Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n call_v day_n sabbath_n 45,288 5 10.7053 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A85666 An exposition of the five first chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. / Delivered in severall lectures in London, by William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1645 (1645) Wing G1851; Thomason E272_1; ESTC R212187 422,046 514

There are 35 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

both they and he shall die if it be not done The second ab utili it may be they will turn upon admonition and so be saved if not yet the Prophet delivers his own soul and there is advantage by it The words in the 16th Verse have little difficulty in them At the end of seven dayes It 's probable the sitting still and silence of the Prophet was from Sabbath to Sabbath on that day he had his glorious Vision and seven dayes after he had a new Revelation Junius The Word of the Lord came to him all the six dayes hee was solitary mourning meditating and silent but on the seventh the Lord appeared again unto him and so after hee had upon Sabbaths revelations from God Observ 1. That God beares with the weaknesses and distempers of his servants Ezekiel declines the Call of Christ shew vs his great ingratitude having had such great favours from Christ seen so much glory and being commanded once twice to go and preach to the house of Israel yet hee sits down is silent and that seven dayes together this might have provoked the Lord to great wrath to have refused him as a stubborn self-willed man and made him to say hee would never admit him to be his Prophet put such honour upon him intrust him with such great matters but the Lord beares with his weaknesse yea his continued weaknesse sometimes Gods anger kindles and breaks out quickly and that for little things in our eyes and opinions as the man gathered a few sticks on the Sabbath hee must be stoned to death those peeped irreverently into the Ark the Lord smote 50000 and upward dead for it presently 1 Sam. 6. Ananias and Saphira a small matter in our conceits it was to keep back a portion of their goods and to excuse it with a lie for this God was wroth and they died Acts 5. but the weaknesses of his children hee beares with and those great ones 2. Mans will and weaknesse cannot hinder the efficacy and execution of Gods decree the Prophets spirit was against this work he refused sate still seven dayes together and would have frustrated Gods intentions if he could but it was decreed in heaven that decree was efficacious his will must be brought off and he must be the man to execute Gods pleasure in a propheticall way to the house of Israel Jonas departs will prejudice Gods designe concerning Ninive but the Lord knew how to humble him to fetch him back being fled and to make him instrumentall to his ends notwithstanding his wilfulnesse and weaknesse Psal 33.9 He commanded and it stood fast and vers 11. The counsell of the Lord standeth for ever let there be contrary counsels wills commands they stand not Gods brings them to nought hee makes them of none effect Prov. 19.21 There are many devices in a mans heart hee thinks not to do this and not to do that and it shall be so and so neverthelesse the counsell of the Lord shall stand he will perfect the work hee hath begun in men and by men notwihstanding their infirmities 3. Spirituall imployments must have sedate quiet well-composed affections and spirits the Spirit of Prophecy came not upon Ezekiel all the time he was distempered and discontented but when time had wrought off the distemper and the il humor was digested then was he stirred by the Spirit of prophecy when the Minstrell was tun'd then the hand of the Lord came upon Elisha 2 King 3.15 Mens hearts and spirits are like Minstrells out of order quickly and long in tuning and right setting but the musick is sweetest when the Instrument is best set then God delights to communicate his Spirit to us to imploy us In the night oft God appeared to the Patriarchs then were they most quiet and fittest to receive instruction In Augustus his dayes when there was peace throughout the world then was Christ given then was hee born When there is peace throughout the little world then are wee aptest for reception of Christ his instructions and readiest for his service God will not commit weighty and great things to men without due fitnesse for them The Prophet had this time deeply to consider of the businesse and to get himself into such a frame as might best sort with the Function he was to be in 4. The Lord doth not leave his long although they be in distempers at the end of seven dayes the Word of the Lord came unto him wee may by our failings and distempers drive away God from us but he will visit us again hee may be gone all the week but come again at the end of it Psal 30.5 Gods anger is for a moment our weeping for a night and joy in the morning it 's not long this good Physician will be absent from his Patient and when he comes he will comfort and cure 5. Our Prophet brought not his own but the Word of the Lord unto the people it 's his Word must be commended unto them Prophets Apostles Ministers are his Ambassadours and must speak what is given them in Commission If they go or speak of their own heads they provoke God and wrong the people Jer. 23.30 I am against the Prophets saith the Lord that steal my word every one from his neighbour the false Prophets would take some sayings of the true Prophets and mingle them with their own lies and errours to get the more credit unto them and sometimes by false interpretations they would wrest the Word to establish their own phantasies they would prophesie for their own glory and profit and this was stealing of the Word they did handle the Word alieno sensu spiritu fine then God or the true Prophets intended so that their word was not conceived to be the Word of God but their own and yet they would fasten it upon God vers 31. I am against the Prophets that use their tongues and say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He saith The word is Lokekim which signifies lenire mollificari dulcorare they flattered and smoothed up the people speaking things pleasing and said He saith they made God the author of their dreams which the Lord reproves in the 32. verse and saith Behold I am against them that prophesie false dreames and do tell them and cause my people to erre by their lies and their lightnesse yet I sent them not nor commanded them therefore they shall not profit this people at all saith the Lord people had need look to their teachers what they are whether sent of God and such as speak the truths of God otherwise they can look for no blessing no profit but when men come in Gods name and with Gods Word you may looke for great benefit you must expect reality for here are two words which note reality and being debar is verbum res 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jehi factum est fuit Gods words are things of great weight and worth VER 17. I have made thee
to make a brief collection of the heads of all that was spoken before implying that much hath been said of Christ by others and that the chief heads of all should be summed up brought together and be found in Christ Much was spoken by David of Christ much by Isaiah much by Ieremy Zachariah Ezekiel now the summe of all that is in them and in the rest shall be gathered together as in one head you shall meet it all in Jesus Christ He is the Magazine and Treasury of all their strength and wealth the chief things that ever have been spoke by the Prophets formerly they are all concentred in him He is the Alpha and Omega the Alpha of Genesis The seed of the woman shall break the Serpents head and the Omega of the Revelations The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with you all So that all between Genesis and the Revelation leads either directly or collaterally unto Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.10 The Prophets prophecied of grace that should come unto you searching when or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie when it testified before-hand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow See here they shewed you the grace that should come the Spirit testified in them of the sufferings of Christ and of the glory that should follow They were Seers and they saw Christ and the glory of Christ and they lead the people up to Christ Thus you have the scope and occasion of our Prophets prophecying and writing it was to convince them of the heavie captivity of seventy yeers to strengthen Ieremyes prophecy to incourage the Church of God in Babylon and to lead them unto Christ 2. In the next place we are to shew you the nature and condition of this Prophecy which is full of Majesty obscurity and difficulty Nazianzen saith Orat. 23. That Ezekiel is the chiefest of all the rest for matter of admiration and acuteness he is the greatest of all the Prophets and the deepest which made Ierome say there was in this Prophecy of Ezekiel a sea of Scripture hee is so deep a labyrinth of the mysteries of God he is so dark so difficult if he do but equalize other Prophets in dignity and worth yet he exceeds them in difficulty and darkness It must be said of this Prophet as of Pauls Epistles 2 Pet. 3. There are some things in them hard to be understood and so there are many things in this Prophet which are hard to be understood There are some strange words in him such as are no where else in Scripture to be found He hath dark visions in him such as will exercise the greatest abilities in the world to find out the aim of God and those truths that are wrapped up in them he hath uncertain Chronologies and Chorographies mysticall Parables forain Histories and many transcendent matters which may awaken your attention and do call for the uttermost of mans industry in the opening Hence it was counted rashness for any one to read this Prophet till he was thirty yeers of age And Ierome tels us Maldonat that it was prohibited among the Iewes that any should read the beginning of Genesis the book of Canticles the beginning or ending of this Prophet till he were thirty yeers of age Ante aetatem sacerdotalem The Rabbins think it not lawfull to interpret this Prophet but only by touching some generall things in it particular things might not be descended into One saith A Lapid Ezekiel is Ieremy vail'd a hand shut up and you know not what is in it like a book sealed up and none can open it or knowes what is written within These expressions have been used to set forth the darkness and difficulty of our Prophet And I will appeal unto you all this day that if that question were put to you when you shall read this Prophet which Philip once put to the Eunuch Acts 8.30.31 Vnderstand you what you read might you not all answer without blushing How shall we understand without a guide And who is sufficient to guide your understandings through this difficult and dark Prophecy For mine own part I durst not have ventured to launch into this deep unless I had been requested unto it And being called unto it I desire to go out in the strength of the Lord and to be as a Star in his hand guided by his Spirit to lead you through the difficulties of this Hieroglyphicall Prophet But you will say If this Prophet be so difficult and dark surely hee is not seasonable nor sutable to these times some other Scripture might have had the preheminence For this take two or three answers First I finde that many Interpreters have fallen upon this Prophet in troublesome and tumultuous times Gregory the great he writ and preached upon this Prophet when the Barbarians were almost at the gates of Rome and when the sword was devouring multitudes Ierome likewise studied and writ upon this Prophet what time Alaricus King of the Goths took Rome and wasted all and filled the Christian world with teares and blood Calvin that great Light of Europe spent his last breath upon this Prophet and in times that were not very peaceable but stirring and troublesom Lavaters Lectures upon this Prophet were together with the commotions in France Gallicis tumultibus and he professeth that he did the more willingly give up himself to the study of this Prophet that so hee might free his spirit from the sad thoughts of the publike and private mischiefs which were in his dayes and acknowlegdeth this was a remedy to him against many evills Secondly I answer that compare our times a little with the times and state of the Iewes and wee shall see some seasonableness in handling this Prophet at this time 1. The sins the Prophet cryes out of amongst them are rife amongst us the sins then were Idolatry Superstition oppression corruption in the worship of God luxury uncleanness prophaneness scorning at goodness hiding their eyes from the Lords Sabbaths and the like Now I ask are not all these sins alive and too lusty in our Kingdome at this time and in this City wherein we live 2. There was then a malignant party which was active and at work and did oppose and hinder the reformation what lay in them which was on foot by Ieremy by Ezekiel by the three Children by Bacuch by the Rechabites all these and many others opposed the corruptions of the times laboured to have a reformation in the worship of God to bring the people back again from their corrupt wayes to the Lord but there was a great opposition by the malignant party and the chief opposers then were the Priests and the false Prophets who poysoned the judgements of the people who suggested false things unto them who fed them with vain hopes with corrupt opinions and deceivable doctrines the chief of the Priests were
as some call him who was the father of this Nebuchadnezzar the great that carried away Iehoiachin into captivity If it were the thirtieth yeer of that Monarchy it falls in with the thirty yeers since the eighteenth of Iosiah wherein the Law was found and the Passeover kept so that these two may stand together and there need be no jarring between Interpreters for this time In the fourth moneth It was not the Moneth Tebet or Thebeth as some will have it which answers to that we call Ianuary but the moneth Tamuz or Tammuz that which answereth to part of Iune and part of Iuly about the time we are now in for the Iewes were to reckon their moneths from April as Exod. 12.2 This shall be the beginning of moneths it shall be the first moneth of the yeer to you that moneth was Abib Nisan or Nissan and answereth to part of March and part of April now from thence this is the fourth moneth and falleth in with the latter end of Iune and beginning of Iuly In the fifth day of the moneth This I finde some do make to be the Sabbath day and it is very probable that it should be so for Chapt. 3.16 hee saith that at the end of seven dayes the Word of the Lord came unto him again Hence they collect that it is not likely that God would step over the Sabbath day and give Ezekiel visions upon another day and not upon that for if Ezekiel had had his visions upon another day the people should have been destitute of all the benefit they were so imployed in their works of building and planting and other accommodations for a captivity that they had no leasure to resort unto Ezekiel upon a week day therefore they strongly conclude that it was upon a Sabbath day in the latter end of the week From hence observe 1. That that time is not considerable wherein the Law of God is out of date the time was reckoned here from the eighteenth yeere of Josiah wherein the Law was found It was lost in Manassehs and Amons dayes till the eighteenth yeere of Josiah when being found it was brought forth for the comfort and instruction of the people for the worship and honour of God and from that punctum the Spirit of God reckons the time and begins the account When Gods Law is out of the way and his Worship down that is no considerable time at all in the eye of God Parties that are in the dark or dead wee do not reckon of their time One converted in his old age said I have been long in the world I have lived but a little time meaning since hee was converted the time before was incomputable The widow that liveth in pleasure the Apostle saith is dead while shee lives 1 Tim. 5.6 and the world is dead that hath not the Law the place is dead that hath not the Ordinances of God so long they have been but they have not lived they have not measured time and therefore the Spirit of God fixeth the account at the finding of the Law 2. The things here not being specified but left undetermined that God would have us observe the remarkable passages in Church and States when they fall out not one or two but many or all the chief as the eighteenth yeer of Josiah when the Law was found when that great passeover was kept when he and the people of God entred into a solemn covenant with God when the great reformation was made among them such great acts were taken notice of as also the changes in Babylon when the Chaldean Monarchy began when Nebuchadnezzar was put into the Throne and his head lifted up above others God would have us take notice of the chief acts of his mercy and providence at chief times Hosea 14.8 Ephraim shall say What have I to do any more with Idols There will be a great alteration then it will be a remarkable time said God I have heard him and observed him and then followeth Who so is wise and he shall undrstand these things prudent and he shall know them Now is a time of memorable emergents and they should be considered the famous things of 1640. 1641. ought to be had in everlasting remembrance a triennall Parliament resurrection of Religion Law and Gospel were found again Reformation begun Protestation and Covenants taken the Kingdomes united here and forain ones shaken in pieces 3 This makes for the truth and strength of our Prophets visions and prophecy for when exact particular times and places are set down that things were done in such a yeer of such a King such a moneth such a day of the moneth it addes weight to an ordinary History and when the Spirit of God shall so punctually determine the time to a yeer a moneth a day it is a strong seal to the truth of the visions and prophecy 4. See here from the fifth day that God hath a speciall care of his Sabbaths and of the spirituall good of his servants Of his Sabbaths that they shall not lie in the dark when they are in Babylon God will open heaven and appeare to a Prophet and give him visions upon a Sabbath day God will do it too upon a Sabbath day that so the people which were in a sad condition that laboured now in Brick and Clay again that were building planting taken up with secular affaires might have a seasonable opportunity for the good of their souls The Sabbath was made for man for the good of man and they found it so Though they be in Babylon they shall have a Prophet they shall have visions and visions upon a Sabbath day when they have liberty and opportunity to come to the Prophet to be instructed in these visions without prejudice to their Callings Ezekiel 1.1 2 c. As I was among the captives by the river Chebar that the heavens were opened and I saw visions of God In the fifth day of the moneth which was the fifth yeere of Jehoiaxhins captivity The Word of the Lord came expressly unto Ezekiel the Priest the sonne of Buzi in the land of the Chaldeans by the River Chebar and the hand of the Lord wast here upon him As I was among the captives by the river Chebar HEre is the place mentioned where the Prophet was and the occasion of his being in it Among the captives The originall s in the middest of the captivity the abstract being put for the concrete captives for captivity and this is ordinary in the Scripture as circumcision for cirumcised Phil. 3.3 Election for Elected Rom. 11.7 the election hath obtained that is the elected and here in the middest of the captivity is in the midst of the captives In the middest is not to be taken Geometrically and strictly as if he were exactly in the middest of them proportionably every way considered but in the middest is to be understood among the captives they were captives and so was he As Josh 7.13
precedent parts of this Vision there is yet more and higher glory to be spoken of and that is the glory of God in the person of Christ This Vision of the firmamen is preparatory to the Vision of Christ upon the Throne it 's described 1. From the place of it it was upon the heads of the living creatures 2. From the colour it was like Crystal and terrible Crystal 3. From the n●yse came thence vers 25. In the 23. and 24. Verses wee have a renewed and intermixt description of the living creatures from their wings the situation the number the office and noyse of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 d stendere expandere To begin with the Firmament the Hebrew word is Rachiah from a word signifies to draw out and make thin as metals are and wooll to stretch out as Curtains and Tents are Isa 40.22 whence heaven is called expansum because it is stretched out over the whole earth the Greeks call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of the firmnesse and permanency hereupon wee call it the firmament not from the hardnesse or solidity as if it were like Iron or Stone but from the firmnesse of it that it hath endured many thousand yeers and is not melted by its motion nor at all changed it 's taken sometimes for the ayre sometimes for the clouds and sometimes for heaven it self and so wee may take it here even the starry firmament This firmament was over the heads of the living creatures the wheels Angels were under it and it was between the Lord Christ and these creatures and did the office of that pair of wings which did cover the faces of the Seraphims in Isa 6.2 great was the glory of Christ and through this vail of the firmament presented to them The colour and likenesse of it was as the terrible crystal We must a little explain these words it was the likeness of the firmament not the firmament it self The Hebr. words run thus the ice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the terrible or the terrible ice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is ice water hardened by cold whence Crystal hath its birth for though ice be not Crystal yet Crystal is from ice when ice is hardened into the nature of a stone it becomes Crystal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nat. hist l. 37. c. 2. more degrees of coldnesse hardnesse and cleernesse give ice the denomination of Crystal and the name Crystal imports so much that is water by cold contracted into ice and Pliny saith the birth of it is from ice vehemently frozen and so you see the originall of Crystal The Epithet here added terrible hath some difficulty in it that heaven a visionall firmament should be terrible seems strange terriblenesse ariseth from newnesse greatnesse or the glory of a thing Things new and strange do cause fear as when the earth opened and swallowed up Corah Dathan and Abiram there was great feare it was a terrible thing and this is called a new thing Numb 16.30 If the Lord make a new thing so when new sights are seen in the heavens they cause astonishment to the beholders as comets the standing of the Sun and the like 2. Things great are dreadfull great waters great mountains great armies Deut. 1.19 he calls the Wildernesse a great and terrible wildernesse Joel 2.11 the day of the Lord is great and terrible and so the Lord great and terrible Nehem. 4.14 from the greatnesse of it therefore might this Crystal be terrible 3. The glory of it that might make it terrible for glorious things are so lightning is glorious and dreadfull when Gods glory appeared in the mount it was terrible unto Moses and made him to quake Heb. 12.21 At Pauls conversion there was a glorious light which stroke feare into all were with him Act. 9. And this Crystalline firmament was full of glory Crystal is a cleer thing receives the light so as to affect the eyes much in like manner this firmament had a great cleernesse and transparency being the foot-stool of Christ sitting upon the Throne Suppedaneum Christi sedentis in throno 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Septuag sometimes translate the Hebrew word for terrible glorious Deut. 10.21 Who hath done for thee these great and terrible things great and glorious things say they so Isa 64. ver 3. Thou diddest terrible things they render it glorious things Tam vehementer nitebat ut form dinem aspicienti afferret Pol. Divinitatem quandam praese fer●bat Mald. for they are terrible and here from the gloriousnesse of this Crystal or Crystalline visionall firmament it may be called terrible and this I conceive to be the true cause of its terriblenesse it was so glorious that none could behold it without being dazled astonished and put into a trembling Observ 1. That all creatures are under Christ even Angels themselves they and the wheels are under the firmament where Christ is he walks above his feet are where creatures heads are all are subject to the power of Christ and hee sits above and hee rules them and over-rules their actions Angels and all wheels stoop to him the Prophet saw the wheel on the earth the Angels under the firmament but Christ was above 1 Cor. 15.27 All things are put under him all Angels all men all devils God hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name Phil. 2.9 2. That heavenly things are pure and glorious and hold forth the glory of God Rev. 22.1 they have the cleernesse splendor and lively colour of the Crystal The higher wee ascend the more purity beauty and glory there is more in the ayre then in the earth and waters more in the Sun more in the stars and firmament then in the inferiour things Gods glory is every where the earth is full of it If wee look downwards we may see it but if we look upwards we shall see more excellency and glory How much glory is in the Sun who can tell how many wonderfull things it hath in it and so the firmament Psal 19.1 The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy work The out-spread firmament that is so vast so transparent so beset with stars that darts down such sweet influences it holds forth Gods glory exceedingly the glory of his wisdome power goodnesse There is much of Gods glory seen in it Job 37.18 The sky or firmament is compared to a looking-glasse not because you may see severall species of things as we see severall faces in the water and birds in the ayre but chiefly because in it wee see so much of the glory of God even most of his attributes we should be oft looking in this glasse and observe the glory of God 3. That the things above are dreadfully glorious so glorious that our weak eyes cannot behold Incu●iunt sacrum quendam honorem the glory of the firmament was as the
