reckoning from Levi whose first generation was Coath the second was Amram the third Aaron the fourth Eliazar who divided the Land at the time God had foretold Abraham 76. Gen. 16.9 The Angel of the Lord said unto Hagar Return to thy Mistress Chap. 21.12 God commands Abraham to send Hagar away First Hagar flying of her own accord was commanded to return to her Mistresse Gal. 4.22 Chap. 31. then being thrust out by force she staid in the desert the Apostle expounds that figure and applies it to the Old and New Testament 77. Gen. 17.12 God appointed circumcision 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing Circumcision by divine institution in the Old Testament was a sacrament to the coming of Christ but in the New Testament it is nothing nor is profitable to our salvation we must therefore distinguish the times of the Old and New Testament 78. Gen. 18.25 Thou shalt not kill the righteous with the
undone or not commanded so as they did them and so the Lord required not the bare sacrificing without having an eye to the thing signified * Exod. 12.24 Ye shall observe this thing for ever Col. 2.14 The handwriting of ordinances were blotted out For ever doth not alwayes signifie eternity or everlasting but that which is of long durance or to endure to the end of that generation viz. till the coming of Christ which it did and thus the word for ever is used many times 125. Exod. 12.36 {inverted †} They had the express warrant of God for it who could not command unrighteousnesse He that gave the Law may dispence with it Gen. 15.14 The Israelites spoyled the Aegyptians by borrowing of them Ps 37.21 The wicked borroweth and payeth not again The Israelites had Gods speciall command for it to spoil the ingratefull Aegyptians whom they had served for many years for no wages God foretold this to Abraham that his posterity should come out of slavery with great wealth * Exod. 12.40 Was 430 years Acts 7.6 And intreated them evill 400 years From Gods promise of the Land of Canaan made Gen. 12.7 and his first passage into Aegypt Vers 10. to this miraculous deliverance were 430 years Some reckon the 30 thus viz. 15 in Horan 1 in Canaan when Ismael was born 14 of Ismaels age when Isaac was born Gen. 17.25 and 18.10 and 16.16 and 21.5 and then 400 years begin from Isaacs birth viz. from Isaacs birth to Jacobs 60 thence to Josephs birth 90 which is thus collected Jacob 130 when Joseph was 40 viz. 30 when Pharaoh advanced him after that 7 of plenty 3 of famine when Jacob came down Jacob was 14 when Laban before Joseph was born and 40 years of his age out of Jacobs 130 and so will remain 75 or 76 for the age of Jacob when he came to Laban and so 90 years when he had Joseph Joseph lived after his Father came down 70. Betwixt Josephs death and Moses birth 60 thence to the Israelites going out of Aegypt 80 years which make up 400 and so there is 430 years in all thus 5 60 400 11 90 30 14 110 430 30 60     80     400   126. Exod. 14.15 And the Aegyptians which you have seen to day you shall see them again no more for ever Vers 30. And Israel saw the Aegyptians dead upon the sea shore In the former place he means the Aegyptians alive following the Israelites which afterwards the Israelites saw choaked in the waters and cast dead upon the sea shoar * 127. Ex. 15.3 The Lord is a man of war Heb. 13.20 The God of peace God is called a man of war by resemblance not that he is so of his own essence but that when his peoples necessiti●s require he expresseth the actions of a man of war in defence of his people and offence of his enemies He is the God of peace because he commands peace works it loves it and proclaimes it * 128. Exod. 12.37 Succoh with Ioshua 13.27 1 Kings 7.46 Succoh was the name of three places one in Aegypt so Exod. 12. The second in the tribe of Gad Josh 13. The third in the tribe of Manasses 1 Kings 7. * Exod 12.40 with Gen. 15.13 From the time the Lord spake that Gen. 15.13 to the time of Jacobs weaning was 30 years and so to the going out of the children of Israel from Egypt 400 which make 430 years which agrees with Gal. 3.17 which said that after the promise was made to Abraham to the time of the giving of the Law which was but three mone●hs after their egresse was 430 years * Exod. 12.42 with 51. Deut. 16.6 We must consider that in Scripture words are often taken not in actu perfecto not in a perfect act but in fieri as they were to be done or actu continuato vel solum in●hoato in a continued act or as the act was only begun When it s said the Israelites went forth on the night it s intended of the b●ginning of their going forth when they are the paschall Lamb they received the command for going forth probably in the night assoone as he knew of the slaughter of the first born but it was in the morn that they actually set forth * 129. Exod. 17.6 And thou shalt smite the rock and there shall come out water of it that the people may drink 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 Moses speaks of the naturall rock and drink the Apostle of the spirituall rock and drink Answ Moses speaks of these historically the Apostle as they were institutions types and mysteries The rock and drink are said to be spirituall and sacramentall First In respect of the spirituall fountain of whose fullness we have all received Secondly In respect of sacramentall institution it was a type of the spirituall drink in Christ Thirdly In respect of exhibition the signification was not naked but a most reall performance of those things exhibited by the water and rock Fourthly In respect of the manner of receiving it by faith * 130. Exod 17.5 Iehovah Nissi The Socinians would hence gather that the name Iehovah is attributed to the creature and so elude those arguments we draw of Christs essentiall deity from the word Iehovah which we say is only given to God and so Christ is because it s given to him But we answer there is no place in the Old Testament where the word Iehovah is attribu●ed to created Angels or any created substance definitive or in the nominative cases or by a proper and improper figurative speech As for this place the Altar was not called singly Iehovah but Iehovah Nessi that is Iehovah is my Banner so that it s not a bare simple name but a sentence serving instead of a name * 131. Exod. 18.12 Iethro took burnt offerings c. 13 16. verses with Deut. 1.7 8. The story as it lyeth here is misplaced the Statutes and Laws are not yet given to Moses and he himself knoweth them not The Law for burnt offerings and sacrifices was not yet given The chusing of Elders and Judges which was upon Iethro's counsell was not till their departing from Sinai and now they are not come to Sinai The reason for the misplacing of the story was Moses Chap. 17.14 16. had denounced the curse on the Amalikites to show that Iethro who dwelt among the Aamalekites 1 Sam. 15.16 did not fall under his curse he brings in the story of his coming into Israel in that very next place after that the curse is related not therefore to conclude that his coming was at the very time assoon as the curse was denounced but to shew that he once came and so accordeth and escapeth that curse * 132. Exod. 19.19 God answered him by a voice Jo. 5.37 You have neither heard his voice at any time The
of the Divine word is proved to be uniforme to the honour and love whereof all that doubt of the consent of the same are modestly invited Some man perhaps will object that some things are borrowed by me from others which I deny not for in compiling this Synopsis I thought it more safe and discreet to follow the steps of the most approved Interpreters than without the authority of famous men in this most corrupt age which is full of Error and Heresie to invert any thing of my own brain and to publish it to the world And I hope that the Courteuos Reader and the equall censurer are not ignorant that in the study of Divinity nothing can be said now that was not said before And it is most profitable Eccles 1.10 Aug. tom 3. de Trin l. 1. c. 3. that many Books should be made by many men of the same things in a divers style but not in a different faith And he shall find that I have compendiously gathered together in this Concordance that which the greater works of learned Men contained more at large so that here he may as it were at a single view comprehend the matter Let those famous men have the praise who have set forth large handfulls in this harvest I would not that any one should derogate from their Orthodox labours but let them have it rather than my self Yet I doubt not but that he who was and is effectuall in their large and learned Commentaries will supply me with his grace and be present to these gleanings If any one condemn my brevity and rudeness●●f my style I sought to be brief but not obscure because brevity is profitable and is accounted most acceptable alwayes by this there is nothing lost in the substance My religious mind bad me stop this little body with solid meat not with lofty and windy words if there be any thing found in it that is not as it should be I crave pardon what is not spoken religiously enough let it pass as not spoken far be it from me that I should arrogate to my self as though I had exactly written without error D. Mart. Luth. in Praef. for I am not he of whom it may be said He made it in the perfect tense but I stand in the last rank who scarce dare say I would have made it yet in great maters it is sufficient to be willing Wherefore I being much solicited by some like my self that is of the meaner sort and by the most pious desire of my intimate friends by this little Book of mine first intended for private use I would nay I am obliged to do them good but not them who suppose they better understand these things For who is sufficient for these things Christian Reader I do patiently and willingly beg of thee that according to thy Piety and Candor thou wouldst sincerely interpret of this my study and duty performed in collecting these Concordances of the Bible and wouldest look upon it with the same mind that I writ it that is with a single and good eye 1 Cor. 1.30 Our Lord Jesus Christ who of God is made unto us wisdome and righteousness and sanctification and redemption in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Sanctifie reconcile and enlighten us by his holy Spirit that being reconciled in him we may remain for ever to the praise of his Divine grace and our own salvation Which is the desire and prayer of Your daily Orator at the Throne of Grace J. T. RECONCILIATIONS Of the Places of the Old Testament THE sacred Scripture of the Old Testament is the Word of God brought down from Heaven from the beginning of the World unto the comming of the Messias preached by the Prophets almost 4000 years written in Hebrew except some few things in Chalde Esdras 4 5 6. Dan. 2 to 8. Ezek. 10.11 called by the Jews Esirmve arba that is Luke 24.27 twenty four divided by Christ into the Books of Moses the Prophets and the Psalms The Books of Moses THe Pentateuch that is the five Books Also the Ocean of Divinity the Hebrews call the 1. Bereschit that is in the beginning 2. Velle Semoth These are the names 3. Vajer He called The 4. Vajed daber And he spake 5. Elle hadebarim These are the words both in Greek and Latine 1. Genesis 2. Exodus 3. Leviticus 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Numbers 5. Deuteronomy GENESIS THE Generation of the World is so called because of the Creation before the flood and the restoring of it after the flood and the administration of it by the Patriarchs unto the birth of Moses it contains the history of 2310 years The Places that are seemingly contradictory * 1. Gen. 1.1 Elohim Almighties Gen. 1.1 2. Bara created The noun singular the verb plural To shew that not one only person but the Trinity of Persons in the unity of essence three in one and one in three created the world the Father works and I work others say Hoc subtile potius quam solidum and that its only an Idiotism of the Hebrew tongue * 2. Gen. 1.1 with Gen. 1.8 God created the Heaven c. And God called the firmament Heaven and the evening and the morning were the second day Moses in the first Verse useth two words to comprize the whole Fabrick of the Creation but afterwards he descends to the parts of the Creation and so distinguisheth the Heaven or Firmament from other parts Or 2. By Heaven is meant in the first Verse by a Metonymy Continens pro re contenta the invisible or glorious habitation of Angels with the Angels themselves and afterward by Heaven is meant the visible Heaven 3. Gen. 1.22 And on the seaventh day God ended his worke Chap. 2.4 All things were created in the day that the Lord God made the Heavens and the Earth Reconciling God created the world and all things therein contained in six dais and not in one day altogether The first place therefore is meant of certain naturall and artificiall dayes The latter contains indefinitely the time of the creation of things Psal 95.7 Heb. 3.13 So this day is put for the time of grace 4. Gen. 1.2 And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters John 7.39 The Holy Ghost was not yet given In the first place the treaty is concerning the person and existence of the holy Ghost in the latter concerning the gifts of the holy Ghost and the miraculous powring forth thereof in the day of Pentecost after the resurrection of Christ 5. Gen. 1.5 God called the light day before the Sun was Ecclus. 43.2 The Sun when it appeareth declareth the day The light which first made the day was not an other light from the light of the Sun but that light which God had dispersed through the hemisphere which he collected afterwards into the body of the Sun * 6. Gen. 1.27 In the Image of God Psalm 89.8 Who is
but the wife The woman is under the power of the man in oeconomicall government whilst she obeyeth and is subject as the body is to the head but in conjugall union the man hath not power of his own body 26. Gen. 3.19 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread Matth. 6.11 Give us this day our daily bread Prov. 10.22 In the first place punishment and a laborious life is denounced against man idlenesse is condemned Deut. 8.3 Mat. 4.4 and Gods blessing is promised because a man is born to labour as a bird to flying nor is it repugnant to honest labour to desire those things which are necessary for the sustentation of our life for it is not labour but the blessing of God which maketh rich God can feed us without bread as he fed Moses Elias Christ but bread cannot feed us without God 27. Gen. 3.19 For dust thou art and unto dust thou shalt return Ecclus. 