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

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we wait for him Hab. 2.3 the Lord is not slack concerning his coming 2 Pet. 3.9 we must be looking for his return Isa 8.17 so that when he returneth we may be able to cry with comfort This is our Lord we have waited for him we will rejoyce in his Salvation Isaiah 25.8 9. The fourth comfortable consideration is Though during this distance of time betwixt Sion's King's departing from her and his returning to her again be the time of Zion's trouble and travel The Church Militant here upon Earth is compared to a Travailing Woman tho' pangs take hold of her and she is in pain labouring to bring forth Mic. 4.8 9 10. yet this traveling-pain these labouring pangs do not last long she is at length delivered to her great satisfaction and comfort This same allusion our Lord himself maketh that the time of his Absenting himself from his Church would be her Traveling time she should suffer the pangs and pains of a Travailing woman and she should have sorrow because her hour is come yet so soon as she is delivered of a Man-Child she then remembers no more her fore-going anguish but all her former sorrow is swallowed up with present joy because God hath enabled her to bring forth a man-child into the world John 16.20 21 22. And thus the Woman Christ's Church is said to bring forth a Man-child which was caught up into Heaven for its security from the Dragon Rev. 12.5 Thus likewise we are told when Christ comes to be formed in the hearts of true penitents by such godly Ministers as Travel in birth for their Conversion as blessed Paul did Gal. 4.19 then there is joy in Heaven over one sinner that repenteth Luke 15. verse 6 10 23 and 32. Now assuredly the Church of Christ shall not alway go with her great Belly nor shall she long complain as Hezekiah did in his Day that the Child of Reformation is brought to the Birth and there is no strength to bring forth Isa 37.3 The Lord will hasten her deliverance in his own due and appointed time Isa 60.20 and Dan. 8.19 He will work wonderful works which we never looked for Isa 64.3 Who hath heard or seen such a thing that before Zion travelled she brought forth before her pain came she was delivered of a Man-child a Nation is born in one day so soon as Zion travelled she brought forth her Childeren Shall I bring to the Birth and not cause to bring forth saith the Lord c. Isa 66.6 7 8 9. As 't is the voice of the. Lord that maketh the Hinds those girt Creatures to Calve Psa 29.9 and Job 39. ver 1 2 3 4. So and much more than so 't is the Voice of the Lord from his Temple that openeth the Church's Womb and causeth her to bring forth her sorrows with Joy and the same Voice from the Temple calleth upon all that love her to rejoice for joy with her and to suck the Breasts of Consolation unto satisfaction and to milk out so as to be Delighted with the Abundance of her Glory Isaiah 66 610 11 12 c. The fifth Cordial is Tho' there be four famous Joys that are temporal and Transitory here upon Earth and all Recorded in Scripture namely 1st The Joy of Harvest And 2dly The Joy of Victory both these be named in Isa 9.3 as very great earthly joys for 't is well known what strange transporting Joys are practiced by Country-men at the last Load of Corn led out of the Field into the Barn to which we add the shearing of Sheep which is called a good day c. 1 Sam. 25.8.36 And 't is well known what strange Triumphing Joys are made by the Conquering Soldiers when they run to divide the Rich Spoils of their Conquered Enemies 3dly There is the Joy of marriage mentioned in Cant. 3.11 Where the day of Solomon's Espousals is call'd the day of the gladness of his heart And 't is no less to other meaner men unto whom it cannot but be matter of Joy When man at his Marryng a Woman doth verily find again his Lost Rib that was taken out of his side Gen. 2. v. 21 22. Therefore marriage is near in sound to a merry age 4thly There is the Joy that succeeds this Joy of Marriage namely the Joy of a Man-child born into the World as is afore-mentioned this is likewise matter of great Joy because thereby Names Posterities Families and Generations are upheld in the World throughout all Counteries over the face of the Earth and without which the World would soon come to an end c. Yet this Joy of the Church bringing forth the Man-child of Reformation is a Joy that far transcends all the other four former Joys not only as it is 1. A Spiritual and Heavenly Joy wherein it exceeds all Joys that are only Carnal and Earthly which strangers do not intermeddle with Pro. 14.10 But also 2. Because It is an everlasting Joy Isa 35.10 61.7 65.17 18 19. Thus our Lord tells his Disciples their Joy at this Man-child's Birth upon his return will be joy which no man taketh away from them Joh. 16. v. 21 22 'T is call'd a day of Refreshing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Refrigerij a cooling day after hot persecutions Acts 3.19 yea And 3. It s a most extensive happiness as it is a day of Restitution of all ●hings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verse 21. as the ground of this Joy is greatest so 't is a joy that lasts longest Moreover 't is said to the faithful Servant Enter thou into the Joy of thy Lord. Matth. 25.21 and again verse 23. Intimating this Joy is too great to enter into us but we must enter into it and when it is once entered into we must enjoy that Joy fore ever The sixth comfortable Consideration is To behold Christ coming in his Kingdom with power and great glory Matth. 24.30 to save Zion from her Enemies Spiritual as well as Temporal and to make all her Foes to become her Foot-stool Psal 110.1 Matth. 22.44 Mark 12.36 Luke 20.42 Acts 2.35 1 Cor. 15.24 25 26. Heb. 1● 13 and 10.13 This must needs be a most joyful sight thus often Recorded in Scripture and infinitely transcending those three famous sights which Father Augustin so earnestly wished to see namely Romam in store Paulum in Ore et Christum in Carne that is Old Rome in her Antient splendor blessed Paul preaching with his Charms of Eloquence and our most blessed Redeemer in his humane nature walking about and doing good as Acts 10.38 We are told how the Tulep call'd a Lilly doth out-shine Solomon in all his glory Matth. 6.28 29. How much more glorious will the sight of Christ be in his State of Exaltation who was greater than Solomon in his State of Humiliation Matth. 12.42 An exalted Christ is a rare sight so excellent as only to be seen of Angels 1 Tim. 3.16 yet it is said that some men shall not taste
and Sparta yea as Jezabel nothing but stumps left so that they shall not say This is Jezabel 2 Kings 9.37 V. 20. And she said unto them after an humble manner And hence Observ 1. 'T is a blessed frame when the Mind and the Means do meet even together as Naomi's did here she had learnt to be abased as well as exalted Phil. 4.11 12. she here puts her Mouth in the Dust when she heard her old Neighbours say Surely this cannot be the same Woman in this present Poverty whom we have seen so flourishing in such past pompous Prosperity Hearing such discourse she answers again in a very lowly Language altogether agreeable to the present Providences of God upon her God had afflicted her and she would carry her Sails according to those Divine Dispensations How many are humbled outwardly who are not humble inwardly who are low in their Means but are not lowly in their Minds No Beggar so bad as the proud Beggar all such as are afflicted and are not better'd by their Affliction and not brought to God's Foot as the Righteous Man of the East was Isa 41.2 thereby they lose the fruit of their Affliction and this is a great loss to lose an Affliction Call me not Naomi but call me Marah that is call me not pleasant or delectable non Amaenam sed Amaram but bitter for the Lord hath dealt very bitterly with me Hence Observ 2. The Almighty can soon and suddenly alter the Condition of his Creatures either for the worse or for the better He can change Naomi into Marah and Marah into Naomi again and all this in a moment The very Heathen Philosophers and Poets had some hold of this Notion that it was God's Work in Heaven to abase those that exalt themselves and to exalt those that abase themselves upon Earth This both Aesop and Hesiod speaks off Those whom God finds priding themselves in their being Naomi's or pleasant and delectable ones those God pulls down and makes Marah's of them by bringing them into a bitter condition and such as do humbly feel themselves to be Marah or bitter those he makes Naomi's beautiful and pleasant ones N. B. This is God's Method first God calls no Man Benjamin that hath not been Benonies in their own hearts and in their Humility and he salutes them not Naomi's in the sweet Comforts of his Spirit until they have been soaked in the bitterness of their own Spirits in that Marah of true Compunction and Contrition Here Naomi bemoans her self not in a way of Murmuring against God in despair and despondency but in an humble sense and submission under the heavy hand of God's Di●pleasure upon her for her sin She saith V. 21. I went out full but the Lord hath brought me home again empty Hence Observ 1. Such as think of Gain out of God's way comes to loss at last They that go out of God's Precincts goes also out of God's Protection and are oft brought home by Weeping-Cross as Naomi here she went out full from Canaan the Land of Promise and a Land of Providence too The Eyes of the Lord was upon it for good from the beginning of the Year to the end thereof Deut. 11.11 12. into the Idolatrous Land of Moab which was under no such Promise nor Providence and she went from Canaan not for want but for fear of want by the Famine then upon it This she recognizes not without some remorse as done out of distrust God's Command is Dwell in the Land and verily thou shalt be fed Psal 37.3 that is be content with thy Lot and abide in thy station and serve God's Providence in thy particular Calling this will bring the Blessing of Food and Raiment for Necessity though not for Superfluity and 't is God's Voice also Wait on the Lord and keep his way ver 34. for such as go out of God's way may say with Jacob I shall bring a Curse upon me and n●t a Blessing Gen. 27.12 Thus did Naomi here thus Lot lost his All by his Carnal Choice of his well-water'd Countreys Gen. 13.10 with 14.12 Lot lost his Liberty as well as his Goods for affecting the first choice which by good Manners he should have given to his Uncle and whereof he had soon enough This was the Issue God crossed Lot in that he had unmannerly chosen and God blessed Abraham in that which was unavoidably left him Thus Jehosaphat had well nigh lost his Life for loving those that hated God 2 Chron. 18.31 with 19.2 then Jehosaphat saw to his Sorrow the great Inconvenience of being out of God's way in bad Company green Wood if bound up with the dry doth easily take fire and is burnt together in a common Calamity However he quite lost his Ships and his Golden Design by such a step out of God's way into such an unwarrantable Confederacy likely by a Tempest which Solomon's met not with 1 Kin. 9.2 8. and 22.44 48 49. Thus also Josiah lost his Life by his rashly going out of God's way without advising with the Prophet Jeremy or Zephany or Ur●jah all then living 2 Chron. 35.22 23 24. repenting no doubt of his Rashness V. 21. The Lord hath testified against me Hence Observ 2. 'T is some allay to our Affliction not to look upon it as a fortuitous thing but to eye God as the Author of it The Lord saith she hath come in as a Witness against me declaring by his Hand upon me both my own sin and his Displeasure for my sin in chusing Moab before Canaan She kisses the Rod and the Hand that smites her reading Divine Faithfulness in her Heavenly Father as Psal 119.75 and saying the Cup that this my Father gives me to drink shall I not drink it John 18.11 Oh what an allay it was to David when able to say The Lord hath bid Shimei Curse me 2 Sam. 16.10 11. David could not say at another time The Lord hath bid Nabal be churlish to me the want of which made him run Riot into a rash Vow 1 Sam. 25.22 in his Resolution for Revenge he carries more calmly to that dead Dog Shimei so call'd ver 9. saying The Lord hath let loose this dead Dog upon me This eying God in our losses and crosses as the principal Agent whatever be the Instrument is a Soveraign help to true Patience Ver. 22. In the beginning of Barley-Harvest and in the beginning of the Passover saith the Chaldee Paraphrast Hence Observe 'T is matter of great Admiration to consider what marvelous and happy hits of Divine Providence doth attend God's Children in their Afflictions Oh what a wonderful hit of Providence this was for Naoms's Soul as well as for her Body She meets with an Harvest time for both She had long been deprived of the Passover in Moab and now she meets with it at the first in Canaan Bread for her Soul as well as for her Body Thus 't was a marvelous hit of Providence that Noah's Ark
and having Salvation c Zech. 9.9 This is that full and strutting Breast of consolation which all the Children of the Church are commanded to suck and be satisfied to milk out and be delighted with the abundance of her glory Isa 66. ver 11. to wit when her King comes in his glory to comfort her this choice Cordial the Prophet Zechariah prepared for the Church's comfort in her Captivity about 500 years before Christ's coming in the flesh and it was so famous a Prophetick promise that when it became a performance at the coming of Christ we find this same Prophecy quoted by all the four Evangelists as Mat. 21.5 7 9. and Mar. 11.2 10. and Luk. 19. ver 30 38. and Joh. 12.13 14 15 16. N.B. But long before this Prophet Zechariah we find that Evangelical Prpohet Isaiah gives us the substance of this very Prophecy in his day saying to the same purpose what shall one then answer the Ambassadors or Messengers of the Nations that the Lord hath founded Sion and the poor of his people shall trust in it Isa 14.32 see Psa 87. ver 1 2 3 4 5. and 102.16 where David long before Isaiah most highly extolls Sion's foundation and its superstructure also when the Lord shall appear in his glory but this Prophetical Evangelist Isaiah comes yet more near to this Prophecy of Zechariah saying Behold the Lord hath proclaimed unto the end of the world as the best Tidings that can be heard in the world say ye to the Daughter of Zion behold thy Salvation cometh behold his Reward is with him and his work before him Isa 62. verse 11. Note hence 1st Here are three Beholds to give the greater Lustre upon the the matter there mentioned 2ly Zions King and Salvation are Synonima's signifying one and the same for Zechariah's King cometh is Isaiah's Salvation cometh and thus old Simeon call'd Christ his Salvation Luk. 2.30 3ly When Zion's King cometh then Zion shall be called a City sought out and not forsaken Isa 62.12 This is the sum and substance of all the best news upon the earth we may draw water with joy out of this well of Salvation Isa 12.3 A Mandamus from Zion's King can save Zion at her lowest State Ps 44.4 and 74 12 and 48.2 N.B. This Prophetick promise of Christ's coming with Salvation unto Zion doth afford twelve comfortable considerations The First Cordial is If the Tidings of Christ's first coming unto his Church tho' then he came only in the form of a Servant and in his State of Humiliation yet the Promise thereof was such good news to Zion and so grand a ground of her greatest joy as both those Prophets Isa 62.11 and Zech. 9.9 do testifie Then how much more joyful tidings must needs be Christ's second coming in his State of Exaltation unto his Church when he shall come in his Kingdom and in the Clouds of Heaven with Power and great Glory Mat. 24.30 The second Cordial is If the Ante nati or those born before Christ namely the Old Testament Saints could be content to wait the full term of four Thousand years from the first Time that Christ was Promised in the seed of the Woman Gen. 3.15 as a Congruous Remedy to man's Cursed Malady by his first foul fall before that promise was performed at the Birth of Christ Then why cannot the Post nati or such as are born after Christ namely the New Testament Saints be content to wait until the term of only two Thousand years more be run quite out before his second coming in Glory which is but half the time that the Patriarks and Prophets waited for his first coming as a● Servant only and not as a Lord and King in his Grandeur of Majesty T' is well known that the time since the Birth of Christ amounts not yet to Seventeen Hundred years so there is yet Three Hundred years and more to make up the numbers of two Thousand which is but the one half of the afore-said 4000 in the Old Testament times yet our Lord comforts us with saying For the Elects sake these days shall be shortned Mat. 24.22 and the world may not last thus Six Thousand years as the Rabbins say only from this ground as the Creation of the world lasted six days so its continuation shall be Six Thousand years because 't is said a Thousand years are but as one day with God c. Now what a shame it is that we of the new Testament times should be so short spirited as to be so soon weary of waiting for our Lord 's coming especially considering how we lay under the blessed influence both of Christ's Birth Life and Death yea and of his Resurrection Ascension and Intercession c. None of which were priviledges of Old Testament times yet they waited for the consolation of Israel Luke 2.25 we should adjure our selves not to awake our love till he please Can. 2.7 3.5 The third Cordial is Tho' there be a time for our Lord 's going from his Zion to wit when his Glory departs from her as it did gradualy from his S●●ctuary Ezek. 10.18 and 11.23 Because Zion's sins do sometime seperate betwixt her Lord and her Isa 59.2 then is it that the spouse complains My beloved had with drawn himself Cant. 5.6 This is the time of Zion's trouble but she shall be saved out of it Jer. 30.7 because there is a time of Zion's Kings returning to her again wherein he saith to her I am returned with my mercies to Jerusalem and I will yet comfort Zion Zech. 1.16.17 Tho' Zion be sad when her King goeth from her yet is she commanded here to rejoice greatly for behold her King cometh unto her Zech. 9.9 Thus we are told how Christ did depart from his Disciples this made them melancholly therefore 't is added for their comfort that in like manner he will return to them again Acts 1.9 11. To the same effect Christ had told them before his death Saying Let not your hearts be sad if I go from you 't is to prepare a place for you and I will come again to you and receive you to my self that where I am there ye may be also John 14.1 2 3. And he adds I will not leave you comfortless or Gr. Orphans for I will come to you again verse 18. and 28. yea for their greater comfort he tells them his absence from them was both expedient and should be only for a little while and then they should see him again John 16.7 16. which proving a problem or a dark saying to the Disciples our Lord explains it verse 17 18 19 20. As it was but a little time indeed betwixt his Death and his Resurrection c. So it must be but a little time betwixt us living in this last age of the world and our Lord 's returning to us though he tarry his appointed time yet are we assured he will surely come and will not tarry therefore must
drawn in Gods Book Psal 139.16 Not unlike to the Letters printed upon the Paper which do answer the Printing Type The Divine Efficiency doth answer to an hairs-breadth the Divine Decree both in Creation and Providence Gods Decree is the standing Rule of his Efficiency Those exact slingers Judg. 20.16 could not hit the mark so well as God doth by his External Efficiency his own Internal and Eternal Decree There is no variation of the Compass in this case at all The supream end hereof is the manifestation of his own glory more particularly of his wisdom power and goodness Psal 8.1 19.1 103. last 104.31 145.10 148.5 Prov. 16.4 Isa 43.21 Rom. 11.36 Revel 4.10 11. 5.13 'T is true God had a complacency in the work of his hands when he saw it was all Tob Meod superlatively good Gen. 1.31 The Lord rejoyced in his works Psal 104.31 It did God good a● it were to see all good and very good It was a delight to him but God saw this long before even from Eternity Non datur prius posterius in Deo The phrase imports God would have Man to see the wisdom power and goodness of God in all which he thus commends to our consideration a curious and glorious frame full of admirable skill and variety 2. The Subordinate or Subalternate End is for Mans Instruction and comfort 1. For Mans Instruction Hereby Man learns that there is a God Isa 40.26 Rom. 1.20 there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something knowable to Natural Reason concerning a Deity the World could not make it self neither could it be made by Chance or by a Concussion of Atoms c. The print and Character of the God of Heaven is legible upon every pile of grass growing on earth Praesentem Monstrat quaelibet Herba Deum Ovid. Let no man say he is not Book-learnt for every one may read the Book of Nature though he cannot read the Book of Scripture and learn thence the knowledge of God the Creator though not God the Redeemer and so abhor Atheism Ignorance and Idolatry Cursed be that God which made not Heaven and Earth Jerem. 10.11 This verse spoken at Babylon and therefore writ in the Chaldee Tongue whereas all the rest of the Prophesie is set down in the Hebrew was given to Gods people to make use of when the Babylonians sollicited them during their Captivity to worship their Idols in the Babylonian Language as a detestation of their Babel Idols saying to them Cursed be your Gods for they made neither Heaven nor Earth The same we may say of all the Idols both of Pagans and of Papagans 2. For Mans Comfort the Maker of Heaven and Earth may be hoped in for help above all Mortal Princes for he is a King Immortal and he is the all-powerful Creator and therefore can help without a peradventure Psal 146.3 4 5 6. Let Israel rejoyce in him that made him and new made him too Psal 149.2 or Hebr. in his Makers implying the Trinity of persons concurring both in Creation and Re-Creation or Regeneration which while Olymphus the Arrian Bishop denyed he was struck dead with three Thunder-bolts in a Bath How ought we to hang our Hope upon this great Creator that did hang the heavy Earth upon nothing Job 26.7 and yet it remains for almost six thousand years unmovable he commanded and it stood fast Psal 33.9 The whole Order of Nature remaineth as he first set it firm fast and unmoveable though it hang on nothing but upon Gods precept how much more ought we to be steadfast unmoveable 1 Cor. 15.58 having the sure word of Gods promise to hang upon 2 Pet. 1.19 The Devil and his Imps would overturn the comely Order of Nature they would as it were mingle Heaven and Earth together and so soon mar all but God confounds the Counsels and disappoints the Attempts of those tumultuating trouble-States and maugre their malice he preserveth Polities Laws Judgment and Equity without which Humane Societies could not long subsist God hath decreed to maintain Civil Government amongst Men to relieve the oppressed to punish the wicked to uphold his Church which hath so few friends on earth and so many Enemies both there and in Hell in despight of all This Decree of God not onely for her preservation in the world but also for her Exaltation above the world stands firm and inviolable as a Mountain of Brass Zech. 6.1 This shall bring her highest Adversaries into the lowest place even to that place which is fittest for them to be the footstool of Christ The Churches help is from the Lord that made Heaven and Earth Psal 121.2 and he will rather unmake both again than his people shall want seasonable help her help is in the Name of the Lord who hath made Heaven and Earth Psal 124.8 Gods power is the prop of her Faith and pricks her on to Prayer therefore we may commit our selves to him as to a faithful Creator 1 Pet. 4.19 a God of infinite might and mercy The Lord that made Heaven and Earth and therefore hath the blessings both of his Throne and of his footstool in his own hand will bestow his blessing both on and out of Sion Psal 134.3 God hath hitherto been our Eben Ezer The famous particular Remarks of the Wisdom Power and goodness of God in the Creation written as with a bright Sun-beam upon a Chrystal-wall for our more particular instruction doth here follow 1st The unchangeable Wisdom of God is made manifest 1. in the exact correspondency betwixt Gods Eternal Decree and his Temporal Creation which was the execution of it as before He is esteemed a foolish Builder or Workman who draws a better Mould in his mind and erects a worse with his hand but this Divine Artificer doth most dextrously accomplish by his wisdom in time what he had most wisely designed before time even from all Eternity 2. In the Curiosity of every Created thing there was both the heighth and depth of Divine Wisdom in every Creature hence David cryeth In wisdom hast thou made them all Psal 104.24 Every part of the Creation was performed in the perfection of Wisdom If God hath given man such wisdom as to contrive so many curious Engines and Artificial Instruments for measuring time almost to a perpetual Motion and Lands almost the whole Earth for all sublunary services how much more of wisdom hath the God of Wisdom who is wisdom in the Abstract wisdom it self that instructs man in all his Arts Isa 28.26 even in that plainnest of Husbandry and is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebr. 11.10 which signifies the most Exquisite and Artificial Artist The lending power must needs be a more exact Artificer than the borrowing power man borrows all his power from God and all his Art and skill from him therefore must God needs be a most skilful Operator infinitely transcending the most sublime contrivances of men every Creature may say
