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

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upon God himself at the top This makes Jacobs Ladder or Christ to be what the Spouse calls him Cant. 5.10 He is Hebr. vexillatus prae decem millibus the most matchless and incomparable Ladder in the World The chiefest among ten thousand over-topping all others as Saul did the people Antesignanus or Standard-bearer conspicuous above all The way of life is above to the wise Prov. 15.24 and that way of wisdom upon this Ladder in a pleasant way Prov. 3.17 It doth many a Soul good to be running up this Ladder I have sometimes wondred at Horace's expression Coelum ipsum petimus nostrâ stultitiâ we attempt Heaven it self in our folly but sure I am it holds more truly Gratiâ prudentiâ by Gods Grace and by Divine Wisdom not by Humane Folly we should all attempt to climb up to Heaven upon this Ladder The Posture and End of its Erection is for saving from Hell and sending to Heaven The fifth Excellent Property is 'T is a large Ladder there is room enough both for Saints and Angels upon this Ladder 'T is so large that it enlargeth and stretcheth out it self into all Lands as do the great Luminaries of Heaven This Ladder is 1. Extensive as 't is found every where where either Jacob or any of the seed of Jacob may be found whether it be in Europe Asia Africa or America whether it be in the City or in the Country whether it be in publick or in private whether in Family-worship or Closet-retirements in all those places Believers do find this large Ladder of Love let down to them and there doth Christ give them his Loves Cant. 7.11 12. Upon which account the Apostle saith I will that men pray every where c. 1 Tim. 2.8 whether in the Fields or in the Villages or in the Vineyards or under the secret places of the stairs Cant. 2.14 any place yea a Chimney-corner may make a good Oratory upon this Ladder whereon Christ accounteth our voices sweet and our countenances comely And this Ladder Christ himself asserteth this great Truth Joh. 4.21 This Ladder as 't is Extensive in the first-place to all places as above So 2. 'T is comprehensive to all persons there is room enough upon this Ladder for all the Saints in all the Nations of the World for those in Rags as well as for those in Robes they need not justle one another in their climbings up to Heaven for want of room Though the way to Heaven be call'd a strait and narrow way Matth. 7.13 14. 't is not call'd so as if there were no room for more than for those few that find it for there is room enough therein for many millions more had they but hearts to seek and find it but because it allows men no Elbow-room for Vanity and Villany This Ladder is that way and may have the same name given it which Isaac's Third Well had calling it Reboboth Gen. 26 22. because then God had made Rooms or Room enough for him So here God hath made Room enough for all Believers upon this Ladder and if they do justle one another as God knows they do too much it is not for want of Room in it but for want of Love and Brotherly Affection in themselves and 't is well if this doth not discover the carnal seed of the Bond-woman from the spiritual seed of the Free The former being the justlers of the latter Gal. 4.29 As it was in Abraham's and Paul's day so it is now in our day Now seeing Christ this Ladder hath room enough for us both in his Kingdom of Grace and in his Kingdom of Glory John 14.2 he hath many Mansions and many Rooms in those Mansions enough of both in his Fathers house for us Oh what a shame is it that we should not have Room enough for Christ but our straitned hearts are too much like the place of Christs Birth which thrust that sweet Babe of Bethlehem into a stinking Stable for there was no room for him in the Inn Luke 2.7 Have we room enough for beastly lusts to which our hearts can be a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an open Inn that entertains all comers and have we or can we make no Room for the holy Child Jesus to whom we should say as Laban said to Eleazar Come in thou blessed of the Lord wherefore standest thou without Gen. 24.31 As Aaron had room enough to bear all the Names of the Twelve Tribes of Israel in the Breast-plate of Judgment upon his heart before the Lord Exod. 28.29 So Christ our High-Priest hath Room enough for all Believers Names both in his Book call'd the Lambs Book of Life Rev. 13.8 and in his heart both while on Earth Joh. 14.2 If it were not so I would have told you he could not find in his heart to hide any thing from them that might help and heal their troubled hearts v. 1. and when in Heaven he is much concern'd with all our sorrows and sufferings Isa 63.9 Acts 9.4 and this Ladder hath Room enough for our descending down into our hearts to view the greater abominations there Ezek. 8.7 8 13. and for our ascending up to view the Excellencies of Christ Alas that we have no more Room for him the chiefest of ten thousand and who deserves ten thousand times more of our loves The sixth Excellent Property 'T is a long and lofty Ladder so long as to reach from Earth to Heaven The distance must needs be vast and prodigious betwixt as the Scripture stiles the Heaven and Earth Gods Throne and his Footstool yet this Ladder is so long that it rests with its Top upon the former and stands with its Bottom upon the latter If Learned Authors do but reckon right they do demonstrate by as they call them undeniable Rules that the distance betwixt Earth and Heaven can be no less than an hundred and sixty millions of miles at the least in its due Longitude And some Astronomers do critically and curiously calculate that long distance to be five hundred years Journey from the superficies or surface of the Earth to the Starry Heaven which is yet but the under-ceiling the glorious glittering Rough cast or the most splendid and bright Brick-wall that encompasseth the Royal Palace the Heaven of Heavens the Throne of the great God and the Habitation of the Blessed Eliphaz in Job 22. v. 12. saith Behold the height of the Stars how high they are so high that our Eyes can hardly reach them 'T is a wonder saith Dr. Hall upon the Creation that we can look up to so great an height and so admirable a distance and that our very Eyes are not wearied and tired out in that long way before they come to that long Journeys end Yet hereby that vast distance is undeniably discovered seeing that some fixed Stars as well as the Sun are bigger than the whole Globe of the Earth notwithstanding they seem to the beholders Eyes but as so
25. never Princes were better served He 'l not let any of his be lost Joh. 17.12 or perish in a Wilderness-Famine Psal 37.19 There be other Congruities I for brevities sake must omit in a bare naming them As 1. Joseph taught his Brethren Unity Gen. 45.24 fearing they might fall out by the way and quarrel about their Crime concerning him who had both remitted it and was reconciled to them all equally so Jesus oft presseth his Brethren to love one another Joh. 13.3 4. and 15.17 Rom. 13.8 1 Thess 4.9 1 Joh. 3.11 and 4.7 12. and to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace Eph. 4.3.13 the Daughter of Dissention is Dissolution 2. As Joseph presented his Brethren to Pharaoh notwithstanding all their unkindnesses to him whereby they became Acceptable though in themselves as Hebrews they were Abominable to him and capable of both Preservation and Preferment Gen. 47.2 and no doubt but he did commend Reuben Judah and Benjamin to the King these three being most endeared to himself So Jesus presents all his brethren to the King of Kings Isa 8.18 having all their Names writ upon his Heart as Aaron had the twelve Tribes upon his Breast-plate through him we have Access Eph. 2.5 and Acceptance also Eph. 1.6 3. As Joseph being not ashamed of his Brethren though he the Lord of Egypt and they Shepherds so an Abomination to the Egyptians instructs them what to say to Pharaoh Gen. 46.33 34. He teaches them to tell the Truth and not be ashamed of their Trade though it was mean and despicable especially to the Egyptians prudently proposing that with his Princes Approbation without which though so great a Favourite he will do nothing for his Friends he might have Goshen most fertile fittest for their Cattle nearest to Canaan and where they might live unmingled with the Idolatrous So Jesus instructeth us what to say to the Father for we know not what to pray for as we ought Rom. 8.26 neither for Matter nor Manner but as He by his Spirit teacheth us Therefore did his Disciples say Lord teach us to pray as John taught his Disciples Luk. 11. ● 4. As Joseph said to his Brethren Come down to me that you may be near me and tarry not also Regard not your Stuff c. Gen. 45.9,10 18 20. So saith Jesus to us Come unto me and ye shall find rest for your Souls Matth. 11.29 yea he will send his Cherubims his Chariots of Clouds to fetch us up to himself as Joseph did for them v. 19.21 that where he is there may we be also 1 Thess 4.15 and Joh. 17.24 He saith likewise Regard not your lumber but take the loss of your Goods joyfully why should we with Lot play at loth to depart seeing Christ hath far better Riches for us the good of all the Land of Glory is before us All is but trash and trumpery to this true treasure of Grace and Glory Lastly He gives them Provision for the way as Joseph did v. 21. even hidden Manna Rev. 2.17 Such as the world knows nothing of Joh. 4.32 and Prov. 14.10 the Cates and Delicates of Faith and a good Conscience Rom. 15.13 Prov. 15.15 which they go feeding upon as Samson did upon his Honey-Comb till he came to his Parents Judg. 14.9 to their Father's House Thus far the Congruity Now see some Disparity As 1. Joseph accused his Brethren to their earthly Father and brought to him their evil Report Gen. 37.2 but our Dear Jesus excuses us to our Heavenly Father interceeding for us with him Hebr. 9.24 Rom. 8.34 He is our Advocate with the Father 1 Joh. 2.1 Answering all Satan's Accusations who is our Accuser to the Father Rev. 12.10 as the Lawyer doth for his Clients opening their Case pleading their Cause so 't is carried Nonsuiting all Satan's Actions Uxori lis non intenditur He cannot commence a Suit against Christ's Spouse she saith Go sue my Husband I am under Covert-Baron c. 2. Joseph was tainted with the corrupt Language of flattering Courtiers in Swearing twice by the Life of the King which was a great Oath in Egypt Gen. 42.15 16. As it was in Spain while she was aspiring after an Absolute Monarchy as France doth now in their prophane Pride used to Swear by the Life of their King So Joseph here that he might seem enough an Egyptian in his friendly Dissimulation Swears heathenishly as the Egyptians usually did partly out of Flattery and partly out of Superstition 'T is like he had contracted this evil Custom accustomed among the Heathens to Swear by the Soul of their Emperours by his being so long Conversant about 23 years in such Evil Company as Pharaoh's Court consisted of which was a corrupt Air for so Godly a Man to breathe in where he might have complain'd with the Prophet Woe is me that I become a man of unclean lips by dwelling among a people of unclean lips Isa 6.5 for there he contracted that sinful Custom of the Court Sin being as catching as the Plague As 't is hard for Sheep to lye among Bryars and Thorns and not to lose some part of their Fleece So 't is of equal Difficulty for Saints to live in a familiar converse among wicked Men and not to lose some part of their Piety and former fervency yea some guilt and filth of Sin will cleave to their Consciences as some Bryar or Thorn doth to the Tails or Sides of the Sheep but it was not thus with our dear Jesus though he was conversant among Publicans and Sinners Matth. 9.10 11. and 11.19 and Mark 2.15 for which indeed the Pharisees did calumniate Christ importing he could not be the Messiah because he kept such ill Company This was to find fault Quòd in Domum aegroti Intravit Medicus that the Physician ventur'd to visit the Sick saith Austin The Sick is the proper Objest of the Physician and to visit them yea those that are Infected with the Plague is his proper Office yet doth he secure himself from Infection by sovereign Antidotes but none like that which our Rophe Giant-like so called Exod. 15.26 or Almighty Physician was endowed with to wit his Divine Nature which secured his Humane Nature from all infecting Tinctures he could converse with Sinners his very Errand into the World and neither countenance Sin nor contract it none of their Evil Communications could corrupt his good Manners as 1 Cor. 15.33 the Devil's Drivel that left a foul stain upon the Speaker could not fasten the like as it oft doth on us upon him the holy Hearer and though sometime he got Grief yet never Guilt by them More Disparities might be mentioned which I omit as likewise for avoiding prolixity the third Congruity betwixt Joseph the type and a Christian in particular as before the Church in General the Antitype A touch only upon this 1. As Joseph was in Jacob's Intention his first-born Gen. 29.18 and 30.23 24. so had the double
drawn in Gods Book Psal 139.16 Not unlike to the Letters printed upon the Paper which do answer the Printing Type The Divine Efficiency doth answer to an hairs-breadth the Divine Decree both in Creation and Providence Gods Decree is the standing Rule of his Efficiency Those exact slingers Judg. 20.16 could not hit the mark so well as God doth by his External Efficiency his own Internal and Eternal Decree There is no variation of the Compass in this case at all The supream end hereof is the manifestation of his own glory more particularly of his wisdom power and goodness Psal 8.1 19.1 103. last 104.31 145.10 148.5 Prov. 16.4 Isa 43.21 Rom. 11.36 Revel 4.10 11. 5.13 'T is true God had a complacency in the work of his hands when he saw it was all Tob Meod superlatively good Gen. 1.31 The Lord rejoyced in his works Psal 104.31 It did God good a● it were to see all good and very good It was a delight to him but God saw this long before even from Eternity Non datur prius posterius in Deo The phrase imports God would have Man to see the wisdom power and goodness of God in all which he thus commends to our consideration a curious and glorious frame full of admirable skill and variety 2. The Subordinate or Subalternate End is for Mans Instruction and comfort 1. For Mans Instruction Hereby Man learns that there is a God Isa 40.26 Rom. 1.20 there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something knowable to Natural Reason concerning a Deity the World could not make it self neither could it be made by Chance or by a Concussion of Atoms c. The print and Character of the God of Heaven is legible upon every pile of grass growing on earth Praesentem Monstrat quaelibet Herba Deum Ovid. Let no man say he is not Book-learnt for every one may read the Book of Nature though he cannot read the Book of Scripture and learn thence the knowledge of God the Creator though not God the Redeemer and so abhor Atheism Ignorance and Idolatry Cursed be that God which made not Heaven and Earth Jerem. 10.11 This verse spoken at Babylon and therefore writ in the Chaldee Tongue whereas all the rest of the Prophesie is set down in the Hebrew was given to Gods people to make use of when the Babylonians sollicited them during their Captivity to worship their Idols in the Babylonian Language as a detestation of their Babel Idols saying to them Cursed be your Gods for they made neither Heaven nor Earth The same we may say of all the Idols both of Pagans and of Papagans 2. For Mans Comfort the Maker of Heaven and Earth may be hoped in for help above all Mortal Princes for he is a King Immortal and he is the all-powerful Creator and therefore can help without a peradventure Psal 146.3 4 5 6. Let Israel rejoyce in him that made him and new made him too Psal 149.2 or Hebr. in his Makers implying the Trinity of persons concurring both in Creation and Re-Creation or Regeneration which while Olymphus the Arrian Bishop denyed he was struck dead with three Thunder-bolts in a Bath How ought we to hang our Hope upon this great Creator that did hang the heavy Earth upon nothing Job 26.7 and yet it remains for almost six thousand years unmovable he commanded and it stood fast Psal 33.9 The whole Order of Nature remaineth as he first set it firm fast and unmoveable though it hang on nothing but upon Gods precept how much more ought we to be steadfast unmoveable 1 Cor. 15.58 having the sure word of Gods promise to hang upon 2 Pet. 1.19 The Devil and his Imps would overturn the comely Order of Nature they would as it were mingle Heaven and Earth together and so soon mar all but God confounds the Counsels and disappoints the Attempts of those tumultuating trouble-States and maugre their malice he preserveth Polities Laws Judgment and Equity without which Humane Societies could not long subsist God hath decreed to maintain Civil Government amongst Men to relieve the oppressed to punish the wicked to uphold his Church which hath so few friends on earth and so many Enemies both there and in Hell in despight of all This Decree of God not onely for her preservation in the world but also for her Exaltation above the world stands firm and inviolable as a Mountain of Brass Zech. 6.1 This shall bring her highest Adversaries into the lowest place even to that place which is fittest for them to be the footstool of Christ The Churches help is from the Lord that made Heaven and Earth Psal 121.2 and he will rather unmake both again than his people shall want seasonable help her help is in the Name of the Lord who hath made Heaven and Earth Psal 124.8 Gods power is the prop of her Faith and pricks her on to Prayer therefore we may commit our selves to him as to a faithful Creator 1 Pet. 4.19 a God of infinite might and mercy The Lord that made Heaven and Earth and therefore hath the blessings both of his Throne and of his footstool in his own hand will bestow his blessing both on and out of Sion Psal 134.3 God hath hitherto been our Eben Ezer The famous particular Remarks of the Wisdom Power and goodness of God in the Creation written as with a bright Sun-beam upon a Chrystal-wall for our more particular instruction doth here follow 1st The unchangeable Wisdom of God is made manifest 1. in the exact correspondency betwixt Gods Eternal Decree and his Temporal Creation which was the execution of it as before He is esteemed a foolish Builder or Workman who draws a better Mould in his mind and erects a worse with his hand but this Divine Artificer doth most dextrously accomplish by his wisdom in time what he had most wisely designed before time even from all Eternity 2. In the Curiosity of every Created thing there was both the heighth and depth of Divine Wisdom in every Creature hence David cryeth In wisdom hast thou made them all Psal 104.24 Every part of the Creation was performed in the perfection of Wisdom If God hath given man such wisdom as to contrive so many curious Engines and Artificial Instruments for measuring time almost to a perpetual Motion and Lands almost the whole Earth for all sublunary services how much more of wisdom hath the God of Wisdom who is wisdom in the Abstract wisdom it self that instructs man in all his Arts Isa 28.26 even in that plainnest of Husbandry and is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebr. 11.10 which signifies the most Exquisite and Artificial Artist The lending power must needs be a more exact Artificer than the borrowing power man borrows all his power from God and all his Art and skill from him therefore must God needs be a most skilful Operator infinitely transcending the most sublime contrivances of men every Creature may say