10.12 A man when he dyeth shall inherit creeping things beasts and worms c. Job A man though he be consumed by Serpents wormes beasts toads yet at last he is brought into the dust of the earth * 28. Gen. 3.22 The man is become like one of us Deut. 6. Hear ô Israel the Lord thy God is one Lord. Psalm 86.10 I am God alone When it s said like one of us in the plurall it intends not a multiplicity of Gods but a distinction of persons in the God-head and when it is said that man is not like this or that person but like us In the generall it implies that the Persons in the Trinity are of the same nature and authority and in saying like us it implies further that man was like God for Qualifications not Essence Man was like God in resembling his power and holinesse not in equalizing either These words Thy God is one Lord was in opposition to the multiplicity of vain Gods which had the repute among Heathens to be Gods but really were not so 29. Gen. 4.1 Eve bare Cain and said Psal 128. I have gotten a man from the Lord. 1 John 3.12 Not as Cain who was of that wicked one Eve in child-bearing acknowledged Gods blessing and by way of thankfullnesse she offered the first fruits of her labours to God John speaks not of the person of Cain which was created by God but of his wickednesse that came from the Devill * 30. Gen. 4.3 4. Abel sacrificed Gen. 4.26 Then begun men to call on the name of the Lord. Doubt Seth lived after Abel and yet Abel sacrificed How did men then begin to call on God when they did it before Answ Questionlesse Adam Abel and Cain did offer sacrifice to God but that was more obscurely and not so solemnely as in Seth's time when it was done publickly and in the Church of God by Seth in whose prosperity the Church remained and probably the corrupt means of Cain might have enervated the sacrificing to God and brought prophanenesse upon the face of the earth which Seth by his publick worship of God did restore so as now men begun openly to pray and sacrifice to God which they had not done formerly Or 2. Men then more purely than formerly began to worship God having separated themselves from the rest of men not concerned in the Covenant lest living in a continuall mixture with the cursed Cainites their promiscuous meetings might poyson the Saints with such vices as this offspring of Cain had learned therefore now they come out from among them and began to call on the name c. 31. Gen. 4.4 And Abel brought of the firstlings of his flock Chap. 4.26 Seth began to call upon the name of the Lord. Adam with his sons before Seth offered sacrifice and called on the name of the Lord in his family but publick invocation began in Seth in whose posterity the Church remained the Canaanites being rejected * 32. Gen. 4.7 If thou do well sin lieth at thy door 1 John 2.1 If any man sin he hath an advocate with the father Jesus c. There are two wayes of interpreting the former way 1. Some as holding such a promise some a threatning the word used for sinne may bear the signification of a sacrifice for sin and so they would make the words to import that if thou sinne then there lies at the door of the Tabernacle or Temple a sacrifice Christ which was promised Eve But this would seem the same much with the former part in having his sacrifice accepted which could not be but by Christ 2. Sinne lyeth at the door that is a threatning to have his secret sinne revealed so that it should not lurk and lye hid in the bosome closet or chamber but be made so manifest as if it were laid at the door though for a time it may sleep as a Mastiff Dog at the door yet it will not rest long Not the Judgement for that sinne will lye long but it will lye in wait for him at the doore when he steppeth either in or out to set upon him If you take it the former way then they signifie the same thing if the latter way then it signifies no more then that sinne will be discovered and haunt us if we repent not but if we repent and call upon Christ then we have an advocate with the father Jesus Christ who will stop the mouth of this dog and remove this sinne 33. Gen. 4.7 Vnto thee shall be his desire and thou shalt rule over him Psalm 37.23 Prov. 16.9 Jer. 10.23 The way of man is not in himself In the first place it is said what a man ought to do Rom. 6.12 Let not sinne raigne in your mortall body In the latter place it is declared that a man of himself can do nothing in divine and saying matters 34. Gen. 4.15 Whosoever slayeth Cain vengeance shall be taken on him seaven fold Chap. 9.6 Whosoever sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be shed God is the wisest and freest law-giver therefore he would not have Cain killed by reason of propagation of mankind after the flood he gave the Law that the Magistrate should punish the murderer with death * Gen. 4.15 with Gen. 9.6 When it is said He that sheds mans bloud c. it s meant either ordinarily or extraordinarily either ordinarily by the hand of the Magistrate to whom is committed the Sword of Justice for that purpose or extraordinarily God in his Justice useth the hand of one murtherer to do execution upon another when humane justice passeth it over with impunity or he some way shortens the life of the bloody man so that he liveth not half his dayes Gods punishing Cain before the flood in such a sad manner shews not that this was against the precept given afterwards or that God upon an extraordinary occasion might not inflict a Judgement upon an offender another way whereby other ends which the Lord proposed might be brought to passe
the face of Pharaoh Heb. 11.27 He feared not the wrath of the King Moses feared for killing the Aegyptian whilst Pharaoh sought to slay him therefore he fled into the Land of Madian But upon his return when God sent him to Pharaoh he despised his threatnings being secure from all danger 114. Exod. 4.21 and 7.3 and 10.27 and 11.10 But I will harden Pharoahs heart Chap. 8.15 8.32 Pharaoh hardened his heart and was hardened c. Ezek. 18.23 33.11 Cont. Faust. God hardens permissively not effectively by no antecedent will for he will not the death of a sinner but by a consequent will when he punisheth by just judgement and useth evill to a good end Satan saith Augustine hardens by perswading Man by consenting God by forsaking * Exod. 4.21 7.3 10.27 with Exod. 8.15 13.15 Hardening in Scripture is given to Satan to wicked Men and to God First To Satan as the first author and mover to sin and hardness of heart Secondly To wicked Men when man by his own proper will turnes himself from God and consents to the councell of Satan rejoycing in evill and detesting that which is good Thirdly to God not as hardning is evill and he the author of evill but that God useth it to a good end Satan hardens by perswasion Man by assenting God by forsaking God hardens sometimes First Temporary and that either for triall or for correction or for a punishment Secondly Eternally which is a part of divine vengeance God casting off wicked men not onely taking away his graces but delivering them to Satan so as they harden themselves more and more And of this sort God either hardens as some think because he by prescience foresees their hardning Or 2. By Permission Or by more efficatious waies As 1. By his generall providence whereby we live and move 2. By withdrawing his Spirit 3. By affording opportunities which wicked men lay hold on and harden themselves By hardning in the former place is meant I will withdraw and withhold grace from him as by withholding or withdrawing light he causeth darknesse and permitting Satan to work upon him and to excite and spurre on his corrupt nature to all manner of contradiction and contumacy against God and thus he shall harden himself by taking those courses whereby he may be hardned 115. Exod. 4.24 Moses had his wife with him in his journey Chap. 8.5 And Iethro Moses Father in law came with his wife and his sons unto Moses Moses sent his wife Zipporah back to Her Father and then afterwards received Her with her Children brought unto him by his Father in law 116. Exod. 5.2 Who is the Lord that I should obey his voyce and let Israel go I know not the Lord c. Rom. 1.21 The Nations knew God and his power so that they are inexcusable Pharaoh was ignorant who Jehovah the God of Israel was nor had he a true knowledge of the true God that he might serve him onely * 117. Exod. 7.1 I have made thee Pharaohs God Exod. 20.3 Thou shalt have none other Gods before me Office is one thing Essence is another It is one thing to represent the Person of God another thing to be a God Moses was to represent God having the office to be an extraordinary Messenger from God The word is Elohim which is ascribed to men in authority and here it is given to Moses as an Ambassadour from God for God and in his stead to command Pharaoh and to punish him if he will not obey the words of Moses speaking in Gods name and working miracles by his power for the confirmation of what he said 118. Exod. 7.20 21. All the waters in Aegypt were turned into bloud Vers 22. And the Magicians of Aegypt did so with their inchantments when they came to the water That which the Magicians did with water digged cut of the earth seemed to be the like for they are no true miracles of God which are done by the help of the Devill * 119. Exod. 9.6 All the Cattle of Aegypt died 9.20 They that feared the Lord among the servants of Pharoah put their Cattle into their houses All the Cattle i. e. the Cattle of all sorts not every one of every sort of Cattle for there were some reserved till another time as in the second place and so the word all is used in other places of Scripture 120. Exod. 9.16 And in very deed for this cause have I raised thee up for to shew in thee my power and that my name may be declared throughout all the earth Rom 3.8 We must not do evill that good may come of it The hardning of Pharaoh was a punishment of his former sinnes and of his tyranny shewed over the Israelites and this God directed for a good end that in Pharaoh his power glory and justice might appear 121. Exod. 9.29 Moses prayed for Pharaoh that the plagues may cease 1 John 3.4 and 5.16 We must not pray for any that sin unto death Moses prayed not for Pharaoh but for the taking away of the plagues farther to declare the power of God and to overcome the wickednesse and obstinacy of Pharaohs tyrannicall heart 112. Exod. 11.5 And all the first-born in the Land of Aegypt shall dye Chap. 12.30 There was not a house where there was not one dead We must understand here not onely the first born by birth but such as were so by authority for it was so ordered by divine providence that there was a first born found in every house * 123. Exod. 12.2 Nisan which answers to our March Exod. 23.16 Thisrin which answers to September How can the year begin at both times Answ Nisan was the beginning of the religious year accord to which was the new Moons and Feasts c. September was the beginning of the Civill year before the Lords Command And hence the account in Civill affaires took their rise yea Sabbaticall and Iubily an yeare though they were sacred yet in that there were many contracts and bargaines c. they begun from September if these years had begun from the Spring then the Jews had forborn reaping and sowing two years together for they should have left their Husbandry in March and so have wanted it in Autumn following twice but beginning at September they only absteined from one harvest and crop unlesse the Sabbaticall year immediately proceeded the year of Jubely which God remedied by antidating a double fertility * 124. Exod. 12.3 They shall take every one a Lambe Jer. 7.22 I spake not unto your fathers in the day that I brought them out of the Land of Aegypt It is one thing to enjoyn sacrifice and offerings as a duty representing other things another to enjoy a duty for its own cause and sake God enjoyned not sacrifice or Lambs as things to be done for their own cause but he enjoyned these things as representing Christ which if he were not represented God esteemed the duty as
because the Pharisees interpreted their law falsely Christ confutes them and teacheth that private persons must not resist force with force and evill with evill but overcome evill with good Rom. 12.21 to part with their garment and turn the cheek 142. Exod. 22.28 Thou shalt not revile the Gods nor curse the Ruler of thy people Luke 13.32 Go and tell that fox Christ speaks so of Herod Private persons of ill will or by contempt must not speak reproachfully of the Magistrate Christ was no private person and by his words detecting the fox-like craftinesse of Herod who endevoured by his craft to overthrow true Religion and the Gospel he sheweth plainly that he feared him not * 143. Exod. 23.7 Thou shalt not slay the innocent and righteous c. Ezek. 21.3 I will draw my sword out of his sheath and will cut off both the righteous and the wicked The former place tels what the civil Magistrate should do in executing Justice the latter shews what the Lord would do in afflicting a people in generall when he destroys the Land He would destroy good and bad whether they were really or only in appearing righteous and this he might do because even in the best he finds matters of failing And besides though he take away the good in a generall judgement it is from the evill to come which they would endure by living under so hard pressures as they were like when a Land was destroyed Besides the godly are no losers in being translated to Heaven * 144. Exod. 25.8 Make me a Tabernacle that I may dwell among them Acts 7.48 The Lord dwels not in Temples made with hands God dwelt in the Tabernacle not that Gods essence or presence can be confined to any place but that he there would give especiall evidence of his grace and glory and of his near relation to his people in entercourse with them by his Word and Sacraments In the time of the Law God did more evidence himself there than in the time of the Gospel 145. Exod. 25.16 Thou shalt put into the Arke the Testimony which I shall give them c. Heb. 9.4 In the Arke was the golden pot with Manna and Aarons rod that budded and the Tables of the Testament In the Arke under the covering were onely the Tables of stone of the Covenant Exod. 16.33 34. Numb 17.7 the pot with Manna and Aarons rod stood before the Ark. The Apostle joyns them all together because they were in the Tabernacle in the sight of God * Exod. 25.16 with Hebrews 9.4 The Apostle saith not that the pot and Aarons Rod were in the Arke The Relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the which is not referred to the Testament but to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Tabernacle before spoken of It s not unusuall for the Relative to be referred to the former Antecedent The Pot and the Rod were said to be in the Arke because we have no answerable Preposition in the English to signifie the latitude and extent of the Original The Greek Preposition signifieth not onely in or within but also by near unto or before Luke 9.31 146. Exod. 29.32 33. Aaron and his sonnes shall eat the holy bread but a stranger shall not eate thereof 1 Sam. 21.6 David eate thereof and they that were with him The Precept of the holy bread or proposition was ceremonial and a temporall pedagogy the morall prohibition was not so David therefore is here excused by a case of necessity 147. Exod. 30.6 Thou shalt put the Altar before the vail that is by the Ark. Heb. 9.3 4. After the second vail in the Tabernacle was the golden censer There was a double vail one by which the outside of the holy place was distinguished from the inside the other by which the holy place was distinguished from the holiest of all between those two vails the Altar of Incense was placed * 148. Exod. 32.32 Race me out of the book of life 2 Peter 1.10 Make your calling and election sure Doubt How did Moses endeavour to make Heaven sure to his soule when he desired to be rased out of the book of life Answ Moses zeale to Gods glory and the peoples good forgets himself and his own estate wisheth rather that himself than the people should perish The Book of life is two-fold the one of life naturall the other eternall He desires to be blotted out of this naturall life and were it to be understood of eternall life it would shew no more then that Moses though carefull enough of his own salvation yet such was his care over the people that he prized theirs rather than his own * 149. Exod. 32.13 Remember Abraham Isaac and Iacob Rom. 2.11 God is no accepter of persons In temporall things such as the first place speaks of such as the forbearing to punish the people of God some say God may have respect to persons but not in eternall Secondly God had not respect to the persons of these Patriarcks but to his gratious promise which he had made unto them as there Moses saith Remember Abraham c. * 150. Exod. 33.11 with Exod. 17.9 Joshuah though he were called a Boy or Child yet he was fifty three years of age and a Commander in the Camp it was usuall to name them so in former times when mens lives were as I take it generally of a longer extent than now and when they were unmarried as Joshuah was Varro cals one juvenis at five and forty and serviu● Tullius at the age of six and forty there is juventus * 151. Exod. 33.11 The Lord spake to Moses face to face John 1. No man saw God at any time John 6. No man hath seen the Father at any time unless he that is of God c. Moses could not see God and live but the Lord spake so clearly to him as a man speaks face to face with his friend that is distinctly clearly not in an obscure manner by Dreames or the like Great is the difference betwixt a cleare discourse and the knowing or seeing of the substance or essence of God No man saw God nor his secret will of producing salvation by Christ and the manner thereof before the Sonne revealed and discovered it and John 6. No man hath seen the Sonne This is opposed to the revelation which Moses laid forth in his writings and which did so elevate the Jews Christ far excelled Moses herein Moses heard a distinct voice but Christ saw the substance of the Father and the secrets of his designations for our salvation 152. Exod. 33.20 No man shall see me and live 1 Cor. 13.12 Now we see through a glasse darkly 1 Joh. 3.2 The essence of God is invisible and incomprehensible to us in this world but in the next world we shall see God face to face the glory of God as he is 153. Exod. 34.3 God doth not justifie the wicked Rom. 4.5 He justifieth the wicked He doth not justifie the