lowest in Hell yea and every Soul whom he draweth thither by his Temptation shall be as a milstone hang'd about his Neck to hold him down lowest in the bottomless Lake 1. Oh how are Earthly men whose footstool is Heaven and whose Throne is the Earth minding onely Earthly things the Devils meat And 2. Oh pray for the accomplishment of that promise that the old Serpent may not for ever hurt the Herbs of Grace those Green Grass the Saints but that he may be reduced to his old Diet of Dust Isa 65.25 which Gospel promise plainly importeth that this literal curse upon the bodily Serpent did imply further and fuller mysteries so Mic. 7.17 Deut. 32.24 That the Devil may be remanded to his first Damnation 3. ☞ Oh that we may not have dirty hearts nor lead dirty lives So we are given as Diet to the Devil If we be Holy ones God will lay his charge upon Satan not to hurt us especially if green and growing in holiness Rev. 9.4 Never was David more tender of having his Son Absolom hurt 2 Sam. 18.5 than God is of such Servants who grow in Grace and Godliness The fourth part of the Devils Doom is I will put enmity c. Though Satan be more darkly doomed in the three former parts on the Serpent yet more clearly in this fourth Some indeed do say that God would not expresly Doom the Devil in the Serpent for two reasons 1. Lest Adam and Eve knowing that there was some Spirit in the Serpent they might have faln into more grievous mistakes 2. Lest the Jews now weak might think there was another power besides God that was able to oppose the counsels of God Yet the Divine Doom in this fourth part of it is properly and without a figure declared and denounced against the Devil himself as well as against the Serpent Vaeibah Ashith I will put enmity c. Here begins the book of the Lords Wars Numb 21.14 which compendiously containeth the continued combat betwixt the Church of God and the God of this World as the Devil is call'd 2 Cor. 4.4 Here the Lords hand is upon his Throne as Exod. 17.16 and he hath solemnly sworn that he will wage war not with Amalek only but with all the Seed of the Serpent those Serpents and Generation of Vipers Mat. 3.7 and 23.33 and children of the Devil Joh. 8.44 1. Joh. 3.10 c. from Generation to Generation Though there be an irreconcileable antipathy betwixt all the brood of Serpents and the whole Race of Mankind according to the literal sense yet the severest and sharpest Hostility lyes betwixt the Godly seed of the Woman and the wicked seed of the spiritual Serpent Satan according to the mystical sense who when discerned in his proper colours as a Devil is abhorred of all Mankind in General like as he hateth all Mankind without Exception and therefore this crafty Devil always studiously hides his hatred to man under some specious pretences of good-will to mankind as he did here to Eve by which prevalent impostures he holdeth the greatest part of the World to lye in wickedness as his Vassals 1 John 5.19 and so comes to be called the God of this World 2 Cor. 4.4 And though this War and Acts of Hostility had their beginning here yet there should never be an ending thereof until Christ the promised seed of the Woman conquer the Devil and cast him into the lake of sire and brimstone So that the issue of this long-lasting War shall certainly be ruine to the Devil but victory to the Elect in Christ This is the undoubted scope of the first Gospel that was Preached here in Paradise unto faln Man being both comminatory to the Tempter and consolatory to the Tempted that as by the former the Devil might be cast down into despair so by the latter our first Parents might be raised up into some hope of mercy seeing this Gospel is wholly prophetical foretelling the future and wonderful Catastrophe and Issue of both those mutual implacable Hostilities wherein two pairs or couples of Enemies are expresly considerable The first couple of Enemies in this enmity are Satan and the Woman Hebrew Benekah Uben Haishah Here the Lord speaks to Satan whom the Serpent did personate passing from the thing signifying to the thing signified as Daniel passeth from the great Tree to the great King signified by the Tree Dan. 4.13 and as both Paul and Peter passeth from the Stone to Christ signified by the Stone Rom. 9.33 and 1 Pet. 2.6 c. So God here passeth from the Serpent to Satan signified by the Serpent as Signum pro Siguato the Sign for the matter signified saying I will put enmity 'twixt thee O Satan and this Woman as the Hebrew word Haishah importeth God as it were pointing to her with his finger 'twixt thee the Seducer and her the Seduced by thy Seducements Therefore by this woman cannot be meant the Virgin Mary as the Popish Monks have dotingly dreamed for this enmity began long before the blessed Virgin was born into the World and that Monkish Dream is notoriously derogatory to the honour of Christ while it transfers the Glory of that Victory over the Serpent from the Son to the Mother from our Redeemer to Mary who her self call'd her Son my Saviour Luke 1.47 especially as those Doting Dreamers read the following clause Hi for Hu the Feminine for the Masculine She for He as if Mary the Mother had broke the Serpents Head and not Christ the Son This is the Sandy Foundation of many Popish Fopperies And though God here putteth enmity 'twixt Satan and the Woman yet this implyeth not that the Man should continue in any Amity with Satan but God opposes the Woman as the weaker Vessel to Satan because the Woman was first deceived by Satan and by this weak Vessel God would put Satan to shame and because the Woman being first in the transgression was the first that needed Comfort yea and Counsel too never any more to hold any friendly familiarity with Satan but to look upon him as a deadly Enemy This very law did most graciously open a door of hope for Repentance and Salvation to our first Parents The law of this lasting enmity came from God as a Judge to Satan but as a Friend Father and Physician to them for to flee from Satan as an Enemy is to flee from Sin and Death and to return to God and Life And without all doubt our first Parents were both mindful and observant of maintaining an enmity according to this Divine law against the Devil all the many years that they lived after for Adam lived 930. years after this The second pair or couple of Adversaries in this Enmity is the two Seeds the Seed of the Serpent and the Seed of the Woman the sense whereof is this 1. By the Seed of the Serpent is not only meant those Venemous Creatures that have enmity with Mankind according to the literal sense
payment to all prophane Persecutors who dare be so fool-hardy as to Fight against God Acts 5.39 Gamaliel's caution is as a loud out-cry Oh come not near such an evil Act or dare not to be found in the remotest tendency towards it If you harden your Hearts against God then God will harden his Hand against you and hasten your destruction Prov. 29.1 and that without Remedy 2 Chron. 36.16 Oh that wicked Men would consider whether their ten thousand even all their Forces they have on Earth be able to grapple with Gods twenty thousand even those Myriads of Armies or Angels which the Lord of Hosts hath ready in Heaven Can a Man of no strength match that God who is of Infinite strength Oh the madness of Men thus to hazard their Weals in both Worlds upon such great disadvantages Luke 14.31 as these But here is a contention of a contrary Nature 't is betwixt an Holy Man and the most Holy God this was an Holy Contention upon a Threefold Account 1. As this Contender with God was not a wicked but an Holy Man that Testimony of Moses God beheld no Iniquity in Jacob Numb 23.21 holds true both as to his Person and as to his Posterity yea such an Holy Man was Jacob that the Scripture Psal 24.6 calls God himself who is all Holiness by the Name of Jacob after the same manner is the Church it self call'd Christ himself 1 Cor. 12.12 All these four be Holy God Jacob Christ and Church The 2d Account is This Holy Contention as it was 'twixt two Holy Persons so it was for Holy things even for sure Mercies which the Septuagint calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holy things of David Isa 55.3 and Act. 13.34 Jacob did not contend with God as wicked men do how he might be wicked at his own will without being controul'd by a superior will but it was that he might have God's Blessing which is a Blessing indeed 1 Chron. 4.10 the Blessing of that Covenant made with his Father and Grandfather and that Blessing must needs be an Holy thing that is contain'd in the Holy Covenant The 3d Account is This Holy Contention was manag'd by Jacob with Holy Weapons too Such as Prayers and Tears are which Luther calls Instrumenta Bellicosissima Ecclesiae miserae The most Military and effectual Ordinānce and Engines of the Afflicted and Militant Church 'T is true we read not of Jacob's weeping recorded by Moses yet Hosea assures us hereof Hos 12.4 He wept and made Supplication he both pray'd and wept for the Blessing it was not the Angel that pray'd and wept for his dismission to Jacob To suppose this done by God to Man is to take away that due Decorum we should have of the tremendous Deity and a thinking over-low Thoughts and too vile Imaginations of the most High and most Holy God Yet we read often how Ardent Prayer is a pouring out the Soul to God not without a Shower of Tears or at least a Storm of Sighs As the best Musick is upon the Waters is heard farther and much more Harmonious than upon the Land So the best Prayers are attended with Tears are most pleasing to God and most prevalent with him Thus Holy Jacob in this Holy contention with this Holy Angel by those Holy Weapons obtains those Holy Things 1. Holy Honour And 2. The Holy Blessing First The Honour that is of Knighthood Christ when he found him how he wrestled by weeping and how he prevailed by Praying Ask'd him Gen. 32.27 Saying What is thy Name As if he should say Thou art such a Fellow as I never met withal Hast thou trip'd up Esau's Heels and prevail'd over him for the Birthright Gen. 25.33 and for the Blessing Gen. 27.36 41. and now would thou trip up my heels also Surely thou art a None-such Man and one without a Parallel And for this Heroick and more than Angelical Exploit thou shalt have from me the Honour of Knighthood Hereupon Christ said to him as it were Kneel down Jacob Rise up Israel and thus after a sort he Knighted him this was according to the Custom of the World whose Conquerours have usually high Titles of Honour conferr'd upon them for their famous Conquests As the one Roman Scipio was honoured with the Title of Africanus for his Conquering Africa and the other was stiled Asiaticus for his Conquering Asia Thus this Patriarch had both his Names from both his Conquests for his first Name was given him for his Conquest over his Brother Gen. 27.36 Is he not rightly call'd Jacob and now he is as rightly call'd Israel for his Conquest over God himself for so saith Christ Gen. 32.28 Thy Name shall not any more be call'd Jacob but Israel that is not only or not so much Jacob as Israel for he was oft call'd Jacob after this not only himself but his Posterity also yet both of them much more often Israel Which Name as the Angel expoundeth it importeth a Princely Power with God for Sara the Hebrew word signifies to play the Prince the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou hast had strength to prevail and El God Christ here asketh Jacob's Name not because he knew it not but that by Jacob's Answer he might take an occasion for the change of his Name which spake out a greater excellency was to be put upon him as Gen. 17.5 Isa 62.2 c. And we find in Scripture That though both these two Names of this Patriarch be put upon the Church of God yet with this Difference when speech is made of the Church's weakness then hath she the Patriarch's first Name and is call'd Jacob yea and sometimes hath words of weakness joined with it as Isa 41.14 Fear not thou worm Jacob c. but when mention is made of the Church's Valour Victory and Glory then is she call'd Israel as Amos 7.2 5 8. Gal. 6.16 and quite throughout the Scripture the same may be observed Moreover Though the Church be call'd sometimes Jacob yet is she never call'd Abraham and she is also oft call'd Israelites but never Abrahamites or Isaacites none of the Holy Patriarchs were dignified with so great an Honour And 't is Remarkable also that lest the Church should so much as seem to be dishonoured with this Patriarch's weaker Name she is never call'd Jacobites but his stronger Name Israelites is given her for her prevailing with God and Men. The Eighth and last Part or Point in this excellent History is The Blessing that Jacob at last obtained by his valorous and victorious wrestling from his opposing and yet Blessing as well as Blessed God This also is entred into the Book of Divine Record and is expresly Registred Gen. 32.29 as an Happy Issue of an Holy Combat the Combat of Faith which is a pattern left us for our practice in the sacred Memoires of this Patriarch's Life Thus long after Jacob blessed Paul learnt from this Patriarchal pattern to fight the good
the Man rather than burn with Lust takes God's Remedy in Marrying though a Levite and in Bondage and for any thing he knew was like to beget Children either for Slavery or Slaughter we must do our Duty and leave the Success to God the Woman now very old having a Daughter Miriam able to watch Moses her Brother when cast into the River was one of those lively Women Exod. 1.19 that had Lady Faith for her Midwife which deliver'd the grave of her Dead Children Hebr. 11.35 much more the Womb of her quick and living The Voice of the Lord makes the Hinds those girtest of Creatures to cast forth her sorrows with Joy Psal 29.9 Job 39.1 2. No less than Faith could possibly be the stay and support of Jochebed in her Travelling Throws for supposing her Burden she was bringing forth to be a Male then must she think of his Birth and Death both together whereas the Travels of other Women are mitigated with Hope and countervailed with Joy of a Manchild being born into the World Joh. 16.21 but alas her Pains in Travel were doubled in her with Fear it should prove a Male the Remedy to others must be a Malady and matter of Complaint to her yea the very crying of her New-born Child she might justly fear would call in some Cut-throat and Male-murdering Egyptian She brought forth Moses and when she saw he was a goodly Child Exod. 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fair to God Act. 7.20 having a Divine Beauty upon him or as some read it fair by God as if God had in some singular manner put an extraordinary splendour upon the Child When the Mother saw this her beautiful Babe she would have given all the Substance of her House to save the life of her Son she hides him three Months in her House as she had hid him nine Months in her Womb and when her House could hold her hidden Treasure no longer no more than her Womb had done she gives him a third hiding in an Ark of Bulrushes Exod. 2.3 This the Apostle calls not an act of natural Affection only but an act of Faith also and commends the Father for it as well as the Mother who was the principal Agent because he consented to it as Saul did to Stephen's Death Act. 22.20 and concurred with it both of them trusting in God's blessing their means of hiding to their Sons Preservation Hebr. 11.13 fearing nothing of the King's Command This is Remarkable the Lord marked what them Faith had but not what their Faith wanted for it was only a weak Faith they had only Faith in hiding Moses three Months and when that term was expired their weak Faith cast him then out upon the Waters where Man ends God begins and becomes Moses's Keeper The Second Remark is concerning Moses's Person as before his Parents who was famous for his Birth Life and Death First For his Birth Moses was famous in many fair Circumstances not only for his own fairness and comely features forementioned wherewith he was Born as a presage of great Undertakings and whereby as by an Instrument first his Parents were moved to hide him in faith of his Safety and then Pharaoh's Daughter was moved also to have Compassion on him and to save him from being Drowned Exod. 2.2.6 But likewise 1. That he was Born as another Isaac of Jochebed when she was very old as Isaac was of Sarah yet one of the lively Women that brought forth this fair Son without the help of those Midwives which had the cruel Decree of the King to slay all the Males at their Birth 2. He was Born as another Enoch who is call'd the Seventh from Adam Jude ver 14. as Heber was the Seventh from Henoch and Isaac the Seventh from Heber All excellent ones among ordinary Men as the Sabbath is among the Six ordinary Week-Days and famous in their Generations So was Moses Born the Seventh from Abraham and as Enoch walk'd with God so did Moses and as Enoch was a Prophet and a Preacher of Righteousness so was Moses also 3. Like a new Noah who was saved by an Ark Moses was accordingly saved by an Ark of Bulrushes when but three Months old He lay floating upon the Waters as Noah had done in the Deluge and had there the Hidings of God's Power Hab. 3.4 When neither any Friend of his nor his own Parents dare own him then God doth Challenge his Custody and indeed never was Moses safer even while All the Tribes of Israel pitch'd their Tents about his Tent than he was at this time of Danger when the Lord himself took care for his Deliverance 4. Moses like our Blessed Messias could not be hid Mar. 7.24 this New-born Child could not be hid in the House wherein he was Born nor lay he long hid in the Ark by the Rivers Brink for by the over-ruling Providence of God Pharaoh's Daughter was brought forth to Bathe her self in the River as she designed but as the Lord order'd it she was brought thither to do what she little dream'd of namely to Discover and also to Deliver the Child from perishing Exod. 2.5 6. She saw the Ark bid her Maid fetch it We none of us know what God hath to do for us when we go abroad The beauty of this weeping Babe and its singular fairness far beyond the Egyptian black hew discover'd it an Hebrew and moved her Bowels of pity to it Miriam Moses Sister saw all those passages afar off with a glad Heart hastens thither and offers her Service to Hire a Nurse for the Child which was its own Mother whom the Princess pays nobly for Nursing her own Child Exod. 2.7 8 9. the Nurse usually expects not Wages from the Child but from the Parents Thus all Pastors when their People prove unkind or unthankful must look up to the Father of their People in Heaven Here God out-bids Jochebed's Hopes as well as her Fears She would have given all she was worth for the Child's weal a little before this and now she shall have the pleasure of Nursing it her self who could have been well enough pleased a Stranger of the Egyptian Women had been a kind Nurse to it and Royal Pay too yea and all this with Authority Thus God rewarded the Faith of Moses Parents in their not fearing the King's Commandment Hebr. 11.23 because it was Unjust and Impious The Duties of the second Table must yield to those of the first They durst not incur the Danger of a Sin to avoid the Danger of a Mischief better Obey God with whom we must live for ever than Man with whom we must stay but a very little time said Antigona in Sophocles we ought to obey God rather than Man Act. 4.19 and 5.29 and Dan. 3.18 and as God rewarded their Piety so he did their Godly Policy Religion allows something of the Serpent as well as of the Dove lawful Policies have from God not only liberty in the Use but his
c. of that Name Exod. 1.11 yet seeing no one City could contain such a vast Number with their Herds and Flocks therefore seems it rather the Countrey Rameses than the City Some Etymologists derive the word Rame-ses from Isis that most famous Goddess of the Egyptians the Wife of Osiris whom they deify'd when Dead for teaching them to plant Vines and to whom they usually sacrificed a Goose so goofish were they in their blind Superstition While Israel was but few at the first they had only a part of the Land of Goshen the Countrey of Rameses but when they multiplied then they mingled with the Egyptians who were the Neighbours they borrow'd their Jewels c. of and in that Countrey they built this City of the same Name which Pharaoh designed for a defenced City in the Frontiers of Egypt that thereby he might the better secure the Hebrews from running away but behold how the Lord over-rules the Man and the Matter This City might be the place of the Rendevouz from whence out of all the Country of Rameses they Dated the Beginning of their March as from the place of their Head-Quarters Thus that City which cost them many a Groan in Burning Brick and Building it therewith c. is now become the beginning of their joyful Jubilee The Third Remark concerns the first place whither Israel went from Rameses namely to Succoth so call'd not only because Israel leaving their Houses in Goshen first built them Booths of the Boughs of Trees in this place for a perpetual Memorial whereof God appointed a Feast of Booths or Tabernacles as Succoth signifies Levit. 23.42 43. but also and more especially because here the glorious Cloud came to cover them spreading it self over the whole Camp Psal 105.39 for Succoth is by Interpretation any sort of Covering whereof this Camp covering Cloud was of the best sort and far better than that made of Boughs which as it would but cover a few Persons in one Booth so would it soon become like the House of Solomon's Sluggard which he saith the Rain droppeth soon thorough but this covering of the Cloud of Glory as it was a more ample covering to cover the whole Camp and a more tight covering insomuch that no annoyance either of Rain or Heat could pierce through it so it was a more lasting Covering that lasted in covering the Camp of Israel until the Death of Moses full forty years Oh how comfortable a covering was this cloudy Pillar to this wandring Camp which was not only a candid Covering to them so that no Thunder Lightning or Rain could annoy them nor any Heat in that hot Climate and in the Summer Season could beat upon their Bodies but was also their Courteous Companion in all their wayless ways always at hand never blown away with any Wind as other Clouds are to direct them in that doleful Desert How well was this Cloud call'd the Cloud of the Lord Exod. 40.38 for though all common Clouds and all created Beings in Heaven and Earth be the Lords yet this Cloud was the Lords after a more special manner because of its special and extraordinary Properties it had all as special Signs of the Lords Presence such as its Substance Matter Situation Duration Motion c. as before To which add here This Cloud had 1. No Natural Motion as ordinary Clouds and Vapours do ascend thereby 2. No Rapid Motion as those Clouds that are aloft follow the Rapid Motion of the Celestial Spheres 3. No Violent Motion as those Clouds below are whirled about by violent Winds whereas this Cloud sometimes moved against the Wind. Nor 4. Had it any Progressive Motion but walked sometimes backward sometimes forward sometimes on the right-hand and sometimes on the left as it pleased the Lord to point out the Journeys to his People leading them in and out as if they had been treading a Maze in God's Garden therefore should not our hearts be troubled Joh. 14.1 If God lead his Church sometime backward and sometime forward in and out in our day Moreover this Cloud was Immoveable and Immutable other Clouds cannot remain near the Earth but are apt to be dispersed by the Reflexion of the Sun-beams if the violence of Wind and Weather dissolve them not but this Cloud rested upon the Tabernacle and never removed out of their sight for the space of forty years Now are the Israelites safely brought out of Egypt to Succoth their first Station and let us suppose this place to be their first Rendevouz because they were so prodigiously numerous God having fulfill'd his Promise to Abraham Gen. 15.14 and that to Jacob Gen. 46.3 in multiplying them to 600000 beside Women and Children insomuch that they were scattered into many Parts of Egypt the Land of Rameses much less the City of Rameses not being able to contain them they might out of all those Parts resort to Succoth where they erected Booths or Tents in the Fields for their Harbour and where the Lord their God met them in his Pillar of Glory to go before them in the way-less Wilderness as Moses told them Deut. 1.32 33. and not only so but also to espy out the good Land which was the Glory of all Lands for them Ezek 20.6 Numb 10.33 with Exod. 13.21 Well might Israel thus accommodated March bravely boldly and in Battel-aray not as Run-a-ways or fugitives for fear but in all comely Order and Equipage so as one hinder'd not another Having such a Captain of Salvation Heb. 2.10 Such a Chief Commander Isa 33.2 to go before them The good Lord grant us such a Pillar of Providence to lead us in our Wilderness-state that we may not march confusedly as Cowards but be couragious and confident in God by faith while we lye under this cloudy dark dispensation wandring in the Wilderness and still falling short of the Land of Promise the New Jerusalem Oh that God would speak comfortably to our hearts in this Wilderness-state as he hath promised Hos 2.14 and be a covering Cloud to us Isa 4.4 5. God hath not been a Wilderness hitherto to us Jer. 2.31 and Deut. 32.9 10 11 12. Now the Cloudy Pillar having undertaken the Conduct of Israel through the Wilderness unto Canaan leads them from Succoth to Etham c. Exod. 13.20 The Remarks in General upon their Journeyings are these following The First is That there were no fewer than forty two of their Journeys and Mansions as Moses gives a Catalogue of them Numb 33. from ver 2. to ver 50. yet not above fifteen are expresly and specially mentioned in the Historical part of their passage through the Desert The Reason why so many are not Recorded before this Catalogue of Moses is because the History takes special Cognisance only of those Stations where some Memorable and more than ordinary Matter happened As at Mara the Waters were bitter at Elim the Palm-trees c. at the Desert of Sin Manna c. at Rephidim Water out