himself and who gave a Being to all the World and who only can change the Beings of his Creatures at his own pleasure Two sorts of Miracles God magnified his mighty Power by The first were for confirming Moses's Faith against all the Objections of his Incredulity and to quicken up his Courage and Resolution in undertaking Israel's Redemption The first of those Miracles was Moses's Rod turn'd into a Serpent c. Exod. 4.3 4 5. This shewed how Moses should be an helpful Rod to Israel but an hurtful Serpent to Egypt Moses fled from it yet at God's Command he took the Crocodile or Dragon by the Tail where his Sting lay his Faith overcomes his fear 't was the Messiah's work to break the Head of the Serpent Gen. 3.15 Tail-temptations only are our Exercise And it shews also Israel had been happy under Joseph's Rod of Government And that Rod was become a Serpent under Egypt's Persecution but that Serpent should become a Rod again under Moses's Government To change one creature into another not in appearance only but in Substance requireth a Divine Power The Second Miracle was Moses's hand made leprous c. ver 6 7. where the same Act of putting his hand into his bosom makes his hand both leprous and cleansed Oh how easily can our Lord the Centurion of Diseases make them both come and go at the turning of an hand This was to shew that God by small means could effect great Matters Moses a mean Exile shall be the Instrument of this Glorious Deliverance yet must he be humbled because his hand that wrought all the Miracles was but a leprous hand which none could Cure but God himself It shews likewise how that fretting Leprosie of Sin lurks and lodges in Man's Bosom there Moses found Leprosie and there he left it Go to Christ for Cure who only can say to the Leper I will be thou clean Matth. 8.2 3. See Levit. 14.44 c. Thus Moses was confirmed by God's making him able to work those two Miracles which no Prophet after him nor Patriarch before him till the Messiah came were enabled to work Notwithstanding all this Divine Condescension in answering all his four doubts and vouchsafeing him these two Signs for the third mentioned ver 9. was not now acted till he came into Egypt where he turn'd the Water of Nilus into Blood yet the Infirmity of his Faith in requesting God to make as some say the Messiah or some other man his Messenger did incense God to anger against him ver 13.14 yet not so as to withdraw his favour from him for immediately the Lord concurreth with Moses's Desire in granting Aaron his Brother to be his Assistant ver 14 15 16 17 20. Now Moses thus fully satisfied goes down to Egypt with the Rod of God in his Hand v. 20. which signifies our Experience of Divine Deliverance formerly assembleth the Elders of Israel works those Miracles aforesaid over again in their sight This made them believe that now God would visit his People and they worshipped God ver 30 31. Moses and Aaron make now many unsuccessful Applications to Pharaoh for Israel's Freedom meet with nothing but reproachful Taunts from the hardened Tyrant which no doubt would have been seconded by bloody Blows had not the Lord who employ'd them in this Embassage tyed up the Tyrant's hands c. 3. Note The first Miracle Moses wrought in Pharaoh's presence was that general Sign whereby he did demonstrate to him that his Commission for Israel's Dismission was from the great Jehovah 'T is said If Pharaoh say Shew a Miracle c. Exod. 7.9 and 't is said likewise That they did as the Lord commanded them ver 10. Though it be not express'd that Pharaoh ask'd a Miracle yet is it not to be doubted that Moses shewed not this Sign till Pharaoh in his Luciferian Pride first call'd for it those two Texts imply no less saying to them Shew me some Work above the power of Nature c. otherwise I shall look upon you as two Sawcy Arrogant Fellows that come in your own Name to Affront my Royal Right and shall deal with you accordingly Hereupon Moses casts down his Rod before him and it became a Crocodile a Dragon as the word imports betokening desolation and that his Countrey if he disobeyed should become a Den of Dragons Isa 13.22 This is the third time that this Sign was shewed once in Horeb to clear Moses's Divine Call first to himself Exod. 4.3 4. again to Israel ver 30. and now to Pharaoh c. Now when Moses had given this Testimony of his Divine Call as his credential Letters from the great Jehovah in turning his Rod into a Crocodile as some Interpret the word Tannin not Nachash a common Serpent which the Egyptians Worshipped and to whose greedy gaping Chaps they had cast out so many Hebrew Infants into Nilus where the Crocodile conversed Yet then did the Lord permit the Egyptian Jugglers the Chief of which were Jannes and Jambres 2 Tim. 3.8 to turn their Rods into Serpents also Exod. 7.11 12. that is by Collusion not really such but in appearance only the Devil in them dazling the Eyes of the Spectators so as to make their Rods seem Serpents and though Moses did not detect the Cheat in words yet was it done in effect by deeds for Moses Rod swallow'd up the Magicians Rods. Tertullian saith That Moses's Truth devoured the Magicians Lie c. Thus Christ who is Life Essential swallow'd up death in victory 1 Cor. 15.55 and these Delusions were Figures of the Lying Wonders of Antichrist whose Church is call'd Egypt Rev. 11.8 yet thus they that be of Christ shall overcome Antichrist for stronger is he in them than he that is in the World 1 John 4.3 4. However this Impostor of those Gypsie Jugglers which God permitted to be done and in which Story the Sacred Scripture most Impartially giveth the Devil his due of his Activity and Ability in his Instruments served so far as to harden Pharaoh 's Heart ver 13 14. The first Remark of the Miraculous Plagues being the second sort of Miracles for confounding Pharaoh was God is said in this Book eight times to have harden'd Pharaoh's Heart Thrice it is said that he hardened his own Heart and five times it is also said that his Heart was hardened to wit by the Devil through the just Judgment of God Though God commanded Pharaoh to let his people go but still hardened his Heart that he would not let them go Yet God herein was not contrary to himself for by so commanding him he requireth his Obedience and by so hardening him he punisheth his Disobedience namely with a Judiciary Penal hardness This Heart-hardened Tyrant asks Moses Who is Jehovah I know him not This proud question Exod. 5.2 hath A long Answer to it in the ●en following Plagues When Israel ask'd What is his Name Exod. 3.13 God gives a short Answer I am hath sent me
affectionate Woman the Christian Church had a Wilderness to hide her self in provided for her by God's most gracious providence whither she was born as upon Eagles Wing and he had done this Old Testament Church Exod. 19.4 where the same Phrase is used when she fled from the face of that Dragon Pharaoh here Revel 12.6.14 Messiah's Church harmoniz'd with Moses's Church having two wings of a great Eagle wherewith she did flye into such hiding solitary places as God prepared for securing her in her being in the worst of times and wherein he fed her v. 6. tho' he did not feast her yet he nourished her v. 14. and kept her alive during the long lease of Antichrist as he had done this Church in the Wilderness for forty years Grotius saith that these wings allude not only to Israel's flight out of Egypt into the Desart but also to the History of David who cryed Oh that I had the wings but of a Dove not of an Eagle Psal 55.7 8. that he might be saved from that Dragon Saul God gives rest to his Church from persecution Act. 9.31 and always preserves her being tho' in a Wilderness tho' she want her splendor and well-being Mat. 16.18 Mark Thirdly As Michael and his Angels were too hard for the Dragon and his Instruments in Warring against the Old Testament-Church for Pharaoh was drowned Amalek was discomfited and the Countries of King Sihon and King Og were conquered by Christ's conduct the Captain of Israel's Hosts in the Wilderness Josh 5.13 Heb. 2.10 Even so the Dragon and his Instruments make war against the New Testament Church Revel 12.7 while she brought forth many Children unto God under the name of the Man-child v. 5. even Christ Mystical as Mr. Joseph Mede interprets it from Gal. 4.19 yet can he not prevail v. 8. but is totally routed and ruined so as not to rally or rage any more for he is cast out of Heaven v. 9. that is from molesting the Church at that time and down to the Earth as Wrestlers saith Grotius cast down the weaker to the ground so Michael or Christ whom none is like in strength Psal 89.8 prevails against the Devil the strong Man is mastered by the stronger Man Luke 11.21 22. and is at last by him cast into Hell Revel 20.10 As the Devil and all his Imps could not obstruct the passage of Moses's Church from possessing the Earthly so nor Messias's Church from entring the Heavenly Canaan Fourthly Now follow the more Particular Remarks upon all the forty two stages Recorded by name in Numb 33. from v. 1 to v. 50. especially where any memorable matter is mentioned befalling Israel in their Wilderness wandring at any one of those particular places For the accomplishing of which work I have truly travelled to furnish the Reader with the choicest cream and quintessence extracted out of the best Learned Rabbins Antient Fathers and Modern Divines both Criticks and Commentators in various Languages The First particular Remark is upon Rameses the first Stage that Moses mentioneth Numb 33.3 beside what is above-said hereof in the General Remarks Mark moreover First That Raamses Hebr. signifies Worms-or Moths the Mystical meaning whereof may well be that as Egypt signifying Anguish and Tribulation and representing this present Evil World that wallows in wickedness is no sit place for the true Israel of God to abide in therefore the Lord calls his Adopted Children out of Egypt Exod. 4.22 Hos 11.1 Heb. 12.23 c. as before for nothing but anguish attends them there John 16.33 c. So Rameses tho' a Treasure City Exod. 1.11 yet our Lord cautions us Lay not up your Treasure where the Worm or Moth may corrupt it Mat. 6.19 Rameses was but a City wanting foundations and made up only of Mortar c. Exod. 1.11 14. Whereas if we according to Christ's Councel lay up our Treasure in Heaven which is a City that hath foundations whose Builder and Maker is the Great Creatour Heb. 11.10 then need we not fear any Moth or Worm to corrupt it or any Thief to break through and steal it for 't is a City above the reach both of Malignant Men or Dawned Devils Hereupon the Seed of Abraham cannot find rest here below in places built by frail creatures Heb. 11.8 9 10 13 to 17. for they hear their Creator crying Arise Depart this is not your Rest for it is polluted Mic. 2.10 and Arise let its go hence saith Christ John 14.30 Mark Secondly Israel marcheth from Rameses to Succoth which signifies Booths built of Boughs as before Behold here the Infant Estate of the Old Testament Church Numb 33.5 At Succoth like a company of Sucking Children they fall upon Building Childish Summer-houses with Boughs and Branches of Trees no better Buildings no fairer nor firmer Fabricks could be expected from them when they came thus rawly out of the Egyptian slavery and were only come now to the first step from Egypt of their forty two stages and stations in the Wilderness and newly entred under the Conduct of Christ cloathed in the Cloud who here came to be as a Schoolmaster to this company of Children and to take his first Tuition of them Exod. 13.20 21. These Children of Israel as they are frequently stiled in Scripture being now but as it were in their A. B. C. could not possibly but be very ignorant of Canaan's glory and of Sion's Excellency when they can sit down in Succoth thus satisfied with such sorry Coverings as Booths of Boughs N.B. First Christ came now and became a new School-master to those simple Children and taught them they must have a better covering he therefore covers them with his cloudy Pillar Wo to them that cover with a covering but not of Christ's Spirit Isa 30.1 and of his Merit also Put on the Lord Jesus Rom. 13.14 N.B. Secondly Grown Christians brought into the Beauty of Sion may not forget they were once but in Succoth Catechumeni A. B. C. Scholars having very little knowledge of God and but Babes in Christ 1 Cor. 3.1 2. 1 Joh. 2.12 13. There is first the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or being of a Believer then the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or well-being and beauty thereof As we may not stay alway at Succoth but press on to Sion He is a Monster that grows not up from being a Child Rehoboam is call'd a Child when grown up a Man 2 Chron. 13.7 So in Sion we must remember Succoth to humble us c. Mark 3d. The second Stage they came to was Aetham which signifies hard ground as before only hinted Thus there layeth hard ground betwixt us and Heaven which Canaan typified many Losses and Crosses many Tryals and Troubles c. We have great need therefore to be well shod with the preparation of the Gospel of Peace Eph. 6.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 well booted Christians that we prove not Habers upon this hard ground 'T is the Conduct of Christ that
Discipline and was a symbol of internal Grace As this People had three Days prescribed to prepare and sanctifie themselves So our Lord saith He for our sakes did sanctifie himself Joh. 17.19 in dying for us which Sanctification Christ compleated not until the third Day at his Resurrection Secondly What the People were not to do 1. They must abstain from their Wives during those three Days Preparation ver 15. This the Apostle sheweth is to be done with Consent for a Time that they may the better give themselves to Fasting and Prayer 1 Cor. 7.5 Not because there was any legal Pollution in it being instituted in the State of Innocency Gen. 2. and honourable in all Heb. 13.4 'T was therefore prohibited not as any prophane Matter in it self but meerly that their Minds might be the more entirely devoted to the Covenant now to be made with God and not diverted by Carnal yet lawful Pleasure Some make this to mean Priests disavowing of Marriage which argues as absurdly as because People on solemn Fast-days abstain from Meat therefore the Clergy must eat no Meat at all 2. As they were not for that Time to touch their Wives so nor must they touch the Mount at that Time when the Signs of God's glorious Presence was upon it v. 12 13. In which Interdict or Prohibition are sundry Branches observable As 1st To whom it was prescribed to wit both to Men and to Beast To Men in General that is to all the People oft intimated in Exod. 19. but principally ver 13. and in special to the Priests who otherwise seem to have a nearer access to God in sacrificing-Service ver 21 22. These Priests are after call'd Young Men of the Sons of Israel Exod. 24.5 being the First born of Families whom God had sanctified to Himself Exod. 13.2 in whose Place he afterward took the Tribe of Levi Numb 8.14 15 17 18. 2ly Upon what Penalty this expresly is added upon Peril of Death The Offender if near Hand was to be stoned and if farther off was to be shot at with a Dart and the Beast is here doomed to Danger to keep his Master at farther distance from Danger in which Premonition there was Mercy in the Commination though so much Severity in the Execution 3ly The Reasons of this Interdict were 1. For Reverence-sake 'T is Presumption in People and an Affront to a Prince for any to come into his presence uncalled Much more into the presence of the King of Kings who though he love familiarity with us in our walking with him in our Conversation yet takes State upon him in his Ordinances will be feared in his Commands and will be trembled at in his Word and Judgments as Dr. Hall phraseth it 2. To restrain the People's Curiosity from prying into God's Secrets 1 Sam. 6.19 Not that it is evil to see God but it is evil in him that seeketh to see him out of Curiosity and to make nearer approaches presumptuously unto him than he permits The Third Reason Had they been permitted to approach and gaze this would have hindred their Attention in hearing the Voice of God which proceeded out of the midst of the Fire 4ly To put a difference betwixt the Lord's Service and that of Idols they had seen in Egypt wherein they used Sporting Dancing and Feasting which afterward this People practised as their Apes when they set up the Golden Calf But here they must know their distance dread God's Presence which was a strong check to all Idolatrous Jollity But 5ly And more especially this was to shew the Nature use and end of the Law which was rather to exclude Men from God by Reason of their Sins than to accept justifie or give Life to them as doth the Gospel for it was the Ministration of Death 2 Cor. 3.7 Gal. 3.10 11 19 21 22 23 24. Mount Sinai is in Bondage with her Children Gal. 4.25 Contrary to the Gospel upon Mount Sion as Paul explaineth at large Heb. 12.18 20 22 c. Notwithstanding this strict peremptory Prohibition that neither People nor Priests should approach beyond their bounds yet the Lord knew better than Moses the Itch of Curiosity in them and therefore He commands Moses to go down and charge them over again though Moses thought it superfluous to keep their Distance yet Moses and Aaron who were Types of Christ's Princely and Priestly Offices were allowed to come up unto the Lord ver 21 22 23 24. The Sixth Remark is the miraculous Manner and marvelous Majesty of the Promulgation of the Law 1. In the affrightful Agitation of the Elements as of the Fire ver 18. of the Air in the Cloud Thunder and Lightning ver 16. and of the Earth in that Dreadful Earthquake c ver 18. And. 2. In the astonishing sound of the Trumpet which by the Ministry of the Angel made a most terrible sound ver 16 19. As Moses gives an ample Narrative of this Majestick Manner of God's giving the Law There was Thunder and Lightning and a Thick Cloud and the ●●und of a Trumpet c. to the Affrightment of all the People c. that the Man of God might the better accommodate his Expressions to the magnificence of the Lord 's glorious appearing on Mount Sinai and thereby the more to make the People meet to meet the God of Israel such a marvelous Majesty attended Moses here as never any Law-givers among the Heathens were ever honoured with That on a suddain in a clear Morning the Mount was surrounded with Darkness and Fire broke forth out of the midst thereof c. as Gregor Nyssen testifieth but Moses better declareth that there were four Signs of God's Presence two were heard the Thunder and the Trumpet sounding and two were seen the Lightning and the thick dark Cloud so the Apostle to shew the Terrour of the Law describeth the giving of it by six several Expressions As 1. Fire burning 2. Blackness 3. Darkness 4. Tempest 5. The sound of the Trumpet And 6. The Voice of Words Heb. 12.18 19. God speaking out of all these must needs be very frightful Deut. 5.22 23 24. and Deut. 4.11 12. Psal 18.8 9 11 12 13. There was no Comfort from the Light of this Fire because of this dreadful Mixture The Thunder-cloud had blackness in it self and caused a darkness to Israel both be put together Blackness of Darkness Jude ver 13. The Tempest includeth Thunder Lightning and the Earthquake together to signifie that all such the Law raises in the Souls of Sinners under strong Conviction and Compunction of Heart Act. 2.37 c. The Trumpet sounding was the great Alarm and Proclamation that the King of Kings was coming down upon the Mount and a summons to the People to appear Personally before him which was a figure of the last Judgment when no more Relief shall be found than was here in this barren Desart Nothing but Bryars and Brambles which if in Gods way He burns them up and
