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A86936 A brief exposition on the XII. smal prophets the first volume containing an exposition on the prophecies of Hosea, Joel, & Amos. By George Hutcheson, minister at Edenburgh. Hutcheson, George, 1615-1674. 1654 (1654) Wing H3823; Thomason E1453_1; ESTC R202497 435,098 550

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be understood of the Jewes land which these enemies invaded and so it holds out that cruelty is odious when men exercise it upon these who have given them no provocation as they did on Judah when they were staying at home and not troubling them 5. Albeit the Church do oftentimes seem to be furthest behinde of any society for outward prosperity yet the time will come when she shall see her own mercy in the misery of others and shall be in good condition when they are gone for in opposition to what shall come on Egypt and Edom it is added But Judah shall dwell for ever c. See Isa 27.7 Exod. 14.30 31. 6. The Lord will perpetuate a Church of Israel after their conversion and restitution till the end of time for it is his expresse promise Judah shall dwell for ever and Jerusalem from generation to generation Ver. 21. For I will clense the blood that I have not clensed for the LORD dwelleth in Zion All these promises and particularly that of perpetuating the Church of Israel are confirmed by a new promise wherein the Lord undertakes to purge her by Justification and Sanctification from the pollution wherein she had layen so long and that he will do this because he dwells or that so he may dwell among them by his Word and Spirit with no lesse blessing then of old Whence learn 1. Sin when it is rightly looked upon will be found a very vile and loathsome thing and they will so judge of it whom God is about to deliver from it Therefore is not only the bloody crimes but all the iniquity of these whom he is about to purge called their blood as Ezek. 16.6 2. There can be no assurance of obtaining other favour till this pollution be done away Therefore this promise cometh in as a confirmation of the former and making way for them For I will clense their blood 3. There can be no purging of sin to fit us for other mercies till God interpose in it and till he apply the merit and efficacy of the death of Christ to take away the guilt and pollution thereof and this he will do to his own he will send this mercy to fit and prepare them for moe I will clense their blood saith he The endeavours of such as are most convinced of sin will not availe without this and till they imploy him for this end 4. The Lords former rejecting of a people and giving them up to walk in their own wayes will not hinder his respecting them and purging their sin in a time of love For albeit Israel have now for many ages not been clensed yet saith he I will clense their blood that I have not clensed 5. As it is the Lords presence in favour with a people and not their merit that assures them of his purging their sin for this is done for the Lord dwelleth in Zion So his clensing of a people from sin doth assure them more and more that he will abide with them for so will the words also read I will clense c. and the Lord or so shall the Lord dwell in Zion AMOS The Argument This Prophet was raised up by God and sent from Judah to preach unto Jsrael much about the same time with Hosea who in executing of his Commission after he hath threatned some Nations about for their sins and spoken against Judah also he falls expresly upon Jsrael and chargeth upon them and sometimes upon Judah with them the many sins of idolatry oppression incorrigiblenesse wantonnesse and the like for which he threatneth that God would destroy them to chap. 7. After which by divers types and representations he confirmeth that this sentence of their destruction was irrevocable threatning the false Priest at Bethel who opposed him in his ministery And then closeth the Prophecy with some promises relating to the times of the Gospel which are sub-joyned for the comfort of the godly who should live in these sad and calamitous times that were ensuing CHAP. I. IN this Chapter after the inscription of the Prophecy v. 1. and the generall summe thereof v. 2. The Lord by his Prophet denounceth judgements to come on several Nations about because of their many and multiplied sins and namely on Syria v. 3 4 5. On the Philistines v. 6 7 8. On Tyrus v. 9 10. On Edom v. 11 12. And on the Ammonites v. 13 14 15. Verse 1. THe words of Amos who was among the herdmen of Tekoa which he saw concerning Israel in the days of Vzziah King of Judah and in the days of Jeroboam the son of Joash King of Israel two yeers before the earthquake The inscription of this Prophecy holds forth first That Amos who carried this message was but a meane man of Tekoa in Judah of which 2. Chro. 11 5 6. Jer. 6.1 and of a mean employment being but an Herdman and of the meanest sort not one who had herds which were kept and fed by others as the word here used somtime signifieth 2. Kings 3 4. but one who was either a mean servant to others or at best a mean man who fed his own cattel as appeareth from Chap. 7.15 Secondly it holds forth that he was sent especially to Jsrael though he deale also with others upon occasion And thirdly that he received his Divine message and began his preaching in the days of Vzziah and Jeroboam the second two years before that earthquake of which mention is made onely here and Zech. 14.5 Some conceive it to have been in the year of Vzziahs death and that it is hinted at Isa 6.1 4 Others that it was at the time of his presuming to offer incense 2. Chron. 26.16 as another testimony beside his leprosie 2. Chron. 26.20 of divine displeasure against his course But at whatever time it was this is certain that hereby the Lord gave warning of great and dreadful commotions and alterations that were to be among these Nations as accordingly came to passe on Israel after the death of Jeroboam the second Doct. 1. The word of the Lord ought not to be rejected in the mouth of meanest instruments nor is their authority to be suspected or condemned because they are meane for Amos who was among the herdmen of Tekoa hath the words which he saw concerning Israel 2. Albeit that men ought not to usurp the ministerial calling nor leave their mechanick and servile employments to intrude themselves upon it for Amos had an extraordinary calling and albeit men who are called to that office ought not to tempt God by neglecting lawful means appointed for their enabling to discharge their calling for the endowments of Amos who was not bred for that calling Chap. 7.14 were by extraordinary dispensation Yet such as are called of God and are conscious to themselves of much insufficency and inability though they use means such I say have notable encouragment to come to God for teaching and furniture in an ordinary way who hath given such
was and who upon her good behaviour would promise to marry her As to the custome of an Israelites marrying the Heathen Virgin Deut. 21.10 13. Doct. 1. As it is matter of sad challenge against the Church that she ingrately sins against loving kindnesse and is an adulteresse unprovoked for so may be imported here that this adulteresse had been beloved and yet plaid the harlot See Jer. 2.5 Mic. 6.3 so loving kindnesse doth not alwayes give up upon sad provocations nor upon saddest dispensations for so is expressely held out here the repudiate adulteresse is yet beloved of her friend and this sets out the love of the Lord toward the children of Israel c. This holds true of the Nation of Israel to this day Rom. 11.28 29. and there may be toward all the Lords people many sweet purposes lying hid under sad dispensations Jer. 29.11 2. Such is mens stupidity in taking up their own case and their superficialnesse in pondering of it that it needs to be much and sensibly inculcate Therefore is this matter twice told first in the type Go yet after that former type chap. 1.2 love a woman c. and then in the explication according to the love of the Lord c. 3. This outward grosse Idolatry with other gods as they judged them to be gods which Israel was guilty of and for which she was repudiate may teach That corrupting the Worship of God and declining from him and his way is the great sin for which the Lord doth plead and may at last reject a visible Church and albeit tentations to such courses may be removed from a Church yet the dispensation and way of Israel may warne us that the hearts of all men are prone that way if they had a tentation that we encline more to false worship then true that naturally we have false wayes to heaven and happinesse and that idols and not the true God are chief in our hearts And when God and his way of service are not delighted in we may charge all these upon our selves So much may we gather from this challenge against Israel they look to other gods or turning their back on God they placed their affection confidence dependance respex on Idols For looking doth import this Ps 123.1 2. Isa 45.22 See Ezek. 20.16 24. 4. The challenge joyned with this that they love flagons of wine or sensual pleasures doth teach that as idolatry and false worship are plagued with sensuality and delight in it as witnesse the feasts of Idolaters Exod 32.6 So sensual men bewray their own inclination that they are ripe for being Idolaters if they had the tryal Therefore are they conjoyned in the challenge as having much affinity and drawing on one another Vers 2. So I bought her to me for fifteen pieces of silver and for an homer of barley and an half homer of barley 3. And I said unto her Thou shalt abide for me many dayes thou shalt not play the harlot and thou shalt not be for another man so will I also be for thee In these verses the type of the second and third parts of the Chapter is propounded As if the Prophet should purchase this adulteresse out of the hand of all her lovers for so much money and barley and sequestrate her from himself and them to live on this sober entertainment in hope of marriage if she carried her self well So should it be betwixt the Lord and Israel as is explained in the following verses Albeit this type be expounded by the Lord himself yet since his speaking of the matter twice invites us to look on it again and again I shall observe somewhat on the type And first the Prophets purchasing the adulteresse for so much money is not to be strained to signifie the Lords redeeming of his Church for the price is given to her self for maintenance and to purchase her good-will though she be his own in order to second marriage But it teacheth that as a common strumpet being bought from all her lovers and a slave bought with money are at the buyers disposal So however Israel followed many idols yet the Lord would prove that he alone had dominion over her to set her in what condition he pleased where none of her lovers should help her Secondly the price given for her fifteen pieces of silver whereby we are to understand so many shekels being but half a servants worth Exod. 21.32 and half the estimation of a woman Lev. 27.4 may teach how little worth they are and how base and contemptible they make themselves who despise the Lord and corrupt his Worship as may be seen on the Jewes to this day and much more on Israel who are in a manner lost in the World See Amos 9.7 Thirdly this small price with the barley joyned with it and given her being but little and sober fare and unfit food especially for women may teach 1. That sensuality provokes God to send pinching penury For she