affectionate Woman the Christian Church had a Wilderness to hide her self in provided for her by God's most gracious providence whither she was born as upon Eagles Wing and he had done this Old Testament Church Exod. 19.4 where the same Phrase is used when she fled from the face of that Dragon Pharaoh here Revel 12.6.14 Messiah's Church harmoniz'd with Moses's Church having two wings of a great Eagle wherewith she did flye into such hiding solitary places as God prepared for securing her in her being in the worst of times and wherein he fed her v. 6. tho' he did not feast her yet he nourished her v. 14. and kept her alive during the long lease of Antichrist as he had done this Church in the Wilderness for forty years Grotius saith that these wings allude not only to Israel's flight out of Egypt into the Desart but also to the History of David who cryed Oh that I had the wings but of a Dove not of an Eagle Psal 55.7 8. that he might be saved from that Dragon Saul God gives rest to his Church from persecution Act. 9.31 and always preserves her being tho' in a Wilderness tho' she want her splendor and well-being Mat. 16.18 Mark Thirdly As Michael and his Angels were too hard for the Dragon and his Instruments in Warring against the Old Testament-Church for Pharaoh was drowned Amalek was discomfited and the Countries of King Sihon and King Og were conquered by Christ's conduct the Captain of Israel's Hosts in the Wilderness Josh 5.13 Heb. 2.10 Even so the Dragon and his Instruments make war against the New Testament Church Revel 12.7 while she brought forth many Children unto God under the name of the Man-child v. 5. even Christ Mystical as Mr. Joseph Mede interprets it from Gal. 4.19 yet can he not prevail v. 8. but is totally routed and ruined so as not to rally or rage any more for he is cast out of Heaven v. 9. that is from molesting the Church at that time and down to the Earth as Wrestlers saith Grotius cast down the weaker to the ground so Michael or Christ whom none is like in strength Psal 89.8 prevails against the Devil the strong Man is mastered by the stronger Man Luke 11.21 22. and is at last by him cast into Hell Revel 20.10 As the Devil and all his Imps could not obstruct the passage of Moses's Church from possessing the Earthly so nor Messias's Church from entring the Heavenly Canaan Fourthly Now follow the more Particular Remarks upon all the forty two stages Recorded by name in Numb 33. from v. 1 to v. 50. especially where any memorable matter is mentioned befalling Israel in their Wilderness wandring at any one of those particular places For the accomplishing of which work I have truly travelled to furnish the Reader with the choicest cream and quintessence extracted out of the best Learned Rabbins Antient Fathers and Modern Divines both Criticks and Commentators in various Languages The First particular Remark is upon Rameses the first Stage that Moses mentioneth Numb 33.3 beside what is above-said hereof in the General Remarks Mark moreover First That Raamses Hebr. signifies Worms-or Moths the Mystical meaning whereof may well be that as Egypt signifying Anguish and Tribulation and representing this present Evil World that wallows in wickedness is no sit place for the true Israel of God to abide in therefore the Lord calls his Adopted Children out of Egypt Exod. 4.22 Hos 11.1 Heb. 12.23 c. as before for nothing but anguish attends them there John 16.33 c. So Rameses tho' a Treasure City Exod. 1.11 yet our Lord cautions us Lay not up your Treasure where the Worm or Moth may corrupt it Mat. 6.19 Rameses was but a City wanting foundations and made up only of Mortar c. Exod. 1.11 14. Whereas if we according to Christ's Councel lay up our Treasure in Heaven which is a City that hath foundations whose Builder and Maker is the Great Creatour Heb. 11.10 then need we not fear any Moth or Worm to corrupt it or any Thief to break through and steal it for 't is a City above the reach both of Malignant Men or Dawned Devils Hereupon the Seed of Abraham cannot find rest here below in places built by frail creatures Heb. 11.8 9 10 13 to 17. for they hear their Creator crying Arise Depart this is not your Rest for it is polluted Mic. 2.10 and Arise let its go hence saith Christ John 14.30 Mark Secondly Israel marcheth from Rameses to Succoth which signifies Booths built of Boughs as before Behold here the Infant Estate of the Old Testament Church Numb 33.5 At Succoth like a company of Sucking Children they fall upon Building Childish Summer-houses with Boughs and Branches of Trees no better Buildings no fairer nor firmer Fabricks could be expected from them when they came thus rawly out of the Egyptian slavery and were only come now to the first step from Egypt of their forty two stages and stations in the Wilderness and newly entred under the Conduct of Christ cloathed in the Cloud who here came to be as a Schoolmaster to this company of Children and to take his first Tuition of them Exod. 13.20 21. These Children of Israel as they are frequently stiled in Scripture being now but as it were in their A. B. C. could not possibly but be very ignorant of Canaan's glory and of Sion's Excellency when they can sit down in Succoth thus satisfied with such sorry Coverings as Booths of Boughs N.B. First Christ came now and became a new School-master to those simple Children and taught them they must have a better covering he therefore covers them with his cloudy Pillar Wo to them that cover with a covering but not of Christ's Spirit Isa 30.1 and of his Merit also Put on the Lord Jesus Rom. 13.14 N.B. Secondly Grown Christians brought into the Beauty of Sion may not forget they were once but in Succoth Catechumeni A. B. C. Scholars having very little knowledge of God and but Babes in Christ 1 Cor. 3.1 2. 1 Joh. 2.12 13. There is first the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or being of a Believer then the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or well-being and beauty thereof As we may not stay alway at Succoth but press on to Sion He is a Monster that grows not up from being a Child Rehoboam is call'd a Child when grown up a Man 2 Chron. 13.7 So in Sion we must remember Succoth to humble us c. Mark 3d. The second Stage they came to was Aetham which signifies hard ground as before only hinted Thus there layeth hard ground betwixt us and Heaven which Canaan typified many Losses and Crosses many Tryals and Troubles c. We have great need therefore to be well shod with the preparation of the Gospel of Peace Eph. 6.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 well booted Christians that we prove not Habers upon this hard ground 'T is the Conduct of Christ that
his Beast which ought not to be smitten without cause for a far less fault than his v. 33. In which words the Lord intimates to him that the Ass was wiser and honester than her Rider because she only turned out of the literal High-Way for saving her own life and the life of her Master also yet did he smite her and would have killed her for so doing Whereas himself had turned out of the Metaphorical way of the Lord contrary to God's will first revealed to him v. 12. and followed his own crooked ways with a purpose to destroy the lives of God's people therefore he more deserved to be smitten yea and killed than his Ass The Third Remark is If the Lord be thus tender in saving the lives of innocent Beasts vindicating their innocency against their over austere and hard-hearted Masters how much more will he protect the cause of his innocent Servants against their wrongful Oppressors Exod. 22.23 God is the Preserver of Man and Beast Psal 36.7 and takes care that our very Beasts should be delivered from servile toil upon the Sabbath Day Deut 5.14 He also saved alive that innocent Ass whereon the disobedient Prophet rode when the Lion tore the nocent Master 1 King 13.23 24 26 28. And here the Lord declareth that had not the Ass turn'd aside out of the way as v. 23. and faln down under him he had killed the Rider and saved the Ass alive v. 33. The Jewish Cabbalists do indeed say reading the words here and she should have lived that the Ass dyed so soon as she had spoken lest the Heathens should Worship her for an Idol But this is to be wise above what is written in Sacred Record However this is certain not that the words import her death but because she by her Rider's misusing her in his mad frantick fit might have despaired of her own life had not God held the hands of this mad Prophet and this is more certain that a dreadful woe is denounced against those that ran greedily after Balaam's perverse way for reward Jude v. 11. And much more God will defend his innocent Saints that would live quiet in the Land Psal 35.20 The Fourth Remark is Hypocrites make fair but faint offers of obedience to God as did Blaam v. 34. Frigidè hoc offert c. He faintly offers to turn back with an if it were evil to go on speaking of his outward actions only but de malo in corde latenti tacet his inward intentions he concealed I have sinned he acknowledgeth namely in misusing my Beast c. This is the whole of his Confession as his Reason following For I knew not thou stood'st in the way intimateth but his wicked purpose and avarice which lay lurking in his breast the true cause of those external extravagant actings he dissembled and prosecuteth still unto the end Si displicet If it please thee not as the Septuagint translateth it Ishubah li revertar mihi meaning if it displease thee that I should go on my journey I will return back to my own house whereas he could not be ignorant that his wicked intent to curse God's People for his own promotion was a most wicked design in God's all-seeing eyes and was the very reason why the Angel came out against him Full fain would he have gone through his ardent desire to the wages of wickedness yet thus he complements with the Angel that if necessity constrain him he must and would turn back The Fifth Remark is God sometimes Answers Men according to the Idols of their own heart Ezek. 14.3.4 as here seeing Balaam was set upon going and neither the first words of God who forbad him to go v. 12 nor the dangers he met with in his way could hinder his mischievous design As God had bid him go v. 20. which was o grant in wrath not in mercy because he stood not in the Lord's first Counsel v. 12 13 32. therefore the Lord met him with a drawn Sword in his going v. 22. so now again v. 35. he is bid to go wherein God gave him up to his own hearts lusts as Psal 81.12.13 when he would not hearken to the first Counsel of God then God lets him walk in his own Counsels as Solomon saith to his wild youngster Walk on in the wide ways of thine own Heart but at thy peril there is a stinging but followeth after Eccl. 11.9 the Lord left him herein to fall by his own Counsels Psal 5.10 and thus Sol. Jarchi explains these words ver 35. Go with the Men for thy Portion is with them and thine end is to perish out of the World as he did for though he escaped now the Sword of the Angel ver 33. yet afterwards He was slain by the Sword of Israel Josh 13.22 The Sixth Remark is False Prophets are always most highly respected of wicked Rulers as Balaam was of Balak here ver 36. because they only have the knack to gratifie Royal Lusts Balak went out to meet Balaam at Moses did Jethro Exod. 18.7 as Joseph did Jacob Gen. 46.29 and the Kings did to Abraham Gen 14.17 18. and Heb. 7.1 this was high respect and yet higher Balak went to the very utmost borders of his Kingdom to welcome Balaam and to entertain him with Honour who was but a Soothsayer c. The Seventh Remark is Wicked Princes do proudly proffer Promotion to false Prophets and Parasites out of their vain Presumption which oftentimes the great God permits them not to perform This they learn from their Father the Devil Joh. 8.44 who presumptuously offered our Lord himself The Kingdoms of the World and the Glories of them to Him as to Others for falling down to worship him Mat. 4.8 9. Thus Balak vainly boasted to Balaam Have not I earnestly sent for thee and am not I able to Honour thee ver 37. whereas indeed he was not able to promote him to Honour but in the end sent him away with displeasure and disgrace acknowledging at the last that the Lord had kept Him back from Honour Numb 24.10 11. and suppose Balaam had not been disappointed of Balak's Honour what had he got but a magnum nihil just a great nothing as the Tempter would have cheated Christ with bare shews and shadows like our Raree-shows which he only shewed him resemblances of worldly Glory The Eighth Remark is Wicked Princes with the help of their wicked Parasites are not able to act any thing against God and his People without Divine Permission Habemus hìc reum consitentem Balaam himself here confesseth it in his cunning Can I ver 38. the Hebrew word is doubled for more vehemency signifying Surely I am not able in any wise c. for the Redeemer of God's People frustrateth the Tokens of the Lyars and maketh Diviners Mad he turns wise Men backward and maketh their Knowledge foolish Isa 44.25 as he did in Balaam's Case here his Curse to a Blessing The Ninth Remark is How contrary
the Lion and the Basilisk but to shew them the compleat Conquest of them So our blessed Jesus causeth all his Chosen and Called to be more than Conquerors over all their Corruptions Rom. 8.37 Yea to be Triumphers in Christ 2 Cor. 2.14 and will tread down Satan under their feet Rom. 16.20 at their Deaths but more specially at the Day of Judgment There be many more Parallel Lines of Parity and Congruity betwixt Joshua and Jesus which will occur in their proper place Now a few words to the Disparity between them The First is in this difference that Joshua Conquered Canaan not only for the People of Israel but also for himself that he might have his part and portion with them for him and his Posterity Josh 18.49 50. But our Lord Jesus hath purchased that heavenly Canaan only for our sakes having had the possession of it before his Incarnation himself by the Right of Inheritance He had a Glory with God before the World was Joh. 17.5 The Second Difference is Joshua did not Conquer Canaan by himself alone but had all the Tribes of Israel to Assist as his Auxiliaries in his Conquest but our Lord Jesus hath by himself alone purchased that heavenly Inheritance He saith I have trodden the Wine-press alone and none were with me Isa 63.3 The Third Disparity is The Conquest of Canaan did not cost Joshua Blood-shed or Death But our Eternal Inheritance cost Christ both his Blood-shed and Death Heb. 9.26 1 Pet. 1.18 19. The Fourth is Joshua could not quite expel the Canaanites out of Canaan Josh 15.63 and 16.10 c. But our blessed Jesus hath perfectly subdued Satan Sin and Death to us that no thing shall eternally harm us Joh. 16.33 1 Joh. 5.4 Rev. 12.11 nonnè sint sed nè obsint Augustin The Second Remark relating to Joshua's Office is the Divine Promise God gave him in his extraordinary Commission to his Office for supporting his Spirit all along his famous Exploits from the first to the last of them which was I will not fail thee nor forsake thee Josh 1.5 a Promise so precious that it is five times repeated and renewed in Scripture As 1. To Moses for his Encouragement in managing his Magistracy over such a Murmuring and Stiff-necked People as Israel was Deut. 4.31 What Moses had first received from God that he communicated to the Common-wealth of Israel 2. Moses encourageth Joshua with the same Encouragement Deut. 31.6 Shewing as God hath never failed or forsaken Moses from the beginning of his Conduct to the ending thereof so nor would God ever fail or forsake him 3. The Lord himself gave forth this precious Promise even to Joshua himself Josh 1.5 6. 4. The Word of the Lord came clothed with this gracious Promise unto Solomon for his Encouragement likewise in building God's Temple c. 1 King 6.11 13. 5. And lastly This Word of Promise which before had been made to particular persons is afterward applied universally as common to all Believers with a very deep Asseveration Heb. 13.5 The Greek there hath five Negatives and may thus be rendred I will not not leave the neither will I not not forsake thee This is well known as a Maxim among Check Grammarians duae Negativae apud Graecos vehementiùs negant that two Negatives tho' they make an Affirmative in other Languages yet they make the most vehement Negative in the Greek Language Hereby the Lord learneth us this Lesson in this pathetical Phrase that when he seemeth in our apprehensions to fail and forget us yet will he not utterly forsake us Psal 119.8 Tho' he fail us sometimes in point of Vision yet at no time doth he forsake us in point of Vnion Every Desertion is not a Disinheritance God may change his Dispensation upon his Children but can never change his Fatherly Disposition toward them c. This same exceeding great and precious Promise so called 2 Pet. 1.4 God gave particularly to Joshua for strengthning his Faith in his great Undertaking of Conducting Israel to Canaan against all dangers and difficulties For the purport of this Divine Promise to him brancheth out it self into many particulars As 1. An Assurance that God would enable him to conquer the Canaanites tho' they exceeded Israel in Number Strength and all War-like Preparations there being nothing too hard for the Lord Gen. 18.14 2. Not only not any Man shall be able to stand before thee but also the Lord promiseth him a constant and a continual Tenour of an happy Success All the Days of his life that is I will be the Alpha and the Omega of thy Conquests and thy ending shall be as successful as thy beginning Thirdly God promiseth to be present with him as he had been with Moses whom Joshua well knew Gods presence had not only preserved him against all the Murmurings Rebellions and Insurrections of stiff-necked Israelites but also had prospered him in vanquishing all those Nations on that side Jordan which rose up against him even so will I bless thee who succeedeth Moses with security from intestine Troubles and with success in all thy Wars abroad Fourthly God saith I will not leave thee that is to thy self nor in the Hands of thy own Counsel I will not fail or forsake thee but be alway present with thee by my Spirit and power in all thy warlike enterprises and expeditions against all thy Enemies which thou undertakes at my Command Fifthly Vnto this people thou shalt divide all Canaan Tho' the Canaanites be Men of prodigious and of a Giant-like Stature and Strength and tho' they dwell in Cities with high Walls and strongly fortified yet be of good Courage in the way of thy obedience to my commands then shalt thou exceed Moses who only led Israel through the Wilderness but this shall be an higher degree of honour unto thee both to subdue all thy Adversaries and to settle thy Subjects in their several inheritances All this being spoken by God himself unto Joshua who was undoubtedly exceedingly valiant before this in his War against Amalek Exod. 17. must much more add to his Valour and make him a Man of Metal indeed CHAP. II. NOW when General Joshua was thus Animated with a generous Spirit by all those Divine encouragements aforesaid from ver 2. to vers 10. Chap. 1. Moreover finding Vox Populi to be Vox Dei the Voice of the People to have so happy a concurrency with the Voice of God vers 6 18. and their promise by their Princes of their Homage and Fealty to his Government from vers 10. to 18. upon this confirmation to the full from both God and Men Joshua begins his first expedition namely his sending Spies to search the Land even Jericho Josh 2. The History of that mission consists of sundry Heads as described in the 2d Chapter 1. The Searchers sent in sundry circumstances vers 1. 2. The Peril they met with in the place they searched with the circumstances thereof vers 1
