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A35537 An exposition with practical observations continued upon the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-seventh chapters of the book of Job being the substance of thirty-five lectures / by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1664 (1664) Wing C776; ESTC R15201 593,041 687

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them We know little of that which is he and he only knoweth that which will be All futures unrevealed are secrets and among them our thoughts are the greatest secrets yet them the Lord knoweth Psal 139.2 Thou saith David understandest my thoughts afar off that is before I think them Is not this strength of knowing wisdome Fourthly God knoweth all things alwayes or everlastingly there is not one of them slips out of his knowledge they are at all times alike that is perfectly before him Is not this also strength of knowing wisdome Fifthly The Lord knoweth all these things as distinctly as if he had but one thing to know Sixthly He knoweth all things by one act of single and simple intuition he doth not know as we by report from others nor by comparing one thing with another nor by inferring one thing from another that is he doth not know by discourse argument or demonstration but all things are before the eye of his knowledge nakedly and immediately as they are These two last as well as any of or all the former are a clear proof not only that God is knowing and wise but that he is mighty in strength of knowing wisdome Secondly Consider wisdome as it is applyed in working Some have much of that wisdome which we call Theoreticall knowing discerning wisdome but as for practicall working wisdome how to put things together how to order them as to the businesses and affairs of this life they are very far to seek We say Great Scholars are not alwayes the wisest men many are knowing they know almost all things they will dispute de omni scibili of all things knowable yet are very weak when they come to lay things together for practice or government if it be but the government of a family or of their private estate they know not how to mannage it much less can they mannage the government of great Societies or Corporations least of all of Kingdomes and Nations But as for the Lord he hath not only a knowing wisdome but a disposing a governing a working practical wisdome in ordering all affairs which we properly call prudence or discretion Psal 112.5 We have seen knowing learned men do things very foolishly imprudently indiscreetly But all the works of the Lord are contrived and model'd as also effected and perfected with infinite wisdome Hence that Holy exclamation Psal 104.24 O Lord how manifold are thy works in wisdome hast thou made them all Which as it is true of all the works of Creation so likewise of the works of Providence the former of which are spoken of in the beginning of the Psalme and the latter in the following parts of it The Lord in wisdome made the world He made the heavens by his wisdome Psal 136.5 and by wisdome hath he founded the earth Pro. 3.19 If in both those places we understand Christ by wisdome it doth not hinder but advance this truth now as the Lord made the world both heaven and earth in wisdome so in and by the same wisdome he governs heaven and earth and all his works in both are full of wisdome Thus it appears that the Lord is mighty in strength of wisdome both as to the knowing and ordering of all things yea the Lord is so mighty in both these kinds of wisdome that there is indeed none wise but he And therefore the Scripture not only calls him The wise God but God only wise Rom. 16.27 Jude v. 25. And surely he is mighty strong in wisdome who hath all the wisdome or is only wise Some may say How are we to understand that is not wisdome one of those communicable Attributes of God so we distinguish the divine Attributes some are communicable o●hers are incommunicable The infiniteness the omniscience the unchangableness the simplicity of God are incommunicable but the holiness the justice the mercy and wisdome of God are communicable that is God doth communicate unto man his holiness his justice and wisdome Why then is it said That God is only wise seeing God hath endowed many with a spirit of wisdome or hath made many wise men in the world I answer First God is said to be only wise because there is none so wise as he his wisdome is so much beyond the wisdome of all men that no man may be called wise but God Thus also God is called the only Potentate 1 Tim. 6.15 because though there are many Potentates in the world yet Gods potency is beyond them all His life also is such that at the 16th verse of the same Chapter it is said He only hath immortality yet both the Angels and the souls of men are immortal but God hath immortality in a way of such eminency that the very Angels and souls of men are mortal in comparison of him David said of his life Psal 39.5 My age is nothing to thee I scarce live at all when I consider the life of God so the wisest man in the world may say of his wisdome my wisdome is nothing unto thee I have no wisdome when I consider how wise God is Secondly God is said to be only wise because there are none originally wise but he his wisdome is of himself yea his wisdome is himself the wisdome of God is not a separable quality from him as the wisdome of a man is Many are men but not wise men but it is impossible for God to be God and not to be wise his wisdome is essential to him The wisdome of man is like gilding upon an earthen vessel but the wisdome of God is like a golden vessel The wisest men are gilded over with wisdome they are adorned and beautified with it but no man how wise soever is wisdome only God is God is if I may so speak an Immense and immeasurable vessel of gold he is all gold you cannot distinguish the gold from the vessel 't is gold quite through he is massie gold massie wisdome The wisdome of man is another thing from himself The wisdome of God is himself and thus God alone is wise Thirdly God is only wise because all wisdome is from him as he hath his wisdome from himself so all others have wisdome from him all the wisdome of men and Angels is but a ray from his light but a stream yea but a drop from his Ocean Bezaliel's Artificial wisdome was from the Lord Solomons political wisdome was from the Lord Solomon asked wisdome from the Lord to governe And not only is the wisdome of Princes Statesmen and Politicians but the very Plowmans wisdome is from the Lord Isa 28.26 where the Prophet having shewed how the Plowman tills the ground how he harrows and casts in the seed how he thresheth and gets out the graine he addeth v. 29. This comes from the Lord who is wonderfull in counsel and excellent in working The Plowman knoweth not how to till his ground to sow his seed to harrow his land to thresh his corne if the Lord did not give him
looks to him that is poor in spirit or of a contrite spirit let such be in Rags and lye upon the Dunghil the Lord will look to them and he hath a threefold look for them First A look of honour as respecting their Persons Secondly A look of care to supply their wants Thirdly A look of justice to deliver them from wrong And if they that are poor in spirit be rich also in the world they shall not fail to receive right from the hand of the Lord. The Lord giveth right to all sorts of men against their wicked oppressors but his poor the Godly poor believing poor those that are poor not only in purse but in spirit are more peculiarly under this priviledge of being righted by the Lord. And usually in Scripture the word poor is taken in a good sence Nomen pauperis in bonum sumitur pauperes sunt populus Dei for good men as the word rich in an ill sence for evil men Jam. 5.1 Go to now ye rich men weep and howl for the miseries that shall come upon you The Apostle speaks as if that were the case of all rich or as if he called all rich men to weeping and howling c. Yet some poor men are wicked and some rich men are righteous and therefore I conceive the word poor may be taken here for any wronged or oppressed poor yet especially for the Godly poor For though God giveth right to all men even the worst of men yet here the scope of Elihu is to shew that God takes most care of those whom the wicked do most not only neglect but injure and oppresse He giveth right to the poor Hence Note The poor especially the Godly poor are often wronged and go by the worst in the world Or thus The poor as poor usually suffer from and by the world As the world is apt to oppresse any poor so mostly the Godly poor Psal 12.5 For the oppression of the poor I will arise 'T is possible a rich man may be oppressed a mighty man may be oppressed by one mightier than he but usually the poor are oppressed and they trampled on who are already underfoot And therefore the Lord saith For the oppression of the poor for the sighing of the needy now will I arise and set him at safety from him that puffeth at him This is not exclusive the Lord will arise for the help of the rich and great when any such are wronged but he is said to arise for the help of the poor as intimating that the poor seldome come by their right or find help in the world unlesse God arise to help them or help them to it and because he hath said he will help them to their right we may be sure he will Davids Faith was strong upon this promise Psal 18.27 Thou wilt save the afflicted people Psal 72.4 He shall judge the poor of the People P●al 140.12 I know that the Lord will maintain the cause of the afflicted And his Experience was as clear as his Faith was strong Psal 37.25 I have been young and now am old yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken that is I have often yea alwayes seen him helped one way or other and sometimes set on high from affliction Psal 107.41 The Lord careth so for the poor as if he cared for none else and the best of the poor are little cared for by any but the Lord. Zeph. 3.12 I will also leave in the midst of thee an afflicted and poor people and they shall trust in the Name of the Lord. The rich of this world trust to creature helps but as the Lords poor know they ought not to trust in creature help so they have it not to trust to and therefore they trust in the Name of the Lord not only out of choice which is their grace and duty but out of necessity And what will the Lord do for them that trust in him not only out of necessity but choice he will surely take care of them and do them right Secondly Note God rights the poor freely He giveth them right he doth not sell it What freer than gift They need not bribe for it As he freely giveth them the Righteousnesse of his Son to justifie them so they have common right of free gift to relieve them Note Thirdly The Lord relieves or rights the poor speedily He giveth implyeth a present act and that doubles the mercy Note Fourthly God will always right the wronged poor He giveth imports even a continued act as he did it in former times in the dayes of old so he doth it at this day and will do it always As the Lord giveth right speedily so constantly with him is no variablenesse or shadow of turning Most men do right only by fits but the Lord is ever giving right Lastly He giveth right to the poor not to this or that poor man but to the poor Hence Note The Lord distributes right to all that are wronged As his Mercy so his Justice is not confined to a few but floweth out to all But it may be objected Why then are so many poor without their right If the Lord giveth right and giveth it continually and impartially why do the poor cry and sigh and groan and mourn why see we so many tears of the poor If they have right why do they complain I answer First The Lord giveth right to the poor sometimes when the poor perceive it not Psal 97.2 Clouds and darknesse are round about him Righteousnesse and Judgement are the habitation of his Throne When a man cannot see the Lord doing right yet the Lord doth right The Sun shineth when eclipsed or covered with a Cloud The Lord never ceaseth to right the poor though neither poor nor rich perceive how or which way he doth it Secondly I answer He giveth right to the poor even when they want right or when they are under the sorest oppressions by supporting their hearts in this perswasion that he will give them right The poor have right when their minds are satisfied that they shall have right There is no true Godly poor man in the world how much soever afflicted but his heart is or may be satisfied that he shall have right That 's a sure word Psal 9.18 The needy shall not always be forgotten the expectation of the poor shall not perish for ever And therefore we may pray with confidence Forget not O Lord the Congregation of thy poor for ever Psal 74.19 The poor may rest in this assurance while their troubles rest upon them that God will bring forth their Righteousnesse as the Light and their Judgement as the Noon day Psal 37.6 He hath right who believes he shall have it as he that believeth hath everlasting life in hope long before he attains the possession of it John 3.36 Thirdly Though we say The Lord giveth right to the poor both speedily and constantly yet he reserveth to himself a liberty as to
Lord hideth himself as to sense and present appearance but he never hideth himself as to the real continuance of his love and care towards his Church or People This Objection some made to one of the Ancients the Lord said they may seem to withdraw his eyes from the righteous because he suffers them to fall under the oppression of the unrighteous Famulos suos nunc m gis respicit nam jam praevidet quid eis miserecorditer recompenset Greg in loc No saith he The Lord beholds the righteous though they perish by the hand of the unrighteous yea when it is worst with them the Lords Eye is upon them for good both to see how they carry it or behave themselves in their Sufferings and likewise to provide a full reward and recompence for them after all their sufferings Before I pass from this part of the verse let me make these two Inferences First If the Lord never withdraweth his Eyes from the righteous then let the righteous know their own Priviledge and Mercy How happy are they upon whom the Eyes of the Lord abide alwayes for good The Lord cannot endure to have good men out of his Eye as Parents say of their darlings and Princes of their Favourites If we were assured that the Eye of a great 〈◊〉 who loveth us were alwayes upon us if he should promise to have an eye to us That 's an ordinary Promise among men I will have an Eye to you that is I will take care of you if we have I say but such a word from a man in Power we think we have got a great revenue such a great Lord will have an eye to us we have his word he will not take off his care from us How much then should we boast and rejoyce in spiri● that the Lord hath said I will alwayes have a care of you I will never withdraw mine eyes from you I will never leave you nor forsake you Heb. 13.5 As it will be the eternal happiness of Believers in Glory alwayes to behold or see God Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God they have some sight of him here in a Glass but they shall see him face to face that is they shall see him clearly as clearly as the creature is capable of seeing or enjoying him now I say as it is the happiness of the Saints in Heaven alwayes to behold God so it is the happiness of Saints here on earth that the Lord doth alwayes behold them that his eye is never withdrawn from them Consider therefore you that are in a righteous state whose acts and words and walkings are also righteous consider your Priviledge consider what it is to have the Lord Jesus alwayes setting his eye upon you to have the Lords directing and counselling eye alwayes upon you to have the Lords pitying and compassionating eye alwayes upon you to have the Lords providing and caring eye alwayes upon you to have the Lords delighting and well-pleased eye alwayes upon you to have the eyes of the Lord thus upon you and to have them alwayes upon you what can ye desire more Thus 't is promised 2 Chron. 16.9 The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect with him And whose hearts are perfect with him but the hearts of the righteous this is their priviledge Jesus Christ Zech. 3.9 is called The stone and saith the Text upon one stone shall be seven eyes There are two interpretations given of that Prophesie First thus upon one stone shall be seven eyes that is the eyes of all men shall be upon that stone upon Christ Seven is a perfect definite Number put for all numbers the eyes of all shall be upon the stone upon Christ although he be to the wicked or to them that believe not a stumbling stone and a rock of offence 1 Pet. 2.8 yet to them that believe he is a most precious stone and as they are alwayes beholding the beauty of that precious stone so Jesus Christ doth indeed invite all eyes to behold him Isa 65.1 Behold me behold me he would have us take off our eyes from all others and look steddily on him Let all eyes be upon the stone that 's a good interpretation There is a second which suits the present poynt I am upon fully Seven eyes shall be upon one stone that is the eyes of God shall be upon Jesus Christ This is a promise made unto him as Mediator when he came in the flesh or in our nature to do that great work for us Then saith the Prophet upon one stone shall be seven eyes which seven eyes note the perfect knowledge of God and so the perfect care that God would have of Chri●● to bear him up through that wo●k of our Redemp●ion Vpon one stone shall be seven eyes I will take ca●e of him I will p ovide for him and I will delight in him As Jesus Christ is all eye and Jesus Christ doth enlighten all eyes that is all that see are enlightened by Jesus Christ so the eyes of God the eyes of the Father were alwayes upon him in favour in love in care when he was here in this world about that great work of our salvation and he had abundunt experience of the eyes of his Father upon him Now mark it this was the great promise made to Christ the Stone that upon him should be seven eyes the eyes of the Lord should be alway and fully upon him And this is the priviledge of every one that hath part and interest in this stone Jesus Christ every righteous person hath seven eyes upon him the Lord God beholds him exactly perfectly and alwayes He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous A second inference is this If the Lord never withdraweth his eyes from the righteous Then let the righteous know their duty What 's that Never to withdraw their eyes from the Lord. There is a threefold eye which a righteous man should never withdraw from God First An eye of faith Secondly An eye of hope Thirdly An eye of dependance and that First for direction in all his wayes Secondly for protection in all his dangers I will lift up mine eyes saith David Psal 121.1 unto the hills from whence cometh my help And again Psal 123.1 2. Vnto thee lift I up mine eyes O thou that dwellest in the heavens Behold as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their Masters and as the eyes of a mayden unto the hand of her Mistress so our eyes waite upon the Lord our God untill he have mercy on us that is we never withdraw our eyes from him while we have need of his mercy and that is alwayes Walk before me that is with an eye of faith hope and dependance was the Lords charge to the father of the faithfull Gen. 17.1 I have set the Lord alwayes before me that is I
unawares nor by the unce●tain changes of the Air but according to his direction and unchangeable purpose It is turned about by his Counsel The creatures do not govern themselves nor are they Masters of their own motions The way of man is not in himself surely then the way of the Cloud is not in it self Clouds take their course according to the order and command which they receive from God Again The Clouds are thus turned about by the Counsel of God that they may do whatsoever he commandeth them Hence note Clouds are sent about work there 's somwhat to be done by every Cloud God will not have a Vapour arise nor a Cloud stir for nothing he commands them to be doing And if God send Clouds abroad to work much more doth he send man forth into the world to do work appoints him what work to do The first Man was no sooner made and set up in a state of created perfection but he was presently set to work he must be doing Gen. 2.15 And the Lord God took the man or Adam and put him into the Garden of Eden to dress and to till it From the Angels in Heaven to the worms that creep upon the earth there 's no creature but hath somwhat to do yea not only the living and rational creatures but as here in the Text the very inanimate creatures the senseless creatures the Clouds have somwhat to do God sends them forth upon his business Every creature hath a service hath somwhat to do And therefore it will be ill with those whom God finds idle or doing nothing or nothing to any good purpose That servant had been doing to whom Christ in the Pa●able is represented thus speaking at the last day Well done good and faithful Servant Thirdly observe The Clouds are faithful and ready Servants they do whatsoever the Lord commands them They are Gods Messengers and they will do any or every E●rand which he sends them about and trusts them with 'T is the duty and commendation of a Servant to do whatsoever he is commanded A mans servant must do all his Masters just and lawful commands he must not take up this or that command to do it and pass by the rest The Rule is plain Col. 3.22 Servants obey your Masters in all things Much more must a Servant of God obey him in all things Acts 13.22 I have found David a man after mine own heart he shall fulfill all my Will David was a trusty servant he was not like Saul who did the Lords work to halves The Clouds are trusty Servants they do whatsoever God commands them and we may distribute the commands which God gives the Clouds into two Ranks First The command of God to the Clouds is somtimes for the hurt o● punishment of man God threatens and he executes vengeance by the Clouds Ezek. 13.13 Winds conveigh the Clouds and the Clouds pour down overflowing showrs in the anger of God and great hail-stones in his fury to consume and ruine all before them Secondly Clouds execute the command of God in a way of favour as they execute his threatnings so they fulfil his promises Hos 2.21 22. Both these commands to the Clouds are expresly mentioned in the next verse I only touch them here Now forasmuch as the Clouds are here described under the notion of the prest and faithful Servants of God doing whatsoever he commands take these Inferences from it First If Clouds do whatsoever God commands them then surely Christians ought to do whatsoever Christ commands them Shall the Clouds of God out do the children of God in obedience We find that admonition often urged in the Scripture of the New Testament especially in the 13th of Mathew and in the 1st 2d and 3d Chapters of the Revelation He that hath ears to hear let him hear But behold a wonder they that have no ears hear The Clouds have no ears and yet they hear and more than hear they do the commands of God What shall we say when Clouds hear and obey and men do neither Let us learn Duty from the Clouds We are sent to the School of Nature in holy Scripture almost throughout Elihu seems to say Go to the Clouds O ye that are either slothful or disobedient consider their work and be wise they are continually doing whatsoever the Lord commands them Secondly If the Clouds do whatsoever God commands them then here 's matter of comfort to all who do what God commands them surely God will not command the Clouds to do them any hurt who are doing his commands If you can say that you do the commands of God you may rest assured God will never give the Clouds a command to do you hurt I do not say but an affliction may drop out of the Clouds upon a man that is doing the commands of God or the Clouds may have a command to drop affliction upon him that is doing the commands of God but the Clouds drop no hurt upon any that do the commands of God And therefore seeing the Clouds even those Clouds that carry Storms and Tempests Thunder and Lightning Snow Hail and Rain the great Rain of his strength seing I say these Clouds that are the Treasuries and Magazines of such terrible things are at the command of God let not his faithful people fear for when the Winds are Stormy when the Clouds are black and carry as we think nothing but wrath and death in them God will take care of ●hem and charge his Clouds to do them no harm Clouds whatsoever they are doing are doing Gods commands and doubtless he will not give them any commands for their hurt who keep and do his commands And as 't is matter of comfort to the faithful Servants of God that he commandeth the Clouds in the Air so that he also commands those Clouds which are raised in the hearts of men or that sit and appear in their faces and foreheads We often see Clouds gather in the Brows of displeased mortals As some are clouded with sorrow so others are clouded with anger and wrath Those black Clouds in the faces of men are as dreadful as the blackest Clouds in the Air yet the Lord who commands the Clouds in the Air commands the Clouds of anger and choler of wrath and indignation rising out of the hearts and appearing in the faces of men and can blow them over or blot them out whensoever he pleaseth Thirdly If the Lord by his commands orders the Clouds and the Clouds are ready to execute his commands then let us have high thoughts of the power of God and of his commands If men refuse the commands of God if the stout and hard hearts of men will not stoop to them the Clouds of Heaven yea the clods of the earth will Whatsoever God commands he will have it done not one title not one Iota as Christ spake of the Law shall fall short or fail or be unfulfilled If such and such will
〈◊〉 plius Pi●c The word which we render and is here used as a V●●b to spread b●a●eth an allusi●n to Metals which a●e beaten on by an hammer in●o plates The Nowne signifies the Fi●mam●n● Gen. 1. becau●e it is an expansi●n or thing spread out I 〈◊〉 the Ve●b is applyed to the work of God upon the Earth Psal 136.6 where the Psalmist puts this among the praises of ●od o● the things for which God is to be pr●ie● To him who st●e●che● out the ea●th The st●e●ching or spreading out of th● 〈◊〉 is the work of God as well as the spreading out o● the H●●●●n The earth i● a solid op●●ous and globous body yet it is said 〈◊〉 str●tched out b●cause as there is a ●●undness in the Earth so a mighty exten● and vastness To him that stretched out the earth ab ve the waters to him give thanks But though the Earth be al●o stretched out yet more properly of which Elihu here sp●aks the Sky Hast thou with him spread out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coelum vel nubes vel aerem signifi●●● unde aliqui conjunctim de omnibus accipiant Scult Coeli si● dicti a tenuitate substantiae et ל valet articulum accusati vicasus Pisc Apud Hebraeos idem significant Shamaiim Schehbkim ita apud Latinos coelum Aether interdum aer mediae regionis ubi sunt nubes hoc nomine significatur Merc The Sky The word ren●red Sky is put somtimes for the Air somtimes for the Clouds as also for the Heavens above bo●h the Clouds and Air. Several of the lea●ned expound it here of the Ai● that is of all below the Moon others of the Heavens which a●e above Hast thou with him spread out the Sky or the Heave● This spreading forth of the Sky may have a th●ee-fold reference Fi●st To the eternal Councel of God b●●●e ●ime As if he had said Wast thou with God when he decreed or purposed to spread out the Heavens Secondly To the wo k 〈◊〉 God in the b●ginning of time Wast thou with God when he did ●ctu●lly sp●ead out the Sky or Firmament in the second dayes work of C●●●tion Gen. 1.6 Thirdly ●hich some insist much u●●n to the daily or frequently renewed wo●k of God in o●de ing and alte●ing the face and mo●ion of the Heavens A● if he h●d ●ai● H●st thou with him when the Sky seeming to be wrapped up in d●rk●ess and rent with thunder and storms hast thou then with him scattered the darkness and cleared up the air making all strong or whole again Thus he is supposed speaking of a thing often done even after every storme not of spreading the Sky at first The Vulgar Latine renders it ironically in the second sense Tu forfitan cum illo fabricatus es coelos Vulg Thou perhaps didst joyn with him in making the Heavens As if Elihu had said 'T is like or belike thou wast with him when he made the Heavens Thou surely wast the Giant or Mighty man who assisted at the spreading out of that vast Canopie Didst thou poor worm contribute thy help or lend thy hand to God in the creation of the World are we beholding to thee that the Heavens which we behold compasse in all things with their embraces you speak of your self at such a rate as if you had been a partner or coadjutor with God in the Creation and had with him spread out the Heavens Thus the words are a strong Negation Thou hadst nothing to do with God when he spread out the Heavens in the work of Creation why then art thou so busie with God about the works of his Providence and particularly about his dealing with thy self The sum of Elihu's argument in this matter may be thus conceived If God call not man in other things as a Counsellor or Judge of his actions nor can be required of any man to do so nor may any man presume to speak against his ordering the Heavens and Meteors which yet concern the great good or hurt of thousands then it must needs be a very unequall thing that any one man should expect of God a reason of his particular dealing with him but patiently submit unto it not at all questioning either his justice or his goodness how greatly and grievously soever he is afflicted First Taking the Heavens either st●ictly or as many do synecdochecally a part being put for the whole work of Creation Note God made the world He sp●ead the Heavens and stretched out the Earth Heaven and Earth a●e the wo●k of his hands Secondly God had no partner in his work Hast thou with him spread out the Sky The Scripture is much in exalting the honour of God as the sole Agent and Efficient in setting up the frame of the Wo●ld Isa 44.24 Thus saith the Lord I am the Lord that maketh all things that stretcheth forth the Heavens alone that spreadeth abroad the Earth by my self The P●o●het brin●s in God speaking thus to com●●●t his ancient people when they saw none to help them What cannot God do alone who stretcheth out the Heavens alone Cannot he bring back the Church of the Jews out of Babylon alone who stretcheth out the Heavens alone cannot he raise up Cyrus for his Shepherd and move him to make Proclamation for their return when there was none to move him about it He frustrateth the tokens of the liars and maketh Diviners mad Those lying Diviners said the Jews were fast enough for coming out but God frustrated their tokens and made th●m mad at their disappoyntments Now as this may exceedingly comfort and encourage the people of God all the world over in their greatest straits that God made the world and spread ou● the Sky alone so it doth exceedingly advance the power and glo●y of God If a man have but a great Carpet or Coverlet to un●old he must call in the help of two or three to spread i● and hold it up one man cannot do it alone But God spread out the H●aven that mighty Canopie of the Heavens alone And his spreading of it was the making of it The mighty God by one act gave the Sky both its being and its forme And all this he did without either Counsellor or Coadjutor No man ever did any very great thing in the world but it was either by the help of other mens heads in contriving or by the help of their hands in effecting To be a sole-Agent of Great things is the sole-priviledge of the Great God And surely if the Lord God had no assistant in the great work of Creation he needs no assistance in his greatest works of Providence He who made the world without help can do what he pleaseth in the world without help Our help saith the Psalmist 124.8 is in the name of the Lord who made Heaven and Earth but the Maker of Heaven and of Earth fetcheth all his help from his own Name Elihu having magnified the power of G●d in spreading out
this reading Elihu in these words prevents an objection which Job might take occasion to make from what he had said or wished rather at the 36th verse of the former Chapter My desire is that Job may be tryed unto the end That is further afflicted or afflicted to the utmost Against this desire of Elihu Job is by him supposed making his exception or objection in this verse As if he had said Why doest thou or what reason hast thou to desire that I should be yet again tryed by affliction What I pray would that profit me if I were afflicted yet more and more Can the suffering of evil do me good or make me better To this objection Elihu gives answer in the next verse and those which follow to the ninth and he doth it as the Asserter of this Interpretation judgeth by this Dilemma Thy afflictions would profit either God or thy self seeing God doth nothing in vaine but neither thy sufferings how grievous soever nor thy doings how righteous soever can profit God no more than thy sins or evil doings can damage God therefore it remains that if God afflict thee further it will be if thou hast a heart to improve it for thy profit This reading and the sense arising from it is much insisted on but as the former is very harsh so I conceive this latter is very dark and intricate and grounded upon the supposition of an objection very remote or not easily to be suggested in this discourse And therefore to avoyd both my own and the readers unnecessary trouble I shall take the Text as it stands in our Translation and offer somewhat for instruction from it How great sinfulness there is in saying There is no profit in the wayes of God I have shewed at the 21st Chap. vers 11 th and Chap. 34th vers 9. So that referring the Reader thither I shall here give only this Note It is very sinful to say we shall get no advantage by leaving sin We may well put the Apostles question Rom. 6.21 to our selves What fru●t have we in those things whereof we are now ashamed What benefit have we got by polluting our selves with sin But how vaine a question is it to say What profit shall I have if I be cleansed from my sin Elihu chargeth Job with this yet still remember he referrs not to his eternal but temporal condition And this was Asaphs or Davids temptation also as to his temporal condition even he the one or the other David or Asaph spake as much in express terms as Job is here charged with Psal 73.13 where complaining of the great tryals and troubles he had been under and of the prosperity of the wicked Behold saith he these are the ungodly who prosper in the world they increase in riches But how is it with me Verily I have cleansed my heart in vaine and washed my hands in innocency for all the day long have I been plagued and chastned every moment As if he had said What have I got by my holiness and forsaking of sin what have I gained by my strictest walkings and abstainings from the very appearance of evil Have I not reason to conclude in good earnest that I have cleansed my heart and hands in vaine seeing my sufferings are not lessned though my sins are seeing my punishments are renewed every morning though I am every morning upon the renewal of my repentance Thus spake the Psalmist in the day of his temptation and doubtless this day of his Temption had been a day of temptation and provocation to the Lord like that of Israels in the Wilderness Psal 95.7 had not the Lord come in by his grace and helped him to bite in his words at the very next verse If I say I will speak thus if I use such not only uncomely but wicked language as this I have cleansed my heart and hands in vaine Behold I should offend against the generation of thy children And when I thought to know this it was too wonderful for me that is it was beyond my skill to reconcile these works these providences of God towards me with his word and promises nor was I any whit less at a loss how to reconcile the prosperity and flourishing condition of wicked men with those terrible threatnings which the Lord in his Word every where thunders out against them These cross and intricate dispensations puzzel'd me greatly put my soul into a maze nor could I spel their meaning nor make out the sense of them Vntill I went into the Sanctuary of God then understood I their end the woful Catastrophe the miserable end of wicked-men their slippery standing and their sudden falling as both are described v. 18 19 20. Then also I understood the blessedness of a godly mans estate both now and for ever in having God his guide and his portion v. 24 25 26. then I understood what profit and advantage comes by cleansing our selves from sin though to the eye it appeare not yea though all appearances speak the contrary To be cleansed from or to remove sin is profitable and advantagious First As to the removal of Judgement When we begin cleansing work the Lord usually makes an end of afflicting work For as one great end of sending affliction is to cleanse us from sin Isa 27.9 By this shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged and this is all the fruit to take away his sin so our being clean●ed from sin is usually the end of our afflictions When we are cleansed from sin we are troubled no more we smart no more speak then Is it no profit to be cleansed from sin when so many not only persons but Nations have been ruin'd because not cleansed from sin God gave his own people cleanness of teeth Amos 4.6 that is famine or want of bread because of the uncleanness of their hearts and lives and is it no profit to be cleansed from sin when for our sinfull uncleannesses God will cleanse us of all our comforts even to a morsel of bread 'T is therefore a speech both false in it self and highly di●honourable unto God to say I shall have no profit for still I shall suffer though I be cleansed from my sin whereas first there is more profit in being cleansed from sin than in being delivered from sufferings and secondly when once we are cleansed from sin we are in the fairest way to be cleared from and see an end of all our sufferings Secondly The more we are cleansed from sin the more communion we have with God and the more peace from God Is not this a great profit a profit besides the eternal reward a profit far better than any temporal reward Will not communion with God satisfie us for the loss of friends of estate or health Will not peace with God answer all the tribulations we can meet with in this world If therefore being cleansed from sin we have closer communion and sweeter peace with God let no man say
quem Deus Instituit Aquin. 1. 2 dae q. 21. Art 4. Ad primum nothing can be diminished nothing taken from God by any act of man Yet man as much as in him lyes takes away from and gives or brings to God when he either keeps or doth not keep that order which God hath appointed Sinners shall be judged and dealt with as they that have greatly annoyed and disadvantaged God as they that have rob'd and spoyl'd him as they that have smitten and wounded him as they that have abased him and laid him low And there is reason they should be judged as having done so forasmuch as they do their utmost to do so Thus they are described Psal 2.1 2. The Heathen rage and the People imagine a vain thing The Kings of the Earth set themselves and the Rulers c. And why all this what was it for It was against the Lord and against hû Anointed This was done by the Princes and Great Ones of the world yet they were so far from being able to prejudice the Lord either in his Person or in his Interest that he did but laugh at them for it And 't is considerable that God is described there according to the notion used by Elihu in the Text sitting in the Heavens vers 4. He that sitteth in the Heavens shall laugh the Lord shall have them in derision And why doth the Lord laugh surely because he sees they can no more hurt or hinder him in his purposes by any of or all their sinful advisings and attemptings than if they should hope to batter down the Heavens by discharging a Pot-gun against them And therefore he concludes with a triumphant Yet ver 6. Yet have I set my King after you have done your worst upon my holy Hill of Sion The sins of men do tu●n to the glory of God but to their own shame The sins of Gods own children turn to the glo●y of his mercy those huge heaps and numberless numbers of sins committed by his Children before Conversion what do they in the issue but lift up the glory of his Grace in the pardon of them And the rebellions committed by impenitent sinners going on in obstinacy to the end without Conversion what do they but lift up the glory of God in his Justice and wonderful judgements which he will bring upon them The sins of the old world which was a world of sin all flesh having corrupted their way before God and there being but one righteous Family found in it all those sins I say did not dammage God at all but indeed they glorified both his Patience and his Justice his Patience in sparing them so long even an hundred and twenty years after warning given his Justice in sending the Flood at last which brought swift destruction upon them and swept them all away The unnatural crying sins of Sodome did not hurt the God of Heaven but God took advantage thereby to glo●ifie his Justice in raining Fire and Brimstone upon them from Heaven Gen. 19.24 Pharaoh by all his opposition against the Israel of God did not disadvantage God but gave him an advantage to make his Power known by swallowing up him and his Egyptian Host in the waters of the Red Sea That which is done against the Will of God fulfills the Will of God The sins of men are so far from hurting the God of Heaven that they glorifie him among men on E●rth while they behold him either turning the evil which is dore into good or punishing them ●or their evil doings That which men speak or do against God like an Arrow shot up into the Ayre falls down upon their own heads David Ps 111.2 breaks out wonderfully into the praise of God upon this consideration The works of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure in them These wo●ks of God wherein we should take pleasure are not only wo ks of mercy to the Godly vers 3 4 5. but of vengeance upon the wicked vers 6. He hath shewed his people the power of his w●rks that he may give them the heritage of the Heathen The works of his hands are Verity and Judgement vers 7. That is judgement for Saints in saving them and upon sinners in consuming them De eo quod agitur contra Dei voluntatem voluntas ipsius vel mala in bonum convertentis vel mala punientis impletur August Enchirid c. 100. We should much contemplate the works of God in bringing glory to himself out of the sins of men The Angels sinned and sell man sinned as soon almost as he was set up These Creatures did that which God would not have done yet God brought about that which he would And thus it is to this day among all the child●en of men while they break holy Commandements God fulfills his holy Counsels no thanks to them yea woe to them So then the Lord hath no hurt by sin which way soever sinners turn themselves they cannot turn away his Counsels nor turn from his Counsels When they are disobeying his revealed will Miro et inaffabili modo non fit praeter ejus voluntatem quod etiam contra ejus voluntatem fit quia non fieret si non sineret nec utique nolens sinit sed volens Nec sineret bonus fieri male nisi omnipotens etiam de malo facere posset bene August in Psal 111. he is doing his secret will in which God is most righteous and in his season will lift up his Righteousnesse and Holinesse his righteous and holy Will in the face of all the sinners in the world and they shall know and confesse that he hath served his own wise and holy purposes even in those Providences wherein they have had no purpose but to serve their foolish and unholy lusts and pleasures We have an illustrious proof of this in that extreamly evil and unnatural practise of men good in the main the holy Patriarchs against their own Brother Gen. 50.20 who told them plainly when he meant them no evil but good But as for you ye thought evil against me but God meant it for good to bring to pass as it is this day to save much people alive Further To clear the Point in general we may distinguish of sin as having a threefold opposition First Against our selves Secondly Against our Neighbour Thirdly Against God This division or distinction of sins must be so understood that the two former namely sin against our selves and against our Neighbour brings a real detriment and disadvantage to our selves and to our Neighbour But as sin hath respect to God it doth not bring any real detriment to him Only it may be said First The will of many sinners is raised up to that height of wickednesse as purposely to set themselves to dishonour God to blaspheme his name and do despight to the Spirit of Grace Heb. 10.29 which is the utmost length that sin or lust can go Secondly The nature of