who loved flagons of wine v. 1. cometh to this fare 2. That we must be much stripped of all things before we be sensible and weaned from our idols For this adulteresse must be thus pinched before she give over her wantonnesse Our hearts are so mad on Idols that they will be fed so long as we have any thing to our selves Fourthly his charging her to abide many dayes sequestrate not playing the harlot nor enjoying him for so the Original hath it Thou shalt not be for a man either me or any other but having hope of marriage if she did well may teach 1. That cutting short of outward mercies should cut off sin and humble us that we may be ripe for mercy and whatever our frame and carriage be yet by affliction God will cut short occasions of sin For as an adulteresse shut up and dieted is secluded from her lovers so Israel by Gods dispensations is made to abide and not be for a man 2. The Lord may intend much good to them whom he brings in contempt and to a low condition For he sequestrates and shuts up Israel thus with an eye to marrying of her 3. Such as God intends this mercy for may yet continue long in a sad condition partly to shew the greatnesse of his displeasure against his people when he is provoked to reject them and partly that they may see the ill of their wayes and may cleave to God the faster when he restores them For Israel is to abide many dayes whereof we have seen a sad accomplishment from the time of their captivity to this day whereof though they get no use in the time of their rejection yet it will be otherwise when they turne to God 4. As it is a choice mercy in affliction not to forsake God nor cleave to other idols though he seem to reject us So it is a token for good to Gods people when by affliction he cuts short their sin For so this sequestrating her is expounded to be an
abiding for him abide for me Although she be rejected from being the Lords wife and have little minde or expectation of him yet the Lords sequestrating her from idolatry to wit in a national way in her captivity is a proof that he will make it an abiding for him whatever she intend or expect in it Fifthly this typical promise of his abiding for her as she doth for him so will I also be for thee is not to be strictly pressed seeing God hath since the time of their rejection chosen the Gentiles though it may be thus constructed 1. He choosed none till the Messiah under whom they are to be converted came in the flesh 2. All whom he chooseth must put this respect upon the elder brother though now gone out of the house that they become Israel before they lay claim to Israels Covenant 3. Whomever the Lord hath chosen yet he hath a room in his heart for them and will have them married to him and this exhausts the scope 4. Their conversion will be indeed as his solemne marriage-day and a resurrection from the dead to the world Rom. 11.15 and that day will evidence what respect he had to them in their lost condition And so it may teach us 1. Notwithstanding the glorious dayes of the Son of man that appear in the world by the conversion of the Gentiles and their marriage to him yet his ancient people are not forgotten by him But as of old when the Jewes were his Church yet he minded the Gentiles and purposed their conversion John 10.16 so his heart is on Israel till they be brought in 2. Not only is it a token that God hath reserved comfort for them who will not have any comfort in trouble without him but as a shut-up adulteresse do renounce all lovers till their husband embrace them again But when the Lord makes his peoples affliction continue sad without any outgate beside himself it is a pledge that he hath thoughts of peace toward them in that trouble For he abideth for her who is made to abide and not to be for a man or secluded from any comfortable condition as a shut-up harlot This is the condition of the Jewes and of Israel at this day who are kept in so low a condition beyond all Nations that they may never flourish till God turne them to him and he embrace them Sixthly the Prophets doing all this in obedience to that command v. 1. to love the woman may teach 1. That as tender husbands do shut up and pinch their wanton and treacherous wives for their good So the Lords love may oft-times be visible in hard usage and denying indulgence to his incorrigible people and his love be ordered by prudent and wholesome severity to tame them 2. That not to be cut off but made to subsist in the saddest condition in hope of future mercy is a rich expression of love For so doth his love toward Israel appear in that he preserveth them however scattered or lost in mens eyes with a purpose to do them good in the latter end See Lam. 3.22 26 29. Ver. 4. For the children of Israel shall abide many dayes without a King and without a Prince and without a sacrifice and without an image and without an Ephod and without Teraphim Here we have the second thing in the Chap. and an Exposition of the first part of the type concerning the adulteresse her being sequestrate in a base and poor condition This the Lord expounds to signifie that albeit he was to cast Israel out yet for the Elects sake in her and because of the Covenant made with her Fathers he would testifie his love to her by making her to subsist during the long time of her captivity though in a sober and mean condition wanting a civil State and without the use either of a true Religion signified by sacrifices and an Ephod or a false signified by Images and Teraphim which were a peculiar sort of Images representing as is conceived their Idols in humane shape This prediction cannot be understood of particular persons of Israel nor of all of them taking them distributively for certainly at all times where ever they are they have some Religion either true or false But it is to be taken of Israel collectively that as a Nation they could neither set up nor performe true or false worship as they had done before their rejection and so it is opposed to their national conversion Further when the Lord foretels that they shall be deprived of true Worship under the name of a sacrifice and Ephod comprehending under this all their Priestly garments and their Priests who used them in publick worship it is not his purpose to justifie their borrowing of these from Judah and making use of them in the worship of the calves as true and acceptable worship but being such as they supposed true and came nearest to it yet they should be deprived of it Or the words are to be taken absolutely without restriction to what they had before to signifie that they should have no true worship at all From this we may beside what is held out in the type further Learn 1. As the Lord may make the fruits of sin very bitter and sad and of long continuance even to his own people So such a condition may have mercy in it and may yet end in mercy For albeit what is here held out be very sad and of continuance for many dayes yet they abide under it and are made to subsist till better come 2. The want of a face of Government of a Nations self is a misery to be laid to heart either when a people are scattered from being a Nation or are ruled over by strangers and yet it is a misery under which a people may be preserved for much mercy For it is foretold here as a part of Israels misery that they shall be without a King and without a Prince without any face of Authority lesse or more over them of their own Nation being scattered among the Nations and under the Government of others where they come and yet in this case they abide till the marriage come 3. As the publick Worship of God is a sweet cordial in affliction and the want thereof a judgement which the Lord will bring on his dearest people when they provoke him and as it is a sad judgement to want the face of a visible Church even albeit there were some corruption in it So corrupting the Worship of God provokes him to give up a people to have no worship at all For this prediction they shall abide without a sacrifice and without an Image and without an Ephod and without Teraphim doth not import that simply it is a judgement to want corrupt worship though whorish Israel in Hosea's time might think so as an harlot would do to be shut up from her Paramours which is indeed a woful temper nor doth it here import so much a mercy to deprive
in this also doth the resemblance hold in the former and latter rain 5. Albeit the Lord see it fit oft-times to delay and suspend the manifestation of himselfe yet it is his peoples duty not to weary but they ought to testifie their estimation thereof by their eagerness and unwearied patience in expecting it for to this end also is this similitude made use of in Scripture That as men wait for this rain with great earnestnesse as being of singular use Job 29.23 and as the husband-man patiently waits for it that he may at last have a fruitfull harvest to recompence his labours So should the Lords people earnestly and yet patiently wait for him as knowing that his coming will make up all Jam. 5.7 8. Ver. 4. O Ephraim what shall I do unto thee O Judah what shall I do unto thee for your goodnesse is as a morning cloud and as the early dew which goeth away Followeth the second part of the Chap. wherein after this sweet digression foretelling their future repentance the Lord returnes to his former challenges against these two Kingdomes and clears himselfe that he was not the cause of that destruction that was to come upon them before these joyfull dayes So that this purpose doth not come in by way of exception against their repentance formerly described as unsound for that contains a patterne of true Repentance and of what they will do at their last conversion But the dependance may be conceived thus That on the one hand the Lord having comforted the truly godly by this prediction he now turns himselfe to the body of the people and his affection if we may speak of him after the manner of man being kindled with the thoughts of that sweet time of love that was to be betwixt Israel and him he expostulates with them that they were nothing like this pattern here prescribed and that themselves being Judges he could do no other then destroy them On the other hand whereas they might object how could he destroy them toward whom he had such a purpose and they were still ready to accuse his rigour and severity toward them Therefore he puts them to instruct any cause they could wherefore he should deal otherwise with them We may take up the purpose in these 1. An assertion that he was not to blame for their destruction but their own condition which was so deplorably desperate that he propounds the matter to themselves to shew upon what grounds he could do otherwise with them then he did considering their way 2. Some confirmations of this assertion whereof the first in the rest of this v. prevents an objection taken from their seeming goodnesse at some times as we finde severall reformations in Judah and in Israel we have Ahabs humiliation Jehu's zeale and others of their Kings not so bad as the rest of them 2 King 17.2 Concerning this the Lord declareth that whatever reall good was in some persons yet any work of repentance or reformation the body of the people attained to was empty and in constant and could no more endure nor abide the touch-stone then the morning-cloud and dew can endure the rising Sun And therefore this could not hinder but rather hasten their destruction Doct. 1. When the Lord proceeds in severity against his people he is not to be looked on as one who takes pleasure in such a way or who delighted in it