the use of her Legs to reach her Land-lords Door where she falls down Dead ver 26. a just Judgment of God upon her Whore-mongers and Adulterers God will judge Hebr. 13.4 as she had too often fallen down in a way of sinning at last she falls down in a way of Suffering whether she repented before she Died is unrevealed if Charity do grant it then her Suffering saith great Grotius was only a Fatherly Chastisement not properly a Punishment But the Psalmist saith better God pardons eternally yet punishes temporally Psal 99.8 for evil doers God will punish for the publick good of Humane Society That she stay'd not still among those Miscreants but was more minded to return to her Husband might be some Indication of her Penitency yet hardly reaching the Door where he was so feeble their Villany had made her that she was not able to cry Open the Door nor to knock for its opening otherwise the Levite doubtless would have let her in because he had sent her out among them to save himself from Buggery This is the more probable because 't is said ver 27. that her Lord was the first up in the House and opened the Door 't is likely to see what was become of his Wife that they might go on their Journey but finding her at the Door-Threshold in a sleeping posture he calls to awake her and to raise her up ver 28. supposing she was come too late at Night to be let in and so was there fallen asleep but lying in that place and posture from Day-break to Sun-Rise he found her in her long Sleep indeed and neither so asleep as to be awakened nor sick of the Sullens to be fetched out N. B. Hereupon he takes up her Dead Body lays it upon an Ass and carries it home to Mount-Ephraim and there in a pang of Zeal divides the dead Carcase into Twelve pieces and sends a piece to each Tribe yea one to Benjamin it self ver 29. for Levi was dispersed among the other Tribes and there could not be Twelve without Benjamin presuming that the whole Tribe would abhor the Villanous Action of this one City of their Tribe as much as any of the other Tribes especially considering how the Messengers by whom the pieces of the Corps were sent did aggravate the Villany saying in the person of the Levite that sent them I came to Gibeah and the Varlets thereof surrounded my Lodging Threatned to kill me if I would not prostitute my Body to their Vnnatural Lust or deliver up my Concubine to them which I was forced to do and they have forced her so that she is Dead Judg. 20.5 This Aggravation he hoped might Exasperate Benjamin against this their own wicked City seeing a visible yet horrid Spectacle was presented to their Eyes which much more affects the Mind than a bare Report only related to their Ears could have done A seeing so sad a sight might stir up some Zeal against the Offenders c. Besides if one part had not been sent to the Tribe of Benjamin as well as to the other Eleven they might seem to be slighted and reputed as Enemies which would doubtless have been deemed a sort of provocation to desert the other Tribes as they causelesly did they neither went nor sent to the Solemn Assembly Judg. 20.3 not once making use of any such Apology N. B. This Fact of the Levite is variously ventilated whether it were lawful or unlawful First Those for the Negative say it was a Barbarous Bloudy and an Inhumane Act in it self to be done by a Strangers Hand much more by the Hand of an Husband to mangle the Dead Body of his Wife after so brutish a manner which is both against the Law of God that commands Burial of the Dead though they be executed Malefactors Deut. 21.23 and also against the common Principles of Humanity and Honesty which do condemn all such Savage Manglings of Dead Bodies But Secondly It may be said for the Affirmative that it was Lawful in the Levite's Case For 1. This was in a time of Israel's Anarchy when there was neither King nor Judge to Head the People or to whom the Levite might apply himself for a Redress of his Grievances and therefore was constrained to make his Applications unto every Tribe distinctly 2. Though this might have been done by Messengers as indeed was done by the Levite herein yet in such a profound Lethargy did all Israel lie at this Time that a bare Message by word of Mouth only could not possibly rouze them out of it and therefore this Levite from a Divine Impulse and Zeal for Justice might judge this Horrid Spectacle also necessary and most effectual 3. Nor did he do this out of any design to Dishonour the Dead but for the benefit of the Living to bring those Belialists to Condign Punishment least the very Air should be poisoned by the Breath of those Pests if permitted any longer to live in the Land and more especially least the dreadful Judgments of God should fall upon the whole Land for Indemnifying Delinquents of the greatest Magnitude And thus for publick good the Law allows of Anatomies that Dead Bodies may be Dissected that by searching out the Secrets of Nature both Physicians and Chirurgeons may learn more skill out of the Bodies of the Dead either to prevent or to cure those Diseases that are Incident to the Bodies of the Living The Levite's Intelligence which he sent to all the Tribes in so marvelous a manner sounds a loud Alarm to the whole Land of Promise insomuch that all Israel do universally acknowledge there was never the like Horrid Villany neither done nor seen neither in their own times nor in the time of their Ancestors Hereupon it was generally concluded to hold a Solemn Assembly wherein this lamentable Tragedy might be seriously search'd into every Man speaking freely and to have speedy Justice executed upon those desperate Delinquents the Actors of it that the Land might not be liable to the Wrath of God if unpunished CHAP. XX. JUdges the Twentieth is a Narrative of the punishment upon Gibeah for this most Horrible Villany and upon the whole Tribe of Benjamin for patronizing that wicked and wretched Town Wherein observe 1. The Antecedents 2. The Concomitants 3. The Consequents First The Antecedents are The General Convention of all the Tribes of Israel excepting Benjamin to consult what was to be done in punishing this abominable Action This is described 1. By the Persons who Convened namely both the People and the Princes ver 1 2. 2. By the Number how many Four hundred Thousand ver 2. 3 By the place where at Mizpeh ver 1.3 4. By the Acts that passed at this General Convention namely 1. They Cite the Benjamites to appear ver 3.2 They hear the Levites complaint ver 4 5 6 7.3 They demand the Benjamites to deliver up the Delinquents ver 12 13.4 They Decree War against Benjamin for their Contumacy
Angel but the Eternal Son of God that Angel of the Covenant appeareth for he is call'd Jehovah ver 14. and the Lord ver 16. to whom Gideon built an Altar which is a Prerogative peculiar to God ver 24.26 and this Son of God oft appeared to the Sons of Men out of his Philanthropy or Love to Mankind Prov. 8.30 31. and as a prelude to his Incarnation Tertullian's Phrase is Christ was oft in carne long before he was ex carne oft in the form and likeness of Flesh before he took upon him the Nature and Substance of Flesh He appeared of old to Abraham Gen. 18.17 and to Jacob Gen. 32.24 whom he calls his Redeeming Angel Gen. 48.16 and to Moses in the Bush Exod. 3.2 Deut. 33.16 and to Israel at Bochim Judg. 2.1 c. and here to Gideon resembling a Man both in his Postures and Actions The Fifth Remark is Christ's Errand hither was both to call Gideon to be Israel's Judge and to comfort him also against their present Miseries therefore gives him a more than Angelical Salutation The Lord is with thee above that of Boaz Ruth 2.4 or that of Gabriel Luke 1.28 Gideon complains ver 13. Christ liking well his Pious Expostulation the publickness of his Spirit and his sensibleness of the common Calamity look'd upon him ver 14. with a look of Love as he did upon Peter Luke 22.61 and with a pleasant Countenance gives him an Efficacious Call from his Threshing of Wheat to a Threshing of Midian This Gibbor Hicchail Hebr. or Mighty Man of Strength must now go Thresh those Plowers that had been Plowing upon Israel's Backs for seven Years ver 14. Christ promiseth to make a new sharp Threshing Instrument with Teeth wherewith the Worm Jacob shall Thresh the Mountains and beat the Hills as small as Chaff Isaiah 41.14 15. and here he saith to Gideon as is said to the Daughter of Sion Arise and Thresh and I will make thy Hoofs Brass and thy Horns Iron and thou shalt beat in pieces many People Mic. 4.13 And notwithstanding Gideon's modest Refusal of this Call and Commission because of his Meanness want of Men Means Money and Authority c. ver 15. yet hath he Christ's assurance that he should Thresh those Mountains the Midianites and their vast Multitudes as if they were but one Man ver 16. and such a Mighty Man of Valeur as Gideon was might think himself able enough to match any one Man whomsoever The Sixth Remark is Gideon asketh a Sign ver 17. This he did not from want of Faith but from weakness of Faith he sought not a Sign as the Pharisees did Matth. 16.1 4. to satisfie his Curiosity or Incredulity but for farther Confirmation of his Divine Call to be Israel's Deliverer Here Gideon was faithful in weakness though but weak in Faith 't was a great trouble to God's Church not to see Signs Psal 74.9 this he desires may be strengthened with a Sign to assure him that he must be the Man who should help the Lord against the mighty Midianites as the Phrase is Judg. 5.23 even this Lord Christ. He presseth here after assurance of good success in so great an undertaking loath he was to be deluded by a Fancy instead of Faith whereof had there been a total want he had never been reckoned among those Renowned Worthies for the Eminency of his Faith in that little Book of Martyrs Hebr. 11.32 The Seventh Remark is The Miracle that the Messiah wrought at Gideon's Request as a Sign whereby his Faith had a full Confirmation ver 18 19 20 21 22 23 24. the Materials of this Miracle were Gideon's present or provision for this Angel as Gen. 18.5 as refreshing Food for a weary Traveller Thus Lot did as well as Abraham Gen. 19.3 and Manoah did so afterward Judg. 13.15 no doubt it was not intended for a Sacrifice for the Requisites to a Meat-Offering Levit. 16.12.15 are not mentioned here but for a Dinner prepared to refresh his unknown Guest the Angel bids him pour out the Broth on the Flesh and Cakes laid upon the Rock out of which Fire came forth as soon as he had touched them with the Staff in his hand and turned his Meat-Offering into a Burnt-Offering N.B. Well were it with us if we could lay all our Services upon the Rock Christ 1 Cor. 10.4 We should do all in the Name of the Lord Jesus Col. 3.17 then might we find more of the Spirit of burning Isa 4.4 which would not only burn up our Corruptions more but also render all our Services more acceptable to God Psal 20 3. turn into Ashes the Geneva Reads as Sacrifices offered up by fire unto the Lord for a sweet Savour Levit. 1.9 13.17 and 2.9 c. and 3.5 c. Thus the Hallowed Shew bread was to be hot Bread daily set before the Lord 1 Sam. 21.6 This Miracle of the Messiah here was the greater partly because the more that the Flesh and Cakes were moistened with the Broth the less apt they were to be to consumed by the fire as was that of Elijah 1 Kings 18.33 and partly because the Angel by this Act did declare himself to be no mere Man that stood in need of any such Provisions for his own Repast but that he was more than a Man even the Son of God whereby Gideon's Faith might the more be confirmed that he who had thus promised success against Midian unto him was throughly able to perform it Though at present Gide●n was affrighted when he saw the Miracle and the Angel vanishing suddenly out of his sight for he knew the Lord had said There is no Man can see me and live Exod. 33.20 yet should he have known also how Jacob had seen the Face of God and lived Gen. 32.30 Thus also God talked with Moses yet his Life was preserved and so was Israel's Deut. 5.24 Gideon here saw God in a Mediatour but he yet understood not this but crys I am an undone Man and shall doubtless die This he thought from the weakness of his Faith and not like himself a Mighty Man of Valour for had he now Died what would have become of God's Promise to him that he should live to save Israel out of the hands of Midian this was like David's Distrust I shall one day perish by the hands of Saul 1 Sam. 27.1 and Psal 116.11 I said in my Haste Samuel is a Lyar in promising me the Kingdom making the Promise of God of no effect Gideon's fear lasted till the Lord spake Peace to him ver 23. then went he to build an Altar unto the Lord that had appeared to him upon the top of the Rock where the Miracle was wrought and call'd it Jehovah Shalom that is the Lord send that peace which he hath promised ver 24.26 The Eighth Remark is Gideon's Zeal for God against Baal when his Faith was farther confirmed and when the Lord gave him an express Command to rout out the Worship
with Midian's Multitudes ver 3. Now must there be a second Purgation when but Ten Thousand be left and still they were too many ver 4. N.B. God is sometime troubled with too much help but never with too little He will have all the Glory of this Miraculous Victory And therefore again he shrinks in this Ten Thousand into the small Remnant of Three Hundred ver 5 6. God knows what is in Man John 2.24 25. that he is a Self-vaunting Creature apt to Autotheism which is a Man's falling down to Worship himself and to say as here Mine own hand hath saved me ver 2. mine own Valour hath got me the Victory So prone are Men to Sacrifice to their own Nets Habak 1.16 which the Lord prevented here The Second Remark from the first part is The marvelous means God used to reduce this Army of many Thousands into so poor a Remnant as only Three Hundred The first Means was a Proclamation that because Cowardise is catching the Cowards are commanded to cashire themselves least they should infect their Brethren Deut. 20.8 and what was become of that Courage they seem'd to have in their first coming into Gideon where they had God's Promise of Conquering their Enemies who had so long oppressed them after a most grievous manner and now had a fair opportunity of recovering their Ancient Liberty which they could not but long for as much as the Rich Glutton did for a drop of cold Water to cool his Tongue when tormented in Hell-fire yet away went Two and twenty Thousand Cowards and deserted their Brethren so little trust is there to be put as one saith here in the fickle and faithless Multitude N. B. The Reason why two parts of three were so timerous and returned home is supposed to be that they now understood the prodigious Multitudes of Midianites c. all well Arm'd and Disciplin'd yea and in great heart because of their long success whereas on the other hand the Army of Israel was but a small handful in comparison of their Innumerable Enemies and of such as were dispirited by long Slavery and many of them unfurnish'd with Arms and necessary Provisions Both those Considerations might probably cool that courage they seem'd to have before But the Second Means of purging the Ten Thousand into Three Hundred by the posture of drinking Water was far more Remarkable than was the purging of Two and thirty Thousand into Ten Thousand by Proclamation only which referred the matter to themselves either for going or staying as their Courage had brought them Voluntiers to Gideon so their Cowardice carried them off Voluntiers from Gideon But this Proclamation not making a thorough Purgation many that were fearful indeed yet loath to be accounted Cowardly Disserters did put on a good Face and desired the good Opinion of Gideon that he might look upon them as more Valiant Soldiers than those Twenty two Thousands that had shamefully deserted him Therefore God bids Gideon try one Trick more to make a stricter Scrutiny which made a Discovery by an Occult and Indiscernible Evidence of Nine Thousand Seven Hundred more Cowards that still remained with him as seemingly Couragious ver 5 6. All excepting Three Hundred did lay them down to drink whereas the Excepted and Accepted number only took up a little Water into the Palms of their Hands to put into their Mouths This latter posture of lapping Water like a Dog was an Indication of stoutness of Body and of Temperance of Mind they only drank a little of the Brook in the way to relieve Nature in necessity then lift up their Heads to pursue their Design Psal 110.7 Those were the fittest to follow the Lord not surfeiting with wordly Pleasures but taking only a little tast of them Whereas the bowing of the Body and falling flat to the ground which had been their posture in Worshiping Baal thrusting their Mouths into the Water as thirsty Horses do that they might drink their fill with Greediness was a sign of a weak weary Body and of an Intemperate Mind c. N. B. Gideon had ask'd of God two Signs before and both were granted him about the Fleece in an open and obvious way of Ocular Demonstration and now God gives Gideon here unask'd a third Sign of an Occult Nature and of an obscure Quality for no Natural Reasons can be rendred why so many of the Ten Thousand did fall down prostrate upon the ground to drink like an Horse and so few of them did lap Water out of their Hands like a Dog save only such as are uncertain Conjectures And therefore it is safest to say That there was an over-ruling Hand of God in this matter of disposing the Minds and Bodies of those Ten Thousand so that all of them save Three Hundred only should lay down to drink because it was his Divine Pleasure to have those over-lowly and over-liberal Drinkers dismissed home and to save Israel from Midian by the hands of Three Hundred Men only The Third Remark upon the Antecedents of the Battel is A new Confirmation of General Gideon's Faith needful enough another Sign seems to be when his Army and Auxiliaries were shrivel'd away and shrunk up into so narrow a compass of Three Hundred Men which the Midianites might scornfully call Gideon's Three Hundred Lap-Dogs How might their Army that consisted of above an Hundred Thirty and Five Thousand Soldiers ridicule this despicable handful and contemn them far more than Great Goliah did the Stripling David and no doubt but Gideon himself had he consulted with Flesh and Bloud as 't is said Gal. 1.16 must have some misgiving Motions in his Mind about his present Enterprize Surely Sense and Carnal Reason was not Gideon's Counseller in this case but Faith upon God's Promise still bears him up believing it was all one with God to save by few or by many 1 Sam. 14.6 and a little help in God's hands will help God's People to Victory Dan. 11.34 that through weaker means they may see God's greater strength Augustin saith God is Magnus in magnis nec minimus in parvis N. B. Howbeit Though Gideon was famous for his Faith upon Record Hebr. 11.32 yet doubtless his own humane Imperfection must suggest some Doubts to him 't is but rational to argue according to Christ's Parable that Ten Thousand Men may not presumptuously wage War against Twenty Thousand because two to one is great odds Ne Hercules contra duos in all probability as they are over-matched so they will be over-mastered by them Luke 14.31 How much more improbable was it in Gideon's case that his Three Hundred Men should be able to match and Master an Hundred Thousand and upwards of Midianites c Therefore we may well suppose that he here cryed out with that Man in the Gospel Lord I believe help my Vnbelief Mark 9.24 at which cry of Gideon the Lord condescendingly came and did corroborate his staggering Faith by Three Marvelous Means The First was
both First It was Secret so not to be pryed into by Curiosity Deut. 29.29 And Secondly Wonderful so that it cannot be comprehended by any Humane Understanding and therefore 't is rather to be adored than searched into ver 15 16 17 18. This Wonderful Angel manifested his Name to Manoah after in his wonderful Actings Then Manoah took a Kid c. though he was no Priest nor had he nigh him the Altar of God's appointing to offer his Sacrifice upon Deut. 12 13 14 c. N. B. Yet Christ standing by him gives a sufficient Warrant to him ver 16. so that he dispensed with his own Law and made both this extraordinary Sacrificer and the extraordinary Altar to be both Lawful and Acceptable ver 19. This Acceptance more plainly appeared in the wonderful Actings of this Angel for no sooner was Manoah's Kid laid upon the Rock as a Sacrifice but presently fire is fetched out of the Rock in a miraculous manner and consumed the Kid-flesh and the Angel ascended up to Heaven in the Flame thereof while Manoah and his Wife looked on ver 20 whereby they knew he was more than a Man of God even the Angel of the Lord yea the Lord of Angels All this could not but be a strong Confirmation of their Faith in having their promised Son and that their Prayers and Oblations were assuredly accepted of God seeing Christ himself had carried them up along with him to present them to the Father N. B. And this is Christ's Work still for his Praying Servants he is our High-Priest that both brings and Burns our Sacrifices to God and perfumes our Prayers so with the sweet Odours of his Merits and Mediation Revel 5.8 and 8.3 Psal 14.12 that they cannot fail or fall short of going up with Acceptance upon God's Altar the Flame of this Altar doth sweetly represent the Office of Christ in his procuring Acceptance with God both for our Prayers and Persons c. N. B. However the Effect of this Wonderful Ascension became a dreadful Consternation in both the Beholders so that they both fell upon their Faces to the ground ver 20. possibly the fire flaming forth out of the Rock and turning their Sacrifice into Ashes as Psal 20.3 might fright them at the first into this prostrate posture and both of them were struck with a Religious fear of Death as is expressed ver 22. and out of a Reverence to that glorious presence manifested in such a wonderful manner they humble themselves to the Earth in Supplication to God for the prevention of Death N. B. The Sign of this Malady was more manifest in Manoah who was in the deeper Consternation than the Woman as appeareth by his lamentable Out-cry We shall surely die because we have seen God ver 22. and no wonder he cryed so to his Wife when Gideon a Man of a more Martial and Magnanimous a Spirit said as much in effect Judg. 6.22 N. B. This General Notion was grounded as 't is supposed from the mistaking of that Text There shall no Man see God and live Exod. 33.20 for though no Mortal Man can behold God in his Majesty yet Jacob Moses and others saw God in such Simulachra's whereby he made himself visible to them yet their Lives were preserved The Rabbins say of them they saw Merchabab velo Rochab only the Chariot God Rode in but not the Rider N. B. But Manoah's Wife recover'd her self first out of the Consternation and having got her Faith above her Fear labours to recover her Husband by applying a fit Remedy to his Malady It seemeth here that the weaker Vessel had the stronger Faith ver 23. where she brings forth pregnant Arguments to shore up her Husband 's fainting Faith which be First From God's receiving their Oblation And the Second is From God's Revealing such Secrets to them about having a Son c. And her Third was And both these in a time of Grievous Common Calamities when open Vision was not Therefore she concludes We shall not Die The last Remark is upon the second part of this Thirteenth Chapter namely the Consequents of this Wonderful Apparition As First Manoah's Wife notwithstanding her Fright both asked and bears a Son by the force of her Faith and calls his Name Samson Hebr. Shimshon which signifies Solilus N. B. A Little Son for Shemesh Hebr. signifies a Son thus he was a Type of Christ who had promised him to his Parents even that Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 N. B. Josephus Interprets this Name Robustus Strong because Samson was strong even to a Proverb As strong as Samson and as the Sun in its strength Judg. 5.31 is irresistible even so was Samson whom the Lord blessed with growth ver 24. both in Invincible Valour of Mind and in Impregnable Strength of Body N. B. So that like a little Sun he began to shine forth toward Israel's Deliverance N. B. Or Shemesh Hebr. signifies a Servant for the Sun is the grand Servant of the World lending light to Man in all his Labours who is said to go forth to his Work and to his Labour until the Evening or Sun-setting Psal 104.23 So Samson was a great Servant of God for Israel's good The Spirit of the Lord began to move him at times ver 25. that is to inspire him with all Gifts and Graces needful for that high employ of Israel's Judge and Deliverer N. B. What God call'd him to he qualified him for so that while he was yet but a Stripling he manifested some Mighty Marks of a most Military Martial Mind in some Matchless Exploits as is supposed against the Philistines which the next Chapter maketh apparent God making use of those his Youthful Essays as Praeludes of Samson's future Valour and Victory over those Philistines whom he hereby provoked and made a Challenge to a Duel c. N. B. Those early Attempts of his were in the Camp of Dan so call'd Judg. 18.11 12. which Story though placed after this was done before it as above In this very place near Hebron the Danites had formed another Camp to give some check to the Incursions of the Philistines which might occasion this Youth to exert his Valour in sight of the Danites N. B. Oh Happy Youth that has the Spirit of God moving them betimes while Young c. Judges CHAP. XIV JUdges the Fourteenth contains Samson's Marriage whereof the Antecedents the Concomitants and the Consequents are very considerable First The Antecedents of it afford Remarks As First Samson went down to Timnath ver 1. a City given by Lot to the Tribe of Dan Josh 19.43 but they being not able it seems to drive out its Inhabitants the Philistines lived there still and now by God's Just Judgements for Israel's new sins they were Lords over Israel ver 4. yet they paying their Tribute duly and truly they were suffered to Trade with them therefore Samson when grown up to Maturity went down thither whether to the Market or to the