thing to God he is above and beyond all the gifts and givings of the creature There is a three-fold ground of it why nothing can be given to God either to oblige him or to add any thing to him First All is due to him what-ever we do is a debt to him we cannot make the payment of a debt a gift Be as holy and as righteous as you will as exact in your walkings as you can it is all of debt and therefore not a gift Luke 17.10 When you have done all when you have run your whole Course of obedience both as to first and second Table duties say you are unprofitable servants we have done no more than was our duty to do There is no gift where all is due Secondly What-ever we do in a way of Righteousness is not a gift nor an advan●age to God for it was all first given us by God Nihil aceressit ei nostra justitia quae tota gratuitum est illius donum we and all that we have came first from him whatsoever we have we have had it of God It is said in that place before noted Acts 17.25 He is not worshipped of mens hands as if he needed any thing why for he giveth to all men life and breath and all things he gives all things and therefore he needs nothing nor can any thing properly be said to be given to him Scitum est illud sapientis Hebraei da illi de su● quia tu omnia tua illius sunt Tua ex tuis offerrimus tibi domine Drus Et lamsi q●od debemu● reddere deo cupiamus tamen de suo reddimus Salvi de Eccl● Cathol who giveth all things We have that remarkable Scripture 1 Chron. 29.10 where David praiseth the Lord for the offering and gift which he himself and his people had brought towards the building of the Temple And he desired that his offerings might be accepted of the Lord not so much as they were given by his hand as because they and the heart to give them were received from the hand of God Wherefore David blessed the Lord before all the Congregation and said Blessed be thou Lord God of Israel our Father for ever and ever for all that is in Heaven and in Earth is thine thine is the Kingdome O Lord and thou art exalted as head above all And now therefore O God we thank thee and praise thy glorious Name But who am I and what is my people that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort for all things come of thee and of thy own have we given thee And again at the 16th verse All this store cometh of thee and all is thine own We cannot be said properly to give another that which is his own already whatever God receives of us came from himself And as whatsoever we give comes from God so every action or duty which we performe to God comes from God he bestows the power to do upon us before we can do any thing and therefore it cannot be any addition unto him There are two graces which we exercise very pleasing to God first Faith secondly Charity yet neither of these contribute any thing to God Faith is so far from giving God any thing that its whole work lyeth in receiving And though charity be a giving grace yet it gives to man only not to God So then what doth God receive of man surely nothing but his own David enquires Psal 116.12 What shall I return to the Lord for all his benefits Ma●k that word return the Hebrew Text may be thus rendred What shall I make to return to the Lord of all his rendrings or contributions unto me As if he had said Lord I have received abundance from thee thou hast payd or recompenced me fully for all my paines and I am looking over it all and considering what of it I shall return to thee it is all thine own and now Lord what shall I return of it back again to thee What he received was returned if not in kind yet in effect and the retu n of that was but his duty it could not be his desert Christ indeed me●ited and satisfied because he g●ve of his own and as God-man wrought all righteousness for us in his own strength Thirdly The Lord receives nothing at our hands for he is full already We can put no more into a full vessel if there be any empty space you may put somewhat more into a Vessel but when it is as full as it can hold what can you put into it Who can make the Ocean fuller which hath in it the fullness of all waters All that we can give to God is not so much an encrease to him as a drop of the Bucket is to the whole Ocean Who can make the Sun b ighter all we do to or for God is not so much as a Candle to the Sun What can he receive who hath all things in himself God is infinitely full therefore there is no giving to him nor receiving by him at our hands That word which is one of the Titles of God holds forth as much he is Elshaddi that is A God every way full every way sufficient he is all-sufficient for us and he is Self-sufficient Est quidem pictas illis grata non autem utilis Plato in Euthyphra Manifestam est quod nulla re Deus nec amicis egebit Arist lib. 7. Eth. c. 12. Some of the Heathens had such notions and glimme●ing apprehensions of Go● Plato saith The exercise of Godlinesse or of Worship is acceptable to God but is not at all profitable to God It is manifest saith Aristotle that God needs no friends nor any thing to help him The Sacrifices of the Jews were great and royal Offerings they brought their Sheep and Oxen and Bullocks and Goats in abundance yet the Lord would have them know he had no need of them Psal 50.8 I will not reprove thee for thy Sacrifices and burnt offerings to have been continually before me I will take no Bullock out of thy house nor he-Goat out of thy Folds for every Beast of the Forrest is mine and the Cattel upon a thousand Hills I know all the Fowls of the Mountains and the wild Beasts of the Field are mine If I were an hungry I would not tell thee for the world is mine and the fulnesse thereof Some conceive that Elihu aimes especially at those gif●s If thou bringest or givest many sacrifices what receiveth he at thy hand The Lo●d doth not call for sacrifices because he is hungry that is hath need of them The Lord Zeph. 2.11 threatens the gods of the Heathen that he would starve or famish them that is he would destroy the means of their Worship But who can famish the Lord whose the world is and the fulness of it Now if God receives nothing at our hands by way of supply or addition then First No Creature is
idle away the day and sport and play and sing away the night As good men have holy songs in the night Isa 30.29 Ye shall have a song as in the night when a holy Solemnity is kept c. So the wicked have their wanton vaine revelling songs in the night when their sensual Solemnities are kept Belshazer was drinking in the night and doubtless he had his musick songs that night And as he had his songs mirth and musick in the night so he said not Where is God my maker who giveth me songs in the night he instead of minding God his maker in his mirth minded only the gods which himself had made as the text speaks Dan. 5.4 They drank wine and praised the gods of gold and of silver c. And thus 't is in proportion with all the wicked to whom God gives songs in the night they say not Where is God my maker This interpretation which carrieth the songs to the oppressors before spoken of contains a truth yet I shall not stay upon it but take the words as referring to the oppressed Here it may be queried how doth God give them songs in the night I shall not insist upon those conjectures which some have made about this giving songs in the night As First implying God so gracious that he giveth us not only in the day but in the night occasion of joy in sorrow namely the view and contemplation of the Heavens and Starrs which are very pleasant and refreshing Psal 19.1 Others Secondly conjecture that God may be said to give the sorrowful and oppressed ones songs in the night by the singing of birds in the night of that bird especially which hath its name from singing in the night the Nightingal Some insist much upon these interpretations It is I grant a great mercy of God that when the Sun is down we have Moon-light and Star-light and that in the night we have the innocent harmless birds to sing and make us pleasant melody But leaving these we may take the words in a double notion First Properly Secondly Metaphorically Properly and so to give songs in the night as the night is taken for night time imports the goodness of God to man not only in the day time but in the night Hence Note God in the night season as well as in the day gives his people matter of joy Night-mercies deserve and call for day-praises especially two sorts of night-mercies First Night preservations Psal 3.6 I laid me down and slept for thou Lord makest me to dwell in safety The night is subj●ct to many dangers Qui distribuit nocturnas custodias Sept The Septuagint render fully to this sense Who giveth watch or preservation in the night that 's matter of praise and thanksgiving to God Secondly he gives us cause of praise and singing not only for preserving our lives while we sleep in the night but for refreshing us with sleep in the night Psal 127.2 So he giveth his beloved sleep The Lord gives us not only safety but sleep Sweet sleep is a great mercy Eccl. 5.12 The sleep of a labouring man is sweet whether he eat little or muc● and they who sleep sweetly get refreshing and renewings of strength after all their fo●mer labours for new labours So tha● if we take night properly for the night time there is much occasion of rejoycing given by God to mankind in general and more peculiarly to his faithfull servants in reference to those common mercies of bodily safety and the return of natural strength and spirits Secondly Take night properly and then this assertion He giveth songs in the night may have this meaning The Lord gives his people a praising frame of heart in the night season Et●am cum nulla ad eum laudandum documenta circumfulgent intus Spiritu excitat ad laudes Jun When they are wrapped up and compassed about with outward darkness when they are solitary and alone when no worldly object holds out any occasion of comfort to them yet then the Lord lets in a light or shines into their s●uls by his good Spirit The Lord may well be said to give songs even in the night when by the immediate work of his Spirit he filleth our spirits with joyes unspeakable and glorious These a●e the most ravishing songs of the night Hence Note God by his good Spirit doth often suggest sweet meditations and comfortable thoughts to his people in the night In the night the Lord minds his servants either of such mercies as they have already received or of such as according to his promise he is ready to or will surely bestow that so they may be busied in that heavenly work of praising him and rejoycing in him when they awake or cannot sleep This was Davids experience Psal 17.3 Thou hast visited me in the night Men use to visit us in the day when we are up or awake But saith David God gives me visits in the night when I am in bed he gives me many a song or makes me to rejoyce When we are in our retirements or freest from the hurry of worldly businesses and enjoyments then we are in the fittest posture for the entertainment and enjoyment of God The Lord visits his servants in the night not only as David there to try them or as elsewhere to instruct them but to com●o●t them as David was assured Psal 42.8 The Lord will command his loving kindness in the day time and in the night his song shall be with me That is a song concerning him I will sing and rejoyce even in the night time because of the goodness and kindn●ss of God to me in the day The experience of Asaph or of David communicated in that Psalm to Asaph gives further proof of this Psal 77.6 where having said v. 1. I cryed unto God with my voyce and he gave eare unto me he adds v. 6. I call to remembrance my song in the night that is those occasions of joy and singing which God hath heretofore given me These songs were sweeter to me than sleep As it sheweth an excellent frame of spirit to remember the Commandments of God in the night which David also professed as his practise Psal 119.55 I have remembred thy Name O Lord in the night and have kept thy Law The name of God is any manifestation of God either in his word or works And again Psal 119.62 At midnight I will rise to give thanks to thee because of thy righteous judgements Some watch in the night to give thanks Psal 134.1 others give thanks when they wake at any time in the night both are acts of purest love to God and proceed from purest consolation in God Cant. 3.1 By night on my bed I sought him The Spouse doth not say only by night I sought him but by night on my bed I spend not the night in sleeping but in seeking him whom my soul loveth Psal 16.7 My reines instruct me in the night
impenitents among his own people by the Prophet Isa 1.15 Though you make many prayers I will not hear for your hands are full of blood Ye are full of bloody sins and ye have not humbled your selves nor cleansed your hearts and hands by the blood of the Covenant to this day and being in that case you may cry and pray till your hearts ake and your tongues ake too yet no prevailing with God no grant no hearing Another Prophet tells them as sad newes from the Lord Jer. 11.11 Behold I will bring evil upon them which they shall not be able to escape or go forth of and though they shall cry unto me I will not hearken to them Though the Lord threatned I will bring such evil upon them that they shall not escape they might say well but when the evil hath taken hold of us we hope God will hear us and deliver us No saith God when the evil hath overtaken and arrested you yet your prayers shall not overtake me Though you cry yet I will not hearken unto you That 's a dreadful Scripture of the same import Psal 18.41 They cryed but there was none to save them even unto the Lord but he answered them not They cryed being in great distresse and they cryed to the Lord he brings in that lest any should say they cryed indeed but possibly 't was to false gods to idols possibly they knockt at a wrong doore and so were not heard No they cryed to the Lord to the Lord by name they were right as to the object of prayer but their hearts were not right they were not right subjects of prayer That once blind man saw this truth when answering the Pharisees about the person by whose power he received his sight he told them plainly Joh. 9.31 We know that God heareth not sinners that is Such as love and live in sin such as go on impenitently in their sins By this answer he closely but strongly confuted that blasphemous opinion and censure of the Pharisees who reputed and reported the Lord Jesus Christ who came into the world to save sinners as one of the vilest sinners in the world and upon that account got him crucified at last As if the man had said Were he that cured me of my blindness such a sinner as you reckon him to be he could never have obtained power from God to cure me of my blindness for we know God heareth not sinners When men sin and pray as it were by turns their prayers are turned into sin and therefore will not be returned in mercy God sometimes hears sinners in wrath and judgement and he sometimes will rot hear Saints as to the grant of the thing in hand prayed for in love and mercy but he never denies praying Saints in wrath nor doth he ever hear a sinner such a one as is here intended in mercy when he prayeth Now as when the Disciples heard Christs answer to the Pharisees question about Divorce they presently said Math. 19.10 If the case of the man be so with his wife it is not good to marry so some hearing this doctrine that God heareth not proud sinners when they cry or pray may possibly say if the case of the proud be thus with God it is not good for them to pray at all To such I answer this doctrine is not urged to make proud or impenitent sinners to leave praying but to leave their pride 't is urged to make them humble under their oppressions and afflictions not to make them prophane They who as they are cannot get by prayer certainly they cannot get by casting off prayer What answer can they have who cry not at all to God when some may cry and get no answer as Elihu here speaks There they cry but none giveth answer because of the pride of wicked men This sense or interpretation most insisted upon in this 12th verse will appear more full and faire in opening the 13th Ad dicti superioris confirmationem Epiphonemaris vice subjicit in which Elihu brings down what he said here into a strong and peremptory conclusion or the next verse renders another reason why God would not relieve those oppressed ones It was not only for the pride of their spirits v. 12. but also for the emptiness and heartlesness of their prayers or because the prayers of proud and evil men are heartless or empty Vers 13. Surely God will not hear vanity neither will the Almighty regard it They cry but God will not hear why will he not hear what hinders He tells us both why and what Surely God will not hear vanity What is vanity What saith vanity hath vanity a tongue can vanity speak the Text saith God will not hear vanity 'T is frequent in Scripture to ascribe a tongue and a voyce to sin of any kind though some sins are more vocall and speak louder than others yet all speak But when he saith Surely or without all Question the Lord will not hear vanity by vanity we are to understand vaine men praying or vanity is put for the prayers and crys of those persons who are as vaine as vanity it self The word rendred vanity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 temeritas falsitas mendacium dicitur de re salsa vana levi mutili signifieth a lie as also rashness temerity God will neither hear rash-headed nor false-hearted prayers he will not hear vaine prayers or the prayers of vaine men The Abstract is often put for the Concrete in Scripture Psal 107.42 All iniquity shall stop her mouth When the Lord brings about that mighty work the bringing down of the mighty sets the poor on high those that are at once poor and humble the Lord will set on high then Iniquity that is wicked men men of iniquity shall stop their mouths or have their mouths stopt they shall not have a word to say as gaine-saying that righteous and glorious work of God So here God will not hear vanity that is vaine men or men that pray vainly all that which men speak or act is vaine or vanity if it be not good if it be not answerable to the will and ends of God yea whatsoever prayer doth not proceed from faith and flow from a pure heart is vanity 't is but straw and stubble dross and dung God will not hear vanity Neither will the Almighty regard it He that will not hear will much less regard vanity The sense is gradual regarding is more than hearing we may put both together he will not hear with regard nor regard what he hears from such The strong God who hath all power in his hand the power of Authority or the power of a Judge will not hear vanity The All-mighty The All-sufficient who hath all power of efficiency in his hand the nourisher and preserver the punisher and correcter of all men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intendit oculos visum intentis fiaeis oculis intuitus est solicitè
neither will the Almighty regard it Consider that Elihu doth not only say God will not hear but he adds neither will the Almighty regard it The doubling of the matter in higher Language intima●es somthing to us and we may note this from it As the Prayers of evil men are vain so they have not any the lest regard from God He will neither hear nor regard David saith Psal 66.18 If I regard iniquity in my heart God will not hear my Prayer God will not hear a David a good man as to that particular prayer if he regard iniquity in his heart that is if he hold any the least complyance or secret correspondence with any sin yea if he hath not repented of and laboured to mortifie every known sin Doubtless then he will not regard the prayers of evil men when they pray also with an evil mind And when this and other Scriptures say he doth neither hear nor regard them there is more intended than expressed even that he doth reject and abhor them that they are a burden and an abomination to him The Scripture is much in shewing how much God makes of holy prayers For first God hath not only promised to hear but regard such prayers Psal 112.17 He will regard the prayer of the destitute and not despise their prayers that is he highly prizeth and esteemeth them Secondly The Scripture telleth us God delighteth to hear such prayers they are sweet to him they are the best musick in his ears Let me hear thy voyce for sweet is thy voyce her prayer-voyce he means chiefly saith Christ to his Spouse Cant. 2.14 Thirdly The Scripture assureth us that God looks upon or reckoneth prayer as an honour done to him 't is an eminent part of worship 't is the giving of him glory certainly therefore take prayer purely God doth regard it very much he will have regard to that which he hath promised regard to he will have regard to that which is sweet and delightful to him which is an honour and brings glory to him therefore there must needs be a great matter in it when he saith He will not regard a prayer such a prayer must needs be very vile impure and stark naught in it self which he thus thrusteth from him or cannot away with It must be confessed that God sometimes defers to hear that is to answer the prayers of those that call upon him in faith and even their prayers who call upon him humbly and sincerely Holy prayers are not alwayes presently answered but holy prayers are never unregarded never rejected 'T is never said in Scripture God doth not regard the prayers of a godly man God may let him stay long for the answer of his prayer to try his faith and patience but he will not slight his prayer As it is the duty of all men to pray and the desire or delight of a godly man when his heart is in a right frame to pray so it is the priviledge of every godly man that his prayer is heard and regarded And as it is the sin of most wicked men that they pray not at all Psal 14.4 Jer. 10.25 so it is the misery of all wicked men that their prayers though they make many and long prayers are not heard are not regarded They are far from the grace and feare of God who regard not to pray unto him and they are as far from the mercy and favour of God whose prayers are not regarded And if a man be upon such bad terms with God that he is not regarded when he is at his best work his praying-wo●k O how little is such a one regarded when he is at his worst work his sinning-sinning-work If some men are not regarded when they are praying to God what are they when they are swearing and blaspheming God when they are causlesly vexing or oppressing their brethren If some men are not regarded when they are praying what are they when they are revelling and reviling The Lords indignation breaketh out to the utmost against wicked men when he tells them the best of their duties their prayer is vanity and though they cry much to him he will not hear nor regard them The Lord hath not said to the seed of Jacob seek ye me in vaine Isa 45.19 that is ye shall not seek me in vaine no as your prayers are honourable and acceptable unto me so they shall be profitable and beneficial unto you you that go forth weeping bearing and scattering this precious seed shall doubtless come again and bring your sheaves with you your prayers shall be returned with blessings upon your souls upon your bodies upon your estates upon your families in which you live as also upon the Nations and upon the Churches among whom you live Thus the seed of Jacob have found and shall further find by the blessed experiences of all these blessings that God hath not said to them Seek ye me in vaine He hath only said of them who are vaine your seekings of me are vaine in themselves and will be vaine fruitless answerless unto you for I the Lord will not hear vanity neither will I the Almighty regard it JOB Chap. 35. Vers 14. Although thou sayest thou shalt not see him yet Judgement is before him therefore trust thou in him THere is a two-fold rendring or translation of this 14t h verse First Some connecting it with the former and taking it in a dependance upon what Elihu had last affirmed concerning God He heareth not vanity Multo minus si di● is non contemplaris istud exauditurus e●t judica coram eo expecta eum Jun neither doth the Almighty regard it translate thus Much less will he hear thee if thou sayest thou doest not lo●k to or regard this judge thy self therefore before him and waite for him As if Elihu should bring an argument from the less to the greater God will not hear vanity nor will the Almighty regard it how much less will he hear thee who sayest upon the matter that thou regardest not him or what he saith and doth That word which in the close of the 13th verse we render regard is the same with that in this 14th verse rendered see as if the whole were a rebuke or a conviction of Job for his stoutness in not viewing and contemplating the power and prerogative of God as he ought in laying his hand upon him and therefore saith Elihu if God will not hear those that pray vainly how much less will he regard thee who seemest not to regard him that is not to humble thy self before him as becomes thee to thy Soveraigne Lord And thereupon Elihu gives him counsel in the close of the verse Judge thy self before him and then waite for him or trust him as we render it Mr Broughton seems to speak in his translation much to this sense giving it thus So when thou sayest thou wilt not mark it judge before him and waite for him As God will
quandoquidem igitur illa non extat invasit ira ejus qua odit et amolitur peccat m etiam in iis ques diligit et salv●s vult maxime Coc. He hath visited in his anger or strictly his anger hath visited That is God hath heavily afflicted thee God is far from all passion and perturbation of mind only he is said to be angry or to visit in his anger when he doth that which anger produceth among men when he casts down and punisheth when he lays his hand sorely upon the Creature then he is said to be angry then His anger hath visited The word notes quick breathing in the Nostrils anger appears or vents it self there as it is said of Paul when Saul Acts 9.1 And Saul yet breathing out threatnings and slaughter against the Disciples of the Lord went unto the High Priest You might see anger as it were foam yea flame out of his mouth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ira ejus visitavit and evaporate at his nostrils Thus saith Elihu Because it is not so his anger Hath visited To visit is properly to go to and see any person whom we respect and love thus we visit friends in civility and courtesie Secondly To visit is an act of pity and mercy and thus we visit the sick the widdow and the fatherlesse James 1.27 Pure Religion and undefiled before God and the Father is to visit the fatherlesse and widows in their affliction that is to go to them in pity either for the supply of their wants by our purse or for the comforting of their hearts by our counsel Thirdly We visit in care as well as in kindnesse that is when we go to our Families or Flocks or places of charge wheresoever they are and see that or whether all things are well and right with them or well and rightly done towards them according to the rules that such persons under our charge ought to act and live by Thus in Colledges and Hospitals there is a visitation of care to make enquiry of persons in trust about persons and things under their trust To the Point in hand there is a twofold visitation of God First He visits in love and mercy Ruth 1.6 Then she that is Naomi arose with her Daughter in Law that she might return from the Countrey of Moab for she had heard in the Countrey of Moab how that the Lord had visited his people in giving them bread That is God had shewed them kindnesse and mercy in relieving them from that devouring famine Again Gen. 21.6 And the Lord visited Sarah as he had said that is he gave her the promised mercy of a Son Once more Luke 1.68 Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for he hath visited and redeemed his People and that 's a blessed visitation indeed which brings redemption Thus the Scripture often speaks of Gods visitation in mercy Secondly There is a visitation of God in anger wrath and judgement The Law saith Exod. 20.4 5. Thou shalt not make to thy self any graven Image c. Thou shalt not bow down thy self to them nor serve them for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God visiting the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children unto the third and fourth Generation of them that hate me That is punishing the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children these Children continuing in their Fathers ways to do sinfully such Children as take up the evil examples or tread in the bad steps of their fore-Fathers shall suffer for it The Prophet at once upbraided the impudent Jews and threatned them in this Language Jer. 6.15 Were they ashamed when they had committed abominations nay they were not ashamed neither could they blush therefore they shall fall among them that fall at the time that I visit them they shall be cast down saith the Lord. Again Isa 26.14 Therefore hast thou visi●ed and destroyed them There is a visitation for destruction that 's a sad visitation In this sense we read of a time of visitation Jer. 8.12 Jer. 10.15 We read of days of visitation Hosea 9.7 The dayes of visitation are come the dayes of recompence are come We read also of a year of visitation Jer. 23.12 For I will bring evil upon them even the year of their visitation saith the Lord. As also Chap. 11.23 I will bring evil upon the men of Anathoth even the year of their visitation This is the visitation here spoken of it is a time a day a year of sore visitation with thee O Job Because it is not so he hath visited in his anger Hence Note First God expects the work of Faith and Patience when his afflicting hand is upon us Faith hath much work to do at all times but most in times of affliction There is also a use of two sorts of patience in our best dayes the patience of labouring in Gods work and the patience of waiting for the reward of our work after all our labours But in sad dayes the Lord expects we should exercise both patience in suffering and in waiting for deliverance out of all our sufferings then 't is that both Faith and Patience trusting and waiting must have their perfect work Secondly Note When the Lord doth not find or see as he expects the work of Faith and Patience in a time of affliction he will afflict more and more until he finds or works it This is it which Elihu saith in the Text Because it is not so he hath visited in his anger Job was sorely afflicted before but now he is visited in anger because he did not manifest such trust in God as he expected in that condition As when the wicked repent not of their sins under the punishing hand of God he will punish them more and more even seven times more for their sins Levit. 26.41 So when good men act not their Graces believe not trust not under the afflicting hand of God he usually afflicts them more and more gives them soarer stripes and layeth yet heavier burdens on them When God misseth what he lock'd for we may quickly feel what we looked not for Mr. Braughtons Translation speaks the Point fully But now for missing his anger doth visit Man seldome misseth t●ouble from God when God misseth duty from man and 't is a me cy that he doth not 't is mans mercy when God minds him of his deficiencies in duty though by a smart visiting rod. Thus the Lord spake of Davids Seed and 't is to be understood of all the Seed of Christ whom David typed Psal 89. If his children forsake my Law v. 30 31. Then vers 32. will I visit their transgressions with the Rod c. How true this charge of Elihu was as to Jobs omission of duty I shall not stay to enquire only this we know Job had professed trust in God yet because it was mingled with so much complaint with so many unbelieving expostulations Elihu might say the Lord missed the patience trust and confidence
forgets God as his Maker will never remember much less answer and accomplish the ends for which he was made Thirdly I will ascribe righteousness to My Maker Note A godly man takes God as his own and appropriates him by Faith in all his Relations Faith takes not only a share in God but all of God My God my Father my Maker my Redeemer are strains of Faith A Believer doth as it were ingross God to himself yet desires and endeavours that all as well as himself may have their part and portion in God yea God for their Portion Job said Chap. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liveth He spake as if he had got a Redeemer not only to but by himself Thus also holy Paul of Christ Gal. 2.22 Who loved me gave himself for me as if he had been given for him alone and loved none but him This is the highest work of Faith and 't is the signification of our hottest love to God it shews endearedness of affection to him as well as neerness and clearness of interest in him when we thus take him as our own Saviour Father Maker I will ascribe righteousness to my Maker Observe Fourthly He who is the Maker of all men can be unrighteous to n● man nor is lyable to the censure of any man whatever he doth 'T is impossible that he who made us should wrong or injure us and that upon a twofold Principle First Of the respect he hath for Justice towards all those whom he hath made God is so tender that he doth not willingly or with his heart affl●ct nor grieve the children of men to crush under his feet all the Prisoners of the earth Lam. 3.33 34. much less will he as it followeth vers 35 ●6 turn away the right of a man before the face of the most High that is before his own face who is the Most High As if it had been said The Lord will not pervert Judgment in any mans Case that comes before him Or if we take those words before the face of the Most High as denoting the highest Judicatory on Earth as our Margin intimates putting there for Most High A Superiour then the meaning is The Lord doth not approve that any earthly Judge though Supream or most Superiour should turn aside the right of a man how inferiour soever for as the 36th verse hath it To subvert a man in his Cause the Lord approveth not or as the Hebrew is rendred seeth not that is he seeth it not with approbation but indeed with detestation and will severely punish such subverters of Justice Secondly It is impossible that he who hath made us should wrong or injure us upon the principle of his Soveraignty over all those whom he hath made He that gives all men their being he that gives all to all men that are in being can be unrighteous to no man whatsoever he taketh from him or doth with him We have Job in the beginning of this Book Chap. 1.21 ascribing righteousness to God his Maker upon this reason or principle The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the Name of the Lord. It is he that made me a man 't is he who once made me a rich man a great man the greatest man of all the men of the East Chap. 1.3 What if now he hath lessened me and left me little or nothing what if he hath now made me a mean man a poor man in account a no man what if God hath now stript me naked and taken all from me He hath taken nothing but what he gave why then should I take it ill at his hands or have so much as an ill thought of him the Lord gives and the Lord takes there 's no unrighteousness in all this If God should utterly undoe us he doth us no wrong if he should as it were unmake us let us consider he is our Maker then we must say there is no unrighteousness in him yea we shall be ready with Elihu in the Text to ascribe righteousness unto him And therefore as a Corollary from the whole Note Fifthly Whatsoever God doth with us or others we ought to maintain the honour of God and retain good thoughts of him both as righteous and good Though Heaven and Earth be moved though the World be full of confusion and un●ighteousness yet we must ascribe righteou●nesse to God Whatsoever or whosoever falls to the dust the Honour and Justice of God must not Thus far of Elihu's third Argument for attention the Fourth is at hand in the next verse Vers 4. For truly my words shall not be false he that is perfect in knowledge is with thee As if he had said I am purposed to speak the truth and nothing but the truth therefore hear me Truly my words shall not be false He gives assurance for or warrants the truth of his words while he saith they shall not be false Negatives in Scripture often carry a strong affirmation The Father of a Fool hath no joy Non est ●●num pro passimum est sic non remitt●tur ei i. e. famietur Drus saith Solomon Prov. 17.21 that is he shall have a great deal of sorrow When the Scripture denyeth forgiveness to any sort of impenitent sinners or saith their sin shall not be forgiven the sense is they shall be punished When we say proverbially Goods ill gotten shall not prosper the meaning is they shall perish and do him mischief that hath gotten them not only shall he not thrive with them but they shall ruine and undoe him his goods ill gotten shall do him no good when the evill day is come much less shall they be able or he by them to prevent the coming of an evil day Once more When we say Such a thing is not ill done our intendment is 't is very well done excellently done So here when Elihu saith Truly my words shall not be false his meaning is I will speak truth and truth to the highest I will speak nothing but what shall endure the Touchstone and the Test I will not offer thee a Syllable of falshood what I alledge and urge either for God or against thee shall not be fetcht o● hammer'd out of my own brain and so subject to errour and mistake but such as God who cannot erre by whose Spirit and in whose stead I speak unto thee hath inspired me with or taught me for thy conviction and instruction Fourthly When he saith Truly my words shall not be false we may take it two wayes First As to the matter spoken Secondly As to the mind of the Speaker when truth is thus spoken t is truly spoken thus much Elihu engag'd for As if he had said The matter that I speak shall be true and I will speak it in truth or with a true mind and heart I will not speak any thing to flatter thee nor for my own ends to trouble thee my words shall be candid and sincere
active conquest as a King which he usually atchieveth by himself alone without any appearance of help from man And though Deborah in her Song Judg. 5. pronounceth a curse upon those that came not out to help the Lord against the Mighty yet it was not because the mighty God needed their help or service but because they did owe it him in duty should have given it him For that the Lord wants no help is further clear from the Prophet Isa 59.16 He saw that there was no man and wondered that there was no Intercessor none so much as to speak a word therefore his arme wrought salvation and his righteousness it sustained him Not only no arme was put forth to help but no tongue so much as move or intercede for help to do it yet his own arme did it Thus the Prophet Isa 44.24 He stretcheth forth the Heavens alone and laid the Foundations of the Earth by himself Now as it was with the Lord in the work of Creation he had no helper no assistant he did it alone by himself so it is as true as to all works of providence Let all men forsake him as the Apostle Paul complained they did him 2 Tim. 4.16 and no man stand by him yet the Lord what his purpose and counsel is can bring to pass alone O behold this might he can do all things without the help of any and not only so but Fifthly God is so mighty that he can bring all things to pass or do what he pleaseth though all creatures should be displeased though all men and Angels though all second causes stand up to hinder and to stop him The Lord can work his will against every will against all contradictions and oppositions Thus the Prophet extols the power of God Isa 14.27 The Lord of Hosts hath purposed and who shall d●sanul it His hand is stretched out and who shall turn it back Where we have first the purpose of God none can disanull that Secondly the execution of that purpose He stretcheth out his hand to do such or such a thing who shall turn it back Let all men and Devils joyn forces and counsels let them strive to do it they shall not be able to do it We have a like confession Dan. 4.35 He doth according to his will in the Armies of Heaven and among the Inhabitants of the Earth and none can stay his hand or say to him what dost thou Such is the mightiness of God that he can work not only when the creature doth not help him or when they apostatize from and desert him or his interest but though they set their hearts and heads their hands and their all against him they cannot stay him nor hinder his work I saith the Lord Isa 43.13 will work and who shall let it Sixthly Behold how mighty the Lord is he is so mighty that he can do all these things and never trouble himself in doing of them he can do all things and not be weary We see the mightiest among men the Powers of this world how they are toyled and moyled how they are worn out how they sweat and labour and are ready to faint and tire in b●inging some poor business some petty project about or to its issue But the greatest designes which the Lord hath in his heart to do he can do them without any wearisomness or trouble at all Isa 40.28 Dost not thou know that the Lord is not weary neither doth he faint and when the Prophet saith the Lord is not weary neither doth he faint the meaning is not this the Lord is somewhat weary only he doth not faint but the meaning is this he hath not the least wearisomness upon him no more than a man hath in turning his hand not only are all things possible to God or such as he can do if he put forth the utmost of his power and strength if he make as we say much adoe if he lay himself out to the full not only are things thus possible to God which yet argueth wonderfull might but behold the Lord is so mighty that there is nothing difficult unto him Not only can he possibly do great things but he can easily do them he can do them without the least trouble to himself There is nothing hard to him who can do every thing Mighty men have done great things but they will tell you they could hardly do them they were forced to turn every stone to straine every veine of their hearts to do them whereas the mighty God can do his work with as much ease as desire to have it done Seaventhly Behold God is mighty so mighty that he can do any thing but that which will argue that he is not almighty The Scripture speaks of something which the Lord cannot doe Tit. 1.2 In hope of eternal life which God who cannot lye hath promised And again the Apostle saith of God not only making promise but oath to Abraham Heb. 6.18 That by two Immutable things in which it is impossible for God to lye the heirs of promise might have strong consolation Once more 2 Tim. 2.13 If we believe not yet he abideth faithfull he cannot deny himself We have these and such like negative Propositions concerning God telling us what he cannot do Now the only reason why it is said the Mighty God cannot do these things is because the doing of them would argue him not to be Almighty To lye is to be weak to deny himself would affirme his impotency therefore he cannot do these things the Lord is so mighty so strong that it is impossible for him to do any thing which should declare any weakness or impotency in him Thus I have given you seaven assertions concerning the might of God all which may very well call for a behold of admiration and astonishment at the mightiness of God Take a few Inferences from this grand Assertion First For Comfort Secondly For Terror Behold the Lord is Mighty Almighty this speaks comfort to the people of God First Surely then he can do whatsoever he hath promised to do and if so then look through the promises and see whether God hath not promised to do good things for his people in generall and for every believer in particular Behold the Lord is mighty these are not vaine words he can fill up and fulfill all his promises As he hath made promises so he can create performances Abraham was fully perswaded that what he had promised he was able to performe Rom. 4.21 Secondly If the Lord be mighty in all those notions foreshewed then certainly he can do whatsoever we desire him to do according to his will As God hath not out-promised his power so we cannot out-pray the power nor out-ask the arme of God we may quickly out-pray the power of man and ask what he cannot do he may say I cannot do this for you it is not in my power but here is our comfort if what we pray and
ask be good for us to have if it be just and righteous for him to do let it be what it will it is within the compasse of the power of God who is also ready to performe it for us The Apostle assureth us of this Eph. 4.20 He is able to do for us abundantly above what we ask or think he cannot only do what we ask but he can do above what we ask yea abundantly above what we ask How narrow and short and poor are our words and prayers compared with the power of God! He can do abundantly for us above what we ask and not only so but above what we think If a man should have somewhat in his mind that he is not able to express as the mind is far larger than the tongue if a man think what he cannot speak or utter yet the Lord is of such power that he can do not only what we think but abundantly above what we are able to think How many requests do we put up daily to God in prayer for our persons for our families for the Church of God and about the Kingdoms of men our own Kingdome especially is it not matter of singular comfort that all these requests are before a Mighty God a God who can quickly send down all our prayers in performances and give us the fruit of all our askings 'T is an everlasting Spring of comfort and encouragement unto the people of God both in prayer and unto prayer they pray to him who is mighty mighty to do what they pray for Thirdly If God be so mighty himself that he can do all things then he is able to give us might to do what he requireth of us if he be mighty enough to do what we ask then he is mighty enough to enable us to do what he commands We ask many things of God God commands many things at our hands when we ask God is mighty to help us to what we ask and if what we ask be what he commands us he will surely help us to do what we ask even whatsoever he commands us to do he strengthens his people with might by his Spirit in the inner man Eph. 3.16 Paul could say Phil. 4.18 I can do all things through Christ strengthening me Christ hath strength to do all things and Christ can make me strong saith the Apostle to do all things Christ hath strength to do all things that he hath a mind to do and he is strong to strengthen us in and for the doing of all things that are according to his mind Fourthly If God be thus mighty to do all things if he hath all strength both commanding and executing strength then as he can give us strength to do all things that he calls us to do so he hath strength enough to reward us for all we do for him this is comfortable Sometimes we work and labour for men who are not able they have little power or if power enough yet no will at all to reward us for it But as the Lord is not unrighteous to forget our labour Heb. 6.10 so he is not unable that is he is infinitely able to reward us We find the strength of God spoken of to this poynt Jer. 32.18 19. Thou shewest loving kindness unto thousands c. The great the mighty God the Lord of Hosts is his Name Great in counsel and mighty in working for thine eyes are open upon all the wayes of the sons of men to give every one according to his wayes and according to the fruit of his doings When the Prophet had asserted God is mighty in working he brings it down to this he is mighty in rewarding us for all our works Do not think what labour soever you have taken for the Lord that you shall want a reward for the Lord hath treasure and store strength and power enough to give you a sufficient recompence for all your labours Fifthly This truth is matter of comfort and encouragement in doing good not only as 't is a service to God but as it is a kindness to men especially to the poor and more especially to Gods poor The mightiness of God should move us to be charitable yea liberall and bountifull in our charity The Apostle useth this Argument 2 Cor. 9.8 for having said God loveth a chearfull giver he presently adds God is able to make all grace abound towards you that ye alwayes having all sufficiency in all things may abound in every good work As if he had said Be not afraid to give nor sparing in giving for God to whom you lend when you give to the poor is a good debter a sufficient pay-master and he will pay you not only in your own but in better coyne than you lent he will pay you in spiritualls for your temporalls in grace for your gold and that abundantly both in the grace of his favour shining upon you as also in the Graces of his Spirit working in you yea ye shall have not only an All-sufficiency in spiritual things but in all things which must needs include temporal things even your Gold and Silver will multiply as Seed by sowing and scattering it abroad as he alludes in the 9t h verse so that ye shall through this ability of God be enabled to abound in every good work that is every good work of Grace in general and if you are called to that special good work of Charity again and again you shall be able to abound in every one of them Some are doubtful if they should give freely and liberally they should lose by it and be straitned themselves No saith the Apostle I avouch and engage the Almightiness of God for it if you be cheerful givers God will shew his All-sufficiency in giving you an All-sufficiency in all things Here are three or four All 's promised to those who give but somwhat in a due manner Here is First all grace Secondly All-sufficiency Thirdly in all things and Fou●thly alwayes and all these grounded upon the mightiness of God God is able Sixthly God is mighty Then he can protect us from support us under or deliver us out of all those dangers which we incurre for his Names sake Dan. 3.17 Secondly Hence we may inferre matter of terrour to the wicked world the sons of Belial the mightiest enemies of God What is the might of sinful man to the mightiness of God! The weakness of God is stronger than man what then is his mightiness We read Rev. 6.15 how the Heathen Kings of the earth and the great men and the rich men and the chief Captains and which may be the recapitulation of all these the mighty men hid themselves in Dens and said to the Mountains fall on us and hide us from the face of him that sitteth upon the Throne and from the wrath of the Lamb. The Apostle checks the madness of the Corinthians in sinning by an intimation of the mightiness of God against whom they sinned 1 Cor.