the Mountain for the Elders ver 1. the Top of the Mountain for Moses and the bottom of it for the People ver 2. Secondly The Manner how Wherein is related what 1st Moses did who 1. Wrote all God's Statutes in a Book ver 4. Heb. 9.19 2. In the Morning the very next day after the fiftieth Day whereon the Law was given he erecteth an Altar to represent Christ and twelve Pillars to represent the twelve Tribes who were both the Parties in the Covenant 3. He sent the First born who were the Sacrificers till the Levites were taken in their stead Numb 3.41 c. to offer up burnt offerings and Peace-offerings both Types of Christ to sanctifie the People for entring into Covenant with God ver 5. 4. With half of the Blood he besprinkled the Altar and the Book that lay upon it to be sanctified thereby ver 6. Heb. 9.19 5. He took the Volume of the Covenant and read it in the Audience of the People that he might bring them into the Bonds of the Covenant ver 7. Ezek. 20.37 6. He took the other half of the Blood and besprinkled the People or the twelve Pillars or the seventy Elders that did represent them ver 8. all which were Patterns of those heavenly Things done by Christ sanctifying us by the Blood of a better Covenant Joh. 17.19 Heb. 9.13 14 18 23. 1 Pet. 1.2 2dly What both Moses said and the People too 1st Moses explained the Covenant and Commands of God to the People ver 3 and 8. as if he had spoke thus This whole People thus besprinkled with the Blood of the Covenant are received into God's Covenant Care and Custody yet upon that Condition If they will exactly keep the Law of their God and in Truth obey all his Commandments 2ly The People Promise their Obedience to all these Conditions of the Covenant ver 3 7. as they had done before Exod. 19.8 and 20.10 Thus the Covenant betwixt God and Israel was establish'd by a mutual and willing Consent though as yet they knew not the Impossibility of the Law which is weak through the Flesh Rom. 8 3. nor did Mind the twelve Pillars of Stone representing to them how their hard stony Nature was thereby resembled to them as the two Tables of Stone did resemble their hard stony Hearts Exod. 31.18 2 Cor. 3.3 3ly The Issue and Effect of this entring into Covenant The Elders of Israel that before might not come near the Lord now see his Glory eat and drink before him and he layeth not his avenging Hand upon them c. ver 9 10 11. Great Joy it was also to all the People ver 15 17. But Moses is call'd up into the Mount with his Servant Joshua ver 12 13. where he must abide to receive the Tables of Stone and the Pattern of the Tabernacle with all the Utensils of it c. In whose absence Aaron and Hur must manage all matters of Controversie in the Camp ver 14. The Glory of the Lord on Mount Sinai appearing all that Time in their sight like consuming Fire ver 15 16. Six days God prepares Moses for receiving the Law as in six days he created the World and rested upon the seventh Gen. 2.2 The same number is here at the giving of the Law wherein God manifested as much Wisdom as in making the World Psal 19. per totum Upon the Seventh day God calls Moses alone into the Cloud who stood at a distance with his Servant till called of God That Seventh Day is supposed to be the Sabbath being call'd the Seventh Day by an Emphatick Article as the Christian Sabbath is emphatically also call'd the Lord's Day above others Rev. 1.10 The People had but three Days of Preparation to receive the Law Exod. 19.10 11. But Moses must have Six to shew what singular Holiness is required of Ministers The Measures of the Sanctuary as the Shekel Cubit c. were double to the ordinary among the People Ministers must wish with Elisha a double Portion of the Spirit that they may save themselves and those that hear them Moses abode in the Cloud Forty Days and Nights ver 18. without eating Bread or drinking Water Deut. 9.9 The like number of days Elias fasted for Reviving the Law which in his day was lost 1 King 19.8 And Christ did the same when he entred into his Ministry of giving the Gospel Matth. 4.2 and it must be supposed that the Lord enabled Moses to abide there forty days as well as to enter the Cloud which he could not do Exod. 40.35 N. B. If it be asked What became of Joshua all this time for he came down with Moses and knew nothing of the Calf set up in the Camp Exod. 32.17 when Moses brought the two Tables It is thus answered Tho' it be expresly said That Joshua went up with Moses and came down with him yet is it not mentioned in Scripture how high he went or whether he heard what God said to Moses c. It seemeth he staid still with Moses during the six days preparation till God call'd his Master from him into the Cloud and like a faithful Servant he staid in some place where his Master appointed and knew how to find him upon his Return Exod 32.17 18 not knowing any thing of Israel's Idolatry so had no meat from the Camp nor did he fast the forty days as Moses did but was as some say sustained all that time with Manna c. in some extraordinary manner by the Lord. In this forty days and nights Conference which the Lord held with Moses in the Mount God gave him the Ceremonial Law which was the Shadowed Gospel for this Infant Church as before he had given the Moral and the Judicial Laws The Ceremonial Law was to direct this Church in the External Worship of God As 1. That a place be prepared for his Publick Worship called then the Tabernacle which as Josephus saith was a portable Temple 2. That the People now in Covenant with their God must offer voluntarily all materials for the making of this Tabernacle both for the outward Fabrick and all the inward Utensils thereof Exod. 25 26 27 and 30. chapters 3. God ordains the Persons to attend the Service of this Sanctuary and they are Aaron and his Sons of the Tribe of Levi who are directed both as to their Garments and as to their Sacrifices and Ceremonies of their Consecration chap. 28 and 29. 4. God calls forth and qualifies the Persons for the whole workmanship of the Tabernacle within and without as Bezaleel and Aholiab with others whom he filled with the spirit of Wisdom and made them meet for the making of all sorts of the Manufacture thereof chap. 31. All which materials must be exactly made according to the Pattern or Model that God now shewed in a Vision unto Moses in the Mount giving him as is supposed an Aetherial Idea or Platform both of persons and things as God afterward
raise themselves to an equality upon his ruine c. The 3d Remark is The event of this murmuring while meek Moses is dumb God speaks in his behalf and while he was deaf God hears and stirs v. 2 3 4. No doubt but this was a great exercise of Moses's patience to be thus traduced by his own Sister and Brother To be derided by Egyptians is threatned as a misery Hos 7.16 but to be reproached by those that are Professors of the same Religion with our selves is far more grievous Zedekiah feared more to be mocked by the Jews than by the Caldeans Jer. 38.19 However meek Moses was a Lamb in his own Cause yet knew how to be a Lion in God's Cause How blessedly blown up was he with a Zeal for God in the case of the Golden Calf and what a stomach shews he in that matter Exod. 32.19 c. But God comes as a swift Witness Mal. 3.5 pleads the part of this silent Sufferer The Lord spake suddenly v. 4. not only as a sharp revenger of his Servant's injuries for wrong done to an Embassador reflects upon the Prince that sent the Embassage but also to prevent all surmises that God came at Moses's complaint to him and seeking revenge the Lord hearing and seeing all that was said and done by those Murmurers and being highly displeased immediately all the three both the Parties offending and offended are judicially Summoned to appear before the Great Judge to the Tent of the Congregation not before the People from whom Aaron's folly must be concealed and then the Judge speaks to the Offenders out of the Cloud as from the Throne of his Glory v. 4 5. Wherein He First Accuseth the two guilty Persons saying Why were ye not afraid to speak against my Servant Moses ver 8. Secondly He vindicates innocent Moses and absolves him v. 6 7 8. preferring him not only above Miriam and Aaron but also universally above all the Prophets Thirdly He passeth the Sentence of Condemnation upon the Offenders v. 9 10. Fourthly The Execution of the Sentence followeth God departs with the Cloud the sign of his presence then woe to them from whom God departs Hos 9.12 all evil comes in as by a Sluce Leprosie rushes upon Miriam a proper punishment of pride c. yea the worst sort and most incurable Leprosie 2 King 5.27 and Exod. 4.6 nor was this all her punishment she must have Banishment also for seven days She was punished for her Pride both in her Body and in her Honour 't was a great disgrace to her to be Excommunicated so long out of the Camp and Congregation This Banishment was a Civil Death as the Law of Nations terms it and her Leprosie made Aaron look upon her as under a natural Death also v. 12. so compareth her to a dead abortive Birth whose flesh was half consumed with this fretting Leprosie Inquiry Why was not Aaron likewise plagu'd with Leprosie Answer First She was first in the fault and likely a mover of Aaron to it Secondly Aaron escaped saith Chrysostom for the Dignity of the Priesthood which was now newly instituted and it would have been a great dishonour to that Order in that legal Worship if the first High-Priest had been made a Leper which would have excluded him from his Ministry who should by his Office be always at hand in the Tabernacle Thirdly But seeing the first Institution of the Priesthood did not secure Nadab and Abihu Levit. 10.1 2 c. a better Reason must be found that Miriam was more passionate and peremptory in her reproofs of Moses and in her reproaches against him than Aaron was But Fourthly The best Reason is that Aaron met God by Repentance and so disarm'd his indignation and thereby redeemed his own sorrow so remained to interceed for his Sister The 4th Remark is The removal of this Remora and Rub that retarded Israel's marching from this Station and the gracious withdrawment of Miriam's double punishment 1. By the intercession of Aaron to Moses and 2. By Moses's Intercession to the Lord in her behalf ver 11 12 13 c. First Aaron cryes to Moses Alas my Lord c. God was now gone in the Cloud not forward as a sign of Conduct but upward from off the Tabernacle where it usually resided aloft in the air and probably disappeared for that time as a Testimony of Divine displeasure gainst Miriam's unclean Leprosie beside had the Lord been present in the sign of his presence Aaron was how conscious of his own unworthiness by his being an Abettor of Miriam's sin to make any immediate address to God therefore requests Moses to mediate for Miriam to teach us both to present our Prayers to God by the Mediation of Christ whom Moses here Typified and also when our own Key of Prayer is become rusty we must make use of the Key of others Favourites of Heaven who live with us on Earth to open the Cabinet of God's loving kindness to us and ours and though Aaron was the Elder Brother and High-Priest yet here he maketh his Request to Moses honouring him with the Title of His Lord Hebr. Bi Adoni confessing their sin and craving pardon which made amends for his former fault he begs his younger Brother's intercession for their Sisters Cure Hereupon Moses like a loving Brother passing by past affronts and injuries which is the most Noble kind of Revenge prays earnestly to the Lord for healing his Leprous Sister as one much afflicted with her affliction He cryes Ael Na repha na Oh God of Might and Mercy as that word signifies heal her I beseech thee c. To which God returns this Answer v. 13 14. Had her Earthly Father spit in her face a sign of anger shame and contempt Job 30.10 Isa 50.6 Mat. 27.30 she should be sorrowful for it seven days the time that Lepers were shut up by the Law c. Levit. 13.4 5 21 26 and 14 8. and Numb 19.11 c. how much more when her Heavenly Father had put this stamp of shame upon her Table of Beauty defiling the face of his undutiful Daughter with such a loathsom Leprosie She shall be shut out of my Church seven days that her sorrow for her sin might be sound and soaking This was a perfect pattern of Impartial Justice against Sinners without respect of Persons for Miriam tho' a Prophetess and Vzziah tho' a present King must thus be separated for their Leprosie Numb 12.14 2 Chron. 26.20 21. both must be ashamed to be seen and shut out from Church-Society When this time of seven days justly inflicted for Miriam's humiliation and purgation was expired she was restored to the Church N. B. And this was done without the Ceremonial expiations prescribed in the case of Leprosie Levit. 14. because her Cure was as Miraculous as her Disease and therewithal her restoring to Society as Authentick as was her separation from it for God's healing her by a Miracle from so sore and
and Priesthood or you c. v. 5 7 and 15. And this very speech of Moses's ●aith Paul maketh use of saying The Lord knoweth who are his c. 2 Tim. 2.17 18 19 20. Seeing those two grand Services afore-●amed did figure forth the great grace given by Christ unto his Elect whom he maketh Kings and Priests Rev. 1.6 and 5.10 a Royal Priesthood 1 Pet. 2.9 therefore doth the Apostle Peter most aptly accommodate this very History to God's knowledge care and love of his Elect c. whom he sanctifieth and preserveth from backsliding as certain Hereticks did in those days against whom also the other Apostle Jude applyeth the same Rebellion of Korah wherein many perished Jude v. 11. N.B. Evil will befall Sinners to morrow as upon Sodom Gen. 19.23 24. upon Egypt Exod. 7.15 and 8.20 and 9.13 and 10.13 and upon Israel 2 Sam. 24.15 and so upon others Zeph. 3.5 Psal 73.14 Isa 47.11 3. Moses in his Pathetical Oration singleth out the Sons of Levi and takes them to task prudently apart as hoping haply to withdraw them from their purpose and to hide pride from them Job 33 17. But they proved incorrigible uncouncelable for tho' he principally spake to Korah the Captain of the Conspiracy yet so as what he said to him concern'd all the other Levites therefore beginning his Speech in the singular number he presently turns it into the plural telling them God had preferred them above the People being in the place of the First-Born of Israel Numb 3.41 and 8.14 1 Chron. 9.2 Psal 135.19 20. The Levites being Assistants to the Priests in the Service of the Sanctuary and having this great honour on them they should not ambitiously aspire to the Priesthood ver 9. for they were not to approach God's Altar Numb 18.2 3. 1 Chron. 6.48 49. therefore God severely punished them for Usurping it here as he did King Vzziah for the same sin 2 Chron. 26.19 21. Thus wisely dealt Moses with those ambitious Levites who would be looking up to the Priests that they might be such themselves he sends their Eyes down to the People over whom they were advanced N.B. Thus the way not to Repine at those above us is humbly to look down at those below us c. Then Moses Impeaches them of High-Treason against Jehovah himself ver 10 11. that they in contemning God's Ministers such are Magistrates Rom. 13.4 Moses as well as Aaron contemned God himself 1 Saw 8.7 Luke 10.16 and Joh. 13.20 What is Aaron As if he had said Do not ye wound God through Aaron's sides Thus Christ glorified spake Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Act. 9.4 Thus are they charged with murmuring against the Lord also Exod. 16.7 And thus here they take offence at the settling of the Priesthood upon Aaron and his Posterity which was the Lord's own doing and not Aaron's and what or who is he to God c. 4. When Moses had thus expostulated the matter with Korah and his Company of ambitious Levites in vindicating the Sacerdotal Office he next takes Dathan Abiram and Hon to task in vindicating the Political or Civil Office from their aspiring to it contrary to God's Institution for the Conspirators were become by Combination plain Levellers to cast down both Magistracy and Ministry and to bring in an Anarchy Regnum Cyclopicum a Kingdom of Confusion wherein every man might offer his own Sacrifice and do that which seemed right in his own Eyes Hereupon Moses summons those Conspirators that were absent for Korah only was present at the Publick place of Judgment ver 12. where Dathan and Abiram are only named and not Hon as in ver 1. for 't is probable he upon second thoughts knock'd off from the Rebellion and is therefore no more mentioned praestat recurrere quàm malè currere as that Emperour said Better stop or step back than run on to utter ruine Those two sturdy Rebels that persisted being Ripe for Destruction Prov. 29.1 send a saucy and contumacious Answer back to Moses the chief Magistrate We will not come up Thus they obstinately avoid the means of their bettering by Moses's debating about the matter with them whereby they might have been dissuaded and so have desisted and found mercy This Refusal to appear was an high crime and was after punished with confiscation of Goods and excommunication of Persons Ezra 10.7 8. N.B. Those Rebels at unawares most remarkably read their own dismal Doom for they rightly resolve We will not ascend up to Moses in the Mount because they were to descend down to the Devil in Hell ver 33 c. But before this they draw up an high Charge against Moses accusing him both for a Tyrant ver 13. and for an Impostor ver 14. wherein they lay Load upon their Lord Moses both for domineering over them tyrannically by Pride as not a Brother and Companion but a proud Prince and for cheating them out of Egypt which they praise just as Caleb and Joshua had praised Canaan Numb 14.8 so preferring the place of their cruel Bondage their Iron Furnace Deut. 4.20 before the Land of God's gracious Promise deceiving them with fair pretences Exod. 3.8 and 33.3 Levit. 20.24 promising plenty in a fruitful Land to cast a Mist upon their Eyes but performing nothing either of Milk or Honey c. seeing he still leads us up and down in this wild desolate Wilderness wherein we are famished with extreme want of all necessary sustenance Thus they profess themselves not to be so blind but they could discern and discover Moses's fraudulent Impostures And whereas at the first they pretended a quarrel against the Priesthood only now they rise higher in their Rebellion and quarrel with the Principality also blaming Moses for his tyrannical and deceitful Conduct which teacheth N.B. If the Ministry once be removed the Magistracy is next c. They here conclude their cavilling Criminations saying thus wilt thou abuse us as if blind men to lead us whither thou listest and rule us according to thy tyrannical Rigour c. as if Moses had been no better to Israel than the Philistines were to Samson Judg. 16.21 and the Ammonitish King to the Men of Jabesh Gilead 1 Sam. 11.2 in thrusting out their Eyes Hereupon they refractorily resolve again We will not come up 5. By all this those Refractory Rebels moved Moses tho' the meekest Man upon Earth Numb 12.3 to high Indignation ver 15. So that he makes his solemn Appeal to God both for owning his Innocency and for disowning the Rebels Incense For the former he calls God who knoweth all things Joh. 20.17 to witness that he had not made any Trade of his Administration of Justice by any unconscionable and unquenchable desires of filthy Lucre which is but a Robbery by Authority I have not taken one Ass from them nor have I hurt any one of them ver 15. which is not the manner of Usurpers and abusers of Authority See 1 Sam. 8.11