if their condition did not unavoidably call for it for so much doth this expostulation wherein he puts on the affections of a perplexed creature teach us See Hos 11.8 2. The disposition and way of the visible Church is oft-times so desperate that no dispensation will better them and however the Lord take no pleasure in their destruction and their priviledges seeme to call for another lot yet there is no remedy but their carriage draweth it on For O Ephraim what shall I do unto thee c. imports that he had essayed all other means but in vain and that now he could do no otherwise with them See Mat. 11.16 17. Isa 5.4 Jer. 9.7 Ezek 5.13 with 6.9 and. 24.13 3. The consciences of the Lords people may plead for God proceeding in greatest severity if they were awaked and it is their duty to justifie him in judging and for this end to be sensible of their desperate incorrigiblenesse for this question What shall I do unto thee doth not import any ignorance and perplexity in God but puts the matter to their own consciences which being well informed as they ought to be would justifie him in his greatest severity 4. As oft-times a people enjoying purer worship may be as ripe for judgement and in as desperate a condition as they who have made fouler visible defection so the universall overspreading of sin contributes to make a peoples case more irremediable Therefore is Judah put to it with Ephraim who yet seemed to be far better then they and this is an evidence of their desperate case 5. A people may have some shew of goodnesse at least at some times who yet are little the better and their condition nothing the lesse desperate for so it is supposed this people had your goodnesse which comprehends any shew of piety toward God or of goodnesse bounty and mercy toward men which they had at any time 6. Mens goodnesse when it is onely in shew and not in reality proves ordinarily a great snare and neck-break to them as hiding the sight of their deserving from them being a ground of exceptation against challenges and of swelling against corrections Therefore must the Lord here take off this objection and clear what their goodnesse was 7. Whatever goodnesse men seeme to have yet it will not availe to exempt them when either it is but empty and wants a firme root or proclaimes its own unsoundnesse by its inconstancy and being but at fits for so much doth this comparison teach us Your goodnesse is as a morning cloud and as the early dew it goeth away Whatever use may be made of these similitudes elsewhere to point out what is really good yet in this place they point at the emptinesse of their goodnesse as a cloud that hath no rain in it and the dew that enters not into the ground to moisten it and at its inconstancy and evanishing Ver. 5. Therefore have I hewed them by the Prophets I have slaine them by the words of my mouth and thy judgements are as the light that goeth forth 6. For I desire mercy and not sacrifice and the knowledge of God more then burnt-offerings 7. But they like men have transgressed the Covenant there have they dealt treacherously against me The second confirmation of their desperate condition is that the Word did no good unto them Albeit the Lord by his Word dealt effectually and sharply with them as men do with rough stones and knotted timber to square them yet all this did but slay them v. 5 And albeit their duty was held clearly out
when they had gone astray but they openly and avowedly refused when they were seriously invited See Jer. 8.4 5. Vers 6. And the sword shall abide on his cities and shall consume his branches and devour thee because of their own counsels Secondly the Lord threatens them with an abiding sword upon their cities and their villages which as branches spring out from the cities or on their bars that is their strong holds Rulers and valiant inhabitants and that because of their following their owne wayes and counsels rejecting the Lords Of this See Chap. 10.6 Doct. 1. The sword ought to be looked on as one of the Lords scourges because of his peoples ingratitude and abuse of mercies and their trusting to their own counsels and not regarding Gods Word For because of these provocations it is threatned here 2. The sword is then a most sharp scourge and speakes much of Gods displeasure when it rageth not only amongst armies in the fields but falls in upon Cities when it is universall upon Cities and branches or villages or Forts or Rulers and other inhabitants and when it continueth long thus and abideth till it consume and devour See Jer. 47.6 7. 3. However men trust much to their own inventions and projects neglecting God and his way as here is supposed Yet all this their wit and policy will be so far from holding off a judgement that on the contrary it doth draw it on For it is added as a reason of the sentence because of their owne counsels Vers 7. And my people are bent to backsliding from me though they called thee to the most High none at all would exalt him The first part of this v is by many taken as a further threatning that they should be in suspense and anxiety being pressed on every hand because of their backsliding from God Which though it be a truth in it selfe Deut. 28.66 and the word doth also signifie to be in suspense yet the Originall construction will not beare this interpretation for it is not because of but to backsliding Therefore I understand it with the translation as a second accusation against Israel for their backslidings to which they were so prone that their inclination and course did still hang sway and bend toward it And if they were at any time in suspense and doubt about their course as the word also imports yet all that but tended to more Apostasy and testified their inclination to it in that no such hesitation stopped their course This generall challenge is more particularly confirmed in the end of the v. from the ill entertainment they gave to the Messages sent by Gods servants to them Doct. 1. Backsliding and Apostasy is the great sin of the visible Church to which she hath a strong inclination naturally even in her best frame any other course she followeth being but a motion against nature For it is a challenge that they not only backslide from what they attained but are bent to backsliding See Chap. 6.4 2. Mens hanging sometime in suspense and having some inclinations to returne will neither double out their point against the power of corruption within them nor will it extenuate but rather aggreage their backsliding that it overfloweth such banks So much doth the other reading teach they are in suspense and yet it tends but to backsliding 3. The great backsliding of Gods people is their backsliding from God and communion with him which draweth on all other Apostasies and defections And every backsliding of the Church in duty or worship is a backsliding from God in so far as men thereby do renounce his prerogative to be the sovereigne Lord to prescribe their duty and the way of his own service and do renounce these wayes and means wherein only communion with God is to be found and intertained In these respects it is challenged that they backslide from me saith the Lord. 4. God will not forget a backsliding peoples interest and pretences of interest in him to aggravate their sin For it adds to the challenge my people are bent to backsliding It cannot but grieve God when these whom he hath choosen to be his peculiar people and hath put them in possession of speciall favours and gained their consent in part do recede from him as unworthy and do choose husks whereon the world feeds as the only desirable portion And it is a sad case when all a peoples priviledges and advantages serve only to make their ditty the sadder 5. As it is of the Lords great mercy that he ceaseth not to follow backsliders with Messages from his Word as here it is supposed that yet there were and that diverse and many who called them So by the entertainment that is given to the Word men may trie whether they have backsliden or not or whether they be persisting in it or turning from it For by this is the charge of Apostasy and bentnesse in following it proven in that they obeyed not the call though they called them none at all would exalt him 6. When the Lord by his Word reclaimes his people from their backsliding it is not because he needs them who is glorious and high in himselfe but for their own advantage For he called them from these base things which drew them away to the most high 7. We are never free of backsliding but when God is most high to us and in our estimation and when he is exalted in our hearts and in our respect to his commands and directions and conscience made of his praise the neglect whereof is an evidence of Apostasy and portends more of it For so is imported in that they are called from their backsliding to come to him as the most high and to exalt him 8. Backsliding is by so much the sadder and the cause of a greater quarrell that it is universall For none at all would exalt him but all refused the call Though it may be also understood and read together they exalted not that is not only with one consent they refused but they joyned not in that work as indeed want of union is a speciall mean of carrying on backsliding and defection Vers 8. How shall I give thee up Ephraim how shall I deliver thee Israel how shall I make thee as Admah how shall I set thee as Zeboim mine heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together In the second part of the Chap. the Lord comforts the godly against the imminent and deserved judgements with some blenks of his mercy And first in this v. the mercy of God is held forth in coming over their provocations to do any thing for them and interposing to hold off the extremity of judgements deserved by them wherein 1. It is insinuate by way of sentence for their Apostasy that their sins deserved hard things even such calamities as befell Sodom and the neighbouring Cities of which See Gen. 19.24 Deut. 29.23 But 2. in the execution the Lord was willing to make a stand