10.22 Do we provoke the Lord to jealousie Are we stronger than he As if he had said What do ye mean he speaks to those that would venture to go to the Table of Devils that is who cared not how they mingled themselves and held Communion in the things of God with those who worshipped Devil-gods or as all Idolaters do Devils rather than God what mean you saith he to these consider your selves Will you provoke the Lord are you stronger than he are you his match are you able to graple with him not so well as a Child with a mighty Giant or a Lamb with a Lion The mightiness of the Lord his Almightiness should make sinners tremble and fear to provoke him he can crush them as a Moth and break them in pieces like a Potters Vessel As 't is the Joy of all true Believers that God hath laid help for them as 't is said Psal 89.19 upon one that is mighty that is Christ of whom David was but a shadow and as 't is the comfort of the Fatherless how weak soever that their Redeemer is mighty Prov. 23.11 So it may fill the faces of the wicked and presumptuous with confusion and their hearts with despairing sorrow to hear that God who is ready to take vengeance on them is mighty Behold God is mighty that 's a glorious sight and yet behold a sight more glorious if more glorious may be And despiseth not any What a temperament is here God is so mighty that he feareth none no not the mightiest yet so meek that he despiseth not any no not the meanest Elihu having asserted the mightiness of God amplifieth it First by his gracious condescension and moderation in the use of his mightiness he is mighty yet he doth not exercise his might in a proud vaunting or contemning way he despiseth not any that 's the first thing in which he amplifies the excellency of God in his mightiness Secondly As God is thus mighty and moderate in the exercise of his might not despising any so behold another excellency of this might of God He is mighty not only in strength of Arm and Authority but as the last words of the verse set him forth In strength and wisdome Or he is as wise as he is strong Some men have a great deal of might and they presently swell proudly this spoyls all others have a great deal of might but not a bit of wit or wisdome or understanding how to dispose or make the best of it But what a mighty God have we to do with who is mighty and despiseth no man who hath not only might of strength but might of wisdome too Thus we see how Elihu in this latter part of the verse advanceth or extolleth the mightiness of God in these two things the infinite Moderation and Wisdome that go along with it and act it I shall a little open both First his wonderful Moderation in the exercise of his mightiness He is mighty And despiseth not any To despise is an act of Pride Pride is a bad Mo●her of many bad Children these three especially First boasting of our selves Secondly contending with others Thirdly despising of others The word here used signifies to despise with abhorrence or loathing as the Stomack doth meat which is offensive to it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ill savoured meat is loathsome and any thing which the mind nauseates is an abhorrence to us The Lord despiseth not he doth not nauseate any The word any is not exprest in the Original Text that saith only The Lord is Mighty and despiseth not we put that supplement in our Translation any He is Mighty and despiseth not any Others render more strictly thus Behold God is Mighty and despiseth not his own people The Chaldee Paraphrase speaks exegetically The Lord is mighty and despiseth not the righteous man The Greek Version hath a fourth supplement to the same purpose God is mighty and despiseth not the innocent person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Innocentem simplicem integrum Sept. Etsi ●●ga●●r ●usti tamen non ideo quia justi Merc. the man free from evill or wickedness a man of integrity a man of simplicity the Lord will not despise such are often afflicted but never despised especially not as such Lastly thus God is mighty and despiseth not the mean the affl●cted the poor or those of low estate Psal 22.24 He hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted neither hath he hid his face from him but when he cryed unto him he heard And this seems most proper to the scope and meaning of Elihu here God is mighty and despiseth not those who have no might Thus the words reflect chiefly upon Job who at least seemed to charge God that he did not consider him in his affliction or in his low estate when he complained and cryed to him We have two Texts in this Book of Job which might very well move Elihu to speak thus unto him though God be mighty yet he despiseth not the afflicted or the poor Job said Chap. 10.3 Is it good to thee that thou shouldst oppress that thou shouldst despise the work of thy hands and shine upon the Counsell of the wicked As if he had said to God Thou seemest to despise me the work of thy hand now that I am poor low and reduced as it were to dust Again Chap. 19.7 we have neer the same ●●nguage Behold I cry out of wrong but I am not heard I cry a loud but there is no Judgment As much as to say I am despised and neglected I am not regarded when I cry This Elihu takes off in the present Text Behold God is mighty and despiseth not any he despiseth not the afflicted not the poor when they cry un●o and call upon him and therefore in this O Job thou hast misbehaved thy self or spoken amiss But which-soever of these supplements we take the sense is good and the Proposition true he despiseth not what will he not despise we say not any a second his own a third the Just a sourth the Innocent a fifth the afflicted there is a sixth which I shall offer before I part with these words All these are true God despiseth not Hence Note First Though the Lord be infinitely more mighty than the mightiest of men yet he doth not despise any man He doth not despise man in general who is the work of his hand yea Job said once Chap. 14.15 Thou wilt have a desire to the work of thy hand The Lord doth not despise any of his works as they are his works or as they come out of his hand and therefore when Jonah seemed to set so low a rate upon the Ninivites who were the work of his hand his Creatures the Lord reproved him for it by the Gourd which when the Lord smote Jonah was angry but said the Lord Dost thou well to be angry for thy Gourd Hast thou mercy upon a Gourd and should
wisdome for it Thus common wisdome as well as political and spiritual wisdome is of God as Daniel confessed when the secret was revealed to him Dan 2.21 He giveth wisdome unto the wise and knowledge to them that know understanding Seeing then all wisdome is from God we must confesse He is only wise Fourthly The Lord may be said to be only wise because he is victoriously wise his wisdome is a conquering wisdome he conquers by his wisdome as well as by his power his wisdome overthrows the wise men of the world Prov. 21.30 There is no wisdome nor understanding nor counsel against the Lord. Many men will be taking and giving counsel against the Lord but it shall not stand Isa 8.9 He is only wise who destroyeth the wisdome of the wise 1 Cor. 1.19 1 Cor. 3.19 20. Thus the Lord is mighty in strength of wisdome in knowing and disposing wisdome discerning all things most clearly and ordering all things most wisely according to the pleasure of his holy and righteous will and he is so wise in all these things that he ought to be acknowledged and reverenced as the only wise God or as God only wise Hence take these Inferences First If the Lord be mighty in strength of wisdome as well as in strength of power then fear to do any thing amiss before him he will spy out every fault and the more you cover the faults cracks and flawes in what you do the more the Lord sets himself to find them out you cannot hide what you do from him therefore take heed what you do Secondly Is God mighty in strength of wisdome then do not find fault with any thing he doth for he can do nothing amiss The works of providence whether they regard persons or Nations are done with as much exactness as the works of Creation were In what beauty and order was the fabrick of this world set up at first in six dayes It is called Cosmos in Greek from the beautiful order visible quite through it and certainly the works of providence are as orderly and perfect as the work of Creation and so will appear at last though now we see so many appearing confusions disturbances and tossings up and down The Lord keeps order how disorderly so ever men are The Lord doth all things in number weight and measure There is not one the least slip error or mistake in what himself doth not in what he suffers men to do as to his own ends how many errors and mistakes soever there are in the wayes of men or in the means which they use Then take heed of picking holes in Gods work much more of picking quarrels with his work We are apt to find fault where there is none with what God doth but how slow are we to find faults where there are many in our own doings Thirdly Is the Lord mighty in strength of wisdome then never be troubled though you have mighty wise men against you be not afraid only labour to assure the mighty wise God for you If you can but assure God who is mighty in wisdome for you you need not be troubled though mighty wise men are against you though Achitophels though Matchevels though the Conclave of Babylon be against you if the wisdome of God be with us and for us we are well enough and shall do well enough notwithstanding the wisdome of the world against us Fourthly If God be mighty in strength of wisdome then when we want wisdome and know not what to do or how to suffer let us go to God if we want wisdome to mannage a prosperous estate or to bear an afflicted estate let us go to God The Apostle gives this direction James 1.5 If any man lack wisdome he speaks of a man in a troublous condition in a time of temptation let him ask of God who giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not God hath wisdome enough for us and can make us wise enough apply to him and you may be supplyed for all occasions Fifthly If God be mighty in strength of wisdome then confidently cast your care on him put your all into his hand Psal 37.5 Commit thy way to the Lord trust also in him and he shall bring it to passe Prov. 16.3 Commit thy works unto the Lord and thy thoughts shall be established that is thy thoughts about thy works and usually our thoughts are more unsetled than our works When we have left a matter in the hand of a wise man how confident are we and how composed are our thoughts as to the well-issuing of it how much more may we be confident and composed when we have believingly left our matters in the hand of the only Wise God! Sixthly If the Lord be so mighty in Wisdome that he only is Wise then beware of trusting to your own wisdom or of being wise in your own eyes That 's the counsel of Solomon the wise Prov. 3.5 Lean not to thy own understanding We are apt to lean too much to the understanding of others if we have such a wise man to counsel us we think all 's safe we are Cock-sure as we say the work cannot miscarry 'T is dangerous to lean to the understanding of others but much more to lean to our own Remember God is only Wise and we never shew our selves more fools than when we lean to our own wisdome or think to carry it by our own wit and so depart from the wisdome of God Therefore be fools be nothing in your own wisdom and you shall be wise with the wisdome of God Thus I have prosecuted the Text according to our Translation There is yet another reading as to both the parts of this 5th verse which I shall touch a little because they are much insisted upon by Learned Interpreters The former part of this verse which we render Ecce Deus p●tens et non fastidit potentes robore cordis Scult Deus potentes non abjecit cum et ipse sit potens Vulg. Vt haec explicatio verbu Hebraeis conveniat vau quod saepe sit redundante verti popest Ecce Deus potentem non fastidit vel Ecce Deus potens non fastidit sc potentem Cum enim verbo illo accusativus addendiu sit satius est ex praecedenti 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Potentem repetere quam objectum ex mente fingere Scult Behold God is mighty and despiseth not any is thus rendred Behold God is mighty and despiseth not the mighty The vulgar Latine thus God doth not cast away the mighty seeing he himself also is mighty The scope of this Translation is thus conceived Job in the 29th Chapter of this Book having set forth his own mightinesse or greatness complained in the 30th that notwithstanding all his former power and might yet God had cast him down and laid him in the dust Here Elihu tells him though God be mighty yet he doth not despise the mighty he doth not reject any man how high
their life nor their death is precious in the Lords sight as both of the meanest Saints are Psal 116.15 The special Promises of preservation are made to the godly the common Providences of preservation extend to the wicked God preserves many wicked men but not one of them can plead a Promise for his preservation or say Lord thou hast undertaken to preserve me I have thy Word or Warrant for my preservation So then the Lord doth not preserve the life of any wicked man upon a word of Promise Secondly I answer When the lives of the wicked are preserved they are not preserved for any love which God bears to their persons as such but either First to bring them into a better state that is to turn them from their wickedness that being converted they may be saved at last according to his purpose Or Secondly they are preserved to serve some ends and purposes of his in this World For though God hath no pleasure in them yet he makes some use of them and doth his pleasure by them Or I may say they are preserved to be Executioners of his displeasure in chastening and correcting his own people The King of Assyria was preserved in great Power and to what end I will send him against an hypocritical Nation Isa 10.6 He must go on my Errand though he meaneth not so nor doth his heart think so as the Lord spake vers 7. He hath other matters and designs in his head but I have this use of him and of his power even to punish the people of my wrath The Lord made use also of Nebuchadnezar and his Army to serve him in the destroying of Tyrus and of him and his Army he saith They wrought for me Ezek. 29.20 Thus the Lord doth some of his work his strange work especially his work of Judgment by the hands of wicked men and therefore he preserves their lives Yea he preserves them many a time to be a help and a defence to his people A Thorn Hedge keeps the Pasture that strange Cattle break not in and eat it up Wicked men are as Bryars and Thorns and they are suffered to live because the Lord can make use of them as a Fence to his people When the Serpent cast out of his mouth water as a Flood after the woman the Church that he might cause her to be carryed away of the Flood then the Earth that is earthly carnal men helped the Woman Rev. 12.15 16 The Lord used bad men to do that good work the preservation of his distressed and persecuted Church Thirdly As the Lord suffers many wicked men to live that they may be brought out of their sins so he suffers others to live that they may fill up the measure of their sins Why did the Lord preserve the Amorites was it because he loved or liked them no but because they were not then ripe for Judgment Gen. 15.16 The Iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full Some wicked men are to fill up their dayes that they may fill up the measure of their Fathers sins by their own as Christ threatned the Scribes and Pharisees Math. 23.32 Such a grant of life though for a thousand years is worse than a thousand Deaths Fourthly we may answer The wicked are not so much preserved from as reserved unto further wrath 2 Pet. 2.9 The Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptations and to reserve the unjust unto the day of Judgment to be punished God doth not presently punish all the wicked nor take away their lives there is a day of Judgment coming and till that day come their lives are preserved as persons reserved unto Judgment Fifthly VVhen wicked men are said to be out of the Lords Protection consider There is a twofold Protection First ordinary Secondly extraordinary The Lord doth preserve and protect wicked men in an ordinary not in an extraordinary way he doth not work wonders much less miracles to preserve them as he often doth for the preservation of his own people God will not be at such cost in preserving of wicked men as he is at in the preserving the lives and liberties of his eminent Servants rather than they shall perish or not be preserved he will somtimes work a miracle and put Nature out of its course to save their lives VVhen those three VVorthies were cast into the midst of the burning fiery Furnace God stopt the rage of that furious Element that the Fire had no power upon their bodyes nor was an hair of their head singed neither were their Coats changed nor the smel of fire had passed on them Dan. 3.27 Did we ever hear that the Lord restrained the power of the fire to preserve wicked men When Daniel a man precious in the sight of God was cast into the Lions Den the Lord preserved his life also by stopping the Mouths of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Did we ever hear that God preserved the lives of wicked men in such a way No sooner were Daniels accusers cast into the Lyons Den but the Lyons had the Mastery of them and brake all their bones in pieces e're ever they came to the bottome of the Den v. 24. The Lord doth not preserve the lives of the wicked by miraculous manifestations of his Power and Glory Sixthly I answer Though some wicked men are commonly preserved as other men yet many by their wickedness hasten their ruine and shorten the number of their dayes We may distinguish of wicked men First wicked men may be taken in a General notion for all that are unconverted and unregenerate Many persons pass for honest and good men in the world who yet are wicked being carnal and abiding in a state of nature wicked men of this sort are ordinarily preserved Secondly Take wicked men and such I conceive the Text especially intends for notorious wicked men such as are murderers blasphemers c. the Lord doth not preserve the lives of such but lets mans Justice seize upon them or divine vengeance overtake them Psal 55.23 The blood-thirsty and deceitful man shall not live out half his dayes that is he shall not live half so long as he might according to the course of Nature because of his nefarious sinful courses Histories are full of dreadful Tragedies sealing to this Truth with the blood and untimely death of gross offenders How often have we seen or heard of the Ve●geance of God following and falling upon those that were signanter notoriously wicked and of ●●ese we are especially to understand the Poynt and Text He preserveth not the life of the wicked Take this Inference from all that hath been said about this awakening Observation How sad is the life of a wicked man indeed of any man on this side the Line of grace but especially of any very wicked man He can scarce be said to live whose life is not preferved by God a wicked man is alwayes in death seeing God doth not preserve his life The Apostle
time and means and manner as in all his outward Administrations so in ministring or giving out this right the Lord waits to be gracious till we are ready for his grace and he waits in the same sence to be righteous till the poor are ready for their right they shall not stay for it when once they are ready for it and it would be a wrong to them to have their right before they are ready for it Lastly There is a day spoken of wherein the Lord will do all his poor right in the view of all the world Acts 17.31 He hath appointed a day in the which he will judge the World in Righteousnesse by that man whom he hath ordained The day approacheth wherein the Lord will judge the world in righteousness Right is prepared designed for them The time till right shall be done to all as is desired or to the utmost of their desires maketh hast He that shall come will come and will not tarry Behold saith he I come quickly and my reward is with me to give every man according as his works shall be Rev. 22.12 And if the Lord come with a reward in his hand for those who have done well he will undoubtedly come with right in his hand to give all those who have suffered wrongfully JOB Chap. 36. Vers 7. He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous but with Kings are they on the throne yea he doth establish them for ever and they are exalted THis verse contains a further confirmation of Gods righteous and gracious dealing with the righteous and gracious poor yea with all that are righteous and gracious The words may be taken either in a stricter or in a larger sense First Strictly as an Exposition of the latter part of the former verse He giveth right to the poor that is He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous We may put both together He is so set to give right to the righteous poor he takes such care of them that he cannot take his eye off from them Secondly In a larger and more general sense as a Conclusion upon the whole matter that God will not desert any righteous person whether poor or rich high or low God will take notice of piety and godliness wheresoever he finds it He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 minuit diminuit ademit substraxit The word which we translate withdraweth and is here used negatively He withdraweth not signifies strictly in the Noune any kind of abatement or diminution and in the Verb to diminish or abate or take short in any kind that which was before When Pharaoh Exod. 5.8 gave out a fresh Charge for burdening or indeed oppressing the Children of Israel in their bondage the Order ran in this stile The tale of bricks which they did make heretofore you shall lay upon them you shall not diminish or withdraw any you shall not abate them a brick And Moses shewing how sacred a thing the Word of God is Deut. 9.2 gives a double check or prohibition to all medlers with it First to medlers by way of addition Ye shall not add unto the Word Secondly by way of abate●ent or abstraction Ye shall not diminish or withdraw from it it is this word As if the Lord had said Every tittle of my word shall stand by it self and every Iota be establisht be sure that ye put nothing to it that you withdraw nothing from it Further this word which we translate withdraw is rendred also to clip as the hayr of the head or beard is clipt Jer. 48.37 It is indeed high treason against the King of Heaven to clip his coyn his word which bears the royal stamp and superscription of his truth and holiness Thus here he withdraweth not that is the Lord doth not abate lessen diminish or take off his eyes from the righteous his eyes are fixed on them for good alwayes and they are alwayes fixed in the same strength and vertue He withdraweth not His eyes God is a Spirit without parts and passions yet often in Scripture parts and passions are ascribed to him in allusion to man here eyes He withdraweth not his eyes that is his sight Oculos domini esso super aliquem nisi aliquid additur semper in bonum sumitur peculiarem ejus favorem et curam importat Bold or his providence And we may take notice that in Scripture where this expression is used without any further addition it is alwayes taken in a good sense When we read either of Gods keeping his eyes upon his people or of his not withdrawing his eyes from his people it alwayes respects their priviledge benefit and comfort He withdraweth not his eyes From the righteous He doth not say from this or that righteous man but from the righteous implying the whole kind or generation of the righteous The indefinite is universal we may render it thus he withdraweth not his eyes from any that are righteous The righteous here may be taken in a two-fold notion First for the righteous as to their state or who are in a state of righteousness Man wanting a righteousness of his own hath the righteousness of another assigned and imputed to him Justified persons through faith in our Lord Jesus Christ are righteous persons as hath been shewed heretofore Secondly We may take righteous here with respect to the righteousness of their wayes and actions They who do righteousness are righteous saith the Apostle John To a righteous state there belongs a righteous way a righteous walk righteous acting not that the righteous do not sin but they would not nor do they sin at all as the unrighteous It is a high blemish or staine to the Gospel when any that pretend to a righteous state or to righteousness by Jesus Christ are not righteous as to their wayes and course as to their walkings and workings whether towards God or man 'T is true in a strict legal sense none are righteous no not one but in a Gospel sense all justified and fanctified persons are righteous and they are called so not only positively as to what themselves are but comparatively as to what the men of the world are who live in a state or walk in a course of sin and unrighteousness The Lord withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous But some may here object or question Is this true only of the righteous Doth the Lord at any time withdraw his eyes from the unrighteous truly that would be very good newes to many unrighteous persons they would be glad that they and their way might be hid from God or that God would not look upon them I answer This Scripture is not to be so understood as if God did behold the righteous and not the wicked for Prov. 15.3 The eyes of the Lord are every where beholding the evil and the good whether things done or persons doing them The Lord doth not withdraw his eyes from
the most unrighteous persons nor from any of their acts or wayes of unrighteousness And when it is said here The Lord withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous it is meant of a peculiar eye which the Lord hath upon the righteous he beholds both the righteous and the unrighteous yet he doth not behold the unrighteous as he beholds the righteous which I shall clear further by giving in a five-fold discovery what that eye of the Lord is which is upon the righteous foure of which are distinct and totally differing from that eye with which he beholdeth unrighteous men and from every one of them I shall give you an observation for our further profiting by this general assertion that the Lord withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous There is a five-fold eye of God spoken of in Scripture First There is a discerning eye that eye by which be unerringly knoweth what every man is and what every man doth Hence note The Lord taketh exact and full notice of he clearly discerns the righteous in every condition This is true also of the unrighteous therefore David puts it universally Psal 11.4 His eyes behold his eye-lids try the children of men that is his sight discovers and discerns what they are of what sort soever they are We may see many men yet not discover what they are they may have a faire outside to our view whilest within they are foule and full of rottenness they may appear in Sheeps cloathing yet inwardly be ravening Wolves But the Lords eye is a trying eye he doth not only know who men are but he knows what they are Such is the importance of that Scripture Heb. 4.13 All things are naked and manifest to his eyes with whom we have to do that is the Lord doth so behold things and persons that he hath a clear understanding of them And though the Lords eye be thus upon all men yet this is specially affirmed of righteous men Psal 33.18 Behold the eye of the Lord is upon them that fear him and hope in his mercy Again Psal 34.15 His eye is over the righteous Both texts teach us that God considers not only what they do but as I may say how they do whether it be peace with them or whether it be trouble with them whether it be joy with them or whether it be sorrow with them the Lords eye is over them to discern not only whether and how they go but how things go with them Secondly The Lord hath a directing or a counselling eye Hence Note The Lord with his eye favourably guides directs and counsels righteous men This eye of the Lord as it denotes favour is peculiar to the righteous We have that expresly Psal 32.8 I will instruct thee and teach thee how I will guide thee with mine eye We put in the Margen I will counsel thee that is thee a Godly man a David spoken of v. 6 7. mine eye shall give thee counsel Men can give direction by the eye and they that are acquainted with them understand what they mean when they look this way or that way thus or so Solomon saith A naughty person winketh with his eyes he speaketh with his feet he teacheth with his fingers Pro. 6.12 13. that is all the postures and gestures of his body shew what he is stark naught and silently teach others to be naught The holy God also teacheth by his feet and fingers his goings and doings his workes and wayes teach us the work which we should do and the way wherein we should go he hath a providential eye the looks of providence give counsel to those who know how to look upon them and interpret them The Lord hath a providential eye upon the righteous not only to foresee their dangers but to direct their course he sheweth them their way and their work by this eye he tells them what pleaseth him and what displeaseth him by this eye this eye the Lord doth not withdraw from the righteous He will guide the feet of his Saints 1 Sam. 2.9 'T is possible for a righteous man sometime to be without counsel he may neither know what counsel to give himself nor what to take from others as Jehoshaphat said in his streight 2 Chron. 20.12 He knoweth not what to do yet as Jehoshaphat said then his eyes are towards the Lord and the Lords eyes are towards him When he is thus counselless there is a counselling a directing eye of God upon him though he at that present know not his way yea be out of his way yet he is not out of Gods eye and that will in due time shew him his way or bring him into his way again though God suffer him to go out of the way yet the eye of God is upon him even when he is out of his way and that eye will reduce and bring him back to his right way There is a directing a counselling eye of God Thirdly The Scripture speaks of a pitying and a compassionating eye of God It is ordinary with us to hear those that are in distress cry out to those who pass by cast an eye upon us look upon us and that is as much as to say pity us have compassion upon us this eye of pity the Lord doth not withdraw from the righteous Hence note The righteous are under the compassionating the pitying eye of God When the people of Israel were in Egypt the Lord said to Moses Exod. 3.7 I have surely seen the affliction of my people and what kind of sight was that what eye of God was it which was upon them the words following and the whole series of Gods dealings also clear it that it was an eye of compassion I have surely seen or seeing I have seen the affliction of my people that are in Egypt c. and I am come down to deliver them We read in that notable place Gen. 16.14 when Hagar was in a very sad and distressed condition being cast out of Abrahams family God had compassion on her and shewed her a Well where she might have water for her self and child and the text saith She called the name of the Well Beer-la-hai-roi that is the Well of him that liveth and seeth me As if she had said God hath seen me in my afflicted condition and he hath also had compassion on me That 's another great priviledge the righteous are under this pitying and compassionating eye of God and from thence follows The fourth eye of God his providing eye his caring eye Hence note The Lord doth so eye the righteous in their straits and afflictions with compassion that he also provides to deliver them out of their affliction out of their straits There is a providing eye of God continually beholding his people Of this providing eye Abraham spake Gen. 22.14 when he was put upon that hard task the sacrificing of his own son his Isaac the Lord had compassion on him and provided another sacrifice and therefore he called
He hath brought down the mighty from their seats and hath exalted the lowly and meek We have some Scripture-instances of such exaltations Joseph a righteous person was cast into bonds yet God sets him not only at liberty but on high he was with the King on the Throne Only in the Throne said Pharaoh Gen. 42.40 will I be greater than thou and all were commanded to bow the knee to him David a righteous person followed the Ewes great with young and the Lord set him upon the Throne upon the Throne of Israel Valentinian was committed to prison by the command of Julian the Apostate because he struck an Idolatrous Priest that would have sprinkled him aqua lustrali with their unholy holy water as he stood in the gate of the Temple where Julian was sacrificing to his Idol-gods yet he escaped that danger and afterwards ascended the Throne of that Great Empire The Lord knows both how to deliver the righteous out of trouble and to bring them to honour Lastly We may hence infer If the righteous are with Kings on the Throne then righteousness hath a reward Them that honour me saith the Lord 1 Sam. 2.30 I will honour It is no vaine thing to serve the Lord to be righteous and to do righteously cannot but issue well The Lord hath all promotions at his dispose Psal 75.6 7. And therefore he saith Say ye to the righteous that it shall be well with him for they shall eate the fruit of their doings Isa 3.10 With Kings are they on the Throne Yet let me add by way of Caution that neither this Text nor the notes given from it are so to be understood as if all righteous persons might hence expect great advancements in this world or to be the special Favourites of Kings and Princes The word of God doth not feed such humours but mortifies them nor doth it cherish any such aspiring expectations in righteous men but teaches them quiet submission in their own private stations and callings to those who are upon the Throne So that while Elihu saith of the righteous With Kings are they on the Throne his meaning must be taken soberly and may be taken distinctly thus First That God hath great respect to and high favours for righteous men Secondly That he brings some of them as it is said of Daniel with the Prince of the Eunuches Chap. 1.9 into favour and tender love with Kings and Princes Thirdly That the Lord hath often advanced righteous persons to Thrones and Kingly Dignities And when-ever the Lord advanceth any of the righteous Etiamsi id externè non fiat semper tamen omnium fides pietas quorundam piorum exaltatione honoratur Coc. he makes good this promise because in the exaltation of one the faith and piety of all righteous persons or the whole kind of them is honoured and exalted Fourthly To be sure all the righteous shall be with Kings on the Throne hereafter Christ hath purchased and is gone to prepare a Kingdome for the righteous and will give them a better Crown than any this world affords an incorruptible one As now the righteous are spiritual Kings or Kings in a spiritual sense Rev. 1.6 that is they rule over and keep in subjection their own lusts and corruptions pride ambition love of the world wrath envy and whatever else in them doth rebell and exalt it self against the knowledge of God yea they as Kings in this world conquer the world by faith 1 Joh. 5.4 and the Prince of this world the devil through the power of Jesus Christ as I say all the righteous are now spiritual Kings in the sense given through grace here on earth so they shall be glorious Kings and reigne with Christ for ever in Heaven and then shall this word of God by Elihu be fulfilled to the utmost With Kings are they upon the Throne Yea he doth establish them for ever and they are exalted Elihu proceeds to shew the happiness of the righteous yet further The Lord doth not only advance them but establish them nor doth he only establish them for a while but even perpetuateth their establishment He establisheth them for ever 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a radice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sedere in hac conjugatione sedere fecit The word is He makes them sit We render fully to the sense He establisheth them The Lord sets them up on high and then settles them on high Some get on high but they cannot keep on high they find no establishment there but God can establish For ever The for ever of this world is a long time The Lord saith of Sion Psal 132.14 Here will I dwell for ever that is long Thus in the text He will establish them for ever that is they shall have long establishment And if we take it as to their exaltation in the other world there God will establish them to the utmost latitude of for ever that is to eternity The Septuagint translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in victoriam Sept Sic 2 Sam. 2.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He will establish them to victory The same word in the Hebrew signifies eternity and also victory because eternity overcomes and triumphs over all The Lord shall settle them to victory and that may have a good interpretation with respect to the power of God in setling them He shall settle them to victory that is they shall in his power overcome all difficulties that stand in the way of their establishment Hence Note As preferment so establishment is from God First He establisheth all things whether they be First natural things the heavens and the earth times and seasons Gen. 8.22 or Secondly Civil things States and Nations or Thirdly Spiritual things First the Gospel and the Church of the Gospel that he establisheth as a Rock against which the gates of hell shall not prevaile Mat. 16.18 so Isa 44.28 Psal 87.5 Secondly Grace in the hearts of his people 1 Pet. 5.10 and them in the wayes of grace 2 Thes 2.17 Chap. 3.3 Thus God establisheth all things Secondly He establisheth counsels and actions Isa 44.26 He confirmeth the word of his servants and performeth the counsel of his Messengers that is he makes good and brings to effect that word which they have given in counsel And as for actions Moses prayeth Psal 90.17 Establish thou the work of our hands upon us yea the work of our hands establish thou it Whatever is in our hands quickly molders away and as the enemies said when the Jewes built the walls of Jerusalem Neh. 4.3 If a Fox go up upon it it will fall unless the Lord establish it but neither the Foxes with their subtilty nor the Lyons with their power and cruelty shall be able to overthrow that wall or those actions which the Lord is pleased to establish for he doth establish them For ever Hence Note The Lord can establish not only for a time but for alwayes he can give a