than that we seeing the necessity of the duty of sanctifying our selves and not finding power in any other to sanctifie us besides God we should apply our selves to God as the fountain of our sanctification 168. Lev. 13.46 The Leper and unclean lived alone without the Camp Mat. 8.2 In the City a Leper craved of Jesus The divine Law was that the Leper set apart should dwell alone but this Leper comes boldly to Christ not doubting to be free from his leprosie 169. Lev. 16.3 The sacrifices were appointed by Gods commandement Psalm 40.7 Sacrifices and burnt-offerings thou wouldst not The sacrifices were appointed by God under the Old Testament that they might shadow forth the sacrifice of Christ and foreshew his coming but God would none of them as the Jews abused them for ostentation and placed the worship of God in the outward ceremony without the internall devotion 170. Lev. 16.6 Aaron shall offer his bullock and make an attonement for himself Heb. 10.4 It is impossible that the blood of Goats should take away sins The legall sacrifices did not expiate sinnes of themselves but as they were a figure of Chrst his own oblation surpasseth them all and is propitiatory for our sins * 171. Lev. 17.3 with 1 Sam. 7.9 1 Kings 18.33 The cause ceasing the effect ceaseth or the prohibition ceaseth The causes of these prohibitions were two First That no Lay-man should not arrogate the office of sacrificeing Secondly That the Jews should not fall into the Gentiles mode of sacrificing in the high places 172. Lev. 18.6 None of you shall approach to any that is neer of kin to him Verse 16. Thou shalt not uncover the nakednesse of thy brothers wife Deut. 25.5 The brother shall take his brothers wife The law of the nearness of blood and not uncovering the brothers nakednesse is perpetuall and must be holily observed by us but that of raising seed to the brother was partly ceremoniall figuring the primogeniture of Christ partly judiciall lest the inheritance should depart to another family which doth not oblige us but is abrogated The former was a generall rule and was to have no exception but such as God himself who made that rule did give which he did Deut. 25 5. * 173. Lev. 19.18 Thou shalt not avenge nor bear any grudg c. Numb 31.2 Go and revenge Midian Private revenge of personall injuries is one thing to be the instrument of Gods vengeance is another We must not revenge our selves as private persons But where God is wronged in his peoples wrong there we being lawfully called to it having the Word of God for our rule we may execute his wrath upon these wicked ones 174. Lev. 19.18 Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self 1 John 2.15 If any man love the world the love of the father is not in him In the former p●ace he understands the love that is due to our neighbour according to Law In the latter concerning unlawfull love of worldly things as those that prefer the things of this world as honours riches and p●easu●es before God himself * 175. Lev. 19.27 Ye shall not round the corners of your head 1 Cor. 11.14 Doth not nature it self teach you that if a man weare long hair c. The word round signifies such a rounding as may be without cutting The word corners is in the original in the singular number and so may not some singular cutting of one corner of the head round in the manner of a circle as the Aegyptian Priests or else in manner of an half Moon or taking the singular number for the plurall so it may be meant of crisping or curling round the hair in some corners of the head or cutting off the longest of the hair to offer tufts or locks as a devoted oblation to Idols as many Heathens did makeing the bare place round with a superstitious conceit of a round figure as most pleasing to God Or of cutting the hair as the Aegyptian Priests did who worshipped the Idols Anubis and Isis shaving round their heads and their eye-brows or of cutting round the hair in mourning The second place speaks of wearing long hair as Women do or very long hair longer than is modest 176. Lev. 22.25 From a strangers hand you shall not offer the bread of your God 1 Kings 5.10 Hiram gave to Solomon cedar-trees and fir-trees All strangers were not abominable in the sight of God but onely the enemies and persecutors of his Church so Cyrus King of the Persians promoted the building of the second Temple and restored to the Jews the golden and silver vessels 177. Lev. 24.19 As he hath done so it shall be done to him Rom. 12.19 You shall not revenge your selves In the former place private persons are forbidden to avenge themselves but the Magistrate is admonished of his office In the latter onely private revenge is forbidden Exod. 22.29 Deut. 1.18 178. Lev. 27.30 And all the tithe of the Land whether of the seed of the Land or of the fruit of the tree is the Lords Numb 18.21 I have given the children of Levi all the tithes in Israel for an inheritance for the service which they serve me The tenths are called Gods because they were commanded by him for a holy use and good of the Church they were given to the sonnes of Levi or to the Ministers of the Church for their service for an inheritance to support them because they being consecrated to Gods service had no inheritance amongst their brethren NUMBERS THIS Book is so called from the numbring of the people of God Wherein Mansions and Offices were ordained for all the Tribes between the Mount of Sinai and the promised Land many transgressions and dangers of the people and punishments and benefits of God are numbred The History contains 28 years 179. NUmb 1.19 Moses numbred the people in the wildernesse of Sinai 2 Sam. 24. David offended God by numbring the people Moses and Aaron did that for good order as God commanded them but David sinned out of arrogancy by numbring the people without command 180. Numb 4.3 The Levites stood from 30 years old to 50 years old to minister in the Tabernacle of the Covenant 1 Chron. 23.3 24. The Levites did the work of the Ministry for the house of the Lord from 20 years old Numb 8.23 from 25 years The younger Levites were newly instructed to 20 years then they were admitted to the office of doing service at 25 years from that time a kind of secondary service was committed to them till they came to be 30 years old from 30 to 50 years they did fully execute the Leviticall office 181. Numb 7.89 Moses entred into the Tabernacle of the Covenant Exod. 40.35 Moses could not enter into the Tabernacle of the Congregation for a cloud abode thereon and the glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle First when the cloud covered the Tabernacle of the testimony and the glory of God filled that Moses could not
written by Samuel It contains the History of three hundred years * 278. JUdg 3.11 The Land had rest forty years Under this number are all the yeares comprehended from the death of Joshua to the death of Othniel as also the eight years of the servitude under the Syrians The lesser number is to be counted under the greater and more complete * 279. Judg. 3.30 The Land had rest eighty years c. Here from the death of Othniel are numbred also the years of Ehud and Samgar for Ehud could not be Judg eighty years for when these years are expired the whole time of man is run out The like we meet with Jud. 5.31 8.28 9.22 10.2 3. 11.26 where in the three hundred yeares are included the forty years of their carrying in the desart 280 Judg. 5.31 Let all the enemies of the Lord perish Prov. 25.21 If thy enemy hunger feed him with bread Mat. 5.44 Luk. 6.35 Rom. 12.20 if he thirst give him water to drink We must do good to our enemies but not to Gods enemies and for private injuries we must not curse them but as they are Gods enemies of whom there is no hope of their conversion out of zeal of a S. Spirit we may pray also for their destruction 281. Judg. 6.17 36. Gideon asketh a signe from God Mat. 12.39 An evill generation seek for a signe Gideon was confirmed in his office by a signe given from God so Moses and Joshua Christ calls the Pharisees an evill generation justly because they out of curiosity sought for a signe Let us be content with the Word of God 282. Judg. 6.21 Gideon sacrified on a rock Lev. 1.5 The sons of Aaron shall offer the sacrifices on the Altar Gideon offered the matter of the sacrifice to the Lord and God himself was the Priest in burning the offering nor was there any Leviticall officer present and the event teacheth us that what Gideon did was from divine instinct * 283. Judg. 9.18 with the whole Chapter and Chap. 8.3 Object It s gathered that there were not seaventy but sixty eight for Abimelech one of the brethren was the slayer and the youngest Jonathus fled Answ The Scripture often puts a round and full number neglecting the lesser or more which either come short or exceed it as Numb 11. There is said to be seaventy Elders when in truth there were seaventy two so here on the contrary seaventy for sixty eight * 284. Judg. 10.1 with Judg. 6.15 Of the Tribe of Issachar of the Tribe of Manasse Answ Gideon and Phua although brothers by the same venter yet of severall Fathers of severall Tribes A woman might marry to a man of another Tribe so as the heritage was not transferred into another Tribe * 285. Judg. 10.4 with Numb 23.41 Object This latter saith they were called Jair from one of an Elder date from Jair the sonne of Manasses Answ The elder Jair gave a name to the Villages The latter to the Walls which encompassed them and so made them Townes or Cities and further he strengthned and confirmed their names * 286. Judg. 11.26 Israel dwelt in Heshbon and Aroer and their Towns three hundred years These years are to be reckoned from the departure of all the Israelites out of Aegypt after this manner the time of their abode in the wildernesse forty yeares the Government of Joshua seaventeen of Othniel forty Iudg. 3.11 of Ehud and Samgar eighty Iudg. 3.30 Barak forty Gideon forty Iudg. 8.28 Abimelech three Iudg. 9.22 Tolah twenty three Iudg. 10.2 Iair twenty two Iudg. 10.3 The whole in all is three hundred and five years Here therefore the five years odde are not named it may be because this even number three hundred is fitter both for the computation and the speech 287. Judg. 11.39 Jephtha did according to his vow Vers 31. Whatsoever cometh forth of the dores of my house to meet me I will offer up for a burnt-offering to the Lord. Deut. 12.31 The Lord hates all the abominations that the Gentiles used to their Gods and those that offered up their sonnes and daughters and burned them in the fire Jephtha vowed disjunctively that whatsoever should first meet him out of his house should be the Lords that it should be either sacrificed or deputed for Gods service for he knew that all living creatures could not be offered in sacrifice to the Lord therefore he he consecrated his daughter for the work of the Sanctuary Verse 38. for she being sanctified to God knew no man and she bewailed her virginity 288. Judg. 13.7 Samson was a Nazarite from his mothers womb unto the day of his death Mat. 2.23 It was fulfilled in Christ he shall be called a Nazarite The Nazarites in the Old Testament were votaries according to Law Numb 6. who gave themselves wholly to meditate upon divine matters and others which were born so as Samson here on whose head never razor came nor was his head ever shorne others were called so both wayes joyntly Christ was prefigured by them who was most free from all uncleanness commonly called a Nazarite because he was brought up in the Town of Nazareth * 289. Judg. 18.1 with Josh 19.47 It s said Dans Lot was the seaventh Lot Answ The Lot assigned them in regard the Amorites possessed a great part thereof was not great enough for them nor was it large enough for them in regard of their numerous Tribe * 290. Judg. 20.46 with 35. There were slain of the Benjamites twenty five thousand Vers 35. twenty five thousand one hundred men Answ An hundred are not counted it may be because this even number of twenty five thousand is fitter for computation and speech * 291. Judg. 21.4 with Exod. 38. There were no more Altars to be built after the erecting of that by Moses Answ Not without the Tabernacle but within the Tabernacle or Temple they might erect as many as was sufficient for the sacrifice as Solomon did 1 Kings 8. But without the Tabernacle none was to be erected without a special dispensation from the Lord. 292. Judg. 16.31 Samson killed himself Exod. 20.14 Thou shalt not kill Samson killed not himself with the Philistins by any rashnesse of his own but he did that by the instinct and power of God and was a figure of Christs overthrowing our enemines RUTH IT is so named from Ruth a woman Samuel describes in this Book Ruths dutifullnesse to her Mother in Law and the integrity of Boas who was Davids Grandfather 293. RUth 3.4 Naomi perswades Ruth to lie down at Boas feet 1 Tim. 2.9 Women adorning themselves with modesty and sobriety That was indeed a dangerous counsell nor must it be drawn in for an example Naomi was brought on to do that by the Law of raising children to the brother that was dead Yet God hindred that no dishonesty happened thereby 294. Ruth 4.13 Boas took Ruth and she was his wife and he went in unto her Deut. 7.3 You shall
descents of another line that is of Nathan the younger sonne of Solomon from which line came our Saviour and not of Solomons line and though Ieconiah may seem to have seed and sons more out of Ier. 22.28 30. yet he is doomed childlesse because neither Salathiel if he were his son nor any of Ieconiahs race Zedekiah the last King being uncle to Ieconiah did succeed him in the legality to sit on the Throne of David though in a kind of Soveraignty as Zerubbabel the son or grandchild rather of Salathiel by Pedaiah did succeed in regard of which successions both Salathiel and after also Zerubbabel may be called sonnes of Iehojakim the father of Ieconiah It is likewise said he shall have none to sit upon the Throne of David that is for any time worth speaking of for his son Ieconiah reigned but three moneths and ten dayes 401. 1 Chronicles 3.18 The sonne of Salathiel Pedaiah of Pedaiah Zorobabel Ezd. 3.2 Mat. 1.12 Salathiel begat Zorobabel Zorobabel was the nephew to Salathiel which he begat by his sonne Pedaiah * 402. 1 Chron. 3.18 with Matth. 1.12 Sons of Pedaiah Pedaiah might dye while his sons were young and Salathiel their grandfather bring them up and in this respect Zerubbabel is called the sonne of Salathiel or Shealtiel 403. 1 Chron. 10.6 Saul died and his three sonnes and all his house died together 2 Sam. 2.8 Abner made Isbosheth the son of Saul King over Israel Isbosheth after his fathers death though he had for a time the name of a King at last he was miserably slain in his bed and Mephibosheth was by favour in the Court of David without any rule so the family of Saul perished rightly with him nor ever could aspire any more to any eminent dignity 404. 1 Chron. 18.12 Abishai smote of Aedom in the valley of salt eighteen thousand 2 Samuel 8.13 It was David Psalm 60.2 That Victory is imputed to Joab Abishai with Joab having the Army divided conquered the enemy at the first assault he overcame six thousand of the Edomites Joab killed twelve thousand of those that fled away but the Victory is imputed to David as their King * 405. 1 Chron. 21.5 The summe of the number a thousand thousand and a hundred thousand 2 Sam. 21.9 There were eight hundred thousand Upwards to the eight hundred thousand in 2 Sam. 24. seem to be added here those twenty eight hundred thousand of Davids Trained-bands 1 Chron. 27.1 15. already enrolled in publick Records and their Collonels Captains and Commanders and Officers to the number likely of twelve thousand which make up the said eleven hundred thousand to the forty seven hundred thousand of Judah are thirty thousand added more in 2 Sam. 24.9 which addition might either be the number of the Regiments under those thirty worthies of David having one thousand in each or rather an addition of so many out of Jerusalem only or out of Levi and Benjamin also which still joyned themselves to Judah after Joabs first return to Jerusalem and giving up the number to the King which he finished not he being weary of that service which was so abominable to him viz. 2 Sam. 24.9 * 406. 1 Chron. 21.12 with 2 Sam. 24.13 Three years famine or seven years famine Answ Some say there is a failing in transcribing the Text in the Hebrew three and seven being so like and the seventy in the 2d of Samuel read it three year and the Arabick M S. in the hands of the Congregation Orators and reason much asserts that it was three years for other judgments go by three as three dayes three moneths Some say the Prophet at the first spake of seven years but his heart being troubled at Davids horror mitigated it to three 407. 2 Chron. 2.14 Hiram was the sonne of a woman of the daughters of Dan whose Father was of Tyre 1 Kings 7.14 He was the son of a widow of the Tribe of Nephtalim The Father of Hiram was of the Tribe of Nephtalim who lived many years in Tyria and had a wife of the Tribe of Dan. * 408. 2 Chron. 6.1 The Lord hath said that he will dwell in thick darknesse 1 Tim. 6.16 Dwelleth in light which no man can approach He dwels in darknesse not so as to include him nor so in light as to exclude him from dark places He may be said to dwell in thick dark-darknesse in relation to us who are ignorant of him and yet dwell in light in relation to himself The Lord probably was said to dwell in darknesse in Solomons time because the sanctum sanctorum by reason of the burning of Incense was through the great smoake therein as it were filled with a cloud or darknesse and in this place did God manifest himself and dwell therein * 409. 2 Chron. 6.6 I have chosen Jerusalem to put my name there John 4.21 Nor yet at Jerusalem men ought to worship In the time of the Law God did put his name in Jerusalem by setting his Tabernacle there and having his Temple built there and thither the Tribes went to worship In the time of the Gospell God took away the priviledge of that place and now he willeth that men lift up pure hands every where 410. 2 Chron. 8.1 Solomon built those Cities which Hiram restored to him 1 Kings 9.11 Solomon gave to Hiram twenty Cities in the Land of Galile Solomon gave to Hiram those Cities for twenty yeares that he might have a yearly revenue from them untill the charges were paid to him then Hiram restored them to Solomon and he built them and made the children of Israel dwell in them * 411. 2 Chron. 14.2 He overthrew the Altars 1 Kings 15. He took not away the high places There were two sorts of high places among the Jews Altars and Temples in the higher places some whereof were erected to Idols these Asa subverted Others were dedicated to the true God which was likewise unlawfull for the Temple by divine institution was only to be at Jurusalem And so although he purged the prophane Temples yet he overthrew them not which occasioned the restitution of Idolatry afterwards * 412. 2 Chron. 15.19 The War was not till the thirty fift year And Chap. 14. It was said Zura was slain by Asa therefore there is war Answ The computation of years is not taken from the beginning of the Kingdom of Asa but from the Kingdom of Judah i. e. Solomons death when the devision began betwixt Rhehoboam and Jeroboam And thus the Text of the next Chapter is to be understood where it is said Baasha the King of Israel ascended into Judah Anno 36 of the Kingdome of Asa for then it was the sixteenth year of his Kingdome * 2 Chron. 13.5 The Lord God of Israel gave the Kingdome over Israel to David for ever 1 Kings 13 32 35. But I will take the Kingdome out of his sons hand c. The promise was conditionall if his sons would walk in his wayes the