in the Chamber over the Gate but not wholly eased himself of it and likely because he feared his Son was not only Dead but also Damned seeing he Died in his Sin when Joab came to him Mark 2. Joab saith to him Thou hast shamed this day the Faces of all thy Servants c. too Rude and Rough a Reproof such as David could never digest tho' for the present he prudently gave place to it because Joab had reason to speak and much of what he spake stood with good reason but better Language to so truly Sacred a Soveraign had better becomed him N. B. Josephus addeth that Joab asked David if he were not ashamed to be thus Affected with sorrow for such a Rebellious Son and bid him come forth and speak friendly to the People or if he did not he threatned to give the Army and Kingdom to another c. Mark 3. Joab chargeth David with Loving his Enemies and Hating his Friends c ver 6. This was not true in the rigour of it but was spoke by him in an high Transport of passion which did hurry him into some undecent expressions such as he Judged necessary to awaken David out of his present Lethargy by such sharpness of Speech For indeed David did not love Absalom as an Enemy but as a Son through an Excess of Natural Affection Nor did the other Branch It would have pleased David well if Absalom had lived and all his Army had died savour of any more truth and soundness but was utterly false for David desired really the preservation of his Army and of Absalom's also Mark 4. Then Joab adds not his Counsel but his Command seeming to speak rather to his Servant than to his Soveraign ver 7. Arise and speak comfortably to thy Souldiers thanking them for their good Service and promising them proportionable rewards c. If not he threatens to Depose David by his powerful Interest he had in the Army and to chuse another Ruler that could rule his own Passions better and so might Rule the People also with more moderation and all these menaces Joab bindeth with a Passionate Oath to startle and scare David Mark Fifthly Hereupon David toward v. 8. When Pills are ill prepared or Potions administred too hot or too sowre the Patient refuses them 'till better made up cooled and sweetned and then he can receive them without loathing and reluctancy N. B. Such a Rash Emperick might Joab have proved here in order to the cure of David's Lethargick distemper his Potion of Advice was ill Administred both too hot and not at all sweetned yet good David makes a vertue of necessity and thereby it proved a word in Season David obeys Joab come out of his Retirement into the place of Judicature all his Party come out of theirs also and congratulate the King for his great Victory he thanks them for their Valour in winning the Victory hereby David's passions were effectually allay'd and we hear no more of O Absolom my Son my Son and then all Israel that were Absolom's Party fled to their homes The Second Head is David's return from his Banishment c. Remarks upon it are First Those followers of Absolom now fled home begin upon second thoughts to blame one another for abetting the late Rebellion They were at strife v. 9 10. which intimates the Devil stickled bard still in some of those late Rebels to hinder David's readmission to the Throne it was not done without dispute N. B. 'T is a great truth that the Crowns of Kings sit faster or looser upon their heads as God is pleased to order the hearts of their People which he can turn in a moment what way he will Oh what mischief might Joab have done David here in his ill-timed despondency had the Lord suffer'd him to improve his great interest in the Army whose hearts as he said will be forth with irrecoverably alienated from thee and this Affliction will exceed all Saul's Persecutions and Absalom's late Rebellion when in thy old Age thou be not only deposed from the Throne but also exposed to contempt and desperate danger But David here being now reconciled to God as well as to himself in the death of his Son God is at work even among the late Rebels themselves to further his Restoration as well as the Devil at work to hinder it by giving them Repentance after their late Rebellion and renewing their Allegiance to David The Second Remark is God thus going before and preparing the way David follows after so good a Leader and first Courts the Elders of Judah who had been possibly too forward in the late horrid Rebellion so might despair of Pardon and haply hang back therefore David assures them of acceptance c. v. 11 12. wherein he complements them as his Kindred yea his Brethren a Title sufficient to stint and stifle all strife if well considered In the Second place he Courts Amasa in particular v. 13. as our Lord did Peter having been the greatest offender Go tell my Disciples and Peter Mark 16.7 so Amasa had been Absalom's Captain General of the Rebels and still had the Command of the strong Tower of Zion and of the City Jerusalem so might have caused new troubles and Tragedies had he not been thus won over by a promise of free Pardon and high preferment in particular and to put his promise out of doubt to him he relates how nearly related he was to David a Sister's Son as well as Joab 1 Chron. 2.16 17. and one that had a mighty influence upon the Men of Judah to turn their hearts towards David v. 14. otherwise David could not return to the Capital City v. 15. N. B. This Question is canvas'd among the Learned Whether David was not de fective either in his Politicks or in his Piety in promising Joab's Abdication and an Instalment of Amasa in his place Answer the First Some say with Peter Martyr that David might justly Abdicate Joab 1. For his slaying of Absolom contrary to the King's Command 2. For his treacherous slaughter of Abner 3. For his frequent over bold and imperious expostulations with the King unbeseeming a Subject to his Soveraign 4. Joab might have many more faults known to David tho' unknown to others 5. David oft designed to Abdicate Joab from his Generalship but he could not complaining again and again that the Sons of Zeruiah were too hard for him 6. David was all along jealous of Joab's imperious temper Ne aliquid novi in eum moliretur Saith Theodoret lest he should harch some Treason against him by his prevalent interest in the Royal Army c. And now David had the opportunity of Amasa one as powerful with the Souldiers as Joab himself c. Answer the Second But others are of Opinion that this Act was one of David's defects for First Joab had purchased his Generalship by hazarding his own life in Conquering that strong fort of Zion 2 Sam. 5.8 Secondly
he had many Beasts in his own belly N. B. All these Victories are ascribed to David v. 22. learn we to do so unto Christ for all our Victories both Croporal and Spiritual These all made way for Solomon's peaceable Reign Sam. CHAP. XXII THIS Chapter is David's Doxology to the Lord for his manifold Deliverances given him both from the hands of Saul and his house and from the hands of all his other Enemies both Domestick and Foreign Now this whole Chapter being wholly Eucharistical and not at all Historical and the self same in substance with the Eighteenth Psalm which may be read either at the end of 2 Sam. 4. when David was delivered from the trouble of Saul's House as the Title of that Psalm intimates or at the end of 2 Sam. 22. here where the Lord had again delivered David from his Foreign Foes Tirinus hath this odd notion that David first drew a rude draught of this Psalm which we have here recorded in this Chap. 22. but afterwards when at more leisure he perfectly polish'd it and gave it to the Priests which is Psalm Eighteenth yet only with some few variations This Song of Thanksgiving some Learned Men do better and more solidly suppose that David composed in the last year of his Reign when he enjoyed a setled secure and sublime peace not indulging himself in his old Age with ease and idleness as too many Kings and Conquerours do in the like Condition but he devoted himself to glorifie God the giver of all his Victories in Religious Exercises such as this was wherein he names Saul as his fiercest and most dangerous Persecutor and whose Persecution was of longest continuance Now seeing there is no History in this Chapter whereof to give the Mystery and Meaning I omit it as I have done others and pass on to the 23d Chapter 2 Sam. CHAP. XXIII WHerein we have the Swan-like Song of David a little before his death and in which we have likewise but little History save only a Catalogue of David's Worthies from v. 8. to the end and therefore a few Remarks upon the Song and the Catalogue will dispatch it also And first upon the Song from v. 1 to the 8th The First Remark is This Song is said to be the last words of David v. 1. not as the last he spoke while living for he spake often after this to Joab to Araunah to Solomon c. after this but it was the last he set down as Pen-man of Holy-Writ and by Divine Inspiration This Song is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much in a little wherein he doth in few words but full of matter First Acknowledge God's Kindness Secondly Confess his own Sins Thirdly Profess his Faith Fourthly Comforts himself in the Covenant and Fifthly Denounces destruction to all Unbelievers Remark the Second Junius judgeth he spake these words after he had given his Commands to Solomon 1 King 2. and after his prayers for him in Psal 72. when he was near his death and Peter Martyr addeth that this Prophetick Song comes properly in after his thanksgiving for all his former Victories Chap. 22. and now he foretels here what great things God would give him hereafter for which he gives thanks also even for the Covenant wherein he confided for his posterity which must be understood of the promise of Christ David's Son and surest Comfort Remark the Third Whenever this Song was sang by David 't is properly placed here for all his Enemies had spat and spent all their venom and he was delivered from them all both domestick and foreign We hear not of any one that stir'd either hand or tongue against him until himself became an enemy to himself when Satan provok'd him to number the People as in Chap. 24. The Second Part is the Catalogue of David's Worthies The Remarks are First This Catalogue is reckon'd in 1 Chron. 11. as well as here Chap. 23.8 c. but with this difference there 't is set down in the beginning of David's Reign here at the ending of it This is a seeming Contradiction yet both are done so upon solid grounds for the former designeth to declare who were the Worthies that help'd David to his first settlement in his Kingdom but the latter gives an account of those that stuck close to him all the time of his Reign and help'd him all along to keep him in his settlement and fast in the Saddle Remark the Second In both the Books of Samuel and the Chronicles there is reckon'd a double Triumverate the first three were men of the greatest gallantry the second three tho' they were exceeding valorous yet not matching the first in fortitude or Magnanimous Atchievements N. B. There be diversities of Gifts yet from the same spirit all must not excell in degree and dignity if all were the head where would be the other parts of the body much less did the other Thirty Heroes Colonels and Commanders come up to the first three Remark the Third Among all those 36 Worthies Joab is not once named in the Catalogue some suppose he is not mentioned because of his barbarous Butcheries of Abner and Amasa as well as for his killing Absalom contrary to the King's Command But others are of Opinion that Joab being the Lord Chief General needed not to be named because his Valour and high Generalship had been notified before at the storming of the strong fort of Sion and he must necessarily be reckon'd one of the number to make up the forementioned number of 36 to the full number of Thirty seven as is the express number v. 39. Remark the Fourth David's refusing to drink the waters of Bethlehem c. v. 15 16 17. looking upon it as too dear a draught for him but religiously pouring it forth before the Lord. N. B. 'T is a good president for Princes not to buy their pleasures with the hazarding the lives of their Subjects and for Masters not to keep their Servants from Ordinances without necessity c. Remark the Fifth The Valour of those Worthies was oft laid forth in defence of the Harvest to keep a Field of Barley and of Lentiles 1 Chron. 11.13 v. 11 12. here and if they contended thus for Provender c. should not we be Valiant for the Truth Jer. 9.3 and contend for the Faith once delivered to the Saints Jude v. 3. Remark the Last on Chap. 23. is In all this long Catalogue of David's 37 Worthies none of David's Brethren are found amongst them tho' some of them were of such a Prince-like port and of so personable a presence that even the Prophet Samuel himself was deceived in them by looking too much at their outward appearance height of stature and a goodly Countenance he judged that Eliab David's Eldest Brother was indeed the Man appointed to be the Lord 's Anointed 1 Sam. 16.6 7. whereas neither he nor any of his other six brave Brethren proved so much as to be any of the number
of three Days were expired for three Reasons The First is this very History contradicts it in saying both that the Lord repented him of the Evil ver 16. now God Repents not of any Evil already inflicted but only of that he threatens to inflict Jerem. 26.3 13. and that he stopped the destroying Angel bidding him Hold his hand ver 16. which was needless if nothing of the Sentence and of the term of Time had been Revoked for the Angel could not go beyond his Commission of three Days The Second Reason is Nor is it credible that either the Angel did not come to Jerusalem until the Three Days were expired or that David did defer his Repentance and Deprecating this Divine Displeasure from his People so long as till Three Days were directly run out The Third Reason is What Bechartus and Peter Martyr alledge that in the midst of Wrath God remembereth Mercy Hab. 3.2 And cuts short his Days of displeasure for the Elect's sake Matth. 24.22 not because God is changeable but because he recalls only what he had determined to do in case of Impenitency persisted in But if David and the People become truly Penitent upon this condition God decreed the Plague should not continue the whole Three Days The Third Part is God's putting a Period to this Pestilence Remarks upon it are First The time when this was done It was when the Destorying Angel had destroyed great Numbers in other parts of the Land and was now on the Third Day come to Jerusalem to destroy it also ver 16. Compare with this the 1 Chron. 21. where this story is much inlarged 'T is said there As the Angel did not only stretch forth his hand to destroy but was destroying with his Sword ver 15 27. Many being already Slain therein even then God Repented and stopped the Angel Where Mark 1. Even good Angels are Executioners of God's Justice and Judgments as both here and at Sodom To do Justice upon Malefactors is so noble an Act and Office as not unbeseemeth an Angel Mark 2. This Good Angel was God's Servant being at his Lord's beck and check obedient to his commands both in striking or stopping Either the Angel knew not the Number how many were to be Slain or he is bid to hold his hand as is spoken after the manner of Men. Mark 3. This Destroying Angel did not begin to Destroy at Jerusalem as Ezek. 9.6 1 Pet. 4.17 Jerem. 25.18 and 21.9.49.12 but came last to it hereupon David had good ground to say The Lord loved the Gates of Sion more than all the dwellings of Jacob Psal 87.2 Sanctius renders this Reason for the Plague not beginning at Jerusalem Because saith he the Citizens perhaps paid their Poll-Tax of an half Shekel having the Tabernacle and Priests present with them which would teach them their Duty Mark 4. God's Repenting and stopping the Angel thereupon was mutatio Rei non Dei effectus non affectus concilis non decreti c. 'T was God's purpose not to proceed but to put a Period to the punishing of the People so soon as he had brought them and their King to unfeigned Repentance the acting or neglecting whereof disposeth of all Temporal Judgments whether off or on as is expressed Jer. 18.8 10. and as is exemplified in Nineveh Jonah 3.10 otherwise God is not as Man that he can Repent Numb 23.19 1 Sam. 15.11 29. Rom. 11.29 'T is only said so because God did here what Men do when they Repent namely cease from farther punishing N. B. Here God's Repentings were kindled and he would not execute the fierceness of his Anger as Hos 11.8 9. David foresaw with an Eye of Faith that God's Compassion would not fail Lam. 3.22 and therefore chused like a loving Child to be chastized by his Father himself rather than by the hand of a Slave or Servants As all Creatures are to the great Creator Psal 119.91 David well-knew that his Heavenly Father would not Plague either him or his People according to the Demerit of their Sins but he would only correct them both in measure and mercy and that for their amendment only Mark 5. The Rabbins all grant that the term of this Pestilence was abbreviated but they cannot concurr upon what part of the Third day the Plague ceased Bochartus saith it ceased as soon as the daily Sacrifice was offered which probably was that in the Morning otherwise the Plague had proceeded to the end of that Day 'T is said ver 25. The Lord was entreated to stay the Plague no doubt but David and the Elders did most earnestly intreat it at their Morning Sacrifice c. The Second Remark is The means whereby God was pacified to put a period to any farther progress were Prayers and Sacrifices ver 17 to 25. First As to David's Prayer Mark 1. The Motive to it which was His seeing the Destroying Angel in an Humane figure with a drawn Sword in his Hand between Heaven and Earth upon which upper station he could strike the Highest Cedar as well as the lowest shrub This astonishing sight startles David expecting to be stricken by that frightful now visible striker so betakes himself to serious Prayer ver 17. Mark 2. David in his Praying for his People as a kind Shepherd for saving his Sheep offers himself to be a Sacrifice for them N. B. So was a Type of Christ that Good Shepherd John 10.11 yet was he much over-done by Christ his Antitype who did not only offer to do it but who really gave up himself an Offering for the Sins of his Sheep even when they were his Enemies and had deserved Eternal woe he himself being wholly innocent not as David saying I have sinned Mark 3. Not only David but the Elders also with him covered themselves with Sackcloth and fell upon their Faces in a deep Humiliation and in a devout Deprecation of God's Plague from the People 1 Chron. 21.16 It was undoubtedly after these solemn seekings of God's favour that God said to the Angel It is enough stay now thy Hand 1 Chron. 21.15 though the End be recorded before the Means to effect that End as is usual ver 7 17. The Third Remark is upon the Second Means David must find Sacrifices as well as Prayers ver 18 19 20 c. Wherein Mark 1. In order to Sacrificing an Altar must be erected the place where must be the Threshing Floor of Abraunah for many Reasons First Because there Abraham had his Knife held from slaying his Son Isaac as God held here the Sword of the Angel from Slaying the Inhabitants of Jerusalem Secondly It was the very place where the Temple was to be Built 2 Chron. 3.1 Thirdly And the Place or City where Isaac's Antitype our Redeemer was actually offered up whom this Altar and Sacrifice did represent N. B. Teaching that all David's Humiliations and Prayers could not appease God's Anger alone without the Sacrifice of Christ Mark 2. God sends the Prophet
Plenty so far as is necessary Prov. 3.16 1 Tim. 4.8 't is the Character of an Impious man not to call upon God Psal 14.4 Yea God promises long life to him here ver 14. upon condition of his Constancy this as the Oar turns the Boat another way c. Thus have we seen how Solomon obtained his unparallel'd Wisdom in the Gift and Habit now in the next place we have the Act and Enercise of it The occasion was when Solomon had received this transcendent Gift at Gibeon He comes home to Sion solemnly to praise God with his Burnt Offerings and Peace Offerings c. for so matchless a Mercy ver 15. Then God order'd it so Two Harlots stood before the King for Judgment ver 16. in a Controversie between them 't is supposed they had complained to inferiour Courts and the controversie could not be concluded there therefore make they their Appeal to Solomon for whom God purposely Reserved it that he might give the first Specimen and Demonstration of his profound Prudence received from the Lord in his Appearnce to him at Gibeon by his most wisely deciding this dark Case publickly before the People N. B. Behold here the most wonderful Trial of the Darkest Case and Difficultest Cause that ever was transacted before any Humane Tribunal either in Civil or in Sacred Records from ver 16 to the end of the Chapter Remarks upon this stupendous Tryal by Solomon The First is that which was previous to it ver 15. The Time when it was namely immediately after Solomon had solemniz'd his Marriage-day with his Wife which was Divine Wisdom saith Sanctius This Solomon solemnly observed as an high Festival-day by giving God his part in his Burnt Offering the Lord's Priests their part in his Peace offering and with the rest He feasted all his Subjects as Peter Martyr well marketh that accompanied him in this Solemnity at Sion this was to quicken them in thankfulness The Second Remark is the Persons that came to complain to Solomon as he sat upon his Throne the Supream Judge of Israel These are called Zonoth which some rend Hostesses or Victuallers rather than Harlots as I have noted before concerning Rahab Josh 2.1 c. for which these Reasons are rendred 1. Holy David durst not neglect that Law of God which saith There shall be no Whore of the Daughters of Israel Deut. 23.17 If Harlots were not permitted in any part of Israel much less in Jerusalem call'd the Holy City N. B. Not like to Vnholy Rome at this Day which allows of Common Stews and Brothel Houses paying a vast Revenue to the Pope ad purgandos Renes as their Phrase is to purge the Reins of their Vnmarried Priests especially in the three hot Months but cursed be that Remedy of Sin that is it self a Sin God will not have a Gain to be recompens'd with such a loss The Second Reason as neither David nor Solomon would tolerate common Harlots so neither durst any such have presented themselves before so Wise and so Just a Judge as Solomon was The Third Reason nor do common Harlots use to bring forth Children but use all the means they can to prevent their Conception or to make away their Brats if born for the better concealing their shame c. The Fourth Reason Those two Women had better Affections for their new-born Children than for the most part Harlots now have These two express here greater Care and Love than such do c. N. B. But the other Opinion that they were Harlots seems more probable 1. Seeing we hear of no Husbands they had whose proper Office it had been to contest for righting their Wives 2. They lived a solitary Life in one House like a couple of Misses maintain'd by their fornicating Gallants privately 3. Lavater addeth that they were Envious Impudent and Litigious as Harlots use to be quarrelling each with other through Emulation 't was lately the Language of a Royal Harlot to her Corrival Two of a Trade can never agree but seeing the Hebrew Word Zoneh signifies both an Hostess and an Harlot they might possibly be both the former by their publick Profession and the latter by their secret Practice as Junius and Piscator Judge and not common Whores The Third Remark is they both come before the King and the true Mother of the living Child is the Plaintiff and first States her Case complaining of a Plagiary that her Child was stolen out of her Bosom by her Co-partner but alas she had no witness to prove it yet she confidently affirms that when the other Woman had smother'd her own Child by over-laying it she steals my Babe out of my Bosom when I was fast asleep about Midnight and laies her own Dead Child in its Room c. ver 16 17 18 19 20 21. The Fourth Remark is now the other Woman comes to her turn of Answering as Defendant and peremptorily denies the Fact and puts her to produce her Witnesses for it belong'd not to her to Disprove this Matter of Difference 'T is the received Rule in Philosophy Affirmanti incumbit probatio they that Affirm must prove the Affirmative but none are obliged to prove Negatives This Advantage the Lyar and Denyer had against her that spake truly and it concern'd her the more to deny the Deed because as Sanctius saith her fear was she should be question'd for murthering her Child for either Law or Custom appointed a Punishment for those that either willingly or by carelessness destroyed their Children The Fifth Remark is when Solomon saw that she who had the Truth on her side would not be overcome by the Impudency of the Lyar and Denier ver 22. Yet was there no Evidence the Yea of the One was of no more Credit saith Peter Martyr than the Nay of the other because they were both equally Women of bad Name and Fame as reputed Harlots These Scolding Contradictions of Yea and Nay so oft repeated undoubtedly made the Matter of Controversie a blind Business to all the People in the Court who now hung in suspence and could not tell which of the two to Believe herein But wise Solomon knew what he had to do in this Dark Case when he said ver 23. here 's nothing but an equal Yea and Nay without Proof Objection Why did not Solomon in this dubious Cause either sift out the Truth by cross Interrogatories or try them with tortures c Answer Peter Martyr saith These ways of examining Persons were probably not used in those times nor do we read that such Methods are required in the Law of God and Confessions constrained by squeezing Tortures are dubious oft as false as true The Sixth Remark is Solomon to decide the Difference bids bring me a Sword ver 24. This command of the King seem'd a childish Act at first to the People that stood by saith Sanctius out of Josephus and Peter Martyr addeth likely some laughed within themselves saying secretly Will the King