several of the Kings of Judah they were brought from the throne to the prison Zedekiah and Jeckoniah and Manasseh had such sad changes when they highly provoked God they came from their Thrones to the prison from a Crown to the cords of affliction yea this hath been the lot of many other righteous men exalted they have been brought to the prison and laid very low in this world Solomon saith of one Eccles 4.14 Out of prison he cometh to reigne and of another he saith in the same verse He also that is borne in his Kingdome becometh poor such vicissitudes and revolutions come over the heads of the children of men yea good men are not exempted from such changes and revolutions Therefore be not offended if at any time you see good men in chaines and fetters in a condition of great affliction Thirdly From the manner of expression When they are bound in fetters and holden in cords Affliction is set forth and described by cords and fetters Hence note Afflictions are grievous to the flesh Are not fetters so are not cords so The word here translated cords is several times in Scripture applyed to signifie the pains of a woman in travel those are most dolorous paines such are some afflictions The Apostle speaking of affliction in generall Heb. 12.11 saith No chastning for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous 'T is no easie thing to be in fetters and cords to be bound in chaines Afflictions streighten and press pinch gall like fetters they burthen the flesh they are no light matters Though the Apostle comparatively to the weight of glory calleth the heaviest outward afflictions light 2 Cor. 4.17 yet first in themselves and secondly to our flesh they are very heavy Therfore we should pity those that are in affliction as those that are in fetters and cords and we should pray for those that are in affliction as for those that are bound Every affliction is a kind of captivity If they be bound in fetters and holden in cords of affliction thus it may be with the righteous But is not this an argument that God hates them surely no we read the mind of God towards them notwithstanding this in the next verse Vers 9. Then he sheweth them their work That is when they are in cords and fetters But did he never shew them their work before yes doubtless he did but then especially and effectually then he sheweth he declareth he makes manifest to them or he causeth them to see and know their work The word in that conjugation signifieth not barely to shew but to make them see understand and consider their work he brings them to a review of what they have done and to see that they have done amiss Then he sheweth it is a shewing with power an efficacious shewing he sheweth them their work What work this their work may be considered two wayes First As to the matter of it what they had done Till we see what we have done we repent not of what we have done how much soever it ought to be repented of as the Lord complained of Israel by the Prophet Jer. 8.6 No man repented of his wicked●esse saying What have I done Secondly As to the vitiousnesse or falsenesse of it He sheweth them their work that is either what they had done which was evil in the matter of it or what they had done in an evil manner though in it self good ●he sheweth them the evil of their work the irregularity the crookednesse and sinfulnesse of their work That this is the meaning appeareth plainly in the words that follow Then he sheweth them their work and their transgression that is that there is some transg●ession or fault possibly many faults and transgressions in their work Then he sheweth them their work Hence Note Fi●st Sin is properly the work of man That is of the flesh in man Gal. 5.19 The works of the flesh are manifest which are these Adultery c. Good is Gods work in us evil is our work against the mind of God Sin is often called the work of our hands Psal 28.4 Give them after the work of their hands render to them their desert that is what they have deserved by their sins Moses declared his fear and holy jealousie concerning the children of Israel in this Language Deut. 31.29 I know that after my departure ye will utterly corrupt your selves because ye will do evil in the sight of the Lord to provoke him to anger by the work of your hands Idolatry is specially called the work of mans hands because Idolaters either worship that as a god or God by that which their hands have wrought Rev. 9.20 They repented not of the works of their hands that they should not worship Devils and Idols of Gold and Silver and Brasse c. Yet Idolatry is much more the work of the heart than of the hand And as Idolatry so any other sin whether of heart or tongue may be called the work of our hand it being that which is most properly our work though originally the Devils work As to pardon sin is properly the work of God so to commit sin is properly the work of man There is no work so much ours as that no work properly ours but bad work all the good we do is the work of God in us or by us Secondly Note Man doth not see the falseness and faultiness of his own work till God sheweth it him There may be many cracks and flaws in our good works which we perceive not we are ready to think and say All 's well we have done very well until God lets us see our work in his light in the light of his Word and Spirit and then we shall see cause to be humbled for those works which we were proud of and sometimes boasted in The Prophet Haggai 1.5 called the Jews to consider their ways they saw their wayes but they considered not their wayes and therefore they saw not the evil and error of their wayes As we see many of the works of God yet see not the excellency or admirable contrivance of them till himself sheweth it so we see many of our own works yet we see not the sinfulnesse vanity and folly that is in them till God shew it unto us he maketh us see our work as it is Thirdly From the circumstance of time when it is that the Lord sheweth unto man his wo●k the falseness of his wo●k the Text saith Then he sheweth them their work that is when they are bound in fetters and holden in cords of affliction Hence Note The badness or sinfulness of our works is most usually and most cleerly discovered to us in times of affliction then sheweth he them their work Josephs Brethren did a very ill work in selling him into Egypt and in putting off their Father with a lye yet they took little notice of this work for many years but when they were bound in fetters and holden in
might serve the turn to hasten our return from a nothing and shall not a command do it when I say a nothing remember as was shewed sin is no such thing as you look upon it to be where are the profits that you have reaped by sin where are the contents and pleasures that you have taken by sin the profit the pleasure and content of sin are nothing there is no advantage to be had by sin Sin is something in the ill effects of it if you would have paine and dishonour and reproach you may have enough of it in sin and you will find sin a something in that sense but sin is a nothing that is no such thing as you expect and look for and therefore be perswaded to return from it Lastly From the whole text take notice of the purpose of God what he hath in his heart when he afflicteth his people the righteous for their iniquities and faylings for their faults and uneven walkings The scope of God in all this is not their hurt but good it is not to destroy them for their sin but to destroy their sin it is not to withdraw himself from them but to draw them nearer to himself all the hurt that the Lord intends us by any affliction is but to get out our dross and to fetch out our filth to bring us off from those things that will undo and ruine us for ever And how great an argument of the goodness of God is it that he designeth the evils which we suffer in these dying bodies to heal the evils and help on the good of our immortal souls that 's all the hurt that the Lord means us And the Lords heart is so much in this design the return of those he afflicts from their iniquity that he seems confident of it that when any are in affliction surely they will return Hosea 5.15 In their affliction they will seek me early surely they will And therefore the Prophet speaks of the Lord as defeated and disappointed of his purpose when he seeth such as he hath afflicted continuing in their sin Isa 9.13 The people turneth not unto him that smiteth them neither do they seek the Lord of Hosts As if he had said 'T is a wonder that being smitten they have not returned what a strange what a cross-grain'd people are these What doth the Lord smite you that you should run farther from him and follow your iniquity closer or hold it faster you may be ashamed that you turn not unto him that speaks to you but when you are smitten will you not return from iniquity remember the Lord therefore suffers you to be bound in fetters that you may be loosed from your sins he therefore suffers you to be holden in the cords of affliction that you might let go your transgressions Take heed you be not found disappointing him of his purpose How well it will be with those who do not disappoint him and how ill 't is like to be with such as do will appear further and fully in the two next verses JOB Chap. 36. Vers 11 12. 11. If they obey and serve him they shall spend their dayes in prosperity and their years in pleasures 12. But if they obey not they shall perish by the sword and they shall die without knowledge IN the former Context we heard what the blessed designes of God are upon the righteous when they are bound in fetters and holden in the cords of affliction namely to convince them of their sin to fit them for the receiving of Instruction and to bring them clear off from iniquity In these two verses Elihu proceedeth to shew what the issue of those afflictions will be in a double respect or case First In case the afflicted come up to and answer the forementioned designes of God that is if they take knowledge of their sin if their ears be opened to Instruction if they return from iniquity what then he tells us v. 11. If they obey and serve him they shall spend their dayes in prosperity and their years in pleasures that shall be the issue the blessed issue of all the afflictions with which they were exercised Secondly He shews us how those afflictions will issue in case the afflicted come not up to those designes of God in case they are not brought to a knowledge of sin nor receive instruction nor return from iniquity what then he tells us that v. 12. if they obey not this will be the consequent of their obstinacy they shall perish by the sword and they shall die without knowledge We have a parallel Scripture to this almost in terms Isa 19.20 If ye hear and obey ye shall eat the good of the Land but if ye refuse and rebell ye shall be devoured with the sword This text not only carries the sense but almost the words by which Elihu expresseth both the Lords pleasure and displeasure in this place to Job Vers 11. If they obey or hear That is take out the lesson taught them if they do that which the affliction teacheth them or which God teacheth by their affliction by their cords and fetters then c. The same word is frequently in Scripture used for obeying and hearing Psal 81.8 11 13. Psal 95.7 To what purpose is our hearing the will of God without obedience to it When young Samuel said at the Lord's call Speak for thy servant heareth 1 Sam. 3.10 his meaning was Lord I am ready to do what thou speakest We hear no more than we obey and therefore obeying and hearing may well be exprest by the same word The text is plain I shall only give this Note and pass on It is our duty to hear and obey when-ever God calls or speakes either in his word or in his works That which this text holds out specially is the voice of God in his works what God speakes by Fetters what he speakes by Cords If ever we hear and obey the voice of the Lord it should be when he teacheth us as Gideon taught the men of Succoth Judg. 8.16 with thornes and briars of the wilderness O let us take care of hearing and obeying this voice For First God is the Lord and therefore to be obeyed Secondly God is a Soveraign Lord and therefore much more to be obeyed Thirdly As all the Commands so all the Chastisements of God are just and righteous therefore they are most of all to be obeyed Fourthly To obey the Commands of God whether taught us in his Word or by his Rod is good yea best for us therefore we should obey for our own good If they obey And serve him or worship him The word which here we render to serve 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Religio at numinis cultus est servitus quaedam is very often in Scripture rendred to worship and sometimes worshipping is expounded by serving Mat. 4.10 Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve that also is the mind of the
make our lives comfortable to us I answer Secondly This promise or promises of a like nature were fitted to the time wherein Elihu spake he spake of the times long before Christs appearing in the flesh when the Lord did as it were lead on his people very much by promises of temporal and outward prosperity of which the Scripture is more sparing in the new Testament where we are come to the fulness of Christ and the riches of the grace of God to us in him of which there is but li●tle comparatively spoken in the old Testament And therefore under that darker dispensation of spirituals the Lord saw it good to encourage that people to obedience by a multitude of very particular outward promises as we may read Deut. 28. He would bless their basket and their store the fruit of the field c. These promises were suted to the state of that under-age people who were led on and enticed by visible and sensible blessings as we do children with toyes and Gaudees and indeed all visible enjoyments are but such in comparison of spirituals Believers under the Gospel being come to a higher state to fuller attainments the promises made to them run not much in that channel yet it cannot be denied that the Gospel also holds out promises for temporals as well as the Law and this latter dispensation of the Covenant as well as the former hath provided sufficiently for our outward comforts Thirdly For answer let us consider the drift of the Spirit of God in this promise of pleasure Job had often complained of his own sorrowfull condition and concluded himself a man of sorrow for all the remainder of his dayes though his faith was strong for the resurrection of his body after death yet he had little if any faith at all that he should be raised out of that miserable estate wherein he was in this life He also had spoken somewhat rashly and amiss concerning the dealings of God with his servants in general as if nothing but trouble and sorrow did attend them and that the wicked went away with all the sweet and good of this world Now Elihu to take him off from these sad and almost despairing thought● as to the return of his own comforts and to rectifie his judgement in the general poynt as to the dealings of God with others he assureth Job that if righteous men being bound in fetters c. hear and obey God will break those bonds and cut the cords of their affliction and they shall spend the remainder of their dayes in prosperity and the rest of their years in pleasures So that Elihu in holding out this promise to Job would rather clear his judgement from an error concerning the lastingness or continuance of his pains and sorrows than heat his affections in the expectation of joyes and pleasures in this world Fourthly I answer Though the people of God have nor alwayes dayes of such outward prosperity nor years of such sensitive pleasures yet they have that which is better and if they have no pleasures they do not want them The Apostle could say Phil. 4.11 I have learned in what state scever I am therewith to be content What is pleasure if content be not We may have outward pleasures yet no content but he that hath content within cannot miss of pleasure A man may have riches but no contentment but he that hath contentment is very rich 1 Tim. 6.6 Godliness with contentment is great gaine and great gaine is prosperity this great gaine this heart-pleasure or soul-rest contentment is the assured portion of those who obey and serve the Lord what-ever their outward portion be in this world And he may be said to spend his dayes in good and his years in pleasure who hath these pure gaines of gracious contentment resting the soul in God in all conditions The life of man that is the comfort of his life doth not consist in the abundance of that which he possesseth Luke 12.15 or in sense-pleasures but in that sweet composure and sedateness of his soul resting by faith in the promises of God or rather in the God of the promises and so sucking sweetness from them Lastly As though a servant of God should be exercised with sorrows all the dayes of his life yet he cannot be said to spend his dayes in sorrow because he meets with many refreshing intervalls and shines of favour from the face of God in the midst of those clouds so he may be said to spend his dayes in pleasure because at least when his dayes here are spent he consummates his dayes which is one signification of the word by an entrance into everlasting pleasures So much for the answer of these questions concerning this promise They shall spend their dayes in prosperity and their years in pleasure From the promise it self Note Fi●st Obedience to God is profitable to man God hath no profit by our Obedience but we have God doth not call us to serve him in his work as we call servants to do our work to get his living by us or better himself no the Lord calls us to serve him and obey him for our own good They consult their own good best who do most good I may say these three things of those who do good and what is serving God but doing of good or what is doing good but serving God First they shall receive true good Secondly they shall for ever hold the best good the chief good they shall not only spend their dayes and years in good but when their dayes and years are spent they shall have good and a greater good than any they had in spending the dayes and years of this life they shall have good in death they shall come to a fuller enjoyment of God the chief Good when they have left and let fall the possession of all earthly goods Thirdly they that do good shall find all things working together for their good if they have a loss they shall receive good by it if they bear a Cross that shall bear good Outward troubles cannot disturb much less pollute our spiritual good for All things work together for good to them that love God who are the called according to his purpose Rom. 8.28 Surely then the service of God is a gainful service a profitable service though the work may be hard and the way painful yet the wages will be sweet and the end pleasant The contemplation of this put David upon putting that question Psal 34.12 13. What man is he that desireth life and loveth many dayes that he may see good that is that he may enjoy good keep thy tongue from evil and thy mouth that it speak no guile depart from evil and do good The Psalmist makes Proclamation What man is he that would have good let him do good let him obey and serve God and he shall have good Again Consider the Promise in relation to the Persons described vers 8 9 10. They
purpose or with a base design There are many who do good who come to duty whether in family or congregation who mind not what they do nor have any love to it or zeal for it here is hypocritical attendance in that they set not themselves to meet with God or find God in the duty yet possibly such come not with a wicked purpose nor with a plot in their heads in doing these duties that 's proper to the hypocrite in heart Thus we may understand that of Solomon lately opened upon another occasion Prov. 21.27 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord how much more when he bringeth it with a wicked mind A man may be wicked as to his state yet not do a thing with a wicked mind not bring a sacrifice which includeth all holy services with an unholy purpose but the hypocrite in heart when-ever he doth any good hath a plot in it as he alwayes serves God with a reserve he hath somewhat that he doth with-hold he cometh by halves so he alwayes serves God with a design He may make a fair shew and a great noise in profession but ever he hath some end of his own in it Jehu said Come see my zeal for God He was about a good work the destroying of Ahabs House and Baals Priests this he called zeal for the Lord but he did all this with a wicked mind for the great thing upon his heart was to get into the Throne ●o be a King he made use of all those specious acts of zeal only as a stirrup to raise himself into the saddle the matter he aimed at was to establish the kingdom of Israel to himself and his posterity That 's a second thing as the hypocrite doth evil purposely so when he doth good he hath a purpose a plot in it more than is good he doth it not either for the honour of God or for the enjoyment of God which are the best ends of every good action and without a pure eye without which no action how good soever in it self is good to or turnes to the good of the actor Thirdly The hypocrite in heart I conceive is such a one as knows himself to be an hypocrite There are many hypocrites who little thinke that they are hypocrites yea they may think themselves very upright and honest in what they do ignorant deluded souls understand not their own case Laodicea was wretched and miserable these are false and hypocriticall but know it not As some judge or rather mis-judge themselves hypocrites who are upright in the maine with God and honest at heart How frequent are such complaints and self-wronging accusations So many are hypocrites or rotten at heart who know it not The heart is deceitfull above all things saith the Prophet Jer. 17.9 and desperately wicked who can know it And among all men common hypocrites know least o● their own hearts But the hypocrites in heart know their hearts are rotten and fal●e to what they professe Induunt pallium pretatis et colorem sanctitatis haec enim est proprietas radicis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sc infi●ere rem alieno colore ●el obmibere et velare alieno pallio The politick hypocrite knoweth that all he doth is but in shew and that he doth but act a pa●● in Religion as a Player upon the Stage when he is most religious he doth but take a colour or die or paynt himself with Religion which is the signification of the word here used in the Hebrew but i● not religious he doth but put a faire glosse or disguise upon himsel● that he may appear what he is not or what he knows himself not to be He knoweth in himself that he is naught while he would be known by and to others as good The Apostle speaking of the grievous sufferings of some primitive Christians saith Heb. 10.34 They took joyfully the spoyling of their goods knowing in themselves that they have a better and a more enduring substance that is they knew they were in a present gracious state and that there remained for them an eternal happy state Thus also an hypocrite in heart is one that knoweth in himself or in his heart that he doth but pretend to be good and that whatsoever good he doth it is only in pretence and is therefore as the Apostle speaks of the Heretick Tit. 3.11 condemned of himself while he acquits or commends himself never so well to others Thus it appears how bad how base the hypocrite in heart is in his best appearances and how much he excels and bears away the Bel fobaseness and badness I may say for madness too from all common hypocrites Now as they exceed in sin so they shall in misery the next words assure us of that But the hypocrites in heart heap up wrath Elihu having described the persons that he dealeth with or about he also sets forth both their wofull and sin●ull condition And he doth it three wayes First By what they do They heap up wrath For a man to be labouring continually only to make heaps of wrath for himself in what a wofull condition is that man Secondly He shews their bad both sinfull and wofull condition by what they will not do that we have at the latter end of the 13th verse They cry not when he bindeth them They heap up wrath that they do They cry not when he bi●deth them That they do not Thirdly He sets forth their wofull condition by that which is an inevitable consequent and fruit of such doing and not doing the evil which they suffer that we have v. 14 They die in youth and their life is among the unclean These are the parts of the wofull condition of hypocrites in heart I shall give a touch upon each of them Fi●st Consider what they are doing If you would know their trade 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ponunt iram 't is this They are heaping up wrath they add wrath to wrath till they make a mighty masse or heap of it There is a difference among some interpreters what wrath is here intended They heap up wrath Aliqui ponunt iram intelligunt ex●ondescunt in deum Merc First Some conceive that Elihu meaneth their own wrath Hypocrites in heart heap up wrath that is when God doth at any time bind them in fetters and holdeth them in the cords of affliction as he spake in the former context these hypocrites in heart what do they Do they obey Do they turn from iniquity Do they amend their hearts or lives No They heap up wrath they grow angry they vex and rage instead of repenting that 's all these hypocrites do when the Lord hath bound them in fetters and holds them in the cords of affliction they are all in a slame they are mad with rage and fury Some both of the Ancients and Moderns insist upon this opinion and it is a very great truth that when the hypocrite ih heart
and Sacrifices as in obeying the voyce of the Lord ● Saul had been very carefull to bring home sacrifices He had not obeyed the command of God yet hoped to put him off with a sacrifice But what were heards and flocks of cattel to be sacrificed when Saul rebelled against God Nothing provokes God more than outward services of worship when they are not accompanied with inward and universal submission to his will for that 's no better a sacrifice no purer worship than a Heathen payes to his Idol-god Hypocrites offer God only the blind and the lame Mal. 1.14 that is maymed and imperfect services there is imperfection in the services of the best but theirs are imperfect services so imperfect blind and lame that they are fit only for the blind and the lame so Idol-gods are called 2 Sam. 5.8 And do not they heap the wrath of the true God who serve him no better than false gods are served by their Idolatrous Devo●ionists Secondly There must needs be a continual heaping up of wrath by Hypocrites for if not to set the heart right provokes God to wrath Psal 78.8 The Lord was exceedingly displeased with the Israelites because they set not their heart aright Now if the Lord be so angry when the heart is not set aright much more must it provoke the Lord when then do purposely set their hearts wrong when they do evil knowingly advisedly when as it were they study to do evil To do good only in shew doth more displease the Lord than the doing of that which in shew is evil or which is evil above-board known to be so by all beholders As Hypocrites often deceive men so they attempt to deceive God himself This cannot but heap up wrath being it self so great a heap of sin They who think God will be pleas'd with outward Services alone or have no care to give him inward are alike displeasing to him Therefore among all sorts of sinners the Lord declares his wrath and thunders woe upon woe in the Gospel against Hypocrites They have heaped up wrath and it shall be heaped upon them They shall have their Portion in the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone That 's the first thing what they do They heap up wrath When the hand of God is upon them they are so far from coming forth humbly and penitentially to turn away his wrath or to seek his face that they provoke him more and more and dreadfully enflame the reckoning against themselves They heap up wrath Secondly Elihu tells us what the Hypocrites in heart do not They cry not when h● bindeth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vincire pro castigare species pro genere Licet hanc doctrinam in communi Elihu prop●nat verisimile tamen est Jobum dicendo pungere But is it a fault or so great a fault not to cry when God bindeth us Are we commanded or bound to cry when we are bound in fetters and holden in cords of affliction wherein lyeth this sin That will appear while I shew what crying is here intended To cry is First to complain and make a noyse this is the cry of impatience Secondly to mourn and be sorrowful this is the cry of Repentance Thirdly to pray to supplicate yea to pray mightily to pray strongly and this is the cry of Faith Luke 18.7 Shall not God avenge his own Elect which cry day and night unto him That is which pray mightily to him night and day The hypocrite in heart often makes the first cry when God bindeth him the cry of impatience but never the two latter he makes not either the cry of Repentance or the cry of Faith in Prayer when God bindeth him This lets us see the second Part of the wickedness of these hypocrites 't is the omission of a most necessary duty yea of two They act very sinfully for they heap up wrath they act not holily for they do not cry when God binds them that is they neither repent nor pray or they repent not heartily they pray not earnestly in the day of their affliction Hence note First Hypocrites humble not themselves when God humbleth them When he binds them as it were hand and foot they are tongue-tyed and heart-tyed The Lord said of such Hos 7.14 They cryed not unto me with their heart when they howled upon their beds they assemble themselves for Corn and Wine and rebel against me They howled and made a noyse but saith the Lo●d all the while they cryed not to me There was no Repentance no Prayer in their cry they cryed not with their heart Hypocrites will first complain much when God binds them secondly they murmure much when God binds them thirdly they will vex themselves like a Bull in a Nett when God binds them Fourthly they will rail and curse when God binds them but repent or pray they do not Isa 8.21 They shall pass through it hardly bested and hungry and it shall come to pass that when they shall be hungry they shall fret themselves and curse their King and their God and look upward Here was blaspheming but no crying no repenting no praying no deprecating the hand of God or the Judgment felt in an humble and spiritual way Hypocrites cry not to the Lord though he makes them cry they are readier to find fault with God than with themselves in the day of adversity they neither cry the cry of godly sorrow for their sin nor the cry of godly Prayers for help out of their affliction They who are false with God in times of Peace seldom if at all repent or duty apply themselves to God for help in times of trouble the reason is The Conscience of the hypocrite in heart tells him Anteactae turpis ●itae ●em●ria anintum enervat he hath dealt basely with God and therefore when he is in streights or bound what face what faith what liberty of spirit can he have to cry to God Such hypocrites often cry out despai●ingly but oh how rately are they brought to cry either believingly or repentingly when God bindeth them Secondly Consider this cry a little further as a Prayer-cry Hypocrites in heart may be much for prayer in time of prosperity they were not hypocrites else if they did not pray they were openly prophane not hypocrites Christ speaking of hypocrites Math. 6. tells us they pray much and Math. 7. they cry Lord Lord. Hypocrites are much in praying especially in times of prosperity yet here he saith They cry not when he bindeth them that is in the day of adversity Hence Observe That which is not done uprightly will not be done constantly Hypocrites cry to God only in shew at best and when 't is best with them but when they fall into a troubled condition they cry not they even lay down their shew they throw up their duties when they miss their desires They who have prayed often in a time of prosperity not throwing away their sins coming into
c. Secondly he applies it by way of conviction that as yet surely he was unhumbled because still under the afflicting hand of God vers 17. But thou hast fulfilled the judgement of the wicked judgement and justice take hold on thee So much concerning the state of these three verses in general I shall now go on to open them in order Verse 15. He delivereth the poor in his affliction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Traxit exiraoeit detr●xit in piet extraxit ex aerumu● miseria ericulo or he pulls the poor out of affliction That is the sense of the word and the work of God We find the word used to signifie the pulling or drawing off of the shoo Deut. 25.19 As the shoo is tied or buckled to the foot and must be loosed before it can with any ease be drawn off Chalatz and lachatz two contraries save and undoe are sweetly used ●y Elihu in this verse Brough so affl●ctions are tyed to us till the Lord unlooseth and draweth them off from us or us from them To draw out of trouble or to draw us out of trouble is deliverance David expresseth himself by that word Psal 6.4 Return O Lord deliver or draw my soul that is me out of the enemies hand or out of the trouble which compasseth me about and is ready like deep waters to swallow me up He delivereth The poor in his affliction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est vox conjugata pauperum a paupertate miserum a miseria Pined Who are meant by the poor hath been shewed before I shall not stay upon it here only consider there are poor as to their outward state and poor as to their inward state that is first poor in spirit which is a blessed poverty and secondly poor in spirituals which is a miserable poverty The two former sorts of poor especially when joyned in one are here intended He delivereth the poor in his affliction or in his poverty There is a great elegancy in the Hebrew text 't is a word of the same root which signifieth the poor who are delivered and the affliction in which or out of which he or they are delivered We may translate the text thus he delivereth the poor in his poverty that is when he is in his poverty or affliction the Lord delivere●h him out of his poverty or affliction if poverty be his affliction o● whatsoever affliction comes under the name of poverty Hic ב redditur per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de ex the Lord delivereth him out of it I have upon other passages of this book spoken of this deliverance yet shall touch it here again because we ought always to remember it we are often in affliction often in trouble and therefore we have need of●en to be put in mind and continually to bear in mind that God is a deliverer the deliverer of his people from or out of afflictions He delivereth the poor in his affliction Hence Note Deliverance is the work of God As ●he poor cannot deliver themselves in affliction so neither can the rich deliver the poor by his riches nor the strong by his power nor the wise man by his wisdom craft or pollicy The Lord often useth the help of man creature help in delivering the poor out of affl●ctions yet the whole effect is here and every where in Scripture attributed to God He delivereth the poor Deliverance of any so●t is of God yet more especially some sort of deliverances are as Nebuchadnezzar confessed Dan. 3.29 who wh●n those three Worthies were delivered out of the fiery furnace ma●e a decree that every People Nation and Language which spake any thing amiss against the God of Shadrach Meshach a●d Abednego should be cut in pieces c. and he did it upon this ground because saith he there is no other God that can deliver after this sort He had an opinion that his god could deliver but he appropriated the glory of that deliverance to their God there is no god can deliver after this sort no god but the God of Shadrach Meshach and Abednego can check and stop the rage of fire and b ing out those unburnt who are cast into the burning That 's the first thing Deliverance is of the Lord. Secondly He delivereth the poor Note The lowest and meanest are the objects of deliverance When it 's worst with us then usually God cometh in He will be seen in the Mount and provide at a pinch he loves to do for us when we can do nothing for our selve Take the poor in any notion but especially for such as being destitute of all help and means of deliverance are also poor in spi it not trusting to any help or humane arm these these are the persons whom the Lord delights to deliver and herefore God is so often spoken of in Scriptu e as espousing the cause and quarrel of the Widow and the Fatherless Thirdly From the manner of expression He delivereth the poor in affliction Note They who are not delivered from affliction may yet be delivered in affliction God doth not alwayes deliver his People from affliction either not suffering affliction to fall upon them or presently bringing them out of affliction but he is engaged by promise to deliver them in affliction and this he doth sometimes by checking the affliction that it shall not hurt them sometimes by enabling them to bear yea to conquer the affliction how much soever it hurts them He delivered those in the third of Daniel in the fiery fu●nace by checking the fire that it should not hurt them and Daniel in the Lions den by checking the hungry Lyons that they did not devour him He delivered Job and David and Jeremie and the Apostles and all the Martyrs who loved not their lives to the death for the testimony of Jesus by causing them to glory in and triumph over all their tribulations He delivereth the poor in his affliction and openeth their ears in oppression What 's meant by opening the ear was shewed at the 10th verse of this Chapter and at the 16th verse of the thirty third Yet consider somewhat in the words anew And openeth their ear The Hebrew copulative particle which we render and is often in that language used to denote a season or special time and then it is rendred by when thus here he delivereth the poor in affliction when he hath opened their ears by or in oppression Thus also Psal 139.16 Thine eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy book all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them The Hebrew is and not one in them as if he had said God had a full Idea or platform of Davids b dy before it was framed so here he delivereth the poor in affliction and openeth or when he hath opened their ears in oppression that is taught them effectually to make a good use of their afflictions We may
in mind And therefore they who perswade or entice others to evil are said to turn them from the Lord and to thrust them out of the way which the Lord commandeth them to walk in Deut. 13.5 To perswade in any degree is to move Josh 15.18 and some perswade so strongly that they make in others great removes Further It signifies to deceive as will appear if you compare Text and Margin 2 Kings 18.32 and those Texts 2 Chron. 32.11 15. all concerning one matter He that is deceived is usually deceived by perswasion and is drawn away by some enticements Now because he that perswadeth or deceiveth another endeavoureth to turn or remove him from what he holdeth or intendeth to the contrary therefore as we render this word signifies also to remove to bring from one place to another or from one state to another He would have removed or translated thee Out of a streight into a broad place Here are two sorts of places a streight and a broad place What a streight place properly taken is all know The Heb ew is He would have removed thee out of the mouth of the streight 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Angustia et adversarius Hinc Septuaginta reddunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Septuagint render He would have removed thee out of the mouth of the enemy An enemy puts us to streights and th●refore the same word signifies a streight and an enemy he would have removed thee out of a streight place the hand of an enemy is so But mo●e generally by the streight place we are to understand any kind of tribulation or trouble whatsoever Troubles of any sort are justly called streights for they inclose and imprison us they abridge us of our liberty they ty us short up where we can scarce stir or breath A man in trouble is a man in streights Some expound these words allegorically taking the mouth of the streight for Hells mouth they that descend thither are indeed in everlasting streigh●s for though Tophet be deep and large as the Prophet speaks Isa 30.33 yet all that are there are in streights Hell is la ge to take in but streight to let out Gehenna est ampla ad recipiendum et angusta ad emitten●um so streight that it will not let one out for ever Others expound it tropologically or with respect to manners he would have delivered thee out of the mouth of the streight that is from the power of thy sins and corruptions for they indeed are streights and though we easily fall into them yet we hardly get ou● De put●o peccati et pr●vae consuctudinis cu●● ingressus facilis exi●us pr●●● angu●tu● Gregor or free of them again But we need not take up either Allegories or Tropologies the words are plain That which Elihu here inten●s by streights is great trouble deep misery into which a man being cast knows neither how to subsist nor how to escape Ye● out of that streight place he promiseth deliverance He would have removed thee out of a streight O●●ng sli●● e●t ingeas ●●la●itas abyssu● m●●●rum in quam de●ersus homo n●que subsistere n●que emergere potest Into a broad place That is to liberty and prosperity which are in Scripture compared to a broad place where a man hath room enough Thou hast known my Soul in adversity sai h David Psal 31.7 8. and hast not shut me up in the hand of the enemy thou hast set my feet in a large Room that is in a prospe●ous condition Thus Elihu here promiseth on Gods behalf He would have removed thee out of a streight into a large place Where no streightness is Sp●tium latum est ●mo la●issimum ubi n●lla angustia est That 's a broad place indeed No streightness implyeth greatest enlargement or enlargment to the uttermost not only of need but desire A broad place where there is no streightness is full lib●rty or fill of liberty A man may be in a very good in a very free condition and yet have some streights To be in so good a condition as to have no streights at all is the top and perfection of freedom And surely The full attainment of such an enlargedness is the reward of the next life not the enjoyment of this life The way of the wicked V●t impi●rum est lata angustissim●e via justo am est angusta latissime et definit in latitudinem jucund ssimam in this life is most streightly broad the way of the righteous in this life is broadly streight and endeth in a broadness of everlasting blessedness God at last will remove all his out of a streight into a broad place where there is no streightness Hence First See the Author of our deliverance is again here rememb●ed He would have removed c. As before he delivereth the poor in affl●ctions so here again He would have removed thee out of a streight into a broad place As all our mercies are of the Lord so let us acknowledge him in all Secondly From the Allusion Note Troubles are streights He is in a streight that knows not what to do thus 't is often with us in our troubles It was so with good Jehoshaphat 2 Chro. 20 12. when a mighty Enemy came up against him Lord said he we know not what to do but our eyes are towards thee he was in a streight what to do here on earth but he had a b oad place to look to even to heaven to the Lord of heaven and earth our eyes are towards thee As if he had said Lord we are in a streight but thou art never in streights Lord counsel us what to do Lord help us to do it The afflicted many a time know not what to do and many times they cannot do what they know they know this thing would do them good but they cannot do it they know that might be helpfull to them but they cannot reach it He is in a streight that doubts what good to chuse much more is he in a streight who seeth that what-ever he chuseth he must chuse some evil Paul was in the former streight and David in the latter Paul was in a streight it was a trouble to him being doubtfull which good to chuse Phil. 1.23 I am in a streight betwixt two betwixt what two betwixt two very good things namely living here in doing good and going to heaven to receive his reward he was in a streight whether to live here to do more work or to go to heaven to receive the reward of his work 'T is some trouble but a blessed trouble when we are in a doubt which good to chuse But they are in very great trouble who are in such a streight that whatsoever they chuse they must chuse evil That was Davids streight 2 Sam. 24.14 the Lord gave him a choyce and a very sad one of three evils either of famine or of pestilence or of flying and