whatever sinners dream yet there is no resisting nor abiding of a day of vengeance nor any refuge against it but by turning to God by faith and unfeigned repentance For so much is held out in this further confirmation of the reason of the strength of this Army for the day of the Lord and not of the appearing of these creatures only is great and very terrible and who can abide it Ver. 12. Therefore also now saith the LORD Turne ye even to me withall your heart and with fasting and with weeping and with mourning 13. And rent your heart and not your garments and turne unto the LORD your God for he is gracious and merciful flow to anger and of great kindnesse and repenteth him of the evil Followeth the second part of the Chap. wherein the Lord calls upon them to make right use of this calamity and of the warning given them This he doth in two exhortations whereof the first in these verses is That they should set about sincere repentance and humiliation testified by holy private fasts and unfeigned sorrow and so prove that they are really converted to God and reconciled to him through faith in the Mediatour v. 12. and that they should study to be rather afflicted in spirit for sin then by performance of externall ceremonies to pretend to it only v. 13. Unto this exhortation two reasons are subjoyned the first whereof in the end of v. 13. is taken from the properties of God who is merciful and gracious not easily provoked rich in kindnesse and who upon sinners repentance is ready to recall his threatenings that they be not executed Doct. 1. Were there never so many plagues on sinners yet God is not bound to take notice of them so long as they repent not And were there never so much terrour and affliction of spirit upon men under feared or felt judgements Yet all these serve to no purpose if they stir not up to repentance and they must be mad who being in such a condition yet do not set about that duty Therefore after all the representation of plagues and of terrour upon men they are called to this as the only remedy and way to an issue and as the duty which they cannot but minde who are seriously affected with such a condition Therefore turne ye See Psal 106.44 Jer. 31.18 19 20. 2. When God is threatening most sadly and proceeding most severely he would be still understood as inviting by these to repentance and willing to accept of it For the Lord who threatens doth exhort and he brings it in with a therefore or upon the back of the former discourse to shew that this is his scope in all of it Therefore saith the Lord Turne ye 3. Such as have been so long abusers of Gods patience as matters seem irremediable and stroakes are either imminent or incumbent should not for all that look upon the exercise of repentance as too late and out of season but ought to judge that it is good even then to set about it and that it will do good however matters go Therefore notwithstanding they were in this sad plight yet the Lord exhorts them even now also to turne 4 Such as do minde repentance especially when God declareth himself angry would not linger nor delay to set about it So much also may be imported in that now also they should turn 5. Whatever doubts such as are humbled under judgements may have that their repentance will not be accepted yet they are bound to answer all these from Gods naked Word who giveth the invitation to such Therefore is the exhortation given to such in his Name to remove all doubts Turn ye saith the Lord. 6. Repentance for particular sins under sad judgements will neither be right nor acceptable so long as men do not minde conversion to God and a change of their state by regeneration that so the tree being good the fruits may be answerable Therefore doth he begin with turne ye to me where the exhortation doth not import any power in man but only points out his duty and sheweth that exhortation is a mean which God blesseth to his Elect and not only deals thereby with them as with rational creatures but therewith imparts strength that they may obey 7. In turning unto God men would beware of being faint or feigned but would study to be sincere and single since they cannot attain to perfection For this in a Gospel-sense is to turn even to me with all your heart 8. As men would begin at conversion to God so they would therewith study to be deeply affected for sin and bygone evils and under the judgements procured thereby and would evidence their affliction of spirit by sorrow and humiliation suitable in some measure to their condition Therefore is it added as an evidence and companion of the former turn ye with fasting and with weeping and with mourning or with such sorrow as is usual in mourning for the dead and expressed not only by wailing but by smiting on the breast and the like gestures It is a change to be suspected where men please themselves with their present good condition and do lightly passe over their former miscarriages And albeit signes and expressions of sorrow be not alwayes at command when men are most afflicted yet repentance for grosse and long continued in iniquity and under extraordinary judgements would not be past over in an ordinary and common way 9. It is our duty in performing repentance and a good evidence of it when our stout hearts are broken and afflicted with the sense of sin and of Gods displeasure for it Therefore it is subjoyned and rent your heart or every one his own heart which is not to be understood literally but that they should be afflicted in spirit as Ps 51.17 10. We are prone to hypocrisie and ought to beware of dallying with God even when we are in greatest distresse and making fairest shewes of repentance Therefore is it needful to qualifie this exhortation rent your heart and not your garments 11. God is not pleased nor will a true penitent be pleased with externall performances and ceremonies neglecting substance For saith he rent your heart and not your garments However they made frequent use of this signe in times of great sorrow as Gen. 37.34 2 Sam. 13.19 Job 1.20 and frequently yet God doth not allow of it when it is alone or preferred to the other as is said in another case Hos 6.6 though we are willing to do many things rather then bow and afflict our hearts before God 12. In all these exercises of repentance we would again and again take heed that we deceive not our selves in the matter of our conversion and pretend only to it till our particular distresse be removed and though we finde our selves reall yet we are to look on it as a work wherein we should still make progresse Therefore after the former exhortation v. 12. it is again subjoyned and turn
house and Ordinances among them and therefore they shall subsist in trouble till they come to an issue Therefore it is added as a peculiar end of Gods leaving a blessing even that there may be a meat-offering and a drink offering unto the Lord your God And this is added as a peculiar encouragement to the penitent who missed the comfort of publick worship and as a ground of hope that he would give them meat that so they might have wherewith to make oblations to him Vers 15. Blow the trumpet in Zion sanctifie a fast call a solemne assembly 16. Gather the people sanctifie the congregation assemble the Elders gather the children and those that suck the breasts let the bridegroome go forth of his chamber and the bride out of her closet The second exhortation repeated from ver 1. and chap. 1 14. is to publick and solemne fasting and humiliation to be indicted by the Priests who after due preparation for that work were to convocate old and young even babes and newly married persons to the Temple to afflict themselves before the Lord. Whence learn 1. Sincere humiliation in secret is not enough in Gods account but when calamities are general there should be a publike profession of repentance and a restraint from delights and lawfull callings for that end and time and Ministers ought to set this work on foot for the Priests are to blow the Trumpet in Zion that there may be a fast and solemne assembly or time of restraint from other imployments 2. Care would be had both by Ministers and people in their stations that such a duty be not prophanely gone about nor external formalities and performances rested on But that it may be performed in a spiritual and sanctified manner And for this end there should be due preparation for it Therefore saith he sanctifie a fast sanctifie the congregation that is when ye Priests intimate the fast stir them up to come prepared as the word also signifieth and purified according to the Law that so they may fast in a sanctified manner 3. Publick humiliations under calamites should be universally joyned in by all that all may concurre to quench the fire which their sinnes have kindled and every one may tremble to lie by in such a need Therefore is the command Gather the people 4. It is the duty of such as are above others in age or authority to be eminently active and examples unto others in times of humiliation Therefore is there a peculiar command concerning them Assemble the Elders to acquit themselves as becometh in this work And by Elders we are not only to understand these that were in office but even old men as appeareth from the opposition of children c. that is subjoyned 5. Children and sucking babes were brought out with the rest in solemne humiliations under the Law not because they can repent but 1. That parents seeing their childrens affliction might lay to heart their owne sinnes for which their babes are afflicted 2. That love to their children and care of their welfare might stir them up to repent 3. That considering that their children had so much sinne in themselves as justly made them obnoxious to these judgements they might be led to see their owne provocations to be farre more hainous 4. That this sad sight on young and old might contribute to stirre them up to the duty for which they we●e convened These were the reasons of this command Gather the children and those that suck the breasts And albeit this be ceased under the Gospel yet all these considerations may be of good use to stir up to repentance in sad times Doct. 6. Even delights otherwise lawful ought to be for horne in times of humiliation under calamities and ought to be laid aside that humiliation may be seriously set about Therefore it is commanded let the bridegroome go forth of his chamber and the bride out of her closet Ver. 17. Let the Priests the Ministers of the LOLD weep between the porch and the Altar and let them say Spare thy people O LORD and give not thine heritage to reproach that the heathen should rule over them Wherefore should they say among the people Where is their God The Priests are further exhorted to be eminently active in this exercise and that privately and publickly they intercede for the people in these humiliations praying that God by sparing of them may prevent their reproach and the heathens ruling over them and the reproach of his own Name who had interest in them As for this place of their weeping and praying betweene the porch where the people met of which 1 Kings 6.3 and the Altar of burnt offerings where they offered sacrifice we need seek no mystery in it as a mid place betwixt God and the people for the porch was the ordinary place where the people prayed when incense and belike other sacrifices were offered Luke 1.10 And the Priests having offered came toward the porch from the Altar and there prayed for and with the people and blessed them for which end it seemeth the people waited for Zacharias Luke 1.21 22. Yea this place betwixt the porch and the Altar was the place where Prophets at least such as were of the Priests linage preached unto the people And so we finde Zechariah was slaine there in the exercise of his calling Matth. 23.35 And so the meaning is only that after solemne sacrifices they should come to the publick and ordinary place and there weep and pray with and for the people Doct. 1. Ministers ought to be eminently exemplar for sense and diligence in times of humiliation And it is a part of their calling to be the mouth of the Lords people in publick prayers wherein they are to expresse such tendernesse and affection as may witnesse their sense of the publike condition and may be an example and means of up-stirring the people for let the Priests the Ministers of the Lord weep between the porch and the Altar and let them say c. 2. The humble penitent hath no refuge left him but God and his mercie only And he is allowed to lay hold on this when he hath no other claime for they are warranted to say Spare O Lord which is an act flowing from mercie withdrawing and moderating deserved judgements 3. Interest in God and the perpetuity and unchangeablenesse thereof is not to be quited by the penitent but to be made use of as a ground of 〈◊〉 Therefore are they directed to plead spare thy people and 〈…〉 wherein a standing right is held forth notwithstanding they by sinne had procured such sharp dispensations 4. Reproach is a sad addition to the calamities of Gods people and an argument why God will pitie when the reproached are penitent and come to him with it Therefore are they to make use of this also give not thine heritage to reproach that is do not by thy dispensations expose them to the insolent scorne of the Heathen who are