children which Job had lost should rise again and so joyned together they are doubled The PSALTER From Singing HEb Sepher Tehilin the Book of Praises 2 Sam. 23.2 It is called the Book of Psalms the small Bible The Psalms are in number an hundred and fifty The most are Davids who was an excellent Psalmist and is called the sweet finger of Israel All of them were written by the dictate of the holy Ghost The most before and some in the time and after the Babylonish captivity unto the times of the Maechabees Some are Didacticall some Propheticall some Eucharisticall containing Instructions Doctrines Exhortations Consolations 449. PSalm 1.2 In the Law of the Lord is his delight Rom. 6.14 Ye are not under the Law Godly men have a singular delight in the Law and in the holy Commandements of God Yet they are not under the yoak and curse of the Law which neither we nor our fathers were able to bear but by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ Act. 15.10 we hope to be saved as well as they * 450. Psal 1.3 4. He is like a Tree planted c. the ungodly are not so Eccles 8.14 There be just men to whom it happeneth according to the work of the wicked and there are wicked to whom it happeneth according to the work of the righteous this is vanity The former place tels us what a godly mans portion and a wicked mans portion is in certainty and assurance The latter place speaks either of what happeneth from evill Princes who do oppresse the just and encourage the wicked which can but last only for the present Or else this happeneth by the providence of God that the wicked should live in pleasure and the godly in trouble as flesh and bloud judgeth yet it may easily be seen the rod of the wicked shall not rest on the lot of the righteous The righteous flourish either themselves as a Palm tree that hath been depressed or in their posterity after their departure which fals not out with the wicked 451. Psal 1.5 The ungodly shall not stand in the judgment 2 Cor. 5.10 We shall all appear before the judgment seat of Christ The first place is to be understood of temporall judgments which wicked men cannot endure when they are examined according to Gods judgments because they are convinced of their sinnes The latter speaks of the last judgment when all good men shall rise to life eternall and wicked men to eternall death * Psalm 1.5 with 2 Cor. 5.10 The wicked shall not be able to stand at the last Judgement though they shall appear i. e. not stand to justifie themselves in their evill actions nor shall they be absolved by the Judges sentence nor be raised from death to glory in the resurrection But they shall be beaten down with terror being void and fallen from all manner of hope * 452. Psal 2.7 Thou art my sonne this day have I begotten thee Prov. 8.22 The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way before his works of old Christ as God was with God in the beginning of his way Christ as man was begotten in time This day relates to his nativity and exhibition in the flesh not to his Divinity And at his resurrection that begetting of Christ according to his humane nature was manifest and clear which probably made St Peter use it to that purpose in the Acts. 453. Psal 2.9 Thou shalt break them with an iron rod like a potters vessell Isa 42.3 He shall not break a bruised reed The Sonne of God will break the wicked with an iron rod and the blast of his mouth but he receives the weak in faith into favour and he perfects his strength in their weaknesse 454. Psal 2.10 Serve God in fear 1 Peter 2.10 Servants be subject to your Masters with all fear c. The fear of God is the beginning of wisdome and before all it is necessary to have that yet we must obey earthly Masters next under God * 455. Psal 5.4 Neither shall evill dwell with thee Esay 45.7 I make peace and create evill Evill dwels not with God as its a sinne but creates evill as its a punishment Evill is taken in the latter place not for that which is a breach of the Law God is not the author of sinne but for that which is contrary to our nature good and happinesse thus sicknesse and trouble c. are evill I create afflictions saith God Evill as its opposed to peace Evill is either that which is opposed to the increated good God himself and so its sinne or as it s opposed to created good and so its affliction God is the author of evill i. e. affliction not of sin because its contrary to himself 456. Psal 5.5 Thou hatest all workers of iniquity Rom. 9.18 Whom he will he hardneth God since he is just and mighty will and can punish all iniquity though he suffer the deceit and violence of the wicked for a time Aug. cont Faust Exod. 4.21 and 7.3 and 10.27 and 11.10 Hardning is imputed to God not as if he were the author of it as it is evill but as it is a punishment and God useth evill to good ends and governs the wicked for good * 457. Psal 5.5 with Rom. 5.8 But God commendeth his love towards us in that whiles we were yet sinners c. God hates all workers of iniquity as workers of iniquity God loves those which have wrought iniquity not as workers of iniquity but as they are considered in Christ those for whom Christ died and the creatures o●●he Lord and as those which are returning to God from iniquity 458. Psal 5.6 Thou hatest all the workers of iniquity Luke 16.8 Christ praised the unjust steward because he dealt wisely God hates all iniquity and deceitfull persons are an abomination unto him God praised the unjust Steward not for his wickednesse deceit or wealth but he admired his subtilty and craft so we use in criminall things to commend the cunning of men though we detest their wickednesse 459. Psal 7.8 Judge me O Lord according to my righteousnesse and my innocency Psal 143.2 Enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified A righteousness of the cause or action a righteousness of the person In the first place he speaks of the justice and the judgment of the good cause of David which he upheld against the enemies of God who oppressed him with their false calumnies and violence and therefore he appeals to God the judge of his just cause that he would defend his innocency In the latter he speaks of the justice of man and so no man is just in the sight of God if God should try him according to the rigor of his justice 460. Psal 7.12 God threatens and God is angry every day Ephes 4.31 Let all bitternesse and wrath and anger be taken from you Anger is commendable when we are angry for
our sinnes and detest evill justly and as we should so God is daily angry with us for our sinnes But damnable anger and unlawfull is joyned with the sin of those who for every light offence do maintain their anger reckoning more of what is committed against them than against God 461. Psal 9.8 God shall judge the world in righteousnesse 1 Cor. 6.2 Know ye not that the Saints shall judg the world The manner of judging of the world is either by authority so the whole Trinity will judge or of subordinate authourity so Christ as Mediator and man will judge or of assertion so the Apostles will judge the world or of approbation so all the Saints and Angels shall allow of the sentence pronounced by the supreme judge Chrysostome the Saints shall judge the world by exemplary judgement because by example of their faith the infidelity of the world shall be condemned 462. Psal 14.1 The fool said in his heart There is no God Psal 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy work Wicked men if not in words yet in their deed and actions they deny God and as much as in them is they wish there were no God and no Hell 463. Psal 18.42 They cryed unto the Lord and he heard them not Jer. 29.12 Ye shall call upon me and I will hearken unto you God doth not hear the prayers of hypocrites but he hears the prayers of penitents 464. Psal 19.4 Their line went out into the ends of the earth Rom. 10.18 Their sound went out into the whole world Paul interprets the Psalme concerning the Doctrine of the Gospell and saith that it is the Canon of the holy Ghost and rule of faith and manners of Christians appointed by God by the sound and voice of the prophets of Christ and his Apostles in which the will of God is revealed and therefore it is called the Canonicall Scripture * Psal 19.4 with Rom. 10.18 To fetch an allusion from a place is one thing to allude to a place only is another He that alludes to a place only is not bound to recite the words further than that allusion requires The Apostle was shewing that the Gospell spread much in the world even as David said the light of the Sunne did * 465. Psal 19.7 The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul Rom. 6.23 The Law is the ministration of death The former place speaks of the Morall Law and also of the Gospell-Doctrine of Christ as it was held forth in the Scripture before Davids time The latter place of the Morall Law alone which though it be a perfect rule of righteousnesse yet in regard of us so unable to performe it and transgressors of it we can have nothing but death by the Law for cursed is he that doth not continue in all that the Law requires The Law is a killing Letter and a ministry of death not of it self but to us so sinfull and wretched 466. Psal 19.8 The Statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the heart 2 Cor. 3.7 The Law is the ministration of death engraven in stones In this Psalme by the Law is understood all the will of God revealed from above The Apostle speaks only of the Morall Law not as it is in it self for so it is the perfect Law of righteousnesse and brings life but in respect of us who are transgressors of the Law and obtained nothing but death by it 467. Psal 19.11 And in keeping of thy Commandements there is great reward Luke 17.10 When you have done all ye were commanded ye shall say We are profitable servant we have done nothing but what we are obliged to do David commendeth the Law of God and that there is great reward in the keeping of it In which the goodnesse of God is commended who may of right require obedience from us yet he freely gives a reward unto us which he oweth not Christ sheweth that we and all that we have are due unto God therefore we can aske nothing for a reward and it is presumption to think that we can deserve any thing at Gods hands * Psal 19.11 with Luke 17.10 There is great reward of mercy not of merit neither of congruity nor condignity for when we have done all we ought we cannot profi● he Lord. It s one thing what God g●●es to us as sonnes another thing what we expect as wages for our work 468. Psal 22.1 My God my God wherefore hast thou forsaken me Joh. 14.10 Chap. 16.32 I am not alone for the Father is with me In the first place is signified the sense of Gods wrath and the effect thereof in Christ who taking upon him our person is made sinne for us though he complained that he was forsaken as man yet he was not forsaken as the Sonne of God nor was the divine nature separated from the humane nature but supported it In the latter place when Christ saith I am not alone he hath respect to the flight of the Apostles and fortifieth himself against it by the presence of his Father 469. Psal 22.3 My God I cryed by day and thou heardest not John 11.42 I knew because thou hearest me alwayes Christ was not heard in his passion because he was to dye In the latter place he speaks of his prayer for believers he gives thanks to his Father that he was alwayes heard 470. Psal 24.1 The earth is the Lords and the fullness thereof Luk. 4.6 I will give to thee saith Satan unto Christ all this power and glory Satan being the spirit and father of lying Joh. 8.4 Matth. 28. Psal 22 8. doth falsly appropriate to himself the power of the world Christ being appointed by his father King of Kings to whom was given all power in Heaven and Earth he rules in Heaven and Earth from sea to sea from the Rivers unto the ends of the earth 471. Psal 24.2 The Lord hath founded the earth upon the seas Exod. 20.4 The waters are under the earth The earth hath its stability from the first Creation the foundation thereof is the power of God which is the center of the whole and it doth as it were move upon the waters above and beneath it hath the waters on the sides so that the Sea is higher than the earth it is therefore the wonderfull work of God that he preserveth mankind from drowning in the midst of the waters 472. Psal 26.2 Prove me O Lord. 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man prove himself God because he proves our thoughts words and deeds therefore we must prove our selves that we may make our selves approved to God * 473. Psal 2.9 Turn not thy face far from me Psal 51.9 Turn thy face from my sins It is one thing to turn away his face from Davids sinne another thing to turn away his face from Davids person David prayed that God would not withdraw his favour from him but that he in favour would hide away his face from his
poureth contempt upon Princes c. The righteous shall see it and rejoyce Prov. 24.17 Rejoyce not when thine enemy falleth The righteous rejoyceth not at the fall of the person so much as at the fall of the power of a wicked man He pitties his person but he is glad that the Sword is taken out of the hand of the wicked whereby the righteous might and should have been made to weep The godly rejoyce not out of spleen to the wicked but because Gods enemies are fallen and Gods glory begins to shine and that he hath manifested his wrath against impiety and oppression 527. Psal 108.9 He curseth his enemies Mat. 5.44 Love your enemies bl●sse them that curse you c. Christ in the person of David by a propheticall spirit wisheth horrid punishments to the enemies of God and his Church In Matthew he exhorts to sincere and ardent charity to our enemies 528. Psal 110.3 Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power Mat. 11.12 The Kingdome of Heaven suffereth violence and the violent take it by force We are willing to do good when the holy Ghost doth his work in us and renews us The Evangelist means a spirituall violence of men with a burning zeal entring into the Kingdome of God and taking of it as it were by force obeying the Gospell forsaking legall ceremonies and embracing salvation by Christ * 529. Psal 112 3. Wealth and riches shall be in his house Act. 3.6 Silver and gold have I none Supply is one thing superfluity is another God promiseth wealth and riches to supply the godly mans needs The Apostles had none because none was then requisite they needed not at that time a supply of money but had it when it was necessary Wealth and riches when its necessary for them and as much as is necessary 530. Psal 112.6 The righteous shall not be moved for ever Prov. 24.16 The righteous man shall fall seven times a day Job 5.19 Psalm 34.10 The righteous in Christ founded on him by a true faith shall not be overthrown though the World and the Devill rage against him but if at any time by infirmity of the flesh he do fall yet he riseth again by Gods grace nor doth he despair or cast away his trust in God but by repentance he returns into favour with God again 531. Psal 115.4 The Idols of the heathens are silver and gold Isa 41.45 46 1 Cor. 8.4 An Idoll is nothing in the world Idols for their matter are things created by God but an Idoll is nothing privatively not negatively because it is not that which it is called namely God it hath nothing of God it can do neither good nor hurt 532. Psal 116.11 Every man is a lyar Rev. 14.5 There was found no guile in their mouth The first place sheweth what we are by nature of our selves the latter of what we are by grace after we apprehend Christ by faith and are led by the Spirit of God which is the Spirit of truth * 