way of admonition and counsel forasmuch as he had done amiss before and carried himself unduly under the hand of God even so far as to fulfil the counsel of the wicked that therefore he would now for the time to come take heed and be more wary And lest Job should slight this admonition or counsel Elihu adds a powerful motive to urge that duty upon him even the wrath of God Beware Why Because there is wrath Beware and beware lest this wrath breaking forth he take thee away with a stroke And how dreadful the wrath of God is Elihu shews in these three verses by a threefold Consideration First because if we fall into the Lords hand when he is in wrath there is no meanes under heaven that can deliver or bring us off This he asserteth at the latter end of the 18th verse Then a great ransome cannot deliver thee It is dangerous coming un-der that wrath from which a ransome especially a great ransome cannot deliver What that ransome is which cannot deliver us is expressed in the 19th verse Will he esteem thy riches no not gold A Second motive to beware o● this dreadful wrath is this because if once the wrath of God be up as there is no ransom so no power in the creature that can deliver That we have in the latter part of the 19th verse nor all the forces of strength though thou hast armies millions of men in armes yea though thou hast legions of Angels in pay yet they cannot prevail all the forces of strength cannot deliver thee There is also a third consideration to shew the unavoidableness of the wrath of God namely because there is no sleeing no making an escape from it Some indeed are so angry that you cannot satisfy them with a ransom and so powerful that no strength can deliver you from their power yet possibly you may make an escape and hide from them you may get out of the way and lye out of sight but saith Elihu that will not do neither in this case v. 20. desire not the night when people are cut off in their place the night or darkness will be no cover to thee from the wrath of an angry God Thus you have the sum and substance of this admonition to Job Beware because there is wrath and that wrath of God so terrible that nothing can deliver from it no ransom no power nor can we deliver our selves by flight or by darkness I shall now open the words more distinctly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 calor ira a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 caluit incaluit quod iracundi incalescunt Verse 18. Because there is wrath beware c. The word which we translate wrath comes from a root that signifies heat or to be hot and we know they that are angry and in wrath are very hot their mind and spirit are enflamed we use to say to an angry man why are you so hot the wrath of man is hot the wrath of God is certainly much hotter Because there is wrath but where is it I answer First there is wrath in the breast or heart of God there his anger is kindled against sinners Secondly There is wrath in the decree of God against sinners Zeph. 2.2 Thirdly there is wrath in the threatnings of God there it first appeares and breaketh forth Deut. 29.20 So the Apostle Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from heaven How is it revealed As his love is revealed in promises so his wrath in threatnings Fourthly there is wrath in the works of God in his Judgments acted upon the children of men As there is wrath hidden in his breast and decreed so wrath is heard from his mouth in terrible threatnings and seen in his hand by terrible Judgments executed upon his enemies We may see wrath in the dealings of God his works tell us he is angry Therefore fear to persist lest in his anger he take thee quite away We should beware of sinful works lest we provoke and stir up the Lords anger to make bloody work There is wrath particularly as to the dealings of God with thee O Job saith Elihu therefore Beware The word beware is not expresly in the Hebrew tex● but it is plainly intended and supplied by Interpreter● in gene●al to make up and clear the sence of this verse We have a like reading in the 36th of Isaiah v. 18. Beware lest Hezekiah perswade you c. The word beware is a supplement added there in a different character to shew that it is not expressed in the Hebrew As if Raoshakeh had said If Hezekiah perswade you to stand out against my Master Sennacherib you will provoke his wrath to your utter ruine and destruction therefore beware There as here beware bespeakes our caution because there is wrath take heed what you do or say Hence note First There is a wrath of God against sin or God will appear in wrath against sinners The Apostle John in his first Epistle Chap. 4.8 tells us in a direct predication God is love and 't is as true God is wrath The wrath of God is a divine perfection it is the perfection of God as his love is God is one and the same he is not divided into several passions perturbations or affections but thus the Scripture speaks of him to denote what we may expect from him and what he is and will be in his actings towards them who obey him not Secondly note The wrath of God appears and is put forth in his works of judgment As the goodness of God is his love acted or as the good things which God doth for us are love-actions so the evils that are upon us are wrath-actions I do not say that every evil which we endure in this world is the acting of wrath upon us but I say there is wrath in the actings of evil upon us Moses said to Aaron Numb 16.46 Go quickly take a Censer hast hast and make an atonement there is wrath gone out How did he know wrath was gone out He tells us in the next words the plague is begun He saw wrath in that dispensation of God the plague begun argued that God was angry Because there is wrath beware Hence note Thirdly We should by all meanes take heed and beware of the wrath of God The wrath of man is a small matter to the wrath of God yet we are very careful to beware of the wrath of man especially of great men The wrath of the Kings and Princes of the world is like the ●oaring of the Lion saith Solomon and we are ready to tremble at that but O how should we tremble at and beware of the wrath of God! Who knoweth the power of thine anger Psal 90.11 We may take some scantling some measure of the wrath of man and know how far it can go and what it can do but we can take no measure of the wrath of God for it is immesurable and therefore we should avoid every
to the godly at all times hath it especially in a time of streights and trouble But as the Lord never regards wicked men so then lest when they have most need of it Will he esteem them no not in affliction There is a third reading of these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in piel contra rapinas munivit hinc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aurum lectissimum quasi ab igne munitum aut quod fit hominis munimentum Will he esteem thy riches no not any defence As our translation no not gold falls in plainly with the first words of the Text so this with the latter Will he esteem thy riches no not gold say we answering the word riches in the first part of the verse Will he esteem thy riches no not defence say others which answers those words nor all the forces of strength in the latter part of the verse So then as our reading complyes with the former part of the verse so this hath as faire a compliance with the latter No not any defence The word signifies to fortify to fence to make strong and hence gold because gold is mans strength and defence Riches are a great strength to be rich in gold is a mans strong tower Will he esteem thy riches no not gold or defence Nor all the forces of strength These words in the close of the verse being the same with the middle part as last rendred may very well be drawn up into one and conceived of as if Elihu had said Suppose thou art a mighty man and hast strong forces he will not esteem thee for all that The very weakness of God is stronger than man 1 Cor. 1.25 that is than the strongest man or than any strength which man can procure either to oppose God or to protect himself against him The Prophet to shew the great power of the Chaldeans saith Hab. 1.10 They shall scoff at kings and deride every strong hold Surely the Lord is so far from esteeming the defences and forces of strength which men make to and for themselves that he scoffs at and derides them The Lord will deride all the strong holds of man even the forces of strength Some get internal carnal strong holds to fortifie themselves in of which the Apostle speaks 2 Cor. 10.4 The weapons of our warfare are not carnal but mighty through God to the casting down of strong holds Most sinners are men of wit they provide themselves strong holds to save their sins in they have their excuses and reasonings to defend their sins or themselves in their sins by Others are men of might they get external strong holds they have Armies and Cities of defence to secure themselves by but will the Lord regard either Not the strong holds set up and maintained by force of wit no nor all the forces of strength Though thou hast Army upon Army and City upon City though thou dost add Castle to Castle and Fort to Fort they are no more than paper walls before the Lord. As neither riches nor nobleness so no power of man can secure man from the hand of God Mr. Broughton varieth a little from our reading yet concurrs fully in sense No gold nor any other thing should be able to give sound strength which himself expounds by this short gloss If now thou despisest repentance thou shalt be utterly cast off As if he had said to Job it is not thy or any mans standing out against God that will help you your only help is in repentance and self-humbling before God Will he esteem thy riches no not gold nor all the forces of strength Hence note There is no strength against the Lord. As there is no counsel so no force of strength against the Lord. Hannah sang this truth 1 Sam. 2.9 By strength shall no man prevail that is against man if God be with him much more is it true that by strength shall no man prevail against God Isa 1.31 The strong shall be tow and the maker thereof as a spark that is as some expound their Idols whom they made their strength shall be as tow that is as the most combustible matter easily consumed and the maker of it that is the Idol-maker shall be as a spark Do but blow a spark among tow and what will become of it Such are the strongest Idols in which men trust and such are the mightyest and strongest men before the Lord who trust in them Tow or flax or hemp after the dressing is as tinder that the least spark will give fire to The strong Idol shall be as tow and the maker of it as a spark or which is in effect the same The strong man shall be tow and that which he hath made or as we put in the Margin his work that is his Idol shall be as a spark and they shall both burn or perish together This is the sentence of the Lord against the strong a spark shall set them on fire and burn them how then shall the strong be able to stand before the Lord who is not a spark but a fire and that a consuming fire and therefore I may urge Elihu's counsel to Job upon all sorts of men upon those especially who persist in any sin take heed because there is wrath beware c. or I may urge them with the Prophets dehortation Jer. 9.23 Let not the wise man glory in his wisdome nor the mighty man in his strength nor the rich man in his riches for none of these can help or deliver from wrath only Jesus Christ can and it hath been shewed who they are to whom he will not be a delivering ransome It may be very useful to consider what negatives Elihu puts upon sinners as to deliverance from kindled wrath not riches not honour not crying not praying not strength not defence can deliver without turning from sin to God and all in Christ Elihu having urged two arguments to make Job beware of wrath first because nothing could ransom him God regards not riches no not gold secondly because nothing could rescue him all the forces of strength could not defend him against nor fetch him out from under the hand of God Elihu I say having dispatched these two arguments he in the 20th verse gives a further and that a third argument to move Job to take heed of wrath because as he could neither be ransomed nor rescued so neither could he be hid or sheltred from the wrath of God That is the general sense of the next verse Vers 20. Desire not the night when people are cut off in their place The root of that word which we render desire signifies a very earnest breathing and longing after a thing as conceiving and believing the enjoyment thereof would be an exceeding comfort and refreshment to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat respirare anholare ad aliquid vel rei alicujus summo desiderio teneri Merc. So 't is used in the seventh Chapter of this
prosecuteth the admonition which he had given Job in the 21 verse to take heed of uttering any thing rashly concerning Gods dealings with him or of choosing iniquity rather than affliction And he presseth the admonition by two great arguments First From the power and wisdome of God in the 22t h verse Behold God exalteth by his power who teacheth like him Secondly He urgeth it by an argument taken from the soveraignty of God as also from his most exact Justice v. 23. Who hath enjoyned him his way or who can say thou hast wrought iniquity As if he had said Take heed how thou accusest the Justice of God in any of his dealings with thee If God be of such power of such wisdome of such soveraignty of such integrity then consider well what thou speakest yea what thou thinkest of God beware thou speakest not a word nor conceivest a thought amiss of him Consider I say God himself his wayes and works thoroughly and thou wilt conclude with me That though many in the world have great power and have left the markes of it in many places and upon many persons yet none like God either first in doing his own work or secondly in directing or teaching us how to do ours So that Elihu by this report and commendation of the power and wisdome of God seems to comfort Job in the assurance or hope of better things Ecce deus excelsus in fortitudine sua Vulg 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 excelsus est intransitive sumi potest attollit robur suum i. e. rob●re suo excelsus est if he would hearken to and accept his counsel for as God had mightily afflicted and broken him so he was as mighty to heal those breaches and deliver him he only waited to see him in a better frame that he might be gracious Isa 30.18 That 's the general sum of the words Vers 22. Behold God exalteth by his power Some read God is high in his own power that carrieth Elihu's reason strongly in it God is exalted in his power above all others and therefore it is no way sutable or consentaneous unto reason that the greater power should be questioned much less condemned of injustice by the lesser power There must be a parity a co-ordination or a co-equality at least if not a superiority where judgement is given That 's a great truth God is exalted in his own power David Psal 21.13 turns it into a prayer or wish Be thou exalted O Lord in thine own strength He makes a like prayer Psal 108.5 The Lord in other places declareth himself p●remptorily in it Psal 46.10 Be still and know that I am God I will be exalted among the Heathen I will be exalted in the Earth It shall be so whether men will or will not whether men will or no God will be exalted because he is exalted in his own power not in any derived power or power given him from the creature Men or Angels The power which God puts forth in his works exalt him or shew him to be a great a mighty God Behold God is exalted by his own power But we translate the Text and so I conceive it more fitly sutes the scope of Elihu as expressing an act of God towards others Behold God exalteth by his power So Mr Broughton Mark the Omnipotent sets up by his strength Behold As hath been shewed is a note both of attention and admiration God The strong God the potent the omnipotent God who is able to overcome all difficulties Exalteth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Elevare exaltare corroborare stabilem inconcussum reddere The word which we render to exalt signifieth to set in an inaccessible height or to exalt ve●y high and not only so but to establish in that exaltation yea so to confirme and corroborate him that is set up in such a height that no power is able to molest trouble or afflict him and therefore a word coming from this root signifieth a fortified Castle or Tower such places if any are exalted and lifted up on high Behold God exalteth As if Elihu had said God is not only exalted in himself he is not only lifted up beyond the reach of all creature-annoyances but he is able to lift up others and he doth actually exalt his when he pleaseth beyond the reach of all danger beyond the hurtfull power of those who hate them and therefore have a mind to hurt them God is so exalted above others that he can exalt others also He exalteth by His Power He hath the power in himself The word which we render power signifieth First That might and strength which is corporal the might and strength of the body Secondly Inward might and strength whether acquired or infused the might of the mind wisdome and pollicy Thirdly Civil might and power honour and riches Whatever maketh a man strong comes under the notion of this word and every way in all the Notions of power God is exalted He exalteth by his power But seeing 't is barely asserted He exalteth by his power nothing being expressed it may be questioned whom doth he exalt or what doth he exalt I answer Forasmuch as the Scripture leaveth it at large and undetermined we may apply this assertion to any either thing or person God exalteth whom he pleaseth and what he pleaseth VVe may take it distinctly these five wayes First He exalteth Himself by his power that is he exalteth his own Name and Glory which is nearest to him yea as himself Secondly He exalteth every work which he will undertake and engage upon He doth not only lay the Foundation of his work and rear up the VValls a little way but he exalteth by his power till he hath set up the Head-stone of his work as the Prophet Zechariah speaketh Chap. 4.7 all that love and fear him shouting and crying Grace Grace to it He exalteth his works of Providence as once he did his work of Creation to full perfection Thirdly The Lord exalteth those that fear him for they are most properly his Favourites and whom should he exalt but those whom he favoureth All the worldly exaltations of evill men are but depressions and abasements compared with those exaltations and advancements which God intendeth for all that fear him and some he exalteth much in this VVorld Fourthly and more specially He exalteth by his power such Job then was those that are cast down by the oppressing power of men even the poor and those that have no help Thou art he saith David Psal 9.13 that liftest me up or exaltest me from the gates of death When I am perishing when I am ready to be swallowed up with death when I am at the greatest loss even as to life it self then thou liftest me up thou liftest me up from the very gates of death Again Psal 18.48 He delivereth me from mine enemies yea thou liftest me up above those that rise up against me When they are casting me down God is
to what we should shun and avoid which is the work of God alone by his grace and Spirit Thus David shews how God is teaching while he is chastening Psal 99.12 Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest out of thy Law God teacheth First by his Word that 's his ordinary way of teaching Secondly he teacheth by his Works and those both the workes of Creation and of Providence and by those whether workes of Mercy or of Judgement By all these meanes God teacheth But that which Elihu chiefly aimeth at in this place speaking to afflicted Job is his teaching by affliction Who teacheth like him As if he had said God doth not lay his hand upon thee by affliction only to make thee smart but to make thee wise he is instructing thee while he is afflicting thee Further as God teacheth by his Word and by his Works so he teacheth most eminently by his Spirit who alone maketh the teaching both of his Word and of his Works effectual upon the hearts of the hearers and beholders Many are taught but none to purpose without the Spirit Who teacheth like him Note Secondly God is no ordinary teacher The teachings of God are above all other teachings There is no teacher to be compared with God Elihu doth not say Who teacheth besides God There are many other teachers but there is not one who teacheth like him Some may say wherein doth the excellency of divine teaching lie how hath that the supereminence above all other teachings Take the answer briefly in seven words First none teacheth so plainly and clearly as God The teachings of men are but dark and obscure to the teachings of God Christ said John 16.26 I shall no more speak unto you in parables but I shall shew you plainly of the Father God speaks by his Word and Spirit to the lowest and meanest understanding Secondly none teacheth like God that is so mildly so moderately so condescendingly to the condition and capacity of those with whom he hath to do Christ said John 16.12 I have many things to say unto you but ye cannot bear them now and therefore I will not say them now I will not bu●den you beyond your strength I know what lessons what instructions you are fit for and I will give you only these and no mo●e till ye are better prepared to receive them I will give you only milk because ye are children and so not able to digest-st ong meat Thirdly none teacketh like God so patien●ly and meekly There is nothing doth more provoke the passion of a teacher than the untowardness and dulness of those that are taught It was a very good Rule given by one of the Ancients he that will teach children must in a manner be a child He must consider what they are and forme himself to their condition else she will never have the patience to teach them O with what patience doth the infinite and only wise God teach his children Isa 28.9 10. He giveth line upon line and precept upon precept here a little and there a little Here is the patience of God He doth not say if ye cannot take it now I will teach you no more No saith God I will give precept upon precept and line upon line though former precepts have not been received yet I will give you more here a little and there a little ye shall have another little to the former little God was forty yeares tutoring and teaching the Israelites in the wilderness to fit them for the possession of Canaan These three yeares saith Christ have I come looking for fruit and all that while he was teaching them to make them fruitfull nor was he hasty then but upon the in●ercession of the vineyard-dresser waited one year more O the patience of God in teaching Fourthly none teacheth like him that is so constantly and continually He teacheth and he is alwayes teaching there is no hour no moment but one way or other God is reaching By every thing we hear or have to do with in the wayes of his providence he is teaching us B sides how constant is God in teaching us formally as 't is said in the Prophet Jer. 35.14 15. I have sent unto you all my servants the prophets rising up early and sending them As if the Lord did bestir himself in the mo●ning to send our teachers betimes He soweth his seed in the morning and in the evening he doth not with hold his hand as he requireth us to do in all sorts of duty whether of charity and righteousness towards our n●ighbour or of piety and holy worship towards himself Eccl. 11.6 Fifthly none teacheth like him that is so truly so unerringly While men teach they sometimes mis-teach while they lead they often mis-lead they teach error for truth and unsafe doctrine for sound they build wood hay and stubble in stead of gold silver precious stone upon that sure foundation Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.12 The best the wisest and most knowing men may erre only God knoweth the full compass of all mysteries yea he is Truth therefore his teachings are most true Sixthly none teacheth like him that is so authoritatively Men teach in the name and authority of God but God teacheth in his own name and authority The Lord giveth Authentity to his own word If the Lord hath said it that 's warrant enough to receive it and believe it When Christ preached the people wondered at his doctrine Mat. 7.29 For he taught them as one having authority and not as the Scribes that is there went forth a mighty command with the word of Jesus Christ He did not as I may say beg attention and submission to his doctrine but exact it upon them and draw it from them Where God teacheth he commandeth his word worketh mightily when he speaketh all must hear at their peril Wh●●e Princes give the rule and publish their Laws subjects must hear and obe● or suffer for not obeying How much more where God gives the Rule and publisheth his Law Seventhly who teacheth like him that is so effectually so efficatiously As God hath authority to charge his teachings upon us at our peril to receive them so he hath a power to work our hearts to the receiving of them Who teacheth thus like God The M●●isters of Christ teach in the authority of God and charge all to receive what they say in his Name but they cannot give an effect to the charge Isa 48.17 He teacheth to profit One translation saith He teacheth things profitable But that is a lean rendring for so doth every Minister that teacheth as he ought but our rendring carrieth the efficacy of the word of God in it He teacheth to profit that is he can make the dullest Scholar learn he can make the most stubborn heart to submit Christ speaking of this great work of God in teaching saith John 6.45 No man cometh unto me except the Father draw him What is that drawing It is this
will part with them on the account of man Only that which God hath taught us abideth with us and that no man can take from us Men may take the life of such a one from him which God hath given him but they cannot take the truth from him which God hath taught him What God teacheth is written as it were with a pen of iron and the point of a diamond it is graven upon the tables of the heart for ever Thus we may in some measure discern who are taught of God and seeing they who are taught of him are so taught we may very well insist upon Elihu's chalenge Who teacheth like him And as there is no teacher like God so neither is there any ruler like God this also is taught us by Elihu as a matter out of question while in the next verse he proceeds to make more questions or two questions more Vers 23. Who hath enjoyned him his way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pro jubere or who can say thou hast wrought iniquity This verse holds out two things First the soveraignty Secondly the integrity of God God is supream in power and he is righteous in the use of his power and therefore O Job thou hast much forgotten both thy self and him in making so many complaints about thy condition which is indeed to enjoyn God his way or prescribe to him how he shall govern the world And seeing no man hath enjoyned God his way who can question him about it what way soever he is pleased to take either with whole Nations or with any of the sons of men Who hath enjoyned him his way or visited him No man hath no man can enjoyn him his way God hath no visitors over him Mr. Broughton renders Who gave him charge over his wayes Like that Chap. 34.13 The way of God is any course which himself taketh either in governing the world in general or any person in particular who shall instruct him about either what or how he shall do whom he shall spare whom he shall punish whose heart he shall soften whose he shall harden whom he shall save whom he shall destroy how he shall teach which way he shall lead in a word how he shall administer justice and order any of his matters all must be bound to and by his Lawes he cannot be bound to or by the lawes and prescripts of any either in works of Judgment or of Mercy either in doing good to and for man or in dealing out of evil Further Who hath enjoyned him his way By the way of God we may understand both the actions of God themselves as also the reasons moving him to those actions As if Elihu had said Who hath taught God what to do Who hath or who can direct him what to do Who may be so bold with God who is the soveraign Lord over all the earth thus to enjoyn him his way Hence note God is the first mover of all that himself doth No man hath shewed him or enjoyned him his way He is the fountain of light he seeth what to do who hath been his counsellor 1 Cor. 2.16 that is no man hath or may instruct him Isa 40.13 Rom. 11.34 Again he is the fountain of power none hath authority to direct him he is above all as he needs not the counsel of any so he receiveth the rule from none I have had occasion more than once in the process of this Book to say somewhat of the soveraignty of God over all creatures and therefore only remind it here Who hath enjoyned him his way Or who can say thou hast wrought iniquity The world is full of iniquity but in God there is none at all As God is not obliged to give any men an account of his works so no man can find any the least real fault or defect in any of them and if his works do not appear so to us now yet at last they will appear to all without any shadow of iniquity Samuel called together the Israelites and demanded 1 Sam. 12.3 Whose oxe have I taken c. Whom have I defrauded c. Come charge me witness against me who can say I have wrought iniquity It was much and a rare thing for Samuel to carry it so justly that none could challenge him but when all the world shall be summoned before God he will be able to put the question Who of all the sons of men can say I have wrought iniquity None can say it but with utmost impudency and highest blasphemy It is impossible for God to work iniquity not only is his Command but his Will totally against it What-ever God works is according to his own Will and his Will is the Rule of Righteousness therefore he can do no iniquity There is no iniqui y in acting or working according to the Law If men act according to their will they usually act iniquity because their will is no● a Law and 't is seldome conformed to the Law The will of no man is so right or so fixed in the right as to be received fo● a Law But seeing what-ever God doth he doth it according to his o●n Will and his Will is the righteous Rule of all things therefore all must be right which he doth Who-ever took him tripping in his dealings Who can say he bath wrought iniquity But why doth Elihu speak thus to Job Had he ever said that God works iniquity I answer He had not Yet because he thought God might have done better by good men or have given out that which was more suitable to their estate than such continual sorrows and afflictions as he endured therefore this saying is deservedly imputed to him For it would have become Job and doth every man to say that is best done which God do●h and that he hath chosen or pitched upon the best and most proper meanes of doing his own choisest servants good even when 't is worst with them in the world or when he afflicts them with the greatest evils For Who can then say he hath wrought iniquity Hence observe First The infinite purity of God as also his love to righteousness and justice Who though he be so absolute in power that none can call him in question none can enjoyn him his way and therefore none can question him for his way yet he is so perfect in righteousness that no fault can be found in him nor any error in his way Though the Lord hath power to do what he will yet he hath no will to do wrong with his power The Lord neither doth nor can do wrong to those who have to their power continually wronged him And indeed he that hath all power in his hand can have nothing but right in his heart How few are there in power though their way be injoyned to them though they have power meerly by commission from superior powers though their power be such as they are to give an account of yet I say how
few are there in power who do not much iniquity who do not either for want of better information or of a better conscience oppress grieve and afflict those that have to do with them or are subject to them God may do what he will yet will do nothing but what is right How infinitely then is God to be exalted in his truth and righteousness And thus the word of truth exalts him Deut. 32.4 2 Chr. 19.7 Rom 9.14 There is no unevenness much less aberration in any of the ways of God he never trod awry nor took a false step Who can say unto him without great iniquity thou hast wrought iniquity Hence we may infer If God works no iniquity in any of his wayes whether in his general or special providences Then All ought to sit down quietly under the workes of God Though he bring never so great judgments upon nations he doth them no wrong though he break his people in the place of dragons and cover them with the shadow of death he doth them no wrong Though he sell his own people for nought yet he doth them no wrong All which and several other grievances the Church sadly bemoans Psal 44. yet without raising the least dust concerning the justice of God or giving the least intimation of iniquity in those several sad and severe wayes Secondly We should not only sit down quietly under all the dispensations of God as having no iniquity in them but exalt the righteousness of God in all his dispensations as mingled also sprinkled with mercy Though we cannot see the righteousness of God in some of them yet we must believe he is not only so but merciful in all of them though the day be dark we cannot discern how this or that su es with the righteousnes much less with the goodness and mercy of ●od yet sit down we ought in this faith that both this and that is righteous yea that God is good to Israel in the one and in the other When the prophet was about to touch upon that string he first laid down this principle as unquestionable Jer. 12.1 Righteous art thou O Lord yet give me leave to plead with thee about thy Judgments Why doth the way of the wicked prosper Why is it thus in the world I take the boldness to put these questions O Lord yet I make no question but thou art righteous O Lord. It becomes all the sons of men to rest patiently under the darkest providences of God And let us all not only not charg God foolishly but exalt him highly and cry up both his righteousness and kindness towards all his people For who can say to God thou hast wrought iniquity Having in several other passages of this book met with this matter also I here briefly pass it over JOB Chap. 36. Vers 24 25. 24. Remember that thou magnifie his work which men behold 25. Every man may see it man may behold it afar off THese two verses contain the third advice counsel or exhortation given by Elihu to Job stirring him up to give glory to God in his providential proceedings with him There are three things considerable in these two verses First The general duty commanded which is to magnifie the work of God Secondly We have here a special reason or ground of that duty the visibility and plainness yea more than so the illustriousness of his work The work of God is not only such as some men may see but such as every 〈◊〉 ●ay see yea behold afar off Thirdly We have here an incentive to provoke to this duty in the first words of the Text Remember Vers 24. Remember that thou magnifie his work which men behold To Remember imports chiefly these two things First to call to mind what is past Mat. 26.75 Then Peter remembred the words of Christ. Secondly To remember is to keep somewhat in mind against the time to come in which sence the Law runs Exod. 20.8 Remember the rest-day that is keep it in mind that when-ever it cometh or upon every return of that day 〈◊〉 may be in a fit posture and preparation for it Remember the rest or sabbath day to keep it holy To remember in this place is set I conceive in a double opposition First To forgetfulness of the duty here called for remember and do not forget it Secondly To the slight performance of the duty here called for the magnifying of the work of God Remember that thou magnifie As if he had said Be thou daily and duely affected with it do not put it off with a little or a bare remembrance the matter is weighty consider it fully As if Elihu had said to Job Thou hast much forgotten thy self and gone off from that which is thy proper work I have heard thee much complaining of the workes of God but thy work should have been to magnifie the work of God Though God hath cast thee down and laid thee low yet thy business should have been to exalt the work of God Remember it would much better become thee to act another part than this thou shouldest have acted the part of a magnifier of the work of God not the part of a complainer gainst it Remember that thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Augeas extollas ejus opus non accuses ut nunc facis Merc. Magnifie The root signifieth to encrease and extol We may consider a twofold magnifying of the work of God There is an inward magnifying of the work of God and there is an outward magnifying of the work of Go● First There is 〈◊〉 ●●d magnifying of the work of God when we think highly 〈◊〉 it thus did the Virgin in her song Luke 1.46 My soul doth magnifie the Lord. Her heart was raised up and stretched out in high thoughts of God Secondly There is an outward magnifying of the work of God To speak highly of his work is to magnify his work to live holily and fruitfully is to magnifie his work We cannot make any addition to the work of God there is no such magnifying of it but we must strive to give the works of God their full dimension and not lessen them at all As we must not diminish the number of his works so we must not diminish the just weight and worth of them There is such a charge of God to the Prophet about his word Jer. 26.2 Go tell the people all the words that I command thee to speak unto them diminish not a word Deliver thy message in words at length or in the full length of those words in which it was delivered unto thee We then magnifie the wo●k of God when we diminish not a tittle As we cannot add any thing to it so we must neither abate nor conceal any thing of it To magnifie is not to make the works of God great but to declare and set forth the greatness of them that 's the magnifying here especially intended Remember
that thou magnifie his works I shall not stay upon that other reading Remember that thou art ignorant of his work The same word which we translate Memento quod ignores opus ejus Vulg. Hieronimus confundit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quanquam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 potius errare quam ignorare significat Drus to magnifie with the variation of a point signifieth to erre hence that translation There is a profitable sense in it for indeed the best knowledge which we have of the work of God may be called ignorance and we said to be ignorant of that work which we are most knowing in Yet because this is straining of the Text I pass it by and keep to our own rendring Remember that thou magnifie His work What work Here is no work specified therefore I answer First All the workes of God are here included Magnify his work What-ever is a work of God what-ever hath the stamp and inscription of God upon it see that thou magnifie it Secondly and more specially We may unde●stand this work of God to be the work of Creation Hujus mundi opificium intelligo Bold the goodly structure and fabrick of this visible world and indeed that 's a work so great and magnificent that it ought to be continually remembred and magnified Thirdly Others restrain it more narrowly to that part of the work of God which is eminent in the heavenly meteors and wonderful changes in the air together with the motions and influences of the stars of which we shall find Elihu discoursing at large like a divine Philosopher in the next Chapter There are strange works of God in these lower heavens where those meteors are born and brought forth Remember to magnifie those works Fourthly I rather conceive though such works of God are afterward spoken of that Elihu intends the work of Providence in both the appearances of it as it is a white or black work as it is for good or for evil as it is in judgment or in mercy A modern Interpreter pitcheth upon the former and upon one particular of the former as if Elihu had directly led Jobs thoughts back to the Deluge that work of God in bringing the Flood upon the old wo●ld and if we can but go back and honour God for his past works of Providence we shall magnifie him for his present As if Elihu had said Thou complainest that thou art overflowed with a deluge of afflictions but doest thou remember how God destroyed the whole world at once in the universal flood But though I think that may be taken in among other works yet to restraine it to that is a great deal too narrow for this Text. Therefore under this work of God we may comprehend any great work of God which is upon record or which we have heard of wherein he hath shewed his power wisdome and justice Remember his work The work of providence Those works of providence which are afflictive have a great place in this Text because the person spoken to was one in an afflicted condition And I conceive Elihu directs Job not so much to magnifie God for the day of prosperity and Sun-shine which he once had as for the day of adversity and darkness which then covered him Remember that thou magnifie his work Which men behold Which the sons of Enosh behold saith Mr Broughton But the word Sons is not in the Text there 't is only men or weak men The word which we translate to behold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath a double signification and that hath caused a double translation It signifieth first to sing secondly De quo cecinerunt viri Quod laudaruni justi viri Chald to see or behold It is translated by several in the former sense Remember that thou magnifie his work whereof men have sang The Chaldee Paraphrase saith For which just men have given praise in Psalmes and songs Beholding fully a good thing and praising it or praising God for it go together as Mr Broughtons glosse expresseth it out of Ramban Gracious and holy men do not only speak but sing the wonderful works of God And that praises were in song or verse both the Scriptures and many ancient Authors testifie God works and men sing the praises of God for his works as Moses David and Deborah did And we find all the Saints Rev. 15.3 singing praises to the Lord for the great work which he will do in bringing forth Judgement to perfection upon Babylon Thus it is a truth the work of God is to be sung and set forth in meeter or in verse We take the other translation Which men behold which with respect to that which followeth v 25. where both expressions refer to the eye is I conceive most proper Magnifie the work of God which men behold As if Elihu had said O Job I advise thee to leave off searching into the secrets of God and set thy self to consider and magnifie those works of God which are plain and lye open to every mans eye The word rendred Behold may note both a transient and an intense or fixt beholding to look wishly as we say to look fastning the eye solicitously yea it imports not only to behold with the eye of the body but with the eye of the mind Some Interpreters put an Emphasis upon the word men Quae viderunt non hominos sed viri praestantes ut sit nomen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sic alibi in loco ubi non sunt viri virum te praesta Drus as noting excellent men vertuous men men of vertue in their qualities and of excellency in thei● abilities such are men indeed worthy men worthy the name of man as it hath been said of old Where there are no men do thou play the man act and speak like a man Some men have nothing but the outside of a man This is a good notion For good men holy men men of divine excellency are most quick-sighted and quick-sented First espying the appearances of God in any of his providences and then making a due improvement of them Therefo●e saith Elihu magnifie his work which men that is holy and good men behold and take notice of David speaking of the wo●ks of God in that notable place Psal 92.6 saith A brutish man knoweth not neither doth a fool understand this that is such a one as he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Non tam ex●ellentes quam mi●●● et plei●●●s v●● omnes ●●mmo homines significat cannot behold the work of God And therefore it is more than a cri icisme to restraine the word men to men of this sort yet it must be granted that the word signifies not only excellent men but any sort of men whether wise or foolish rich or poor and the weake sort of men more specially than the stronger and more noble in any kind And to take the word in that universality as compassing and