be left of them but their noisome stinke and this he will do because or though they had done great things against Gods people As for that which is said and will drive him to a land c. with his face toward the East-Sea c. it may be either understood thus that though they were so many as to fill the breadth of the land from the East or Dead Sea to the West or Mediterranean Sea Yet he would drive them to the Wildernesse and kill them there or rather that the main bulk and body of them should be driven into the Wildernesse their fore-party into the dead sea and their reere into the West-sea there to die However it teacheth 1. Scourges and hurtful things were they never so dreadful yet God who sends them can drive them away and consume them when he will for I will remove farre off from you the Northern armie which had beene dreadful before And he can make use of Wildernesses and Seas even the uselesse dead Sea to help his people against their enemies I will drive him into a land barren and desolate c. 2. God can let scourges be seene how contemptible they are when he hath done with them for this formidable armie serveth for nothing but to stink above ground his stink shall come up and his ill savour shall come up 3. Instruments of Gods vengeance against his people will gaine nothing by their paines but stroaks And though they have acted much yet God will reach them for all this done because or although he the Northern armie hath done great things Ver. 21. Fear not O land be glad and rejoyce for the LORD will do great things 22. Be not afraid ye beasts of the field for the pastures of the wildernesse do spring for the tree beareth her fruit the fig-tree and the vine do yield their strength These promises are for more assurance and comfort applied and amplified And first application is made to the land that it should not fear but rejoyce seeing God was to do great things and to the beasts that they should lay aside their fear since the earth was to be blessed with pasture and fruit This speaking to the land and beasts doth not import them capable but God by this would speak to the comfort of the penitent And it teacheth 1 The Lord would have his promises and comforts applied by them to whom they are given for their refreshment So much doth this application of the former promises import 2. Gods kindnesse to penitents will be such as not only to refresh themselves but to gladden and refresh their land their beasts and all in their kinde for so is held out here 3. Penitents are instrumental to draw down blessings on themselves and on what they enjoy for now the mourning land ch 1.10 and the crying beasts ch 1.18 20. are made to rejoyce 4. Gods care of the earth and of very cattel may assure penitents of his respects to them If he respect the lands affliction and the beasts how much more theirs See Matth. 6.26 30. 5. God when he pleaseth can make fears end in joy and the hope thereof should bring joy when fear is yet on for so much is held out in the command to the land Fear not be glad and rejoyce and that in hope 6. Gods great power who promiseth and who hath given proof thereof in executing threatenings may guard against fear and afford ground of hope were the thing promised never so great and difficult for so is held forth in the reason of joy that the Lord who had done great things by that Army v. 20. will do great things 7. God can and in due time will remove the feares of his people by giving actual proofes of his love for so are they encouraged by the promise made to the beasts for their sake and good v. 22. Be not afraid ye beasts of the field for the pastures of the wildernesse do spring c. Ver. 23. Be glad then ye children of Zion and rejoyce in the LORD your God for he hath given you the former raine moderately and he will cause to come down for you the raine the former raine and the latter raine in the first moneth 24. And the floores shall he full of wheat and the fats shall overflow with wine and oile 25. And I will restore to you the years that the locust hath eaten the cankerworme and the catterpiller and the palmerworme my great army which I sent among you Secondly the promises are applied to the Church whom he exhorteth to rejoyce And that because 1. He will give them which he speaks of as done because of reall certainty raine in due season and measure and make the effects prove it a reall blessing v. 23 24. 2. Because by succeeding plenty he will make up the losse they sustained by the years of famine v. 25. Whence learn 1. Whoever misse of joy yet God will have his penitent Church and people to rejoyce and they are allowed to have as much and as solid joy as any and more Therefore are the children of Zion called to it 2. The Lord must not only afford matter of joy and comfort to his people but must speak and apply it to their heart and stir them up to rejoyce in it before it work Therefore is this exhortation and application needful Be glad then ye children of Zion and rejoyce 3. Common favours and benefits should be unto the Lords people but as a step leading them up to rejoyce in God and not to be rested on themselves Therefore though the promise be of plenty yet they are to rejoyce in the Lord their God and because of a special interest in him See Jer. 9.23 24. Luke 10.19 20. 4. Common favours given so a people upon repentance do warrant them to rejoyce in God as evidencing his respect unto them and interest in them even by these For so the penitents here are upon this promise commanded rejoyce in the Lord your God 5. As man needs many things for his subsistence and for furnishing the meanes thereof as raine at several seasons to make the earth fruitful So the Lords measuring and timing of outward mercies is that which makes them mercies indeed for though rain be needful yet it is the blessing of it that he giveth it moderately and that he sends the former raine and the latter raine in the first moneth which was the season as appeareth of the latter rain concerning which it is not needful to make further inquiry Only what is here said of raine holds good in all outward mercies that it is the great advantange of Saints that the disposing of them is in the hand of their only wise Lord. 6. Promising mercies will not prove unuseful nor disappoint the expectation of penitents as the Lord in justice deals often with the wicked For as moderate and seasonable rain promiseth a good harvest so it shall prove so the floores shall be full of
terrour to the wicked For it is for these causes it gets this name Vers 32. And it shall come to passe that whosoever shall call on the Name of the LORD shall be delivered for in mount Zion and in Jerusalem shall be deliverance as the LORD hath said and in the remnant whom the LORD shall call To confirme the godly against these calamities he subjoynes the third spiritual promise which is That all true Israelites and Converts of the Gentiles who cleave to God and worship him sincerely shall finde deliverance by preservation under trouble till they come to full deliverance and salvation at last This he confirmeth in a generall promise that of the Jewes and Gentiles called of God there shall be deliverance according to Gods promise or some remnant to escape to preserve a people to God upon earth and at last to inherit salvation Doct. 1. Were the condition of the visible Church or of the world never so deplorable and desperate yet it should not drive men from God his truth and pure worship but rather make them cleave to it more and evidence this by frequent and earnest calling on him For this is the duty required under these calamities to call on the Name of the LORD under which is comprehended all outward and inward worship of God whereof this is a chief part and mens cleaving to it 2. As God is able to save in greatest extremities so he will undoubtedly save and deliver them who cleave to him and seek him be of what Nation or people they will He will either hide some of them from trouble in great tempests or preserve them under it till he give an issue from it here or hereafter and at last will compleatly save them For whosoever shall call on the Name of the LORD shall be delivered or escape See Rom. 10.13 3. The Church is the place of greatest safety and where deliverance may most readily be expected of any and however it fare with particular persons in times of commotions yet the Lord will still preserve a Church and remnant in the world yea even a remnant of Jewes till their full conversion The efore saith he for in mount Zion and in Jerusalem shall he deliverance and in the remnant Where he names Zion and Jerusalem not only as a type of the Church wherein safety is to be found and the remnant are to be preserved but to point out that of the Jewes belonging to these places he would keep still a remnant Rom. 11.5 till that day come whereof he speaks in the next Chapter 4. God hath past his word for the preservation of a remnant under trouble and this is to be trusted to whatever our sense say to the contrary For saith he there shall be deliverance as the Lord hath said frequently in the Holy Scriptures 5. As the true Church is but a remnant in comparison of the rest of the world So times of trouble cutting off some and tempting others to Apostasie may draw them to a very small number who cleave to God and shall partake of promised salvation Therefore it is added by way of explication that deliverance shall be in the remnant or among them though some of them escape not the stroak of trouble 6. It is Gods effectual calling and election of grace that makes a difference among men and makes them seek and cleave to him And this is also a pledge that he who hath called and ingaged them in that service will give them deliverance and an issue from it Therefore it is added both by way of reason how it cometh there is a remnant and by way of confirmation that they shall be delivered they are the remnant whom the Lord shall call See Rom. 11.4 5 6 7. 1 Thess 5.24 CHAP. III. IN this Chap. the Lord doth prosecute and confirme that promise in the close of the former Chap. concerning the preservation and deliverance of a remnant especially as it relateth to the Jewes and therefore the dependance and connexion is expressed by the particle for which intimates that what followeth is an explanation and confirmation of what is there said In this confirmation 1. He promiseth to return the captivity of Judah v. 1. 2. He promiseth to punish all the enemies of the Church especially of the Jewes And that for this end he will convocate them to plead the cause of his people against all of them v. 2 3. and particularly against some of their nearest neighbours v. 4 5 6. and having pleaded with them he will passe sentence against them v. 7 8 and see it executed by convocating all of them as he will also bring his prepared executioners v. 9 10 11 12. who at Gods command v. 13. will do great execution upon them v. 14. In which case they shall be left destitute of all comfort v. 15. and God will be terrible unto them v. 16. 3. He closeth these promises with comfortable applications to the Church particularly to Judah and Israel shewing what proofes of love they shall meet with in these dispensations and what shall be the sweet consequents thereof and namely that when he shall be thus terrible to enemies yet he will be their hope and strength v. 16. that he will confirme them in their interest in him and that they shall be holy and secured from the invasion of st●angers v. 17. that they shall have abundance of temporal benefits together with spiritual graces and refreshments v. 18. and that when their enemies shall be utterly destroyed yet he will establish and perpetuate them v. 19 20. and will cleanse them from their pollution that he may evidence his presence with them and may continue it v. 21. Ver. 1. FOr behold in those dayes and in that time when I shall bring again the captivity of Judah and Jerusalem Albeit this Vers doth expressely hold out only the time of Gods sentencing and punishing Judahs enemies of which he speaks in the following purpose Yet it doth import further 1. That there was to come a captivity and dispersion of the Jewish Nation both in City and Countrey and that under the Gospel and after the pouring out of the Spirit of which ch 2.28 for all the ensuing predictions do follow upon that It hath been already declared that after the performance of that promise great troubles were to follow ch 2.30 31. and that in the midst of these troubles not only should the truly godly attain to eternal salvation by cleaving to God and his Worship but the Lord should preserve a remnant for himself who should escape these troubles v. 32. And this as the connexion imports and hath been said before is but a confirmation and particular instance given of that general promise in the case of the Jewes So that it cannot at all relate to the captivity of Babylon 2. It imports that a restitution and returne of their captivity was to follow upon their dispersion at which time he will performe what is after