533. Psal 116.11 All men are lyars Isaiah 63.8 Surely they are my people Children that will not lye David said this in haste that all men are liars even Samuel and all who said David should be King so pressing was his affliction What he said when the cloud of blacknesse was upon his understanding is not to be taken as his clear judgement All men its true naturally are lyars but yet grace alters them Isaiah tells us what an opinion the Lord had of his people that they would not lie that is deal disloyally with God in departing from him to Idols If they had done so they had lyed in regard of the promise made to the Lord to the contrary 534. Psal 119.13 With my lips have I shewed all the judgments of thy mouth Rom. 11.33 The judgments of God are unsearchable The Psalmist speaks of the judgements of Gods mouth revealed in his Word Paul of the secret and unscrutable judgments or the reason why God doth this or that to make one man rich another poor 535. Psal 119.13 I have hated the wicked Rom. 12.14 Blesse those that persecute you and curse them not Godly men must not hate mens persons Mat. 5.2 Acts 7. but rather their faults not those that sinne of weaknesse but those that sinne of obstinacy and rather to pray for them both by the example of Christ and Stephen c. than to curse either * 536. Psal 119.54 Thy statutes have been my Songs in the house of my Pilgrimage Psal 137.3 How long shall I sing the Lords Song in a strange Land Gods statutes were Davids joy or comfort or Songs for that may be meant by Songs or Gods Word was the subject of his Songs in the time of his trouble The latter place tells us that Saints are unwilling to sing at the desire of the wicked which will make a mock of the Songs of God Nor doth it say but that Saints may sing the Lords Songs in the time of affliction when the Lord moves their spirits to that work It is one thing for Saints to sing of their own accord another thing to sing by compulsion or invitation of the wicked 537. Psal 119.155 Health is far from the ungodly Mat. 9.13 I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance The Psalmist speaks of wicked men obstinate and such as are hardned in their sinnes rejecting the grace of God and Christ the author of salvation Christ speaks of penitent sinners who being convinced with the sense of their own sinnes flie to the mercy of God and seek health in Gods grace onely through Jesus Christ 538. Psal 125.1 They that trust in the Lord shall not be moved Rom. 11.17 Some of the boughs were broken off for their incredulity Christ makes fruitfull and barren Vines the Apostles boughs by which he represents the faithfull and Infidels those that were broken off it was for their unbelief 539. Psal 128.1 Blessed are all they who feare the Lord. 1 Joh. 4.18 There is no fear in love for love casts out fear Filial fear proceeds from faith by which we apprehended God as present all the faithfull have this and consolation accompanieth it The Apostle speaks of the servile fear of the Infidels which proceeds from a sense of the presence of God as a Judge and there is no consolation in this but confusion * Psal 128.1 with 1 John 4.18 There is a twofold fear servile filial servile is that fear which hath punishment for its object and nothing else Now in punishment are two things observable First The punishment of losse Secondly The punishment of sense 1. The punishment of losse a totall and finall separation from the face presence and favour of God which in some measure may be the object of a filiall fear 2. The punishment of sense the dolours pains and torments of Hell and of these there is a twofold fear moderate and immoderate Now when the fear of these are immoderate
they cannot stand with love But when we are affraid out of the love and respect we owe to God to displease him or we moderately fear the punishments of the Lord. These may stand with love Perfect love casts out all tormenting fear not all fear whatsoever for Matth. 10.28 Fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in Hell * 540. Psal 129.1 Many times have they afflicted me from my youth up Nahum 1.9 Affliction shall not rise the second time The first place tells us that the godly are often afflicted The second place tells nothing to the contrary but that the enterprises of the Assyrians against Judah and the Church were against God and therefore he would so destroy them at once that he should not need to return the second time to destroy 541. Psal 132.13 God hath chosen Sion for his habitation this is my rest for ever here will I dwell because I have chosen it Acts 6.14 We heard him say that Jesus of Nazareth should destroy this place and change the traditions of Moses In the first place is a promise of the conservation of the Temple and of the Jewish polity upon condition of their obedience if the Jews should do that which God commanded them and keep his holy Covenant In the last Stephen from the predictions of Christ and the Prophets concerning the ruine of the City and Temple at Jerusalem invites them to repentance 542. Psal 136.1 to 26. The goodnesse and mercy of the Lord is for ever and ever Tit. 3.4 When the gentlenesse and love of God our Saviour appeared The Fathers under the old Covenant did no otherwise taste the goodnesse of God than we do by looking unto Christ to whom God commended his goodnesse and him that he promised to give our Fathers for their salvation he hath given unto us revealed in the flesh 543. Psal 139.1 O Lord thou hast proved me Gal. 6.4 Every man shall prove his own work The Psalmist prayeth that God would prove him not that he was free from sinne but he desires by mercy to be cleansed The Apostle sheweth what is our duty namely to make our works approved to God which he will prove * 544. Psal 139.21 22. Do not I hate them O Lord that hate thee c. Matth. 5.44 Love your enemies There is a difference betwixt our enemies cause and his person Their sinnes and evill causes must be hated we must give no approbation thereto but their persons being Gods creatures and was his Image must beloved Enemies are of two sorts private and publick a private enemy is he which hateth a man for some private cause such a one we must love and not hate A publick enemy is he that hates an enemy for Gods cause for the Gospels cause and these be of two sorts curable and incurable if curable pray for their conversion hating their conditions incurable 1 Cor. 16.22 and even to these we must ha●e their sin● and for their sinnes hate their persons and no otherwise David in the former place speaks of publick not private who hated not him but God and were incurable 545. Psal 145 8. The Lord is gracious and full of compassion Exod 33.19 I will have mercy on whom I will Rom. 9.15 19. God is gracious and mercifull so that he offereth his goodnesse to wicked men also and declares in them the effects of his grace and clemency he made them he given them temporall goods he defers his temporall and eternall judgments though they are ungratefull to him but he sheweth mercy to whom he will not looking on our worth but he saveth us frely without being obliged he doth all of his own goodnesse and mercy * Psal 145.8 with Exod. 33.9 The former place speaks of Gods mercy compared with his other attributes as they are communicated to men and so comparatively his mercy is above all his works for even wicked men have many mercies from the Lord. The second place shews Gods mercy from eternity on particular persons which no waies crosseth the former 546. Psal 147.9 He giveth to the beasts his food c. 1 Cor. 9.9 Doth God take care for Oxen God takes care for Oxen so as to give them their food in due season Yet he takes no care for Oxen in comparison as he cares for man The Apostles meaning is to shew that the end of the Law was not to shew or prescribe how Cattle should be sed though that may be occasionally delivered in it but to command equity to be used in the just rewarding of those who labour for us and under similitudes and shadows these wer● prefigured in the Law The PROVERBS OF SOLOMON VVIthout doubt it was taken out of his three thousand Parables and his most wise sentences for the good of the Church teaching good men patience and wisdome and the fruit of it is to be imbraced and sinne to be fled from Relating the works of the wise and foolish he commends the manners of an honest woman 547. PRov. 1.15 My sonne walk not with sinners remove thy foot from their paths Luk. 15.1 All the publicans and sinners came unto him to hear him and he received them Solomon forbids us to run to evill with wicked men or to allow of their wickednesse Christ receiving publicans and sinners reproved their faults exhorted them to repentance by his great love toward them * 548. Prov. 1.20 Wisdome uttereth her voice in the streets Esay 42.2 He shall not cause his voice to be heard in the streets Christ the eternall wisdom of his Father uttereth his Gospell in the most publick places so as none can plead ignorance Nor doth this hinder Christ in his Incarnation to come privately and not with the externall pompe and glory of worldly Princes which by reason of their followers and triumphs make a noise in the streets 549. Prov. 1.26 I will mock at your trouble and laugh when your destruction cometh Ezek. 18.32 I will not the death of a sinner for I take no pleasure in the destruction of a sinner God is delighted in his justice when he punisheth those which despise his grace and that will not hearken to his fatherly vocation but of his mercy he will not the death of sinners as death is the destruction of nature The former place belongs to Gods consequent will the latter to his antecedent will that is ruled by justice this by mercy * 550. Prov. 1.28 They shall seek me early but shall not find Mat. 7.7 Seek and ye shall find When Christ saith seek and find he bids seek in time and not out of time not deferre our repentance and calling on God till Gods time be past for then if they seek God as many may do in distresses and calamities they shall not find a return of deliverance But if any man in the day of grace will seek God he shall find him * 551. Prov. 2.19 They that go in to her return no more 1 Cor. 6.10 Such were some of
Lord will do The first That wicked men will not take notice of the Lords glorious works though the works being considered in themselves are glorious The second place shews what a glorious work that of redemption should be that even all that would see and take notice of it not shutting their eyes and being obstinate as the wicked do might see it * 607. Isai 26.14 They are dead they shall not live Vers 19. Thy dead men shall live The condition of wicked men perishing is one thing the Saints rising is another There is a difference betwixt men that are dead to God and men that are Gods dead men or that die for God or are his The former Texts speaks of oppressors which are but dead though they live they are many times cut off in the midst of their dayes they shall not live but those that are dead or slain upon Gods account shall live again live for ever 608. Isai 26.20 The wicked will not behold the Majesty of the Lord. Chap. 40.5 And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it together for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it The Prophet speaks concerning the Kingdome of Christ and the state thereof and he teacheth in the former place that the wicked shall be so blinded that they cannot perceive the mighty worke of God wherein he hath shewed his greatnesse his glory his power and his mercy which blindnesse of theirs doth not take away the glory of God and of Christs Kingdome which all men may see in the saving work of mans Redemption 609. Isai 28.16 Behold I lay in Sion a stone a sure foundation faith the Lord. 1 Cor. 3 10. I have laid the foundation saith Paul God laid the foundation of our salvation in respect of his decree the sending of his Sonne and the perfection of mans salvation Paul laid the foundation in respect of manifestation and of his office and of the Christian Religion at Corinth * 610. Isai 30.26 The light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sun and the light of the Sun seven-fold Matth. 24.29 The Sun shall be darkned and the Moon shall not give her light Spirituall shining is one thing naturall is another The light and knowledge of God should so farre exceed that which it had been that as much as the Moon light was inferiour to that of the Sun so much the knowledge of that time should be inferiour to that which was to be in after ages Nor yet doth this hinder but that at the generall desolution of the world the naturall lights of the Sun and Moon should be obscured * 611. Isai 30.20 Thy Teachers shall not be removed into a Corner any more Phil. 5.1 Paul a prisoner c. The former place speaks comparatively thy Teachers shall not as formerly be removed into corners but there shall be more plenty Nor doth this hinder but God may upon speciall occasions remove this and that Teacher and suffer them to be imprisoned as Paul though he never leaveth his Church in generall without Teachers Some distinguish betwixt teaching in Corners and Teachers to be driven to Corners by persecution * 612. Isai 31.7 Idols of Silver and of Gold which your own hands have made 1 Cor. 8.4 We know that an Idol is nothing Idols are something materiall or in relation to the substance that they are framed of they are nothing in relation to their effects and energies an Idol is of no force or value * 613. Isai 33.52 The Lord is our Law-giver Gal. 3.19 The Law was Ordained by Angels The former place speaks of God as the Author the latter place denies not God to be the Author but speaks of Angels as instruments or meanes by which the Lord gave the Law * 614. Isai 35.8 He was taken from prison and from judgement and who shall declare his generation Act. 8.33 In his humiliation his judgment was taken away It is one thing to quote the word another thing the sense Luke quoted the sense and substance of what the Prophet had said and not the words He was taken away from the judgement of his adversaries and delivered from prison What else was that but the exalting of his own judgement above them that past upon him The word that is rendred is as well to lift up a thing as to take away 615. Isa 38.1 2 Kings 20.1 2 Chron. 32.24 Set thy house in order for thou shalt dye and not live Vers 5. I will adde unto thy dayes fifteen years saith the Lord. Augustine saith that Ezechias was in order to dye according to some causes of future events In Gen. tit lib. 6. cap. 17. yet God added fifteen years to his life doing onely that which he foreknew he would do before the beginning of the world Gods justice brought the command for Ezechias death but his mercy prolonged his life and so Ezechias Piety and Repentance is proved 616. Isai 41.7 Chap. 46.6 They lavish gold out of the bag and weigh silver in the ballance and hire a Goldsmith and he wageth it a God 1 Cor. 8.4 An Idoll is nothing Silver and Gold and such materials as the Idols are made of were created by God but relatively unto God they are said to be nothing because they have nothing of God in them for God will not be worshipped by Idols 617. Isai 42.8 Chap. 48.11 I will not give my glory to another Matth. 11.29 Chap. 28.19 All power is given to me in Heaven and in Earth God will not give his praise and glory to an Image Christ to whom all power and glory is given is not only man but the true and eternall God also with the Father and the holy Ghost having co-equall glory with them but by reason of his office of Mediator all things are given him of the Father 618. Isai 42.8 I will not give my glory to another Rom. 8.14 The glory of God shall be revealed in us The first place is concerning those things wherein God will be glorified by us in this life that is by worship adoration invocation The letter concerning the participation and place of glory in the life to come which he will communicate to us 619. Isai 42.10 Sing unto the Lord a new Song that is the Gospell Gen. 3.15 It was Sung in Paradise concerning the blessed seed of woman That Evangelicall Song is called new not for time but because it comprehends new and wonderfull things a new light is kindled by it it makes a new Creature and shews us the new way to heaven 620. Isai 45.6 7. I am the Lord and there is none else I forme the light and create darknesse I make peace and create evill I the Lord do all these things Gen. 1.31 And all that God made was good God makes evill not of sinne but of punishment and calamity by which he justly afflicts sinners Also the Prophet here opposeth the evill of the misery of war to the good