hee hates reproof is brutish Prov. 12.1 Prov. 15.10 he is void of understanding a sensuall brutish creature he regardeth it shall be honoured Pro. 13.18 honoured with comfort safety life Noah was warn'd of God and made an Ark to the salvation of himself and his house Heb. 11.7 And when sinners take warning it 's life salvation to them Ezek. 33.5 hee takes warning delivers his soul how needfull then is warning how profitable if souls be saved by it 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is given by inspiration and is profitable for instruction for reproof c. It is so profitable that the salvation of souls depends upon it When David was reproved by Nathan of his sinne it reduced him from the errour of his way and was salvation to him Let us blesse God for his Word and reproofes tendred to us out of it and subject unto them as tending to our present and eternall good Bee not offended with the reprovers but affected with the reproofs VER 22. And the hand of the Lord was there upon me and he said unto me Arise goe forth into the plain and I will there talk with thee 23. Then I arose and went forth into the plain and behold the glory of the Lord stood there as the glory which I saw by the river Chebar and I fell on my face 24. Then the Spirit entred into me and set me upon my feet and spake with me and said unto me Goe shut thy selfe within thine house IN these and the following verses to the end you have directions for the Prophet and events that fell out The hand of the Lord comming upon him hee is directed to goe to the plaine where the Lord Christ promised to speak with him and he going thither the first event was he saw the glory of the Lord standing there vers 23. 2. He is amazed and falls down at it which is implied in the 24. verse 3. He hath the Spirit entring into him and is strengthened by it set upon his feet which is expressed in that 24. verse Then here is a further direction that he should go and shut up himselfe vers 24. And here his silence is declared 1. By this inclusion of himselfe in his house 2. By the bands imposed upon him vers 25. They shall put bands upon thee 3. By the impediments Christ himselfe inferres verse 26. I will make thy tongue to cleave to the roofe of thy mouth and thou shalt bee dumb Lastly the time of his prophesyings mentioned vers 27. which is when Christ should speak unto him I come to open the words The hand of the Lord was there upon me In the 14th verse of this Chapter and in the third verse of the first Chapter you have had these words opened already This hand of the Lord was the Spirit of the Lord which acted the Prophet and shewed him and others that he was not moved in an humane way or by inconsiderate motions but divinely the power and efficacie of the Spirit There That is at Tel-abib in the 15th verse he came thither and sate down there seven dayes And being in his habitation sad and backward unto the work he was call'd unto the Word of the Lord came to him verse 16. and the Hand of the Lord was there upon him Hee thought being shut up in his house that the businesse would fall and that hee should be excused from propheticall service but he was mistaken Gods Hand finds him out and hee is bidden to go forth into the plain not to stay any longer within his dores but to go into the plain or valley 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the word in Hebrew signifies being from a word which is to cut divide break This plain or valley was divided from the mountains and a solitary place free from company and disturbances delightfull fit to refresh and quiet the spirits of men Obs 1. The Spirit is the great agent in divine things it 's the hand of the Lord that doth all it beautifies with gifts and graces calls to office directs whither to go what to do it assists and inables to all divine operations Christ had the chiefest work to do that concern'd the Church and the hand of the Lord was upon him Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon mee and Isa 11.2 it 's a Spirit of might and inabled him to do mighty things Luke 24.19 And so Stephen Acts 6.10 They were not able to resist the Spirit by which he spake it 's the Spirit doth the great things in Religion sanctification and mortification are the works of this hand of the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 6.11 Acts 13.2 Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto 2. The servants of Christ have daily need of new influences of the Spirit to encourage them to and strengthen them in their work Ezekiel was full of feares had many discouragements sate in a doubtfull condition what to doe and the hand of the Lord was upon him he had formerly felt divine vertue seen Christ and heard him yet all this doth not suffice the hand must worke again and help him else nothing will be done The Apostles had been much with Christ seen his miracles heard his doctrine and yet they must stay at Jerusalem till the Spirit fall upon them Acts 1.4 Paul saith of himselfe and others Wee are not sufficient of our selves to think any thing of our selves but our sufficiencie is of God 2 Cor. 3.5 That is all our strength and help lies in him wee daily finde a want in our selves and God as it pleases him le ts out from his sufficiencie unto us now a little and then a little and we are ever receiving from him and enabled by his grace and Spirit to doe what is done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the 1. Phil. 19. is mentioned the supply of the Spirit it 's the administration subministration under-supplying underpropping of the Spirit all which words note the Saints infirmities and need of the Spirit Those things befell Paul would not turne to his good without the Philippians prayers and further supply of the Spirit as a weak house must bee under-propped a sickly man have daily help an Army constant supply so must the servants of God be under-propped helped supplied by the Spirit Therefore we should daily pray as it is in Psalme 68.28 Strengthen O God that which thou hast wrought for us and that which thou hast wrought in us 3. No place can keep off the hand of God from comming upon us There at Telabib shut up in his house divine vertue seised upon him he thought now to heare no more of prophesying and doing publick service of that nature to the Jewes but the Spirit of God found him out that cannot be excluded from any place or limited to any time It 's like the winde that blowes where and when it listeth When the Apostles were shut up in a roome Acts 2.2 3. there was a rushing mighty
God when God is in his jealousie hee speaks dreadfull things and doth answerably to speak in zeal is to decree an irrevocable and bloody sentence Hence Josh 24.19 hee is a jealous God and then followes and will not forgive your transgressions and Deut. 29.20 The Lord will not spare his jealousie shall smoak against that man and all the curses in this Book shall lie upon that man What man the man that breaks covenant with God g●ing out to false worship and thereby putting him into jealousie which as it 's the rage of a man and makes him cruell in the day of vengeance so it 's the rage of God and makes him without pity or mercy when hee executes vengeance he will then accomplish his wrath and not spare powre out all his wrath and vengeance VER 14 15. Moreover I will make thee waste and a reproach among the Nations that are round about thee in the sight of all that passe by 15. So it shall be a reproach and taunt an instruction and an astonishment unto the nations that are round about thee when I shall execute judgement in thee in anger and fury and furious rebukes I the Lord have spoken it IN the 14th Verse are two judgements more laid down desolation and reproach this last is aggravated from the extent of it to the nations round about and all that passed by In the 15th you have the repetition of the last judgement and the ends of both annexed which are First for information Secondly for astonishment I will make thee waste That is Jerusalem with the Villages and all the land adjacent Judah was a fruitfull land Isa 5.1 the glory of all lands flowing with milk and honey Ezek. 20.6 Moses calls it a good land a land of brooks waters fountains deeps that spring out of vallies and hills a land of Wheat and Barley Vines Fig-trees Pomgranats a land of Oil Olives and honey a land where nothing was lacking the stones of it were iron and in the hils was brasse Deut. 8.7 8 9. it was the Lords land Hos 9.3 Imm●●uels Isa 8.8 a land that God cared for and watched over all the yeere long Deut. 11.12 Egypt was an inconsiderable land to this vers 10. that was prophane this was the holy land Zach. 2.12 the pleasant land Zach. 2.14 it was well built well till'd and greatly peopled yet this land must be laid waste they should be in ariditatem like a river dried up that if you looke for water in it there is none so if look for a Temple Worship or Ordinance c. in Jerusalem there is none their cities and habitations are burnt their gardens unfenced their trees cut down their Vines undressed their fields untilled and all made a wildernesse a land of briers and thorns Isa 7.24 And this was fulfill'd as you may see in Nehem. 2.17 Lam. 1.4 The wayes of Sion do mourn because none come to the solemn feasts 2.2 3.5.18 and the adversaries hand was upon all her pleasant things Lam. 1.10 Hence the Church complains Isa 64.10 11. Thy holy Cities are a wildernesse Sion is a wildernesse Jerusalem a desolation our holy and beautifull house where our fathers praised thee is burnt up with fire and all our pleasant things are laid waste see here the truth of divine threats and the mischief of sin it so exasperates God that he turns a fruitfull land even his own land into barrennesse saltnesse for the wickednesse of them that dwell therein Psal 107.34 A reproach among the nations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God would make them not only for a waste but also for a reproach Charaph is simply to reproach to disgrace and that 's not all they should have but they should be for a taunt also and that 's more Vide de Dieu in Mat. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from Giddeph to blaspheme revile and so it 's used Mat. 27.39 for Matthew writ his Gospel in Hebrew where it 's said they reviled Christ and wagged their heads so should this people be reproached and revil'd have bitter taunts and sarcasms thrown at them Jer. 24. They shall be removed to all kingdomes of the earth for their hurt to be a reproach a Proverb a taunt and a curse hence grew those reproaches and imprecations Let it be with thee as it was with Zedekiah his family and followers Plaga Zedekia tangat t● fit frater servus Zedekia Vatab. and Jer. 29.22 the curse in the captivity was The Lord make thee like Zedekiah and like Ahab whom the King of Babylon roasted in the fire this judgement was very sore reproaches and taunts are bitter things piercing deep scarce any thing afflicts an ingenuous spirit more then they do Zedekiah feared nothing more then reproach and mocking Jer. 38.19 I am afraid lest the Jews fall to the Chaldeans deliver me into their hand and they mock me it was a sad thing to be stript of all their cities the land to be laid waste but much more to be expos'd to scorn yea publikely of all and that by the appointment of the Judge even God whom they took to be their friend and that to the nations they had hated and held tributary many yeers this was exceeding pungent especially they being the top and glory of all nations it was fulfill'd Lam. 2.15 16. All that passe by clap their hands at thee they hisse and wag their head at the daughter of Jerusalem saying Is this the city that men call The perfection of beauty The joy of the whole earth All thine enemies have opened their mouth against thee they hisse and gnash their teeth they say We have swallowed her up certainly this is the day that we looked for we have found we have seen it The Lord hath done that which he had devised he hath fulfilled his Word An instruction The Vulgar is Exemplum this act of God upon Jerusalem exposed so to reproach should be an example to the Heathen The Hebrew is musar from jasar to bind to discipline to instruct the judgements of God upon his people are vincula bonds to bind up Heathens from their sins they are disciplinae reproofs unto them being guilty of great sins they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instructions to teach them to repent of their sins because the Jewes by their holy lives did not excite the nations to inquire after and serve the true God therefore their judgements shall be their instructions teach them to fear and forsake their Idolatry they could reason thus If God spared not the holy city the holy people the holy land when they fell to Idolatry uncleannesse and other vile sins how will he spare us if we be found in the same wayes his judgments are exceeding dreadfull we will take warning their sufferings shall be our safety if judgements were to be instructions to Heathens and wrought upon them shall they not much more be so to Christians the ruines of Germany the blood of Ireland the
breaches of England let them be instructions unto us Let us all say with Isaiah 26.8 9. In the way of thy judgements O Lord have we waited for thee the desire of our souls is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee with my soul have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within me will I seek thee early for when thy judgments are in the earth the inhabitants of the world will learn righteousnesse Heathen inhabitants will do it and shall not Christians it's seasonable wisdome to learn by the blows of others An astonishment Not for stupifying and hardening which sometimes is the end and fruit of judgements but for admiration God would so deal with Jerusalem and her inhabitants that the nations round about should be astonished at his dealings God would make them an astonishment an hissing and a perpetuall desolation Jer. 25.9 yea the plagues of the city should be such that every one that passeth by should be astonished and hisse Jer. 19.9 yea many nations should say Wherfore hath the Lord done thus to this great city Jer. 22.8 Deut. 29.22 23 24. God saith The plagues of that land should be such as that it should be like Sodom and Gomorrah so great so strange that all nations should say Wherefore hath the Lord done thus unto this land What meaneth the heat of this great anger God might have done thus with this great city with this pleasant land but he hath spared us and we have cause to be as much astonished at his mercies as they were at his judgements Let us fear reform lest our sweet mercies be turn'd into astonishing judgements When I shall execute judgement in thee in anger and fury and furious rebukes There is mention of executing judgement in the 8th and 10th verses and here in this verse with addition of anger fury and furious rebukes the Prophet may seem too repetitious and verbous but it 's otherwise repetitions of the same thing serve to confirm the truth of the matter to shew the speed of the event and to excite the minds of those the things concern all which fall in here the Prophet prophesying against the Jews at Jerusalem their city state and threatning destruction to all himself keeping in Babylon conceived that they would not believe what he said and fear what he threatned neither affected with what he delivered to prevent these evils he repeats the thing oft and strengthens it with variety of words that so his doctrine might be the more weighty the sooner believed they awakened and the judgement that was at hand feared In furious rebukes The Hebrew is in rebukes of heat Pradus observes that jacach notes rebuking before witnesse and God would do it before the nations and these rebukes were not to cure but to destroy I the Lord have spoken Lest they might think the Prophet and his Prophecy might die together and come to nothing the Lord tels them it was himself spake and that the Prophecy should take place what ever became of the Prophet because it was from him who was the living God and would see it fulfill'd at Jerusalem though uttered in Babylon VER 16. When I shall send upon them the evill arrow of famine which shall be for their destruction and which I will send to destroy you and I will increase the famine upon you and break your staffe of bread I Have spoken of famine and breaking the staffe of bread in Chap. 4.16 Only I shal open unto you that expression The arrows of famine they are either the arrows that bring famine or the arrows that famine brings The arrows that bring famine are great droughts Palmer-worms Locusts Canker-worms Caterpillers thunder lightning winds storms immoderate rains great hails long frosts murrains transportations of commodities monopolizing hoording up of creatures wars c. many of these are shot down from heaven by God and all are sent from God and cause famine and they are call'd arrows for that they do to the corn cattell fruits and State where they are what arrows do to the bodies of man or beast wound disquiet consume hence when mention was made of a famine in Habakkuks dayes Ch. 3.11 the Lord is said to march through the land in indignation ver 12. and his bow to be made quite naked then did God shoot amongst them the arrows of famine The arrows famine brings are leanness faintness sickness loathsomeness frettings fears of death longings for death gnawings of the stomach pinching of the wind got into the bowels eating of their own flesh thirsting and burning heat c. these are arrows that famine brings and kill like arrows shot into the liver which wounding deeply pain greatly and kill quickly and in this sense I rather take it here because the judgement spoken of concerning the Jews who were to be besieged if it be taken in the other sense it would have been a judgement to the besiegers who lay in the field and were not so well fortified against those arrows as they within it is therefore meant of the arrows famine brought upon them chiefly not excluding the arrows brought that famine namely war and these arrows were prepared in Moses dayes Deut. 32.23 I will heap mischief upon them I will spend mine arrows upon them and what arrows They shall be burnt with hunger and devoured with burning coals and with bitter destruction vers 24. Famine is like a multitude of hot coals in a mans bowels and bones that cause grievous pain even bitter destruction and therefore they are call'd here the evill arrows of famine because they bring many evils and at last a miserable death this Jeremiah acknowledges made good Lam. 3.12 13. speaking in the person of the Church and State Hee hath bent his bow and set me as a mark for the arrow he hath caused the arrow of his quiver to enter into my reins VER 17. So will I send upon you famine and evill beasts and they shall bereave thee and pestilence and blood shall pass through thee and I will bring the sword upon thee I the Lord have spoken it HEre is a repetition of the former judgment only one is new that is evill beasts some would have it meant of the Chaldeans that were like evill beasts that with their horns teeth heels hoofs should tosse gore rend and devoure them others understand it literally for evill and wilde beasts Lions Bears c. which were threatned Deut. 32.24 I will send the teeth of beasts upon them with the poison of the Serpents of the dust Lev. 26.22 I will send wild beasts which shall rob you of your children destroy your cattel make you few in number and your high way desolate see the truth of it 2 King 17.25 Lions were sent that slew them they feared not God But this was past and our Prophet speaks of that was to come Know then that as God sent Lions to destroy them there so he could send Lions to destroy
chiefest in malignancy and opposition this you shall see 2 Chron. 36.14 15 16. All the chief of the Priests and the people transgressed very much they polluted the house of the Lord they mocked the messengers of God despised his words and misused his Prophets this was the practice of those times Was there ever any great disorder corruption in the Church or any sedition treason almost in the State but some of the chief of the Priests have had their hands in it When the Calf was set up in Moses his dayes Aaron the Priest had his head and hand in it when David was a dying Adonijah makes the sedition and stir in the Kingdome but Abiathar the Priest had a great hand in it Both in the State and in the Church you may well observe that the chief of the Priests have had their hands in the evill in the trouble And have not we now a malignant party that oppose the reformation intended and begun Do they not set themselves with all their might against the Ieremies Daniels Ezekiels and Rechabites of the Land that will not defile themselves There is such a party you all know that do oppose godliness that despise the Prophets scorne the Saints make sad the hearts of the righteous and strengthen the hands of wickedness therefore this prophecy may be seasonable enough in regard of that malignant party that doth oppose too openly 3. They had lost their countrey their choysest comforts they were in captivity and constant jeopardy of their lives if they provoked the Babylonians they were ready to fall upon them and root them out presently and those at Ierusalam were in danger every day to have their liberties estates consciences Religion and lives taken from them And are not we like unto them and are not we even in a Land of liberty in a state of captivity Do not our estates our liberties our consciences our Religion our lives and all lie at the stake Wee are even in Babylon in the midst of Sion wee are in a sad and heavie condition therefore this Prophecy may be seasonable now considering our estate is so like to theirs 4. The times then were such that they loathed Manna ordinary and plain truths would not down unless truths were new and transcendent they were weary of them and slighted them Ieremy was too plain a Prophet for them too low and God gives them Ezekiel a dark and hard Prophet And is it not so in these dayes we have been fed with Manna so long that we loath Manna as a wormy thing If we have not something new unheard of transcendent we are weary wee think it not worth our going out of doors if so then here is a Prophet that may be sutable to these times and your desires God gave them this Prophet in a time of affliction and there was something in it for afflictions open mens understandings Vexatio dat intellectum and inlarge their capacities when people are under pressures then their understandings are quickest then they are most apprehensive therefore God gave them such a Prophet as might sute with their condition in exercising their parts and graces to the full when at the best Now is a time of affliction if your spirits be awakened and the bent of them be after high and hard things lo here are difficulties and transcendencies for you here are high things to draw up your thoughts to exercise your spirits be they never so choice and apprehensive One thing more for the seasonablenesse of this Prophet it is said heaven was open Ezekiel saw visions of God If ever God hath opened heaven since Christ now he hath done it in these sad times God hath now caused is causing you every day to see visions out of the Prophets and out of the Gospel These expository Lectures are openings of heaven and let out cleare and choice light unto you from heaven therefore seeing heaven is opened let visions of God be counted seasonable and become acceptable unto you But if this Prophet be so dark and difficult what is the benefit and fruit we shall have by him This is the next head wee are to come unto and the benfits of this Prophet are these the darker the Prophet is the more of God may you look for from him God dwelleth in darkness as well as in light Psalm 18.11 He made darknesse his secret place And Exod. 19.9 God came to Moses in a thick cloud Tenebrae sunt latibulum D●i and there Moses had the most of God Here God is coming to you in a dark Prophet and questionless you shall find much of God in him here you shall see much of Gods mercy in upholding and comforting the spirits of his people and providing for them in a strange land here you shall see much of Gods justice in punishing sinners for their sins and iniquities here you shall see much of Gods truth in fulfilling of prophecies here you shall finde much of Gods power in subverting of Kings and Kingdomes here you shall finde much of his manifold Wisdome in these dark visions here you shall finde more of God then you expect 2. This prophecy is an exact History of the time of the Jewes being in captivity in it you have many passages of Nebuchadnezzars reign and government of his acts abroad and at home and of Gods dealing with his people in the time of this their seventy yeers captivity Were not Daniel and Ezekiel extant wee should have such a great losse as the world could not tel how to repair it the acts of Gods dealing with his Church and people in that seventy yeers would be swallowed up in a Chaos of darkness 3. You shall see for what sins God subverteth and overthroweth Kingdomes and States In this Prophet you shall find that the Lord doth ruine glorious Churches great Cities mighty Kingdomes men of great renown families and posterities and the particular sins for which he doth it Namely for false worship Idolatry injustice uncleannesse prophaning of his Sabbaths contempt of his Word abuse of his Prophets and sins of that nature So that as it is Prov. 21.30 There is no wisdome no counsel nor understanding against the Lord. God will overthrow even Kings and their Councels Kingdoms with their Nobility and Gentry with their Magistrates and people God will overthrow them when he once sets upon such a worke such a designe There is no standing out against him 4. You shall see here also the different carriage betweene the godly and the wicked in times of Judgement When judgements are abroad in the world the inhabitants of the earth should learn righteousness but wicked men they grow more active against God more impudent more desperate and hard-hearted they combine and plot together to roote out the righteous this you shall see in this Prophecie And for the godly you shall finde that when judgements are neare and upon them they are mourning in secret they get together
it is that Vision is put for prophecy Isa 1.1 3. In a Vision there is alwayes such an irradiation of the mind such divine satisfying over-powering strong light that the partie who hath the Vision is put out of all doubt and dispute concerning the truth of the thing he hath seene or is represented Moller Ps 89.20 4. There is in a vision a strong impulse upon the spirit of the partie to doe that which is the minde of God concerning that vision 5. It is when they are awake God speaks to men by dreames in the darke when they are asleepe but usually visions are when men are awake All these are found here in the Prophet Ezekiels vision 1. There are representations of diverse things to him he was an Hieroglyphicall Prophet he had more things presented unto him of that nature then any Prophet besides All that followeth here in this Chapter are representations of things to Ezekiel in this vision 2. It is of things to come for this Prophecie being either of the ruine of Jerusalem or of the state of the Church still it was of that which was not present but future 3. The Prophet he had strong inlightnings he had such irradiations of his minde that he was satisfied touching the thing therefore he saith The word of the Lord came expresly unto him the hand of the Lord came upon him in a great deale of strength 4. He had a mightie impulse though he was backward unwilling to goe on in the worke of God yet the Spirit came upon him with power and put him on And lastly it was when he was awake walking up and down by the river Chebar there he had these visions Thus much for the nature of a vision now these visions were visions of God I saw visions of God Not that he saw God oft and so every sight of God made a new vision for no man can see God and live but visions revealed to him by God which did in some measure set out the glory and majestie of God and so they are called visions of God Or visions of God by way of opposition and exclusion thus I saw visions of God I had divine visions not Satanicall delusions for Satan hath his Prophets and they have their visions whereby they delude the world not dreames and conceits of mine own no Angel no Devill no dreame no fancy of mine presented them unto me but they were propheticall visions such as God himselfe hath presented Or visions of God lastly in regard of the eminency of them I saw visions of God that is choice rare difficult transcendent visions Things that excell in Scripture-phrase usually are said to be things of God As the Mountains of God the Cedars of God the Citie of God as you may reade Psal 36.6 Psal 80.10 Jonah 3.3 1. Observe here the certaintie of the things contained in this Prophet He doth not say I heard but I saw visions of God The sense of sight is the most certaine most active most discerning most evidentiall of all the senses Therefore 1 Joh. 1.1.3 That which we have seene with our eyes which we have looked upon we declare unto you There was certaintie in that which they saw One eye-witnesse is more then ten heare-says then ten eare-witnesses Thales being asked the Question Quantum ocul● ab auribus How much truth should differ from a lie his answer was As much as the eyes differ from the eares intimating that what you heare may be false but what you see that is certain The Prophet here saw visions of God to shew the certaintie of these visions and so of the whole Scriptures which are visions of God 2. See here the dignitie of these Visions they are visions of God such as are great glorious transcendent things Mens words works things are meane poore and worthlesse but the things the visions of God they are so high so excellent that few can reach them they are beyond the apprehensions of ordinary men yea the Prophets themselves did not see all that was in those visions God did vouchsafe unto them This shews the things of God have transcendency in them are of great authoritie and challenge answerable esteem These are visions of God and must with all Scripture be valued accordingly Hence the Ancients have called the Scriptures An Epistle of God sent from Heaven to the sonnes of men Therefore in them is nothing impertinent empty but all in them is glorious full of sense mysteries and Spirit this strengthens the authoritie of Scripture Ne titubet fides that our faith may not stagger at all but be confident and build upon them as visions and truths of God 3. See here that when God beginneth once to let out mercy to his servants he stints not presently but proceeds I saw not one vision but I saw visions of God hee had many choice ones It was kindnesse that Ezekiel had such a name The strength of God it was kindnesse that the Lord would open heaven to him it had been great kindnesse if he had seen but one vision but for Ezekiel to have heaven opened and to see visions of God many visions one after another this sheweth the great kindnesse of God When Rachel had her first son she called his name Joseph which signifieth adding or increase for she said The Lord shall adde to mee another son Gen. 30.24 Now God hath begun to shew kindnesse he shall not only give me this but he shall give me another son also When the Lord hath bestowed one mercy on you you may name it Joseph increase addition for God will bestow another upon you Abraham had many mercies from God one after another and Moses a multitude of mercies he converseth with God face to face he heareth God speak he hath Gods presence to go along with him yea he seeth all Gods goodnesse and glory to passe before him When mercies come forth God will not presently shut the door of mercy again Heaven is opened visions are presented one after another Psal 36.10 Continue thy loving kindnesse the Hebrew is draw forth or draw out thy loving kindnesse A metaphor either taken from vessels of Wine which being set abroach once yeeld not only one cup but many cups so when God setteth abroach the Wine of his mercy he will not fill your cup once but twice and seven times or taken from a Mother who hath her breasts full of milk drawes them out for her childe not once but often the child shall have the breast many times in the day and many times in the night so when God beginneth to shew mercy to you he will draw out his breasts of consolation and will bestow mercy after mercy upon you or from a line which is extended for so God being in a way of mercy will extend the line of mercy and measure out mercy after mercy for you Is not heaven now opened Do you not see visions of God this day How often is