confirm our Faith c. The Second Remark is At this Mansion of Kadesh doth Miriam dye a good Woman and of great use as a Prophetess to the Church in the Wilderness to which she was one of the three Guides Mic. 6.4 N. B. First Something that was famous is Recorded of her Exod. 15.20 and Secondly Something that was Infamous Numb 12. As to the first no doubt but Miriam was endued with a Prophetick Spirit and God spake by her and by Aaron as well as by Moses Numb 12.2 tho' not so familiarly mouth to mouth as to him v. 8. therefore is she honoured as one of those three singular instruments in the hand of God and a principal guide of God's People from Egypt towards Canaan 'T is not impossible that Miriam might be as helpful to Moses being much Elder than he whom she watched when Exposed in an Ark of Bulrushes Exod. 2.4 as Nazianzen's Mother was to his Father non Solum adjutricem in pietate sed etiam doctricem gubernatricem c. Not only an Help-fellow but also a Doctress and Governess to him as the Son's Character is of her Therefore they who vilifie the Female Sex especially with reference to Religion may here observe that in the very point of extraordinary Prophecy as well as in ordinary piety the Male and Female are all one in God as they are in Christ Gal 3.28 But secendly Tho' Miriam was famous enough until that unhappy matter of emulation betwixt her and Moses's Wife happened Numb 12. as above this was that which made her something infamous a blot in her Escutcheon of Honour which we may charitably believe she got cancel'd out upon her Repentance and recovery from Leprosie Suppose her weak head being of the weaker Sex was not able to bear such strong Wine out of the Cup of such an high honour without being intoxicated for which fault her Heavenly Father spate inker face Numb 12.2 14. Yet thus far God honours her by Recording her death in Sacred Scripture Numb 20.1 as was Sarah's Gen. 23.1 where Sarah's Age as well as Death are both Recorded Some have observed that God thought it not fit to tell us of the length of any Woman's Life in Scripture save only Sarah's for the humbling of that Sex which is too apt to be haughty Notwithstanding as Souls have no Sexes so of some Women such as Miriam Deborah the Virgin Mary c. It may be said that beside their Sex there was nothing found Woman-like or weak in them as if what Philosophy saith the Souls of those Noble Creatures had followed the Temperament of their Bodies which consist of a frame of rarer Rooms of a more exact composition than Man's doth The great storm that Miriam raised and probably about precedency is covered with sience Mic. 6.4 as was Sarah's unbelief 1 Pet. 3.6 the Prophet and the Apostle making an honourable mention of them both thus Miriam is honourably mentioned for her Death and Burial Numb 20.1 Where also her age is necessarily implyed tho' not plainly expressed as was Sarah's for she must dye about 130 year old being at least ten years older than Moses whom she watched among the Reeds of the River and who dyed at 120 years old c. The Third Remark at Kadesh this second time is Israel's murmuring again for want of water here as before they had done at Rephidim in the first year of their coming into the Wilderness Exod. 17.2 That was done by the Old Generation and this by the New Numb 20.2 3 4 5 c. Who did too perfectly Patrizare Children acting over again the old sins of their sinful Parents whom God had therefore cut off and consumed at this time whereupon those new Male Contents were the worse because they made no better improvement of God's severity with their Fathers as Dan. 5.22 As God had tryed their Father's forty years ago with this very want so now he tryed their Children and they also Rebell'd against him Thirst is a more eager Appetite than Hunger and more enrageth the Desires and Affections of Mankind therefore were they thus earnestly and eagerly hot in their chiding of Moses in wanting not only Water but Patience also whereby they were transported to break the peace with their Governour this was now their Malady and a great impediment again in their way to Canaan The Church in the Wilderness was exercised with the same evil of wanting Water both in her first and in her last years wandring therein the same Fiery Tryals may befall us that befell our Fore-fathers in the Marian days Objection They had lain here at Kadesh a whole Twelve-Month 38 years before this and then there was no murmuring for want of Water Answer The Waters out of the Rock Horeb broached at Rephidim Exod. 17.6 c. had followed them from thence to Kadesh and from Kadesh back to the Red-Sea and in all their 38 years wandring those Waters followed them still 'till their return now to Kadesh again but at this time those Waters out of the following Rock 1 Cor. 10.4 were departed tho' the manner how is not expressed Thus God may betrust his Church a long time with Living Waters yet by his Soveraignty withdraw them again The Fourth Remark is The Remedy to this Malady for which Israel again in a new Edition seditiously murmured Moses and Aaron pray for Water v. 6. which God again graciously answered putting up and pardoning this renewed Rebellion in a new Generation and prescribes means to satisfie their thirst by a renewed Miracle v. 7 8. Such a Congruity there is betwixt that Miracle in the first year Exod. 17.1.6 and this in their 40th year that some have mistaken this for a Repetition only of that but Disparity may be observed as well as Congruity for 1. That at Rephidim which was their tenth Encamping place from Egypt this at Kadesh which was their Tenth Station of the 42. before they entred Canaan Numb 33. declares it c. 2. There Moses cryed to the Lord for the outrage of the People here Moses and Aaron both fall down before the Lord. 3. There the Lord stands before Moses on the Rock here his Glory appeareth unto Him and Aaron 4. There Moses was commanded to smite the Rock with his Rod here he is commanded only to speak to the Rock with his Rod in his hand 5. There it was for the Old Generation here for the New c. 6. There Moses is not branded with Incredulity as here he is which makes the fifth Remark The Lord is angry both with Moses and Aaron here for their unbelief ver 9.10 11 12. Moses's Sin seems to be manifold here as 1. His immoderate anger 2. His speaking to the People when he should have spoke to the Rock ver 8. 3. His smiting of it when he should only have spoken to it 4. His smiting it twice in a pang of Passion the doubling of his stroke shew'd the heat and fume of
a peaceable and harmless passage through Edom. N.B. This unkindness of Relations befel Christ himself his Friends laid hold on him looking upon him as a Mad-man Mark 3.21 And if this was done to the green Tree what may the dry expect Hereupon Christ forewarns us of the failure of Friends and not only so but of their opposition also that we may place our hope and trust in him alone Matth. 10.21 22. Psal 2.12 and 73.25 28. The fourth Remark is The unkindness of Friends ought patiently to be endured as passing through Wisdom's hands which appoints Time Place Measure and Manner Thus David still'd himself with this consideration that the hand of the Lord ordered the Tongue of cursing Shimei But more expresly here the Lord had forbad Israel to meddle with Edom Deut. 2.4 5. in which place Targum Jonathan thus paraphraseth Israel was commanded by the word of Heaven that they should not wage War with the Posterity of Esau because the time was not yet come wherein God would execute Vengeance upon Edom by their hands This is mentioned in Obadiah's Prophecy Therefore Israel at this time suffered patiently the unkindness of Edom and obeyed the Lord herein tho' the way which they after went through the Wilderness fetching a compass round about the Land of Edom and Moab to come into Canaan proved exceeding irksome and grievous to them so that their Souls were discouraged not only because of the tedious length of the way but also because of the many wants and woes that they found therein Numb 21.4 5. And Jephtha pleads this to vindicate Israel's Patience and Innocency Judg. 11.18 Hereupon Israel being denied passage through Edom turned away to Mount Hor Numb 20.22 which was their next Resting-place after they came from Kadesh Numb 33.37 which name signifies a Mountain upon a Mountain for Har Hebr. signifies a Mountain and Aaron or Aharon signifies a Man of the Mountain who died now on the top of this Mountain upon a Mountain so died near Heaven Numb 20. v. 24 28. yet leaving an holy Son to succeed him upon Earth The same hands of Moses that had put on his Priestly Garments for Glory and Beauty Exod. 28.2 and Levit. 8.7 8 9. do now pull them off to teach the disanulling of that Priesthood that now had contracted sin Numb 20.12 Deut. 32.50 51. and the bringing in of a better Priesthood by Christ who is the true Eliazar or Hebr. help of God Heb. 7.11 18 26 27 28. and who is a Priest for ever after Melchizedek's order and ever liveth to make Intercession for us c. ver 25. and 9.24 Aaron is said to die gnal pi Jehovah at the mouth of the Lord as if God had taken away his Soul out of his Body sucking it out with a kiss of Love the same is said of Moses Deut. 34.5 Numb 33.38 He died upon Hor hagidgad that is in a hole there of Gidgad or Gudgod Deut. 10.7 on the first day of the fifth month for his sin committed at the Waters of Meribah in Kadesh Numb 20.12 24 26 c. after his Priestly Garments were stripped off from him and put upon Eleazar his Son and then he was lamented by Israel all that whole month for thirty days N.B. Mourning for the Dead is honourable the People mourn for Aaron as after they did for Moses who was now reprieved only till they came to Nebo Deut. 34.1 4. thirty days whom they had dishonoured forty years 'T is the Lot of many of the Servants of God to have more honour after their death than they had in their life The Burial of Aaron tho' omitted here is mentioned Deut. 10.6 Both Aaron's and Moses's sin at Meribah is call'd Rebellion and both were doomed to death for it Numb 20.12 24. The best man's heel hath some Iniquity cleaving to it Psal 49.5 Some dirt sticks to all our feet John 13.7 c. so need washing and the brightest Lamps have need of God's Golden Snuffers at some time or other Israel then marched from Mount Hor to Zalmonah Numb 33.41 call'd so of Zelem an Image for there the Brazen Serpent was set up after Many Remarks more than ordinary are upon this Station Recorded The first is The Canaanites having heard of the overthrow which was given Israel thirty eight years before their coming to this Station Numb 14.45 and of the hand of God against them in their so long wandring in the Wilderness were hardened and emboldened to encounter them again at this time when they heard of their second approach towards Canaan Numb 21.1 and no doubt but the Devil did endeavour by this new Impediment which he stirred up to discourage Israel making them think that as their Fathers were through unbelief affrighted and entred not into the promised Land Deut. 1.27 32 35. so their Children hereby might also be deprived Yea and God for the Chastisement of their sins and for the Exercise of their Faith out of his unsearchable Wisdom suffered those Cursed Canaanites at the first to conquer them and to take some of them Prisoners a sorer affliction than what Job suffered The most wise God permitted this Malady worse than any before to befal them that his People might know when they came indeed to conquer the Land they did not conquer it by their own strength or for their own worthiness Psal 44.3 4. Deut. 9.4 The second Remark is This Malady that was matchless in all their former wanderings put Israel upon seeking out a suitable Remedy Hereupon they vowed a Vow c. ver 2. that if God would grant them Victory they would Anathematize all they conquered reserving nothing for their own use but destroy all as consecrated to God With this Religious Promise they joyned fervent Prayer for God's help which was the most probable way to prevail with God as their great Grand-father Jacob found it Gen. 28.20 36. and who is therefore call'd the Father of Vows Thus they found it also ver 3. where 't is said The Lord received the Prayer of Israel and gave up King Arad and his Canaanites into their hands c. then according to their Vow they devoted the Conquered Persons to death their Cities to be burnt but their Goods confiscate to the Lord were carried into the Lord's Treasury Levit. 27.28 29. as was done to Jericho Josh 6.17 19 21 24. But this Vow of destroying the Canaanite's Cities could not now be performed unless in some as first-fruits offered up to God for they being now far off in the Wilderness could not destroy the Cities lying in Canaan Numb 33.40 into which they came not till after Moses's Death and still Jordan was betwixt them and it 'T is not to be believed that they now entred Canaan and when they had destroyed their Cities returned again into the Wilderness to take that tedious Journey which was so irksom to them after Numb 21.4 Therefore this is spoke by way of Anticipation they now conquered the Canaanites Army
usually say A Cursing Person is a Cursed Person that this Woman was a Cursing and a Swearing and Cursing Woman appeareth from the Hebrew Word Veatteth Alith ver 2. Et tu Jurâsti vel male dixisti vel adiurâsti as the Hebrew is Translated For Alah the Noun from Alah the Verb signifies an Oath with Execration or Cursing Numb 5.21 because Cursing was added to an Oath to confirm it the more Deut. 29.12.21 Nehem. 