of this sentence and command given to the executioners is that there shall be great execution made of the enemies and they shall fall without number And for the Churches greater comfort it is declared that this day of the Lords vengeance is near not when the Prophet spake this but it shall speedily come after the enemies great preparations against the Church The place of this execution is called the valley of decision or threshing which is the same with the valley of Jehoshaphat v. 2 12. and it gets this new name because there the Lord will make a great havoke of enemies which is usually expressed by threshing Mic. 4.13 Isa 41.15 2 Kings 13.7 or because it is the valley determined and appointed as the word will signifie wherein to do this execution or the place wherein God will decide this great controversie betwixt him and his Church on the one part and these enemies on the other Doct. 1. Albeit it may be matter of admiration and terrour to the Church to see so great and so many enemies combined against her yet God shall make that resolve in as great a wonder to see the great havoke made of them Therefore is it held out by way of admiration Multitudes multitudes in the valley of decision 2. God will at last decide the controversie betwixt the Church and especially of Israel and her enemies and will determine the question by making many a skin pay for it For the valley of Jehoshaphat will be also the valley of decision and there multitudes multitudes shall be laid in the dust 3. When enemies are at the height of their attempts especially against converted Israel then the Lords people may expect that he will not be long in taking his day about of them wherein his glory will shine for the day of the Lord is near in the valley of decision Verse 15. The Sunne and the Moon shall be darkened and the Starres shall withdraw their shining This execution is further amplified that as the Church had felt before in her calamities chap. 2.10 so the enemies should at that time of their extremity be denied all comfort in the creatures from heaven or earth and that there should be great alterations in the world of which more v. 16. if not also the extraordinary signes of eclipses and darknesse presaging and accompanying the same Doct. 1. Though enemies may be insulting when the Church is in great bitternesse yet the day may and will come about wherein they shall drink of her cup if not of a worse For what was denounced against the Church ch 2.10 is now made their portion 2. Whatever be the delights and enjoyments of Gods enemies yet when he begins to reckon with them all their comforts and refuges from heaven or earth will faile them and all things will frowne and lowre upon them For so much is imported in that the Sunne and Moon shall be darkened c. These creatures shall deny them light and comfort and this shall make all things dark on earth to them and these dreadful sights shall terrifie them Vers 16. The LORD shall also roar out of Zion and utter his voice from Jerusalem and the heavens and the earth shall shake but the LORD will be the hope of his people and the strength of the children of Israel Followeth a comfortable application of all this to the Church and particularly to Israel holding forth in several promises what mercie to them shall be in their recollection of which v. 1. and in this streak on their enemies and what sweet consequents shall follow thereupon The first promise is that when the Lord shall manifest himself thus terribly against their enemies according to the predictions of his Word and out of his love to his people and when he shall make great alterations therby which is a further amplification of the calamities which are to come on enemies Yet in the midst of these confusions and terrours he will afford hope and strength to his Church and people Whence learn 1. When God manifests himself against his Churches enemies and specially against Israels adversaries he will be very terrible and dreadful And his being a party will make all the creatures to deny comfort and will adde to the bitternesse and terrour of such a desolate condition for the Lord shall roar like a Lion see Zeph. 2.11 Isa 42.13 14. And beside their desolate condition v. 15. the Lord also shall roar to imbitter that and as the cause of it as is after cleared of the shaking of heaven and earth 2. Gods executing of vengeance will be according to the predictions uttered in the Church and these will be found terrible in execution what ever men thought of them before for the Lord shall roar out of Zion and utter his voice from Jerusalem imports that God from out of Zion had spoken against them by his Word and that now his speech going forth in execution shall be found terrible as the roaring of a Lion 3. God will make his presence with and love to his people conspicuous by his indignation and severity against their enemies for the Lord shall roar out of Zion c. imports also that he is present there and that he evidenceth his respect to his habitation by his dreadful thunderings against the enemies thereof 4. As God is powerful to overturne heaven and earth when he pleaseth So his subduing of enemies may bring great alterations and overturnings in the world for when he shall roar the heavens and the earth shall shake which together with what is said v. 15. maketh a compleat parallel with the condition of the Church chap. 2.10 and it imports such an alteration of affairs as if there were a dissolution of the world and overturning of the course of nature And it is no wonder if they who are so well rooted in the world cause it to shake hefore they be cast out of it and if they who are so universally spread through the earth need general commotions to make them miserable 5. When God is shaking the earth to overturne enemies Gods people may be exercised with many fears and apprehensions that the storme will break upon them Therefore they need a promise to secure them against this 6. Nothing will be able to secure the hearts of Gods people against the terrours of a time of great commotions but God only and what they finde in him and from him Therefore doth the promise remit them to what the Lord will be unto them 7. In times of great confusion the Lords people may expect that he will be a place of refuge to hide them in that he will furnish them who come to him with ground of hope for the future and with strength and courage to bear out till the accomplishment come for that which is propounded here i● hope or a refuge and strength and God undertakes not to disappoint them of these the Lord will be the hope of his people c. he
will take them under his protection he will let them see ground of hope in himself and furnish them with hope to lay hold on it and with strength to bear them out 8. What the Lord hath been or will be at any time to his people Israel in performing spiritual promises that he will be to all who are indeed his people Therefore doth the promise run generally both to his people whoever they be and to the children of Israel Ver. 17. So shall ye know that I am the LORD your God dwelling in Zion my holy mountaine then shall Jerusalem be holy and there shall no stranger passe thorow her any more The second promise is that by these and other experiences of his love they shall be confirmed of his interest in them and care of them no lesse then when of old he resided among them in the visible signes of his presence The third promise is that for fitting them to enjoy his presence he will make them holy by sanctification And upon this shall follow their preservation from the invasion of open enemies and that they shall not be exposed as a prey to them as formerly they had beene This also in Scripture-language is understood by their being holy as it is observed in Obad. v. 17. partly because of the ceremonial pollution that of old did accompany the invasion of their land by heathens beside that it did obscure their priviledge of being the Lords peculiar sanctified and set apart people But chiefly because as is usual in wars when prophane Nations invade the Cuhrch they did overturne holy ordinances and cast all loose and in confusion Doct. 1. Interest in God is the great ground of the Churches encouragement for it is held out as their great mercie I am the Lord your God 2. This interest is yet more sweet when it is evidenced by his presence and the gracious effects thereof among his people and he is not provoked to forsake them though they be his Therefore it is added I am the Lord your God dwelling in Zion 3. It is an addition to all these mercies when not only matters stand so but the Church knoweth it and is convinced of it And this must be Gods own work without whose help they will neither see interest nor presence who yet in reality enjoy both Therefore he undertakes it to make their comfort and mercy compleat Ye shall know that I am the Lord your God c. See 1 Cor. 2.12 4. The Lord will in due time make his interest in and presence with his people convincingly clear by visible dispensations and actings for them for so by what I will do for you shall ye know that I am the Lord your God c. 5. Where God takes up his dwelling among a people all that concernes them becometh his and he takes care thereof for then it is my mountaine to wit Zion where he dwelleth 6. Gods presence with a people must be entertained and proven by their holinesse for then it is my holy mountaine and Jerusalem is holy See Psal 93.5 7. It is God only who can undertake for making his people holy and it is their duty to deny themselves and imploy him for that end for it is his promise then shall Jerusalem be holy 8. Where a people have real sanctification as a fruit and evidence of Gods presence they have also the promise that he will preserve them from the invasion of enemies for then shall Jerusalem be holy in this respect also that no stranger shall passe