of his Government Sedechias was put by force not by right into his place by Nebuchadonozer 660. Jer. 37.14 Jeremy said I fall not away to the Chaldeans Chap. 21.9 He that goeth out and fals to the Chaldeans shall live Jeremy taken in the gate defendeth his innocency that he fell not to the Chaldeans nor was a betrayer of his Countrey but he said that he would go into the Land of Benjamin 661. Jer. 52.31 In the thirty seventh year of the captivity of Jehojakim King of Judah in the twelfth moneth in the twenty fifth day of the moneth Evilmerodach lifted up the head of Jehojakim King of Judah 2 Kings 25.27 In the thirty seventh year of the captivity of Jehojakim he was lifted up in the twelfth moneth the seven and twentieth day On the twenty fifth day Evilmerodach took counsell to deliver Joakim out of prison on the twenty seventh day it was concluded and effected all things being disposed well for his enlargement THE THRENES or LAMENTATIONS OF JEREMIAH THe Prophet bewails the destruction of Jerusalem and the Kingdome of Judah and the captivity of the people He comforteth himself and the people in the promise of God and commends the cause to God by his prayers * 662. LAm 3.31 The Lord will not cast of for ever Lam. ult ult Thou hast utterly rejected us The first place tells that God may afflict his for a time yet he will not cast off for ever The latter place are the words of those sadly afflicted which makes them think themselves so miserable as that they were utterly rejected Or else it may be read by way of Interrogation Hast thou utterly rejected us not that it doth say that God would reject them but that they were so long in affliction as they thought God had forgotten them * 663. Lam. 3.33 He afflicts none willingly 1 Pet 4.19 They that suffer according to the will of God It is true they which suffer suffer according to Gods will and yet he afflicts none with delight or so as taking pleasure in it or doing it upon recreation but he is forced thereto by their wickednesse 664. Lam. 3.37 Who is he that saith and it cometh to passe when the Lord commandeth not Verse 38. Out of the month of the most High proceedeth not both evill and good Deut. 32.4 The works of the Lord are perfect The evill of punishment not of sin is meant in the first place which is not ill in it self but in respect of men For all punishment in respect of God that inflicts it hath the nature of good 665. Lam. 5.7 Our fathers have sinned and are not and we have born their iniquities Ezek. 18.20 The Sonnes shall not bear the Fathers iniquities The children succeeding the Parents in their sinnes succeed them also in their punishments Godly and penitent children shall not bear the iniquities of their parents for ever though they be afflicted with temporall punishments 666. Lam. 5.21 Turn thou us unto thee O Lord and we shall be turned Psal 119. ult Hosea 14.2 Turn O Israel to the Lord thy God Conversion and repentance is the work of God Act. 11.8 he gives it to the Gentiles and none but those that are enlightned in their hearts can truely turn unto God EZEKIEL HIS PROPHESIE THE Priest the sonne of Buzi who was brought into Babylon under Jekonias and confirmed the Prophesie of Jeremiah and comforted the captives about the year 3350 by the River Chebar he had the visions from God He prophesied twenty years 667. EZek. 8.12 The Lord seeth us not Heb. 4.13 All things are naked and open before the eyes of God The Prophet makes mention of what foolish men say who thought both by their words and deeds that God saw them not whose perverse judgment doth not hinder the truth which maintains that all things be they never so secret yea the thoughts of our hearts are open before God 668. Ezek. 18.4 The soul that sins that shall dye Rom. 5.6 Christ died for us The first sentence is legall and teacheth what must be done by the Law divine or humane legally The last is Evangelicall shewing that God for Christs sake freely gives us his grace and salvation 669. Ezek. 12.13 I will bring Zedekiah into Babylon to the Land of the Chaldees yet shall he not see it though he shall dye there Jer. 34.3 Thine eyes shall behold the eyes of the King of Babylon and he shall speak with thee mouth to mouth Zedekias being taken saw the King of Babylon afterwards they put out his eyes that he could not see the Land of the Chaldees nor Babylon in his captivity * 670. Ezek. 16.3 Thy birth and thy nativity is from the Land of Canaan Rom. 11.1 The seed of Abraham It s true the Israelites were of Abrahams race yet so degenerate that they in manners seemed rather to be Ammonites and Hittites two execrable Nations they were Canaanites in imitation Israelites in generation 671. Ezek. 18.19 Walke in my precepts keep my judgments 1 Tim. 19. The Law was not made for the righteous but for the wicked and disobedient The Prophet understands the Law that teacheth and enlightens us The Apostle the Law that condemns us Rom. 8.33 For there is no condemnation to those that are justified in Christ Jesus 672. Ezek. 18.21 But if the wicked will turn from all his sinnes that he hath committed he shall not dye Heb. 6.4 It is impossible for those that were once illuminated if they shall fall away to renew them again by repentance It is hard and impossible in respect of those who barre themselves out from Gods mercy and shut their hearts that they may not be enlightned by the Sun of righteousnesse but it is not so in respect of God who would have all men to repent and be saved yet he justly punisheth with finall impenitency all obstinate and malicious Apostates and such as sin against the holy Ghost 673. Ezek. 18.23 and 33.11 God will not the death He hath no pleasure in the death of the wicked Rom. 9.18 He hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth God will not the death of a sinner by his antecedent will but by his consequent will or his justice because he justly punisheth him who rejects the grace of God offered unto him He hardens therefore permissively not affectively 674. Ezek. 18.23 I will not the death of him that dieth Chap. 3. 18. Thou shalt die the death God as our Father will not by the Gospel but as he is our judg and revenger he will by the Law that a sinner shall die 675. Ezek. 18.23 32. I have no pleasure in the death of him that dyeth 1 John 5.16 A sin unto death God will not the death of him that repents for his mercy is over all his works A sinne unto death is a sinne against the holy Ghost and so it is called because it is justly punished with finall impenitency 676. Ezek. 18.26 When
greater amongst all men but not that all under the New Testament should have the gift of Prophesie The latter places are of publick and ordinary Prophesie * Joel 2.28 with 1 Cor. 14.34 I suffer not a woman to speak in the Church If women were to have the spirit powred upon them in the times immediately after Christs Ascention then why must they not speak in the Church The former place speaks of extraordinary gifts given to some women the latter of a duty lying upon all The former ●s to be restrained to the times ●ext after Christs life the latter is a duty lying upon all times The former hath reference to extraordinary parts and gifts the latter hath reference only to ordinary preaching and teaching by way of office 702. Joel 2.32 Whosoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be delivered Heb. 6.4 Chap. 10.26 They that are once enlightned if they fall they cannot be restored The first place speaks of the faithfull who call on the Lords name in faith The latter concerning Apostates that sinne against the holy Ghost who have neither faith nor true prayer though they pray with their lips for they do it not sincerely and therefore their prayers are an abomination to God * Joel 2.32 with Heb. 6.4 The former place is a promise to those that can pray The latter to those who cannot pray but actually fall away The former is spoken of Gods Children for God heareth not sinners the latter speaks of the wicked for Gods Children never fall away finally from grace enlightning not being put here for saving knowledge but a Theory of Christ 703. Joel 3.20 But Judah shall dwell for ever and Jerusalem from generation to generation Amos 9.11 The Tabernacle of David is fallen down Matth. 24.1 Acts 15.16 The promises of the perpetuity of the Temple and Kingdome of Judah belong not to the building and walls of the City or the civill Kingdome but to the perpetuity of the Kingdome of Christ and his Church against which the gates of hell shall never be able to prevail and they ●re conditionall upon their faith obedience and purity of Divine worship * Joel 3.20 with Matth. 24.1 The former place is meant of the spirituall Jerusalem and Judah the Children of God The latter of the materiall Temple and Jerusalem The former is a promise if it be meant of the externall Judah and Jerusalem which hath a condition if not expressed yet implyed viz. that they should walk with the Lord. The latter by the threatning of such judgements shews and implies that they had broke their promise The former place useth the word for ever But that in Scripture is many times used for a long season and so it was in the latter before the judgment came on Jerusalem after Joels time AMOS HIS PROPHESIE VVHO was of the common people amongst the Heardsmen of Tekoa He prophesieth of the wrath of God to the Kings and Kingdomes of Judah and Israel and he threatens Famine Sword Pestilence devastation and ruine to the neighbours who were enemies to Gods people He prophesied in the year 3153 in the dayes of Josiah King of Judah 704. AMos 1.3 6 9 11 13. Chap. 2.1 4 6. For three transgressions and for four I will not spare And at length he reckons but one It is a periphrasis of the seventh number which three and four do make which is called a perfect number in the Scriptures and a certain number is put for anuncertain as if he would have said For many iniquities I will not spare those Nations * 705. Amos 3.6 Is there any evill in a City that I have not done Deut. 32.4 The Lord is a God of truth void of iniquity The former place speaks of God as the Author of malum poenae of affliction the latter of him not as Author malum culpa of sinne In the former sense affliction is not simply and in it self evill or as it is a punishment of God but in respect of mens understanding or apprehension and if God should punish sinne with sinne we cannot say but the punishment is good as from God though the sinne be naught as practised by man 706. Amos 5.18 Woe unto you that desire the day of the Lord that day of the Lord is darknesse Matth. 6.10 Thy kingdom come Chap. 24.30 Let it come with glory The Prophet speaks of the day of Judgement of this world which hypocrites desire who look to be justified in their works and not of the last judgement which godly men ought to pray for and to cry without ceasing Rev. 22. Come Lord Jesus * 707. Amos 5.18 with Matth. 24.30 Rev. 6.10 The former place speaks of a profane or scoffing desire either as daring and provoking God to bring that once to passe which he hath so long threatned Or as believing that the day should never come to passe or by an impudent presumption as if God coming to Judgement should find them innocent or lesse guilty than they were adjudged to be and so they are the words of profane persons The latter place of the desire of the faithfull in humility for the coming of Gods grace God comes sometimes as a Judge with vengeance to the wicked so in the former and he comes by his Spirit to the godly as a sanctifier so in the latter 708. Amos 5.21 I hate I despise your feast dayes Exod. 20.8 Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day God hated the feasts and solemnities of the Israelites because they were defiled with humane traditions and a Pharisaicall opinion of merit But he doth not despise the Sabbaths appointed by himself and feasts which are kept at his command 709. Amos 5.26 But ye have born the Tabernacle of your Moloch and Chiun your Images the star of your God which you made for your selves I will cause you to go into captivity beyond Damascus Act. 7.43 You took up the Tabernacle of Moloch and the star of your God Rempham figures which you made to worship them and I will carry you beyond Babylon Rom. 16.19 1 Esd 8.17 Stephen cites this Prophesie though in divers words yet in the same sense so Christ and his Apostles cite other places of the Old Testament Moloch and Rempham were the Idols of the Ammonites The Israelites of Damascus by Cyromedia were carried further into Persia and the Countrey of the Caspians beyond Babylon * 710. Amos 5.26 with Acts 7.43 The places have some seeming differences but thus reconciled The former place useth the words the latter place the matter and sense of those words which accorded to the institution and transposed some words for perspicuity and evidence Rempham in the latter place is added or put for Chiun if by Chiun as some will the Planet Saturne is meant Plautus in his Penulus calls the Ciun and the Aegyptian Anubis calls Cyon in Greek Plutarch conceives to be the same with Saturne then its the same with Rempham Besides Rephan in the Coptick language
should walk after God with all their heart The Prophesie by a legall commination moved both King and people to manifest their zeal But he frighted the wicked Hypocrites and such as were averse from God by threatning them that so they might forsake their sins 733. Zeph. 1.7 The day of the Lord is at hand 2 Thes 2.3 Be not terrified as though the day of the Lord were at hand In the former place by the day of the Lord is understood the neernesse of the Babylonish captivity In the latter the coming of the Lord to Judgement the time whereof is not for us to know 734. Zeph. 3.7 I said surely thou wilt fear me Vers 7. But they corrupted their own doing I said The Lord useth that word after the manner of men not as though he had failed of his hope for all things are known to him before they be but as if he should say Who would think you should be so hardned that my very threatnings should not move you HAGGAI HIS PROPHESIE HE upbraids the Jews for that they did not rebuild the Temple and exhorts them to build it and he describes the magnificence of the second Temple He prophesied after the captivity of Babylon under Darius Hystaspes in the year 3444. 735. HAggai 1.8 Bring wood and build the house Isai 66.1 Thus saith the Lord Heaven is my seat and the earth is my footestole what house is that you will build unto me The rebuilding of the Temple was accepted with God for the holy convocation and the worship in it to Gods glory that was with the Priesthood and Leviticall Rites a Type of Christ unto whose coming only it was to endure 736. Haggai 2.3 You that saw this house in its first glory and how do you see it now Is it not in comparison of it as nothing Verse 9. The glory of this latter house shall be greater than that of the former house saith the Lord of Hosts The structure indeed of this house did not answer the Majesty of the first house built by Solomon Yet the spirituall glory of this latter house shall be greater than the former house because the Lord himself came into it and preached in it disputed and wrought great miracles there 737. Haggai 2.4 Do so for I am with you saith the Lord of Hosts Zach. 1.12 O Lord of Hosts how long will it be ere thou have pitty on Jerusalem In the first place the Prophet comforts the people by the hope of promises in Christ promising that God would be present there with his people after the captivity of Babylon In the latter Christ intercedes for his Church which hath sinned against God and was punished by a just judgement of God with a Babylonian captivity for seventy years * 738. Haggai 2.4 with Zach. 1.12 The former place is conditionall I am with you if you do so The latter shews that they were in affliction and so it implies they had broken their condition 739. Haggai 2.6 Yet a little while and I will shake the Heaven and the Earth and the desire of all Nations shall come This Prophesie was fulfilled after five hundred yeares under Augustus Caesar Luk. 2.11 With God a thousand yeares are but as one day or one watch in the night ZECHARIAH HIS PROPHESIE THE sonne of Barachiah He warns the Jewes to repent to build the Temple he makes mention of his Visions and explains them by the effusion of the Spirit of grace and prayer He prophesied after the returne from Babylon in the year of the world 3456. 740. Zech. 1.3 Turn unto me and I will turn unto you Joh. 6.44 No man comes unto me unlesse my Father draw him The first place is legall requiring of us what we ought and not what we can do The latter is Evangelicall for no man comes unto God unless God draw him by his Spirit Jer. 31.18 Therefore we must pray diligently Convert me ô Lord that I may be converted because thou ô Lord are my God 741. Zech. 1.17 Chap. 2.10 The Lord shall yet comfort Zion and shall yet chose Jerusalem Eph. 1.4 God the Father chose us in Christ before the foundations of the world The election of a certain people to be a visible Church in the first place is taken metonymically for by that deed God sheweth that he hath confirmed the election of Jerusalem In the latter God speaks of our election unto eternall life 742. Zech. 2.8 He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of mine eye Isa 3.1 Behold the Lord of hosts doth take away from Jerusalem the whole stay of bread In the first place is contained the promise of God to the faithfull that keep his Covenant in the latter is the pronouncing of judgement against the obstinate Jews God is said to have kept his people as the apple of his eye so long as they were obedient Deut. 32.10 Psal 17.8 But temporall punishments inflicted on the wicked do not infringe the truth of his promise and of divine performance 743. Zech. 3.9 I will remove the iniquity of his land in one day Rev. 13.8 Christ slain from the beginning of the world In one day is the performance of Christs passion who dying for our sins restored us unto life But he was slain from the beginning of the world in Gods determinations by election virtue eficacy and acceptation and in respect of the fruits of it which redounded to the Church under the Old Testament 744. Zech. 6.13 He shall sit and rul● upon his throne Isa 9 7. He shall sit upon the throne of David and upon his Kingdome Luk. 1.33 Christ in respect of his divine nature hath his throne from everlasting to everlasting But in respect of his humanity being he is born of the seed of David according to the flesh the Lord God hath given him a throne that he may reign over the house of Jacob for ever 745. Zech. 11.12 They weighed for my price thirty pieces of silver Matth. 27.9 Then was fulfilled what was spoken by Jeremiah the Prophet they took thirty pieces of silver the price of him that was valued whom they did value Eusebius saith De Demonstrat l. 10. c. 4. that Jeremiahs name was put for Zechariahs name by the errour of the Scrivener Out of Jeremiah some make the computation where he makes mention of seventeen shekels which make thirty pieces of silver Jer. 32.9 746. Zech. 13.7 Awake ô sword against my shepherd and against the man that is my fellow saith the Lord of hosts smite the shepherd and the sheep shall be scattered Joh. 10.10 No man takes away my life from me The Prophet mentioneth God the Father commanding in the name of the whole Trinity whose words outwardly are common to the three Persons and undivided that his shepherd namely Christ should be slain that contradicts not Christs words who willingly laid down his life for us 747. Zech. 13.7 The sheep shall be scattered Joh. 17.12 Those that thou gav●st unto me I