10.29 N. B. This Womans Swearing was upon a Threefold Account First By Swearing she Vowed that she would make an Idol Secondly In Swearing she devoted the Thief to Direful Curses Thirdly And more plainly In Swearing she Adjured her Son that if he knew any thing of this Theft for probably she suspected him at least to know of it that he would discover it to her and she certainly cursed the Person that stole them imprecating Mischief and Destruction to him The fear of a Mother's Curse startles her Sons Conscience it being denounced in her Son 's Hearing fearing that God might say Amen to it as he had done he well knew to Noah the Father's Cursing of Canaan Gen. 9.35 therefore these Cursed Canaanites were cast out of their Land and themselves became Possessoas of it This Consideration affrighted the Son makes him confess his fault and begs his Mothers Pardon and Blessing Secondly That she was but a Mongrel in Religion appeareth not only because out of the same Mouth came Blessing and Cursing Jam. 3.10 She blew hot and cold in a moment in her Passion over shooting her self into two extreams her first extream was her Cursing at Random she knew not whom and her second extteam was assoon as she knew the Thief was her Son immediately pronounces a Blessing on him not at all reproving him for his sin ver 2. Though his Sin was not common Theft but in her Account no less than Sacrilidge for she tells him I had wholly Dedicated this Silver thou hast stoln unto the Lord ver 3. in the Hebrew it is Jehovah the Incommunicable Name of God which demonstrateth also that she was but a Mongrel and exceedingly Superstitious in mingling the Inventions of Man with the Institutions of God For 't is apparent neither she nor her Son did absolutely design to desert the True God or his Worship seeing as the Mother Dedicated or Hebr. Sanctified this Silver and set it apart for the Service of the true Jehovah so the Son rejoyced at his obtaining a Priest of the Tribe of Levi according to Jehovah's appointment and thereupon promised to himself that Jehovah would bless him ver 13. But both their Intentions were here for the Son concurr'd with the Mother to make an Image to Worship God by their Image as the Israelites had done before them Exod. 32.1.5 and did after them Hos 2.16 according to Jeroboam's Model who was a Man of Mount Ephraim also 1 Kings 11.26 and 12.25 and who establish'd by a publick Law this very Idolatry that was thus privately begun by this Woman and her Son This sheweth that there be two sorts of Idolatry The First is The Worshiping of false and strange Gods as among the Heathens The Second is A Worshiping of the True God after a false manner as oft among the Israelites contrary to Divine Prescription and according to Humane Invention as Micah's Mother with himself would represent God by their Image of their own Heads though expresly contrary to the Second Commandment c. A Good Intention here excuses not an evil Action The Third Remark is Those Eleven Hundred Pieces of Silver thus restored would to God all ill-gotten Goods were so the Mother and Son join together to make an Image c. The Founder hath Two Hundred thereof and with the other nine all the other Trinkets were procured together with furnishing a Chappel for Worship c. ver 4 5. for it is improbable she would alienate any part of her dedicated Silver to her own private use though she might love a cheap Religion as well as her Son who allowed his Levite a very slender Salary ver 10. Micah's Son not of Aaron serves here for an Idolatrous Priest though God had left Israel a stinging Memorial in the presumptuous Case of Usurping Korah Numb 16.40 That no Stranger which was not of the Seed of Aaron come near to offer Incense before the Lord that he be not as Korah and again The stranger that cometh nigh shall be put to Death Numb 18.2.7 This Lying Lesson Jeroboam learnt from Micah here who made Leaden Priests who were not of Levi but of the lowest of the People fitted well enough for his Golden Calves and he made a Mock-Temple to hold his Mawmets and Monuments of Idolatry for himself and the Ten Tribes to Worship in 1 Kings 12.31 as Micah did here a Mock-Chappel for himself and his Neighbourhood round about him v. 5. N.B. From which Act his Name is cut off shorter by two Syllables for whereas the Text in the Original had call'd him Micaiahu with a part of the Name Jehovah affixed to his Name till he had set up his Image c. from thence forward namely from ver 5. the Text all along calls him in short Micah All that Worship Graven Images shall in God's time be cut short and confounded Psal 97.7 The Fourth Remark is A wandring Levite providentially comes to seek a Lodging there and thereby turns the Laick-Priest out of his Office the occasion of this Levite's wandring is set down ver 6. There was no Magistrate in those corrupt times to take care of the Levites Maintenance the Service of God in Sacrifices and Oblations out of which the Levites were maintained was now under this Anarchy neglected and no doubt but in this Depraved State of Apostacy there were faults found on both sides the Levites did likewise neglect the Exercise of their Offices and therefore were the more neglected by the People and others of the Laity put into their Employ Hereupon the Levites were constrained to leave the Tabernacle and their own Cities wherein they had lived before and to wander into other parts of the Land where they might find a Livelihood N.B. This was the Case of the Priests and Levites in Nehemiah's time Nehem. 13.10.11 God grant it may not be our Case also c. This Levite's Lot in that Dispersion fell into the Tribe of Judah ver 7. which seems to be set down by way of Reflection upon that Tribe which God had so highly Honoured Gen. 49.8 9 10 11. and made them the frst Conquerors after Joshua's Death Judg. 1.3 c. Yet now was declined into such a General Defection that this Levite could not find Entertainment in so great and famous a Tribe but he must be forced to wander and seek Subsistency elsewhere ver 8. This wandring Levite wanting Means and Maintenance walks abroad as a way faring Vagabond to seek Necessaries and in his Wanderings lighteth upon Micah's House not with any former
Glory c. Sixthly He was not willing to Reprove them but the Clamours of others forced him to do it Seventhly He did not Rebuke them publickly 1 Tim. 5.20 for their publick sins to make the Plaster as broad as the Wound Eighthly It was only a Verbal Reproof whereas he should have put them out of their Priesthood and punished them for their Adultery according to the Law without respect of Persons as a Judge c. Ninthly He did not Rebuke them in time but let them live long in sin Tenthly He soon ceased chiding them so 't is said He restrained them not ch 3.13 All that can be said by way of Apology for Eli in this case is First That he now was very Old v. 22. Some suppose him to be now come to his Ninetieth Year even in his Doteage so could not himself Converse with his Sons so as to observe their Male-Administrations and withal he was dim-sighted so could not so well see their sinful Practices His Superannuation caused his frequent Absence from the Tabernacle which gave a greater opportunity for his Sons Wickedness to whom the management of God's Worship was in their Father's Retirement betrusted and 't is not improbable his Sons did not much regard his Reproofs because he was Old and Over-worn but themselves being in their Vigour had Marry'd Wives and were Fathers of Children And N. B. 'T is commonly known that Old Age doth incline Men to Mercy so that 't is no Wonder if Eli seem rather to Flatter than to Chastize his Sons Secondly This Apology may be made also for Old Eli in his giving right Counsel to his Refractory Sons v. 24 25. telling them 1. How they made the Lord's People to transgress either in encouraging them to perpetrate the like execrable Practices by their prophane patterns and instigating the Lord's People to become Children of Belial the Devil's People by their pernicious Examples or otherwise in hurrying them into the other extream of not only neglecting but also of contemning their own indispensable Duties of Offering Sacrifices when they saw that their Oblations must pass through such horrible wicked hands And 2. Telling them If one Man sin against another by doing any Injury the Magistrate or Vmpire may in such a case compose the Difference and patch up such a Peace as both Parties ought to acquiesce if their Hearts be not bigger than their Suits in that final Determination But saith he you have not sinned against Man only but against the Lord also therefore it is not in the power of Man to right the wrong done to God or to reconcile you to him whom you have so immediately offended in his Worship N. B. Eli meaneth that after the manner of Men many dare intercede with the Prince for such as have injur'd any private person but none dare do so presume when the Injury is offered to the Prince's own Person None dare be a Solicitor much less can be a Days-Man in such a case so that Eli seems to point at the Messiah whose Office is to take away transgression Dan. 9.24 who was the Antitype of their Priestly Office and whom he wishes them to make their Mediator repenting of their sins and laying hold of his Merits by Faith and not to perish in their final Impenitency The Sixth Remark is The manner how the Man of God a Prophet sent of God did chastize both the cockering Father and his cockered Children which is done partly Reprehensory and partly Comminatory from v. 27. to the end First By way of Reproof who this Reprover was many are the Conjectures of Learned Men some say it was Elias who was not yet Born into the World or Phinehas who was now lately gone out of the World Others more probably think it was Elkanah or an Angel in Man's shape but seeing this is not revealed in Scripture as 't is vain curiosity to enquire so 't is impossible to determine who he was yet whoever was this Reprover whereas Eli did but dally with this Nail of Reproof he drove it down to the Head here both to the Father and to his Sons N. B. First As to Eli this Man of God upbraids him with that distinguishing favour he had received from God in making him his High Priest though descended of Ithamar the younger Son of Aaron and gave all the Emoluments of the Priesthood a very Honourable Maintenance to him and his Sons and yet dare they thus provoke the Lord their Benefactor like foolish Folk and unwise Deut. 32.5 6. Beneficium postulat officium Benefits are binders to Offices and Duties of Thankfulness God looks upon the Abuse of his Benignity as an high Indignity and therefore chides he thus with Eli for this Affront v. 27 28. and not only so in the general but gives him this particular Impeachment that he had neglected his Duty both as a Parent and as a Priest and as a Judge in indulging his Sons to trample under foot the Ordinances of the Lord yet chused he rather to gratifie them than to glorifie God v. 29. N. B. Eli is charged here with conniving at his Sons sins for his own Self-ends because their Sacriledge help'd to feed their Old Father N. B. Secondly By way of Threatning 1. The loss of the Priesthood to Eli's Family v. 30. God had promis'd it to Phinehas Eleazar's Son Numb 25.12 but in some time of the Judges saith Dr. Lightfoot the High Priesthood was translated from the Line of Eleazar Aaron's Elder Son to the Line of Ithamar the younger of whom this Eli descended 1 Chron. 6.4 5 6. and 7 8 6 10. This forfeiture from the Elder Line the Doctor supposeth was made in the matter of Jephtah for instructing him no better but suffering him so unnaturally to dispose of or dispatch his own only and Religious Daughter N. B. Thus as the Promise for the perpetuation of the Priesthood to Aaron's Family Exod. 28.43 and 29.9 was Conditional only so long as they did Honour God therein which Condition the Elder Line of Aaron kept not in the case of Jephtah's Vow therefore was the High Priesthood transferr'd to the Younger Line which now upon the like failure in the Condition made a new forfeiture thereof by Dishonouring God so notoriously in Eli's Sons N. B. This may be called Breach of Promise as that is Num. 14.34 when the old Generation were wasted in the Wilderness and yet the new one was brought into Canaan as God had promised Deus non descrit nisi deferentem Austin 2 Chron. 15.3 2. This Man of God threatens the Extirpation of Eli's Family v. 31 32. His Arm shall be out off as Zech. 11.17 which may either be the Ark call'd the strength of God Psal 78.61 and taken after by the Philistines chap 4. or his Priesthood which was his strength and subsistency whereby he and his Family subsisted but principally his Posterity who are the strength of Parents Gen. 49.3 Deut. 21.17 Psal 127.4 5. this Arm
in the Chamber over the Gate but not wholly eased himself of it and likely because he feared his Son was not only Dead but also Damned seeing he Died in his Sin when Joab came to him Mark 2. Joab saith to him Thou hast shamed this day the Faces of all thy Servants c. too Rude and Rough a Reproof such as David could never digest tho' for the present he prudently gave place to it because Joab had reason to speak and much of what he spake stood with good reason but better Language to so truly Sacred a Soveraign had better becomed him N. B. Josephus addeth that Joab asked David if he were not ashamed to be thus Affected with sorrow for such a Rebellious Son and bid him come forth and speak friendly to the People or if he did not he threatned to give the Army and Kingdom to another c. Mark 3. Joab chargeth David with Loving his Enemies and Hating his Friends c ver 6. This was not true in the rigour of it but was spoke by him in an high Transport of passion which did hurry him into some undecent expressions such as he Judged necessary to awaken David out of his present Lethargy by such sharpness of Speech For indeed David did not love Absalom as an Enemy but as a Son through an Excess of Natural Affection Nor did the other Branch It would have pleased David well if Absalom had lived and all his Army had died savour of any more truth and soundness but was utterly false for David desired really the preservation of his Army and of Absalom's also Mark 4. Then Joab adds not his Counsel but his Command seeming to speak rather to his Servant than to his Soveraign ver 7. Arise and speak comfortably to thy Souldiers thanking them for their good Service and promising them proportionable rewards c. If not he threatens to Depose David by his powerful Interest he had in the Army and to chuse another Ruler that could rule his own Passions better and so might Rule the People also with more moderation and all these menaces Joab bindeth with a Passionate Oath to startle and scare David Mark Fifthly Hereupon David toward v. 8. When Pills are ill prepared or Potions administred too hot or too sowre the Patient refuses them 'till better made up cooled and sweetned and then he can receive them without loathing and reluctancy N. B. Such a Rash Emperick might Joab have proved here in order to the cure of David's Lethargick distemper his Potion of Advice was ill Administred both too hot and not at all sweetned yet good David makes a vertue of necessity and thereby it proved a word in Season David obeys Joab come out of his Retirement into the place of Judicature all his Party come out of theirs also and congratulate the King for his great Victory he thanks them for their Valour in winning the Victory hereby David's passions were effectually allay'd and we hear no more of O Absolom my Son my Son and then all Israel that were Absolom's Party fled to their homes The Second Head is David's return from his Banishment c. Remarks upon it are First Those followers of Absolom now fled home begin upon second thoughts to blame one another for abetting the late Rebellion They were at strife v. 9 10. which intimates the Devil stickled bard still in some of those late Rebels to hinder David's readmission to the Throne it was not done without dispute N. B. 'T is a great truth that the Crowns of Kings sit faster or looser upon their heads as God is pleased to order the hearts of their People which he can turn in a moment what way he will Oh what mischief might Joab have done David here in his ill-timed despondency had the Lord suffer'd him to improve his great interest in the Army whose hearts as he said will be forth with irrecoverably alienated from thee and this Affliction will exceed all Saul's Persecutions and Absalom's late Rebellion when in thy old Age thou be not only deposed from the Throne but also exposed to contempt and desperate danger But David here being now reconciled to God as well as to himself in the death of his Son God is at work even among the late Rebels themselves to further his Restoration as well as the Devil at work to hinder it by giving them Repentance after their late Rebellion and renewing their Allegiance to David The Second Remark is God thus going before and preparing the way David follows after so good a Leader and first Courts the Elders of Judah who had been possibly too forward in the late horrid Rebellion so might despair of Pardon and haply hang back therefore David assures them of acceptance c. v. 11 12. wherein he complements them as his Kindred yea his Brethren a Title sufficient to stint and stifle all strife if well considered In the Second place he Courts Amasa in particular v. 13. as our Lord did Peter having been the greatest offender Go tell my Disciples and Peter Mark 16.7 so Amasa had been Absalom's Captain General of the Rebels and still had the Command of the strong Tower of Zion and of the City Jerusalem so might have caused new troubles and Tragedies had he not been thus won over by a promise of free Pardon and high preferment in particular and to put his promise out of doubt to him he relates how nearly related he was to David a Sister's Son as well as Joab 1 Chron. 2.16 17. and one that had a mighty influence upon the Men of Judah to turn their hearts towards David v. 14. otherwise David could not return to the Capital City v. 15. N. B. This Question is canvas'd among the Learned Whether David was not de fective either in his Politicks or in his Piety in promising Joab's Abdication and an Instalment of Amasa in his place Answer the First Some say with Peter Martyr that David might justly Abdicate Joab 1. For his slaying of Absolom contrary to the King's Command 2. For his treacherous slaughter of Abner 3. For his frequent over bold and imperious expostulations with the King unbeseeming a Subject to his Soveraign 4. Joab might have many more faults known to David tho' unknown to others 5. David oft designed to Abdicate Joab from his Generalship but he could not complaining again and again that the Sons of Zeruiah were too hard for him 6. David was all along jealous of Joab's imperious temper Ne aliquid novi in eum moliretur Saith Theodoret lest he should harch some Treason against him by his prevalent interest in the Royal Army c. And now David had the opportunity of Amasa one as powerful with the Souldiers as Joab himself c. Answer the Second But others are of Opinion that this Act was one of David's defects for First Joab had purchased his Generalship by hazarding his own life in Conquering that strong fort of Zion 2 Sam. 5.8 Secondly