he ate sparingly saith Sanctius that he might have some to suffice him the next Day However the Angel touches him the second time to awake him out of his Repose to betake Himself again to a fresh Repast ver 7. telling him he must feed lustily that he might be able to hold out so long a Journey as to Horeb N.B. The like Words the Angel of the Covenant seemeth to say to us in his Ordinances especially in the Lord's Supper eat O Friends yea drink abundantly c. Cant. 5.1 Remark the Fifth Elijah obeyed and in the strength of that double Meal he went to Horeb c. ver 8. Horeb is reckoned from Beersheba but fourscore Miles whereof he had walk'd one Day 's Journey already into the Wilderness So that the Prophet need not spend forty Days and Nights in going thither but Peter Martyr supposeth that he went wayless ways with many windings and turnings in the manner of Fugitives to shun Jezebel's Pursuers Sometimes he stood still rested and lay lurking in obscure Places and perhaps saith Menochius It was not at the first his purpose to pass so far as Horeb but God by his Providence brought him through all his wandrings in the Wilderness thither saith Peter Martyr that he might there instruct him Others are of opinion that forty Days and Nights time was spent in not only his going to Horeb but also in his abiding there N.B. However this is certain that this double Meal lasted to nourish him for so long a Time No doubt but Meat and Drink of an Angel's providing must have an extraordinary Digestion and Operation As the Meal in the Barrel and the Oil in the Cruise continued for three Years Chap. 17.14 15. so might this Meat of the Angel's making abide in Elijah's Stomach for forty Days and forty Nights and this is reputed the Prophet's seventh Miracle in his Fasting so long as Moses had done before him Exod. 34.28 and the Messias after him Matth. 4.2 which three great Fasters did meet gloriously together on Mount Tabor at Christ's Transfiguration Matth. 17.3 The third Place Elijah fled to for fear of Jezebel was Mount Horeb where the Lord met him ver 9 to ver 18. Remarks upon this are these First Horeb had a Cave in which Elijah lodged himself this was a more convenient Place for his Lodging than when he lay in the open Air under his Juniper-Tree in the Wilderness and Rab. Solomon saith It was the self-same Cave wherein Moses was when he saw God's Back-parts Exod. 33.21 22 23. and 34.6 Hence this Cave was in most high esteem among the Ancients saith Josephus c. N.B. However this Mount Horeb was the Place where God appeared to Moses at the first Exod. 3.1 2. and where afterwards God gave the Law to Moses and Israel Deut. 4.10 15. It surely could not but much confirm Elijah's Faith against his fear to behold those sensible Monuments wherein God cover'd Moses with his Hand while He passed by him with his overwhelming Glory Moses had gone to this Horeb to see God in the Bush Exod. 3.1 2 3. but here God comes to find Elijah in this Cave saying to him what dost thou here Elijah ver 9. wherein saith Peter Martyr God asks not because he knew not but secretly taxeth him for forsaking his Station intimating to him how he had sent him and set him to reduce Israel from their relapses and gave him great Gifts and Miracles for that end and saying I would have protected thee still hadst thou continued amongst them But now most unlike a Champion for Truth thou art a timorous run-away and comes not hither by my command but by thy own Cowardice for fear of Jezebel N.B. But others vary from Peter Martyr's Sentiments saying Had God been displeased with Elijah's being here He would not have sent his Angel to sustain him in the Wilderness nor have so strengthen'd him to travel forty Days and Nights with the succour of one double Meal only Therefore say they God asks this Question only to usher in the following Discourse Remark the Second Elijah's Answer to God's Question ver 10. in which Peter Martyr observes that the Prophet doth not speak out simply and directly but conceals the true Cause of his coming thither and commends himself with his Zelando Zelavi I have been Jealous c. meaning that it grieved his Soul to behold the Lord's Spouse so play the Harlot c. God's Honour was as tender to him as a Wives Honesty is to her Husband N.B. Here it is that Elijah makes Intercession to God against Israel Rom. 11.2 laying three grievous Crimes to their Charge The First is Their forsaking God's Covenant The Second is Their throwing down God's Altars The Third was Their slaying God's Prophets Oh woe to that People who put a Godly Minister to such an unpleasing Task whose Work properly is to pray for and not against them When a People so far apostatize as to fall a persecuting God's Prophets and when the most eminent of them are the greatest objects of their Hatred and Persecution such a People forfeit Prophets Prayers for them and Ripen fast for Destruction Remark the Third is Jehovah's appearance to Elijah at the Mouth of the Cave whereas the Lord's Accusation and Elijah's Apology before mentioned were in the Heart or midst within the Cave from ver 11 to ver 13. Mark 1. The Lord bids Elijah come forth out of his lurking Hole into the open light and stand in the Mouth of the Cave and there thou shalt see my Harbingers all three Terrible in themselves to humble the Prophet and to prepare him for hearkening more heedfully to the Divine Oracle in the fourth Harbinger and for receiving it with a deeper Veneration Mark 2. The first of God's Harbingers was a tempestuous wind that moved the Mountains and rent the Rocks ver 11. Though the Wind of it self be but a Vapour yet what great things God can work by it is well known both at Sea and Land by Storms and here also and all to make way saith Osiander for his own gracious appearance in the last Harbinger N.B. This Tempest represented Hazael whom Elijah anointed afterward ver 15. that tearing Blast to Israel was from God but God was not in it c. Mark 3. After the Wind comes the Earthquake more terrible than the Wind that did but move the Air but this the Earth saith Dr. Hall that only beats upon some Prominencies of the Earth but this shook it from its Center N.B. This might prefigure Jehu whom Elijah anointed ver 16. This again is added but the Lord was not in it that is God was so in it as in his other extraordinary Works but not so as to impart himself graciously to Elijah therein lest he should rather be affrighted than instructed by God's speaking to him out of those terrible Things Mark 4. After the Earthquake came the Fire more terrible than the two former to teach Elijah
The Fourth Remark is Christ may seem to sleep and slight those whom he hath a mind and a purpose to relieve as his Disciples in the Storm Mat. 8.23 c. and those Blind Men who followed him crying out from Jairus's house to his own house yet takes he no notice of them all along in the open street to increase their importunity no sooner was he come into the house but he then answers their Eager and Earnest cries Christ knows how to comment his Mercy to Mankind citò data citò vilescunt lightly come by lightly set by what is easily obtained is mostly but little esteemed The Fifth Remark is Foregoing faith found in man makes him more capable of receiving the following favour of God Christ asks them Do ye believe I am able to do this They said yea Lord. They believed Christ's Incarnation calling him the Son of David which was a blessed prop to their Faith upon him as their Lord and Saviour c. The Sixth Remark is The Prayer of Faith hath a mighty prevalency with the Almighty God Thus Christ both graced and gratified the Syrophenician Woman whom before He had both reproached and repulsed by granting her request and giving her as it were the Key of his Treasury bidding her go into it and take what Mercy she liked most Mat. 15.28 There is no doubt saith a Grace Divine but Justifying faith is not beneath that which is Miraculous in the Sphere of its own activity and where it hath warrant from God's Word All things are possible to him that believeth Mark 9.23 Christ will do any thing for them The Seventh Remark is Though Christ was not tied to Means yet did he use Means in his Touching their Eyes with his hand then according to their Faith which was not vain it was done unto them their Eyes were opened by Christ's Touch which he could have Wrought by a Word of his Mouth to teach us not to Tempt God in neglect of means c. The Eighth Remark is All things are not to be made known at all Times nor to all Persons our Lord in his state of Humiliation was not Ambitious of Vain-glory. Therefore did he straitly charge them to silence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he terribly threatned them from telling it abroad partly to teach both his Ministers and his Members not to be all for Fame and Name whereby to dazle the Eyes of others with admiration not valuing hidden Treasures The Heathen Poet saith Scire Tuum nihil est nisi te scire hoc sciat Alter And again Digito monstrari Dicier hic est to be pointed at for a brave man c. And partly because Capernaum was now fallen under a general unbelief and untowardness Mat. 11.23 so had rendred it self incapable tho' not of Christ's Presence yet of knowing his Miracles The Ninth Remark is Obedience to a general Command may be the sin of Disobedience as it crosses and contradicts a particular Command The general command was that they should declare the Glory of God 1 Chron. 16.24 Psal 96.3 and Isa 66.19 and these two Blind Men receiving now their sight could not but look upon their silence as the most sublime Ingratitude Ingratum si dixeris omnia the worst and the whole of sin should they conceal the greatness of his Grace towards them therefore they divulge it though against his will Some foolishly say Christ for bad them to stir them up the more what is this but to speak wickedly for God c. Job 13.7 making him who was Truth it self to dissemble As their divulging it was a doing against an express particular command it was certainly their sin though done from a pious intention for though a bad Aim may make a good Action bad as in Jehu's case yet a good Aim will not make a bad Action good as in Vzzah's Concerning the second Miracle here of Healing the possessed Dumb man we have these few Remarks 1. The end of one good Action should be the beginning of another No sooner were those blird men gone out of the house from Christ but immediately they brought in a man possessed with a Dumb Devil whom also Christ healed He was never weary with well-doing 't is pity we all are so soon so N. B. Note well Christ's Ministers should learn from their Master not to expect Rest till they come to Heaven the right Resting-place Rev. 14.13 No affronts or hard usages from his Adversaries did dishearten him from doing good though Dogs bark and leap at the Moon yet continues she her course So did he and so should we notwithstanding contradiction of sinners Heb. 12.3 in Villages as well as Cities The 2d Remark There be many gagg'd by a Dumb Devil at this day as this poor man was at that time Satan still puts his Stilling Gag into the mouths of men and women that they can neither pour out their prayers to God nor publish his praises nor profess his Truth to others They cannot utter themselves for others edification● The Spirit of Faith is not an in-dweller in the heart only but sits also upon the door of the lips 2 Cor. 4.13 I believed therefore have I spoken Psal 116.10 to wit in prayer confession and communication The Spirit of Faith observes no dumb or silent Meetings as some do in our day and as the Carthusian Monks did of old whose Orders were only to speak together once a week but true Christians have otherwise learned Christ Eph. 4.20 who teacheth them 't is a shameful neglect of duty when they speak not often one to another Mal. 3.16 that their Meetings together might be for the better and not for the worse 1 Cor. 11.17 Exhorting one another c. Heb. 10.25 The 3d Remark is 'T is better to be Dumb than to speak prophanely This man with his Dumb Devil was in a better case than those Proud Pharisees whose mouths the Devil had not gagg'd but made an open Sepulchre to belch out stinking and black Blaspheaus against our Lord's Miracles as if wrought by Magick Mat. 9.34 and 10.25 and 12.24 The vile person will speak villany Isa 32.6 as well as vanity Psal 12.2 and not only proudly Psal 17.10 grievous and mischievous things Psal 31.18 and 38.12 but wickedness it self Job 27.4 because the Devil tips his tongue but gags not his mouth whereas even a foul when he holdeth his peace is accounted wise Prov. 17.28 Job 13.5 and in an evil day the prudent keep silent Amos 5.13 not conniving at man's sin but acquiescing in God's Providence The 4th Remark is Such as are possessed with Dumb Devils must come to Christ to be dispossess'd thereof as this man here They must sit down at Christ's feet Mat. 15.30 where all his Saints do sit Deut. 33.3 then shall the Dumb speak Mat. 15.31 and they shall speak not the Language of Ashdod but the Language of Canaan Neh. 13.24 Christ will turn to them a pure Lip and Language that they
it must be meant for David himself had begged his Bread twice once at Nob. 1 Sam. 21.3 and again of Nabal 1 Sam. 25.5 8. Yet God forsook him not And the Lord gives this good Security to the very Daughters of Moab Let thy Widows trust in me and leave thy Fatherless Children with me I will preserve them alive Jer. 49.11 Assuredly God hath much more kindness for the Daughters of Sion c. N. B. Note Well 3. Consider how all Christs Sheep thrive best upon short Commons Gods Daniels likes well and looks fair and fat when fed only with pulse and water Dan. 1.12 15. Man lives not by Bread alone c. Mat. 4.4 the Lords People do Travel safelyer through the Valley of Bacah which signifies Tears then when they pitch their Tents in the plains of Sodom Righteous Lot made but an unrighteous Choice when he chused to Sojourn in that well-watered Country Gen. 13.10 11 13. with Gen. 19.4 c. It is much better to be pickled and so preserved in Brime than to rot in Honey Prosperity of Fools doth destroy them saith Solomon Prov. 1.32 It often proves too strong Wine for weak Brains and doth Intoxicate c. Davids Heart and Harp too was kept in better Tune for God and Godliness when he washed his Couch with Tears Ps 66. than when he with Job chap. 29.6 did wash his steps with Butter if it may be said that Adversity hath kill'd its Thousands with Saul sure I am that Prosperity hath kill'd its Ten Thousands with David 2. Let us look upon this Lazarus for his Leprosie as well as Poverty he was full of Sores ver 20. Running Ulcers were upon him this made him seemingly still more Miserable yet the Glutton's Dogs did Commiserate him more than their dogged Master did They licked his Wounds ver 21. Dogs naturally loves to lick blood thus 't is said that Dogs licked the Blood of those Peerless pair of sinners to wit the blood of Ahab and of Jezabell Yet this Miserable Man who was mocked by Men and lick'd by Dogs in his Life came to be Honoured by Angels at his Death therefore 't is not Righteous Judgment to Judge of any Mortal by outward Appearance it is said of one of the same Name with this Larazus to wit the Brother of Mary and Martha John 11.3 The two Sisters send this word to Christ Behold be whom thou Lovest is sick which shews Bodily sickness may consist with Christs Love and so may Poverty and Leprosie c. N. B. Note well The Lepers under the Law were not sent to the Physician but to the Priest Levit. 13.2 3 5 6 c. Hence our Lord to Confute the Jews Cavill that he opposed the Law bad the Leper go shew thy self to the Priest Matth. 8.4 to signifie that the Priest under the Law was a Type of Christ who is a Priest for ever Hebr. 7.3.17 Who is Jehovah the Physician Exod. 15.26 The Sun of Righteousness with Healing in his Wings Mal. 4.2 And who Healeth all our Diseases Ps 103.3 Unto whom we all that have the fretting Leprosie of sin ought to come for Cure It may not be said here why did not Christ Cure this Leper as he did many other Lepers for this Story of Leprous Lazarus was of one long before christs coming in the flesh Augustine and Prudentius think him to be that Eleazer who was the Faithful Servant of Abraham Gen. 24.2 3. c. And who for his Faithfulness now resteth in the Bosom of Faithful Abraham as 't is said of this Man ver 22. N. B. Note well This poor Lepar lay at the Rich Man's Gate and begged not for whole Loaves but only for such Crumbs as fall from this Gluttons full Table for his Dogs to Eat up under the Table ver 21. This was the Offall only and due to the Dogs Matth. 15.27 Yet would he not spare this Dogs part to this Beggar but these very Dogs having that part which he begg'd came forth and were kinder than their dogged Master and licked his Ulcerous Sores which sheweth that Man in the fallen Estate is not only like Brute Beasts that Perisheth Ps 49.12 20. But is become worse and fallen below them in many Moral Duties The Kine though they had Calves at Home took the straight way to Bethshemech signifying Hebr. the House of the Sun not turning aside to the right Hand or to the left 1 Sam. 6.7 12. Whereas Men turn aside to crooked Pathes c. Ps 125.5 Not minding the straight way toward the House of the Sun of Righteousness whereas Solomon saith Let thine Eyes look right on and thine Eye-lids look straight before thee c. Turn no● to the right Hand nor to the left c. Prov. 4.25 26 27. Thus Balaams Ass proved Wiser than his Master who became the worst Ass of the two and had been slain had he not been saved by the Wisdom of his Ass Numb 22. ver 23 25 27 to 34. And thus God often sends Man to the School of Inferior Animals for his Learning Instruction from them as go to the Ant thou Sluggard c. Prov. 6.6 and 30.25 yea go to the Stork to the Turtle to the Crane and to the Swallow who all know the Appointed time of their Coming which Men know not c. Jer. 8.7 Moreover God complaineth that the Oxe knoweth his owner and the Ass his Masters Crib but Israel doth not know my People doth not consider a sinfull Nation a Seed of Evil doeos they are gone away backward Isa 1.3 4. N. B. Note well This Godly Beggar was in League and at Peace with those Brute Beasts the Gluttons Dogs according to the promise thou shalt be in League c. with the Beasts c. Job 5.23 These Dogs do not fall upon this Beggar to Tear him as is the manner of many Dogs c. but they rather fawn upon him quite contrary to their dogged Disposition which was here Chained up and Restrained as is expressed concerning dogged Persecutors Ps 76.10 And they did all the kindness they could do for him in cooling the burning heat of his Ulcers by licking them with then Tongues 'T is Remarkable while the Image of God did shine forth in the first Adam that he had Dominion over all Beasts Lions Dogs c. Gen. 1.28 But by his fall he lost this Dominion both for himself and for all his Posterity yet so far as this lost Image is renewed and restored by the second Adam to his Redeemed this Dominion is in part restored also Hence are we told by Antient Martyrologists that in the Ten Primitive Persecutions neither the Dogs nor the Lyons dired to Tear those Christians when the Law then was Christianos ad Leones that were cast forth to be Torn by them untill their Persecutors did cover them with the skins of Beasts that they might mistake them to be but Beasts like themselves The Third Difference betwixt these two Persons is in