heaven opened I saw visions of God and the Word of the Lord came expresly to mee and the hand of the Lord was there upon mee Here were strong evidences of his Call to the work he was to go about Ministers are to be the mouth of God to the people and the mouth of the people to God both are weighty businesses they deal about the eternall truths of the eternall God your immortall souls and the everlasting condition of them The glory of God is concredited in a great measure unto them the great things of the Kingdome of Christ are put into their hands to dispense as God shall move and give them opportunity Had they not need therefore to see to it that their Call be right and to make it out strongly and clearly that God hath sent them If they can clear it up that God hath sent them they may expect his assistance his blessing his protection and successe in their labours How ever things prove this will be their comfort in the midst of opposition reproach persecution hazard of liberty and lives I was called of God I am in his work in his way he brought me into his Vineyard hee will stand by mee I will go on let him do with me what he pleaseth The clearnesse of a mans Call will add much comfort to a mans spirit in a black day it makes conscientious pitifull and painfull a Ministers call being evident the peoples consciences will be satisfied will receive his doctrine then will they look upon him as their Pastor and Teacher reverence him for his works sake and are likely to receive much good by him Whereas otherwise if the Calling of Ministers reach no higher then a Patron or Prelate there is seldome any good comes either to Ministers or people therefore it concernes them to look narrowly to it that their Calling be of God cleare and strong to themselves else they cannot make it out to others neither shall finde that comfort nor do that good which otherwise they might 3. That in corrupt times when Religion the Chu●ch and Gods glory are greatly indangered God then takes care to raise up some extraordinary servants to vindicate his truth in his people his glory all was brought now to a desolate condition false Prophets prevailed Religion suffered Gods honour was low and now God takes Ezekiel that was one of the ordinary Priests before and bestowes a larger measure of his Spirit upon him and raiseth him up to be a Prophet and sets him awork to do great things in Babylon Though now men be not called immediatly by the voyce of God and Christ as of old yet by extraordinary instincts and motions of Gods Spirit they were heretofore and are still put upon great services Philip was a Deacon by his ordinay Calling but by extraordinary instinct and hints of Gods Spirit he was raised up to be an Evangelist and to do greater service unto the Church of God So Luther that was a Frier at first by extraordinary instinct of Gods Spirit was raised up to purge errors out of the Church and to glorifie God especially in clearing the doctrine of Justification by Free grace So Zwinglius Wickliffe and others in our dayes God hath not left himself without witnesse at this day he hath stirred up the spirits of some to do him great and extraordinary services 4. That those Ministers are fittest to speak to the people that finde the Word of God to have being in them The Word of the Lord came expresly to mee the Word of the Lord had being in him was ingraffed in him When the Word is a word of being in our hearts then it will be a word of power in your consciences That which comes from our hearts will reach to yours and will be effectuall in you otherwise the Word is but an empty sound it cometh from the teeth outward and reacheth but to your eares and seldome goeth down into your souls 5. Take this note that there are principles of opposition in the dearest servants of God to the work of his Spirit It is said the hand of the Lord came upon mee invaded mee so some render it I stood out against God I had my carnall reasonings I had stubbornnesse and opposition in my will I said there was a Lion in the way and I pleaded hard against this work and service But the Spirit of God came upon me came mightily upon me came with a strong hand upon me as he saith came so upon me that it subdued all my carnall reasonings subdued the stubbornness of my will it removed all my shifts and pretences and brought me off to go about the Work of God Is it not thus with most Christians When you would pray when you would do good is not evill present with you But when the Spirit of God cometh upon you it will overcome that indisposition that sluggishness that opposition it will work down distempers and frame you sweetly to go about the work of a God as it did Ezekiel 6. That the Word and Ordinances of it that visions and revelations do the heart of man reall good when divine vertue goes along with them otherwise not What if Ezekiel had seen never so many visions what if God had spoken never so expresly unto him unlesse the hand of God had been upon him too unlesse the Spirit of God had improved those visions and ingraffed those words in him all had been as an empty sound all had been as meer shadowes and sights to him But when the Spirit of God goes along then there is efficacy and benefit in any Ordinance take away the Spirit from the Word and Ordinances of God and they will be but dry bones without meat or marrow take the Gospel which is called the ministration of the Spirit if the Spirit be not in it the choisest promises the sweetest truths there what are they they are Literae damnatoriae and Leges mortis they are letters and lawes of death to the soul When the hand of the Lord is upon an Ordinance and upon a man in that Ordinance then is there good gotten and then doth the soul gain 2 Cor. 10.4 Our weapons are mighty through God 7. That all spirituall good received and done by the Saints is from the operation of Gods Spirit which therefore is called Gods hand Luke 11.20 If I by the finger or hand of God cast out devils this finger Mat. 12.28 is called the Spirit of God If I by the Spirit of God cast out Devills That which is called finger in one is called the Spirit in the other Now doe men receive any good have you faith have you love patience meeknesse understanding zeale godlinesse any all graces It is this hand of God that hath wrought them Doe you doe any divine good unto others It is this Spirit of God that workes by you and inableth you to doe that good Act. 6.10 They were not able to resist the wisedome and Spirit by
it will be terrible to all it falleth upon What therefore will wicked men doe when God shall come out like a whirlewinde when God shall come out as a great cloud thunder lighten in the world raine fire and brimstone and an horrible tempest When God shall doe this what will become of them Wicked men in Ezek. 13.10 11. are compared to a wall that is daubed up with untempered morter When God shall come with a tempest and shake that wall can it stand No it 's said it shall fall a stormie winde shall rend it The Jewes daubed with untempered morter and when the storme came they fell many Christians daube up themselves with the untempered morter of their own righteousnesse of vaine hopes of doing this and that But when this whirlewinde blows they will downe Mat. 7.27 They are houses built upon the sand and when the winds blow the floods beat and the raine falls they will fall also and fall from the hopes of heaven to the bottome of hell Therefore looke to your foundation looke that you be not built upon the sand but upon a rocke and that you daube not with untempered morter for there is a tempest already begun 4. That God can bring adverse power from any quarter he can raise winde and clouds from the North from remote places those we little thinke of he can make use of a lusty bitter and mercilesse Nation and that suddenly to awaken a secure people to correct his owne servants and to plague his enemies It 's likely they had such thoughts at Jerusalem as these Surely Babylon is a great way off Nebuchadnezzar hath his hands full none of the Kings of the earth will or dare come neare Jerusalem Lam. 4.12 Wee are in no such danger as these timerous Prophets speake of Why should we trouble our selves with needless fears we will on in our wonted wayes and are not such as these our thoughts doe not wee thinke that foraine enemies are so imployed and taken up at home that they have no leasure to come and trouble us But God can from the North bring a tempest God can from foraine Nations bring in those that can powre out their wrath upon us and make as grievous a storme as ever fell upon Jerusalem We doe not beleeve and they did not beleeve But what if God doe not bring it from abroad cannot he raise up a storme from within Is there not already a winde out of the North a whirlewinde and a cloud raised and how soone doe any of us know but there may be blacknesse darknesse and the day of the Lord round about us we may be suddenly invironed with winds and dreadfull stormes such as our hearts never thought of and our eyes never saw Let us not be secure a bloudy tempest is amongst us already The drunkard maybe secure when he is at Sea asleepe upon the top of the Mast though it may cost him his life for doing so but a sober man will looke about him when he seeth the Ship shaken and heareth the winds blow and perceives the waves rise and if it be possible save his owne life and the Ship too If you be sober men looke about you Is not the storme begun Doe not the windes blow Are not the clouds darke Is not the day of the Lord upon us If it be possible save your owne lives and the Ship that you are in that now begins to shake to sinke The heathen Mariners had so much religion that when there was a storme every one cryed to his God and so much charitie as not to suffer Jonah to lie asleepe but goe to him and say Awake thou sleeper what meanest thou arise call upon thy God that if it may be he may save both thee and us Be not you behinde the heathen Mariners shew so much religion and charitie in you as every one to goe and call now upon his God Cry to your God now that he would still the windes That he would rebuke the waves That he would still this storm Cry to God now with all your strength and wrastle with him night and day that he may shew some mercy to his Beloved and not give her up to be a spoile to the hands of enemies Awaken your Jonahs that are asleepe in your houses Call upon husband wife friends Minister all and every one to put to their hearts and hands to secure this Ship that is almost now split and falling in peeces Now take your Censers for wrath is gone out from the Lord put fire and incense in them that if it be possible Mat. 8.24 you may stop the wrath When the Disciples were at Sea and a storme arose Christ being with them asleepe in the Ship they awake him saying Lord save us we perish So doe you Christ seems to be asleepe awake him with your prayers and say Lord save us wee are called by thy name wee are Christians save us else wee perish Christ you see presently arose rebuked the windes and the Sea and there was a great calme Be not secure now of all times but thinke with your selves what you would doe if all the Nations of the world were come against England if all the Counties in England were in an uproare if this Citie were besieged and fire throwne into it to burne the houses Thinke what you would doe then doe it now fit and prepare your selves for the stroake of God in the storme and tempest that how ever it goe with your bodies estates liberties or lives yet it may goe well with your immortall soules 5. That God disposes of winds and clouds for what services he pleases A whirlewinde is made Elijahs chariot to heaven 2 King 2.11 The Lord hath his way in the windes Nah. 1.3 He answered Job out of the whirlewinde Chap. 40.6 By a winde he conveys the holy Ghost to the Apostles Act. 2.2 So for the clouds God sets his bow in them to witnesse the securitie of the world from drowning Gen. 9. He created a cloud upon the Assembly Isa 4.5 He went before the Israelites in a pillar of a Cloud Exod. 13. And the glory of the Lord appeared in the Cloud Exod. 16.10 The Temple was fild with a cloud 2 Chron. 5.13 A cloud received Christ and carried him to heaven Act. 1.9 When wee behold the clouds and heare the winds we should be carried higher in our thoughts then to look at them philosophically in a naturall way we should minde them Theologically as instruments of choice services of God as instruments of his power wisedome and glory VERS 4. And I looked and behold a whirlwinde came out of the North a great Cloud and a fire infolding it selfe and a brightnesse was about it and out of the middest thereof as the colour of amber out of the midst of the fire A fire infolding it selfe c. A Fire infolding it self or as the Hebrew word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignis se involvens Mont. a
mindes sow tares in the field Luke 8.12 Matth. 13.24 25. put devillish thoughts into the heart Joh. 13.2 work powerfully in the heart of the disobedient Eph. 2.1 and trouble their spirits 1 Sam. 16.15 I see not but good Angels may do as much being more potent then they Rev. 12. Michael and his Angels overcame the Dragon and his and Psal 103.20 they excell in strength they are called exercitus coelestis Luke 2.13 one can do more then a great Army one slew 185000. in a night 2 King 19.35 They are Bellatores fortissimi and have appeared like Warriors David saw an Angel with a sword in his hand stretched over Jerusalem 1 Chron. 21.16 Elisha saw them with horses and Chariots of fire 2 King 6.17 Angels are Gods Militia Psal 68.17 the Chariots of God are 20000. even thousands of Angels they stand alwayes before God and can do what ever God wills and commands This consideration of the strength of Angels should adde to our comforts and Gods praises if a man be in danger and have a strong convoy appointed by the King he is secure much comforted and thankfull too that Majesty hath appointed it God hath given us the mighty Angels that are stronger then Lions to be our guard to convoy us through the Wildernesse of this world let it multiply our comforts and Gods praises The next face is that of an Ox and it notes out the obsequiousnesse faithfulnesse patience and usefulnesse of angels in their ministrations for an Ox accustomed to the yoke is very tractable not stubborn kicking and flinging as untamed Heifers are Hos 10.11 Ephraim is as a Heifer that is taught and loves to tread out the corne a Heifer taught and delighting in his work is willing to it such are Angels Psal 103.20 They hearken to the voyce of his Word they look upon God as the great Generall and if he give out the word they give out their strength and go about the work willingly they are very obsequious to his commands if he sayes Go smite Herod for his pride Balaam for his covetousnesse David for his vain-glory Senacherib for his blasphemy and Sodom for its uncleannesse presently they go Praestat fidum maisterium 2. Faithfulnesse an Ox doth faithfull service Horses do oft deceive in their service but an Ox seldome in plowing or carrying of burthens So Angels are faithfull in their ministrations they fail not in the least particular the Angels would not let John worship him the Angels would not suffer Lot to linger in Sodom 3. Patience an Ox is a patient creature what burthen soever is laid upon him or what work soever heels imployed in the Ox is not impatient So the Angels they are patient in their ministration though they meet with much opposition The Prince of Persia withstood Gabriel 21. dayes Dan. 10.13 In the midst of oppositions and great services they are without all impatience though their work never end Rev. 4.8 yet they never complaine 4. Usefulnesse Prov. 14.4 much increase is by the strength of the Ox no creature more usefull to the support of a family then the Ox for of old all the plowing was by Oxen. Elijah findes Elisha plowing with twelve yoke of Oxen 1 King 19.19 And Job had five hundred yoke of Oxen and it 's said they were plowing Job 1.3.14 no mention of Horses and in some places of this Kingdome they make greatest use of Oxen by their strength Kingdomes and Families are maintained Therefore Moses Deut. 3.17 compares Joseph to the Bullock or Ox because he sustained his fathers family and Egypt with corne Exod. 22.1 If an Ox or Sheep were stoln and so killed or sold the thiefe was to restore five for the Ox four for the Sheep and the reason was because of the service and usefulnesse of those creatures they served for sacrifice to God to plow the earth to feed and cloath the family in other things they were to restore only double David makes it one part of the happinesse of a Commonwealth that the Oxen be strong to labour Psal 144.14 Oxen are needfull and usefull creatures and Angels herein resemble Oxen they are ministring spirits sent out for the service of Gods family they live not to themselves but to the publike In the Revelations you may reade what great services the Angels are imployed in they sound the trumpets and powre out the vials of Gods wrath they preserve the Saints from the violence of Devils and devilish men This instructs man to be like Angels in these qualities if God command call for any duty to be obsequious yeelding and to say with Samuel Here I am Speak Lord thy servant is willing to heare ready to obey and when we are in the service let us be faithfull do it conscionably let us be patient although we meet with delayes oppositions reproaches and loss let us be serviceable and profitable to others Angels have no benefit by their ministrations God hath the glory and man the good The last face is that of an Eagle and in it as in a glasse we may see the perspicaciousnesse swiftnesse and vivacity of the Angels for these three are Eagles observable 1. They are quick-sighted Job 39.29 Her eyes behold afar off speaking of the Eagle from the top of the rocks out of the clouds they are said to behold fishes swimming in the Seas so strong is their sight that they soar aloft and can a long time behold the Sun with open and stedfast eyes In aquila Cicurata Merlin in Jobum c. 39 Scaliger hath seen it in a tam'd Eagle A man of acute parts that can see quick and far into matters we say he is Eagle-eyed the Angels are not wanting in this particular they are quick-sighted 2 Sam. 14.20 and Rev. 4.6 The four beasts they are mentioned being the same here in Ezekiel are said to be full of eyes before and behind and in the 8th verse full of eyes within they have much naturall knowledge much revealed knowledge set o●t by their ●yes within and much experimentall knowledge coming in by their observation and deep insight into things noted by their eyes before and behind they soar aloft stand before God behold the face of God alwayes Matth. 18.10 2. Eagles are swift in their flight 2 Sam. 1.23 Swifter then Eagles and Job 9.26 The Eagle maketh hast to the prey Pindar calls the the Eagle the queen of Birds Lam. 4.19 for her swiftnesse no Foul flies more swiftly then the Eagle hence when things were to be done suddenly the Scripture mentioneth the Eagle Hos 8.1 He shall come as an Eagle against the House of the Lord that is Nebuchadnezzar shall come suddenly Angels are no dull creatures in a night the destroying Angel slew all the first-born in Egypt in a night 185000. in the camp of Senacherib and Dan. 9.21 Gabriel came flying swiftly to Daniel and suddenly there was with the Angel a multitude of the heavenly hosts Luke 2.13 3. Eagles are
shall give account of himselfe unto God God will say to us Come give account of your Stewardships Luk. 16.2 Every one hath a talent is a Steward hath some trust committed to him and he must not thinke to run and never returne let men act how they will returne they shall be they never so great be they Princes Magistrates Commanders c. Eccles 12. God shall bring every worke unto Judgement with every secret thing whether it be good or evill both the work and the workman must be questioned Mat. 12.36 Of every idle word that men shall speake they shall give an account of in the day of Judgement 3. That Angels are lively and unweariable in their negotiations they run and returne as a flash of lightning when they had done great service in the world they were as lively at the end of it as at the beginning they return back with as much life and speed as they went forth and were ready for new imployments they return'd as to give account of what was done so to receive new commands and worke This is a good patterne for us all that in the workes of God those imployments he calls us to we grow not weary of one sinne fits for another and men are unweariable in that trade So one dutie should fit for another and wee should never be tyred in our spirits Ad laetitiam et animi pacem magnum pondus habent rectae actiones though we be in our bodies Gal. 6.9 Let us not be weary in well-doing the wicked are weary of and in well-doing What profit is it say they that wee keepe his Commandements and that we walke humbly before the Lord of Hosts Mal. 3.14 When will the new Moone be gone that we may sell corne and the Sabbath that we may set forth Wheat Amos 8.5 Psal 36.3 He hath left off to be wise and to doe good Mal. 1.13 They said What a wearinesse is it and snuffed at it and brought that was torne lame sicke but the godly are never weary of Gods work Desidia est mors superstes Vacua est vita though sometimes they are weary in it through the strength of the flesh weaknesse of grace and other discouragements but they having tasted how gracious the Lord is are not will not cannot be weary of his service his Commandements are not grievous to them 4. That they seek not themselves but the honour and glory of their Master they stay not when their work is done upon pleasure curiositie to see or know any thing but immediately returne and are taken up wholly with the glorifying of God they are attent watching his Commands for they look up they are intent upon his work they turne not to either side look not backe but goe streight forward they contend for his glory they runne returne and give account and would have new Commissions be at work againe and have God to be glorified to their utmost abilities Isa 6.3 Holy holy is the Lord of Host the whole earth is full of his glory they see God so glorious excellent and holy in himselfe so glorious in all his works that they minde not themselves but God and make it their onely and great designe to glorifie God Rev. 4.8 9. And this is our duty and comfort if done 1 Cor. 10.31 Whether you eate or drinke c. The glory of the infinite holy wise and great God should be precious to us we should attend his commands intend his worke contend against all lets within or without and promote his worke and glory to our utmost That worke is not referr'd to Gods glory but our gaine credit or profit is a dead work Omnibus operibus nostris coelestis intentio adjungi debet Aquinas The School-men call for a right intention in every work as that which animates and inlivens the same and though we cannot actually intend Gods glory alwayes in every thing yet there should be a vertuall intention of it A bowle runs an arrow flies by vertue of that arme first sent them forth and all our actions should proceed in the strength of a morning or primary intention of Gods glory One thing yet remaines touching the motion of Angels namely the efficient cause of their motion and it 's the Spirit set down in these words VER 12. Whither the Spirit was to goe they went SOme doubt there is what is meant by the Spirit here not the counsell or will of the Angels and so the sense to be that they went which way they had a minde whither their own wills and spirit carried them and my reason is because they are brought in here as servants and officers and therefore not to be left to their own wills but to be under command and at the will of another Souldiers goe not where they please but where their Generall pleaseth By Spirit we are to understand neither the will of Angels nor winds nor the soule of man for Spirit in Scripture doth signifie all these but the essentiall and eternall Spirit of God and this is evident by the 20th verse Whithersoever the Spirit was to goe they went it 's not said whithersoever their Spirit was to goe they went but whithersoever the Spirit that is the Holy Ghost coessentiall and coequall with the Father and the Sonne whither that Spirit of wisdome and power led them thither they went when that Spirit bad them returne they returned as that Spirit moved them so they moved Object The Spirit of God neither goes nor moves from place to place being infinite how then can this be meant of the Spirit Ans This is spoken humanitùs after the manner of men in regard of the vision Ezekiel had Non mutatione loci aut essentiae sed declaratione potentiae gratiae it seemed so to him but the Spirit being infinite neither goes nor moves by reall change of place or essence but by declaration of its power and grace When the Spirit or God doth that is unusuall then they are said to come and be present Againe the Spirit went in the Angels not simply in it selfe there was in the Angels imperium impetus Spiritus the imposition and impression of the Spirit which carried them on Observ That Angels although exceeding wise full of knowledge active and able to doe great service yet are not at their own dispose they move not at their own pleasure they went not where they listed Let the abilities of the creature be never so rare excellent they must be under the power of a Superior they must be ordered and directed by a higher cause Angels themselves are not Lords of themselves they are not sui juris much lesse men that are lower then Angels 1 Cor. 6.19 Men are bought and they must be his servants at his dispose that hath bought them and that is God And therefore they must not abuse their bodies and soules to fornication any sinne but glorifie God with both 2. That it