praise him whether men do or no. All thy works shall praise thee saith David Psal 145.10 What then should they do for whom they are wrought The latter part of the verse shew what they will do who know what God hath wrought for them Thy Saints saith he shall bless thee They who have as most have low though●s can never give high p●aises of the works of God Thirdly In that this counsel and exhortion is given to Job in that this spur is as it were put to his sides Remember that thou magnifie Note The best men need monitours and remembrancers to quicken them about their duty of magnifying the works of God The Lord though he needeth not yet will have us to be his remembrancers to do our works for us if we would have our works done the Lord would have us by prayer to mind him of our own and of all his peoples condition Isa 62.6 Ye that are the Lords remembrancers so we put in the Margine and in the Text ye that make mention of the Lord c. The Lord will have us to be his remembrancers And though he is ever mindful of his Covenant yet he liketh it well to be put in mind of it But O what need have we of a remembrancer to put us in mind of the work of God and to magnifie his work We need a dayly remembrancer to put us in mind of what we should do how much more of what God hath done We need to be minded of that which 't is a wonder how we can forget our latter end or how frayle we are how much more do we need to be minded of those duties which fit us for our latter end and lead us to those enjoyments which never end F●urthly Observe Such is the sinfulness of mans heart and his sluggishness that he hardly remembers to magnifie God for those works which he cannot but see Elihu urgeth Job and with him all men to remember that they magnifie even that work of his which men behold and which every man may see How slack are they in or to that great duty of magnifying God who when they see or may see if they will his mighty works yet mind not the magnifying of him Fifthly Observe Some works of providence are so plain that every man that doth not wilfully shut his eyes may behold them He is altogether stupid and blockish that seeth not what all may see Hence the Psalmist having said O Lord how great are thy works concludeth such among brutes and fools Psal 92.6 The brutish man knoweth not neither doth a fool understand this It was the saying of Plato an Heathen That man is worthy his eyes should be pulled out of his head who doth not lift them up on high that he may admire the wisdome of the Creatour in the wonderfull ●abrick of the world I may adde and in the works of providence Are they not such that as the Prophet speaks He that runs may read them Sixthly Consider why doth Elihu thus charge it upon Job surely to humble him for his sin in that he did not magnifie God for his works Hence Note It is a great aggravation of our neglect of praising God for his works or of our not magnifying the works of God seeing his works are obvious to every man even to the weaker and ruder sort of men If the very blind may see them how sinfully blind are they who see them not The works of God should be sought out Psal 111.2 4. If they lie in corners yet they are to be sought out and they are sought out of them that have pleasure therein If God should hide his work under ground if God should put his Candle under a bushel as Christ saith men do not Mat. 5. yet 't is our duty to seek it out and set it upon a Candlestick that all may behold it and praise him for it Now if the most hidden works of God must be sought out that they may be magnified surely then when the works of God stand forth and offer themselves to our view and we cannot tell which way to draw our eyes from them how great a sin is it not to behold them not to give him the glory of them Seventhly Observe To magnifie the works of God is mans duty yea it is a most necessary and indispensible duty This is the poynt chiefly intended by Elihu in his present discourse with Job This containeth the sum and substance of the whole Text. To magnifie the work of God is so necessary so indispensible a duty that A remember is put upon it lest at any time it should slip from us The Lord knowing how great how weighty how comfortable how profitable a duty it is to keep the Rest day prefixeth this word Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy Exod. 20.8 I might give instance from several other Scriptures importing those duties which have a memento put upon them to be of great necessity and that the Lord will not bear with us if we lay them by or neglect the constant performance of them To forget any duty is very sinfull how much more those which we are specially warned to remember that we do them David was not satisfied in doing the duty of the text alone but must associate others with him in it Ps 34.3 O let us magnifie the Lord together that 's a blessed consort the consort of the blessed for ever The whole work and reward too of Saints in heaven is and eternally will be to magnify God and they have the beginnings of that work and reward who are sincerely magnifying his work here on earth God hath magnified his word in all things above his name Psal 138.2 and the reason is because his workes answer or are the fulfilling of his word to the praise of his glorious name Now if God hath magnified his word by his workes then we must magnifie his workes or him in his workes For wherein doth God magnifie his word but in his works He hath magnified his work by bringing his word forth in his works Surely then if God hath magnified his word by bringing it forth in his works then 't is our duty to magnifie the works of God which are the product effect and answer of his word But some may say how is that done I would give answer to this question in five things First Then we magnifie the work of God when we magnifie God for his work we cannot magnifie the mercy of God but by magnifying the God of our mercys We cannot magnifie his work while we neglect himself we magnifie God in his work first when we ascribe the whole efficiency of what we see done in the world to him and say This is the singer of God Or when we say according to this or that time What hath God wrought Numb 23.23 To magnifie the work of God is to give the whole of it to God 'T is the hand of God upon a work that sets
the price upon any wo●k and makes it worthy to be magnified As in some Pictures this ●ets a price upon them to say they are such a mans work the work of such a famous Artist the work of Apelles or of Michael Angelo So if we would magnifie any p●ovidential work we must say it is the wo●k of the great God it is he that ha●h done it the eye of our mind must look directly at God in ruling and governing of the wo●ld While we pore much upon or stay our thoughts about second causes we cannot exalt the work of God though we call it Gods w●rk yet if our hearts hang about second causes the work cannot be exalted as his 'T is a depression of the work of God to put any thing of man upon it To honour the work of God is to give him the whole effect of the work As we then magnifie God when we look to him alone with a single eye as the end of all our works There is nothing doth magnifie God in what we do but our looking to God as the end of all we do Let our work be what it will never so glittering never so gay and glorious in the eye of the world yet if it be not consigned over to God it is a base and pittiful work if any man dedicates his work to himself he dishonours his work Now I say as it magnifieth our work when we make God the end of our work so that which magnifieth Gods work is when we look upon him not only as having an hand in it but as being both the beginner and ender of it If we take or give this to the creature that is sit down in this or that Instrument as the means by which we have attained our end or as the end of what we have attained we spoil the work as to God or despoil God of his work Remember this and this only magnifieth our work when we with a single eye look to God as the author and as the end of it Every work we see done is magnified and God in it when we look to God as the Alpha and Omega as the Author and Ender of it Nor is this true only in those works of God which he doth more immediately but where men act most and are very instrumental Let us therefore ascribe every work to God and that first in afflicting us such an eye Joseph had Gen. 45.8 It was not you that sent me hither but God that is not so much you as God saith Joseph to his brethren I do not say it was you though you were unkind brethren it was not you that sent me hither but God I look at him more than at you in that great affliction which was brought upon me by your envy and unbrotherly unkindness towards me Such an eye David had when he was under a very grievous black dark providence when his son rose up against him and when his subject Shimei cursed him even then he magnified that work of God by ascribing it wholly unto him 2 Sam. 16.10 The Lord hath said unto him curse David He magnified God in that great affliction by looking at the hand of God alone in it and passing by Shimei's both undutifulness and extream malignity He said as much while he tells us he said nothing in a like or as bad a case Psal 39.9 I opened not my mouth because thou di●st it Hence that reproof in the Prophet Isa 5.12 They regard not the work of the Lord nor consider the operation of his hand Secondly Let us ascribe every wo●k to God in exalting us such an eye had the Church to God Psal 44.1 2 3. Our fathers have told us what work thou didst in their dayes Thou didst drive out the heathen by thy hand and plantedst them they got not the land in possession by their own sword c. but by thy right hand and thine arm c. Here is no mention at all of Joshua's achievements and famous victories in subduing the Canaanites c. All is given to God and he alone exalted for that exalting work That 's the first answer Then we magnifie the work of God when we acknowledge him alone both in afflicting and exalting us Secondly Then we magnifie the work of God when we beat out as it were and sift all the circumstances of his work as we say to the bran that so we may find out every perfection every glory of it when we do not only behold and see the wo●k but when as direction is given Ps 48. We walk about Zion tell her towers and consider her pallaces that is when we do not look upon things only in the bulk but make an exact scrutiny or take a full view of every part We cannot magnifie the work of God by a bare beholding of it but by prying into every circumstance of it or by considering what excellencies and rarities are in it As we magnifie our sinful works in one sence we should magnifie our sins that is aggravate them not magnifie them to applaud them or glory in them but to make our selves ashamed of them as I say we magnifie our sinful works or what we have done sinfully when we consider all the circumstances of our sins as committed against light and love against mercy and goodness against the patience and forbearance of God against our own professions and promises against our experiences and priviledges all which should oblige us to holiness and engage us to a gracious circumspection in all our wayes and walkings lest at any time we should sin against God and grieve his Spirit So we magnifie the works of God when we eye all the circumstances of them and consider them as done for us when we could do nothing for our selves as done for us when we must have perished and been undone unless God had appeared for us as done for us when we deserved not the least good to be done for us as done for us when none would do any thing for us none caring for our soules as done for us when none could do any thing for us These and such like circumstantial considerations exceedingly magnifie the work of God A bare behold a transient look may discover no great matter but if we seriously weigh every particular we shall then see cause enough to magnifie the work of God Eliah 1 Kings 18.43 commanded his servant to go look towards the sea and when he went first he saw nothing but being commanded to go seven times he at the seventh saw a little cloud rising out of the sea as big as a mans hand but at the last heaven was black with clouds and wind and there was a great rain If we would look again and again if we would look seven times upon the work of God that which at first seemed nothing or afterwards no bigger than a mans hand or no bigger than a mans hand could effect and bring about will at last be magnified to such a
mortifie wha● grace hath the work of God put you upon the exercise of They only indeed magnifie the work of God who have such workings towards God It were better not receive a mercy than not to be bettered by a mercy It is not our crying up the works of God in our words but in our works which is the magnifying of them It is more safe for us to say nothing of what God hath wrought for us than to publish it or make our boast of it when we our selves do ●●●hing worthy of it in a way of condecency and proportion to it 'T is the design of God in giving promises to make us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 Much more having given us any great performances of his promises doth he expect that we should be clean and holy O then what a pittiful course do they take who pretending to magnifie the works of God do such things as are a defilement both to flesh and spirit A third design of God in working for us is to make us trust him more or to be more in believing 'T is shewed Psal 78.4 what great things God did for the Jewish nation and for their fathers But what did God ayme at in all we have the answer v. 8. That they might set their hope in him and not forget his workes The aim which God had in those great works was that their hope might be set upon him that they might trust in him more then ever they had done The Lord by the great works he doth would gain upon our faith or cause us to trust him for the future How dishonorably do they carry it towards God who believe not his word much more they who believe not his workes that is who believe him not notwithstanding his workes as 't is said of Israel Ps 78.32 For all this they sinned still and believed not his wondrous works The Psalmist doth not mean that they did not believe such works had been done but the meaning is they did not trust God who had done those wo●ks These and many more dutyes the Lord teacheth us by his word and he teacheth them also by his workes as it is said v. 22. who teacheth like him The Lord teacheth us many excellent lessons by his works if we had hearts to learn them Lay these things together in practise and they will be the best yea they are the only way of magnifying the works of God done for us And if the works of God are to be magnified all these wayes then they fall short of this duty First Who only make a report of the works of God who tell the story of what he hath done and so have done As we ought to adorne the doctrine of God Tit. 2. so likewise the doings of God or what God hath done by our doings Meer narratives about the work of God is far below magnifying his work Secondly They fail much more who extenuate and diminish the works of God wh●●bscure or eclipse his workes As in our confessions of repentance it is a sign of a bad heart barely to report our sins before God without aggravating them in their sinfulness but in confession to extenuate our sin sheweth a very rotten and naughty heart so in our confessions of praise meerly ●o report what God hath done for us without putting an accent or a due emphasis upon his mercies shews much ●oldness of spirit in the duty but to clip and lessen the workes of God to hide and darken them to abate and detract from them shewes a base and a wicked spirit Thirdly How do they fail in magnifying the workes of God who do not only conceal how good they are but bring up an ill report upon them as those searchers did upon the land of Canaan Those works and dispensations of God which like that land slow with milk and honey may be looked upon and censured by some as good for nothing but to eat up and consume those that are under them Fourthly They who ate impatient under any work of God who murmur and repine at it are far from magnifying the work of God Fifthly They are far from magnifying the work of God who think themselves so wise that they could mend the work of God had they the pensel in their hand they would make fairer work of it what hudling is here think some what confusion is here say others what sad work is here saith a third If we had the ordering of things what an orderly wo●ld would we make if we had the ordering of things as God hath we would quickly cure and remedy all these disorders Though such formal speeches be not uttered yet such things are spoken in parables the actions of some tell us such are their thoughts as if they could mend the work of God and govern the world with greater moderation than t is though indeed we need not scruple to call the wisest man in the world a very dotard if he thinks so or that any thing can be done more equally than God hath done it Let all flesh adore let none presume to question the work of God let God alone with his work as he will have no controler so he needs no counseller Remember t is mans duty to magnifie his work not to mend it to shew how good it is not to attempt the making of it better And indeed as it is the highest poynt of presumption so of ignorance to meddle with the mending of it The Lord is a Rock saith Moses Deut. 32.4 and his work is perfect Who but a fool or who but by the over-working of his own folly would venture to mend that which is already not only perfected but perfect were it only the work of a man much more when it is the work of God the only wise God And that we may be provoked humbly to magnify and for ever deterred from that proud attempt of finding fault with or mending the work of God consider these three things First Take the argument in the text the plainness of the work of God it is such as may be seen afar off none can pretend ignorance of it or if they do that 's a vain covert or excuse every man may see it man may behold it afar off as most worthy to be magnified Secondly If we do not magnifie the work of God God will lessen his own works of mercy and favour toward us Thirdly He will do no more for us if we magnifie not what he hath done It is said Math. 13.58 Christ did not many mighty works there because of their unbeleif God will do no more mighty works for them who refuse or neglect to pay him a tribute of praise and glory for what he hath done JOB Chap. 36. Vers 26. 26. Behold God is great and we know him not neither can the number of his years be searched out ELihu having called upon Job to magnifie
especial power wisdom and goodness of God The water if left to it self would ●all whole like a sea upon us or like a mighty floud in such quantities as would instead of refreshing overwhelm the earth When God drowned the world it is said Gen. 7.11 The same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up and the windows or flood-gates of heaven were opened We are not to imagine that heaven hath windows o● flood-gates but God did not put forth his mighty power to make small the drops of rain but let it come all at once those waters which were before bound up in the clouds by the decree of God were now by his decree let loose in a wonderful manner and measure and came down not in drops but in streames and spouts the clouds did not as formerly destil their burden Pluvia in nubibus velut in linteo continetur atque in illis velut compressa guttatim distill●tur but ease themselves of it at once or altogether Rain ordinarily as sweat through the Pores of the skin passeth by degrees through the Pores of the Clouds yet God can let it out all at once Sea-men who take long Voyages tell us they meet with spouts of wate● endangering great ships So then this making small the drops of water is to be ascribed to a threefold Attribute of God Fi●st It is a wo●k of his power nor is it done without a kind of Miracle that the water comes down as it were through a sive or watering-pot Secondly It is a work of divine wisdom The Lord knowing that the earth cannot digest huge portions of water at once divides it into little po tions that the earth may gradually receive and let it soak into i●s bosom for the feeding of Plants and the supply of all c●eatu●es that live upon it Thirdly 'T is a work also of divine Goodness for if God did not make small the drops of water if it should come down whole it would drown the earth instead of comforting and fattening it Behold then the Power Wisdom and Goodness of God in making small the drops of water Though Philosophers have attempted to find out and assigne a reason in Nature about this falling of the rain in drops yet they have not fully attained the reason why nor the manner how God doth this we must ascribe it chiefly to the power wisdome and goodness of God in ordering it for the benefit of man yea of all living creatures Plane admirabilem et tremendum in illu et per illa fefe exhibet deus Merc And surely Elihu leads us to consider the wonders of those things which are common and naturall to convince us that forasmuch as we cannot clearly see the reason of those lesser things we should take heed of prying into greater and remoter secrets and he would have Job particularly know that seeing he could not find out the way of God in these natural things much less could he find out the way and whole designe of God in those his providential dealings with him He maketh small the drops of water and then as it followeth in this verse They pour down rain according to the vapour thereof Though the water be made into small drops yet he doth not say they drop down but they pour down rain that is the drops fall plentifully that frequent expression in Scripture of pouring down every where implyeth plenty or abundance The promise of pouring out the Spirit in the latter dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fundit fundendo purgaovit active item percolatus ex●olatus de faecatus suit Imber nimbus plu ●a notes the abundance of the Spirit that shall then be given The word signifies also to straine implying that the rain is contained in the Clouds as it were in a linnen cloath which being pressed distills the water in small streams or drops as it were through a strainer They pour down Rain There are three words in the Latine the first of which notes a showre or gentle rain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pluvia hi●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verbum transitivum in Hiphil significat fe●it ●luere quo certe innuitur deum esse Authorem pluviae Fagius in Gen the second a stormy or fierce rain the third rain in generall Rain in this place may be taken in all or either of these notions for at one time or other the Clouds pour down drops into all sorts of rain Rain as I said is made of vapours drawn up and here he saith They pour down rain According to the vapour thereof There are two sorts of vapours there are dry vapours and moist vapours dry vapours say Naturalists are the matter of the wind and the moist are the matter of the rain Now saith Elihu they pour down rain according to the vapour thereof that is Pluviae quasi fluviae eo q òd fluant Isidor Quae fundunt pluviam post nebulam ●jus Pisc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat v●porem et nubem signific●t etiam calamitatem hinc versus ita vertitur nam subtrahit stillas aquarum quae fundebant pluviam ad calamitatem ejus Jun look in what proportion the Sun draweth the vapours into the Aire in that proportion doth the rain fall upon the Earth or in the sam● proportion that the vapour is drawn up in that proportion is the rain let down Some render the word which we translate vapour a cloud that is after the water is drawn up into a Cloud it pours down rain proportionably Another translation renders it Affliction or trouble and give the whole verse thus He draweth up the drops of water which poured down rain to their Calamity This the lea ned Author applyeth particularly to the Flood in N●ahs time but I shall not stay upon that Our reading is clear They pour down rain according to the vapour thereof that is in the same proportion that vapours come up the rain falls down First In that as the rain is made of the vapour so according to the vapour or in proportion to the vapour such are the showres of rain Note According to what is naturally received returns are naturally made And if the Clouds of Heaven return to man naturally according to that they receive from the Earth how is man on earth bound morally or in duty to return according to what he receives from Heaven Let us mind our accordings and proportions to the dealings and dispensations of God The Clouds of the aire will condemn us at least witness against us if we receive much and return little I passe this Only here we may take notice of six things in Concatination one with another First vapours are drawn up from the Earth Secondly they are made into watery Clouds Thirdly from thence they are sent back to moisten the Earth Fourthly the rain sent down is proportionable to the vapour that went up Fifthly according to that proportion the Earth is made more or lesse fruitfull plentifull
rains cause or produce plentifull fruits ordinarily from the Earth and little rains little fruits Sixthly and lastly man is nourished and hath his outward Comforts encreased or lessened in proportion to the fruits which the Earth bringeth forth or to the fruitfulness of the Earth All these things attend and depend upon one another They pour down according to the vapour thereof and God draws up in proportion to what himself purposeth they shall pour down Thus we see how God by the Sun draws out the moisture and sap of the Earth to return it back with advantage Drawing up the moisture makes the Earth languish and her fruits wither sending it down again makes the Earth green flourishing and fruitful They pour down rain c. And what more Elihu answers Vers 28. Which the Clouds do drop 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nunc Coelum nunc nubes denot●t a tenuissim● earum Substantia Drus Here he speaks more expresly and tells us more clearly than before what the vapours are made up into According to the vapour thereof which the Clouds do drop As Clouds are made of vapours so they are the receptacles or vessels of rain which they hold as was shewed before as long as God pleaseth and when he gives the word then they drop And distill upon man abundantly That 's another elegant word implying the manner in which the rain comes or falls it is as by a distillation Here also 't is expressed for whose use or sake principally the rain is sent The Clouds saith the Text drop and distill upon man yet we know men get themselves out of the rain as soon and as fast as they can The rain falls upon the earth and abides there yet 't is said to distil upon man because the rain distils at mans request and for mans sake That other creatures are cherished by the rain is not for themselves but for man as man is not cherished and maintained by those creatures for himself but for God As the rain distills chiefly for the glory of God so nextly for the relief and comfort of man and for man it distills Abundantly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Super hominem multum vel super homines affluentèr ut 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sit adverbium quod eù minùs se proba● mihi quia Rab. hic scrilitur eum Cametz Drus There is a double reading of this word Some take it as an Adjective to the Substan●ive man rendring thus it distills upon many men we take it adverbially Which distill upon man plentifully that is in great plenty upon man We may take in both readings without strain to the Text or departure from the matter in hand For as the rain all 's or distills upon man abundantly so upon abundance of men the rain we know falls sometimes very plentifully and at times or one time or other all the world over watering every mans ground and serving every mans turn or occasions Therefore Elihu expresseth the blessing fully when he saith The Clouds distill upon man abundantly or upon abundance of men Hence Note First The Lord haih rain enough in store He hath vessels plentifully filled for the watering of the Earth and The Lord is so free in his dispensation of the rain that as he gives it to many in number so to many in kind he maketh his rain to fall as well as his Sun to shine upon the just and on the unjust Math. 5.45 It shews the exceeding goodness as well as the bounty of God that the evill partake of his benefits as well as the good And for our further improvement of this bounty of God remember that if God be so abundant and liberall in blessings to us we ought in proportion to abound in duty towards him or as the Apostle exhorts 1 Cor. 15.58 we should be stedfast and immoveable alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord. Some do only a little I may say only here a stitch and there a stitch of work for God but we should abound in it and that not only now and then by fits but be alwayes fixed in it especially we should do so with respect to that which the rain is a Symbol of the word of God When God drops and distills the rain of Gospel t●uths and holy soul-saving instructions abundantly upon us how should we abound in every good word and work It was prophesied of Christ Psal 72.6 He shall come down as rain upon the mown grass as showers that water the earth Some of the Ancients expound that place of the coming down of Christ in his Incarnation then indeed he came down like rain upon the mown grass he came down sweetly and powerfully 'T is true also that Christ who is God the Word the substantial Word comes down as rain in and with the declarative word of God preached and faithfully dispenced to the souls of men and when Christ comes down thus to us we should rise up to him and return fruits of grace according to the showres of grace which we have received The Prophet gives us an elegant comparison of the natural and spiritual rain in their effects and issues Isa 55.10 11. For as the rain cometh down and the snow from heaven and returneth not thither but watereth the earth and maketh it bring forth and bud that it may give feed to the sower and bread to the eater so shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth it shall not return unto me voyd but it shall accomplish that which I please and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I send it Now what is the pleasure of God in giving his Word what is the arrand upon which he sends it 'T is I grant sometimes to harden deafen and blind a people Isa 6.9 10. 't is sometimes to be a savour of death unto death 2 Cor. 2.16 These are dreadfull judiciary purposes of God in sending his Word nor doth it ever please the Lord to send his Word upon this arrand but when he is sorely displeased by a peoples slighting and contempt of his Word The thing which prima●ily pleaseth him the purpose which he chiefly pu●sueth in sending his Word is that his people may have as the Apostle speaks Their fruit unto holiness in this life and in the end everlasting life For these ends the Lord is daily distilling upon us the rain of his Word both in commands and promises and in both abundantly Therefore let us labour to abound in returns of faith of love of hope of self-deniall of zeal for God and of fruit-bearing unto God If when God distills the natural rain that should provoke us to fruitfulness in spiritualls how much more when he pours down so much spiritual rain upon us For the close of this meditation consider That As the natural rain First softens the earth and mollifies it Secondly cleanseth the earth and washeth it Thirdly enricheth the earth and makes it fruitfull Fourthly comforts the earth and makes every
them in remembrance that God made their fore-fathers dwell in tents when he brought them out of Egypt as also to mind them that here they had no abiding place but were to seek one to come And as this place of publick worship so any place for private dwelling was called a tabernacle Surely I will not come into the tabernacle of my house until c. Said David Ps 132.3 that is into my house which though it be a royal Pallace yet I look upon it but as a movable tabernacle But doth God dwell in a movable house God is immovable he makes no removes yet wheresoever God is pleased to shew himself in his power and marvelous works there we may say his tabernacle is The tabernacle of God where this noise this mighty noise is made is nothing else but the Clouds before spoken of The Clouds are Gods tabernacle they are called so expresly by a word of very near cognation unto this Psal 18.11 He maketh the Clouds his pavilion A pavilion is an extraordinary tabernacle a pavilion is that tabernacle which is proper to a King or to the General of an Army Now saith the Psalmist He maketh the Clouds his pavilion In them he shews his power and glory They are also called the chariots of God Psal 104.3 Deut. 32.6 and he is said to come in the Clouds as a Prince in his chariot He came in a thick Cloud Exod. 19.9 and he descended in a Cloud Exod. 34.5 which here is called his tabernacle So then the Clouds together with all that middle region of the air where the rain now and fiery meteors are generated are in Scripture allegorically called the tabernacle of God because there he seems often to dwell or reside for the producing of many wonderful works upon this inferiour world We may take the word here in a double allusion unto a tabernacle or unto two sorts of tabernacles First There were ordinary tabernacles wherein men dwelt The ancient Hebrews dwelt in tents or tabernacles these were tabernacles for civil use or for habitation in allusion unto which the Apostle speakes of the body wherein the soul dwels 2 Cor. 5. When the earthly house of this tabernacle shall be dissolved we know that we have a building of God an hsuse not made with hands eternal in the heavens Secondly There were tabernacles for military use souldiers tents or tabernacles As the whole heavens so the clouds especially may be called the tabernacle of God in both respects they a●e his house wherein he sits unseen and doth wonders all the wo●ld over in them he sh●weth his power and appears glo●iously and as a great P●ince or mighty General he sends out his edicts and orders from the clouds he commands winds stormes tempests snow haile for several dispensations to go from thence according as his own infinite wisdom seeth fit and the cases of men require whether in wayes of Judgment or of mercy as Elihu tells us yet more distinctly at the 31th verse For by them saith he judgeth he the people he giveth meat in abundance The clouds are very fit and commodious for Gods use in any of these respects either for the terrifying and punishing of the wicked or for the helping and feeding of them that fear him Now forasmuch as the clouds are called the tabernacle of God upon these accounts Learn first There God is said to be especially where he especially workes God is no more in one place of the wo●ld than in another as to his being and existence for he is every w●ere he filleth heaven and earth We must not think that God is shu● up in the clouds as a man in his tabernacle but because God workes much in the clouds and doth great things by the rain thunder and lightening therefore the cloudes whence these Meteors issue are called his tabernacle Where-ever God works much he is said to dwell Why is God said to dwell with them that are of an humble and contrite heart even because he workes much in them and much by them So because many great works of God are done in the Clouds as we shall see more particularly hereafter therefore the Lord is said to dwell there as in his tabernacle Secondly When 't is said Who can understand the noise of his tabernacle Observe The most dreadful storms and tempests the roaring winds which we hear at any time are sent out by God they are the noise of his tabernacle They go when he saith go Psal 148.8 Stormy winds and tempests fulfilling his will We may think stormes of all thing● least under command and order yet they are under an exact order The most stormy winds go not an haires breadth besides or beyond the commission which God gives them As often as we hear the roaring noise of the wind much more of thunder let us remember 't is the noise of his tabernacle Vers 30. Behold he spreadeth his light upon it and covereth the bottom of the sea Elihu insists still upon the workes of God He spreadeth his light Some understand by this light the lightening and it is a great truth God wonderfully spreads the lightening upon the da●k clouds as if they were all in a flame That 's clear to the eye when it lighteneth and God is s●yd Psal 144.6 To cast forth his lightening which comes neer this word in the text he spreadeth it But because in the next ch●pter Elihu speakes purposely of the lightening therefore I shall not stay upon that sence here but decline it Rather take light in the common notion He spreadeth his light that is the light of the Sun which is eminen●ly called Gods Light upon it that is upon the cloud spoken of in the forme verse and so the two parts of this verse yeild us a de●crip●ion as I conceive of the weather-changes made by God When we have had much rain and stormes God can presently spread his light up●n the cloud that is cause the light and heat of the Sun to conquer the clouds and scatter them And he also covereth the bottom of the Sea That is by and by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he makes it very dark by the gathering of thick clouds even as dark as the bottom of the Sea whither the light cannot come or dark to the bottom of the Sea R●dices maris sunt profundissimae infimaeque illius partes The original is the roots of the Sea that is the lowest parts of the Sea which we significa●tly translate the bottom of the Sea Some explicate the whole ve●se He spreads his light upon the face of the whole heavens and spreads the waters over the Ocean so that no bottom can be seen scarcely found Mr. Broughton by the roots of the Sea understands the earth Another saith he makes mention of the roots of the Sea because the waters of the Sea are as it were the roots of the Clouds they chiefly supplying the matter of which they are made Vapours drawn from