he had many Beasts in his own belly N. B. All these Victories are ascribed to David v. 22. learn we to do so unto Christ for all our Victories both Croporal and Spiritual These all made way for Solomon's peaceable Reign Sam. CHAP. XXII THIS Chapter is David's Doxology to the Lord for his manifold Deliverances given him both from the hands of Saul and his house and from the hands of all his other Enemies both Domestick and Foreign Now this whole Chapter being wholly Eucharistical and not at all Historical and the self same in substance with the Eighteenth Psalm which may be read either at the end of 2 Sam. 4. when David was delivered from the trouble of Saul's House as the Title of that Psalm intimates or at the end of 2 Sam. 22. here where the Lord had again delivered David from his Foreign Foes Tirinus hath this odd notion that David first drew a rude draught of this Psalm which we have here recorded in this Chap. 22. but afterwards when at more leisure he perfectly polish'd it and gave it to the Priests which is Psalm Eighteenth yet only with some few variations This Song of Thanksgiving some Learned Men do better and more solidly suppose that David composed in the last year of his Reign when he enjoyed a setled secure and sublime peace not indulging himself in his old Age with ease and idleness as too many Kings and Conquerours do in the like Condition but he devoted himself to glorifie God the giver of all his Victories in Religious Exercises such as this was wherein he names Saul as his fiercest and most dangerous Persecutor and whose Persecution was of longest continuance Now seeing there is no History in this Chapter whereof to give the Mystery and Meaning I omit it as I have done others and pass on to the 23d Chapter 2 Sam. CHAP. XXIII WHerein we have the Swan-like Song of David a little before his death and in which we have likewise but little History save only a Catalogue of David's Worthies from v. 8. to the end and therefore a few Remarks upon the Song and the Catalogue will dispatch it also And first upon the Song from v. 1 to the 8th The First Remark is This Song is said to be the last words of David v. 1. not as the last he spoke while living for he spake often after this to Joab to Araunah to Solomon c. after this but it was the last he set down as Pen-man of Holy-Writ and by Divine Inspiration This Song is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much in a little wherein he doth in few words but full of matter First Acknowledge God's Kindness Secondly Confess his own Sins Thirdly Profess his Faith Fourthly Comforts himself in the Covenant and Fifthly Denounces destruction to all Unbelievers Remark the Second Junius judgeth he spake these words after he had given his Commands to Solomon 1 King 2. and after his prayers for him in Psal 72. when he was near his death and Peter Martyr addeth that this Prophetick Song comes properly in after his thanksgiving for all his former Victories Chap. 22. and now he foretels here what great things God would give him hereafter for which he gives thanks also even for the Covenant wherein he confided for his posterity which must be understood of the promise of Christ David's Son and surest Comfort Remark the Third Whenever this Song was sang by David 't is properly placed here for all his Enemies had spat and spent all their venom and he was delivered from them all both domestick and foreign We hear not of any one that stir'd either hand or tongue against him until himself became an enemy to himself when Satan provok'd him to number the People as in Chap. 24. The Second Part is the Catalogue of David's Worthies The Remarks are First This Catalogue is reckon'd in 1 Chron. 11. as well as here Chap. 23.8 c. but with this difference there 't is set down in the beginning of David's Reign here at the ending of it This is a seeming Contradiction yet both are done so upon solid grounds for the former designeth to declare who were the Worthies that help'd David to his first settlement in his Kingdom but the latter gives an account of those that stuck close to him all the time of his Reign and help'd him all along to keep him in his settlement and fast in the Saddle Remark the Second In both the Books of Samuel and the Chronicles there is reckon'd a double Triumverate the first three were men of the greatest gallantry the second three tho' they were exceeding valorous yet not matching the first in fortitude or Magnanimous Atchievements N. B. There be diversities of Gifts yet from the same spirit all must not excell in degree and dignity if all were the head where would be the other parts of the body much less did the other Thirty Heroes Colonels and Commanders come up to the first three Remark the Third Among all those 36 Worthies Joab is not once named in the Catalogue some suppose he is not mentioned because of his barbarous Butcheries of Abner and Amasa as well as for his killing Absalom contrary to the King's Command But others are of Opinion that Joab being the Lord Chief General needed not to be named because his Valour and high Generalship had been notified before at the storming of the strong fort of Sion and he must necessarily be reckon'd one of the number to make up the forementioned number of 36 to the full number of Thirty seven as is the express number v. 39. Remark the Fourth David's refusing to drink the waters of Bethlehem c. v. 15 16 17. looking upon it as too dear a draught for him but religiously pouring it forth before the Lord. N. B. 'T is a good president for Princes not to buy their pleasures with the hazarding the lives of their Subjects and for Masters not to keep their Servants from Ordinances without necessity c. Remark the Fifth The Valour of those Worthies was oft laid forth in defence of the Harvest to keep a Field of Barley and of Lentiles 1 Chron. 11.13 v. 11 12. here and if they contended thus for Provender c. should not we be Valiant for the Truth Jer. 9.3 and contend for the Faith once delivered to the Saints Jude v. 3. Remark the Last on Chap. 23. is In all this long Catalogue of David's 37 Worthies none of David's Brethren are found amongst them tho' some of them were of such a Prince-like port and of so personable a presence that even the Prophet Samuel himself was deceived in them by looking too much at their outward appearance height of stature and a goodly Countenance he judged that Eliab David's Eldest Brother was indeed the Man appointed to be the Lord 's Anointed 1 Sam. 16.6 7. whereas neither he nor any of his other six brave Brethren proved so much as to be any of the number
of three Days were expired for three Reasons The First is this very History contradicts it in saying both that the Lord repented him of the Evil ver 16. now God Repents not of any Evil already inflicted but only of that he threatens to inflict Jerem. 26.3 13. and that he stopped the destroying Angel bidding him Hold his hand ver 16. which was needless if nothing of the Sentence and of the term of Time had been Revoked for the Angel could not go beyond his Commission of three Days The Second Reason is Nor is it credible that either the Angel did not come to Jerusalem until the Three Days were expired or that David did defer his Repentance and Deprecating this Divine Displeasure from his People so long as till Three Days were directly run out The Third Reason is What Bechartus and Peter Martyr alledge that in the midst of Wrath God remembereth Mercy Hab. 3.2 And cuts short his Days of displeasure for the Elect's sake Matth. 24.22 not because God is changeable but because he recalls only what he had determined to do in case of Impenitency persisted in But if David and the People become truly Penitent upon this condition God decreed the Plague should not continue the whole Three Days The Third Part is God's putting a Period to this Pestilence Remarks upon it are First The time when this was done It was when the Destorying Angel had destroyed great Numbers in other parts of the Land and was now on the Third Day come to Jerusalem to destroy it also ver 16. Compare with this the 1 Chron. 21. where this story is much inlarged 'T is said there As the Angel did not only stretch forth his hand to destroy but was destroying with his Sword ver 15 27. Many being already Slain therein even then God Repented and stopped the Angel Where Mark 1. Even good Angels are Executioners of God's Justice and Judgments as both here and at Sodom To do Justice upon Malefactors is so noble an Act and Office as not unbeseemeth an Angel Mark 2. This Good Angel was God's Servant being at his Lord's beck and check obedient to his commands both in striking or stopping Either the Angel knew not the Number how many were to be Slain or he is bid to hold his hand as is spoken after the manner of Men. Mark 3. This Destroying Angel did not begin to Destroy at Jerusalem as Ezek. 9.6 1 Pet. 4.17 Jerem. 25.18 and 21.9.49.12 but came last to it hereupon David had good ground to say The Lord loved the Gates of Sion more than all the dwellings of Jacob Psal 87.2 Sanctius renders this Reason for the Plague not beginning at Jerusalem Because saith he the Citizens perhaps paid their Poll-Tax of an half Shekel having the Tabernacle and Priests present with them which would teach them their Duty Mark 4. God's Repenting and stopping the Angel thereupon was mutatio Rei non Dei effectus non affectus concilis non decreti c. 'T was God's purpose not to proceed but to put a Period to the punishing of the People so soon as he had brought them and their King to unfeigned Repentance the acting or neglecting whereof disposeth of all Temporal Judgments whether off or on as is expressed Jer. 18.8 10. and as is exemplified in Nineveh Jonah 3.10 otherwise God is not as Man that he can Repent Numb 23.19 1 Sam. 15.11 29. Rom. 11.29 'T is only said so because God did here what Men do when they Repent namely cease from farther punishing N. B. Here God's Repentings were kindled and he would not execute the fierceness of his Anger as Hos 11.8 9. David foresaw with an Eye of Faith that God's Compassion would not fail Lam. 3.22 and therefore chused like a loving Child to be chastized by his Father himself rather than by the hand of a Slave or Servants As all Creatures are to the great Creator Psal 119.91 David well-knew that his Heavenly Father would not Plague either him or his People according to the Demerit of their Sins but he would only correct them both in measure and mercy and that for their amendment only Mark 5. The Rabbins all grant that the term of this Pestilence was abbreviated but they cannot concurr upon what part of the Third day the Plague ceased Bochartus saith it ceased as soon as the daily Sacrifice was offered which probably was that in the Morning otherwise the Plague had proceeded to the end of that Day 'T is said ver 25. The Lord was entreated to stay the Plague no doubt but David and the Elders did most earnestly intreat it at their Morning Sacrifice c. The Second Remark is The means whereby God was pacified to put a period to any farther progress were Prayers and Sacrifices ver 17 to 25. First As to David's Prayer Mark 1. The Motive to it which was His seeing the Destroying Angel in an Humane figure with a drawn Sword in his Hand between Heaven and Earth upon which upper station he could strike the Highest Cedar as well as the lowest shrub This astonishing sight startles David expecting to be stricken by that frightful now visible striker so betakes himself to serious Prayer ver 17. Mark 2. David in his Praying for his People as a kind Shepherd for saving his Sheep offers himself to be a Sacrifice for them N. B. So was a Type of Christ that Good Shepherd John 10.11 yet was he much over-done by Christ his Antitype who did not only offer to do it but who really gave up himself an Offering for the Sins of his Sheep even when they were his Enemies and had deserved Eternal woe he himself being wholly innocent not as David saying I have sinned Mark 3. Not only David but the Elders also with him covered themselves with Sackcloth and fell upon their Faces in a deep Humiliation and in a devout Deprecation of God's Plague from the People 1 Chron. 21.16 It was undoubtedly after these solemn seekings of God's favour that God said to the Angel It is enough stay now thy Hand 1 Chron. 21.15 though the End be recorded before the Means to effect that End as is usual ver 7 17. The Third Remark is upon the Second Means David must find Sacrifices as well as Prayers ver 18 19 20 c. Wherein Mark 1. In order to Sacrificing an Altar must be erected the place where must be the Threshing Floor of Abraunah for many Reasons First Because there Abraham had his Knife held from slaying his Son Isaac as God held here the Sword of the Angel from Slaying the Inhabitants of Jerusalem Secondly It was the very place where the Temple was to be Built 2 Chron. 3.1 Thirdly And the Place or City where Isaac's Antitype our Redeemer was actually offered up whom this Altar and Sacrifice did represent N. B. Teaching that all David's Humiliations and Prayers could not appease God's Anger alone without the Sacrifice of Christ Mark 2. God sends the Prophet
Plenty so far as is necessary Prov. 3.16 1 Tim. 4.8 't is the Character of an Impious man not to call upon God Psal 14.4 Yea God promises long life to him here ver 14. upon condition of his Constancy this as the Oar turns the Boat another way c. Thus have we seen how Solomon obtained his unparallel'd Wisdom in the Gift and Habit now in the next place we have the Act and Enercise of it The occasion was when Solomon had received this transcendent Gift at Gibeon He comes home to Sion solemnly to praise God with his Burnt Offerings and Peace Offerings c. for so matchless a Mercy ver 15. Then God order'd it so Two Harlots stood before the King for Judgment ver 16. in a Controversie between them 't is supposed they had complained to inferiour Courts and the controversie could not be concluded there therefore make they their Appeal to Solomon for whom God purposely Reserved it that he might give the first Specimen and Demonstration of his profound Prudence received from the Lord in his Appearnce to him at Gibeon by his most wisely deciding this dark Case publickly before the People N. B. Behold here the most wonderful Trial of the Darkest Case and Difficultest Cause that ever was transacted before any Humane Tribunal either in Civil or in Sacred Records from ver 16 to the end of the Chapter Remarks upon this stupendous Tryal by Solomon The First is that which was previous to it ver 15. The Time when it was namely immediately after Solomon had solemniz'd his Marriage-day with his Wife which was Divine Wisdom saith Sanctius This Solomon solemnly observed as an high Festival-day by giving God his part in his Burnt Offering the Lord's Priests their part in his Peace offering and with the rest He feasted all his Subjects as Peter Martyr well marketh that accompanied him in this Solemnity at Sion this was to quicken them in thankfulness The Second Remark is the Persons that came to complain to Solomon as he sat upon his Throne the Supream Judge of Israel These are called Zonoth which some rend Hostesses or Victuallers rather than Harlots as I have noted before concerning Rahab Josh 2.1 c. for which these Reasons are rendred 1. Holy David durst not neglect that Law of God which saith There shall be no Whore of the Daughters of Israel Deut. 23.17 If Harlots were not permitted in any part of Israel much less in Jerusalem call'd the Holy City N. B. Not like to Vnholy Rome at this Day which allows of Common Stews and Brothel Houses paying a vast Revenue to the Pope ad purgandos Renes as their Phrase is to purge the Reins of their Vnmarried Priests especially in the three hot Months but cursed be that Remedy of Sin that is it self a Sin God will not have a Gain to be recompens'd with such a loss The Second Reason as neither David nor Solomon would tolerate common Harlots so neither durst any such have presented themselves before so Wise and so Just a Judge as Solomon was The Third Reason nor do common Harlots use to bring forth Children but use all the means they can to prevent their Conception or to make away their Brats if born for the better concealing their shame c. The Fourth Reason Those two Women had better Affections for their new-born Children than for the most part Harlots now have These two express here greater Care and Love than such do c. N. B. But the other Opinion that they were Harlots seems more probable 1. Seeing we hear of no Husbands they had whose proper Office it had been to contest for righting their Wives 2. They lived a solitary Life in one House like a couple of Misses maintain'd by their fornicating Gallants privately 3. Lavater addeth that they were Envious Impudent and Litigious as Harlots use to be quarrelling each with other through Emulation 't was lately the Language of a Royal Harlot to her Corrival Two of a Trade can never agree but seeing the Hebrew Word Zoneh signifies both an Hostess and an Harlot they might possibly be both the former by their publick Profession and the latter by their secret Practice as Junius and Piscator Judge and not common Whores The Third Remark is they both come before the King and the true Mother of the living Child is the Plaintiff and first States her Case complaining of a Plagiary that her Child was stolen out of her Bosom by her Co-partner but alas she had no witness to prove it yet she confidently affirms that when the other Woman had smother'd her own Child by over-laying it she steals my Babe out of my Bosom when I was fast asleep about Midnight and laies her own Dead Child in its Room c. ver 16 17 18 19 20 21. The Fourth Remark is now the other Woman comes to her turn of Answering as Defendant and peremptorily denies the Fact and puts her to produce her Witnesses for it belong'd not to her to Disprove this Matter of Difference 'T is the received Rule in Philosophy Affirmanti incumbit probatio they that Affirm must prove the Affirmative but none are obliged to prove Negatives This Advantage the Lyar and Denyer had against her that spake truly and it concern'd her the more to deny the Deed because as Sanctius saith her fear was she should be question'd for murthering her Child for either Law or Custom appointed a Punishment for those that either willingly or by carelessness destroyed their Children The Fifth Remark is when Solomon saw that she who had the Truth on her side would not be overcome by the Impudency of the Lyar and Denier ver 22. Yet was there no Evidence the Yea of the One was of no more Credit saith Peter Martyr than the Nay of the other because they were both equally Women of bad Name and Fame as reputed Harlots These Scolding Contradictions of Yea and Nay so oft repeated undoubtedly made the Matter of Controversie a blind Business to all the People in the Court who now hung in suspence and could not tell which of the two to Believe herein But wise Solomon knew what he had to do in this Dark Case when he said ver 23. here 's nothing but an equal Yea and Nay without Proof Objection Why did not Solomon in this dubious Cause either sift out the Truth by cross Interrogatories or try them with tortures c Answer Peter Martyr saith These ways of examining Persons were probably not used in those times nor do we read that such Methods are required in the Law of God and Confessions constrained by squeezing Tortures are dubious oft as false as true The Sixth Remark is Solomon to decide the Difference bids bring me a Sword ver 24. This command of the King seem'd a childish Act at first to the People that stood by saith Sanctius out of Josephus and Peter Martyr addeth likely some laughed within themselves saying secretly Will the King