direct them to their journeyes end so that they misse not the marke they aime at What if many second causes be ignorant blind know not their own motions yet if they have guides infallible to lead them it 's sufficient to conduct them to the intended end If a seeing dog can lead a blind begger from place to place direct his motion to the desired end shall not the eye of providence lead any all second causes to their end Providence is an unerring thing and disappoints not God of his expectation The Pilot carries a great ship from harbour to harbour over the Seas through the stormes and fulfils the mind of the Master and so Providence carries the great wheels up and down to the very place appointed 4. The least motions of the wheels are not without providence some think that the great things in kingdomes and the world are transacted by providence but for they lesser they passe in a casuall manner providence reaches them not but the eyes were every where the wheels were full of eyes not a few eyes here and there one but in every part that so mans minde might be freed from such sinister thoughts as that there should be any motion of any wheel without the direction and influence of providence God hath made the least and greatest creatures and hee causeth the least and greatest motions Providentia ita cura● omnia ut unum aliquid ita singula ut si illud curaret unicum August in Confess And the Schoolmen say that providence is infinita in omnibus infinita in singulis Let us pitch our thoughts upon some lesser motion the dispensation of a lot the fall of a haire from the head the preparations of the heart the answer of the tongue these are all of the Lord and directed by providence the earth loseth not a pile of grasse the trees not a leafe the water not a fish the aire not a bird without an ordinance of providence 5. Providence orders the motion of the rings and wheels in all parts all the world over not one two or three wheels had eyes but all foure had eyes round about them God by his divine providence ordered things as well in Babylon as in Sion Providence wrought in Aegypt and in the red Sea As there are wheels in all parts of the world in all Kingdomes of the earth so there are eyes in all those wheels 6. The works of God in disposing and governing second causes are admirable glorious and beautifull workes The wheels were full of eyes fitly disposed wisely carried on certainly attaining their ends Could we see the eyes in the wheels we should never fault the workes of God in the world but stand and admire their glory and beauty when the heavens are vailed with clouds we have sowre and discontented thoughts of the heavens themselves but when the clouds are gone that we can see the Starres those eyes of heaven then we admire their beauty and glory and certainly it 's a most glorious sight to see the heavens full of starres in a cleare night and it 's no lesse glorious to see the eyes in the wheels and the choice acts of providence in all their turnings and windings Caussin saith the world in all its parts is ruled like a paper with musick lines and if wee could see those lines they would be as glorious as lines of gold 7. The motions of the wheels are such as that they hold out a providence to all there is something in the wheels that none can reach and something that any may see they are full of eyes and the weakest may see one providence or other if not all the eyes yet some of them there be mysteries in the wheels to exercise the greatest and eyes to satisfie the weakest As no man but sees the stars in the heaven at one time or other so no man but may see the eyes in the wheels That evill doth not over-run all and the wicked devour the good argues a providence In one of the Conanie Islands Johannes Metellus saith there is a tree which drops water at every leafe and sufficeth the Inhabitants and their flocks being a drie Island without water Mithridates when in his cradle had his clothes consumed with lightning and his body not toucht A father and a son shipwrackt at sea the son sail'd to shoar upon the back of his dead father In these particulars and such like providence doth eminently appeare VERS 19. And when the living creatures went the wheels went by them and when the living creatures were lift up from the earth the wheels were lift up 21. When those went these went when those stood these stood and when those were lifted up from the earth the wheels were lifted up over against them Here we have 1. The motion of the wheels farther commended unto us 2. Their station 3. The time of both THe motion was forwards upwards and downwards and for the time of their motion and station it was when the creatures moved or stood as the Cherubims moved so moved the wheels forward upward downward and when they stood still the wheels stood The kind and manner of their motions with their rest depended on the living creatures they moved equally at their motion What 's meant by the lifting up of the wheels must be inquired for Angels to be lifted up is not strange they are heavenly creatures and heaven is their habitation But for the wheels to be lifted up that is very strange wee must search out the sense for into heaven they were not lifted Expositers leave us in the dark all except one that I have met with passe over this difficulty and what I find in that one is this the lifting up of the Angels and the wheels referre to the supreme cause and seems to tell us that inferiour and superiour causes wheels and Angels are under the regiment of the first cause and if wee take the words actively as Montanus doth render them viz. the living creatures in lifting up themselves from the earth the wheels lift up themselves also and that is they looked up to heaven for direction and assistance which may well be called a lifting up themselves Psal 25.1 Vnto the Lord do I lift up my soul that is to thee do I look for counsel comfort strength If wee take the words passively when the living creatures are lift up from the earth the wheels were lift up then I will give you my thoughts what the sense may be and it 's this the lifting up is not meant of lifting up to heaven but to service when God should more then in an ordinary way let out himself to the Angels give them new light new strength and so lift them up to great service then the wheels also were lifted up proportionably to do their parts and the words in the Text invite me to conceive it to be the sense because it 's said The spirit of the living creatures was in the wheels
the Angels that in reverence to them the women are to be vail'd and it 's a great honour to Christ that Angels reverence and adore him 6. They are carefull to prevent all offence in their ministrations either of God or man of Christ or any creature they cover up their bodies their feet that nothing obscene may be seen and give distaste nothing excellent be seen and draw to an over-valuing and Idolizing of them so wise and cautious they are and this addes much to the glory of Christ that his servants the Angels never give advantage to men or devils to reproach their Lord and Master Alas how much doth Christ suffer by us even by Ministers and others in their ministrations Men see our weaknesse our pride our vain-glory miscarriages many wayes and rejoyce in our flesh even when Christ is reproached But Angels passe through all their imployments so that they are blamelesse and Christ made beautifull whom they serve 7. That Angels are furnished for their ministrations they have wings to flie and wings to cover their bodies what ever may make them and their services acceptable speedy successfull they have it and this is for the honour of Christ those he imployes in his work hee inables and accommodates they go not forth empty unqualified he sent Apostles and fill'd them with his Spirit hee gives gifts to men and wings to Angels VER 24. And when they went I heard a noyse of their wings like the noyse of great waters as the noyse of the Almighty the voyce of speech as the noyse of an host when they stood they let down their wings HEre is a farther description of the Angels by their going their noyse their standing and letting down their wings The principall is the noyse of their wings and that I shall make most inquiry into A difficulty incounters us in the beginning of the Verse when they went I heard the noyse of their wings rather when they did fly was the noyse of their wings then when they went The originall will help us something in this strait it 's otherwise there thus the words are read And I heard the noyse of their wings like the noyse of great waters as the voyce of the Almighty when they went so that there the originall brings it in and so wee may take it thus the noyse of their flying was as the noyse of great waters and the noyse of their going as the voyce of the Almighty or rather thus by going we may understand their motion the execution of their office and that made a great noyse which is amplified and set out by divers similitudes The first similitude is of great waters waters that run among the stony and rocky mountains make a terrible noyse gulling into the earth and threatning the foundations of the mountains hence Job 14.19 the waters are said to weare the stones they eat into them making concaves and chambers therein and for their noyse in the 46. Psalm v. 3. there it 's no gentle murmuring but a roring the Sea roares so that it 's heard in some places many miles The second similtude is as the voyce of the Almighty or the voyce of God some understand hereby a great voyce because it 's the usuall dialect of the Hebrew tongue to expresse great things by saying they are things of God as Cedars of God for tall and great ones Psal 80.10 11. Rivers of God for great rivers and full of waters Psal 65.10 Mountains of God for high ones Psal 36.6 so a trembling of God 1 Sam. 14.15 for a very great trembling and in like propriety of speech the voyce of the Almighty for a great voyce some truth in this may be granted but somewhat more then a great voyce in generall is to be looked at Psal 18.13 it being a Vision and Hieroglyphicall things presented to the Prophet therein we must therefore refer it to that in Psal 29. even the thunder which is called the voyce of the Lord vers 4. The voyce of the Lord is powerfull the voyce of the Lord is full of Majesty it breaks the Cedars yea the Cedars of Lebanon and so to that Ps 18.13 The third Similitude is the voyce of speech some mystery lies in this that their noyse should be like an articulate voyce the speech of man And two things may be intended in it either the speech of man that is upon some terrible designe and so speaks grievous words even words of death and so it holds analogie with the other similitude of Waters and of Thunder or else by voyce of speech the noyse of their wings the judgements they executed did speak and proclaime Gods commands his wrath and the peoples sins if the judgements seemed terrible as they were indeed the cutting down of a kingdome the ruine of the chiefest City and people in world the voyce of speech was God commands God is angry you are guilty and we must proceed The 4th and last similitude is as the noyse of an host this is a dreadfull noise there is beating of Drums sound of Trumpets clattering of Armour jumping of Chariots rattling of wheels neighing stamping prauncing and rushing of Horses the roaring of Cannons the clamors of men wounded groanes of men dying Carry me out of the Host for I am wounded saith Ahab O the dolefull complaints that are there such as would astonish a man of spirit to heare the noyse of the Angels was such a noyse Observ 1. That the judgements of God executed upon kingdomes cities persons are very dreadfull they are like roarings of the Sea when great storms be and mighty Navies are dashed in pieces and sunk into the deeps they are formidable as the noyse of an Army marching or fighting How dreadfull were the plagues of Egypt that in Exod. 9.23 24. when hail thunder and fire were mingled together was very grievous such as never was the burning of Sodome was dreadfull yet Jerusalems judgement was sorer Lam. 4.6 all their pleasant things were spoyled women and maids ravished in the streets their mighty men troden under feet young men and virgins crushed troden down as grapes in the Wine-presse Priests and Elders dyed for famine children swooned in the streets powred out their souls in their mothers bosomes for want of bread and water pitifull women sod their children of a span long and made meals of them they were slain in the Sanctuary terrors were round about and no way to escape left if they looked for comfort there was none to give it Princes were hanged up by the hands those did weare scarlet imbraced dung-hils Sabbaths Sanctuary Law Vision all failed prevailing fire was in their bones death they longed for and found it not God was against them their enemies prospered and mockt at them and their Sabbaths Where 's your God what 's become of all your worship sacrifice prayers fastings they clapt their hands hissed wagged their heads and said of Jerusalem Is this the perfection of beauty the joy
within shee was all glorious within so if Christs Throne the outside of it be so glorious what is hee in the Throne all glorious all glory Joh. 1.14 Wee beheld his glory the glory as of the only begotten If Apostles saw glory in him being on earth in his low condition what did our Prophet see in him being above the firmament in his Throne and glorious condition The Scriptures set him out not only to be glorious but glory Psal 24.8 King of glory Jam. 2.1 Have not the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ the Lord of glory in respect of persons The word Lord in the second place is not in the originall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but thus it stands there have not the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ the glory so that Christ is glory and the glory the glory of heaven the glory of the world the glory of Sion the glory of the soul and not only is Christ glorious and glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but hee is Heb. 1.3 the brightnesse of glory that is spotlesse perfect intense exceeding glory hee is the brightnesse of the glory of the Father or the Fathers glory shines out most brightly and intensly in the Son the Fathers glory in the whole creation is but darknesse to his glory in Christ and therefore he is brightnesse of glory and every thing that comes from Christ hath some beames of glory in it his works are called glorious Luke 13.17 they rejoyced for all the glorious things done by him the liberty he purchased is glorious liberty Rom. 8.21 his Church is glorious Ephes 5.27 his Gospel is glorious 1 Tim. 1.11 6. That Christs Throne must not be of common stone but precious ones of Saphires the pavement of God was of stones or bricks of Saphire Exod. 24.10 and Christs throne must be of Saphires the Church is Christs Throne visible and conspicuous as the heavens Jerem. 3.17 Jerusalem is called the throne of the Lord and the Churches under the Gospel are the throne of Christ hee sits in the Congregations and bears rule in them Rev. 2.13 I know where thou dwellest where Satans seat or throne is there was a congregation of persecutors Idolaters and unclean parties for such sinners are mentioned in the 13. and 14. verses and this company was the seat and throne of Satan many congregations are thrones of iniquity and shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee Psal 94.20 But godly congregations are the Seat and Throne of Christ Now as the conscience which is the invisible seat of Christ must be pure 1 Tim. 3.9 holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience so must the visible Seat of Christ be pure the congregation where hee will sit and reigne therefore the promise is Isa 54.11 12. that the state of the Church under the Gospel shall be better then it was under the Law there all stones were laid in the building but here should be a difference made God wll lay stones with faire colours Saphires Agats Carbuncles and pleasant stones and that it 's meant of Gospel-times and Churches the words following in the 13. verse shew All thy children shall be taught of the Lord which Christ applies to these times Joh. 6.45 So then the Churches now are to be of Saphires such as have a heavenly vertue and purity in them not of Sand-stones Tode-stones or any High-way-stones they are fitter to make Satan a seat then Christ a Throne 1 Pet. 2.5 they are called lively stones not dead stones that have no true grace in them but lively ones they must be that make a house a throne for Christ Stones that it may be a solid building lively that it may be a usefull profitable building and Saphire that it may be a pure and glorious building 7. Judiciary power is put into the hand of Christ not only as God but as man there was the appearance of a man above upon the Throne there sate the Sonne of man Acts 23.3 and sitting upon the Throne imports power and power judiciall therefore when Christ tels his Disciples of sitting upon the twelve thrones hee tells them also of judging the twelve tribes of Israel Mat. 19.28 and that Christ had such power and that as Sonne of man appeares Joh. 5.27 The father hath given the Son authority to execute judgement because hee is the Son of man verse 22. hee hath committed all judgement to the Son both judgement of actions things and persons Acts 17.31 God will judge the world in righteousnesse by that man hee hath ordained the last judgement shall be by Christ even that great judgement So particular judgements here as now Christ sate in judgement upon Jerusalem and sentenced them to death and captivity And because judgement is opus potestatis an act of power therefore Christ himself tels us that all power in heaven and earth is given unto him Mat. 28.18 8. The Lord Christ actually ruleth the world and all things in it hee sits upon the Throne and exerciseth his power and authority 1 King 2.12 There sate Solomon upon the throne of David his Father that is hee ruled the kingdome and all the affaires of it so Christ sitting upon the Throne presents to us his active ruling the Prophet might see hee held the globe of the world in his hand that hee raised tempests out of the North sent abroad the four living creatures in the severall parts of the world that hee orders the wheels and causes them to stand or go at his pleasure the Lord Christ is not out of office or idle now in heaven though hee sits upon a Throne of glory at his Fathers right hand hee is not neglective of the world he upholds it by his power Heb. 1.3 hee sends out his Angels to minister unto his verse the last hee still gives gifts to men and provides for his Church Ephes 4. and makes the Word the favour of life or death to men hee restraines the wrath of enemies and hedges up their wayes hee makes use of them as rods to drive his stragling sheepe into the fold hee subdues hearts and spirits to himself and protects them being subdued hee discovers confounds the enemies plots and persons 9. The Lord Christ doth govern all with great tranquillity and with great facility hee sits upon the Throne and doth all that imployes quietnesse of mind A sedate temper there is no passion or perturbation in him hee is a Lion for his power a Lamb for his meeknesse hee rules by counsell and wisdome in much quietnesse Act. 17.31 he judgeth in righteousnesse and what hee doth is done without difficulty let him speak the word and presently it 's done if hee bid Nebuchadnezzar go and sack Jerusalem carry them away to Babylon hee goes hee accomplisheth his will fully 10. That Christ is ready ever to heare the causes and complaints of his Church he sits upon the Throne other Judges are of the Bench and Throne and parties agrieved
is too glorious for mans eyes to behold and therefore is presented here more remote and hidden from the Prophets sight There was the appearance of fire in the colour of Amber or within the outward fire this was glorious that exceeding glorious the fire in the fire here is infinite glory shut up obscured by that is lesse glorious You heard before of Christs humane nature that it is very glorious much more the Divine that communicates the lustre glory to the humane 2 Pet. 1.17 a voyce came from the excellent glory glory that excell'd all the glory of the creature that excell'd all the apprehensions of creatures 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the glory greatly becoming or great becoming glory it 's glory that greatly becomes the great God and such is the glory of the Divine nature of Christ it 's excellent glory and if it were let out a little in the strength and fulnesse of it wee should be sunk by it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Glory is a weighty thing the Hebrew word for glory signifies gravitas pondus onus intimating that glory as it 's a bright so a heavie thing brightnesse and weightinesse are in it 2 Cor. 4.17 it 's call'd a weight of glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the glory of Christs divine nature would oppresse us if fully opened to our view Moses made a request to God which if he had granted would have been his death Exod. 33.18 I beseech thee saith he shew me thy glory God tels him in the 20th verse no man can see me and live my glory will be a consuming fire unto thee yet God is pleased to communicate the glory of his divine nature here to Moses in that way might do him good and not destroy him hee puts him into the cleft of a rock and shewes him his back parts vers 23. which was some glorious body as Testatus thinks some humane shape as others conceive and not unlikely to be Christ Oluaster Osiander as hee appeared in his transfiguration full of glory and Majesty thus God condescended to Moses and so here to the Prophet Non cadit sub sensum corporis Juxta possibilitatem humanam Fulgor ille tantae majestatis nos in nihilum redigeret hee sees the glory of the divine nature in the humane which in it self is not subject to mans sense but through divine dispensation is made visible according to mans capacity If wee cannot behold the Sun for its brightnesse nor one creature behold another without prejudice to it self how can wee behold the exceeding glory of the Creator of the divine nature without great danger without death the glory of such Majesty would turn us into nothing 5. That Christs actions even judicary ones are glorious there was brightnesse round about his presence sitting in judgement and his actuall punishing of the Jewes with war famine captivity are all full of glory This supreme Majesty executing judgement fils all with brightnesse and glory when the Angels came with power to judge Babylon Rev. 18.1 2. it 's said the earth was lightned with his glory Acts of judgement and justice are glorious and shining Ribera saith this is meant of judgement upon Rome which shall be evident to all and fill the world with the glory of it when it shall be fulfilled God was glorious as well in destroying the Egyptians as delivering the Israelites there is so much beauty and brightnesse in works of justice and judgement that they are call'd the glory of the Lord Numb 14.21 The people upon the ill report brought upon the Land of Canaan murmured thought to make a captaine and go back to Egypt whereupon God threatned to smite them with the pestilence and to disinherit them Moses interposes intercedes for them God answers him and saith Rev. 14.11 The fire and brimstone they are tormented with is vindicta Dei ex qua quasi sumus produt Dei laus gloria Alcazar At thy request I have pardoned them but as truly as I live all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord what 's that the glory of his just judgements upon them in the Wildernesse and shortly after Corah and his confederates were swallowed alive by the earth Zimri and Cosbi were run thorow for their wickednesse and in these and other particulars was the glory of the Lord seen evidently Would Magistrates and those have power in their hands shine and be glorious let them execute judgement and see justice done Solomon by that act of judgement between the two Harlots touching the dead and the living childe became renowned What a glorious act was in it when Darius set Daniel at liberty and caused his accusers to be cast into the den of Lions If men in place would punish delinquents executing justice in the feare of God without respect of persons distemper of affections or any sinister respects they would be like Angels and enlighten the City and Kingdome with glory such a one is Sol justitiae and fils the world with the beams of righteousnesse hee is dextra Dei and relieves Kingdomes Cities Families with equity VER 28. As the appearance of the bowe that is in the cloud in the day of rain so was the appearance of the brightnesse round about HEre is a description of that brightnesse or glory which compassed him that sate upon the Throne himself was glorious the brightnesse of glory and he had circumferentiall brightnesse and this is resembled unto the Bowe in the cloud that which we call the Rainbowe first mention of it is in the 9th of Genesis verse 13. where God puts double honour upon it 1. He ownes it for his I do set my Bowe in the cloud and 2. Makes it foederall a token of the Covenant between him and the earth and so by divine institution is exalted to a supernaturall work a sacramentall signe I shall speak something of this Bowe Philosophically and something Theologically 1. Philosophically the generation of it is in the wombe of a cloud and the cause naturall viz. the reverberation of the Sun-beames in a moyst cloud for when there is a moyst cloud opposit to the Sun fitly disposed to receive the Sun-beams and to reflect them then is the Rain-bowes birth and appearance the figure of it a semicircle sometimes lesse but never greater sometimes there hath been a Rain-bowe in the night from the beames of the Moone which is weak and like a white cloud Mylichius observes In lib. 2. Plin. that from the Sunne hath sometimes been a white Rain-bow but constantly the Rain-bowe is of divers colours specially blew green and red all very glorious Thaumantis filiam propter admirationem In Theaeteto and wonderfull drawing the eyes of the world to behold it whereupon Plato thinks it 's called the daughter of Wonder it 's so admired The naturall signification of it is rain and moyst weather Scaliger saith if it be in the morning it