Christ makes this an argument of faith in God for food and cloathing Mat. 6.26 Behold the fowls of the air for they sow not neither do they reap nor gather into barns yet your heavenly Father feedeth them are not ye much better than they How little faith have you who knowing that God feeds the fowls of the air yet cannot trust him for your food He giveth food in abundance Thirdly note Plenty and scarcity are at the dispose of God He can give meat in scarcity as well as meat in abundance he can give cleanness of teeth as well as fulness of bread And as he can strengthen the staff of bread so break it and cause us to eat bread by weight and with care and to drink water by measure and with astonishment Ezek. 4.16 To eat by weight and drink by measure is to eat and drink in the want of bread and water as is expressed vers 17. And as these changes of our natural so of our spiritual food are from the Lord Amos 8.11 I will send a famine What famine not of bread but of hearing the word of the Lord. 'T is the Lord who sends plenty and scarcity of bread whether for the soul or for the body Fourthly In that he saith by them he giveth meat in abundance Note God useth natural meanes as the cause either of plenty or scarcity The Lord could give us abundance if he pleased without rain but he rarely gives abundance but by rain he sends rain out of the Clouds to water the earth and make it fruitful The Lord could make our souls fruitful in every good work without the preaching of the word but he seldom doth it I believe never when the word may be had without the preaching of the word And therefore the Lord by his Prophet makes a comparison between or a paralel of these two Isa 55.10 11. As the rain cometh down and the snow from heaven and returneth not thither but watereth the earth and maketh it bring forth and bud that it may give seed to the sower and bread to the eater so shall my word be that goeth out of my mouth c. The Lord useth rain and snow yea wind and thunder to fit the earth as he useth his Word and holy Ordinances to fit the soul to bring forth fruit to himself He could do both alone but he improveth that order of nature and grace which himself at first set up and instituted to b●ing about these excellent ends 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praebebit esc●m per multam Sept. By them he giveth meat in abundance The Greek translation renders all manner of muchness From the whole learn what cause we have to acknowledge the goodness of God in every shower of rain and fleet of snow for by them he giveth us our meat We should hence also be minded to fear the Lord and to take heed of his displeasure It is said Asts 12.20 when Herod was highly displeased with them of Tire and Sidon they came with one accord to him and having made Blastus the Kings Chamberlain their friend desired peace because their Country was nourished by the Kings Country O how much more should we labour to avoid the displeasure of God and hasten to make our peace with him seeing our Country is nourished by his Country The heavens nourish the earth else the earth could not afford any thing for our nourishment We are fed rather from the heavens than from the earth The clouds drop down and make the earth fat to give grass for cattel and co n for man Elihu speaks nothing of the Earth but of the Clouds f●om them we are fed Lately consider Elihu joynes both effects expresly By them he judgeth the people he giveth meat c. Hence note The Lord can make the same creature either beneficial or hurtful to us That which is an instrument in his hand for good to his servants is often a plague and a scourge to his enemies The rain which at one time moistens the earth at another time drowns it the rain which at one time cherisheth the creatures at another time choaks them The winds which at one time fan the air and cool it at another time enrage and vex it the winds which at one time sweeten and cleanse the air at another time corrupt and infect it The Lord can with the same creatures furnish himself for any dispensation By them he judgeth the people and by them he giveth meat in abundance JOB Chap. 36. Vers 32 33. 32. With clouds he covereth the light and commandeth it not to shine by the cloud that cometh between 33. The noise whereof sheweth concerning it the cattel also concerning the vapour THese two verses have a Character of difficulty and obscurity put upon them by several interpreters Hujus et sequentis versus difficultas et obscuritas tanta semper ab omnibus enarratoribus habita est ut vix alius in toto hoc libro ne dicum in toto sacro codice locus isto impenetrabilior esse videatur Bold and some have concluded them the most difficult and darkest portion of the whole Book of Job yea of the whole Book of God And should I reckon up all the various Grammatical constructions of these words together with the distinct interpretations given upon them I should weary my self and rather perplex than advantage the Reader And therefore I shall speak to these two verses First as they are laid down plainly in our translation according to which with submission to the judgement of those learned Authors I see neither any great difficulty nor obscurity in them and shall afterwards give a brief account at least of some of those different readings and translations which I find upon them The words as I conceive according to the mind of our translators and as the Text clearly beareth hold out two things concerning the raine of which Elihu had spoken before First What is naturally preparatory to raine or foule weather that we have in the 32d verse With clouds he covereth the light and commandeth it not to shine by the Cloud that cometh between Secondly We have that which is declaratory of raine or as some call them the Prognosticks and signs of raine these are laid down in the 33d verse The noise thereof sheweth concerning it the Cattel also concerning the vapour Vers 32. With clouds he covereth the light He that is God covereth the light with Clouds We heard of the Clouds at the 29th verse but the word there used is not that which is used in this 32d verse Vox 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 am●igua est ad manus nubes proprie volas denotat ad nubes refero quia de iis hactenus actum et quia propriè curvaturas significat quales in unaquaque mibo duae sunt convexa concava De Dieu in loc The word here made use of by El●hu signifies generally any thing that is hollow or concave as
the God of glory speaking to us Some will excuse themselves they are ignorant they have never been taught to know God But did such never hear it thunder that ●eacheth much of God so much as will make them inexcusable who obey him no● who tremble not at his Power and Majesty Thunder calls for and more it commands our fear of our reverence and submission unto Go● e●●●cially when God together with this voice sends his arrow● bol●s o bullets to do great things against his enemies as he did against Pharaoh Ezod 9.23 and against the Philistines 1 Sam. 7.10 Yea the Lord threatened to distress Jerusalem with Thunder and with Earth-quake and with great noise Isa 29.6 Now if Thunder be the Voice of God or the noise of his Voice then take these brief Inferences from it First Let us see what a powerful and mighty God we have When it thunders every believing soul may ●ay This is the Vo●ce of my Father what cannot he do for me that can speak thus Secondly If God hath such a dreadful Voice if he thunder with his Voice we should learn to secure aim and fence ●ur selves against the dread and danger of Thunde● by the actings of Faith in him and of Repentance and godly Sorrow for our sinnings against him Some of the Heathens have given pittiful counsel what to do in time of thunder Seneca was a wi●e man Adversus tonitrua coelorum minas subterraneae damus dei defussi in altum specus remedia sunt Sen. lib. 6. Natur. quest cap. 4. yet he directs to poor shifts in such extreamities The remedies saith he against Thunder and the Batteries of the heavens are under-ground houses caves or holes of the earth to hide our selves in These were the best helps he could advise his Roman Gallants to when God uttered his mighty voice in Thunder But Christians know better how to hide themselves even in the goodness of God against those terrible appearances of his Power Thirdly If God speak with such a Voice as this in the Air take heed of slighting his Voice whensoever he speaks in the Church as Athiests and Epicures do He who speaks so loud in Thunder can thunder upon us at any time The Word preached if not obeyed will at last come upon all those who obey it not with as great a terror as Thunder Fourthly Let us not be amazed and frighted at Thunder as Heathens or Unbelievers Fifthly Let us not think lightly of it as if it either came by chance or meerly from natural causes Sixthly Let us fear the God of Thunder not fear Thunder as a God Some have superstitiously thought Thunder was a God and adored it so 't is reported of the Lithuanians anciently Lithuani fulmon deum esse pu●abant propterea illud adorabant Cromeru● l. 15. Hist Pol. and possibly some of them do so to this day Secondly In that Elihu calls so earnestly for attention to this voice Hear attentively the noise of his Voice Learn Those things which are most easie to be heard possibly may not at all be understood Who doth not hear when it thunders but how few are there who attend or understand the Thunder or hear Thunder attentively God speaks to us not only with a sti●● voice few hearing or attending him but though he thunders few attend him yea those wo ks of providence which speak lowder than Thunder and shine cle●rer ●●an the Lightning yet are neither heard no● seen As When his hand is lifted up some will not see Isa 26.11 So when his Voice is li●ted up when 't is lifted up not only like a trumpet but like thunder when he speaks most audibly yea most terribly some will not hear and he is not heard by many much less diligen●ly attended to how loudly how terribly soever he speaketh The Lord often thunders by the voice of this Word what are his te●rible threats but loud thunder-claps yet few hear or though they hear yet they attend not Not to hear the voice of God in his Word is as if you did not attend to the voice of Thunder Every word of God though spoken with a still voice hath a greater force in it than Thunder from the Clouds As the terrible works of God are signified by Thunder Rev. 10.3 4. So the terrible words of God his threatning words against impenitent sinners are resembled to Thunder And therefore such as the Lord fitted among his own Apostles for that dispensation are called in Scripture Sons of Thunder Mark 3.17 And they who dispence the Word with a strong voice and fiery zeal are truly so called to this day and may be said both to Thunder in their Exhortation and to Lighten in their Conversation And indeed the Word of God truly and faithfully dispensed by any is like Thunder For First As Thunder so the Word spoken is the Voice of God and a more excellent and distinct Voice than Thunder that only shewing in general that God is or that he is great and powerful this shewing us distinctly who and what God is and what he requireth of us Secondly Thunder throwes down and dissipates high things So doth the Word of God 2 Cor. 10.5 Thirdly Thunder is irresistable by any power of man it will make its way through all opposition so is and doth the Word of God Fourthly Thunder pierceth very subtilly it reacheth the bones quite through the flesh the Word of God doth more it divideth soul and spirit and the joynts and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the hea●t Heb. 4.12 Fifthly Thunder breaketh the hardest things which resist it but not soft things so the Word of God breaks the stout but binds up the contrite spirit it resists the proud but giveth grace to the humble Jam. 4.6 Now if the Word of God be in all these respects like Thunder Let us not only hear but attend or as the text saith hear attentively the sound of his voice If any ask when do we both hear and attend with the inward and outward ear the Thunder of God or his voice both in his works and in his word I answer First When we are stirred up to high and holy thoughts of God We are never rightly affected with the Word of God till our hearts are wrought up to and deeply at least truly affected with the God of the Word Secondly When our hearts are raised up in thankfulness for any discoveries of God in his goodness and mercy to us who can so easily destroy us by his power He that trembles at this voice of God and hath no sense nor tast of his goodness nor is moved to praise and serve him trembles only like a bruit beast Thirdly When we learn to depend and hang upon him for all as he that can do all things graciously for us as well as speak so terribly to us then we hear diligently the noise of his voice axd the sound that goeth out of his
very mighty very powerful even clothed with an irresistible power and might And therefore if we take the Prophet David in 29th Psalm before mentioned speaking in the former part of it of the effects of Natural Thunder only yet toward the close of the Psalm he applyeth it to the Word of God while he saith v. 9. And in his Temple doth every one speak of his glory that is the Word and Ordinances of God ministred in his Church or Temple will put every one to acknowledge and speak of the glorious Power of God even much more than the mighty Thunder which soundeth in our eares or the subtil Lightning which flasheth in our eyes There is a far more royal power in the Thunder of the Word than in the word of Thunder This terrifyeth only to Conviction but that terrifieth to Salvation for after God speakes terror there in his Threatnings he speaks comfort in the Promises and when he hath affrighted us with a sense of our sins and of his wrath due to us for our sins as with an horrible tempest he presently refresheth us with the gentle gales of revealed g●ace and with the pleasant amiable Sun-shine of his favour by Jesus Ch i●t And therefore in respect both of the Natural and Spiritual Thunder considered in the circumstances and consequences of it Elihu might well conclude as he doth in the last words of this Verse and matter Great things doth he which we cannot comprehend We may take these words not only as intending the great things of the Thunder which indeed are such as we cannot comprehend but as a transition from Thunder to those other great things that God doth set forth in the latter part of the Chapter Great things doth he God doth the least things but he can do great things he doth great things Which we cannot comprehend The Hebrew is He doth great things and we know not F●cit magna non cognoscimus Heb. which may be expounded two wayes First We know not that is we take no notice of them God doth great things and we are very backward to consider them Secondly We know not that is he doth such great things that let us consider and study them as long as we will let us break our brains to find out the greatness of them yet we shall never find it out He doth great things that we cannot comprehend The text is clear and the sense profitable in either Interpretation● he doth great things which we do not consider or he doth great things that when we have considered them and done the most we can we cannot come to the full knowledge of them Naturalists speak much of the causes of these things yet the clearest sighted among them could not see the bottom of them nor reach the utmost reason of them Great things doth he which we cannot comprehend Hence note It is both proper and easie to God to do great things He is the great God so great that doing great things is no weariness to him T●e t●xt doth not say h● hath done great things o● he will do great things bu● he doth grea things he is alwayes doing g eat t●●●gs and 〈◊〉 is a po●nt improveable for the comfort of the people 〈◊〉 God When a great matter is to be done we say who shall do it 〈◊〉 when we are in great troubles and dangers we s●y who shall deliver us If small matters be to be done we think we o● o●her men like our selves can do them but when great m●●●●rs are to be d●ne we hardly believe that God can do them for us yet 't is all one with God whether the thing be great or little that is to be done if he please to undertake the doing of it It is questioned Amos 7.2 By whom shall Jacob ar●se for he is small They looked to this and that creature and saw Jacob so small and low that they thought he could never rise again but remember Jacobs God is great and he doth great things this great thing especially to raise them that are low and small What-ever your condition is remember God is great and can as well do great things as little as easily make a world as give you a morsel of b●ead there is nothing hard to God He doth great things and according to the strictness of the Hebrew text we know not that is we consider them not we take little notice of them Hence observe The sons of men are commonly very slight thoughted about the great works of God When God thunders ma●vel● we know them not we lay them not to heart The Prophet Isa 5.12 sheweth how busie the ca●eless Jews were in their mi●th and jollity but they regarded not the work of the Lord neither considered the operation ●f his hands When God is doing g●eat thing● o●e man is getting wealth another taking his pleasure but they regard not at all or have very little regard to what God is doing Again from our reading Great things doth he which we cannot comprehend Note God doth great things that are beyond the greatest of our apprehensions such things as after all our study we are short in and short of As it is our sin that we take not paines enough to know the great things that God doth so God doth things so great that when we have done our best or after all our paines we cannot know them fully though we know their outside yet little of their inside though we know their effects yet little of their causes and contrivances To know a thing is to know it in the causes of it Scire est per causas scire to see the reason of it A man knoweth not the things that he knows till he seeth the reason of what he knows How little doth man know of or see into the reason of the great things that God doth How little do we see of the marvels that are in the works of God The love of God passeth knowledge Ephes 3.19 Though we labou● to know it and 't is our sin that we labour not more to know it yet we cannot it surpasseth all our knowledge And as that love of God which is the first mover of all the good and great things that he doth for his people ●●●seth our knowledge so the things that are the effects of that love to his people are so great that they pass our knowledge Hence we may infer these two duties First Let us be much in the admiration of the great things that God doth Where knowledge ends there admiration should begin It was a shame for a Philosopher to admire because he was supposed to know the whole compass of nature but 't is no shame for a Christian to admire there being many things not only in the ●pecial dispensations of grace but in the common dispensations of providence which he cannot know comprehensively the whole compass of which he cannot graspe or take in with the best of his understanding Secondly
not as noting the hand or power of God sealing men but ●ods sealing the hands of men putting them off from or besides their labour Thus by Snow and Rain he sealeth or shutteth up the hand of every man and why so the reason is given in the next words That all men might know his work God by extraordinary Snowes and Raines stops men from their work But what Is it that they should be idle No but that they may know his work Whose work Some understand it of mans own work As if the meaning were this God stops men a while from further or present work that they may take a view of their past works or he takes them off from their civil works and employments that they may employ themselves in considering their moral works as the Prophet admonished the Jews Isa 1.5 Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts consider your wayes Another Prophet reproved them for the neglect of this duty Jer. 8.6 No man saith what have I done The Lord often brings his people to hard sufferings that they may know their own doings or works This is a profitable sense yet I rather conceive that the work here intended is Gods work and so I shall prosecute the words That all men may know his work This wo●k of God may be taken two wayes First More st ictly thus God by rain shuts up the hands of men from their wo●k that they may know those extraordinary stormes of Snow and Rain which drive them in from their labour and shut up their hands from working are his special work Great Snowes Raines declare to all men the great power of God who doth not only astonish men by terrible thunder and lightning but can by Snow and Rain his much weaker weapons put them beside their purpose and stop their work Secondly Take his work more largly God sealeth up the hands of men that they having a vacancy from their own work may consider his he doth as it were force them from what they were doing or intended to do that so they may have leisure to take notice of what he hath done That all men may know his work Hence note First God can hinder or stop any man or all men in their work He when and as he pleaseth can seal up the hand of every man If God hath a mind to work none can lett him Isa 43.13 Who can seal the hand of God I may say also whose hand cannot God seal How easily did the Lord seal up the hand of the the builders of Babel Gen. 11.7 They were hot upon a mighty work but God by confounding their tongues sealed their hands and they as 't is said v. 8. Left off to build the City Secondly When the text saith God sealeth up the hand of every man that all men may know his work Observe How diligent soever men are about their own works yet they are slow enough too too slow to take notice of the work● of God When the hand of God is lifted up some will not see it they are not only backward to see it but opposite to the seeing of it and though others do not set themselves against yet they do not set themselves to the knowledge of his works 'T is a great and common sin our not studying to know the works of God we should study the works of God as much as we do the word of God we should study both his work of Creation and his works of Providence whether works of Mercy or of Judgment we should endeavour to know all his works From the universality of the expression that all m●n may know his work Note God would have all study this Book the book of his works They whose business and labours lie in fields the Plow-men and the Vine-dressers he would have them know his works as those special works of his the Snow and the Rain so his works in general The meanest of men cannot excuse their ignorance of the works of God seing the Text and Point tell us God drives them many times out of the field home to their houses and will not let them do a stroak of work more abroad on purpose that they might know his work Hence note Thirdly The aim and intendment of God in keeping us at any time from our work is that we may know more of his works It is a great part of our wisdom to answer the designes of God in all his providences to us We seldom think what God intends by a wet day by a rainy day by a tempestuous day we little think the aim of God in calling us from our works is to call us to the consideration of his work Some men would never find a time to bestow their thoughts upon the works of God if God did not take them off from their own work they would never be at leisure if he did not give them a leisure a vacation time and as here in this text seal up their hand God hath various wayes to take men off from the hottest pursuits of their own works he takes many off from them by sickness he binds them as prisoners to their beds others are taken off from their own business by proper imprisonment and restraint of liberty and why what is the reason of this is it not that they may know his work that they may well consider the dealings of God with them A sick bed is a School and so is a Prison where we should study both the Word and Works of God Let us remember when-ever God takes us off from our Callings by sickness or restraineth our liberty by imprisonment his gracious purpose is that we may know his work Possibly when we had liberty to go about our own work we could find little or would not find much leisure to meditate upon the works of God Well saith God I see I must take you off from your works else you will never be Students in mine That 's the effect of Snow and Rain with reference to man He sealeth up the hand of every ma● that all men may know his work But here we have another effect with respect to beasts Vers 8. Then the beasts go into dens and remain in their places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Potius fera quam bestia a viva●itate nam eadem vox vitam significat Drus There are two words in the Hebrew which signifie bruits or beasts The word here used properly signifies wild beasts the other tame beasts such as are for our use and brought up to our hand The text intends the wild beasts the beasts of the forrest the beasts of prey they go into dens these seek shelter in snow time or when the great rain of the strength of God falleth upon the earth The Psalmist Psal 104.20 describes the beasts ordinarily going out of their dens when the night comes Then saith he all the beasts of the forrest go forth Here we have the beasts whether night or day driven to
water as well as in congealing those mighty floods o● water into icy rocks David celebrateth the power of God in this also Psal 147.18 He sendeth out his word and melteth them that is the morsels of ice spoken of vers 17. He causeth the wind a warm thawing wind to blow and the waters flow that i● those waters which were bound up by the cold flow away by heat Some insist much upon this translation It is of the Lord that the waters are enlarged or straitned frozen or dissolved I leave it with the Reader which to pitch upon both are safe and honourable to God and proceed to the next verse Vox 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 composita est praepositione 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nomine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quo significatur irrigatio a verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 irrigare Pisc Vers 11. Also by watering he wearieth the thick cloud he scattereth his bright cloud There is a four-fold reading or exposition of the former part of this verse By watering he wearieth the thick cloud First thus For watering or that he may water the earth Cum tempus irrigandi terrant est cogit condensat nubes illasquo magna aquarum copia gravidas effi●it Inde apud Hometum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. nubium congregatur Jupiter Bold he wearieth the thick cloud that is he calleth up so much vapour as burdens or wearieth the thick Cloud that he may have sufficient for the watering of the earth by rain God causeth his vapour to ascend saith the Prophet Jer. 10.13 that is he draws up much water by vapors as the matter of clouds or as the matter out of which clouds are made and he fills the cloud so full of water that it can scarce bear the weight and all this he do●h for the plentiful watering of the earth Secondly thus He causeth the cloud to give out or spend its water till it be weary We say of any thing that is spent to the last it is ti●ed and wearied Thus the Lord by watering wearies the thick cloud commanding the clouds to pour rain upon the earth till they are tired till they have spent all their store Mercerus and cannot yeeld a drop more Yet because to water the earth is the most proper and natural business of the cloud therefore Thirdly A learned Expositor conceives that the cloud is not we●●ied by watering or raining upon the earth but that on the contrary the cloud is said to be wearied or troubled when while it is about that work it is scattered or dispersed by the Sun or Wind. Fourthly Others refer this wearying of the cloud to the command which it receives for the watering of very remote parts of the earth The Lord saith to this or that cloud ●emove far off go and water such a Countrey it may be a hundred yea many hundred miles off the place from whence the vapou s were exhaled and there disburden thy self or fall down in showres When the Lord sends the cloud a long journey we may say 't is even wearied as a man or beast is that hath gone a long journey Frumen●um desiderat nubes Vulg. Cibus arborum imber est Plin. l. 17. cap. 2. I shall not trouble the reader with that wide interpretation of the Latine translator rendring thus The cloud desires corn or the cloud labours for corn that is to make the earth fruitful and bring forth abundance of corn Some of the Ancients have taught that there is a kind of natural marriage between the earth and the clouds or between the clouds and the corn or any other fruits of the earth Rain is the food of the earth that is of Fruits and Plants to which the Prophet Hos 2.22 makes an elegant allusion But I pass this The second interpretation I judge most congruous to the scope of the text which saith clearly Also by watering he wearieth the thick cloud Whence note Those creatures which have greatest stores to give may quickly have none left to give Here is a cloud and a thick cloud Elihu doth not speak of an ordinary but of a thick cloud yet upon the Lords command to give showres the cloud is quite spent and wearied Though men have the greatest affluence the largest stores and stock● of wealth or riches yea of gifts and graces yet they may be wearied and even drawn dry The thickest clouds that is they who have the greatest treasures of strength of wit of learning and knowledge are soon wearied exhausted and emptied unless they live in dependance upon God Only God himself can never be wearied by watering How much soever God giveth out to us he is not at all emptied but remaines everlastingly equally full And if God will speak to the meanest creature even to that which seemeth most empty it shall water others and not be wearied The thick clouds they who have much may be spent while he that hath but a little shall not be spent The Prophet said to the poor woman 1 King 17.14 The oyl in the cruse and the meal in the barrel shall not waste The woman might draw out of the oyl as long as she would and still there would be a supply of oyl nor would the barrel be weary in yeelding meal The Lord can make the creature unwea●ied and establish it to us for good A full cloud will soon drop away if the Lord forbear supplies and a few drops shall be as an eve●lasting spring where the Lord gives out supplies We may al●o allude to that 2 King 4.2 There was a poor widow and the creditors were ready to seize her two sons for bondmen and saith she I have nothing but a little pot of oyl and what will that do towards payment Well saith the Prophet Go borrow thee vessels abroad of all thy neighbours even empty vessels borrow not a few and thou shalt draw out of the pot and the pot of oyl shall not be wearied by giving oyl into the vessels God speaking to the pot of oyl it yeelded a continued supply the oyl never ceased till the woman had not a vessel to receive it If God saith to the least pittance of temporals which a man hath in this world hold out it shall not fail nor be weary 't is so likewise in spiri uals the Lord can make a little grace hold out the thinnest cloud shall not be wearied by watering Again By watering he wearieth the thick cloud that is God giveth out showres to water the earth abundantly Hence note God is very free and liberal He will empty the thick cloud upon the earth to make it fruitful He gives not only a few drops but abundance and this is most true in spi●ituals How doth the Lord showre down and empty even whole clouds of good things upon the soul as he hath promised so he once did and still doth sometimes and will mo●e in the last times poure out the Spirit which is an
not others shall if Jewes will not Gentiles shall if the Jewes will not carry it like the children of Abraham God can and will raise up children unto Abraham of the Stones of the street he will nor want instruments to answer his Counsels nor to execute his commands God will shake Heaven and Earth but he will have his Will done and his decrees perfected yea he will dissolve and ruine them rather than not have his Word fulfilled That of David Psal 136.2 Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name is true of the word of command as well as of the word of p●omise God will magnifie the word of his promise above all his Name and he will also magnifie the word of his command above all his Name that is his Word is as a glass wherein his Name that is his Holiness his Power his Goodness his Faithfulness his Mercy his Justice and his Wrath are to be seen and shall be seen in the accomplishments of it towards the children of men Therefore fear and admire this mighty God who will find means for the executing of his Word for the doing of all that he hath spoken The Clouds shall do whatsoever he commandeth them upon the face of the World in the earth Fourthly If the Clouds are turned about by his Counsel if he doth as it were hale the Ropes to turn the Clouds which way soever he pleaseth then Whensoever you see the Clouds gathered by the wind remember God hath somwhat to do there 's somwhat to be done these Clouds are the Servants of God there 's some command or word of God or other to be fulfilled We do not as we ought consider the Counsel of God in the motion of the Clouds yea some when the Clouds gather and the storms of Wind or Rain of Thunder and Lightning break forth are more ready to think of the Counsel of the Devil than of God they are apt to say surely There 's Conjuring abroad What 's that but the executing of the Devils Counsel whereas we should say God doth it by his Counsel Take heed of neglecting God when you see the Clouds do not attribute their motion or the most dreadful Storms that proceed from them to any thing beside the Counsel of God for there is not the least vapour can rise out of the earth for the making of a Cloud but he causeth it to ascend there are not any materials gathered toward the constituting of a Cloud but they are under Gods hand he causeth the vapours to ascend and there is not the least breath of wind can stir to move the Clouds Clouds are moved with the wind but as God hath appointed neither bad Angel nor good can stir a Cloud but as God willeth And therefore look to the hand and counsel of God in all these things take heed of staying in any work of Nature do not ascribe these impressions and perturbations in the Air to the power of the Devil and wicked Arts all is of the Lord whatsoever is done One of the Ancients said concerning the Devils when they desired leave to enter the Swine Why should any of the sheep of God be afraid of the Devil when the Devils cannot have power over the Swine without leave from God The Devil cannot move a breath of wind but according to the will of God though he be the Prince of the Air yet there is a Prince above him to whose commands all are subject both in Heaven and in Earth Fifthly If it be so that God commands the Clouds whensoever they come with their storms or showrs then ascribe the praise of all the good you receive from the clouds to God and be humbled under the hand of God whensoever you receive outward dammage from the clouds do not say it is a chance Sixthly Learn hence the greatness and the soveraignty of God say as they did admiringly Math. 8.27 Who is this that both the Winds and Seas and Clouds obey him None of the words of the Lord shall fall to the ground as an Arrow or Dart that misseth th● Mark or as water spilt that cannot be gathered up again which latter allusion is specially intimated 1 Sam. 3.12 19. Here in the Text Elihu sets forth the Power and Soveraignty of God having all creatures at his beck and command as hath been shewed already from other passages in this Book and more will occurr hereafter The Soveraignty of God over men can never be duly acknowledged till we acknowledge his Soveraignty over Winds and Rain Hail and Snow which lye in the Bowels and bosome of the clouds and from thence are dispenced to the earth at the will of God Seventhly and lastly If the clouds do whatsoever God commands them if they be such faithful servants to God then surely the clouds will one day rise up or come forth as witnesses against all that resist the commands of God Not to obey them is bad enough but to resist them is far worse Christ would awaken the Scribes and Pharisees by telling them Math 12.41 The men of Nineveh shall rise up in the Judgment against this Generation and shall condemn it because they repented at the preaching of Jonah as also the Queen of the South because she came from far to hear the wisdome of Solomon If Jesus Christ u●ged those instances of the men of Niniveh and of the Q●een of the South to terrifie that Generation for not obeying his commands or fo● not receiving the Promises of the Gospel doubtle●s then in the g eat Day the very clouds and winds shall come in as witnesses against all those that have resisted the will of God in any of his commands Have the Clouds will he say done whatsoever I commanded them and have you resisted have you cast my words behind your back when the very Clouds have taken up embrac'd and fulfilled them The Clouds will be a swift witness against all those that rebel against the commands of God The Snow and Rain the Winds and Storms fulfilling his word will bring in a casting Evidence against all those who have cast his word behind their backs All this we may read and see in the commanding power of God over the Clouds and in their readiness to obey Elihu proceeds Vers 13. He causeth it to come whether for Correction or for his Land or for Mercy He that is God causeth It that is the Cloud He causeth the Cl●ud to find so the Hebrew to find every place and every person concerning whom it hath received command and commission from God Thus the word is used by Moses Numb 32.23 If ye will not do so behold ye have sinned against the Lord and be sure your sin will find you out that is the punishment of your sin and that Judgment which God will pour out upon you for your sin will find you out wheresoever ye are In this sence the Cloud will find us out we render well He causeth it to come that is
to cherish and comfort the fruits of the Earth But besides these common and ordinary ends of sending rain somewhat extraordinary seems to be intended when the Text saith He causeth it to come for mercy or favour What 's the favour or special me●cy that comes by rain Surely it is the sending of such a rain and such a blessing with it as causeth the earth to bring forth abundantly The Lord can more than supply wants he can give plenty he can give as much in one year as may serve for two or three Sive ad Benignitatem sc●ut benigne fiat terrae citra necessitatem ut cum pluv●● descendit summo aestu ad aerem refriger●ndum Drus Thus he p●omised Levit. 25.21 Then I will Command my blessing upon you in the sixth year and it shall bring forth fruit for three years the sixth year was the year before the Sabbath-year for then they were not to till the g●ound Now if you carefully observe my Sabbath-year saith God you shall have no want though you do not sow This is a mercy when God sends in a double or treble Crop when he not only sends enough to serve the tu●n or to keep us alive but abundance and plenty so that the floars shall be full of wheat and the fats shall overflow with wine and oyle as the promise is expressed Joel 2.24 Hence note God is not only a just but a bountifull Master He doth not only give us enough for necessity but for delight and contentment if we use his boun y well and turn not his blessings to his dishonour plenty will be our mercy The Clouds come somtimes for Correction God sweepes away even our necessaries by raines which are therefore in Scriptu●e called sweeping raines at other times the Clouds come for mercy and empty themselves to fill us with the blessings of the earth that we both by corrections and favours may be led to repentance and receive further mercy not only mercy f●om the Clouds but mercy above the Clouds Thus the words stand in a fair opposi●ion and one part of the verse illustrates the other Yet I conceive there is somwhat further in these wo●ds for mercy or in mercy and free benignity which may intimate thus much to us That even the Rain from the Clouds and fruits of the earth are not given us of desert but of free favour and mercy They come for mercy or as a mercy God doth not seed the World because he owes them any thing but because he is mercifull we do not oblige him to give us a drop of rain or a morsell of bread sweet showres from Heaven and plentifull harvests on Earth are acts of grace mercy favour and good-will unto man God payeth men wages in nothing but in punishment wh●n God punisheth he payes wages that which is deserv'd if God send the Clouds for Correction we have what our sins have procured and brought upon us but if he send plenty we have mercy a gracious bounty or largess from the hand of God our daily bread is not pay nor wages but reward and mercy much lesse is that which is more or beyond our daily bread We by sin deserve that the Heavens should be as the Lord th●eaten'd his ancient people in case of disobedience as b●ass and the Ea●th as iron but we have not deserv'd that the Heavens should drop fatness and the Earth yeild her increase this is mercy Not only are we to look upon the Pardon of sin as a me●cy and Redemption by the blood of Christ as a mercy and Justification through his Righteousness as mercy and eternall life as a mercy or coming from mercy and free grace but we are to receive every bit of bread as coming to us through mercy freely and not upon any account of our own workings or deservings And if we cannot deserve a showre no nor a drop of rain from the Clouds if we cannot deserve a Crop of Corn from the Earth then surely we cannot deserve grace or peace from God or eternal life and happiness with God Therefore how should we magnifie and admi●e the mercy and free grace of God for spiritual thing● when we see such cause of magnifying him even for temporal good things if the Clouds are favourable to us it is of mercy Further That notion may be well improv'd which some give of this word reading the Abstract by the Concrete we say For mercy they say for the mercifull that is for the liberall benigne and mercifull man the man of a large heart to d● good God causeth the Cloud to come somtimes for Correction usually for his land to conveigh common comforts and he hath his times wherein he causeth it to come for the merciful that is in special favour to those that are mercifull and good and g●acious both as they have received grace from God and as they have done good things for and among men He that watereth shall be watered also himself Pro. 11.24 Thus you see the three-fold Message that God sends the Clouds upon either to Correct men for their sin or for his Land that the Creature in general may have subsistence or for special favour and mercy to his peculia● people and for those above the rest of good men who are mercifull and ready to do good JOB Chap. 37. Vers 14 15 16. 14. Hearken unto this O Job stand still and consider the wondrous works of God 15. Dost thou know when God disposed them and caused the light of his cloud to shine 16. Dost thou know the ballancings of the clouds the wonderous works of him which is perfect in knowledge THis context begins the second part of the Chapter wherein Elihu First exciteth Job to a serious contemplation of the wonderful works of God this is expressed in the 4th verse Secondly He urgeth the weakness and inability of Job and indeed of any man to understand the full compass of those works And this he doth First In general as to them all in the beginning of the 15th verse Dost thou know when God disposed them Secondly he sheweth his inability as to particulars or the several kinds of the works of God First As to his causing of the Light to shine in the close of the 15th verse Secondly As to his weighing or ballancing of the Clouds verse 16th The summe of these three verses together with the two next which follow make up an earnest exhortation that Job considering and comparing that great power and wisdom of God which appear shine in those forementioned works with his own weakness and insufficiency would therefore humble himself and not venture any further to contest or plead with God And because many of the Lords providential works are unsearchable as wel as these which are natural therefore Elihu would not have J●b busie himself in any curious prying into those which concerned his present condition For if there be infinite and unerring wi●dom tempered with mercy and justice with