and Grotius Jeroboam's Golden Calf there had turned Beth-el the House of God into Beth-aven Hos 10.5 an House of Wickedness as their Names Hebr. do signifie The filthy Dust of those Mawmets must not be allowed to lie near Jerusalem saith Lavater but it was carried about eight Miles from thence to disgrace that Idolatrous City Bethel Mark 2. This zealous King Deposed the Idolatrous Priests c. ver 5. call'd Chemarims Hebr. not only because they wore black Cloaths as the word signifies after a Superstitious fashion which is the concurrent opinion of Junius Piscator Mercerus Munsterus Montanus Pagnin c. but also because they were Tinged Singed and burnt black inwardly with an Hell-fire-fervency for a false Religion saith Avenarius c. N. B. The Prophet Hosea speaks of those Priests Hebr. Chemarims Hos 10.5 affecting a black Habit Sanctimoniae Ergô for Sanctimony's sake And the Prophet Zephany saith in Josiah's Day that God will cut off the Name of the Chemarims Zeph. 1.4 namely Baal's Chimney Chaplains black Sooty Fellows like those Greasie Mass-Priests or Abby-Lubbers in the Romish Church Elias in Tisbi saith these Atratei Black-coats were shut up in Cloysters and the Jewish Rabbins call the Monks Chemarims Many Men addicted to Idolatry entertained those Chemarims in Josiah's time Jer. 3.6 Zeph. 1.1 4. as too many do Harbour Mass-Priests in our Times those Josiah cut off according to Zephany's Prophecy c. Mark 3. Josiah Destroyed the Idolatrous Grove ver 6. either that Grove which was planted nigh the Temple as Flaccherus supposeth wherein the Image of Baal was Worshipped after the manner of the Gentiles who Worshipped Priapus in Groves after which they committed all lascivious Beastiality in promiscuous Copulations therefore the Lord forbade by his Law the Planting of any such Groves Deut. 16.21 because it was the practice of Idolaters 1 Kings 15.13 and might be the occasion of reviving that abominable Idolatry Or rather this was a Representation of that Grove or the Image of it because 't is said He brought out the Grove from the House of the Lord ver 6. and we read of an Image with a Carved Grove about it 2 Kings 21.7 that not God in the Temple but the Devil in the Grove might be Worshipped saith Sanctius And this Image he stamp'd small to Powder at the Brook Kidron and the Powder thereof he poured upon the Groves of that Rascality which had been set on Mischief as Exod. 32.22 23. and which had Worship'd the Groves 2 Chron. 34.4 And this Bastardly Brood so call'd was probably Buried in this infamous place as a brand of Ignominy put upon them saith Tirinus All this was done saith Junius in detestation of Idolatry and for Caution to them that still lived Mark 4. Josiah extirpated the cursed Cells or Seats of the Sodomites ver 7. those abominable Brothel-Houses in which Males prostitute their Bodies to Males which was both a Punishment of Idolatry Rom. 1.23 24 27. and a part of their Idol-worship practised at the Instigation of that impure and diabolical Spirit worship'd in the Idol saith Lavater from 1 Kings 15.12 13. and wickedness was so far spread in this Time saith Sanctius that those heinous Sodomites drove a gainful Trade even in the Temple it self and their spiritual Pollution involved them into such carnal Lusts as the very Women were not ashamed say Sanctius and Osiander to Weave Curtains for hiding the Mens shameless Sodomy acted even by the Priests of the Groves c. Remark the Second Josiah's Reformation after the Temple in City and Countrey Mark 1. He demolish'd all the High Places from the North to the South Coast of the Countrey without Partiality ver 8. neither sparing those Priests of Aaron's Line though they sacrificed not to Idols saith Menochius but to the true God yet because they did it in a forbidden Place Deut. 12.11 therefore he deposed them from their Offices Nor did he spare the Rich more than the Poor saith Junius for when he had polluted all the high Places in other Cities to take away their supposed Sanctity saith Grotius he found an High Place erected by Joshun the Governour of the City at the very Gate after the manner of the Pagans who placed their Tutelar or guardian-Gods at the Gates of their Cities This Joshua in Josiah's Day was a great Man and had a good Name Heb but was a bad Man and of a superstitious Nature He had complied with the Iniquity of former times in setting up an high Place at the Gate nigh his Palace yet Josiah's Zeal spar'd it not Mark 2. Josiah's candour toward those Priests descended from Aaron ver 9. for though they had not kept the charge of the Lord but had foully apostatized in sacrificing to God in forbidden Places either for fear or for favour becoming Time servers and comporting with Idolatrous Kings and therefore must bear their Iniquity namely they and their Posterity must be degraded from their Priestly Functions as a Punishment thereof saith Menochius N.B. Other faults saith Grotius in the Priests were pardoned if they proved Penitent he did not remove them from their Sacerdotal Offices but for Idolatry and Worshipping God in unlawful Places did Degrade them yet because these were 1. Levites of Aaron's Race though lapsed and hurried down the stream of Temptation in former Times And 2. They were Penitents falling by Infirmity but rising again by Repentance Poena or Punishment and Penitency are near of kin being Words of the same Derivation therefore for the Honour of the Priesthood this Pious King takes care of their maintenance when laid aside from the Service of God's Altar as Neh. 13.28 Such an one was that temporizing Priest Nehemiah chased from him But a fuller Example hereof is in Ezek. 44.10 11 12 13 14. they yet were to live out of that allowance for the Priest ver 29 30. Lev. 2.4 5 10 11. and 24.5 6 c. Junius well observeth that their spiritual Blemish put them into the very same State which corporal Blemishes brought them into Lev. 21.17 18. Mark 3. Josiah defiled Topheth ver 10. a pleasant Valley near Jerusalem wherein Idolatrous Kings had cruelly tortur'd and tormented their own Children by burning them to Molech Chap. 16.3 Jer. 7.31 call'd Topheth saith Junius from Toph a Drum which was there beaten lest the Father should hear the most horrible howlings of his Child burning in the Fire N.B. From this abominable abuse of this Valley of Hinnom Tophet was taken for Hell Isa 30.33 which in Matth. 5.22 is call'd Gehenna from this Valley of Hinnom representing that place of Torment without End and past Imagination This fruitful Valley zealous Josiah defiled by Dung and dead Mens Bones c. saith Lavater to prevent the like abuses for ever Mark 4. He likewise took away the Horses of the Sun c. ver 11. which were either 1. Carved Horses to which were adjoined a carved Chariot with the Picture of the Sun according
to keep it ever-burning upon God's Altar Lev. 6.12 13. besides there was Fire in other Places for Pots to boil with 1 Sam. 2.15 2 Chron. 35.13 c. so much Wood was used as also for Burning of Sacrifices but the common Store of the Temple now failing they bind themselves to provide it in their Courses that God's Service might by no means be neglected N. B. As they took great Care for fuel to nourish God's Fire here that it might not be put out So no less ought we to do to feed our Faith Love and Zeal which Solomon calls the flame of God Cant. 8.6 Waters must not quench it Cant. 8.7 10. nor must Ashes cover it 2 Tim. 1.6 we may not wi●h-draw the fewel of God's Ordinances or pour on the puddle-water of gross-sins but feed it as well as the Gentiles did the Vestal Fire which was never to dye out for want of fresh fuel Mark 6. The Sixth Particular Branch of the Covenant was for paying their first Fruits ver 35 36 37. that the Priests rights might be firmly assured and they not be defrauded of any part thereof all the Particulars of the first Fruits are distinctly described here that none might pretend Ignorance in withholding the Priests-due which at this Time the People were prone to Practise either through Poverty or a Penurious or a Prophane Disposition But the first-born of their Sons and of their Cattel both great and small if unclean might be redeemed Exod. 13.2 13. yea the first Fruits of their Dough that the Priest might have a Cake as oft as they Baked N. B. Thus God required the firstlings of all to shew how he highly values the kindness of our Youth Jer. 2.1 2. Mark 7. The Seventh Branch they bound themselves unto by this Covenant was the Payment of Tythes ver 37 38 39. which the Law gave the Levites for their maintenance Numb 18.24 28. and they paid the Tenth of their Tenths to the Priests all this was done by the Inspection of the High-Priest call'd here by way of Eminency the Son of Aaron saith Grotius and though they paid Tribute at this Time to the King of Persia N. B. Yet they thus solemnly bind themselves by Oath that they would not defraud the Lord of his Part but render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to God the things that are Gods Matth. 22.21 and God's part was laid up in God's House which they promis'd to frequent themselves and to see that none of his Servants should forsake it for want of maintenance which yet they did out of want Chap. 13.10 Nehemiah CHAP. XI THIS Chapter is a Sacred Narrative which seemeth to divide it self into two formal Parts the First is An Account of those Persons that dwelt in the City And the Second is Of those also that dwelt in the Countrey Remarks upon the first Part are First The City is said to be large and great but the People were few that dwelt therein Chap. 7.4 therefore was it Nehemiah's double Diligence when he had once repaired it in all its Parts then his Care was to Repeople it also In Order hereunto he Orders the Rulers especially those that made up the great Council or Sanhedrim to dwell in Jerusalem This they could not well but willingly embrace saith Sanctius because 1. This was the Royal Seat and the most beautiful City and therefore the most suitable Place for the Nobles as is usual in all Nations to take up their Residences there And 2. These were Voluntiers likewise in obeying this Order that this Capital City might be better defended by their Presence and Influence whereby saith Wolphius they declared themselves brave Patriots and grateful Citizens for the Publick Good Remark the Second This Holy City as 't is call'd here ver 2. and many other Places of Scripture because the Temple stood in it with all its Holy Ordinances c. was the principal But or Mark that all the Jews Enemies chiefly shot at therefore so few of either the Princes or People durst make it their free Choice to dwell there both because of the Danger they were mostly expos'd to in that Place and because at present it was rather Chargeable than Beneficial to its Inhabitants in Repairing and Watching whereas in the Countrey they could live at more Ease Plenty and Safety therefore were there so few that offered themselves willingly to secure this so much envied City save only such as were truly publick-spirited and those were they whom the People blessed God for ver 2. that they had such Zeal for the common Cause given them and pray'd God to bless them with Safety and Success Remark the Third Because they that offer'd themselves voluntarily to dwell at Jerusalem were too few to replenish and defend that large and fair City then it was ordered say Grotius and Menochius that every Tenth Man out of the rest of the People should dwell there ver 1. and that none might rationally repine at this Order and to prevent all Murmuring the matter was manag'd by casting Lots the Dispose whereof is wholly from the Lord Prov. 16.33 that so it might appear God himself would have such and such to dwell at Jerusalem as the Apostles knew the Mind of God by the same Means Acts 1.24 26. This Oracle of God answer'd all their Doubts As 1. Of their Desires of enjoying the Profit and Pleasure of the Countrey And 2. Of their Fears to live in the City lest it should be Besieged c. then Conquered and so they Captivated again this made many loath to Adventure there to inhabite save only those few whose Faith was above their Fear and whom God enabled to Roll themselves upon his precious Promise I will be a Wall of Fire round about Jerusalem Zech. 2.5 N. B. This one of Ten or Hebr. Teshang Haiadoth nine Hands saith Montanus or Parts that were left by Lot to live in the Countrey when only one part was chosen by God to dwell in this Earthly Jerusalem is an excellent shadow and figure of the Paucity or fewness of those whom the Lord chuseth to inhabit the Heavenly Jerusalem according to Isa 6.13 Jer. 3.14 c. Many are called but few chosen Matth. 7.13 and 20.16 and 22.14 Remark the Fourth The Description of those that were chosen to reside in the City 1. Those of Judah's Tribe from ver 4 to ver 7. yea and of the Children of Ephraim and of Manasseh too 1 Chron. 9.3 where the same is set down as here but the number is greater because here only those are reckoned who inhabited Jerusalem by Lot but there the Voluntiers also as Masius well observes out of Junius and therefore the Name Israel is used ver 3. to intimate saith Menochius out of Lyra that such of the Ten Tribes as for Religion's sake were moved to leave their own Tribes and to join themselves with the Men of Judah as many did 2 Chron. 11.16 and 30.11 c. And
it must be meant for David himself had begged his Bread twice once at Nob. 1 Sam. 21.3 and again of Nabal 1 Sam. 25.5 8. Yet God forsook him not And the Lord gives this good Security to the very Daughters of Moab Let thy Widows trust in me and leave thy Fatherless Children with me I will preserve them alive Jer. 49.11 Assuredly God hath much more kindness for the Daughters of Sion c. N. B. Note Well 3. Consider how all Christs Sheep thrive best upon short Commons Gods Daniels likes well and looks fair and fat when fed only with pulse and water Dan. 1.12 15. Man lives not by Bread alone c. Mat. 4.4 the Lords People do Travel safelyer through the Valley of Bacah which signifies Tears then when they pitch their Tents in the plains of Sodom Righteous Lot made but an unrighteous Choice when he chused to Sojourn in that well-watered Country Gen. 13.10 11 13. with Gen. 19.4 c. It is much better to be pickled and so preserved in Brime than to rot in Honey Prosperity of Fools doth destroy them saith Solomon Prov. 1.32 It often proves too strong Wine for weak Brains and doth Intoxicate c. Davids Heart and Harp too was kept in better Tune for God and Godliness when he washed his Couch with Tears Ps 66. than when he with Job chap. 29.6 did wash his steps with Butter if it may be said that Adversity hath kill'd its Thousands with Saul sure I am that Prosperity hath kill'd its Ten Thousands with David 2. Let us look upon this Lazarus for his Leprosie as well as Poverty he was full of Sores ver 20. Running Ulcers were upon him this made him seemingly still more Miserable yet the Glutton's Dogs did Commiserate him more than their dogged Master did They licked his Wounds ver 21. Dogs naturally loves to lick blood thus 't is said that Dogs licked the Blood of those Peerless pair of sinners to wit the blood of Ahab and of Jezabell Yet this Miserable Man who was mocked by Men and lick'd by Dogs in his Life came to be Honoured by Angels at his Death therefore 't is not Righteous Judgment to Judge of any Mortal by outward Appearance it is said of one of the same Name with this Larazus to wit the Brother of Mary and Martha John 11.3 The two Sisters send this word to Christ Behold be whom thou Lovest is sick which shews Bodily sickness may consist with Christs Love and so may Poverty and Leprosie c. N. B. Note well The Lepers under the Law were not sent to the Physician but to the Priest Levit. 13.2 3 5 6 c. Hence our Lord to Confute the Jews Cavill that he opposed the Law bad the Leper go shew thy self to the Priest Matth. 8.4 to signifie that the Priest under the Law was a Type of Christ who is a Priest for ever Hebr. 7.3.17 Who is Jehovah the Physician Exod. 15.26 The Sun of Righteousness with Healing in his Wings Mal. 4.2 And who Healeth all our Diseases Ps 103.3 Unto whom we all that have the fretting Leprosie of sin ought to come for Cure It may not be said here why did not Christ Cure this Leper as he did many other Lepers for this Story of Leprous Lazarus was of one long before christs coming in the flesh Augustine and Prudentius think him to be that Eleazer who was the Faithful Servant of Abraham Gen. 24.2 3. c. And who for his Faithfulness now resteth in the Bosom of Faithful Abraham as 't is said of this Man ver 22. N. B. Note well This poor Lepar lay at the Rich Man's Gate and begged not for whole Loaves but only for such Crumbs as fall from this Gluttons full Table for his Dogs to Eat up under the Table ver 21. This was the Offall only and due to the Dogs Matth. 15.27 Yet would he not spare this Dogs part to this Beggar but these very Dogs having that part which he begg'd came forth and were kinder than their dogged Master and licked his Ulcerous Sores which sheweth that Man in the fallen Estate is not only like Brute Beasts that Perisheth Ps 49.12 20. But is become worse and fallen below them in many Moral Duties The Kine though they had Calves at Home took the straight way to Bethshemech signifying Hebr. the House of the Sun not turning aside to the right Hand or to the left 1 Sam. 6.7 12. Whereas Men turn aside to crooked Pathes c. Ps 125.5 Not minding the straight way toward the House of the Sun of Righteousness whereas Solomon saith Let thine Eyes look right on and thine Eye-lids look straight before thee c. Turn no● to the right Hand nor to the left c. Prov. 4.25 26 27. Thus Balaams Ass proved Wiser than his Master who became the worst Ass of the two and had been slain had he not been saved by the Wisdom of his Ass Numb 22. ver 23 25 27 to 34. And thus God often sends Man to the School of Inferior Animals for his Learning Instruction from them as go to the Ant thou Sluggard c. Prov. 6.6 and 30.25 yea go to the Stork to the Turtle to the Crane and to the Swallow who all know the Appointed time of their Coming which Men know not c. Jer. 8.7 Moreover God complaineth that the Oxe knoweth his owner and the Ass his Masters Crib but Israel doth not know my People doth not consider a sinfull Nation a Seed of Evil doeos they are gone away backward Isa 1.3 4. N. B. Note well This Godly Beggar was in League and at Peace with those Brute Beasts the Gluttons Dogs according to the promise thou shalt be in League c. with the Beasts c. Job 5.23 These Dogs do not fall upon this Beggar to Tear him as is the manner of many Dogs c. but they rather fawn upon him quite contrary to their dogged Disposition which was here Chained up and Restrained as is expressed concerning dogged Persecutors Ps 76.10 And they did all the kindness they could do for him in cooling the burning heat of his Ulcers by licking them with then Tongues 'T is Remarkable while the Image of God did shine forth in the first Adam that he had Dominion over all Beasts Lions Dogs c. Gen. 1.28 But by his fall he lost this Dominion both for himself and for all his Posterity yet so far as this lost Image is renewed and restored by the second Adam to his Redeemed this Dominion is in part restored also Hence are we told by Antient Martyrologists that in the Ten Primitive Persecutions neither the Dogs nor the Lyons dired to Tear those Christians when the Law then was Christianos ad Leones that were cast forth to be Torn by them untill their Persecutors did cover them with the skins of Beasts that they might mistake them to be but Beasts like themselves The Third Difference betwixt these two Persons is in