the glory of the Lord but it 's the greater mercy that God will put forth creating power in a vision and present the likenesse of his glory in variety of things according to the capacity and for the advantage of his servants so Moses saw the glory of the Lord in the Mount so Christ shewed unto Peter James and John his glory in his transfiguration Matth. 17. Isaiah hee had a glorious vision Chap. 6. and so glorious it was that it 's called the glory of the Lord and this did the Prophet Isaiah see in the likenesse and appearance of it not in its own nature for no man you ever could so see the glory of God and live Jehovah this name by the learned Jewes is called 1. Hashsham that name emphatically as the chiefest of all the rest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The name of four letters 3. The great Name 4. The blessed Name for the high Priest did pronounce it only once a yeer and that in the Temple at the feast of Propitiation at the solemne blessing Numb 6.24 25. 5. The glorious Name 6. The name Separate shem Hammephoraash because separate from ambiguity saith Maimon from our knowledge saith the son of Maimon 7. The name appropriated to God because it is most proper to him 8. The name of remembring because it brings to mind the being of God 9. The name of essence or being Shemhaguetzem a name of substance Plebi sub poena mortis ejus pronuntiatio vitita fuit Buxtorf Qui pronuntiat nomen Tetragrammatum non habet partem in suturo seculo The Jewes are exceeding superstitious about this name and say it must not be pronounced they term it The unexpressible Name themselves never utter it but Adonai or Elohim in stead of it they tell us that the womans son in the 24. of Levit. was accused of blasphemy and stoned to death because hee pronounced this name Jehovah And there is a relation of the Priests of the Sanctuary that not knowing how to read this name being written by Moses * Spasmo correpti interiorint Gerard. in loc Shindl. they laughed and were smitten to death of God for it It 's strange to think what miracles the Jewes attribute to this name Moses had it writ in a Rod or Staffe Christ got it and put in his thigh and so by vertue of it they both did all their miracles they tell of one David a Magician that by vertue of this name went in one day a journey of ten dayes But to leave Rabbinicall conceits This name Jehovah imports essence Ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fuit est being existence and by it the eternity independency efficacity and truth of God are laid before us together with his being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and here it 's attributed to Christ and tels us that hee hath his being of himself he is compleat in himselfe and an infinite sea of being Eternall Rev. 1.8 Independent Rev. 1.5 Efficacious giving being life and perfection to all creatures Hebr. 1.2 3. Col. 1.16 17. hee is true yea truth fulfilling the promises 2 Cor. 1.20 Observ 1. Jesus Christ who sate upon the Throne here is JEHOAVH of the same essence with the Father and the Holy Ghost hee is not consimilar but consubstantiall with them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alius pater alius filius alius spiritus but not aliud pater aliud filius aliud spiritus not like the Father or like the Spirit but the same the one differs from the other personally but not essentially 1 Joh. 5.7 There be three that beare record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one one in essence one in propriety one JEHOVAH Jer. 23.6 the Prophet speaking of Christ tels us what his name shall be called Jehovah Zidkenus The Lord our righteousnesse and in Mal. 3.1 Jehovah whom you seek shall suddenly come to his Temple by the name JEHOVAH is meant Christ who is God and this is of great concernment it 's the foundation of our faith in Christ of our worshipping of Christ of our salvation by Christ and of all good from Christ if he were not Jehovab the Gospel should be a lie our faith a fancie our worship false the Church a fable all men lost and that for ever 2 Again that the glory here represented in this Vision was not the glory of a creature but of Jehovah there was a man presented to his eye but Jehovah to his faith it was the appearance of the glory of the Lord not only of Christ as man but as God-man and so the glory was glorious glory And when I saw it I fell upon my face Here is the first effect of it when hee had this vision beheld this glory hee was amazed so smitten with the lustre of it that hee could stand no longer but down hee falls and that upon his face There is frequent mention in Scripture that upon visions and appearances of Divine Majesty the servants of God have falne down Dan. 8.17 He fell upon his face and Saul Acts 9.4 hee fell to the earth Abraham hee fell on his face when God appeared to him Gen. 17.3 The three Disciples Christ took up into the mount when they saw the glory and heard the voyce they fell on their faces There is a great difference between falling on the face and falling on the back To fall forward notes respect and humility but to fall backward is a note of sin and guilt Abraham fell twice upon his face the Prophets oft the godly when they are to deale with God fall forwards the wicked backward Cadere in faciem observantiae est humilitatem semper olet sed retro cadere peccatum supponit aut indicat Jer. except old Eli. Wee read not of any good man that fell backward but all those came to take Christ Joh. 18.6 went backwards and fell to the ground So Isa 28.13 Precept upon precept that they might go and fall backwards There be divers reasons or grounds of mens falling upon their faces in visions and apparitions of God 1. The Majesty of God that is present in these visions and some way or other represented to those that have the Visions so Dan. 10.9 2. The lustre of Divine glory that accompanies the same this made Paul and his company fall to the ground Act. 26.13 14. 3. Some new and dreadfull thing that appeares in the Vision as here creatures with four faces and four wings wheels rings full of eyes and so high that they are dreadfull 4. Sense of their owne frailty and weaknesse Visions having divine Majesty Glory and some terriblenesse in them have wrought strange effects upon infirme men they have lockt up their senses and put them in a deep sleep Dan. 8.18.10 Chap. 9. made them sick and faint many dayes Dan. 8.27 much grieved and troubled their spirits Dan. 7.15 taken away their strength and comelinesse Dan. 10.8
into his mouth 3. In the whole race and work of his Ministery that hee might not be discouraged seeing that hee had seen such a vision heard such a voyce Thirdly to confirm the Jewes Gentiles all to whom this Prophecy should come of the Majesty reality and truth of it Note 1 God sets one sense awork after another his eye was taken up before with the sight of great and glorious things now his eares come to be exercised and fill'd with as choyce truths as the eye had objects and after there is a roll for his taste and touching God lets in mercy and goodnesse to us through every window and door Note 2 That grat feare doth astonish and hinder judgement hee heard a voyce but knew not whose it was feare doth disturb and surprize Ezekiel Chap. 2. vers 1. And hee said unto mee Son of man stand upon thy feet and I will speak unto thee IN the former Chapter wee met with great deeps and difficulties mysteries of a high nature and if any light have appeared in the opening of them let him that sits upon the Throne have the glory of it by his assistance we have gone over sundry rocks and through some deeps In quibus liberis gressibus locut onis nostrae in●repidum pedem ponamus Greg. Hom 9. in Ezek. and we desire by the same assistance to proceed and now wee are come from the Mountains to the Plains where wee may walk with more safety The glory of the Lord being set out in this government of the world in his dispensations towards his Church in the antecedent Chapter The scope of this Chapter is to corroborate Ezekiel smitten down with the sight of glory and to shew his Call unto his Propheticall Office the parts are the confirming sending and instructing of the Prophet 1. His confirmation and comforting is laid down in the two first verses 2. His sending in the three next to the sixth verse 3. His instructing from the sixth to the ninth after that mention is made of a roll in the two last verses and in the beginning of the next Chapter which is of much concernment as in its place may appeare The confirming of the Prophet is 1. By the Word of God in the first verse 2. By his Spirit in the second verse In the first verse are two things considerable 1. The party speaking 2. The matter spoken where you have 1. The Appellation Son of man 2. The Command Stand upon thy feet 3. The ground of it which is a gracious promise And I will speak unto thee It 's Christ who speakes and unto Ezekiel whom hee calls the Son of man the originall is the sonne of Adam that is of earthly man for as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15.47 The first Adam was of the earth earthly and Adam signifies earth or red earth whereof his body was made and when we read in Scripture this phrase it notes out to us 1. Our base beginning that we are of the earth there is no man be he never so excellent high wise honourable but hee is the son of Adam terrae filius a brat of the earth Psal 49.2 Both low and high Adam and Ish the base man and the noble man as the Chaldee renders it both the sons of Adam and the sons of Jacob are so they have all one father and all one mother and that is the earth 2. Our frailty that wee are earthen vessels and soon broken in pieces Psal 9.20 Put them in feare O Lord that the nations may know themselves to be but men they think themselves gods but shew them thy power thine iron Rod and Scepter bring a War a plague a Famine amongst them and then they will know that they are frail weak men 3. Our worthlesnesse and fitnesse to be rejected who amongst us regards a clod of the earth an earthen vessell silver or golden ones some prize and prize too much but earthly ones are contemptible Nations are as the drops of the bucket and small dust of the ballance Isa 40. and are not they contemptible things this made David to wonder and say Psal 144.3 Lord what is man that thou takest knowledge of him or the son of man the son of earth that thou makest account of him that thou visitest him Psal 8.4 and Job 7.17 What is man that thou shouldest magnifie him and that thou shouldest set thine heart upon him these be high and great expressions to be bestowed upon so poor a thing as man is to take knowledge of him and such knowledge as to make account of him as to minde him visit him magnifie him to set the heart upon him this is exceeding much from an infinite great and glorious God towards worthlesse men and not credible if the Spirit of God had not revealed it 4. Our end that wee are earth thence wee came and thither we must Gen. 3.19 Dust thou art and unto dust thou must return This title of Son of man I do not find given to any but three in the Book of God once to Daniel Chap. 8. 17. Vnderstand O sonne of man forty times and upwards to Christ and above eighty times to this our Prophet but with this difference Ezekiel is called the Son of man by another Christ alwayes calls himself so Ezekiel is four times in this Chapter so called and it 's given him 1. To prevent pride say some Expositers hee had a glorious Vision was among Angels saw the Lord Christ and was to enter upon the Propheticall Function the least of which might stir corruption and make pride blossome when Paul had his rapture into the third heavens and heard things unutterable what saith he 2 Cor. 12.7 Lest I should be exalted above measure through the abunance of revelation there was given to mee a thorne in the flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet me c. Paul was in danger of being lifted up but God prevented it and so here Ezekiel is minded of his mean originall his frailty worthlesnesse and end that he might not be exalted with his Vision or Office we are exceeding apt upon the receit of great mercies to grow proud and confident which are evill in any but worst in a Prophet and therfore to prevent these hee calls him Son of man 2. To frame his spirit to a right estimate of himself through out the whole course of his Office that what ever good was done Nihil supra naturae humanae vires sibi assumeret he should still remember he was the Son of man and it was God not he that did it It 's a hard thing to keep the heart in an humble frame and fitnesse to give unto God the glory of what he doth by us God helps our Prophet by this title which runs through the whole Prophecy and took such interest in his heart that whatsoever was seen heard said or done by him the Son of man the glory of all was given to Christ the Son of
the worm his mother Job 17.14 you see what stock and kindred Job came of and wee are all of the same house therefore afterward in the 25. Chap. v. 6. It 's said man and the Son of man is a worm and so David I am a worm and no man Psal 22.6 velo Ish hee was enosh sorry sinfull miserable man he was Adam an earthly man but not Ish a man of worth strength a worm son of the earth weak contemptible Coniah Jer. 22.28 in the vulgar is called vas fictile an earthen vessell a broken Idoll or a vessell in which is no pleasure and then followes O earth earth earth heare the word of the Lord Princes Priests and People he calls them all earth to minde them of their mean originall to bring down their spirits to make them sensible of their weakness and condition they were hastening unto Isai 40.6 All flesh is grasse and all the goodlinesse thereof is as the flower of the field grasse withereth the flower fadeth because the Spirit of the Lord bloweth upon it surely the people is grasse 4. That the command of Christ is powerfull Stand upon thy feet saith hee and it proved efficacious let Christ speak and the thing is done By him were all things made Joh. 1.3 hee said Let there be light and there was light he said Let there be an earth and let it bring forth an it was so hee call'd forth things that were not and gave them a being under the Gospel how powerfull were his commands he bade devils depart the possessed and they did so he bade the winds and waves be still and they were so he called Lazarus out of the grave and he came forth presently there is infinite power in Christ and great yea oft exceeding great vertue goes forth with his commands he said to the Fishermen that were strangers to him Follow mee and they left all and followed him 5. That the Lord loves to incourage man to his duty hee saith not here stand upon thy feet only which might have sufficed but he makes him a promise and I will speak with thee I that am upon the Throne compassed with glory that have the rule of all the world in my hand I will speak with thee here was singular incouragement to this duty and so to other duties it 's mans duty to walk uprighty and to incourage unto it the Word saith No good thing will be with-hold from them that walk uprightly Psa 84.11 It 's our duty to believe and did not Christ tell Martha in a particular case that if she would believe shee should see the glory of God Ioh. 11.40 And told he not another that all things are possible to him that believeth Mar. 9.23 So Christ is lifted up that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Joh. 3.14 15. So for prayer it 's our duty but see what incouragement Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it Psal 81.10 and Whatsoever you shall aske the Father in my name hee will give it you John 16.23 To persevere and overcome is our duty and see Rev. 21.7 He that overcometh shall inherit all things and I will be his God and hee shall be my Son to give alms is mans duty as Luke 6.38 Give and it shall be given unto you good measure pressed down and shaken together and running over shall men give into your bosome 6. That the word of Christ is a sweet comfort to a soul troubled Stand upon thy feet and I will speak to thee thou art amazed cast down but my word will revive thee put life and spirits into thee What a comforting word is that of Christs Matth. 11. Come unto mee yee that are weary and heavy laden and I will refresh you and Ioh. 6.37 Him that cometh unto me I cast out in no wise Christ had the words of eternall life verse 68. and those must needs be sweet and acceptable to afflicted spirits and these words hee hath given us in the Gospel which is glad tidings the savour of life the power of God to salvation VER 2. And the Spirit entred into mee when hee spake unto mee and set me upon my feet that I heard him that spake unto mee THe Prophet being confirmed by the word of Christ in the foregoing verse here he is comforted and confirmed by the Spirit also What is meant by the Spirit must be opened some have conceived that when our Prophet fell upon his face at the sight of him and his glory that sate upon the Throne his spirit left him and hee lay for dead and so here by Spirit to be understood his soul or spirit returned entred revived him and set him upon his feet but this interpretation wee cannot admit for three Reasons 1. We never reade that ever any were stricken dead when God appeared unto them in Visions the utmost wee finde is that of Daniel Chap. 10. v. 17. Neither was there breath left in me through feare he was as a man out of breath but not without a soul hee had a deadly feare but was not dead 2. The Text it self confutes that opinion for in the last words of the former Chapter it 's said I heard a voyce of one that spake if Ezekiel had been spiritlesse soulelesse when hee fell upon his face it had been impossible for him to have heard a voyce 3. Had it been the return of his own spirit the words would not have been he set me upon my feet but I arose we must therefore leave that interpretation 2. By Spirit some understand an Angel and their reason for it is because it 's said He set me upon my feet the Prophet being among Angels and they seeing him down one lifted him up and set him upon his feet but this interpretation although it be Piscators I cannot commend unto you for First how could any of these Angels that had faces bodies wings and feet enter into the Prophet for here it 's said The Spirit entred into mee Secondly if it had been an Angel the words must have run thus rather then as they do one of the Spirits one of the Angels entred into me and not the Spirit By Spirit then understand that Spirit which was in the living creatures and in the wheels Chap. 1.20 Even the eternall Spirit of God and of this judgement is Jerome Gregory Calvin Junius Maldonate c. If their testimonies suffice not take the testimony of Scripture Chap. 3.24 Then the Spirit entred into mee and set me upon my feet and spake with mee and said Go shut thy self within thy house c. Here the Prophet repeating the same words sheweth that it was the Spirit of God he spake of and neither Angel nor his own spirit The meaning is this when Christ spake unto me and I heard his voyce presently I felt divine vertue the Spirit seised upon entred into mee comforted and confirmed me set me upon my feet and fitted mee to heare the
That men unable and unhonest in the Office of the Church set up by him were never sent by him hee gives gifts and graces to men and then sends them the Spirit entred into Ezekiel and then I send thee He hath the power of sending it depends on his will and that is sacred hee would not put in an insufficient or corrupt man upon any terms and therefore he hath set rules and lawes to shew what men hee would have in those holy Functions he hath given precedents of his own choosing Rom. 1.5 By whom wee received Grace and Apostleship first Grace and then Apostleship 2 Cor. 3.6 Who hath made us able Ministers of the new Testament The Lord Christs Ministers are able not only in parts but chiefly in the Spirit that is light and life in them such hee sends such hee approves and as for ignorant and evill ones see what the Lord saith Hos 4.6 Because thou hast rejected knowledge I will also reject thee that thou shalt be no Priest to mee Christ would not have a prophane ignorant man to be in that Calling 3. That those are sent of Christ may not delegate their power and execute the office by others but must do it themselves the Prophet might not appoint another being sent of Christ to the children of Israel I send thee and thou shalt say unto them thus saith the Lord Ambassadours are themselves to deliver their messages and not others for them or in their stead Ministers are Ambassadors and 2 Cor. 5.20 for Christ and do preach and pray in Christs stead who is their Head and Lord whereupon saith Paul Wo unto mee if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 And what 's the ground of it Vers 17. The dispensation of the Gospel is committed unto me I am commanded to do it I may not I dare not commit or delegate this trust this power to others Delegation is actus imperii an act of power and all the Officers of the Church must be obsequious not imperious therefore Hierarchists and those that substitute others to preach in their stead usurpe the power of Christ to whom it belongs to delegate men to preach in his stead and over thousands of Churches if he please 4. That those Christ sends and sets over people are by divine institution I send thee to the children of Israel he was not a Prophet to others but unto them and that by divine authority Act. 20.28 Take heed unto all the flock over which the Holy Ghost hath made you over-seers this was the Church of Ephesus and the Elders of it were set there by no lesse authority then that of the Holy Ghost the Office Power Jurisdiction over such a people is not humane arbitrary ad placitum but of divine institution 2. That many are call'd and seem to be Israelites which in truth are not the Jewes were call'd the children of Israel here and were so according to the flesh but they were not so in the Spirit they had not the principles of Jacob in them they walked not in his steps they had his name but not his faith they were call'd Israelites but were not true Israelites Rom. 9.6 they are not all Israel that are of Israel in the true sense of the Scripture they are not all Israel that is spirituall such as Jacob was men of Prayer wrestling with God prevailing like Princes but they are of Israel according to the flesh and fleshly Israelites to whom the promises pertained not in Matth. 8.12 they are called children of the kingdome but yet such as should be cast out into utter darknesse they thought themselves safe in being called so and conceiting themselves such but they were deluded and so now many thousands think themselves Christians Saints when in truth they are nothing lesse the very contrary enemies to true Christians and Saints The Papists boast that they are Catholiques Christians the Church of God but it 's in no better sense then these rebellious Jewes are termed the children of Israel What are titles when truth is wanting no other then a kind of blaspheming Rev. 2.9 I know the blasphemy of them that say they are Jewes and are not they were Jews by name and did reproach the Christians and the Lord Christ but were not Jewes in truth Rom. 2.28 29. Hee is not a Jew which is one outwardly in circumcision of the flesh but hee is a Jew which is one inwardly whose heart is circumcised and is one in the Spirit Now these men saying they are Jewes and were not did blaspheme much prejudice and wound the honourable name of being a Jew and what were they a Synogogue of Satan and now those think call themselves Christians and are not they blaspheme and wound that honourable name of Christians and so they that call themselves churches and are not they blaspheme and wrong that honourable name of Church Papists say they are the Church be it so it 's the church of Satan not of Christ they worship Idols not Christ they are Babel not Bethel they have the title not the substance 3. That when Gods people degenerate and fall to sinfull practices then they lose their glory and contract reproach before the Israelites fell to Idolatrous courses and violation of divine Law they were Gods Inheritance Deut. 4.20 his Portion Deut. 32.9 his peculiar Treasure Exod. 19.5 his Strength and his Glory Psal 78.61 his anoynted Ones Psal 105.15 they were so honourable in his account and precious in his eye that hee suffered none to do them harm he rebuked Kings for their sakes and hee gave Egypt a ransome for them men and people for their life Isa 43.3 4 God thought nothing too deare for them no titles too good a kingdome of Priests a holy Nation Exod. 19.6 but when they fell from him to sinfull and base courses then their honourable titles are turned into reproachfull and bitter ones they are called here Goiim prophane rejected pollution sterquilinium excrementa mundi so the Jewes accounted of the Gentiles and so God accounts of them here they judged so of the Babylonians and God metes out the same measure unto them in Prov. 14.34 it 's said Righteousnesse exalts a Nation but sin is a reproach to any people even to Gods own people it makes them vile hatefull Viles facit Syr. abominable to God and man and brings such terms as proclaims their shame Isa 1.10 God calls them Rulers of Sodome and people of Gomorrah Isa 57.3 sons of the Sorceresse the seed of the Adulterer and Whore an hypocriticall Nation Isa 6.10 a nation not desired Zeph. 2.1 a thievish Nation Mal. 3.9 the generation of his wrath Jer. 7.27 Loammi none of my people Hos 1. 4. See here the great evill is in Sin it is Rebellion against God 1 Sam. 12.15 not only great Sins Idolatry Murther c. but even all sin it 's a casting off God a withdrawing from his Laws Commands Authority as Hos 4.12 They have gone
and so to impudencie when the Calves were first mentioned in Israel the people trembled at it but afterwards they could kisse Calves and sacrifice to Baal Hos 13.1 and out-stand the threats of the Prophet Sin banisheth shame from its habitation so that the sinner and shame are disacquainted Psal 52.1 Why boastest thou thy selfe in mischief O mighty man Doeg boasteth of his bloodinesse that hee had kill'd the Priests at the command of Saul Zeph. 3.5 The unjust knoweth no shame Though men foam out their shame Jude 13. and glory in their shame Phil. 3.19 yet they will know no shame It 's an exceeding evill to be past shame to be impudent in sinning if ever God shew mercie to such sinners they must be ashamed What fruit had you in those things whereof now yee are ashamed Rom. 6.21 yee were impudent in committing but now yee are ashamed in confessing and remembring of them 2. That where there is an impudent face there is a hard stiffe heart if the heart were not stony before God the face would not be impudent before man Act. 7.51 Yee stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart there was brawnishnesse within and impudency without and a hard heart is one of the greatest evills Mercies prevail not what mercies had they in the Wildernesse in Canaan and yet they did not move them Miracles will not do it when they took Christ hee said I am hee and they all fell backward to the ground after this Peter cuts off Malchus his ear Christ heals it here were two miracles yet they did no good upon their hard hearts they went on laid hands on Christ who wrought the miracles bound him as a malefactor and thought to make him sure for doing any more miracles Pharaoh saw ten miracles the Israelites woar a miracle about them fortie yeers their clothes and shoes ware not out they were new at fortie yeers end yet these wrought not upon their hard hearts Pliny tels of a river in Lucania that turns leaves and sticks into stones It is not fasting and prayer will do it many are hardened in them There be waters that what ever is cast in they turn into stone and some mens hearts grow stonie in what ever Ordinances they are A hard heart is a grievous disease worse then the stone in the reins or bladder It was Nabals disease and death and most men are sick and die of that disease 3. That God sends his Prophets and Ministers about hard services such as are full of discouragements when they are look'd upon with a carnall eye Ezekiel had presently to object Lord wilt thou send mee to a people that is impudent I shall never make them blush to a people hard-hearted I shall never make impression on their spirits by any truths I shall preach unto them my labour will be in vain are they a rebellious nation do they rebell against thee and will they not much more rebell against me this is a hard task if thou regard'st not me yet regard thy truths What shall they be cast away about such a people as this O spare me and spare thy truths No saith God I send thee unto them and thou shalt speak unto them they are hard tasks that God puts his servants upon Isaiah was called to a hard service Chap. 6.9 10. to preach ruine and destruction to a people and so unwelcome he was that he saith Chap. 8.18 I am for a signe and wonder in Israel Jeremiah is set over nations and kingdomes to root out Quid est praed care nisi furorem populi in se derivare Luth. to pull down and to destroy Chap. 1.10 the Kings of Judah the Princes Priests and People he was to deal withall and Vers 19. it 's said They shall fight against thee Preaching provokes all sorts of men and so hard did Jeremiah find his work although God promised to be with him he was so derided saw so little good come of his labours that he resolved to lay down his Calling and to speak no more in the name of the Lord Jer. 20.9 Knox when called to preach he burst forth into an abundance of tears and so withdrew himself to his chamber and was full of grief and troubled till he was compell'd to preach Preaching is a warring 2 Tim. 2.4 and Preachers are souldiers hence Paul calls Timothy a good souldier of Christ and when we come to spoil and plunder people of their goods their lusts wills humours opinions and to take away their strong holds their carnall reasoning against Christ in the Gospel and wayes of God they are in a rage take up arms against us Paul fought with Beasts at Ephesus 1 Cor. 15.32 and they gored him and sought his death The Galatians that would have at first pull'd out their eyes for Paul thrust out their tongues against Paul hee was their enemy because hee told them the truth those cryed Hosannah a little before were ready to cry Crucifie crucifie hardly a Prophet or an Apostle but suffered by the hands of their hearers 4. Ministers should not so much look at the persons they are sent to or the event of their ministerie as at their Call I send thee saith God look thou to that trouble not thy self at the persons that are so wicked nor at the successe of thy ministerie but consider I have call'd and sent thee Gods will and command must content us support us what if wee be scoffed at reviled made the off-scouring and filth of the world yet here is the comfort of a true Prophet of a true Minister Christ sent him and hee that set him awork will pay him his wages whether they heare or heare not to whom hee is sent the Nurse hath her wages whether the childe live or die and wee are a sweet savour of Christ unto God in them that are saved and in them that perish 2 Cor. 2.15 The souldier hath his respect and reward whether hee kill men or take them alive and wee are acceptable unto God as well in the deaths as the lives of men This consideration comforted Isaiah Chap. 49.4 5. I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for nought yet surely my judgement is with the Lord and my work with my God and though Israel be not gathered yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord and my God shall be my strength Hee would look at God and not at the difficulty of the work or discouragements from men and want of successe sometimes God gives large incouragement promises hope successe providing for our infirmities at other times bare a commission and command must suffice to do that would make ones heart ake it 's his prerogative to send whom he will and upon what service he will Let us lay aside all discouraging thoughts look to our Call rest in Gods will and know it's honour to be in his service though nothing come of it wee are acceptable to him if not to men and shall