ordained or ordered first in respect of God because they are by him instituted and appointed Secondly in regard of themselves the Lord hath set them certain limits and bounds whereby they should be ordered Thirdly in respect of those which are to be ordered God would have order among men some to rule and some to obey Magistracy is said to be the Ordinance of man that is the framing and ordering of Civil Government is of man or intended by or hath this or that mode from men or is proper to men or is discharged by men 1253. Rom. 13.5 You must needs be subject not only for wrath but also for conscience sake Gal. 5.1 Stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free Submission is either active or Passive If we cannot the active way we must the passive way The decrees of the Magistrate if they agree with Gods Word and are appointed for good order they bind the conscience so also Ecclesiastical Constitutions for keeping the Moral Laws are to be piously observed so far as they hinder not the use of our Christian Liberty * Rom. 13.5 For conscience sake Gal. 5.1 Stand fast c. For conscience sake of the Divine Precepts which being obeyed brings peace of conscience but to resist Gods Ordinance i. e. the Magistrate in Licitis Honestis or actively is a deadly sin sauciens conscientiam wounding the conscience The second place forbids not obedience to the Magistrate but bids us stand fast in that liberty which Christ hath given but Christ never gave liberty to resist the Magistrate as before I said 1254. Rom. 13.8 He that loveth another hath fulfilled the Law Mat. 22.40 On these two Commandments the love of God and our neighbour hang all the Law and the Prophets The love of our neighbour proceeding from the love of God is the fulfilling of the Law since we have but the Image of God in our neighbour therefore God must be principally beloved * Rom. 13.8 with Mat. 22.40 Hath fulfilled the Law The Apostle rehearseth not all the Commandments but only those of the second Table because he treateth of those Duties which are to be performed unto men and by the keeping of the second Table is better observed and discerned the keeping of the Law than out of the first We must restrain the word Law to the second Table but in the former place we must take in both the Tables Besides the love of our Neighbour may be said to be the fulfilling of the Law because it proceeds from the love of God and he that loves his Neighbour first loves God and then his Neighbour in order to God 1255. Rom. 13.13 Let us not walk in strife and envying 1 Cor. 14.39 Covet spirituall gifts Emulation joyned with envy by reason of anothers profit is evil and meant by the first place in the latter sincerity of love proceeding from good zeal and justice 1256. Rom. 14.1 Him that is weak in the faith receive but not to doubtful disputations Gal. 2.11 Paul withstood Peter to the face saying if thou being a Jew livest after the manner of the Gentiles They are weak who know not the true use of indifferent things Peter being taught by the heavenly vision that distinction of Meats was taken away deserved to be reprehended because what he learned of God and taught in the publick Council he yet observed not but was scandalous both to Jews and Gentiles 1257. Rom. 14 3. Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not Col. 2.21 Touch not taste not handle not In the former place abstinence and observation of meats proceeding from faith without scandal is left free for the Ceremonial Law ended at Christs coming In the latter he reproves the superstition of the Colossians who being taught the use of things indifferent yet brought them in as a part of Gods worship necessary to salvation The Apostle doth not so much condemn them for observing Ceremonies as that they did keep them opinione necessitatis with an opinion of necessity In the latter place the Apostle speaketh not so much of abstinence from meat and marriages but of the Precept of abstinence from both which should be brought in by wicked Hereticks the Manichees Talions and others which condemned them as evil 1258. Rom. 14.6 He that regardeth the day regardeth it unto the Lord and he that regardeth not the day to the Lord he doth not regard it Gal. 4.10 He reprehends them for observing daies and months and times and years The first place leaves it free to the weak who had tender consciences either to observe or not observe the legal festival daies so they did it without opinion of merit or necessity or offending their neighbour The latter reprehends the Galathians who with a kind of tye of conscience did observe the Sabbaths and Festival times of the Jews according to the Law as if they had not been set free by Christ * 1259. Rom. 14.9 That he might be the Lord both of the dead and of the living Mat. 22.32 He is not the God of the dead In the one place they are said to be dead according to the Sadduces sense that had no being at all but were utterly perished and extinct both in body and soul of such the Lord is not God For he is not a God of that which is not he is not their God as they are dead but as he purposeth to raise them again But hereby the dead the Apostle understandeth them that are alive in soul though dead in body 1260. Rom. 14.15 Destroy not him with thy meat for whom Christ died Joh. 10.28 My sheep shall no man pluck out of my hand The Elect may be destroyed by themselves as weak men and by reason of Satans malice that puts so many offences in their way but not in respect of God for no man can snatch them finally out of his hands * Rom. 14.15 with Joh. 10.28 He is said to destroy his brother who though he really cannot yet g●ves occasion to such a ruine The Apostle speaks not here exactly and precisely of those whom indeed Christ died for but of such as in our charitable opinion are held to be of that number Omnes fidem Christi profitentes pro redemptis habet charitas Christiana All that profess the faith of Christ Christian charity holdeth to be of the number of those which are redeemed 1261. Rom. 15.2 Let every one of us please his neighbour Gal. 1.10 Should I yet please men I should not be the servant of Christ We must please men for their edification both by words and examples but not to seek for glory at the mouth of the people for so the Apostle would not please men * Rom. 15.2 with Gal. 1.10 We must consider three things Who wherein to what end men are to be pleased 1. Who if I should please the incredulous Jews and Infidels I should not please Christ He must seek to please the brethren and believers 2.
than our Wives * 1306. 1 Cor. 7.10 with Mat. 19.9 Except for the cause of fornication When he saith the wife may not depart he intends not depart not upon any occasion but depart not upon any trifling or lesser occasion than the Word of God hath expresly laid forth which is fornication And yet it is one thing for the Wife to depart from the Husband another thing for the Husband to put away his Wife Though the former is the safer opinion for reconciliation of this place 1307. 1 Cor. 7.14 Your children are holy Eph. 2.3 We were the children of wrath The first place sheweth the honest procreation of Christian children who though they are by nature the children of wrath yet by reason of the Covenant and faith they are called holy * 1308. 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing Gen. 17.16 And you shall circumcise the flesh c. To say Circumcision is nothing is one thing and that it was commanded of God is another Though God commanded Circumcision yet he commanded it so as not to be an Ordinance further than to reach that Age which was till Christ came and suffered When the Apostle said it is nothing he meant now in the daies of the Gospel it is nothing or of no force to salvation * 1309. 1 Cor. 7.20 Let every man abide in the same calling wherein he is called 1 Tim. 3.1 If a man desire the Office of a Bishop he desireth a good work Doubt How can a man desire the Office of a Bishop which is a ruling over other Churches and yet abide in his first calling of being a Deacon or Presbyter Ans A man may abide in his Calling and yet desire an higher degree in that Calling to be a Minister and to be a Bishop are not different species for a Bishop when he doth assume that Office leaves not his Ministry 1310. 1 Cor. 7.21 Art thou called being a servant Care not for it Ver. 21. But if thou maiest be made free use it rather The first place is to comfort servants against the troubles of servitude and he will not have them for that condition to forsake the faith of Christ whereunto they were called and lose their Christian liberty for their corporal service So that the instruction added to it makes no disagreement because servants ought with a willing mind to embrace lawful freedom obtained by reason and a safe conscience 1311. 1 Cor. 7.23 Be not servants of men Chap. 9.19 The Apostle makes himself a servant to all men It is indeed a most ignominious slavery and sad service to depend on the commands of other men besides the commandments of God but to be serviceable for the sacred Ministry is not ignominious but honourable 1312. 1 Cor. 7.23 Be not servants of men Eph. 6.5 Servants obey your Masters Service is spiritual or carnal from that he disswades in the former place for we must not obey the wicked desires of men and dishonest commands Gal 5.1 Eph. 6 6. but must so serve them that we may not offend God or wrong our consciences this he chargeth us to do which though it may be thought hard yet whilst we do it in the sincerity of our hearts for that God requires it it will be accepted * 1 Cor. 7.23 with Eph. 6.5 The former place bids us if we be free we must not wilfully or willingly especially when the times are as they were in Pauls time betake our selves to the services of men but be as little entangled as may be that both in body and spirit we may be Christs Or however be not so the servants of men that you may forbear the commands of Christ or be not so mens servants as to give men any command over you depend only on Christ and his Word The second place forbids nor our being servants but when we are servants to behave our selves as servants yet if we can be lawfully made free to chuse that rather 1313. 1 Cor. 7.25 Concerning Virgins I have no commandment of the Lord yet I give my judgment Mat. 19.12 There are some Eunuchs which have made themselves Eunuchs for the Kingdom of heavens sake There is no command of Virginity in both the Covenants Christ speaks of the Essence of the time past condemning them of rashness because they sought for the Kingdom of God in perpetual continency which is a singular gift of God and given to very few Paul speaks for necessity setting down what is expedient for all by reason of time and place because it was not safe for Christians because of persecutions to stay alwaies in one place and because of the cares which ordinarily follow married people 1314. 1 Cor. 7.29 Let those that have wives be as though they had none Ver. 3 4 5. He approves conjugal custom In the first place he forbids not the use of Marriage but he would not have the husband too uxorious and he bids them to use the goods of this world moderately lest we should be overcome with evils or suppose the good of this life to be perpetual Since if we lose not all here by some accidents yet in our doubts we must leave them all 1315. 1 Cor. 7.32 I would have you to be without carefulness 2 Thes 3.10 He that will not labour let him not eat By carefulness here he means not to call men from their vocations and houshould cares but the inconveniences of Matrimony whereby we are often called from the service of God 1316. 1 Cor. 8.1 Knowledge puffeth up 1 Cor. 1.5 Enriched in Christ with all knowledge The first place condemns vain knowledge adjoyned with pride Knowledge puffeth up not of it self but by accident smatterers and boasters abusing it neglecting what is for their edification The latter praiseth knowledge joyned with charity as it was a gift of God in Christ amongst the Corinthians * 1317. 1 Cor. 8.4 We know that an Idoll is nothing Isa 41.45 46. Idols are silver and gold c. Materially they are something so Silver and Gold and the works of mens hands but effectually they are nothing that is not able to work any thing they are nothing in the value of God or of good men they are nothing worth 1318. 1 Cor. 8.11 Through thy knowledge shall thy weak brother perish for whom Christ died Joh. 10.28 Those that are Christs sheep shall never perish Infirm Christians may perish by reason of first their infirmity secondly Satans malice and thirdly the impudency of the wicked who abusing their Christian Liberty are an offence to the faithful they cannot perish 1. In respect of the counsel of God 2. And the merits of Christ 3. And the efficacy of his intercession who by a mighty hand preserves them to salvation * 1319. 1 Cor. 9.6 Or I only and Barnabas have not we power to forbear working 2 Thes 3.9 He that will not labour let him not eat The former place tells us it was as lawful for Paul and Barnabas to live upon the