may be called a Reign only 95. days N.B. Nor did Vitellius fare better by his beastly bloody practices for before the year went about the rumor of Vespasian's stirring in Aegypt against him made his Rabble of Roaring Ruffians like himself soon to forsake him the Citizens almost undone by his Riotous excesses c. seiz'd upon him dragg'd him through the street cast all kind of filth at him wounded him with weapons and at last threw him off the stairs into Tyber as he had barbarously done to the Brother of Vespasian who succeeded this wretch and who with his Son Titus his successor exercised more moderation towards Christians But about 82 years after Christ Domitian Titus's Brother and one of a cursed carriage from his Cradle steps up and about the year 90. sets on foot that second grand persecution as Nero had done the first against the Christians wherein this Apostle was not devoured by that bloody Beast but only banished into Pathmos where he lay five years a prisoner till Nerva who succeeded this Tyrant Domitian when he was slain by his own Servants after he had Reigned about 6. or 7. years and who released John and many more and countermanded that cruel persecution of Christians for which this Emperor Nerva was stiled a Parent and Patriot as well as a Prince of his Empire And 't is said that John thus marvelously both preserved and released by the power and providence of God returned to Ephesus again and dyed there about three years after in the year 98. but for five years before his release himself tells us that he was a companion of the Christians in Tribulation Rev. 1.9 All which pretious time God would not have so good a man to lose but to Improve and therefore falls he into a Divine Rapture upon the Christian Sabbath call'd the Lord's day in Pathmos Rev. 1.9 10. wherein he received the Revelation from Christ which is a prophecy representing the affairs of the Church of God concerning both her dangers and her deliverances from the Apostles times to the last coming of Christ N.B. This prophecy John was commanded to write and to deposit it in the hands of these seven Churches of Asia which then were the most famous in that part of the world tho' miserably enough corrupted as is above mentioned 'T is not a small matter that unchurches a true Church of Christ and those seven golden Candlesticks were to Communicate the light of this Divine Prophecy to other Churches with the promise of a blessing upon those that read or heard it so as to make a believing use of it Rev. 1.3 and 22.7 such pretious treasure as Christ hands out to his Church in it may not be slighted The manifestation of those Divine Mysteries by our Mediator to this Apostle makes the Family of Faith to be of God's Court and Council Great is the comfort to know God's secrets Psalms 25.14 1 Cor. 2.16 Gal. 6.10 c. God will not hide from Abraham Gen. 18.17 N.B. I have already given a large Analytical account of this whole book of the Revelation in my Scripture Prophecy which is the latter part of my Church History to which I refer the Reader Adding here only that it contains three Kingdoms 1. The Pagan which ended at Constantine the Great about 325 years after Christ 2. The Pa-pagan Kingdom both being the Kingdoms of the Dragon the one litteral and the other mystical And 3. The Prince of Peace his Kingdom or the Kingdom of the Lamb of God for the Lamb will have his Kingdom as well as both the Dragons He will divide the spoil with the strong Isa 53.12 being the stronger man than the strong Pagan Prince or the strong Pa-pagan Pope yea or the strong Dragon or Devil himself Luke 11.21 and 22. and when Christ takes to himself his great power to Reign c. Rev. 11 15 17. then that Kingdom of the Stone shall not only become the Kingdom of the Mountain to fill the whole earth Dan. 2.35 45. N.B. a little stone from small beginnings growing into a great mountain 1 Cor. 15.24 filling the whole world but also it shall be a persevering Kingdom and perpetual not like the other foregoing Kingdoms which had their certain bounds and periods appointed them beyond which they could not pass only days are allowed for those Kings but Christ's Kingdom shall never have an end of days weeks months or years Dan. 2.44 and 7.9 12 14 18 27. N.B. And the Celestial Beings glorified Saints and glorious Angels shall bless the Lord for exerting his power and for recovering the Kingdom of Christ out of the hands of Antichrist and setting his King upon his holy hill of Zion Psa 2.6 where he shall Reign for ever and ever Reve. 11.15 17. and 12.10 singing Halelujahs because the Lord God Omnipotent Reigneth Revel 19.6 and the Kingdom of this Prince of Peace as Christ is called Isa 9.6 shall be a peaceable as well as a perpetual Kingdom for then all his foes shall be made his foot-stool Rev. 11.18 and 16.17 and 19.15 16 19 21. N.B. And the thousand years mentioned Revel 20.2 3. cannot bear a lower construction than this at the least that they denote statum tranquillum a serene calm and sublimely peaceable time of long continuance for the Church of Christ to enjoy her free liberty for worshiping God in spirit and truth without any molestation or temptations to idolatry then no impositions and penalties for non-conformity as formerly she hath had either from Pagans Jews Turk or Pope N.B. And this must be before the day of Judgment for after this large space of time which the Lamb grants to his Bride upon her marriage with him at the Jews conversion Rom 11.15 Rev. 19.7 of a long feasting with him in a peaceable and plentiful injoyment of all Gospel ordinances call'd the marriage-supper Matth. 22.2 and 25.10 Satan is let loose again after his long restraint and bestirs himself in all quarters of the world to stir up his Vassals for making one more attempt to ruine the Lamb's Bride Rev. 20.7 8 9. where that mixt multitude of the Devils rude rabble gathered from all parts of the earth all which is but the Devils round walk Job 1.7 is compared to Ezekiel's Gog and Magog for the like number design and ending in their own destruction Ezek. 38.4 6 18. to 23. then follows the vision of the day of Judgment c. Rev. 20.10 11 c. But the grand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 postulatum or inquiry is at what period of time will Christ begin this his third peaceable Kingdom The Answer in short is this 1. It is a special favour of God to his children that he hath made so great a discovery of such Divine Secrets and Mysteries both by Daniel and by John concerning the wonderful over-ruling providence of God in Governing the world and his Church in the world according to his own pleasure Should we know no more but
and having Salvation c Zech. 9.9 This is that full and strutting Breast of consolation which all the Children of the Church are commanded to suck and be satisfied to milk out and be delighted with the abundance of her glory Isa 66. ver 11. to wit when her King comes in his glory to comfort her this choice Cordial the Prophet Zechariah prepared for the Church's comfort in her Captivity about 500 years before Christ's coming in the flesh and it was so famous a Prophetick promise that when it became a performance at the coming of Christ we find this same Prophecy quoted by all the four Evangelists as Mat. 21.5 7 9. and Mar. 11.2 10. and Luk. 19. ver 30 38. and Joh. 12.13 14 15 16. N.B. But long before this Prophet Zechariah we find that Evangelical Prpohet Isaiah gives us the substance of this very Prophecy in his day saying to the same purpose what shall one then answer the Ambassadors or Messengers of the Nations that the Lord hath founded Sion and the poor of his people shall trust in it Isa 14.32 see Psa 87. ver 1 2 3 4 5. and 102.16 where David long before Isaiah most highly extolls Sion's foundation and its superstructure also when the Lord shall appear in his glory but this Prophetical Evangelist Isaiah comes yet more near to this Prophecy of Zechariah saying Behold the Lord hath proclaimed unto the end of the world as the best Tidings that can be heard in the world say ye to the Daughter of Zion behold thy Salvation cometh behold his Reward is with him and his work before him Isa 62. verse 11. Note hence 1st Here are three Beholds to give the greater Lustre upon the the matter there mentioned 2ly Zions King and Salvation are Synonima's signifying one and the same for Zechariah's King cometh is Isaiah's Salvation cometh and thus old Simeon call'd Christ his Salvation Luk. 2.30 3ly When Zion's King cometh then Zion shall be called a City sought out and not forsaken Isa 62.12 This is the sum and substance of all the best news upon the earth we may draw water with joy out of this well of Salvation Isa 12.3 A Mandamus from Zion's King can save Zion at her lowest State Ps 44.4 and 74 12 and 48.2 N.B. This Prophetick promise of Christ's coming with Salvation unto Zion doth afford twelve comfortable considerations The First Cordial is If the Tidings of Christ's first coming unto his Church tho' then he came only in the form of a Servant and in his State of Humiliation yet the Promise thereof was such good news to Zion and so grand a ground of her greatest joy as both those Prophets Isa 62.11 and Zech. 9.9 do testifie Then how much more joyful tidings must needs be Christ's second coming in his State of Exaltation unto his Church when he shall come in his Kingdom and in the Clouds of Heaven with Power and great Glory Mat. 24.30 The second Cordial is If the Ante nati or those born before Christ namely the Old Testament Saints could be content to wait the full term of four Thousand years from the first Time that Christ was Promised in the seed of the Woman Gen. 3.15 as a Congruous Remedy to man's Cursed Malady by his first foul fall before that promise was performed at the Birth of Christ Then why cannot the Post nati or such as are born after Christ namely the New Testament Saints be content to wait until the term of only two Thousand years more be run quite out before his second coming in Glory which is but half the time that the Patriarks and Prophets waited for his first coming as a● Servant only and not as a Lord and King in his Grandeur of Majesty T' is well known that the time since the Birth of Christ amounts not yet to Seventeen Hundred years so there is yet Three Hundred years and more to make up the numbers of two Thousand which is but the one half of the afore-said 4000 in the Old Testament times yet our Lord comforts us with saying For the Elects sake these days shall be shortned Mat. 24.22 and the world may not last thus Six Thousand years as the Rabbins say only from this ground as the Creation of the world lasted six days so its continuation shall be Six Thousand years because 't is said a Thousand years are but as one day with God c. Now what a shame it is that we of the new Testament times should be so short spirited as to be so soon weary of waiting for our Lord 's coming especially considering how we lay under the blessed influence both of Christ's Birth Life and Death yea and of his Resurrection Ascension and Intercession c. None of which were priviledges of Old Testament times yet they waited for the consolation of Israel Luke 2.25 we should adjure our selves not to awake our love till he please Can. 2.7 3.5 The third Cordial is Tho' there be a time for our Lord 's going from his Zion to wit when his Glory departs from her as it did gradualy from his S●●ctuary Ezek. 10.18 and 11.23 Because Zion's sins do sometime seperate betwixt her Lord and her Isa 59.2 then is it that the spouse complains My beloved had with drawn himself Cant. 5.6 This is the time of Zion's trouble but she shall be saved out of it Jer. 30.7 because there is a time of Zion's Kings returning to her again wherein he saith to her I am returned with my mercies to Jerusalem and I will yet comfort Zion Zech. 1.16.17 Tho' Zion be sad when her King goeth from her yet is she commanded here to rejoice greatly for behold her King cometh unto her Zech. 9.9 Thus we are told how Christ did depart from his Disciples this made them melancholly therefore 't is added for their comfort that in like manner he will return to them again Acts 1.9 11. To the same effect Christ had told them before his death Saying Let not your hearts be sad if I go from you 't is to prepare a place for you and I will come again to you and receive you to my self that where I am there ye may be also John 14.1 2 3. And he adds I will not leave you comfortless or Gr. Orphans for I will come to you again verse 18. and 28. yea for their greater comfort he tells them his absence from them was both expedient and should be only for a little while and then they should see him again John 16.7 16. which proving a problem or a dark saying to the Disciples our Lord explains it verse 17 18 19 20. As it was but a little time indeed betwixt his Death and his Resurrection c. So it must be but a little time betwixt us living in this last age of the world and our Lord 's returning to us though he tarry his appointed time yet are we assured he will surely come and will not tarry therefore must
we wait for him Hab. 2.3 the Lord is not slack concerning his coming 2 Pet. 3.9 we must be looking for his return Isa 8.17 so that when he returneth we may be able to cry with comfort This is our Lord we have waited for him we will rejoyce in his Salvation Isaiah 25.8 9. The fourth comfortable consideration is Though during this distance of time betwixt Sion's King's departing from her and his returning to her again be the time of Zion's trouble and travel The Church Militant here upon Earth is compared to a Travailing Woman tho' pangs take hold of her and she is in pain labouring to bring forth Mic. 4.8 9 10. yet this traveling-pain these labouring pangs do not last long she is at length delivered to her great satisfaction and comfort This same allusion our Lord himself maketh that the time of his Absenting himself from his Church would be her Traveling time she should suffer the pangs and pains of a Travailing woman and she should have sorrow because her hour is come yet so soon as she is delivered of a Man-Child she then remembers no more her fore-going anguish but all her former sorrow is swallowed up with present joy because God hath enabled her to bring forth a man-child into the world John 16.20 21 22. And thus the Woman Christ's Church is said to bring forth a Man-child which was caught up into Heaven for its security from the Dragon Rev. 12.5 Thus likewise we are told when Christ comes to be formed in the hearts of true penitents by such godly Ministers as Travel in birth for their Conversion as blessed Paul did Gal. 4.19 then there is joy in Heaven over one sinner that repenteth Luke 15. verse 6 10 23 and 32. Now assuredly the Church of Christ shall not alway go with her great Belly nor shall she long complain as Hezekiah did in his Day that the Child of Reformation is brought to the Birth and there is no strength to bring forth Isa 37.3 The Lord will hasten her deliverance in his own due and appointed time Isa 60.20 and Dan. 8.19 He will work wonderful works which we never looked for Isa 64.3 Who hath heard or seen such a thing that before Zion travelled she brought forth before her pain came she was delivered of a Man-child a Nation is born in one day so soon as Zion travelled she brought forth her Childeren Shall I bring to the Birth and not cause to bring forth saith the Lord c. Isa 66.6 7 8 9. As 't is the voice of the. Lord that maketh the Hinds those girt Creatures to Calve Psa 29.9 and Job 39. ver 1 2 3 4. So and much more than so 't is the Voice of the Lord from his Temple that openeth the Church's Womb and causeth her to bring forth her sorrows with Joy and the same Voice from the Temple calleth upon all that love her to rejoice for joy with her and to suck the Breasts of Consolation unto satisfaction and to milk out so as to be Delighted with the Abundance of her Glory Isaiah 66 610 11 12 c. The fifth Cordial is Tho' there be four famous Joys that are temporal and Transitory here upon Earth and all Recorded in Scripture namely 1st The Joy of Harvest And 2dly The Joy of Victory both these be named in Isa 9.3 as very great earthly joys for 't is well known what strange transporting Joys are practiced by Country-men at the last Load of Corn led out of the Field into the Barn to which we add the shearing of Sheep which is called a good day c. 1 Sam. 25.8.36 And 't is well known what strange Triumphing Joys are made by the Conquering Soldiers when they run to divide the Rich Spoils of their Conquered Enemies 3dly There is the Joy of marriage mentioned in Cant. 3.11 Where the day of Solomon's Espousals is call'd the day of the gladness of his heart And 't is no less to other meaner men unto whom it cannot but be matter of Joy When man at his Marryng a Woman doth verily find again his Lost Rib that was taken out of his side Gen. 2. v. 21 22. Therefore marriage is near in sound to a merry age 4thly There is the Joy that succeeds this Joy of Marriage namely the Joy of a Man-child born into the World as is afore-mentioned this is likewise matter of great Joy because thereby Names Posterities Families and Generations are upheld in the World throughout all Counteries over the face of the Earth and without which the World would soon come to an end c. Yet this Joy of the Church bringing forth the Man-child of Reformation is a Joy that far transcends all the other four former Joys not only as it is 1. A Spiritual and Heavenly Joy wherein it exceeds all Joys that are only Carnal and Earthly which strangers do not intermeddle with Pro. 14.10 But also 2. Because It is an everlasting Joy Isa 35.10 61.7 65.17 18 19. Thus our Lord tells his Disciples their Joy at this Man-child's Birth upon his return will be joy which no man taketh away from them Joh. 16. v. 21 22 'T is call'd a day of Refreshing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Refrigerij a cooling day after hot persecutions Acts 3.19 yea And 3. It s a most extensive happiness as it is a day of Restitution of all ●hings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verse 21. as the ground of this Joy is greatest so 't is a joy that lasts longest Moreover 't is said to the faithful Servant Enter thou into the Joy of thy Lord. Matth. 25.21 and again verse 23. Intimating this Joy is too great to enter into us but we must enter into it and when it is once entered into we must enjoy that Joy fore ever The sixth comfortable Consideration is To behold Christ coming in his Kingdom with power and great glory Matth. 24.30 to save Zion from her Enemies Spiritual as well as Temporal and to make all her Foes to become her Foot-stool Psal 110.1 Matth. 22.44 Mark 12.36 Luke 20.42 Acts 2.35 1 Cor. 15.24 25 26. Heb. 1● 13 and 10.13 This must needs be a most joyful sight thus often Recorded in Scripture and infinitely transcending those three famous sights which Father Augustin so earnestly wished to see namely Romam in store Paulum in Ore et Christum in Carne that is Old Rome in her Antient splendor blessed Paul preaching with his Charms of Eloquence and our most blessed Redeemer in his humane nature walking about and doing good as Acts 10.38 We are told how the Tulep call'd a Lilly doth out-shine Solomon in all his glory Matth. 6.28 29. How much more glorious will the sight of Christ be in his State of Exaltation who was greater than Solomon in his State of Humiliation Matth. 12.42 An exalted Christ is a rare sight so excellent as only to be seen of Angels 1 Tim. 3.16 yet it is said that some men shall not taste