accept of mee a tender father men go on a long time in a carelesse sleepie or scorning way but when sicknesse comes death is before them and they ready to take possession of an eternall condition then their conscience stings them and they feel what an evill it is that they have opposed neglected undervalued the Prophets and Sons of the Prophets The Adulterer will be roused out of his pleasing dream and soft bed at last Prov. 5.12 13 and say How have I hated instruction and my heart despised reproof and have not obeyed the voyce of my teachers nor inclined mine eare to them that instructed me there will be strong convictions in the bosome of such a finner and conscience will sound in his eares and set upon his spirit those truths of his teachers that formerly have been despised When Pharaoh and the Egyptians were in the red sea and the old world had the flood about its eares what languages did their consciences speak did they not tell them they had had Moses and Noah Prophets and Preachers of righteousnesse and gave no ear to them did they not sting them to death and make them cry out and say O that wee had hearkened to those servants of the living God whilest wicked men are hearing sometimes their consciences are netled and gall'd Act. 5.17 The high Priest and all with him when they heard and saw what was done by the Apostles they were filled with indignation and John 8.59 the Jewes were so vexed at Christ that they took up stones to cast at him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 disserrabatur Super Martyrem Stephanum dentibus colubrinis stridebant quem quasi serpentem in corde habebant Aug. Serm. 6. de sanct and those that heard Stephen Act. 7.54 they were cut to the heart and gnashed on him with their teeth with the Saw of anger malice and envie they were even sawn in sunder and gnashed on him with their teeth and if the Word were so terrible while they had shifts to evade the stroke of it and comforts to allay the power of it what would it be to them at last when all shifts and comforts should fail them Some have confessed their consciences have been so cudgell'd at the hearing of some men as they never were in all their dayes before others that truths have been so darted into them they could not get them out in a week or moneth after they have stuck like arrowes in their livers and have been half-deaths unto them Mortes dimidiatae what will the Word be at last unto rebellious sinners it will arrest them and be most terrible unto them Zach. 1.6 Did not not my words take hold of their fathers it did and will do in these dayes John 12.48 the Word of Christ will judge and condemn sinners be an Anathema Maranatha unto them and they shall know it 8. That the Prophets shall be witnesses at last for or against their hearers they shall know there hath been a Prophet amongst them his person his pains his truths his life his sufferings his death will all come in for witnesses one day every Prophet every Preacher that Christ sends is a witnesse as well as an Officer or a Minister Acts 26.16 I have made thee a Minister and a witnesse all faithfull Ministers are Christs witnesses Act. 1.8 They beare witnesse of Christ and his Doctrine and if wee receive not him and his doctrine they will be Christs witnesses against us when the Lord Christ shall say to a people I have knockt at your dores many yeers together but yee would not open unto me I tendered life and salvation grace and glory in my Gospel and Ordinances but you would none of them you had your Farmes Oxen Wives to take up your thoughts Mammon to serve honour and praise to seek of one another examples of men to follow c. as for mee and my Prophets my Ministers you despised or only gave the hearing and that was all and my charge is not false here are my witnesses What say you to it Speak you Ministers of such a City and such a place What did you not preach many a Sermon shed many a teare swet many a drop make many a prayer for them did yee not earely and late watch for the good of their soules c Yea Lord but they would not receive us they would not believe our report wee made of thee they would not take thy yoke upon them c. wee shook off the dust of our feet against them This will be dreadfull when such witnesse of the Prophets comes in against hearers VER 6. And thou Son of man be not afraid of them be not afraid of their words though bryers and thornes be with thee and thou dost dwell among Scorpions be not afraid of their words nor be dismaid at their looks though they be a rebellious house THe Prophet being struck down with the sight of his glory which sate upon the Throne in the former Chapter is lifted up and comforted by the Spirit in the two first verses and call'd to publique service in the three next and that among a wreched rebellious people In this and the two next Verses the Lord Christ gives him instruction concerning his Office First negatively in the 6th verse Be not afraid of them I have made thee a Prophet and it 's not for a Prophet to feare the face of man Secondly positively in the 7th verse where hee informs him whose words he must speak unto them Thou shalt speak my words unto them it 's not for a Prophet to speak his own words but the words of him that sends him Thirdly both negatively and positively in the 8th verse Be not thou rebellious like the rebellious house they will not heare me submit to my Lawes walk in my wayes they go after their own counsels wils lusts but be not thou like them and then positively open thy mouth and eat that I give thee In the 6th verse you have 1. The Appellation Son of man 2. The Instruction Prohibition or Duty Be not afraid which is often repeated in the Verse 3. The causes and grounds of feare are specified which are divers First the quality of their persons thou maist pretend they are great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Princes and Nobles but be not afraid Mehem from them The second cause is their words they will reproach thee and seek by evill speeches to discourage thee but Be not thou afraid of their words The third is their looks they will look strangely frown bitterly swell against thee and brow-beat thee Be not dismaid at their looks The fourth is their disposition 1. Metaphorically by Briers Thorns and Scorpions they will scratch and teare sting and kill 2. Literally They are a rebellious house Feare not be not afraid be not dismaid c. These words are four times mention'd in the verse to shew our aptnesse unto fear and to shew the forwardnesse of the Lord Christ
will countenance thee 1 Sam. 15.25 26. so Elijah was no white-livered Prophet but a man of metall 1 King 18.15 17 18 19. As the Lord of hosts liveth before whom I stand speaking to Obadiah I will surely shew my self to Ahab this day I but Jezabel hath vow'd thy death and Ahab makes search for thee all the land over and if thou be found thou art a dead man Well saith Elijah I will shew my self and when he came into his presence what a salute had he Art thou hee that troubleth Israel I 'll have thee dispatched one way or other is the Prophet daunted now no but replies I am not he but it 's thou and thy fathers house send and gather to mee all Israel what a commanding what a suspicious word was this he might have thought that this man would get power about him and offer violence to him and his house thou thinkest to have my blood but I will have the blood of all the false Prophets c. Who might not think that Elijah rather was King then Ahab 2 Chron. 26.17 18. When King Vzziah would have burnt incense to the Lord the Priest resisted Vzziah and thrust him out of the Temple they that are in publike place are to be men of courage and therefore they must not feare 3. God is with his those hee calls and imployes in publique service Josh 1.9 Why should hee be strong and of good courage for the Lord thy God is with thee Jer. 1.8 Jer. 1.19 Be not afraid of their faces for I am with thee to deliver thee Gods presence should put life into us when inferiour natures are backt with a superiour they are full of courage when the Master is by the Dog will venture upon creatures greater then himself and feares not at another time hee will not do it when his Master is absent When God is with us who is the supreme it should make us fearlesse it did David Psal 118.6 The Lord is on my side my help I will not feare what man can do unto mee let him do his worst frown threat plot arm strike the Lord is on my side he hath a speciall care of mee hee is a shield unto mee I will not feare but hope as it 's in the next verse I shall see my desire on them that hate mee I shall see them changed or ruin'd our help is in the name of the Lord but our feares are in the name of man God takes speciall care of men in publique place the Angels of the Church are as the stars in his right hand Rev. 1.16 hee holds them fast and it 's said of Christ Isa 49.2 That he was hid in the shadow of his hand in the protection of his hand is the Septuagint Vmbra est symbolum protectionis it defends from the heat of the Sun that was in Judea exceeding hot God hides Christ yea all are eminent and under who belong to him in a speciall manner and delivers them from danger Zach. 2.5 I will be unto Jerusalem a wall of fire round about who shall dare to come neer it then to hurt the Magistrates Ministers or people there Some think it alludes to the Cherubim that with a fiery flaming sword kept Paradise others to the fiery Chariots round about Dothan 2 Kin. 6.17 where Elisha was either of these is good and notes protection but there is another and it may be more suitable interpretation and it 's this When they travelled in the wildernesse oft wilde beasts would be assaulting them specially in the night when they laid down to rest then they made a circular fire about them and so no beast Lion Wolfe or Leopard dare middle with them the fire was a wall to them and hence the expression seems to be taken that God when wilde beasts wicked men should offer violence to Jerusalem hee would be a wall of fire round about it 4. Those are in publique place are in Gods place I have said yee are Gods Psal 82.6 Moses was to Aaron in stead of God Exod. 4.16 And so Ministers they are in Christs stead 2 Cor. 5.20 and they must be like unto God fearlesse of men but dreadfull unto men It 's an ill thing to see a drunken god to heare a swearing god and it 's as ill to see a trembling fearfull god a Magistrate a Minister afraid of man when as they having the Image and authority of God stampt upon them are to make others especially sinners to quake Rom. 13.4 The Apostle bids evill doers not the powers be afraid why they are the Ministers of God and beare not the sword in vain they must not feare but make others do it so did the Apostles and Prophets John made Herod quake and Paul mad Felix tremble here were Lambs scaring Lions 5. They that are godly true Christians their godlinesse their cause suffers by their fearefulnesse they have receiv'd another spirit then that of the world 1 Cor. 2.12 even the Spirit of God which is no timerous cowardly Spirit the Apostle denies that 2 Tim. 1.7 God hath not given us the Spirit of feare but of power of love and a sound minde where there is a base feare there is sicknesse of mind no soundnesse and there is little love and lesse power those that have the Spirit of Christ and the Spirit of God it is not for them to feare have you the Spirit of the Lord of Hosts in you have you the Spirit of Jesus Christ in you and will you feare and tremble before men that have the spirit of devils in them the Spirit of the Lord of Hosts is like himself and the Spirit of Jesus Christ is like Christ himself he was not afraid of any if therefore men in place have this Spirit they must not feare for they do dishonour Christianity and the Spirit they have received from their Lord and Master Jesus Christ 6. There is not that in wicked men as should make us to feare them if wee consider they are Briers Thorns Scorpions contemptible things rather to be despised then fear'd if they had truth grace and God with them then they might be feared they have not God with them they are a rebellious house and hee is against them they cannot pray to fetch in might to make them dreadfull if they say a prayer the prayer of the wicked is abomination to the Lord they are full of feares themselves and have no true valour in them that arises from other and better principles then they have if they had truth of grace God with them then wee might feare them but their guilt their wickednesse doth weak●●hem and multiply their feares can wicked men be without feares Isa 8.12 feare yee not their feare they have a slavish distracting heart-smiting tormenting hellish feare Saul feared the people 1 Sam. 15.24 Is there not a spirit of feare upon many in Ireland and England too have not Judges feared the Courts they have sate in 6. God will
unpreaching Doctors and Prelates 4. That the gift of Prophecie is from Christ hee reached out a Hand and gave the roul of a Book hee is the great Prophet and hath all Prophecie and propheticall power in himself and whom he pleaseth hee can make a Prophet and inspire with propheticall vertue and where hee pleases even in Babylon as well as in Canaan VERS 10. And hee spread it before mee IN this Verse yee have the opening of the Roul the fulnesse and contents of it Hee spread it before me that is unrouled it and laid it open before me The word in the originall signifies to expound and interpret and wee may conceive that Christ did not only spread the roul before his eyes Expanditur quando hoc quod obscure prolatum fucrat per latitudinem intellectus aperitur Greg. but caused him to understand it by this spreading he saw it was written within and without but by Christs interpretation of it hee knew that there were written in it lamentations mourning and woes It was written within and without The Hebrew is in the face and in the back that is on both sides such writings the Greeks call Opisthographa that is writings writ on the backside fill'd within and without Lavater thinks that on one side were writ their sins and on the other Gods judgements this fulnesse of the Roul intimates either the length of the prophecie as Vatablus conceives or a multitude of evils hanging over the heads of the Jewes as Maldonate thinks or the abundance of revelations committed to the Prophet as Jun. not what Jerome and Bellarmine conceit that the writing within and without should note the literall and mysticall sense of the Scripture Lamentations mourning and woe Here is the contents of the Roul bitter and sad things Amara moesta the burning of the Temple the overthrow of Jerusalem the captivity of the Jewish nation and all the evill should befall them the word Kinim Lamentation noteth a plain complaint a sad speech testifying the sorrowes of mind as David in the case of Absalom O Absalom Absalom c. this was a naturall complaint and simple lamentation suddenly breaking forth without all premeditation Mourning is more it 's deeper and upon consideration the word in the Hebrewis from Hagah to meditate and noteth suspirium ab imo pectore tractum when one hath mused much and seriously upon the cause and matter of grief and then fetcheth deep sighs such as are inditiall of intense and bitter sorrowes that is the mourning here Isa 38.14 I did mourn like a Dove the Hebrew is I will meditate noting mourning that comes from meditation the Doves mourning is inward Cranes chatter and lament Doves mourne Woe This word vehi noteth not only the voyce in lamentations and grones in mourning but knocking of the breast and clapping of the hands together as is used in greater afflictions thus some Interpreters understand it but I conceive by Woe here is meant the threatnings of Judgement or Judgements threatned according to those woes in Matth. 23. and the fruit of them as it 's Lam. 5.16 Observ 1. That divine mysteries are unknown to men though very easie and familiar till they be unfolded this Roul could the Prophet never have comprehended the meaning of if Christ had not opened it take all the types and ceremonies of the Law there were mysteries wrapped up in them which neither Aaron nor Moses had known if they had been left to their own abilities those elements used in Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord we should never have known the mysteries of them if heaven had not helped us would we think the Rain-bow an Embleme of mercy if Scripture had not held it out to us Indians Heathens do not cannot so apprehend it take any divine mysteries they are too transcendent for our capacities there be depths in them that wee cannot fathome 2 Cor. 2.14 the naturall man cannot know the things of God they are spiritually discerned there must be a great mysterie wrought in him before he can discern mysteries 2. It 's the Lord Christ that opens and interprets mysticall things efficaciously unto the faithfull hee spread the Roul before Ezekiel and made him to understand the mysteries of it what is the Scriptures but a roul folded up a book sealed till Christ open it we may all say as the Eunuch being demanded if he understood what he read said How can I except some man guide mee Act. 8.30 31. so unlesse Christ guide us and lead us into the mysteries of the Word wee cannot understand Rev. 5.5 When none could open the booke sealed up the Lion of the tribe of Judah could do it He hath strength to untie all knots and a spirit to search all deeps Christ himself is the greatest mysterie and he is the great opener of mysteries Matth. 11.27 All things are delivered to mee and my Father and no man knowes the Father save the Son and hee to whom the Son will reveal him if ever God be made known savingly to the soul it must be by the Lord Christ and hee doth not reveal unto all but to whomsoever hee will to his Elect ones from others hee conceals him they have the Letter the Roul but not the mysterie thereof their light is darknesse But there be some in the world that Christ doth interpret the riddles and dark things of the Scripture unto see that place in Joh. 15.15 Hence first saith Christ I call yee not servants for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doth but I have call'd you friends for all things that I have heard of my father I make known unto you these were Christs friends Christ revealed all to them but from other all was kept it was Christ revealed unto the Prophets what they had and to the Apostles what they had the Scripture may well be call'd the Revelation of Christ you have one Book call'd so Rev. 1.1 The Revelation of Jesus Christ which God gave unto him to shew unto his servants that is his faithfull ones if we would therefore understand the Roul of the Book the mysteries in the Scripture wee must look up to Christ and intreat him to spread them before our eyes and to interpret them to our hearts 3. That the servants of God must not refuse to receive and propound large and sad messages to the people Here is a Roul writ within and without and fill'd with lamentations mourning and woe Here was liber mortis a book of death and deadly things this the Prophet must receive and declare to the people how ever they take it people would gladly heare from the men of God good tidings they would have a law of kindnesse in our lips our mouths to drop honey they would have us sons of consolation but wee must speak what our great Lord and Master puts into the ●oul if hee bid us preach lamentations mournings and woes we must do it 4 That the Lord gives
give him notice thereof c. Thou shalt surely die Moth tamuth in dying thou shalt die that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt certainly die amongst the Hebrewes where there is repetition of the word by an Adverb Gerund Participle or the Verb it self it ever increaseth the signification of the first word 1 King 8.13 I have surely built thee an house it is in the Hebrew In huilding I have built thee an house so in 1 Sam. 26.25 Thou shalt do great things and shalt also still prevail the Hebrew is faciendo facies valendo valebis in doing thou shalt do in prevailing thou shalt prevail by such duplication of the words the signification is intended and so in these words thou shalt surely die In his iniquity That is for his iniquity so the Preposition ב Beth it must be understood if he would take notice of his sin repent and leave it he should not die but because he goes on in it he shall die for it Hosea 12.12 there you find Israel served for a wife the Hebrew is Beishshah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a wife but the sense inforceth it to be rendred for a wife and so here for his iniquity His blood will I require at thy hand His death shall be imputed unto thee and thou shalt answer for it I will charge it upon thy head and deal with thee as a murtherer thou hast shed his blood and I will avenge it on thee so the word inquire imports Gen. 9.5 Surely your blood of your lives will I require c. Require is thrice in that verse and what is meant by requiring the blood or life of man is fully exprest in the next Verse Who so sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed so then when blood is shed and life is lost Gods requiring of it is to have blood for blood and life for life hee that sheds blood or suffers blood to be shed when he may prevent it he shall be responsible for it God is wronged by shedding of blood and will have satisfaction for it therefore he is said to make inquisition for blood Psal 9.12 Gods requiring mentioned Deut. 18.19 is expounded by Peter of destruction Acts 3.23 What death is meant in this Verse is doubted among Interpreters whether the death of the body or of the soul or of both the Ancients interpret it of the death of the soul the soul of the wicked going on in his sin and of the Prophet neglecting his duty shall die for it some later Expositers would have it meant of the death of the body some temporall judgement to cut them off by but wee see many ill Prophets that neglect to warn the wicked of their evill wayes and many wicked men go on in their sinfull courses and neither are taken away by temporall judgements the young Prophet was slain by a Lion 1 King 13. because he was lesse faithfull then he should have been and Jonas was cast into the deeps buried in the belly of a Whale because hee declined the service of the Lord but these were extraordinary acts and chastisements not vindictae true reall punishments I conceive therefore by death is meant all calamities leading unto death H●c loco accipitur sanguis pro animae damnatione licet etiam pro corporis caede pernicie possit intelligi Pint. in loc and the death of soul and body at last if faith and repentance did not intervene if eternall death be due to the sinner dying in his sins it 's threatned to the Prophet for not telling him of his sin otherwise a temporall punishment for an immortall soul lost eternally by the negligence of the Prophet should be all the recompence made and that is not compensatio sufficiens nay frequently there should not be any for ill and idle Prophets do live as long as healthfully and happily as others and die without any hand of God observable upon them Observ 1. The Lord Christ knowes who are wicked and vile we guesse at men and presume oft wrongfully they are such but the Lord knowes who are such in truth and is not deceived hee knowes the Goats and Swine as really as the Sheep and Lambs hee can distinguish between the vile and precious between his jewels and the reprobate silver he never mis-titles or miscalls any he knew the Scribes and Pharisees were hypocrites and therefore call'd them so hee knew that Judas was a Traytor Non eadem est sententia tribunalis Christi anguli susurronum Jer. Ep. 39. and therefore branded him with that name he call'd Herod a Fox Nathaniel a true Israelite and in neither was he mistaken 2 Tim. 2.19 The Lord knoweth them that are his yea and those that are not his Christ could tell Ezekiel what the people of Israel were better then himself that dwelt amongst them hee told him they were Briers Thornes Scorpions a rebellious House if all the world besides had said so and not Christ it had been no great matter the world is full of errour it mistakes but when the Lord himself who is infallible shall pronounce a man wicked then is he wicked indeed there is great weight in it let us look to it what hee saith in his Word of us if he call us wicked proud froward c. we are so 2. The power of life and death is in Christs hand when I say to the wicked Thou shalt die he hath authority over their lives and can at his pleasure pronounce them dead men Act. 3.15 he is the Prince of life and Rev. 1.18 hee hath the keys of hell and death hee can let out the soul from the body and let it into hell when hee will The life of man which is most deare to him is at the will of another He spake with authority when hee said Bring those mine enemies that will not have mee to rule over them and slay them before mee Luke 19.27 When men are arm'd with power over our lives they are much feared Judges when they go forth to keep Assizes make Counties to quake and Princes when they go forth to war make Kingdomes tremble Now Psal 2.10 11. Kings and Judges are commanded to serve him with feare to kisse him with subjection lest hee be angry and command them to be slain or tell them they shall die If Kings and Judges that make others feare must feare the Lord Christ and submit unto him how should all under them do it then Christ knowes us what we are how we have sinned what wee deserve and can in a moment destroy us or proclaim it our consciences that wee shall die in our iniquities and eternally suffer for them It was hee awakened Judas's conscience and set it on fire let out his life and sent his soul to perdition Be you great or small he is the Lord he is ruler of the Princes of the earth all power is in his hand and though he be the Lamb of God