thorow her to wit in an hostile way And albeit this seeme to be a peculiar promise to converted Israel and albeit others even Judah it self when they have been upon the amending hand have met with sad stormes from enemies Yet certainly such have the promise of this mercy when it is for their good and what they meet with which seemeth contrary to it is but to stir them up yet more to the study of holinesse and in that respect they get a blessed issue from their troubles and will come to a compleat issue at last 9. It is a sad ingredient in the trouble of the Lords people when they are invaded by profane Nations that not only their priviledges are obscured thereby but that their invasion and the confusions occasioned therreby together with their corrupt principles and practices do cast l●●se and overturne Religion and bring in a deluge of prophanity Therefore is the mercy of their deliverance from strangers set forth under the name of being holy as is before explained 10. Such as have been long molested by enemies though they will meet with trouble in one kinde and degree or other while they are within time yet they may attaine to this mercy to be free of molestation and trouble from invading enemies and not meet with it any more in the measure that formerly they have had for such is the promise to Israel and Jerusalem being converted there shall no strangers passe through her any more Whatever troubles they may meet with from enemies after that great day of vengeance formerly mentioned yet they shall not any more passe through them as formerly to subdue or rul● over them or carry them into captivity So that their greatest hazard then will be that quietnesse may breed security Vers 18. And it shall come to passe in that day that the mountaines shall drop down new wine and the hills shall flow with milke and all the rivers of Judah shall flow with waters and a fountain shall come forth of the house of the LORD and shall water the valley of Shittim The fourth promise is that God shall be so bountiful to converted Israel th●● they shall not want abundance and variety of temporal benefits which are instanced in their mountaines and hills abounding with vines and with good pasture for the herds and flockes that they may afford much milke and that they shall have abundance of water which was oftentimes scarce in that land To this is subjoyned the fifth promise that this plenty should be accompanied with spiritual graces and refreshments conveighed by the Gospel and flowing forth not only for their own quickening and comfort but for the good of the Nations round about even of those whose condition seemeth most desperate To clear this promise a little we have first 1. The benefit it self compared to a fountain of waters flowing out whereby as is cleared on Zech. 14.8 is understood all spiritual graces and refreshments which are held forth and instrumentally communicated and conveighed to sinners by the Doctrine of the Gospel and applied and quickened by the Spirit 2. We have the fountaine and rise of this benefit it shall come forth of the house of the Lord. It is conceived that the speech alludeth to some conduits that conveighed water to the Temple some whereof came by the Altar to wash away the blood that was poured out there and so ran out again with it See Ezek. 47.1 and so it
proofe of his fulnesse in raising up and instructing this herdman to be his extraordinary Ambassadour 3. Such as give but ill entertainment to the messages they receive may get rougher messages sent unto them and such as despise eminent and discreet messengers God may send such to them as will use them more roughly for Israel had many notable Prophets both before and at this time who being despised he employes this herdman who was not onely hatefull to them as being a Jew and a base man and so it might lay their pride when God sent such a one unto them but God makes use of his rustick and rude humour that they might be dealt with plainly and roughly who now through their own obstinacy were become like the brute beasts which Amos had kept before 4. Such as are called of God were they never so mean may boldly and on all hazards declare his minde to a sinfull people and their courage is a testimony of their calling witnessing against all despisers for as Amos durst deale freely with Israel and tell the words which he saw concerning Israel so the Lord did convince Israel that he was called by him in that he durst leave his own country and trusting in God durst deale freely with this flourishing Kingdom according to their deservings 5. It is a great snare to a wicked Nation when they prosper notwithstanding their wickednesse and there is need in such a case that the wrath of God pursuing sin be frequently inculcate from the word that men may not deceive themselves therefore is Amos as well as Hosea sent with these hard tidings in the days of Vzziah and in the days of Jeroboam c. Both of which had prosperous reignes at least for a time 2. Kings 14 23 24 25 c. 2. Chron 26. 3 6 7. 6. When the Word of the Lord is not regarded it is just with him to preach to a people by his judgements and by unnatural and extraordinary signes and wonders to let them know his anger so much may be gathered from this Earthquake which was a terrible stroak and warning to that people who beleived not and therefore is taken special notice of here and long after Zech. 14.5 Verse 2. And he said The Lord will roar from Zion and utter his voice from Jerusalem and the habitations of the Shepherds shall mourn and the top of Carmel shall wither This verse holds out the summe of the whole Prophecy to wit that God was about to manifest his terror in executions according to the threatnings of his Word As the sentence may relate to heathen Nations round about who are also threatned by this Prophet it hath been opened upon Ioel 3.16 But as it relates to Israel to whom this Prophet is chiefly sent and to whom the most part of what followeth is directed the sense and summe of it is that the Prophet speaking in his own termes who was well acquainted with the roaring of Lions in the wildernesse and with pastures for sheep declares that however Israel since their defection from the house of David despised the Temple of Jerusalem yet they should finde that God dwelt there and that the true Doctrine sounded there and from thence and as other Prophets before him and he among the rest were sent out by God dwelling in Zion and some of them from thence to denounce his terrible judgements so these threatnings were now to break forth in dreadful execution In somuch that the habitations of the shepherds shall mourn c. Whereby we may understand that all their fertile and pleasant places such as their green pastures and fruitfull Carmel either that in Asher near the Sea Josh 19.24 26. Jer. 46.18 or rather that in Judah better known to him Josh 15.21 55. 1. Sam. 25.2 should be laid desolate and that as the Land should feele the stroak so the inhabitants being deprived of their delighted-in prosperity should be filled with sorrow and griefe and be made to mourn as herdmen do when their pastures are dried up Doct. 1. However the Church and truth of God be contemned by these who make defection therefrom and God may seem to lie by for a time from avenging this Yet he will appear to assert his presence in his Church and to manifest the truth of his word by execution according to it for the Lord will roare from Zion his dwelling place and utter his voice from Jerusalem where the Temple stood that is he will now in a terrible way make it manifest that what Doctrine was preached there and elsewhere in his name was his word 2. However men contemn God in the matter of subjection to him yet he will be their party to punish them for their sin whether they will or no for Amos gets it in Commission to publish that God will manifest himself dreadful against them and he said the Lord will roar from Zion c. 3. The Lords word how much soever it be despised yet it will prove terrible to the stoutest when it breaks fourth in execution for the Lord will roar from Zion and utter his voice from Jerusalem that is his threatnings though despised will prove thus dreadful in that day 4. God is provoked to make the creaturres whereof man makes use feel his anger and smart under it if men will not be sensible for the habitations of the shepherds shall mourn and the top of Carmel shall wither that is their pleasant pastures and the most excellent of their friutful Fields as Carmel signifieth shall feele the stroak See Jer. 12.11 5. Whatever fruitful or pleasant thing it be that men lean to and delight in neglecting God it will certainly in due time decay till nothing be left them but sorrow for the want of them for so much also is imported here in that the habitations of shepherds shall mourn not onely shall the Land be put in a mournful posture but the inhabitants shall be filled with sorrow Verse 3. Thus saith the Lord For three transgressions of Damascus and for four I will not turn away the punishment thereof because they have threshed Gilead with threshing instruments of Iron Albeit the Lord sends Amos chiefly to preach against Israel as appears from v. 1. yet he ordains him to begin with accusations and threatnings against forraign Nations round about before he come to deal with them And accordingly in this and the beginning of the next Chapter there are six of these Nations spoken to We may conceive these reasons why the Lord followeth this method 1. That however this Prophet was a mean man yet Israel might be convinced of his Authority and Commission to be a Prophet in that God had revealed his mind to him concerning so many Nations beside themselves 2. That when Israel should look on other Nations and see them plagued as well as themselves they might not as men are naturally unwilling to see God in calamities ascribe their owne afflictions to fortune or chance among the