his Candlestick c. Oh that we could cry to Christ Now if ever now or never before it be too late Vespera jam venit nobiscum Christe maneto Extingui Lucem nec patiare Tuam The Day is far spent and the Night is at hand c. The Night of Trouble is already come and how near the Night of Death is we know not Oh leave us not sweet Saviour Jer. 14.8 9. But if we grow cold and careless of the Gospel as Luke 12. v. 47. or dare to live in known sins as Ezek. 8.6 c. Christ will pack up his All and be gone if we lament not after the Ark as 1 Sam. 7.2 6 If we do not repent of our Sins and then do not take faster hold of Christ also as these two Disciples do here And as Jacob did long before and would not let him go without a blessing he had then let his Flocks and his Herds go his wives and his Children go when in his wrestling he said I will not let thee go Gen. 30.26 Thus likewise when the Lord told Moses that he would not go himself with Israel but turn them over to the Conduct of a Created Angel that himself might no longer be vexed with that stiff necked People Exod. 32.34 and 33.2.3 Moses will not lose his Lord so easily but cries out Lord let me die upon the spot here rather than that thy presence should not go with us c. Verse 12 15 16 17. wherein he challengeth God with his promise made Exod. 23 20. That God the Son that Angel and Lord of Angels might go along with them although the Justice of God the Father could not bear them nor forbear from destroying them He cannot be content to live or stir without some visible signs of God's gracious presence Oh that we were in such a holy frame of heart in all our Undertakings and Removals 'T is now become absolutely necessary for us to do as the People did who sought Christ out in a Desart place therein was their Faith they came up to him therein was their Hope and stayed him that he should not depart from them therein was their love to him Luke 4.42 If ever we have tasted how good the Lord is Psal 34 8. what a sweetness there is found in his gracious presence c. we cannot carelesly let him go as the indifferent World do that never tasted any good 1 Pet. 2.2 The 3d Remark is He went in and tarried with them and made Himself known to them in breaking of bread c. Luke 24.29 30 31. If we have but tasted the sweetness of Christ and of the Breast-milk of the Gospel and cannot be quiet without it even the Sincere milk of the Word of God but cries to Christ with good Abraham and like sons Daughters of old Abraham My Lord If now I have found savour in thy sight pass not away I pray thee from thy Servant Gen. 18.3 do not depart with thy Gospel from us for by these good things we live and herein is the life of our Spirits saith holy Hezekiah Isa 38.16 could we but Court Christ aright with both Fervency and Importunity as did the widow such an one is the Church if her Lord and Husband depart from her by a bill of Divorcement Luke 18.3 4 5 6 7. He would be prevail'd with to tarry as here and Matth. 15.22 to 29. Christ had no purpose to deny that woman's request who would not be said nay either by silence or sad Answers but at last grants her the Key of his Treasury and bids her go into it and please her self with any Mercy that she wanted c. So here he had no purpose to pass away from these Disciples though he made a shew of it by his posture not by his speech yet this was only to try their Affections and to prove how they prized his presence which once being demonstrated he went in and supped with them c yea turn'd their Supper into a Sacrament as the Romanists would have it to palliate their Dry Eucharist of Bread without Wine c. but it is most apparent to the contrary for an Inn was no proper place for it nor would Christ administer it to such persons as yet knew not who he was able or not able to minister it Nor would our Lord cross his own Rule in giving it to persons who had not examined themselves first 1 Cor. 11.28 nor made any preparation for it seeing Christ did not give any intimation that he was going about such a Celebration and for ought we know other Guests Supped with them in the Inn which could not be worthy Receivers N.B. Beside Christ never gave this Sacrament but once and that to the Twelve only now these two being of the 70 Disciples so had never seen him Administer that Ordinance could not possibly know Him by Breaking Sacramental Bread as Romanists say which they never saw before Indeed they had often seen his Customary practice in Blessing the Table and Breaking the Bread for common natural refreshment and though this were no more seeing moreover Christ used not here the words of Institution of the Holy Supper Take eat this is my Body which Romanists call the five words of Consecration for Transubstantiating the Bread into his Body N.B. Yet was it an extraordinary Priviledge to have Christ's presence in his glorified Body even at an ordinary Supper Happy are we when He will vouchsafe us his blessed presence at our common Meals but more happy shall we if we gravel with Christ●● Company the who●e Day of our Lives in this lower World then at the Night of Death we shall be sure to sup with him in a De●●r World●s for so hath he promised us Luke 22.20 The 4th Remark is Christ made himself known to them 't is not said By breaking of Bread but in breaking c. Luke 24. v. 35. Nor is it said By a Form of thanksgiving that he constantly used Nor was it by working any wonder at the Table as some ●ay He broke the Bread so smooth and even as if it had been cut with a knife c but the particle in doth not denote the Cause But the Time to wit while he s●t at Table with them then was the Time when that which held their Eyes from knowing him hitherto was removed then the Lord opened their Eyes at the beginning of the Supper Which teacheth us 1. That we should never dare to eat unblest Bread c. 2. And to account it an high Divine favour that we have the free use of our senses How may our lives beheld as theirs was to hinder us from discerning one another And 3. That Christ may be present with us at Bed and Board at Home and Abroad and yet we may not be able to discern Him or his presence c. The 5th Remark is He vanished out of their sight not as a Spirit usually doth though it was a Spiritual Body
Pleasures He was but once at a Marriage-feast he is now Risen and Ascended above them sometimes we read our Lord wept but we never read that he did so much as once laugh 3. Nor in dead Treasures He sat but once over against the Treasury he is now Risen c. 4. Nor in Ease and Idleness He once slept upon a Pillow in the Ship he is now Risen c. The Spouse could not find him by night on her Bed nor in the broad ways of the World Cant. 3.1 2. 5. No nor in the perfection of Humane Mortality for he is Risen and Ascended c. 3dly That we Rise up and Ascend with Christ to Newness of Life Rom. 6.4 from Prophaneness to Piety this is to have part in the first Resurrection Rev. 20.6 awakening out of sin and living unto God 4thly That we labour after an Experimental Knowledge of the power of Christ's Resurrection Phil. 3.10 and of his Ascension also this we do if we cannot be content to be col●●●●d careless in our Devotion without finding our hearts burning within us while he talks with us in the way of our Duty Luke 24.32 beyond the reach of formality we may live by a form but we cannot die by a form we must feel the exceeding greatness of his power which worketh mightily in his Redeemed Eph. 1.19 making all his Saints heavenly-minded ascending up to him who is Ascended like Pillars of Smoke Cant. 3.6 and drawn up after him John 12.32 Cant. 1.3 and Col. 3.1 as not being wedded to worldly things 5ly That we purifie our selves 1 John 3.3 to be prepared for our own Resurrection and Ascension which we hope for by vertue of our Redeemer's The fourth is a word of Comfort 1. Our Hope may hang the faster and firmer for obtaining a better Resurrection and an happy Ascension because of the two grand Pawns and Pledges we have to assure us of both As he our Head is not only Risen which cannot but Raise the Body also for Christ accounts not himself compleat without his Church which he calls his fulness c. Eph. 1.21 22. but he is also ascended so must draw up John 12.32 his whole Body even the little Toes or least Members thereof that they may be with him to behold his Glory c. John 17.24 but likewise he hath taken our Nature with him into Heaven and hath sent his Spirit down to us upon Earth Our Flesh is above and his Spirit is below this is a double Earnest 2ly May we but be able to say in the Witnessings of the Holy Ghost that the Lord Christ hath raised our Souls up to the life of Grace we then need not doubt but he will also raise up our Bodies to a life of Glory and not only our Souls shall ascend to him at our death but they shall be ●nited again to our Bodies at the last day and shall both together be with him in Glory for ever If we have experience of a Spiritual Resurrection and Ascension in our Souls This doth strongly confirm our Faith that it shall be corporal also Eph. 5.14 1 Cor. 15.32 34. Ro. 6.4 11. Phil. 4.20 1. Th. 4.14 Col. 3.4 3dly The Soul cannot but be without comfort till Christ the Comforter come and appear to us as to Peter Luke 24.34 who had wept bitterly Luke 22.63 Now where-ever Christ is he will appear sooner or later he cannot be hid Mark 7.24 He appeared personally to the Patriarchs as he did to his Disciples but now to us spiritually Matth. 28.20 whereof we should make good proof and then may we hope he will appear to us gloriously at the last our Faith is supported both by Evidence and by Influence from these things All fruits were unholy till the first fruits were heaved Levit. 23.11 Rom. 11.16 All his Redeemed have a Quietus est or Acquittance virtually by Christ Risen and Ascended Rom. 5.18 and 4 25. but it passeth actually upon us when Christ appeareth savingly to and in us c. 4thly If Christ have led us forth as far out of the World and Sin as Bethany he will assuredly bless us as he did his Disciples Luke 24.50 51. at his last farewel Thus Isaac blessed Jacob but he first felt him Gen. 27.12 21. and if he hath blessed us we shall be blessed as Jacob was but take heed we go not about to cheat him for so shall we bring a curse and not a blessing We may know we are right Adopted Children if we have clean hands a pure heart and an holy life then have we the Lord's blessing Psal 24.3 4. and this is the Sugar which will sweeten the bitter Cup of our Crosses and Curses from an evil World the comfort of Christ's Spirit the feeling of his favour and the pardon of our sins c. 5thly 'T is our great comfort to consider Christ ascended as our common Representative with all our Names writ upon his Breastplate Exod. 28.29 Others indeed ascended as Enoch in the time of Nature and Elias in the time of the Law as well as Christ in the time of the Gospel but none ascended as our Lord did Note For 1. They ascended before Death seized upon them so did not Christ 2. They ascended by the power of another as Elias by a fiery Chariot c. but Christ by his own power 3. They made no way into Heaven for any body else but Christ did for all his c. Heb. 10.20 Note He did not shut the door as Lot did when he had taken in the Angel Gen. 19.10 but left a broad door open for all his Members 4. They could not work Miracles in Heaven as they had done on Earth but Christ could send his Spirit down to his Disciples c. 5. They went up suddenly but Christ leisurely that his Disciples might the better behold and believe it and that we may not expect to go up to Heaven in a Whirl-wind but gradually as Israel did to Canaan by 42 Removes The Righteous are scarcely saved 1. Pet. 4.18 Hard travel must help to Heaven 6thly 'T is no less our comfort to have Christ's Spirit Rom. 8.9 11. and witnessing with our spirits verse 15. that the Lord is risen indeed in us and hath appeared to us Luke 24.34 'T is an infallible sign that we are Simons Saints true believers for we find not that Christ after his Resurrection appeared once to any one under the real Denomination of an Unbeliever Thomas tho' Unbelieving yet was no Unbeliever not to any of the Chief Priests Scribes and Pharisees not to Pontius Pilate nor to King Herod c. For these reasons 1. To teach us that his Kingdom was not of this World John 18.36 2. That his Kingdom did not depend on or stood need of humane Patronage 3. Nor was it to come with Worldly Pomp or outward Observation Luke 17.19 20 21. John 20.29 4. That those Kill-Christs and Contemners of Grace and Mercy might begin to taste of the
Babble and Talk Idlely and Ignorantly But Peter stands up ver 14. who was now become Stoutest after his former stumbling and thereby gaining ground as stumblers usually do ran the faster And stands so strong as a Stone according to his Name Cephas He buckles close to these Cavillers and both mildly and solidly confutes their Calumny not suffering them to carry it away so with their Contumelious Cavilling ver 15 c. Peter's Sermon or Apologetical Oration is a clear Confutation of their cursed Cavil Though the time of the Vintage was not yet come it being so early in the Summer which made the slander more irrational yet takes he another method to convince them of their Folly 1. Arguing Negatively not from the time of the year but from the time of the day Saying it is now but nine a Clock before the Morning Sacrifice and Service before which ye all know none of us use either to eat or drink but do fit our selves for it by fasting till that be done we serve God first and then our selves c. Therefore we cannot be Inebriated as ye have slandered us This Argument was more than probable in those soberer times and very Cogent and Conclusive how little soever to our shame such an Argument would be of proof now when men's Brains are Crowing before day c. 2. He argues Positively That these Men it seems others spoke in all Languages as well as he are filled with the Spirit not with Wine urging this argument by Informing them both of the Divine promise in Joel's Prophecy wherein is related the Time the Manner and the Effects both proper to some and common to all Respecting both persons and Things c. And also of the Divine Performance now in these last days of the Messiah Exhibited the Old Testament being fulfilled in the New and God keeping his best till last which the Devil doth not but quite contrary Then he demonstrates that this powring forth of the Spirit which formerly had been given out by drops only here a little and there a little could come from no Fountain but from Christ naming him a Man c. That is from Adam but not by Adam then proving strenuously that all this which they wondred at c. was the glorious effects of Christ's Death Resurrection and Ascension This Nail he drives to the head by a large discourse from verse 22. to 36. Then follow the Fruits and wonderful Effects upon the hearts of the hearers of Peter's powerful Sermon from ver 37. to 47. The Effects are 1. Special And 2. General The 1. Special fruits concern either this new Churche's Friends or its Enemies The good Auditors that were convinced by Peter's Sermon are commended upon Record both for their Repentance ver 37.38 and for their Perseverance ver 42. Their Conviction having now nothing to say for themselves but the sense of their shameful sin stopped their Mouths proceeded to compunction they were pricked in the heart not only that nail which Peter that wise Master of the Assembly Eccles 12.11 drove to the head did punctually prick and pierce their hearts as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there signifies but also they felt the very nails wherewith they had Crucified Christ now sticking fast in their own guilty Consciences as so manny sharp Daggers or stings of Scorpions The pain of the Mind and sufferings of the Soul are far more Acute and Dolorous than those of the Body Pro. 18.14 So great was the grief of these same convicted Persons that they were as deeply concerned as if they had been run thorow with a Sword which indeed the Sword of the Spirit the word of God had done to them Eph. 6.17 This was foretold to fall out now Zech. 12.10 Sight and Sense of sin must precede Sorrow for sin The Eye shall affect the Heart Note The Eye is the Instrument both of Sight and of Sorrow and what the Eye never sees the Heart never rues The Prodigal came to himself before he Repented of his sin and of the loosness of his life Luke 15.17 c. Men must bethink themselves or bring back to their minds 1 Kings 8.47 Ere they will say we have sinned and wrought wickedness Jer. 8.6 Psal 38.18 There must be Conviction upon the eye of our understandings before there can be Compunction in our Hearts and Consciences As Conviction is not Compunction but comes short of it so Compunction is not Conversion but comes short of it also For those Auditors ask what shall we do and the Apostle answers Repent Though they were pricked at the heart and let blood in the heart-vein to let out the life of their sin yet it seems they had not still Repented Nay Peter prescribes this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Repent ye to wit by a through-Conversion as the Remedy against their present malady of Compunction for Repentance includes Reformation and Amendment of life Matthew 3.7 and Luke 3.8 Note Therefore 't is no better than over-forward folly to Administer Comfort to those under conviction and compunction till they have sorrow'd after a godly sort and to a Transmentation as the word signifies amounting to an heart-changing and a life-changing work Judas himself had Contrition Confession and Restitution most men go not so far who yet profess large hopes of Heaven yet wanted he still the other three parts Transmentation Conversion and Obedience of Faith which should have compleated his Repentance unto Life but he died in the Birth Hosea 13.13 As the unwise Son Ephraim did there c. When those Auditors had through grace come up to a thorough change both of Minds and of Manners not only disliking their former deeds with prophane Esau and despairing Judas c. and God had given them Repentance unto life both a Repentance for sin and a Repentance from sin this is the Repentance never to be Repented of 2 Cor. 7.10 Then followed the Blessed Fruit of Perseverance expressed in verse 42. They continued in the Apostle's Doctrine and Fellowship with all stedfastness c. Note Peter had powerfully pressed upon them to be praying Persons ver 21. telling them that if they call'd upon the Name of the Lord they should be saved which words import both that to be able to pray is better than to be able to prophecy for such may be unknown to Christ Matth. 7.22 and also that to pray in Faith is the best and most blessed means not only for escaping the just Judgments of God at the great and terrible day of Judgment but likewise to prepare a people for the Lord both in the Kingdom of Grace and of Glory Peter had likewise thundred out that Divine threatning that all Christ's Foes should be made his Footstool verse 35. aut paenitendum aut pereundum They must either repent or perish such as will not bend shall be made to break such as will not submit to his Golden Scepter shall surely be crushed to pieces by his Iron Mace Christ
season draws out Peter to pass through all quarters to visit the Saints that he might confirm them in the Faith and establish a Ministry among those Churches newly planted by the dispersed Disciples v. 32 Acts 9. Secondly The Place where was Lydda which was one of those places Peter passed unto to visit c. a famous City in former times not far from the Mediterranean Sea upon the West Bank of Jordan Oh wonder how Christ hath his Saints scattered and planted in Cities and Countreys c. Thirdly The Person healing was Peter this was not the first healing Miracle that Peter had wrought by the power of Christ for before this he had cured the Cripple that was born lame not lamed by any violent casualty Acts 3.2 7. and that had been lame forty years Acts 4.22 as above Besides we find Acts 5.15 how the shadow of Peter wrought wonders N.B. The like whereunto we read of Paul after Acts 19.12 not as if the shadow or garment or the body of these Apostles had any inherent vertue in them to heal Diseases and to cast out Devils but that the power of helping the Distressed was now so abundantly poured out at this Effusion of the Holy ●host upon them insomuch as these weakest and improbable means were made soveraign and effectual to work Miracles that the glory of those wondrous works might not be attributed to such contemptible things but to the blessed Messiah now gloriously exhibited N.B. Moreover such prodigious Products from such unlikely means did not only demonstrate that the power was of God but it was an accomplishing of Christ's Promise to them that they should do greater works than he had done John 14.12 by which Providence the Gospel was much more propagated To which may be added that Peter there was in conjunction with John in healing that begging Cripple but here he acts alone by himself Fourthly The Party healed was Aeneas who is described 1. By his Name supposed to be a Jew tho' living now at Lydda whom the Jews call'd Hillel but the Greek-Lyddians call'd him Aeneas 2. By his Disease a dead Palsie which had taken away the use of his Limbs so that he became a Clynick and lay Bed-rid 3. By the Antiquity of his Disease Acts 9.33 he had kept his Bed eight years All this is Recorded not only to declare the certainty of the History but especially the difficulty of the Cure and the excellency of the Miracle Omnipotenti Medico nullus insanabilis occurrit Morbus To such an Almighty Physician as Jehova is no Diseease is found incurable Exod. 15.26 Fifthly The Manner how this Cure was wrought is related verse 34. Acts 9. which contains 1. Peter's command in the Name of Christ wherein he promiseth Recovery to this Paralytick suitable to our Saviour's saying Mark 2.9 and John 5.8 in the like case to demonstrate the perfection of the Cure in being now able to make his Bed Peter acts not here by his own power but lets this lame man know whom he should acknowledge for his Benefactor himself being but the Instrument in Christ's hand And 2. The Paralytick's Cure thereby He immediately arose together with the Word there went forth a power Luke 5.17 As Peter was assured of this so the Paralytick did experience it for he felt the dolorous Distemper by the Resolution of his Nerves depart from him in an instant and that now he was inabled to arise and to cast up his Bed whereof he had now no such need as formerly for eight years All this did declare that the Cure was done by a Divine Power seeing Nature and Art acts in Time and by Degrees but he was cured immediately and that perfectly also insomuch as he was made able to make his Bed the best discovery thereof to all Sixthly The Effects hereof namely upon the many Spectators of this Miracle All that dwelt at Lydda and Saron saw it and turned to the Lord verse 35. Acts 9. The Hebrew is Sharon a place that had most fruitful Fields Isa 33.9 1 Chron. 27.29 but now it became Christ the Rose of Sharon indeed Cant. 2.1 For this Providence became an Ordinance to the Inhabitants of that City 1 Chron. 5.16 not far from Lydda for hitherto they had been erroneous in Fundamentals so had turned their backs of Christ but now were both Inlightened and Inlivened to embrace his Truth The second great Miracle Peter wrought in this his Journey from Jerusalem when he went thence into all quarters to visit the Saints and to confirm them in the Faith Acts 9.32 was his raising Dorcas from the Dead at Joppa which Miracle is described by six Circumstances The first is the Person upon whom this Miracle was wrought by Peter the personal Object whereof hath sundry Demonstrations As 1. By her Name which is twofold Tabitha so call'd among the Jews and Dorcas so call'd among the Greeks both names signifying a Doe or Roe-Buck and as she was espoused to Christ no other she was to him than as a loving Hind and pleasant Roe Prov. 5.19 2. By her Profession she is call'd a Disciple of Christ 3. By her Practice and Manners she was rich in good works which are the best Riches last longest and go farthest for they follow us into another World Rev. 14.13 She is commended for her Beneficency and for her Liberality Acts 9.36 And 4. By her Disease and Death verse 37. N.B. A dear Disciple may be diseased and die Mary and Martha send this word to Christ Behold he whom thou lovest is sick yea and dead too John 11.3 c. Christ's Love and Saint's Death as well as Diseases may well enough hold a consistency as here also in this dear Dorcas whom when dead they had washed not only to fit her for Burial but especially to shew their hope of the Resurrection which would change that vile Body like Christ's glorious Body Phil. 3.21 The second Circumstance is the double occasion 1. The Ficinity of the place Joppa a Port-Town and very beautiful call'd so from the Hebrew Japhah signifying fair or a fair Haven most memorable for Jonah's taking Shipping there when he would flee from God and decline his Message Jon. 1.3 expresly said to be nigh to Lydda verse 38. Acts 9. The second occasion was the Intercession of the Disciples who were sensible of the great loss they all had in the death of so good a Woman therefore sent they speedily for Peter not only to come and comfort those who were most concerned in the loss but also by the Direction of God's Spirit they were not without hope that this pious Woman might be zecovered by Peter and so remain farther profitable to the Church hereupon they request his haste in coming to them before her Burial which now they were preparing for this is an evidence of such an hope The third Circumstance is the moving Cause of this Miracle which was the doleful Lamentation made by Widows for the loss of this