ride in triumph after great Victories then they scatter gold and silver plentifully and give the greatest honours and gifts unto men So Christ reserved the powring out of his Spirit in such plenty and invisible signes till his glorifying therefore Austine saith The Prophets had not another Spirit who foretold Christ to come but this is meant of that manner of giving which appeared not at all before They under the Law had not the Spirit given in that way and so largely but they had the same Spirit 2 Pet. 1.21 and Luke 1.41.67 3. The Spirit of Christ which the godly receive is not a Spirit of bondage but of comfort of grace and freedome this Spirit did not straiten the Prophet but enlarge him he was imprison'd with his own feares beate downe under sense of his owne worthlesnesse but this Spirit of Christ did set him at libertie and lifts him up againe and works graciously in him this Spirit is oft call'd the Comforter and that emphatically because no man no Angel no Ordinance doe or can comfort like the Spirit it helps against feares sinnes guilt temptations straitnesse of heart this made the Apostle say Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is libertie 2 Cor. 3.17 It knocks off bolts locks shackles it makes way for his owne graces to act and act with livelinesse and if there be strong holds within strong lusts that oppose it 's a Spirit of power and will carry all before it 2 Tim. 1.7 God hath not given us the Spirit of feare but of power such power as will conquer all the rebellions of a mans will bring all into order captivate every thought unto Christ and make a man able to doe the whole will of God an Ezekiel to prophesie to a rebellious people and to venture his life amongst them 4. Those Christ sends unto the Church he gives his Spirit unto Ezekiel hath the Spirit enters into him before he enters upon his office men voyd of the Spirit are not meet to be Church-officers all things in the Church come under spirituall consideration the people are to be professors of holinesse ordinances are holy and what should unholy officers doe there if they have not the Spirit of Christ they are none of his and what should they doe in the Church of Christ he will aske them one day Friends how came you in hither I sent you not 5. The Spirit performes what Christ promiseth In the 22th verse Christ bids the Prophet goe forth into the plaine and tells him he will there talke with him but being come thither the Spirit entred into him and spake with him Christ and the Spirit are one in Essence one in will and one in operation so that the Prophet was not deceived but it was the same as if Christ had spoken to him I will be with you to the end of the world saith Christ his Spirit was with them and so in that it was made good that he was with them the Spirit makes good what ever the Lord Jesus hath promised when it comes and it cannot be otherwise for these three Father Word and Holy Ghost are one and agree in one 1 Joh. 5.7 6. There is a language of the Spirit within a man The Spirit entred into mee and spake with mee How it speaks is hard to make out unto you Wee have heard that the Devill hath spoken in parties bewitched and possessed and you have text of Scripture for it Act. 19.13 14 15. When the sonnes of Sceva adjured the evill spirit in the Name of Jesus the evill spirit answered Jesus I know and Paul I know but who are yee Thus did the Devill expresse himselfe in the possessed and surely the Spirit of God can speak vocally in those where it dwells but that is not the ordinary language of the Spirit A man speaks to another Quando conceptum mentis alteri manifestat and as the Schools say of Angels Halens they speak manifestando suum volitum so we may say the Spirit speaks unto us by manifestation of its minde unto us Joh. 16.13 What the Spirit shall heare that shall be speake and he will shew you things to come and ver 14. he shall receive of mine and will shew it unto you 7. The proceedings of God with his own servants are various and darksome the Prophet was bid to preach oft before in the 22. verse he is called forth into the plaine and when he is there the Lord bids him goe and shut himselfe up in his house as it is in this 24. verse Now he will have him prophesie and presently he suspends him from his office and libertie neither is there any change in God but he by these various dispensations fulfills his eternall counsells 8. God considers the weaknesses of his servants beares with and provides well against them Ezekiel was timorous the House of Israel rebellious and like enough to offer violence to the Prophet if he should have presently propounded the dreadfull judgements of God that were at hand against Jerusalem and therefore he takes care of him and commands him to shut up himselfe that so he might be safe and not at first be discouraged at the wickednesse of the people or weightinesse of his worke God is full of bowells and tenders his when put upon difficult imployments VER 25. But thou O Sonne of man behold they shall put bands upon thee and shall binde thee with them and thou shalt not goe out amongst them THis verse speaks of the bands impos'd upon the Prophet and what these were we must inquire The word is Gnavothim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Syriack renders catenae chains the Vulgar vincula bands Montanus funes ropes and not any ropes but funes contorti adeoque densi thick twisted ropes as the originall signifies Now these ropes or bands be taken literally by some and metaphorically by others Literally thus They seeing the Prophet sad seven dayes and now astonished at what he had seene and heard and observing some strange looks and carriages from him they thought he was or would be besides himselfe and therefore they bound him it was a conceit among Jewes and Gentiles that Prophets were a kinde of mad-men Hos 9.7 The spirituall man or as the Hebrew is the man of the Spirit is mad they thought him out of his wits our Prophet had received the Spirit of Christ and that wrought in him and the people might be apt enough to judge him a mad man 2 King 9.11 When a Prophet came to anoint Jehu said his Companions Wherefore cometh this mad fellow Prophets were reputed mad fellows and that not onely by the Jewes but by Gentiles also Plato in Phaedro saith Quidam divino beneficio sunt infani Martyr in 2 King 9.11 K●mchi thinks that the Prophets were so call'd quod dum vaticinarentur speciem praeferrent hominis alienati cum à mente tum à sensibus ut Prophetae Sibyllae and Tullie in his
five yeeers passed in that condition Chapt. 1.2 and yet their proud hearts not humbled their old enmity to the Prophets not worn out 2 Chron. 36.15 16 17. God sent them messengers Prophets and they mocked them misused them till the wrath came and there was no remedy and therefore he brought upon them the Chaldeans who led them into captivity where they were servants and slaves their wronging of the Prophets was the cause of their suffering and yet all their sufferings did not subdue their spirits and work them to entertain the truth and walk peaceably towards the Prophet they bind him in the land of bondage the Plough breaks the earth in many places but doth not better it but leaves it as it was nothing is put in by the Plough if the Master dung it and sow good seed in it when the Plough hath broken it then there is like to be a harvest but if nothing be sown weeds nettles thorns will grow where the Plough hath been and so afflictions may break our estates our bodies our sleep yet if nothing be added if God do not sanctifie them the harvest will be tares and not wheat 6. It 's no new thing for Prophets and Ministers to be roughly intreated and laid by as uselesse things Ezekiel 400. yeeres before Christ is shut up bound kept from coming among the people and this misery hath befallen the Prophets in severall ages 1 Kin. 18.4 Jezabel cut off the Prophets and then they were hid by fifties in caves Jeremy was shut up in the prison in the Kings Court Jer. 32.2 most of the Prophets and Apostles were restrained from their publique imployments shut up in prisons banisht or driven into corners and that proves oft a great sadding to ingenuous spirits not so much in that they suffer but because they are out of imployment but let those are in such conditions or may shortly be consider it 's no strange unwonted thing such afflictions have been formerly 1 Pet. 5.9 The same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world besides God hath need of no men nor any of their parts VER 26. And I will make thy tongue cleave to the roof of thy mouth and thou shalt be dumb and shalt not be to them a reprover for they are a rebellious house HEre is a farther and full manifestation of his silence but there is doubt concerning the meaning of the words The Septuagint hath it I will bind thy tongue and this bond it 's conceiv'd was a divine precept God commanding him to be silent and thereupon it was that he forbare to speak unto them Others take the words literally and hold that the use of his tongue was taken away so that neither in publique nor in private hee might speak unto them but be a wordlesse and tonguelesse man amongst them whereupon they being troubled and wondring at what had befallen Ezekiel might search out the cause and become more willing to heare those sad messages he had to deliver But salve aliorum judicio I conceive the words are not to be taken in their literall sense 1. Because the Prophet is bid in the the next Chapter verse 9. to prepare him meat and to eat thereof which he could not do if his tongue had cleaved to the roof of his mouth the motion of the tongue is needfull to that action 2. It 's plain from the 14th verse of that 4th Chapter that it cannot be meant literally for there the Prophet speaks Then said I ah Lord God behold my soul hath not been polluted c. We are then to take the words figuratively thus Thou shalt be as a man whose tongue cleaves to his mouth as a man that is dumb such a one shalt thou be amongst them and this sense the words following infer Thou shalt not be to them a reprover they would not have thee to tell them of their sins of my judgements and the danger thereupon and thou shalt not be a reprover unto them and it 's the Scripture language to call them dumb that are in the place of Ministers and Prophets and preach not Isa 56.10 Observ 1. The Lord hath the power over Prophets lips to shut and open them at his pleasure I will make thy tongue cleave to the roof of thy mouth c. If God forbid the Prophets to speak they must be dumb as contrary if hee command they cannot be silent Amos 3.8 The Lord hath spoken who can but prophesie The Jewes objected against the Prophets that they prophesied no good unto them only sad things and were messengers of death the Prophet answers it 's true but God hath commanded hee hath spoken and who can be silent who shall dare not to deliver and heare his message he is a roaring Lion will tear in pieces disobedient Prophets and people he was to speak and to be silent when God would have it so Balaam knew this Numb 22.38 Lo I am come unto thee O Balak have I now any power at all to say any thing can I with canning do any thing so is the Hebrew the word that God putteth in my mouth that shall I speak it was in God to open or shut his mouth hee could not with all his canning do ought Prov. 16.1 The preparations of the heart in man and answer of the tongue is from the Lord and so the silence of the tongue and cessation of the spirit in man is from the Lord Prophets are to be silenced and suspended not when Prelates people will but when the Lord will 2. People are impatient of reproofs Thou shalt not be a reprover unto them for they are rebellious they would not indure him to deal roughly with them to convince them of their sins many affect the Prophets being shining lights but when they are burning lights they hate them when they scorchmen w th through reproofs and evident convictions of their guiltinesse then they hate them and seek to mischieve them Isa 29.21 Hee that reproved in the gate had a snare laid for him and Micaiah is a hatefull man to Ahab 1 King 22.8 because hee prophesied not good to him reproofs are veritates mordaces they have salt and fire in them which few men can indure especially being sore and therefore they wil imprison and murther the Prophets Put this fellow into prison saith Ahab vers 27. Let John reprove Herod and he is presently clapt into a prison Luke 3.19 Reproofs evidence to men that their sins are known awaken guilt and crosse them in the things they love and therefore they cannot indure them like Moses rod in hand it was without hurt but thrown down it became a Serpent so reproofs thrown forth prove Serpents to men they molest and sting them 3. The peoples sins do cause God to cut them short of spirituall mercies here was a Prophet furnished with the treasure of heaven and the Lord shuts up his mouth and makes him a dumb Prophet unto them and why so
abound with souldiers and munition have great priviledges yet all these protect it not from invasion from destruction Ierusalem is besieged ruin'd burnt with fire this Ierusalem was the City of David 1 King 9.24 and God did great things for Davids sake Isa 37.35 it was the holy City Neh. 11.18 a strong Citie Psal 31.21 the joyous city Isaiah 32.13 the city of solemnities Isa 33.20 the perfection of beauty and joy of the whole earth Lam. 2.15 it was the city had the Temple the Oracles and Ordinances of God and greatest priviledges that ever city had therefore it 's said Kings should bring presents thither Psal 68.29 it was the city that God himself chose above all others to put his name there 1 King 14.21 and hereupon it was call'd oft the city of God Psal 46.4 the city of the great King Psal 48.2 the city of the Lord of hosts vers 8. and for her situation it was among mountains Psal 125.2 had towers and bulwarks Psal 48.12 13. and was accounted impregnable Lam. 4.12 The kings of the earth and all the Inhabitants of the world would not have believed that the enemy should have entred into the gates of Ierusalem it was conceived to be of invincible strength therefore the Iebusites when David came to take it placed the lame and blind to defend it thinking them sufficient to keep out David and all his strength 2 Sam. 5.6 7 8. but notwithstanding all these particulars this was the city to be visited Ierem. 6.6 and why shee was wholly oppression in the midst of her shee cast out wickednesse as a fountain waters Vers 7. this was the city to be besieged and made desolate Ier. 19.8 yea a curse Ier. 26.6 Ninive was the great city Ion. 1.6 but it 's greatnesse preserved it not Neh. 3. Babylon was the golden city and yet it ceased Isa 14.4 Ierusalem exceeded all in favours in priviledges in promises of safety yet this city is invaded taken and laid even with the ground let none therefore confide in cities in any created strength in any arme of flesh men are exceeding apt to do it some trust in Chariots some in horses some in cities some in Princes and great men but you will finde horses and chariots and cities vain things Psal 62.8 and for men that there is no trusting in them at any time therefore saith David Trust in the Lord at all times yee people powre out your hearts before him God is a refuge for us other things are not and because you will think men are considerable hee addes Surely men of low degree are vanity and men of high degree are a lie they will deceive if you confide in them 6. The sins of a people and city may be so provoking at such a heighth that neither God nor man will shew mercy to them God bids him set an iron pan between him and them shewing that both himself and the army that hee should bring would be as iron to them they had iron hearts and necks Isa 48.4 and would not yeeld to God and now he would be so to them and cause their enemies also to be such God would set his face against them and the faces of their adversaries Great sins make God inexorable severe Ezek. 14.13 14. When the Land sins grievously I will stretch out my hand and cut off man and beast and though Noah Iob and Daniel were in it they should deliver but their own souls all their prayers tears righteousnesse interest in God should extend no farther then themselves God now had shut his eyes and would not look upon them he had stopt his ears and would not heare them praying nor others for them hee was set against them resolved to punish them therefore no miseries no complaints no sufferings of the living or groans of the dying could prevail with him and when the army came it used them severely enough 7. The Lord sends out his Declarations before he causes destructions this shall be a sign to the house of Israel God steals not upon men by publique judgements before they heare of them but tells them of their coming while they be at some distance The Prophets heare of them and they proclaim and discover them some way or other this fact of the Prophets would quickly spread and be at Ierusalem and so might be a warning unto them God sends out the lightning before hee thunders hee frownes before hee smites and gives tokens of his coming in wrath before he executes it VER 4 5 6 c. Lie thou also upon thy left side and lay the iniquity of the house of Israel upon it according to the number of the dayes that thou shalt lie upon it thou shalt beare their iniquity 5. For I have laid upon thee the yeeres of their iniquity according to the number of the dayes three hundred and ninety dayes So shalt thou beare the iniquity of the house of Israel 6. And when thou hast accomplished them lie again on thy right side and thou shalt bear the iniquity of the house of Judah forty dayes I have appointed thee each day for a yeere 7. Therefore thou shalt set thy face toward the siege at Jerusalem and thine arme shall be uncovered and thou shalt prophesie against it 8. And behold I will lay bands upon thee and thou shalt not turn thee from one side to another till thou hast ended the dayes of thy siege IN these Verses the Prophet proceeds in the typicall besieging of Ierusalem and the words declare to us the duration of the siege which was to be many dayes and the cause of it their iniquity The word Iniquity notes here not sin but the punishment of sin and in that sense it 's oft used in sacred language Isa 53.6 The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all that is the punishment of our sin and Psal 69.27 adde iniquity unto their iniquity that is punish their iniquity punishment is an inseparable companion of sin and therefore it hath the name of sin And the Prophet was to beare their iniquity that is the punishment of it this he did representatively by this act of lying upon his side so long setting out the longsuffering of God who had born with the sins of this people and not punished them as they deserved our Prophet did not here represent Christ who bare our iniquities but at the command of God hee sustained the person of the ten Tribes and kingdome of Iudah and therefore it 's said verse 5. I have laid upon thee the yeers of their iniquity I have appointed thee by lying on thy side so many dayes to represent the time they have offended mee by their Idolatries and sins attending the same and so to set out my patience and aggravate the punishment of their sin Christ bare the sins of men to take away the punishment of it the Prophet to increase the same For our better understanding of these Hieroglyphicall passages in the
thorns some dung but it is the dung of beasts which being dried by the wind and Sun burns well and supplies the necessity of the needy but the dung of man for firing hath scarce been heard of this he should take and in the embers and ashes thereof bake his miscell any bread to set out the great scarcity of fuell both in their fiege and in their captivity this was a very irksome businesse for a Prophet to gather the dung of men to dry it make fires with it and prepare his diet with such unsavory fire and that in their sight not privately this did much trouble him but especially to eat such bread this sets out also the great haste and hunger they should be in they should not stay till the bread was baked in an Oven but presently hastened their dough to the fire though never so unwholsome Vers 13. Defiled bread Because in Lev. 19.19 they were forbid to fow their fields with mingled seed it hath been conceived thence that this was call'd defiled bread because of the mixture of grain wheat barley beans c. but mingling of seeds neither made the ground nor the bread polluted for he is not after bid to change the seeds but the dung it was that made it polluted bread the baking of it in so noysome a fire and this set out the course and polluted diet they should eat not only when they were besieged in Ierusalem but when they should be in Babylon Vers 14. I have not eaten of that which dieth of it self or is torn in pieces neither came there abominable flesh in my mouth Whosoever toucheth or eateth of these was unclean Lev. 11.39 40.22.8 Deut. 14.21 and so for their excrements the Lord is carefull they should not be defiled with them Deut. 23.10 11 12 13 14. Lev. 5.3.7.21 It doth not appeare any where in Scripture that bread prepared thus is defiled only here in the former verse God calls it so and the Jewes had tender delicate stomachs which did abhor all unclean things and therefore they used much washing and oft washed their hands before meat The strength of the Prophets argument lyeth thus Lord I have never eaten any abominable polluting flesh and how shall I now eat defiled bread I have ever kept my self from what thy Law hath forbidden and how shall I now defile my self with that which nature it self abhors Vers 15. Cowes dung for mans dung This was lesse terrible to nature this relaxation was of advantage to the Prophet not to the people for when the siege came they did more horrid and unnaturall things then eat bread bak'd in Cowes or mans dung as you may read Lam. 4.10 Vers 16. I will break the staffe of bread The staffe of bread is a metaphoricall expression borrowed from staves used by those are weak sickly and aged by their staves they help and support themselves such a staff is bread to the frail nature of man and man that hath it blessed unto him finds it as a staffe to stay up his fainting spirit This phrase imports two things First the vertue and nourishment comes by bread and hence it 's said to strengthen mans heart Psal 104.15 Secondly the bread it self there may be much bread and little vertue in it and contrary little bread and much vertue in it as in the Widows meal and oil 1 King 17.14 But when God will break the staffe of bread hee ever takes away the one if not the other the plenty of bread if not the vertue of it Lev. 20.26 When I have broken the staffe of the bread ten women shall bake their bread in one Oven and they shall deliver you their bread again by weight and yee shall eat and not be satisfied The Greek for breaking the staffe of bread renders it afflicting with penury of bread as breaking of bread Act. 2.46 notes plenty and communicating of food so breaking the staffe of bread implies want and scarcity Psal 105.16 He called for famine upon the land and brake the whole staffe of bread so that the land could not sustain them and Isa 3.1 The Lord of Hosts doth take away from Jerusalem and from Judah the stay and the staffe the whole stay of bread and the whole stay of water God would take away the plenty and the vertue hee would not blesse either unto them hence it 's said Hos 4.10 They shall eat but not have enough not be satisfied Mich. 6.14 to drink and not be filled to cloath themselves and not to be warm Hag. 1.6 Some would here understand by breaking the staffe of bread to be meant only a deficiency not an insufficiency but I conceive God would take away both their bread and the blessing of that remain'd according to that in Deut. 28.17 Cursed shall be thy basket and thy store God would take away panem nutrientem panis nutrimentum that the blessing being remov'd they might be weakned and the bread being remov'd they might be consum'd The word Makak signifies contabescere to pine away Vers 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a man in a consumption and not only so but foetere foetidum fieri to become noysome and loathsome and so it 's us'd Psal 38.5 My wounds stink and are corrupt so they should not only consume but grow loathsome and unsavory as it 's usuall with those are almost famished Observ 1. That Gods judgements upon a sinfull people are seldome single but one succeeds in the neck of another before the Prophet had been put upon a siege and now he must expresse a famine and mind them of eating polluted bread in another land In the 28. Deut. and 26. of Lev. God threatens judgement after judgement till he hath consum'd them it 's long before God begins to strike but when he once strikes he will go on and dispatch his work and make an end of an impenitent people and so recompence his slacknesse to punishment with severity and succession of judgements Amos 4. God had judgements which like fish-hooks should snatch them away cleannesse of teeth droughts blastings pestilence c. Ezek. 14. God hath sword famine pestilence and noysome beasts to send one after another and what one leaves the other shall devour God smote them with the sword in Ireland and hath not the famine followed it we are under the edge of the one and shall be I feare under the teeth of the other 2. That a famine upon any is a distressing judgement if God send it upon Jerusalem they shall find it very heavie when David was put to that hard choyce 2 Sam. 24. hee would not have the sword or famine to come upon him or his Curtius reports of Alexander Lib. 6. that warring against the Bactrians hee and his were besieged with such a famine as they were forc'd to eat up their horses that carryed their necessaries when the Carthaginians besieged Saguntus in Spain they were brought to such miseries with a famine that they
the wicked and that for speciall ends I have set thee in the midst of the nations and God had peculiar ends in it The nations and countrey about was full of ignorance Idolatry and prophaneness God recorded his name at Jerusalem set his worship there and them in the midst of the nations that they might make known the true God the true Religion the true way of Worship that they might by their holy lives win those that were without bring them in to serve the God of Israel and had the Jewes been consciencious of their wayes faithfull and spirituall in their worship they might have prevail'd much with the nations to have turned from their Idols and other sins to the living God at least have convinc'd them of the evill of their own wayes and the excellencie of Gods wayes Therefore Moses used this Argument to perswade the Jewes to keep Gods Statutes Deut. 4.6 Keep and do them saith he for this is your wisdome and understanding in the sight of the nations which shall bear all those statutes and say Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people Examples of ci●●es and nations are convincing and perswasive Orators if they be ●●lly ●eakons on a hill whose light extends far great cities have influence into all the counties and countreys round about they came from all places to Jerusalem from Sheba 1 King 10.1 from Ethiopiae Acts 8.27 from Parthia Mosopotamia Lybia Rome and many other parts Acts 2.9 10. and what they saw and heard at Jerusalem that fastned upon them What is done in great cities is much observed and goes forth to the ends of the earth Rev. 17.5 Babylon the Mother of Harlots and abominations of the earth 4. Ingratitude is a sin that provokes heaven it self it caused God the giver to upbraid Jerusalem the receiver I set thee in the midst of the nations I made thee the head put honour upon thee call'd thee my city was thy defence glory strength I gave thee my Judgements and Statutes and what hast thou done corrupted thy self corrupted the nation changed my judgements into wickednesse and rejected them this troubled the Lord greatly in all ages Deut. 32.6 Do you thus requite the Lord Oh foolish people and unwise is not he thy father that hath bought thee hath hee not made thee c. and notwithstanding all that God had done for them and was to them yet they corrupted bespotted themselves dealt perversly and crookedly with God so Isai 1.2 Heare O heavens and give eare O earth I have brought up children and they have rebelled against mee Oxen and Asses were more respective of their owners then they were of their God and therefore God upbraids them with it God had done much for that people his Law Prophets Temple Worship Miracles choycest blessings of heaven and earth were for them and yet they were ingratefull therefore God calls heaven and earth to witnesse against them how unreasonable they were in their carriage towards the Lord so in Jer. 2.12 he puts it higher Be astonished O yee heavens at this be horribly afraide very desolate and why should there be such a change in the heavens because Gods people had made a dreadfull change on earth God had been a fountain of living waters unto them fill'd them with comforts of all sorts made them green and flourishing and now they had forsaken him for puddle and broken cisterns of their own ingratitude troubles heaven and earth Bernard saith mans ingratitude troubled Christ more then his crosse nails whippings reproaches yea his death for Christ to become man to suffer all for man and he to be unthankfull this pierced him to the heart most and when God doth much for kingdomes and cities and they prove ingratefull it puts God into an upbraiding way Isa 5.4 I did so and so for my Vineyard Oh what could have been done more I will take away the hedge thereof and it shall be eaten up trod downe laid waste it shall have briers and no rain shall fall upon it 5. Those have the name and face of Gods people may become worse then Heathens Jerusalem changed Gods Statutes into wickednesse that was ill but she did it more then the nations which was exceeding ill hence you find Ezek. 16.46 47 48. that the sins of Jerusalem exceeded the Samaritans and Sodomites Thou hast not walked after their wayes nor done after their abominations but as if that were a very little thing thou wast corrupted more then they in all thy wayes their sins were inconsiderable to Jerusalems and because Sodoms sins being so great notorious as that they fetched fire from heaven and God could forbear them no longer it would hardly be received that Jerusalems sins were worse then Sodoms the Lord swears to it As I live saith the Lord God Sodom and her daughters have not done as thou and thy daughters have done the nations and countreys about never sinned so desperately against God as those professed his name and went for his people and you have the sentence of heaven for it Jer. 2.10.11 Passe over the Iles of Shittim and see send unto Kedar and consider diligently and see if there be such a thing hath a nation changed their gods which are yet no gods but my people hath changed their Glory for that which doth not profit the turpitude of their fact is fully set out it was such as could not be parallel'd among Heathens inquiry was made the report given in that the Gentiles changed not their gods they would not alter their lawes and worship they had from men but the Jewes parted with their glory when they would not part with their shame they let go their Religion which was divine Hos 9.10 and without any just cause changed Gods judgements and statutes into wickednesse into that which neither did nor could profit they were changelings chopt away heaven for earth God for Idols and his worship for mens inventions this made the Lord say of them Jer. 3.5 Behold thou hast spoken and done evill things as thou couldest What could they do worse then let the infinite glorious wise most holy and blessed God go for Idols and Idolatrous worship when the heathens would not let their gods goe that were of base and corruptible materialls made by the hands and art of men that could neither see heare or help them What could Manasses doe worse then he did 2 King 21.11 VER 7 8. Therefore thus saith the Lord God Because you multiplyed more then the Nations that are round about you and have not walked in my Statutes neither have kept my Judgements neither have done according to the judgements of the Nations that are round about you 8. Therefore thus saith the Lord Behold I even I am against thee and will execute judgements in the midst of thee in the sight of the Nations c. THe 7th verse is of the nature of the sixt and hath in it motives unto God to proceed in judgement