of their Idolatry in the matter of the golden calfe as is cleared Act. 7.40 41 42. 8. It is the great folly and madnesse of men to think that a deitie is in their choice to choose and make what they will a God unto themselves Or to think to represent a deitie by Images which are of their making or to worship these Images as in reality they do whatever they pretend to the contrary for it was also their fault that they had Images the star of your God which ye made to your selves And Act. 7.43 it is said figures which ye made to worship them 9. Idolatry being continued in will at last draw on exile and captivity Therefore is the sentence given out against the present generation that since that course had gone such a length Therefore I will cause you go into captivity beyond Damascus And by this expression beyond Damascus is imported not onely that they should be carried far away beyond that place which Stephen Act. 7.43 respecting the event declareth how far it was even so far beyond Damascus that it was beyond Babylon also But further the expression may also import 1. Whereas they thought much of the stroaks had been inflicted on them by the Syrians of Damascus and that belike some of them were carried into captivity by them The Lord declareth that they should be carried further off then ever they were carried by the Syrians And that their continued in provocations should make them think little of what they had felt in respect of what was to come upon them 2. Whereas they might think strange of that sentence given out against the Syrians and of their threatned captivity chap. 1.5 The Lord declareth that they should be carried further off then the Syrians and that the stroak to come on them who were his people and yet proved incorrigible should be sadder in that respect then his stroak on a pagan Nation 3 Whereas they might look on the Kingdome of Syria and Damascus as a strong bulwark betwixt them and any remoter enemy on that quater as being a potent Kingdome not easily to be subdued The Lord declareth that this refuge shall faile them and an enemy should come further-off who should carry them beyond it Doct. 10. Men will very readily sleep securely under saddest threatnings unlesse they consider again and again that God is their party and do seriously meditate upon his greatnesse and power Therefore are they again advertised that this is said by the Lord whose name is the God of hosts CHAP. VI. ALbeit Israel was Amos peculiar charge yet in this chap. Iudah is joyned with them both in the challenge v. 1. And all alongst as appeareth from the last threatning v. 14. And by so doing the Lord would have it cleared that his servant was not partial in his doctrine nor led by any private spleen against Israel And he would let Israel see how little cause they had to be secure seing Iudah is so dealt with also In the first part of the chap. the Lord challengeth and denounceth a wo upon the Inhabitants of Jerusalem and Samaria and especially the great ones for their prophane security relieing upon their strength and eminency v. 1. which yet was but a weak ground if they considered other Nations and cities v. 2. for their contempt of threatnings and the oppression that followed thereupon v. 3. And for their sensualty and luxury little regarding the afflictions of the rest of the countrey v. 4.5.6 In the second part of the chap. the Lord explains that wo v. 1. and pronounceth sentence against them That these secure voluptuous persons should go into captivity with the first and so their jollity should be removed v. 7. That certainly he would not regard their priviledges and execellencies but would trample upon them and deliver up their city to the enemies v. 8. That there should be a great mortality among them v. 9.10 And that he would ruine the families and houses of great and small v. 11. In the third part of the chap. the Lord confirmeth this sentence shewing that however hitherto he had manifested his patience and taken pains upon them Yet now it was to no purpose to use any further meanes to reclaime them as appeared from their horrid injustice v. 12. And however they were insolent and boasters of their own strength v. 13. Yet he would refute that carnal confidence by sending an enemy who should overrun the Land of Canaan from one end to another Verse 1. Wo to them that are at ease in Zion and trust in the mountain of Samaria which are named chief of the nations to whom the house of Israel came In this v. a wo is pronounced against the inhabitants of the chief Cities of both Judah and Israel and especially against the great ones there because they were stupidly secure as trusting in their strength by situation and their own and the places eminency these two places being the two chief places of both the Nations or Kingdomes to which all Israel did resort as to the chief Cities of the Kingdomes and places of publick justice and of publick worship also in Jerusalem Doct. 1. Albeit ease and a quiet settled condition be that which men love well and do hunt after by all means and take too well with when they enjoy it Yet ofttimes such a condition breeds so much presumption and carnal security that it brings a wo and curse with it for wo to them that are at ease or secure as these at ease ordinarily are 2. Such as seeme to cleave or really do cleave to God and his way better then others may readily make a sleeping pillow of that and yet that doth not warrant them to be secure but will rather put them in the front of those that are under the wo if they prove so Therefore doth he begin with this wo to them that are at ease in Zion before Samaria Where it is imported that they may be at ease and that then they get the first of the wo. And he names Zion rather then Jerusalem because among other reasons this mount was the eminent part of their City being the City of David the man according to Gods heart with whom the Covenant was made and who herein was a type of Christ and the place whereunto David brought the Arke 2. Sam. 6.12 And therefore it is that however the Temple stood on mount Morijah 2. Chron. 3.1 yet mount Zion is often named as the place of Gods residence to which the promises are made being a type of the Church where Christ the Son of David reignes and dwells And yet the Lord declareth that all this should no avert the wo. 3. Albeit that the strength of places by situation do breed carnal confidence and that draw on security yet all that is no warrant for it nor will guard against the wo Therefore also is Zion named because it was strong and long a taking from the Jebusites 2.
it in sons and daughters old men and young servants and handmaids It may teach 1. No rank or sex or condition of persons are secluded from the promise of the Spirit ●e they old or young male or female bond or free 2. The efficacy and fulnesse of the Spirit of God is such as to refresh and prevaile with all these sorts of persons young ones who are not capable of mans teaching yet are not secluded from his teaching Mark 10.14 16. Luke 1.15 The Spirit hath vertue to illuminate and subdue young men notwithstanding all the power of their corruptions 1 John 2.13 14. to keep men fresh and lively in old age Psal 92.13 14. and to make servants happy in their condition 1 Cor. 7.22 3. It is Gods sure promise to the Church of the Gospel that the knowledge of him and of his truth shall be continued and propagated therein from generation to generation For therefore is it put in the first place your sons and daughters rising up to succeed you shall prophesie Doct. 10. As for these wayes of revealing the will of God of old by prophecie visions and dreams albeit they point all at one thing and seem to be named all here to let out the fulnesse of Gospel-knowledge answering to all of them and therefore seem to be comprehended all under prophesying as it is attributed to his servants of all sorts and ages Acts 2.18 Yet seeing they are distinctly named and attributed to several sorts of persons as prophesying to sons and daughters visions to young men and dreames to old men We may from it take up some steps and degrees of the knowledge of God wherein they grow up who are under the Spirits teaching As 1. By prophesying attributed to sons and daughters we may understand simply the knowledge of divine things 2. By visions attributed to young men we may understand their clearer insight and uptaking of these mysteries then they had in their younger dayes For vision doth represent the thing revealed more sensibly 3. By dreams wherein men have their senses shut up from the world and which are attributed to old men we may understand a further degree of illumination when light received doth take hold on the affections to sanctifie and subdue them So that mens hearts are taken off the world and filled with the things of God And so this gradation will teach That the knowledge of God which is communicated unto men by the Spirit will be on the growing hand till from a common notion and remembring of it it come to be more seriously pondered and laid to heart and till it take hold upon the affections and conquer the whole heart to God Ver. 30. And I will shew wonders in the heavens and in the earth blood and fire and pillars of smoake 31. The Sunne shall be turned into darknesse and the Moon into blood before the great and terrible day of the LORD come To prevent all secure and carnal thoughts as if upon embracing of the Gospel and receiving of the Spirit men should be rid of all outward trouble The Lord foretells of great commotions which were to be in the world after the pouring out of the Spirit Whereof though there were some particular accomplishments in these primitive times and before that dreadful day of the destruction of Jerusalem Yet the prediction stretcheth forth to all ages after the pouring out of the Spirit till the second coming of Christ to judgement which is here called the great and terrible day of the LORD The expressions pointing out these commotions of wonders in heaven earth c. may be understood either literally that there shall be signes of blood fire darknesse and eclipses of Sun and Moon going before these calamities as presages thereof or figuratively that there shall be such commotions and such signes of Gods anger for sin such judgements and calamities of sword famine and sicknesses such persecutions desertions tentations heresies schismes c. as if heaven and earth were going through other the course of nature overturned and the world full of dreadfull fights of blood fire and darknesse and neither Sunne or Moon affording wonted light or comfort To dip further into what may be connceived to be figuratively pointed at under every one of these I conceive is not very safe Doct. 1. Whatever breathing times God may allow upon his Gospel-Church yet it is her duty to look for commotions and troubles especially after times of pouring out of the Spirit and times of much light and reformation For upon the one hand Satan will bend all his power to oppose the progresse of the Gospel and will set the world in opposition to the Church and on the other hand God will poure out all sorts of calamities upon the visible Church to punish them who contemne his rich offer and do not walk answerably to such dispensations and to trie the graces of his own that they may aspire toward spiritual happinesse in heaven And he will punish secret and open enemies for the injuries they do to the Church For these causes is this prediction subjoyned to the former promise 2. It is the Churches duty not only to look for troubles but to expect that they will be great and very dreadful such as may testifie the greatnesse of Gods displeasure against sin and of mens fury against the Church such as may throughly trie the godly and bring about Gods deep counsels For there will be wonders in the heavens or the firmament and several regions of the aire and in the earth blood and fire c. 3. Whoever be employed in raising these great commotions and whatever be the designes and malice of men in them yet it is the Churches good and safety to see a supreme hand of God in all of them For saith he I will shew wonders c. 4. Though the Church in several ages may get times of breathing and tranquillity yet these will not be permanent but interrupted with sad blasts till the second coming of Christ which as it is certainly approaching so it will put a period to all stormes wherewith the godly are tossed For these things will be before the great and terrible day of the Lord come that is in all ages till that time and belike very violently immediately before Math. 24.29 30. 5. The day of Christs second coming will be great and terrible and as it is Acts 2.20 a notable or illustrious day A despised Christ will be seen great there great things will be done in that day He will then reach his full and final end of all his works All things will then be revealed and made patent the glory of God will be seen face to face the secrets of hearts the glory of Saints and the truth of promises and threatenings will then be made manifest And though the godly will then be free of all terrour yet it will be in it self a day of much state and majesty of the Lord and of great