of Antichrist defection from the Gospel He exhorts them to good words and works These two Epistles were written from Athens 1407. 1 THES 1.3 Remembring your work of faith and labour Rom. 3.28 Gal. 3.10 Faith is opposed to works Faith is a work but not ours or proceeding from our own strength Joh. 6.29 for then it would not justifie us but it is the work of God and a quality in us respecting the merits of Christ therefore the Apostle calls not Faith it self so much a work as he doth that which proceeds from faith * 1 Thes 1.3 with Gal. 3.10 Faith is a work and brings forth works is a work of the Spirit and brings forth works of righteousness in us yet this hinders not but that Faith may be opposed to Works in the matter of Justification Faith as it justifies is not considered as it brings forth Works but as it brings home Christ Faith yet which brings home Christ is not without Works which Works do shew themselves immediately upon Justification though I cannot say in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Justification 1408. 1 Thes 2.20 For you are our glory 1 Cor. 1.31 He that glorieth let him glory in the Lord. Our glorying hath its foundation in God in the mean while if any thing be done amongst the auditory by the work of the Ministry we must say with the Apostle It is not I that laboured 1 Cor. 15.10 but the grace of God which was with me 1409. 1 Thes 4.17 Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord. 2 Tim. 4.6 I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departure is at hand In the first place is spoken of the company of the faithful by reason of the most near communion and uniting of the body of Christ for we are all one spiritual body so many as believe in Christ so that what happens to one member may seem to happen to all the rest * 1410. 1 Thes 4.17 And so we shall be ever with the Lord. Rev. 20.6 They shall be Priests of God and of Christ and shall reign with him a thousand years We shall be ever after our Translation with the Lord. The latter place speaks of a thousand years but probably this may be in this world before our translation and so it nothing hinders but that after our translation we may be with the Lord for ever Whether these thousand years are to be meant litterally for so many years or else figuratively as the rest of the verse must be viz. Kings and Priests interpreted it is not to the purpose in hand 1411. 1 Thes 5.5 Ye are all children of the light and of the day not of the night Rom. 8.19 For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation of the Sons of God We are here with Paul children of light and the day in grace nor yet in glory The Apostle expected not to be made the Son of God because he was so already actually but only to be revealed to be so for it appears not so yet what we shall be for though we be heirs we do not yet actually possess the Kingdom we must therefore distinguish Sonhood acquired here by grace from that which shall be in our Country by glory 1412. 2 Thes 1.5 The persecutions and tribulations which you endure are a manifest token of the righteous judgment of God that ye may be counted worthy of the Kingdom of God for which you also suffer Eph. 2.8 You are saved through faith and not of your selves it is the gift of God The faithful are worthy not by their own worthiness but Christs also the word worthy is the same here with convenient Col. 1.13 1413. 2 Thes 2.2 The day of Christ is at hand 1 Joh. 2.18 It is the last time To be at hand and to draw near do differ the Apostle denieth that the day is at hand but he denieth not that it draweth near it is called the last time in respect of former time and because in the last time the day of judgment draweth nigh it is called the last hour in respect of God because our daies compared to Eternity are but one moment and a thousand years in Gods sight as yesterday when it is past also all things are present with God 1414. 2 Thes 3.10 If any would not work neither should he eat 1 Cor. 9.6 Have we not power to forbear working In the first place Works are either of the head or of the brain flesh and idleness are condemned in the latter labour is commended which is wrought not with the hand alone but with the head also the Ministers of the Church are not to get their living by the labour of their hands being they are not Mechanicks The Apostle had a singular gift from God to preach extemporary 2 Cor. 1.11 and yet had he means from the Churches Two Epistles of St. PAUL to TIMOTHY THE first is a pattern for Pastors to shew them what they ought to be in Doctrine and Prayers and in Life with their families and laies down the way how to instruct all men of what state age or condition soever It was written from Laodicea in the Year of Christ 52. The second confirms Timothy that he should not be cast down in his mind by reason of the tempests of persecutions and warns him that in preaching the Gospel he should avoid false doctrine that he should be diligent and come unto him It was written from Rome when he was in prison in the year of Christ seventy * 1415. 1 TIM 1.19 20. Some having put away scil a good conscience concerning faith have made shipwrack Joh. 3.36 He that believeth hath life eternal Doubt He that believes in Christ is as sure of salvation as if he were already in an actual and real possession of Christ which cannot be if a man may fall from faith Answ Hymeneus and Alexander made shipwrack not so much of faith it self as of the object of faith that they believed the doctrine of faith which they once professed and afterward deserted falling into heretical blasphemies and blasphemous heresies 2 Tim. 2.17 18. which place clearly explicates the other it shews that they fell from some fundamental truth formerly professed as in the point of the Resurrection or the like The Apostle adds immediately Ver. 19. Nevertheless the foundation of the Lord abideth sure c. q.d. though some professors fall away yet such as do indeed belong unto Christ and are his are firm and stable Or secondly they gave reins to a licentious life against the dictates of their own conscience which God punished by taking away the light of the Spirit from them that so in the midst of their course they should lose their most spiritual Merchandize Yet this shews not that ever these fell from true saving faith or ever had it they that have it once cannot finally
chapters * Mat. 4.12 with Ioh. 1. to the 4th Chap. Matthew omits what was done and delivered by Christ in the daies of Iohn because it would not have been so congruous to his design Iohn he relates it as supplying that which might to some have seemed a defect Matthew tells us that Iohn was imprisoned but sets not down particularly the time of his imprisonment for these words When Iesus had heard that Iohn was imprisoned doth not imply that immediatly upon Christs being tempted Iohn was imprisoned for as Iohn relates many things were done and Christ went into Galilee But that Christ when he heard of Iohns imprisonment began to preach and go into Galilee 767. Mat. 4.18 Iesus walking by the Sea of Galilee saw two brothers Simon and Andrew casting a net into the Sea and he said Follow me Luk. 5.1 He stood by the Lake of Genesareth v. 3. Ascending into Simons ship he bade them put off a little from the land and he sat and taught the people out of the ship as he ended his speech he said to Simon Lanch into the deep v. 10. Fear not henceforth thou shalt catch men Here we have need of a threefold reconciliation Matthew saith that Christ walking toward Sea called Peter Luke in a little ship But Matthew speaks of his first call and Luke of his confirmation in it 2. Matthew makes no mention of the Miracle but what he let pass Luke describes 3. Matthew calls it the sea of Galilee Luke the Lake of Genesareth because the Hebrews call all waters Seas Matthew respects the Province Luke the banks by the next City * Mat. 4.18 with Luk. 5.1 3 c. This is not contrariety but illustration one explains another the story at full in them all is thus As Jesus walked by the sea of Genesareth he saw two ships standing there the one whereof belonged to Peter and Andrew and the other to Iames and Iohn All these men being partners had been fishing all night but had caught nothing and were not stepped down out of their ships to wash their nets Christ passed with multitudes on the shore entreth into Peters ship and thence teacheth the people and thence putting out a little into the Main he helped Peter to a miraculous draught of fishes which was so unweildy that he was glad to beckon up Iames and Iohn from the shore to come and help them the draught of fishes was got up and boated and then Iames and Iohn return to the shore again and fall to mending their net which was rent with helping at so great a draught Peter seeing what was done adoreth Christ and he and Andrew being yet at sea are called by him for fishers of men and bringing their ships to shore they leave all and follow him Christ and they coasting a little further along the shore came to Iames and Iohn and he calleth them 768. Mat. 5.1 Christ seeing the multitude went up into a mountain and taught them Luk. 6.17 He came down with them and stood in the plain Ver. 20. Looking on his Disciples he said Blessed c. Here is also a threefold difference either Matthew saith that Christ preached in the Mountain Luke in the field Or Matthew saith he preached to the people Luke to his Disciples or Matthew saith before Luke after the healing of the leper Whence we conclude that Christ repeated that Sermon a second time * Mat. 5.1 with Luk. 6.17 Or it may be thus That it was the same Sermon in both Matthew and Luke both reciting the doctrine of Christ Luke making mention of a plain Luk. 6.17 before Christs Sermon not passing thence to the Sermon but from his miracles to his Doctrine having no intention to hint the time or place though Matthew would the place not the time Or it might be thus Luke saith not that it was made by Christ in a plain or standing Only this he saith that Christ coming from the mountain stood in a plain place and there wrought certain Miracles and then preached Now all this might be done and yet Christ might preach this Sermon in the mount sitting as St Matthew saith For the order of the story is this Christ being maligned of the Jews went into the mount and there prayed After a long prayer he chose the twelve Apostles and then came down into a Plain and wrought miracles but by reason of the throng which pressed about him to touch him he went into the mountain again and there preached this Sermon to his Apostles and others that followed him 769. Mat. 5.4 Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Vers 14. Rejoyce and be glad Phil. 4.4 Rejoyce in the Lord alwaies Christ speaks not of all that mourn but such as from the heart mourn for their sins and believe in him Joh. 16.33 Luk. 16.25 2 Cor. 1. whose condition in this life is sorrowful and they suffer pressures in the world their mourning brings joy in this world and the world to come and God comforts them in all afflictions Christ pronounceth such mourners happy * Mat. 5.4 with Phil. 4.4 In the former place he pronounceth them blessed that seriously and truly mourn for their own and others sins In the latter he commands the same mourning persons to take their portion even to rejoyce and be glad for ever 770. Mat. 5.5 Blessed are the meek for they shall possess the earth Heb. 11.13 And they all confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims in the earth Meek are gentle such as with a quiet mind endured injuries do not resist evil but overcome evil with goodness by the example of Christ to these is the possession of the earth promised not simply Rom. 12.21 Mat. 11.28 1 Cor. 3.22 Psa 27.13 14.16 but by right of inheritance for the godly though they possess nothing are said to possess the earth because they have Christ who possesseth all things and he is only rich who ha h a quiet mind The earth here is principally taken not for the element of earth but the land of the living * Mat. 5.5 with Heb. ●1 13 37 38. The former and the latter place both speak of meek men such as with quiet and patient hearts bear Gods judgments and mens injuries The former place speaks of their possession of the earth because God gives a meet and convenient portion of the earth either to them or their posterity as he dealt with Abraham Isaac c. they had sufficient for themselves and a promise of great possessions which their Posterity did enjoy 2. If it fall out that meek persons die in want or banishment yet God gives them contentation which is fully answerable to the inheritance of the earth 2 Cor. 6.10 3. The meek have this of right as some suppose being the members of Christ who is Lord of all 1 Cor. 3.21 22. 4. They are Kings by Christ and after the last Judgment they shall rule and reign with him for ever Rev. 5.10
though for a time Gods people may want the possession of the earth yet in regard of their posterity or of having that which is equivalent to it for themselves they do not want it 771. Mat. 5.10 Blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousness sake Ver. 12. Because great is their reward in heaven 1 Pet. 2.10 c. 4.14 Rom. 8.18 The afflictions of this world are not worthy of the glory hereafter which shall be revealed in us The reward here hath no relation to any merit of ours but to the free love of God who promiseth for Christs sake a reward of his grace to them that ask him and crowns his gifts in us Nor do the afflictions and sufferings of this life merit the free rewards of eternal life * 772. Mat. 5.12 with Rom. 8.18 The Former place tels us that those who are persecuted for the Gospels cause may rejoyce because they have a great reward in heaven not that this persecution did merit Heaven but because God would freely give it to such a person as was so qualified it is a reward not a desert it is of grace not of merit The latter place shews that all we can do cannot deserve heaven Mat. 5.44 Love your enemies 1 Joh. 5.16 There is a sin unto death I do not say you shall pray for it The former place gives a general rule the latter tels us of a particular exception Love your enemies so as to pray for them unless they be such enemies as sin a sin unto death Love your private enemies I do not say the enemies of the Church pray for them till you be clearly convinced that they have sinned the sin unto death 773. Mat. 5.12 Great is your reward in heaven Eph. 2.8 By grace you are saved through faith it is the gift of God Our salvation properly is not a reward but the gift of God Rom. 5.6 c. 3.28 Phil. 2.13 1 Tim. 4.8 in respect of acquiring it and application conservation and perfection 774. Mat. 5.14 You are the light of the world Joh. 8.12 I saith Christ am the light of this world All Doctors of the Church and all Christians enlightned by Christ are light not of themselves but from Christ of whom they receive their splendor and divine light or Christ is of himself the true original light who enlightens every man that comes into the world * Mat. 5.14 with Ioh. 8.12 There be several kinds of Lights Original and derived the first as the Sun the other as the Stars Original is that which is the cause of all light and so in the latter Text Christ is the Cause of all light and knowledge which is saving and in this sence Iohn Baptist Ioh. 1.8 is not the light nor any Disciple But there is a derived light which shineth forth but yet is received from another and so Iohn was a burning and shining light or lamp Ioh. 5.35 and so were the Disciples 2 Cor. 4.6 for they received their light from Christ and they testified of this light and they walked as in the light 775. Mat. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works c. 6.1 Beware that you give not your alms before men All that are enlightned with the light of the Gospel must study to do good works Rom. 13.12 That by the works themselves the faith and godliness in our hearts may be known to men But in the latter place all works of ambition and boasting are forbidden by Christ for hypocrites they do so desiring to be praised and seen of men * Mat. 5.16 with 6.1 The former place speaks that Ministers must preach so as men may have occasion to glorifie God both by their life and Doctrine The latter place bids both Minister and people to avoid doing any thing for vain glory for that hinders the glory of God It is lawful to do good works before men to stir them up to do the like and to praise God but it is not lawful to do any work to have praise with men it is one thing to do a good work to evidence to men our faith when it is doubted and accounted by men to be hypocritical another thing to do a good work before men to make our hearts which are hypocritical to appear to be true * 776. Mat. 5.17 with Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law to every one that believeth The former place shews Christ as God and man came not to destroy that mandatory part of the Law viz. the moral part the mandatory part is Ceremonial Judicial and Moral He hath not destroyed this last though he hath fulfilled so much as concerned him the first second yea the third He came not to destroy that part of Gods Word concerning Righteousness and Justice which Moses penned by Gods Commandment or the Prophets i. e. That part of Gods Word which is contained in the writings of all the Prophets in the old Testament after Moses He came not either by his Doctrine or Practice to free men from the obedience thereof or to put an end to them so as they should be useless But he came to fulfil them First By his Doctrine 1. Restoring the proper meaning and true use 2. And by revealing the right way Secondly By his Person he fulfilleth the Law 1. By becoming accursed to the Law 2. And by perfect obedience unto the Law Thirdly He fulfilled the Law in the Elect by creating faith in Christ and by giving them the Spirit of God The second place tels us Christ is the end of the Law He ended the Ceremonial Law and legal Rites the Law Prophets being until John Mat. 11. He was the end of the Law but not directly for in general the Law was made to make man righteous but seeing that could not be done the Law brings us to Christ in whom we are righteous 3. Christ is the end and scope aimed at in the Old Testament all the Prophets gave testimony of him Christ he is the end because he perfectly fulfilled it the Ceremonial Law being the substance of it the Moral Law by his active and passive obedience Christ is the end of the Law as the Law is taken more largely for the whole Doctrine contained in Moses Joh. 5.46 Or secondly as the Law is taken more strictly for the Precepts of the Moral Law in three respects 1. Of his personal obedience which the Law required 2. In regard of satisfaction for the punishment due by the Law 3. In justifying us by Christ to whom the Law as a Schoolmaster brings us 777. Mat. 5.17 I came not to destroy the Law but to fulfil it Gal. 3.13 Christ came to redeem us from the curse of the law There is a difference between the Law and the Curse of it as Christ hath fulfilled the Law so must we walk in his Commandments and by applying Christs satisfaction to our selves we are said spiritually to fulfill the Law from the curse and