they should finde it so 3. Vehementiam To set out the intensivenesse of God in this thing he was serious and reall his heart was in it he was not words but weight I even I c. That so they might be the more affected The Vulgar reads it to thee in stead of against thee the Hebrew beares both and the sense abides the same I even I to thee that is coming to thee with my judgements I am hastning towards thee for thy ruine and destruction and so coming to Jerusalem is being against it That phrase in Levit. 26.24 of walking contrary to them and punishing them is the expository of this here God would come to them come against them and destroy them and this should be not in a private way but in the sight of the Nations it 's a sad thing to have God secretly out with one much worse to have him an open enemy as God professes he would be unto them all should see his dealings with them Judgements Here it 's not taken as in the 6. and 7. verse but notes wrath vengeance and punishment to be inflicted upon evill doers it 's the same word in the Hebrew that notes lawes and punishments and both are call'd judgements being from the infinite wisdome counsell and judgement of God Observ 1. That it's God is the great Agent in all Judgements befall Cities and Kingdomes Nebuchadnezzar Nebuzaradan and many thousand fierce bloudy Souldiers came against Jerusalem but God was in them acted and ordered them they were the rod and staffe in his hand with which he beate Jerusalem the Axe with which he hewed them the razor wherewith he shaved them and might have said It 's not wee but your God is against you he hath commanded us to come forth to plunder your Countrey to besiege take and burne your Citie though you yeelded not obedience to his commands to prevent the judgement yet wee must and will to execute the judgement appointed by him sufferers are apt to look at the next and second causes not at God but Armies plagues famines what ever judgements are extant they are in Gods hand he is the principall actor in them 2 Chron. 12.7 God calls the wrath his wrath and Shishach was to powre out upon Jerusalem Shishach was the vial God put in the wrath and powred it out at his pleasure Amos 4.6.10 God tells them it was he gave them cleannesse of teeth and sent the pestilence and it 's he breaks out like fire in the house of Joseph Chap. 5.6 and Isa 63.10 he fought against them it was God in their enemies did it 2. It 's a dreadfull thing to have God against a Citie or Kingdome Behold I even I am against you I that have loved you so dearly that have done so much for you that have been a friend a father a husband a deliverer a counsellor a God of salvation even I am against you The word Behold imports so much where that is prefixt usually some great strange and dreadfull thing follows and so here could a greater stranger or more dreadfull thing befall Gods people then to have God against them 1. All in God is against them all his attributes his wisdome holinesse mercy justice patience power c. working for their ruine Jer. 18.11 Behold saith the Lord I frame evill against you and devise a device against you Gods head and hand was at work against them and so in Micah 2.3 Behold against this family doe I devise an evill it was ill with the family of Jacob when God set his thoughts a work to devise judgements for them The infinite wise and powerfull God when he is once against a people improves his attributes for their ruine hence you have it in the Word that Gods face is against the wicked Psal 34.16 and set against them Levit. 26.17 and so his hand is against them Lam. 3.3 2. All from God as 1. All the creatures When the King himself is out with any all his officers and servants frowne also Angels are against a people when God is against them When two States fall out they call away their Embassadours and God calls away his Angels when he is wrath with a Nation and because their Lord and Master is wronged by that Nation they take part with him against it and stand ready to execute his judgements upon it when Christ was injuriously dealt withall Peter drew in his Masters behalfe presently when God was against Egypt the destroying Angel was quickly felt there Not onely Angels but all inferior creatures act answerably unto their Lord when he moves against a people they doe it also the starres fought against Sisera Judg. 5.20 the waters against Pharaoh Exod. 14.26 the earth against Corah Dathan and Abiram Num. 16.32 fiery Serpents stung the Israelites Numb 21.6 see Levit. 26.22 Ezek. 34.28 Chap. 14.15 Wilde beasts God would send amidst them and he did it 2 King 17.24 25. there were Lions and 2 King 2.24 there were Beares which did devoure Herod was eaten up by wormes Pherecydes with vermine Plinie tells that in Spaine they were constrain'd to forsake their Cities because undermin'd with Conies one in Thessal with Moules and in France many Townes were left because annoyed with Frogges Locusts Mice and Waspes God is the Lord of Hosts and can quickly muster up an Armie of the creatures against his enemies 2. All Ordinances the Word is the favour of death 2 Cor. 2.16 the Gospel is hid to them Chap. 4.3 Prayer and fasting witnesse against them Isa 58.5 Zach. 7.5 Passeover Circumcision Sacrifices Temple Sabbaths New Moones c. did them no good but encreased their woes Isa 1.11 12 13 14 15. and Chap. 6.9 10 11. Heare yee indeed but understand not and see yee indeed but perceive not Make the heart of this people fat their eares heavie shut their eyes lest they should see heare understand he converted and healed And why thus God was against them he would wast their Cities and make their Land desolate God was against the Jewes his purpose was to root them out and what did Christ his glorious Gospel and treasures of it profit them as Ahab said of Micaiah 1 King 22.8 he prophecied no good unto us so these prov'd no wayes good unto them 3. God ●ets a people he is against against it selfe he divides them Ephraim is against M●nasseb and Manasseh against Ephraim and both against Judah Isa 9.21 When people will divide from God God will multiply their divisions he can and doth mingle a perverse spirit in the midst of a people he is against Isa 19.14 there shall be no agreement but in the ruine of one another Ver. 2. I will set the Egyptians against the Egyptians and they shall fight Brother Neighbour Citie Kingdome each against another 4. All miseries plagues judgements curses break in quickly upon that people Levit. 26. When God is in march against a people he will appoint over them terrors consumptions burning agues
and place of the Oracle others into the court of Israel the court of the Priests and the court of God where the Ark and Cherubims were Jun. Maldon and this they make the Sanctuary or place of holinesse for Mikdashi is my holinesse as well as my Sanctuary there the glory of God appeared between the Cherubims and this place they desired I shall speak a little of the holinesse of places because there is an opinion in the world that some places are holy and that duties done in them are better then done elsewhere It was the saying of a great Prelate B. A. that God heard prayer Non quia precatur sed quia ibi because the prayers were in such a place Two wayes places become holy First by divine presence Secondly by divine institution For the first when God did in a visible extraordinary way manifest himself and his glory in any place this made it holy as Matth. 17. when Christ was transfigured in the mount and excellent glory appeared this made the place holy and the Apostle call'd it The holy mount 2 Pet. 1.18 So Gods appearing to Moses in the bush Exod. 3.5 made that place holy such appearances of God are not now The second way is by institution and appointment from God when the Lord doth depute and consecrate places to holy uses then are they holy as the Temple was God appointed the place the building of the Temple the dedication consecration thereof its onely God can make any thing holy none but he that made the creature can lift it up to a higher condition then 't was set in at first no man can make persons things times places holy besides the Lord. Now the Temple was by the institution of God so sanctified that it was a type of Christ a part of worship a powerfull meanes of grace giving acceptation to the persons and all the duties of worship there done so that it was a sin for them to worship elsewhere or to divert the Temple to any other use We have no extraordinary appearance of God to make places holy nor any consecrated by divine institution to type out Christ or any spirituall thing to be a part of worship a means of grace making the worshippers and worship more acceptable and therefore I conceive we have no place holy it was not the Temple but the Synagogues that resembled our publique places of worship and they were not holy Mat. 10.17 They scourged in their Synagogues and that was no holy act A Lapid Brugens it 's the judgement of learned ones that Paul had his five whippings of which he speake in the 2 Cor. 11.24 in the Synagogues they had the Word preached in them Job 18.20 Act. 15.21 as it is in these publique places yet that did not make them holy and priviledge them from common acts of Justice the holinesse of places under the Law was ceremoniall and Christ hath put an end to such holinesse the difference of places he hath taken away and no one is more holy then others Job 4.21 The houre is coming saith Christ to the woman when you shall neither in this mountaine nor at Jerusalem worship the Father it 's true now there is holinesse in these places the men and their services are more accepted here then any where else but the houre is at hand that all such respects shall be taken away and all places made alike and you and your services shall be as acceptable in every place of the world as at Jerusalem Hence is it that Paul puts men upon praying every where 1 Tim. 2.8 Many thinke their prayers better in such a meeting-place as this then in their closets then in the fields but they are deceived places now adde no efficacy or acceptation to mens prayers it 's rather prayer Ordinances and so the spirituall presence of God in them that makes places holy and this is the Argument that some stick upon but upon examination this will not make the publick place of meeting more holy then others for Mat. 18.20 it 's said Where two or three are gathered c. be it in a ship a private house a field if gathered together in his Name he is in the midst of them he is there not for the place but the peoples sake yet no man judicious accounts all places holy where spirituall duties are doing or after they are done and why publick places of worship should be so accounted of in time of worship or after is not discernable to a religious and judicious eye of old the Altar sanctified the gift it 's not so now Hast defiled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the Vulgar it's violasti hast violated wronged but the Hebrew word notes more it 's impurare vitiare and it 's the same word with that sets out the defilement of Dinah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 34.5 Vitiavit Dinam a woman may be wronged and not be defiled the Sanctuary was defiled polluted prophan'd Sometimes you reade of the Lands being defiled as Num. 35.34 Sometimes of the Priesthoods Neh. 13.29 Sometimes of the Lords holy Name being defiled Ezek. 43.7 And here of his Sanctuary We must inquire what it is that defiles the same 1. Sacrificing other where then God commanded Levit. 17.4 5. If an Oxe Lamb or Goat were kill'd in the Camp or out of it and not brought to the dore of the Tabernacle to offer it was accounted of God bloudshed they would offer in the fields and not where God appointed and this was a defilement and as great as shedding of bloud 2. When they brought things or persons prohibited as 1. Unwarrantable Sacrifices any thing corrupt and not according to rule Mal. 1.7 8. Yee offer polluted bread upon mine Altar it was not unleavened of fine flower and oyle according to prescription Levit. 4.8 it was of Rye Barley or course Wheate and this bread this Mincha polluted Gods Altar and so when they affered the blind sick and lame for Sacrifice they were corrupt things ver 14. and defiled the Altar and Temple of the Lord. 2. Idolls God would not have any Idoll come in his house 2 Cor. 6.16 What agreement hath the Temple of God with Idolls God and Dagon cannot dwell in one house this was the quarrell here Jer. 7.30 They have set their abominations in the house which is called by my Name to pollute it The same words you have againe in Jer. 32.34 and you shall finde there were strange Altars set up in Gods house Ahaz brought in the Altar of Damascus 2 King 16.10 c. And there were the Altars of Manasseh in the Court of the Lords house 2 King 23.12 And the high places on the right hand of the mount of corruption ver 13. they did defile also as the carkasses mention'd in Ezek. 43.9 which were the carkasses of Manasseh and Amon Mend. buried in the Kings garden close by the wall of the Temple 2. When persons were brought
goes on by degrees in his wrath against a people he did not accomplish his anger and fury at first he began with lesser judgements but at last came up to a perfection before he had whipt them with scourges now hee would do it with Scorpions he had formerly done much vexed them with wars famine plague but never laid waste their city ruin'd their Temple scattered them into the four winds as now he would do hee had in times past corrected them like a father he would now execute them like a Judge the drops of his wrath had done no good now they should have the full vials all the wrath conceived against them should be inflicted accomplished 2. That wrath let out against a sinfull people oft times lies long upon them I will cause my fury to rest upon them they were 70. yeers under Gods displeasure in Babylon Gods wrath hath been upon the Jews that rejected the Gospel these 1600. yeers they would not be under the blessing of Christ they are under the curse of God his wrath abides upon them Gods anger and fury hath rested upon Germany above twenty yeers these kingdomes of Ireland and England are under it fervent prayer is requisite that God would remove his wrath and not let it rest upon us It 's a dreadfull thing to have settled plague or war amongst us The Barons wars in King John's Henry the third's and Edward the second 's dayes made sad times Gods wrath rested then for a long season upon this kingdome the choycest blood of it was let out and it brought a deplorable condition Let us repent and reform that wrath may not rest upon the kingdome and let us believe that wrath may not abide upon us John 3.36 He that believes not the wrath of God abideth on him man came into the world a childe of wrath an heir of wrath Christ is a remedy propounded for removall of that wrath if men believe not the wrath of God abides still on them goes along with them and will eternally sink them 3. God takes pleasure in executing judgement in accomplishing his wrath and causing his fury to rest upon impenitent and incurable sinners he will be comforted in it Prov. 1.26 I will laugh at your calamity God would bring calamities upon them just judgements for the setting at naught his counsels refusing his reproofs and rejoyce in them for as judgements are satisfaction to divine justice they are delightfull unto God Isa 30.32 in every place where the grounded staffe shall passe which the Lord shall lay upon him it shall be with Tabrets and Harps when God should destroy the Babylonians and Assyrians it should be with delight which the Tabrets and Harps expresse which were musicall Instruments used in wars and victories Exod. 15.20 And when God executed judgement upon spirituall Babylon Rev. 18.20 it was with joy therefore the Spirit of God calls for it Rejoyce over her thou heaven and yee holy Apostles and Prophets for God hath avenged you and himself on her also which was a comfort and ease a delight to God hence judgements in Scripture are term'd his pleasure Isa 46.10 11. I will do all my pleasure Calling a ravenous bird from the East and Chap. 48.14 Hee will do his pleasure on Babylon 4. The Word of God may be preached among a people and they through ignorance and malice not know it nor entertain it they shall know that I the Lord have spoken it they conceived not that it was the word of God which the Prophets delivered they thought them to be no more then other men and their word humane and therefore sleighted it there was much affected ignorance in them Isa 27.11 it 's a people of no understanding Jer. 4.22 My people are foolish they have not known me and as many were blind so many were malicious against the Prophets and their messages they brought from God Jer. 44.16 As for the words which thou hast spoken in the name of the Lord wee will not hearken unto thee but wee will do whatsoever thing goeth forth of our own mouth Christ came and preached to his own and they received him not they neither knew him nor his doctrine or if they did they maliciously rejected both 5. That wicked men shall be convinced and left without excuse they shall know that I the Lord have spoken they eyed men and not me they deem'd it mans voyce not heavens but they shall find that it was the voyce of God amongst them and what can men say when God hath spoken and hath not been hearkened unto every mouth will then be stopt they would not know but they shall know they would not own my truths but they shall feel my judgements and when they are upon them then will they remember the Prophets and their words which will be as burning coals in their bosomes then they will see what desperate revolts they have made from God how they are besieged with his power and cannot escape the stroke thereof when men shall see it 's the infinite great and glorious God that they have sleighted in the Prophets in the Ordinances then they will be struck dumb and fall under the wrath of that God 6. God will justifie his servants in their zealous labors for him They shall know that I have spoken it in my zeal it 's God speaks in the Prophets it 's his zeal they expresse let men be zealous against sin the iniquities of the times they are counted mad fiery fellows troublers of Israel seditious factious c. Paul was a zealous man and not only Festus an Heathen counted him mad Act. 26.24 but even the Christian Corinthians 2 Cor. 5.13 thought him besides himself and such conceits had the people of Christ who was a man of zeal they thought him too hot that his zeal was beyond his judgement Mar. 3.21 they plainly said he was besides himself Michal scoft at David as one of the fools for his zeal Let the world passe what censure it will upon Gods Ministers God will justifie those who are sincerely zealous and count their zeal his zeal 7. That the Lord is intense and will not recall his indignation when he deals with unfaithfull covenant-breaking persons as in Gods zeal there is intense love towards his Church when God promises mercy to his people it 's seal'd with this The zeal of the Lord of Hosts shall do it 2 King 19.31 so here is intense hatred wrath against his enemies therefore God beats them off from their own inventions in the second command by this consideration that he is a jealous God and his jealousie extensive to the 4th generation and Deut. 32.22 saith God A fire is kindled in mine anger and shall burn unto the lowest hell and shall consume the earth with her increase and set on fire the foundations of the mountains and what 's the reason of this indignation it's given in vers 21. they have moved me to jealousie with that which is not
up and send officers belongs to Christ 228 unable ones not sent by Christ 229 Ordinances do good when the Spirit is on them 60 efficacy of them is from Christ 294 they are Gods name 454 P Pan What the iron pan signifies 385 Patience God bears long with the sins of his people 400 yet forgets not their sins ibid. People enemies to their own good 375 their sins deprive them of spirituall mercies 379 like to hair in three respects 418 Gods people may become worse then Heathens 432 Perseverance Angels go on 116 Pestilence The etymologie and nature of it 455 Pity What the word notes 453 Place God hath three places 309 no holiness in them now 312 449 no place can hinder the working of the Spirit 364 how places become holy 448 Pope And his Hierarchy not of Christ 228 229 Principles There are opposite principles in the best of men to the wayes of Christ 319 Priest Occasion of setling the Priesthood upon Levi. 45 Prophet Whence 8 of the first and second Temple 9 a Prophet in Babylon 23 subject to scorne reproach 47 they were carried on in their propheticall work hy the might of the Spirit 316 they could not prophecy at their pleasure 326 they must speak the words of the Lord 336 how a Prophet should be received 338 counted mad men 373 Providence Acts in all motions 144 it puzzles the ablest unsearchable dreadfull 149 it 's in the least motions 152 works of it glorious beautifull ibid. 287 it over-rules secondary agents 403 Punishment conformable to sin 412 Q Quiet The quiet spirits are fittest to receive and act spirituall things 329 R Rainbow The naturall cause of it 192 the naturall and theologicall signification of it 193 194 Ram A war-like instrument and why so called 385 Rebellion What 226 what in Gods account 279 Relatives Vsed in Scripture without Antecedents 23 24 Repetition Of the same words and things of what use 466 Reproached such honoured 48 reproaches are bitter piercing things 464 Reproof People are impatient of them and why 378 379 Righteousnesse A double righteousnesse 350 two sorts of righteous men 351 righteousnesse of faith never fails and why 352 353 there be deceiveable righteousnesses 356 we must not confide in our own righteousnesse ib. three rules to help against it 357 Roul 282 the eating of it what 290 Prophets must feed upon Christs rouls 292 Ruine Kingdomes States the cause of their ruine is in themselves 77 mans is in himself 359 S Salvation Few saved 241 Saphire What it signifies and represents 177 178 Seraphims What. 80 Sephar 3. Shekel Of sanctuary why so called 405 Side The Prophet lying on his side and left side 393 394 Sight the certainest sense 53 54 Sgnification To impose higher significations on things then they have by nature belongs to God 72 281 Signes God deals with his people in signes and types 387 why ibid. hee gives to the sign the name of the thing signified 429 Sin A fire infolding 76 disables us from seeing glory 205 causeth Gods people to lose their glory 231 sin is rebellion ibid. progresse in it causeth impudencie 237 sinners come to a height of sinning 243 it's an imbittering thing 244 the fruit of it is death 343 difference betweene Hamartanein and Poiein hamartian 353 sin it makes uncapacious of happinesse 367 cuts off spirituall mercy 379 sin may so provoke that neither God nor man will shew mercy 391 God forgets not the sins of men 400 seldome any return from sinfull wayes 402 it defiles 453 Son of man opened and what it notes 210 how oft given to Ezekiel and why 211 Speed It 's required in Gods service 100 Spirit Why called the hand of the Lord 56 57 it's author of all good done and received 60 how said to move or go 122 the Spirit is the great agent in all 123 363 it works any where and cannot be shut out of any place 364 how the spirit of the living creature is said to be in the wheels 160 it moves all ib. consent between Angels and wheels is from the Spirit 162 the Spirit is living and lively 164 what is meant by Spirit 216 entrance what 218 369 a chief comforter ibid. whether it goes alwayes with the Word 221 it affects and visits the humble 370 it's a comforting and encouraging Spirit 371 Spirit speaks in a man 372 the Spirit enables to discerne 223 why the Spirit took up the Prophet 306 heals our infirmities 321 it works invincibly ibid. Standing Of that posture 212 Stubbornnes Men wil not hear God 299 Stumbling-block What meant by it 354 how God layes it 354 355 takes them out of the way of his 350 Sword What it doth 456 T Tel-abib What it signifies 322 Temple Was a part of worship 312 consecrate to what end 448 449 what defiled it 450 Terrible What makes so 166 Throne What it signifies 176 Christ sate not stood in it 179 Christs throne must be of Saphire 182 Time No good plea for sinners 402 Tongues Thorny in what respect 254 255 how the Prophets clave to the roof of his mouth 377 power of it in Gods hand 378 Tree Dropping water in a dry Iland 153 Truth All truth should be received 204 sweet to taste bitter in operation 318 V Vision What things are in a vision 52 visions have excellency in them 54 effects of them 204 why men fall upon their faces at visions 204 why the Prophet had a second apparition of Gods glory 365 Voyce Of Christ how taken 206 W Watchman Christ appoints watchmen in the Church 332 they must be knowing not sleepy 333 must endure hardship ibid. they are for the flocke 335 Weary Godly may be weary in but are not weary of Gods worke 120 121 Wheels What is meant by lifting up the wheels 154 none can hinder the motion of the wheels 156 God puts stands to them at his pleasure 158 they cannot move otherwise then they do 160 motion of the wheels never unseasonable 161 wheels move whither the Spirit will have them 163 wheele why the world likened to it 130 secret motion in the wheele 140 high dreadfull 143 149 motions of the wheels are judicious 151 Whirlewind Nebuchadnezzar compared to it in three things 67 68 Wicked The worse for the Word 245 without excuse having means 246 shall see what mercy they have refused 247 248 they are like thornes and wherein 252 like scorpions 258 we must take heed of them 262 267 their acquaintance not to be sought 265 what fruits they bring ibid. their losse not considerable 266 Christ knows who are such 241 there is hope of those are very wicked 344 they deal cruelly with the Prophets 375 lesser sins punished in the wicked more severely then greater in the godly 402 403 wicked men are worthlesse 252 421 Gods people more wicked then heathens 432 Will Mans will his ruine 299 Wisdome Mans crosse to Christ 318 Word The power of it from the Spirit 220 it's the Chariot of the