Tim. 3.16 even from that God who cannot lye Tit. 1.2 and they knew also that truth alone and not error is able to abide that Divine Test Those only are false Wares which need a dark Shop wherein to put them off to the too Credulous Chapmen N.B. They did all this laudable work in the way of Religion yet were not still truly and throughly Religious and Regenerated but were yet unconverted for after all this it is said of them verse 12. Therefore many of them believed both Jews and honourable women of the Gentiles and of men not a few N.B. Upon all those to whom God had given this preparation of the Heart in Attentive hearing in serious pondering and comparing with the Scripture what they heard c. God blessed his own Gifts he had given them and their improvement of the Talents bestowed on them and he gave still more unto them to that which they had according to his promise whosoever hath to him it shall be given Matth. 13.12 and 25.29 namely such Talents of Nature and providence which he hath received from God for imploying and improving in a way of practice but if persons prove lazy idle and negligent herein then their Right-arm and Right-eye which they seemed to have Luke 8.18 shall be dryed up and darkned Zechar. 11.17 the rust of whose Riches shal rise up against them James 5.3 God oft withdraws those gifts which he hath given to persons when they do not use them for God's Glory and the good of their own and others Souls the great ends for which we are betrusted with those Talents N.B. We are even in the faln Estate betrusted with some liberty in external Acts such as are resorting to Gods Ordainances hearing and reading his word c. and our indeavours ought to be Answerable in the use of this liberty would we lay aside all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness and receive with meekness the ingrafted word which is able to save our souls James 1.21 we may find the Lord's hand not shortned but his word as powerful and piercing as ever it was to those Noble Bereans but if we hide our Talents with the bad Servant we cannot expect that Spirit of Sanctification which the Bereans found The third Remark is That Humane prudence and policy is lawfully Subservient to Divine piety It was an High Piece and Point of prudence in their not sending Paul the nearest and direct Road to Athens but round about by the Sea from avoiding the danger from those that lay in wait for his life 'T is written then immediately the Brethren sent away Paul to go as it were to the Sea Acts 17. verse 14. yet those that conducted him and had undertaken to secure him from those murdering Jews brought him to Athens verse 15. This was pious policy to make towards the Sea-side as if Paul had designed to take shipping and be gone out of those parts quite away This was pretended and the rumour of it was reported abroad to hinder the malicious Jews from pursuing him any farther whereas a Journey to Athens in the same Countrey was really intended and it may well enough be supposed that Paul's implacable Adversaries pressed Horses to purs●● after him towards Athens but Paul gave them a fair go-by by his taking the long Circumference round about towards the Sea on foot in the by-foot paths that he might disappoint his pursuers by his going on foot to Athens Tho' Silas and Timotheus stayed at Berea still not only because they were less maligned than Paul but also because they had some Kins-folks in Macedonia N.B. Thus our Lord doth allow as much of the Serpent as of the Dove in us in his saying be wise as Serpents and harmless as Doves Matth 10.16 17. The Sagacity of Serpents may be imitated in our Christian prudence so far as it consisteth with the Dove's Innocency Piety without policy is too simple to be safe and policy without piety is too subtle to be good Christ would not have his sheep so simple as to stand still and let the Crows stand upon their backs and pull off their wool from their sides There is a Sanctified subtilty and sagacity in foreseeing evils and hiding from them Prov. 22.3 we may not willfully cast our selves upon the needless dangers a Serpent's eye is a singular ornament in a Dove's head Our meekness must be mixt with wariness that it way be the meekness of Wisdom James 3.13 As we may not be crafty Foxes on the one hand to deceive others c. So nor must we be dull Asses that couch under every burden without necessity on the the other hand The Dove without the Serpent is easily caught and the Serpent without the Dove doth sting most deadly The Dove never provokes the Hawk nor projects revenge yet when pursued saves it self if it cannot by fight yet by flight as Paul did here c. Now come we to the fourth Station of Paul in Greece lying in Europe which was in Athens as before in Philippi Thessalonica and Berea Thus the Providence of God over-ruled all the Devil's-mischievous attempts to suppress the Gospel so as thereby the Gospel was much more spread abroad from one City to another until at last it came to this famous University The Relation of Paul's fourth Station which was at Athens hath two grand parts First the Resolves of it And Secondly The Remarks upon it First The whole Narrative hereof Admits of this Analysis or Resolution What Paul acted at Athens may be thus resolued First There is his preparation to preach there wherein we may consider the causes moving him thereunto which were twofold External and Internal for beside the opportunity of a large Auditory and such as were learned yet inviters of him to preach as they had an Itch after Novelties and were curious Inquirers after News these were outward motives there was also another cause more inward namely the Divine Zeal of this Blessed Apostle who beholding the vain Superstition and abominable Idolatry of that famous and learned City could not bear it nor restrain himself from declaring the vanity of it verse 16 17 18 19 20 21. Secondly The Sermon which Paul preached consists 1. Of an Exordium or Preface and Prologue wherein he useth a pious Insinuation for Captivating the Ears and Hearts of his Hearers to attend diligently unto his discourse verse 22 23. 2. Of the Principal Proposition that the True God is only to be worshipped and tho' as he granted they did worship the true God among their Idols as to the matter of worship yet did they do it after a false and vitious manner therefore doth he make known this their Vnknown God to them by declaring to them God's Attributes and his works of Creation and Providence obviating an objection drawn from their fore-fathers Ignorance as also by putting them into a dread that even that same Christ who was crucified should become the most dreadful Judge of Quick
Ceremonious and External Rites of the Nazarites Vow He only yielded thereto as yet indifferent Nor is it any other than Ridiculous for the Romanists to make this the Ground of their Religious Vows and for their shaven Crowns which is now so bald a Ceremony in France that some be ashamed of the Mark. CHAP. XIX Paul at Ephesus NOW come we to Paul's sixth and last Station before his return to Jerusalem in his Journey to which City he did visit many places as he returned thither as the sequel will show which was at Ephesus Acts 19.1 The Metropolis of the Lesser Asia where he made a long stay about the space of three years verse 10. and verse 22. in Asia that is in Ephesus he stayed still after the former two years which commendeth Paul's great diligence for the planting of the Gospel 'T is expresly said by the space of three years Acts 20.31 Here was that admirable door which he saith was opened for him 1 Cor. 16.9 and here it was that the famous Church which he wrote his Epistles to afterwards was gathered and likewise John wrote another to it from the mouth of Christ Rev. 2.1 2 c. and here Paul fought with Beasts after the manner of men 1 Cor. 15.32 N.B. Paul's Station at Ephesus presents to our prospect two principal parts First What he did there And secondly What he suffered there As to the first namely his Doings these may be considered either in a private or in a publick respect His Private actings there were twofold 1. His examining the believers he found in that place about the gifts of the Holy Ghost c. ver 2 3 4 with 5 6 and 7. 2. His determining with himself to return unto Jerusalem verse 21. giving notice of this his purpose to the Neighbouring Churches verse 22. by Timothy c. N.B. Then his Publick Actings there were twofold 1. His Preaching the Gospel And 2. His working Miracles there 1. He preached which is expressed in the Circumstances 1. Of place this is twofold 1. In the Jews Synagogue verse 8. Then 2. In the School of Tyrannus a Teacher of the Law Reading Law-Lectures there verse 9. And 2. Of time which was about the space of two years verse 10. And 2. His working-miracles this is amplified and Illustrated by a distribution of the whole into parts verse 11.12 that the power of Christ might be more clearly manifested in him N.B. Then Paul's sufferings for such good doings in this place are next specified and reducible to two heads 1. What opposition the Jewish Jugglers made against Paul's Ministry and Miracles verse 13. but the Devil in the possessed prevailed against the Devil in them v. 14 15 16. and when it was observed how God over-shot the Devil in his own bow this produced the wonderful effects 1. Of Confession of Sins Verse 17 18. And 2. Of Amendment of Manners and Reformation of life verse 19. in burning their books which taught Magick Astrology and charming of love c. Then 2. What from the Silver-Smiths of the City who made Shrines for Diana whose Captain in that uproar against Paul was Demetrius verse 24. who by a Starched Oration stirred up all the Rabble into Sedition and to the apprehending of Paul's Parteners and puting the whole City in to a Confusion verse 25 26 27 28 29. with 32 34. yet was all this Stir hushed by the wisdom of the Town-Clark which was indeavoured by Paul himself but was hindered by his Friends verse 30 31. at last effectually v. 35 to the end Those many heads of Resolves afford many famous Remarks The first Remark is 'T is a Transcendent Mercy of God to any Church of Christ that in the absence of one powerful Preacher they are well provided with another N.B. This was God's mercy to the Church of Corinth that when Paul had planted a famous Church there and was called away by the Spirit of God to go into Ephesus he left behind him such an able instrument as Apollos was to water his new plantation Acts 19.1 The Ability of Apollos whom some think to be the same with Apelles Rom. 16.10 is expressed Acts 18.24 where he is described 1. By his Name and Nation he was an Alexandrian-Jew by his Eloquence he was a Rational Prudent and Learned man and by his profound knowledge in the Sacred Scriptures he was a mighty Scripture-man both apt to teach the truth and able to maintain it 2. He is described by his Teachers Aquila and Priscilla who in private discourse contributed much to Apollos's further and fuller Instruction for tho' he was a man fervent in Spirit Improving to the utmost all those aforesaid Qualifications and taught diligently the things of the Lord in the Jews Synagogue yet knew he only the baptism of John who Baptized with water only but could not Baptize with the Holy Ghost Matth 3.11 N.B. Or the Doctrine of John who was a Preacher of Repentance and of Faith in Christ the Lamb of God he pointed at whose Baptism and Belief was the same with the Apostles afterwards for he baptized them and their Master too only after Christ's Ascension they received extraordinary Gifts Acts 2.4 and knew many truths more fully which had not been Revealed in the baptist's times N.B. And herein those two Tent-makers instructed Apollos not that they turned publick preachers for Paul saith 'T is not lawful for a woman to Teach that is Publickly 1 Tim. 2. v. 11 12. but Aquila and Priscilla having had so much Converse with Paul they were the more able in private conference to inform Apollos better than yet he knew with that knowledge they had learned from the Apostle N.B. And tho' Apollos was very skilful in the words of Scripture to expound them and had an excellent Elocution wherewith to express well his Exposition yet was he not puffed up herewith but condescends to be Catechized by these tent-makers an humble man can be content to learn from the meanest even a little Child shall lead him Isa 11.6 now he who had taught diligently according to the best skill he had attained before became far more accomplished to convince the Jews that the Messiah who was sent from God was the Saviour of the World and this he did both in Corinth which was in Achaia supplying Paul's absense and in Ephesus also Acts 18.25 26 27 28. Confuting gain-sayers and Confirming such as believed through grace The second Remark is The foundation of this Church at Ephesus was laid and those twelve members ver 7. were admitted into Church-Order by examination Paul asks them have ye received the Holy Ghost Acts 19.1 2. This Question was de primor diis Ecclesiae concerning its first Constitution for as yet these Disciples were not come up into any Ecclesiastick form or Discipline So that the Apostle asks them how they were grounded c. that it might appear they were Divinely called to become the foundation of that Church They Answer we
may be called a Reign only 95. days N.B. Nor did Vitellius fare better by his beastly bloody practices for before the year went about the rumor of Vespasian's stirring in Aegypt against him made his Rabble of Roaring Ruffians like himself soon to forsake him the Citizens almost undone by his Riotous excesses c. seiz'd upon him dragg'd him through the street cast all kind of filth at him wounded him with weapons and at last threw him off the stairs into Tyber as he had barbarously done to the Brother of Vespasian who succeeded this wretch and who with his Son Titus his successor exercised more moderation towards Christians But about 82 years after Christ Domitian Titus's Brother and one of a cursed carriage from his Cradle steps up and about the year 90. sets on foot that second grand persecution as Nero had done the first against the Christians wherein this Apostle was not devoured by that bloody Beast but only banished into Pathmos where he lay five years a prisoner till Nerva who succeeded this Tyrant Domitian when he was slain by his own Servants after he had Reigned about 6. or 7. years and who released John and many more and countermanded that cruel persecution of Christians for which this Emperor Nerva was stiled a Parent and Patriot as well as a Prince of his Empire And 't is said that John thus marvelously both preserved and released by the power and providence of God returned to Ephesus again and dyed there about three years after in the year 98. but for five years before his release himself tells us that he was a companion of the Christians in Tribulation Rev. 1.9 All which pretious time God would not have so good a man to lose but to Improve and therefore falls he into a Divine Rapture upon the Christian Sabbath call'd the Lord's day in Pathmos Rev. 1.9 10. wherein he received the Revelation from Christ which is a prophecy representing the affairs of the Church of God concerning both her dangers and her deliverances from the Apostles times to the last coming of Christ N.B. This prophecy John was commanded to write and to deposit it in the hands of these seven Churches of Asia which then were the most famous in that part of the world tho' miserably enough corrupted as is above mentioned 'T is not a small matter that unchurches a true Church of Christ and those seven golden Candlesticks were to Communicate the light of this Divine Prophecy to other Churches with the promise of a blessing upon those that read or heard it so as to make a believing use of it Rev. 1.3 and 22.7 such pretious treasure as Christ hands out to his Church in it may not be slighted The manifestation of those Divine Mysteries by our Mediator to this Apostle makes the Family of Faith to be of God's Court and Council Great is the comfort to know God's secrets Psalms 25.14 1 Cor. 2.16 Gal. 6.10 c. God will not hide from Abraham Gen. 18.17 N.B. I have already given a large Analytical account of this whole book of the Revelation in my Scripture Prophecy which is the latter part of my Church History to which I refer the Reader Adding here only that it contains three Kingdoms 1. The Pagan which ended at Constantine the Great about 325 years after Christ 2. The Pa-pagan Kingdom both being the Kingdoms of the Dragon the one litteral and the other mystical And 3. The Prince of Peace his Kingdom or the Kingdom of the Lamb of God for the Lamb will have his Kingdom as well as both the Dragons He will divide the spoil with the strong Isa 53.12 being the stronger man than the strong Pagan Prince or the strong Pa-pagan Pope yea or the strong Dragon or Devil himself Luke 11.21 and 22. and when Christ takes to himself his great power to Reign c. Rev. 11 15 17. then that Kingdom of the Stone shall not only become the Kingdom of the Mountain to fill the whole earth Dan. 2.35 45. N.B. a little stone from small beginnings growing into a great mountain 1 Cor. 15.24 filling the whole world but also it shall be a persevering Kingdom and perpetual not like the other foregoing Kingdoms which had their certain bounds and periods appointed them beyond which they could not pass only days are allowed for those Kings but Christ's Kingdom shall never have an end of days weeks months or years Dan. 2.44 and 7.9 12 14 18 27. N.B. And the Celestial Beings glorified Saints and glorious Angels shall bless the Lord for exerting his power and for recovering the Kingdom of Christ out of the hands of Antichrist and setting his King upon his holy hill of Zion Psa 2.6 where he shall Reign for ever and ever Reve. 11.15 17. and 12.10 singing Halelujahs because the Lord God Omnipotent Reigneth Revel 19.6 and the Kingdom of this Prince of Peace as Christ is called Isa 9.6 shall be a peaceable as well as a perpetual Kingdom for then all his foes shall be made his foot-stool Rev. 11.18 and 16.17 and 19.15 16 19 21. N.B. And the thousand years mentioned Revel 20.2 3. cannot bear a lower construction than this at the least that they denote statum tranquillum a serene calm and sublimely peaceable time of long continuance for the Church of Christ to enjoy her free liberty for worshiping God in spirit and truth without any molestation or temptations to idolatry then no impositions and penalties for non-conformity as formerly she hath had either from Pagans Jews Turk or Pope N.B. And this must be before the day of Judgment for after this large space of time which the Lamb grants to his Bride upon her marriage with him at the Jews conversion Rom 11.15 Rev. 19.7 of a long feasting with him in a peaceable and plentiful injoyment of all Gospel ordinances call'd the marriage-supper Matth. 22.2 and 25.10 Satan is let loose again after his long restraint and bestirs himself in all quarters of the world to stir up his Vassals for making one more attempt to ruine the Lamb's Bride Rev. 20.7 8 9. where that mixt multitude of the Devils rude rabble gathered from all parts of the earth all which is but the Devils round walk Job 1.7 is compared to Ezekiel's Gog and Magog for the like number design and ending in their own destruction Ezek. 38.4 6 18. to 23. then follows the vision of the day of Judgment c. Rev. 20.10 11 c. But the grand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 postulatum or inquiry is at what period of time will Christ begin this his third peaceable Kingdom The Answer in short is this 1. It is a special favour of God to his children that he hath made so great a discovery of such Divine Secrets and Mysteries both by Daniel and by John concerning the wonderful over-ruling providence of God in Governing the world and his Church in the world according to his own pleasure Should we know no more but
was quickly Metamorphos'd in the Ecclesiastick power of the Bishop of Rome in comparison of whose power that when Phocus had gratified Boniface the Bishop with the primacy for the supporting him in the Imperial Chair after he had murdered the Emperour Mauritious his Master and placed him self in it The Emperor's power was indeed very small ever after Therefore is he said to exercise all the power of the first Beast healing his former wound by reviving the adoration of Images under a new name of Saints by which Idolatry lived again and doth live yet is it also limited to 42 months Rev. ch 13. v. 5 12 15 and those two Beasts are but one Beast ver 17 18 c. N.B. That the Lord may make me as another Barnabas a Son of Consolation Acts 4.36 unto the Disconsolate Church in this our Day with a blessed Voice in the Temple Isa 66.6 I shall lay down this General Rule first that the choicest and most soveraign Cordials wherewith we ought to Refresh and Revive our Trembling Spirits when we are even fainting away with fear prevailing over our hope are the exceeding great and precious Promises of God 2 Pet. 1.4 which are called by the Evangelical Prophet the Breasts of Consolation Isa 66.11 Those are the blessed Suckling Bottles that all God's Children who are taught of the Lord Isa 54.13 John 6.45 must learn to suck that they may be satified so as no longer to look upon the consolations of God like small matters to them Job 15.11 for no small gifts can come from the hand of so great and so gracious a God who is the God of Consolation Rom. 15.5 and the Consolation of Israel Luke 2.25 He is the God of all Comfort 2 Cor. 1.3 that is of all true Comfort of all kinds of Comfort and of all degrees of Comfort He is the Fountain from whom they all flow and such a Father of Mercy as when one comforting Mercy is spent upon us God still abides as a Father able to beget more and new comforting Mercies for us that the Heirs of the Promises might have strong consolation c Heb. 6.17 18. even everlasting Consolation in our Lord Christ 2 Thes 2.16 Now as there is a Natural Instinct which instructeth Lambs and all such like young Animals immediately as soon as brought forth to suck the Teats of their Dams c. So there is a Divine and Spiritual Instinct which teaches all the Lambs of Christ to suck the precious Promises those blessed Breasts of Consolation that they may be as Napthali satisfied with favour and filled with the blessing of the Lord Deut. 33.23 Behold the marvelous congruity betwixt this Instinct of Nature in all young Animals and that great Grace of Faith in all God's Children 'T is said the Just shall live by his Faith Hab. 2.4 a Text so famous as to be three times quoted in the New Testament R●m 1.17 Gal. 3.11 and Heb. 10.38 All which Divine Scriptures do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unanimously hold forth the most eminent and most excellent exercise of that great Grace of Faith so exceeding useful to us both while we live and when we die The Just or truly justified ones cannot live without it 'T is as the Merchant Ship that fetcheth our food from far Prov. 31.14 even from Heaven it self sometimes as it did Manna Psal 78.24 25. John 6.31 This Grace makes men able to live even in the worst of times and sure I am none dare die without it 't is the saving Grace as Heb. 11.13 All God's Worthies died in the Faith c. Thus far in the general but now come to particulars N.B. We must learn all of us as becometh the Babes of Christ to suck out satisfaction to our Souls from such blessed Breasts of Consolation as are most suitable to our present condition of any kind of Calamity The first Instance I shall give here is that exceeding great and precious promise which God most graciously granted unto Abraham that Father of all the faithful Rom. 4.16 when a pang of fear came upon him and when his Faith was fallen below his Fear and his Fear was swollen up above his Faith then God comes seasonably and says to him Fear not Abraham I am thy Shield and thy exceeding great Reward Gen. 15.1 When Abraham was made able to suck out the sweet Milk of this precious Promise by the Mysterial Mouth of a lively Faith then his former fainting fits of a desponding fear were done away and then could he walk as it were hand in hand with his God through all his following Tryals and became able to follow his heavenly Father as we may say blindfold not knowing whither he went Heb. 11.8 yet all along well knowing with whom he went for he always walked as a Child in his Father's hand saying as David said afterward Though my God lead me through the Valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for God is with me his Rod and Staff still comfort me therefore surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever Psal 23.4 6. 'T is expresly said of Abraham that he staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief but was strong in faith giving glory to God and being fully perswaded that what God had promised he was able also to perform c. Rom. 4.20 21. Now what Malady of fear did here befal our Father Abraham may befal any of the Sons and Daughters of Abraham yea undoubtedly often times does so As Faith in God's Promise was this holy Patriarch's Remedy against his Malady of fear So accordingly it ought to be our Remedy also If we could believe more in the Lord our God we should be better established against all distrustful fears and be more prosperous in our works and ways 2 Chron. 20.20 Isa 7.9 for God proportioneth his performing unto the measure of our believing saying to us as to the Man in the Gospel As thou be lievest so be it unto thee Matth. 8.13 Mark 9.23 This is a very great Truth that whosoever of the Sons and Daughters of Abraham do their duty according to that Divine Command Rom. 4.12 of walking in the steps of faithful Abraham in this World they shall be sure of lodging in the bosom of Father Abraham as Lazarus did Luke 16.22 in the World to come c. The second Instance that I shall add alone here concerneth the Church of God in general as the first did every Child of God in particular both which may fall into fainting fits of hopeless fear this is that exceeding great and precious promise out of which all the Children of the Church ought to suck the Milk of consolation in a disconsolating day of distress upon the Church of Christ namely that blessed Breast of comfort recorded by Zechariah Rejoyce greatly O! daughter of Zion c. Behold thy King cometh unto thee Just