word is a weariness to them they soon think they have enough Secondly There is need of patience for submission to what is heard How short soever the Sermon is yet when it pincheth the conscience and pricketh the heart it is not easily born They who hear quietly some wo●ds of truth will not endu●e some other we hardly continue hearing with any patience when to us the word heard is a hard saying and bares hard upon either our consciences or our practises when the singer is as it were laid upon and presseth the sore few can endure it 'T is easie to hear pleasing things but that which crosseth our spirits or our wayes calls for patience When Stephen the Proto-martyr preached to the Jews and brought the word home to their consciences by that close application Acts 7.51 Ye stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ear ye do alwayes resist the Holy Ghost as y●ur Fathers did so do ye At this word or when they heard these things they were cut to the heart saith the text and they gnashed on them with their teeth their patience was quite spent they could hear no longer And when St. Paul spake to that g●eat Assembly Acts 22.1 22 23. They gave him audience unto this word I will send thee to the Gentiles and then lift up their voices and said away with such a fellow from the earth for it is not fit that he should live Then they cryed out and cast off their clothes and threw dust in the air Thus they raved and were enraged like angry yea like mad dogs when once their title was questioned or as we speak their coppy-hold toucht by the mention of the Gentiles whom they greatly despised and judged themselves so much above Hearken to this to this pinching word to the word that strikes upon your lusts The length of a Sermon spoiles the patience of some but the strength and searching power of it spoiles the patience of more A sincere heart is willing to hear all and is most pleased to hear that word which gives deepest wounds to any corruption of heart or transgression of life Such words are wholsome though bitter or sharp and the more they make us smart the more medicinal and healing they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Stat sc permentis rectitudinem Aquin. Hearken unto this O Job Stand still and consider the wonderous works of God Elihu not only desires Job to hearken but to stand still and consider There is a twofold standing still First Bodily I do not conceive Elihu imposing any such gesture or composure upon Job as to stand still and not stir his body The Hebrew is but one word stand up There is a liberty as to any comly gesture of the body in hearing a man may lawfully sit as-well as stand and hear yet to stand up and hear sheweth a readinesse of the mind and a hungring desire after the Word Secondly There is a standing still of the mind The body may stand as still as a stake or stone while the mind is in strong motion yea while there are most vehement commotions and perturbations in the mind This still-standing of the mind in hearing what is spoken may be taken in a double opposition First To any impatience unquietness or uncomposedness of the mind when the word is spoken Secondly To any irreverence slighting or disregarding of the word spoken To stand still is to get the spirit quiet to hear patiently or to stand still is to get the heart into a reverential frame to hear affectionately So then to stand still implieth both patience and reverence We have like admonitions in the 30th chapter of this book vers 20. and chapter 32d vers 16. Yea that admonition of Balaam was of like sence with this Num. 23.18 Rise up Balak and hear When Balaam was about to deliver his parable and declare the mind of God concerning Israel he called upon Balak to rise and stand up that is to entertain the message with respect Hearken unto this O Job stand still Hence note We ought to be in a gracious quietness and composure of spirit when we are called to hear and mind what God hath done or spoken Further We ought to have a quiet sedate composed spi it not only when we hear doctrinal truths delivered from the word of God but also when we hear of the providences and various wo●ks of God As this word stand still may refer to the words going before Hearken unto this so to those which follow Consider the wonderful works of God And then the duty required in them reaches both his Word and Works It is a great power of grace which causeth the heart to stand still in this sence that is to be in a quiet frame when the works of God trouble us or are troublesome to us Thus M●ses bespake the Israelite Exod 14.12 Stand still and see the salvation of God It was a very t●oublesome time with the Israelites they were ready to give themselves and all they had for lost when Moses exhorted them to stand still Nothing but faith in God can make us stand still when we are ready to fail and that will certainly do it Unbelief makes the heart as unquiet as theirs was upon the report of a war against Judah Isa 7.2 And his heart that is the heart of Ahaz was moved and the heart of his people as the trees of the wood are moved with the wind 'T is hard travel of soul to sta●d still and see the salvation of God when every thing seen threa●ens des●lation The Lord is represented requiring us to do so Psal 46.10 Be still and know that I am God When the Psalmist had spoken of the desolating works of God he added this word from the Lord be still as if he had said the Lord commandeth you ●o be of a quiet and composed spirit when all things seem to be in a hurry or confusion for he had said before vers 8. Come behold the works of the Lord what desolations he hath made in the earth Yet even now saith the Lord Be still and know that I am God David at the beginning of the Psalm had professed a f●rm purpose in himself and in all the faithful w●th him for such a still-standing how-ever things moved or matters should go yea tumble in this world vers 1 2. Though the earth be moved and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea though the waters thereof roar c. We will not fear God is our refuge and strength How comely is it for man thus to stand still in a silent and believing consideration of what God hath done or is doing to which Elihu called Job expresly in the next words stand still Consider the wonderous works of God Here is First Consideration Secondly Consideration of the works of God Thirdly Consideration of the wonderous works of God To consider 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligere is
the special work of the Understanding or of the intellectual Powers To consider is the most proper work of a rational creature It is no easie matter to consider our selves what we are and what we have done or what we are doing Hag. 1.7 Consider your wayes But 't is a harder matter to consider God as good in his being and na●u e and as good in his workings operations That 's the business of this text ●ons●der the wonderous works of God consider them in the fullness of them and consider them fully In which sence the Prophet reproves the Jews for their non-consideration Israel doth not know my people do not consider Isa 1.3 They do not consi●er what I have done nor what I am doing they are an inconsiderate and regardless people and therefore a people not to be rega●ded There 's nothing worth the taking notice of in a people or person who take no notice of the works of God They who will not consider his doings will quickly be inconsiderable and of no account with him Consider the wonderful works of God Consideration is opposed to two things First To slightness of Spirit or the light passing over of what we hear or see Secondly to unquietness and passionatess of spirit because of what we hear or see Some lightly pass things by others think of the wo●ks of God in a passion or with a kind of rage they are rather vexing themselves about the wonderous works of God than considering them Consideration is a wo●k that stands between these two extreams slightnesse and unquietnesse of spirit Consideration requires a serious soul and if right it makes the soul patient They who once consider the works of God rightly will rest in them satisfiedly Consider the wonderful works of God Elihu was speaking of those works of God in the Air the Meteors Clouds and Rain c. as under the rule of his providence now saith he Consider The wonderful works of God This informs us that the works of God are very considerable First In natural things that is what God doth in disposing the course of nature must be duely considered by man Secondly In civil things that is in what he doth in ordering the affaires of men and these either publick in Nations or private in Families In all these God hath his workings and his wo●ks in all must be considered Thirdly In spiritual things what he doth in wayes of grace upon the souls of men in convincing and converting them in humbling and comforting them which are his choicest and most excellent works of all Now though all these works of God are to be conside●ed the last especially yet the workes of God here set before Job are those in Nature and the providential disposure of them these are no small matters Elihu calls them and so they are wonderful Consider the wonderful works of God These works of God in and about natural things may be dist●ibuted into those that are common and ordinary or those that are rare and extraordinary Elihu is not treating here about the rare extraordinary works of God but about the common and ordinary works of God in the Clouds the Rain and Winds c. yet he calls them wonderful Consider saith he the wonderful works of God From the connexion in that Elihu bids Job stand still and then consider the wonderful works of God Observe Fi●st We can never consider things aright till our minds come to a rest and are quiet We cannot make a true use of our reason when we are much moved with passion we must stand still before we can consider Moses when the bush bu ned and did not consume said I will now turn aside and see this great sight why the bush is not burnt Exod. 3.3 He went near and stood considering that wonderful wo k of God He was not in a fright he was not scared to see a burning bush but he stood in a well composed frame of mind to consider what his eyes beheld or the meaning of that strange sight Secondly Note The works of God are matter of great consideration As the word of God is to be conside ed so his works and none can profitably consider the word of God unless they consider the works of God too His wo●ks are a Comment upon his word the word of God is exemplified in his wo●ks what God speaketh that he doth We may find the word of God transc ib●d in his works I saith David Psal 77.12 will meditate also of all thy works and talke of thy doings The Character given of a godly man Psal 1.2 is He meditates in the Law of God night and day and Psal 119.148 M●ne eyes prevent the night watches that I might meditate in thy word N●w ●●●g d●y man should meditate the word so the works of God nigh● and day David was resolved to do so in the place before-men●ioned as also Psal 143.5 I saith he remember the dayes of old I meditate on all thy works I muse on the work of thy hand Did we rightly consider the works of God how just how goo● they are we would b● more in doing good wo●ks and we should do ●u● good w● ks better If any ask How are we to consider the works of God I answer First Consider them in their number that they are many The wonde●full works of God are innumerable he doth not only one not only two or three but many very many wonderfull works Many O Lord my God saith David Psal 40.5 are the wonderfull works w ich thou hast done Secondly Consider the wonderfull works of God in their kinds o● sorts wo●ks of Creation or wo●ks of Providence The wo●ks of God in Providence are very va●ious His wo●ks in the Heavens his wo●ks on the Earth his wo●ks of j●dgment and his works of mercy his wo●ks of patience his wo●ks of vengeance his works in delivering us from evill and his works for the continuance of our good ●●e very various and 't is our duty to consider them all Whatsoever or how●oever God is pleased to wo●k the thoughts of man should work upon it and give him the glory of it Thirdly The wo●ks of God are to be considered as in their number and kinds or so ●s so in their circumstances As we are to conside● ou● sins not only in their kind but circumstances which exceedingly agg●avate and heighten sin so circumstances in the wo●ks of God must be considered for they exceedingly heighten the works of God As the circumstances of a sin may make a sin li●tl● for ●he ma●ter very great and exceeding sinfull so a circumstance in my wo k of God may make it though little in it self great and wonde full We leave out the very strength of a wo k of me●cy when we passe by the circumstances of it A work of me●cy done in su●h a ●ime in such a way a work done for such a people for a people so undeserving renders the work much more
considerable and valuable The Lord saith David Psal 111.4 hath made his wonderfull works to be remembred The old translation saith The mercifull and gracious Lord hath so done his marveilous works that puts a so upon his works he hath not only done them but he hath done them so in such a way with such circumstances he hath put such marks such accents upon them that they are to be remembred that they cannot but be remembred It is but an half consideration of the works of God to consider them abstractly and nakedly without their cloathings that is their circumstances of time place persons when where how for whom and by whom they were done Fourthly We should consider the works of God in their aims ends and tendencies not only what they are but what they lead to what the purpose of God may be in them with respect to our selves with respect to the Church with respect to the world is very considerable There is not a drop of rain that falls from Heaven but it hath a purpose in it and that not only to feed and nourish man by making the earth fruitfull but to make our hearts and lives fruitfull Or thus We are to consider the works of God in their aimes First as to God to set forth his power wisdome goodness Secondly as to man First to draw man nearer to God Secondly to raise him up in thankfulness Thirdly in holiness and conformity to the will of God Now if this be to consider the wo●ks of God then we may inferre Though there be many who see the works of God yet there are but few who consider them It is an easie thing to see the wo●ks of God that 's only eye-work but to consider them is difficult that 's head-work and heart-work too Though I conceive that word rendred to see is somtimes used in the sence of this Text for consideration Isa 26.11 When thy hand is lifted up they will not see They could not choose but see with their eyes that such things were done but they did not see or rather would not see as seeing notes considering the hand and aime of God in doing them They who have no mind to answer and submit to to p●ofit by and confo●me to the works of God have no ca●e nor will they take the pains to get such a sight of them So that while most see the works of God ocularly while they see the outside the bulke and body of them they see not the works of God spi●i●ually no nor so much as rationally 'T is not a glance of the eye but the study of the min● which is required in seeing the works of God And hence it is that though there are store of spectators and talkers of the works of God yet there are few considerers of them Every one almost will be speaking of the great things which God doth saying What do you hear or do you not hear what is done what is come to passe but where is the consideration of what is done or of what hath passed who stayeth his thoughts and breathes wisely upon the works of God They are wise indeed who do so as David concluded after a long and most excellent discourse of the works of God Psal 107.43 Who is wise and will observe these things as if he had said None but the wise will nor can observe them even they shall understand the loving kindness of the Lord. Thirdly What are those works which Elihu here calls the wonderfull works of God Surely those described both in th● foregoing and subsequent part of this Chapter are which are no prodigies in Nature the Winds Rain Frost Snow Thunder and Lightning These are the matter of his discourse and of these he saith Consider the wonderfull works of God Hence observe The common constant and ordinary works of God are full of wonders Though we rightly distinguish the works of God as was touched before into ordinary and extraordinary common and wonderfull yet did we fully understand them there is a kind of wonder and miraculousness in all the works of God even in his most common ordinary or every dayes wo●ks What is more ordinary and common than the generation and formation of man Yet saith David Psal 139.15 I will praise thee for I am fearfully and wonderfully made marveilous are thy works and that my soul knoweth right well And the reason why we do not look out the wonders of that and of many other common works of God is because they are so common The very falling of the Rain hath a wonder in it the blowing of the Wind hath a wonder in it the motion of the Clouds hath a wonder in it the growing of every spire of grass out of the earth hath a wonder it it the budding out of every leaf and blossom on the tree hath a wonder in it yet because these things are common we do not think nor call them wonderfull Every one would think i● a wonder to see a dry rod a rod cut off from the tree blossom as Aarons did Numb 17.8 but who thinks it a wonder to see a tree well rooted in the earth blossom every Spring yet there is a wonder a wonderfull work of God in that al●o Magnitudine rerum cons●etudo subducit I●a enim compositi su●●us ut nos quotidi ant etiamsi admiratione digna sint tran●eam Sen l 7. Nat quaell c. 11. A Heathen Philo●opher could say from his own ob●e●vation of things and persons Custom takes away admiration Such is the genius or spi it of mankind that we never admire what we often see or meet with though in it self it be never so admirable Who admires the motion of the Sun every day yet the Suns motion every day is as miraculous and stu●endious as its standing still was in that day of Joshua's battel with the Kings or as its retrograde motion or going back was in that day of King Hezekiah's recovery from a mortal disease That such a vast body as the Sun should take and fulfill such a journey should pass such an unconceivable space in twenty-four houres is an amazing wonder Sol spectatorem nisi cum d●fi it non habet nemo observat lunam nisi laborantam yet no man wonders at it I● hath been said The Sun and Moon have hardly any beholders they can scarcely get a look from us unless when Eclipsed and then all men stand gazing and wondering at them every one will be looking towards them with hands lifted up say O strange yet the Eclipses of the Sun Moon are far easier to the conceptions of R●ason than the motion of the Sun and Moon is considering the vast course they run and performe every day We admire things out of course or when their course is disturbed yet the constant course of things is much more admirable every time the Sun riseth every time the rain falleth every time the wind bloweth every time the tyde turneth we have a
out how good how merciful God is or the utmost extent of his goodness and mercy which Zophar in the place before cited calleth a finding of him out to perfection I may give you a five-fold Negative to shew wherein God cannot be found out First We cannot find him out as to the infiniteness of his E●sence and Being that 's beyond the line of a created Understanding Secondly We cannot find him out as to the excellency of his Attributes or the manner of his being who can tell how wise God is how holy how just how powerful how good We may easily find his divine perfections all the world over we may find them in every leaf of the book of the Scripture yea in every leaf of the book of the Creature but we cannot find them out any where to perfection Thirdly We cannot find out the depth of his Counsels God hath some Arcana secrets which he hath reserved in his own power as Christ told his disciples in the first of the Acts vers 6. when they would needs be prying into that secret of his councel the time of restoring the kingdom to Israel There are many councels of God lockt up in his own bo●om which we cannot find out nor must we be bold and curious in searching into them Fourthly The Lord cannot be found out no not in his works of P●ovidence which are acted outwardly or by which he brings forth his councels to act Psal 77.19 His foot-steps are not known not only are not any of his secret councels known but some o● his very foot-steps his treadings his goings are not fully known God goeth so that we cannot find where he g●eth he leaves no track as we say behind him Rom. 11.33 How unsearchable a●e his Judgments not only his councels but how unsearchable are his Judgments and his ways past finding out That 's the very expression of the text There are many providences of God which we find and feel which we see and cannot but see yet we cannot find them out that is we are not able to give a direct answer why God doth this or that nor how this or that was done Consider that Scripture 2 Chron. 31.20 21. where we have a most singular character of Hezekiah and of his government Thus did Hez●kiah throughout all Judah and wrought that which was g●od and right and truth before the Lord his God and in every w●rk that he began in the service of the house of God he did it with all his heart and prospered So the 31th chapter concludes yet the 32d begins thus After these things and the establishment thereof Sennacherib King of Assiria came and entred into Judah and encamped against the fenced Cities One would have thought Hezekiah being thus zealous for the Reformation of the Church of God in Judah and Jerusalem and having done all that concerned it with a perfect heart that surely such a Prince should have lived in peace and prospered all his dayes yet presently his Kingdome was invaded by a potent enemy Sennacherib comes against him and fills him and all his people with fear of utter subversion This was a secret of providence very hard to find out a depth which who can fathome That when a good King with his Counsel had been indeavouring a true Reformation and that with a perfect heart he should presently see war at his gates Solomon saith Pro. 16.7 When a mans ways please the Lord he makes his enemies to be at peace with him Yet it was no sooner said of King Hezekiah that his wayes pleased the Lord but the very next paragraph of his Chronicle reports an enemy making war upon him Fifthly Take this also We cannot find out God in the dispensations of his Free Grace in the Gospel ●here are such mazes such mysteries of love and goodness and kindne●s in Jesus Ch ist as though it be our duty to be searching after them and in them all our dayes though we ought to be continually digging in those golden Mines to find out the treasures hidden there yet we can never find them out Therefore the Apostle Ephes 3.8 calls them The unsearchable riches of Christ not unsearchable because it is unlawful to search after them but unsearchable because when we have searched to the utmost we cannot find them out as he speaks in the close of that chapter that we may be able to comprehend with all Saints the height and depth and length and breadth and to know the love of Christ that passeth knowledge Under all these considerations and many many more God is past finding out Whence take three brief Inferences First Do not search too far that is beyond what is written into the counsels of God no nor into the works of God For though as it is said Psal 111.2 the works of God are great sought out by all them that have pleasure therein yet they that have the greatest pleasure in them cannot in all points find them out It is our duty to search the works of God but to think we can find out the bottom of his works would be our sin Secondly If the Almighty cannot be found out no not in his works of providence then Take heed of censuring or finding fault with his works Shall we censure what we cannot know and find fault with that which we cannot find He that censures what another doth should first have the full compass of what he doth and be able to look quite thorow it which the most eagle-eyed soul in the world cannot as to what God doth in this world And therefore though you see no reason for what is don do not complain for there may be a reason for the doing of it which you do not see and the reason is often such and lyes so deep that you cannot see it And know this is reason enough why you should forbear censuring what is done because God doth i● though you can give no o●her reason why it is done Thirdly If God be past finding out in his works and much more in himself then be not so much as discontented with his works You are not yet come to the bottom you have not seen the last man born as we say you know not what God will make of it till he hath done all therefore take heed of murmuring and discontent Zech. 2.13 Be silent O all flesh before the Lord for he is risen out of his holy habitation Though his rising be visible yet we cannot see all the concernments and intendments of his rising therefore be sil●nt altogether from fear and discontents and though not from all enq●i ies about it yet from a presumption of finding out all by enqui●ies For As touching the Almighty we cannot find him out That 's the first 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He is excellent in power T●at's the second Mr. Broughton reads He is huge of strength The word rend●ed excellent properly signifies to encrease There is no encrease of the strength of
God what he is he ever was and ever will be there is neither encrease nor diminution of his strength But because things which are alwayes encreasing grow to a huge bigness and strength therefore he is said to encrease in strength or as our translation imports to excel in power He that excels in power is excellent in power The word rendred power implieth the power of doing the Greeks call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or of activity a power put forth in working he is excellent in power that is in ability to do whatsoever he pleaseth and when 't is said he is excellent in power in this kind of power i● notes that the power of God in doing doth wonderfully excel all tha● ever he hath done Ejus virtus in infinitum excedit omnes effectus suos Aquin. The effects or acts of the power of God are nothing as I may say to the faculty of his Power he can do more than he hath done He is so far from having over-acted himself I mean from having done more than he can do again which hath been the case of many mighty men and may be the case of any man how mighty a doer soever he is that he can do infinitely more than he hath done if he himself pleaseth he is excellent in power or of excelling power I have as was lately said opened this point of the power of God in other places of this Book whither I refer the Reader yet taking the power of God as the word is properly here intended for his working power Note The working power of God is excellent so excellent that it exceeds the apprehension of man There is a two-fold power of God and in both he is excellent First His commanding power his power of Soveraignty or Authority that 's a most excellent power 't is a power over all whether things or persons Secondly His power of working or effecting that which he commands Some have a power of commanding yet want a power of working they want a power to effect that which they command but whatsoever God hath a mind to command he hath an hand to effect and bring it about he can carry on his work through all the difficulties and deficiencies which it meets with in or by the creature He can do his wo●k though there be none to help him in it though all forsake him and with-draw from his work yea he often worketh though there be not so much as an Intercessor to move him to work Isa 59.16 He saw that there was no man to do any thing and wondered that there was no Intercessor to entreat him to do somewhat for them Things were in a great exigency and there was not only no man that would put forth a hand but there was no man that would bestow a word for redress no man would bespeak either God or men for help What then must the work stand still or miscarry no saith the text His own arm brought salvation unto him that is set it ready at hand for him to bestow upon his people or his own arm brought that salvation to his people which they greatly needed and he graciously intended though he had not the contribution of a word towards it from any creature here below one or other God alone is self-sufficient and to man All-sufficient Such is the working power of God that he can work not only when he hath but a little help but when he hath no help at all Secondly The excellency of the wo●king power of God appears in this that he can and will p●oduce the desired effect and bring his work to pass though many though all men oppose it and rise up against it though they set both heart and hand wit and will power and pollicy to cross yea to crush it The Lord is so excellent in power that he both can and will do his work through all opposition though mountains stand in his way though rocks stand in his way he will remove them or work through them Isa 43.13 I will work and who shall lett it Neither strength nor craft neither multitude nor magnitude neither the many nor the mighty can lett it if the Lord undertake it Take a double Inference from this First 'T is matter of great comfort to all that fear God in their weakest condition and lowest reducements when they are fatherless and have none to help them As the Lord is excellent in his wo●king power so he usually takes that time yea stayes that time till his servants are under the greatest disadvantages till they are at worst before he will put forth his power and work The Apostle saith of himself 2 Cor. 12.10 When I am weak then am I strong that is then have I the strength of the Lord coming into my help And as it is with respect to particular persons so to the whole generation of his children when they are weak then are they strong that is then they have the strong God the God excellent in power appearing and working for them Secondly This al●o is a sad word to all that stand in the way of Gods working power His working power quickly works through all power and can work it down Babylon is a mighty powerful enemy but Rev. 18.8 we read of the downfal of Babylon and that her ruine shall come as in one day But how shall this be effected The answer is given in the close of the verse For strong is the Lord God which Judgeth her Suppose there should be no power in the world strong enough to pull down Babylon yea suppose all the powers in the wo●ld should stand up fo● Babylon 't is otherwise prophesied for the Kings of the earth shall hate the whore and shall make her desolate and naked and eate her flesh and burn her with fire but suppose I say all earthly power should appear for rather than against Babylon yet this is enough for us to rest in strong is the Lord which Judgeth her He is excellent in power and as it followeth In Judgment This comes in lest any should think because God is so excelent in power so mighty in strength that therefore he would carry things by violence or by meer force as the sons of men the mighty Nimrods of the world somtimes do If they have strength and power to do such or such things they regard not Judgment nor Justice they look not whether right or wrong therefore Elihu when he had said God is excellent in power presently adds and in Judgment As if he had said Though the Lord excel all in power and is able to crush the mightyest as a moth yet he will not oppress any by his power the worst of men shall find the Lord as much in judgment and righteousness as he is in strength and power And therefore O Job be assured God hath not done thee any wrong nor ever will This I conceive to be the scope of Elihu in the connexion of these two
The excellency of God in Judgment as well as in Power But what are we to understand by judgment in which Elihu saith God excells In answer to this Querie I shall first shew that Judgment is taken four ways in Scripture and then prove that God is excellent in Judgment with respect to every one of them First Judgment is an ability of judging A man of judgment and a wise man are the same When we say such a man is a man of Judgment or a judicious man we mean he is a prudent man he is able to discern things that differ he knows how to order state and determine doubtful things aright In this sence we are to understand it here the Lord is excellent in judgment that is in wisdome and prudence to set things right and to give every one his right he sees clearly how to mannage all his affayres and purposes by righteous meanes to right ends The prophet gives God the glory of this title expressely Isa 30.18 The Lord is a God of judgment Blessed are they that wait for him That is the Lo●d is infinitely furnished with wisdom he knows exactly not only what ought to be done but how and when to do it therefore waite for him And 't is encouragement to waite when we have a person of judgment and understanding a discreet and prudent person to waite upon God is a God of judgment in this sence theref re blessed are they that waite for him Secondly Judgement in Scripture is taken for that moderation or due measure which is observed in any thing that is done This follows the former for unless a man have a Judgment or true understanding in the thing it self he can never hit a right measure of it Thus I conceive that Scripture is to be understood Math 23.23 where Christ denouncing or thundering out woes thick and threefold against the proud hypocritical Pharisees he tells them Ye pay tythe of Anise and Cummin and have omitted the weightier matters of the Law Judgment Mercy that i● either they did not give a right judgment according to Law or their legal Judgments were given with rigour not at all attemper'd mixt and moderated with mercy Of such the Apostle James speaketh Chap. 2.13 He shall have judgment without mercy that hath shewed no mercy and mercy rejoyceth against Judgment In this sence the Lord is excellent in Judgment For as he hath wisdome and understanding to see what is just ●ight so in Judgment he remembers Mercy His patience is grea● before he gives Judgment and his moderation is great when he gives it He dealeth not with us according to our sins nor rewardeth us according to our iniquities Psal 103.10 that is his Judgments are not proportion'd to the greatness of our sins and iniquities For as it followeth at the 11th verse of that Psalme as high as the Heave● is above the Earth so great is his mercy towards them that feare him Therefore the Prophet brings in the Chu●ch praying thus Jer. 10.24 O Lord Correct me I conceive it is not a direct prayer for Correction but a submission to it As if he had said I will not murmur nor rebell against thy Correction O Lord Correct me but with Judgment that is with due moderation It cannot be meant of Judgment as it notes the effect of divine displeasure but Correct me moderately or as another text hath i● in measure as thou usest to correct thy people This meaning is plain f●om the opposition in the next words Not in thine anger least thou bring me to nothing Anger transports men to do things undecently wi●hout mode●ation we quickly exceed our limits if carried out in passion and though that anger which the Scripture attributes often to God never transports him beyond the due bounds of his wisdome and justice yet when God is said to do a thing in anger it notes his going as it were to the utmost bounds of justice this caused the Church to pray O Lord if the cup may not pass from me if it cannot be but I must be corrected then I humbly and earnestly beg thou wouldst be pleased to correct me in Judgment not in anger least thou bring me to nothing What the Church prayed for here the Lord promised elsewhere Jer. 30.11 I will not make a full end of thee but I will correct thee in measure and will not leave thee altogether unpunished Thus God is excellent in Judgment He abates the severity of his proceedings and allayes the bitterness of the cup by some ingredients of mercy Thirdly Judgment in Scripture is put for the reformation of things when they are out of order In this sence it is used John 12.31 Now is the Judgment of this world Our late Annotators tell us that by Judgment is meant reformation As if Christ had said I am come to set all things in order that have been out of order and disjoynted in the Jewish Church and every where else Now is the Judgment of this world In this sence God is excellent in Judgment or he excells in this Judgment that is he is for reformation he will set all things right he will make crooked things strait he will make the rough places plain John the Baptist came before Christ in this work yet in this work Christ is before or exceeds John the Baptist The Lord Isa 4.4 will purge away the iniquity of the daughter of Zion with a spirit of Judgment and with a spirit of burning that is with a reforming and a refining Spirit And the Lord will send forth this Judgment unto victory Matth. 12.20 that is he will do it thorowly he will ove●come all the difficulties and put by all the obstacles which hinder the perfect reforma ion of things as well as ●f persons That 's the importance also of that great promise Isa 1.25 26. I saith the Lord will turn my hand upon thee or take thee in hand a●d purely purge away thy dross and take away all thy tinn th●t is all those corruptions which have crept in upon thee I will rest●re thy Judges as at the first and thy Councellors as at the beginning Things and persons are usually best at first The new broom ●ay we sweept clean As time consumes all things here belo● so it co●rupts most things and therefore when the Lo●d promiseth to restore them to a primitive purity he promiseth the purest restauration all which is summ'd up in the 27th verse Sion shall be redeemed with Judgment which is not only if at all intended of a redemption by Judgment on her enemies but by that reformation which ●od would work upon themselves in taking away their dross and tinn Restoring their Judges as at the first and their Councellers as at the beginning Such a Judgment is spoken of Isa 30 22. Ye shall defile also that is utterly disgrace and deface the Covering of thy graven Images of Silver and the Ornament of thy molten Images of Gold
flight and bold thoughts of God to take up high and reverential thoughts of God this this is to fear God Yet a little further and more distinctly I conceive here in this place to fear God stands in a four-fold opposition Fi●st Men should fear him and not murmure at what he doth Secondly They should fear him and not lightly pass by what he doth Thirdly They should fear him and not question him about what he doth Fourthly They should fear him and not curiously search or prie into what he doth The Lord having such power to do such wisdom in doing such a mixture of mercy with justice in all that he doth men should only admire and improve his doings not murmure at nor lightly pass by nor question nor curiously pry into what he doth Thus to fear God as faithful in all his works and to fear offending him in any of our own work● is the summe of Godliness Hear the conclusion of all saith Solomon Eccl. 12.13 Fear God and keep his Commandements this is the whole of man that is as we translate the whole duty of man Secondly Taking the word men more strictly as signifying not strong or mighty men but weak afflicted men Note When God is afflicting us we ought to be much in the fear of God What when the hand of God is upon us shall our hearts be lifted up against him or in our selves what shall not our hearts stoop when our backs are burdened with sorrows and bowed down with a cross Not to fear God when we are at furthest remove from fear or trouble in the world is an argument of a very bad heart but not to fear him when fear is round about us or when himself is chastening and correcting of us argueth a much worse frame of heart Holy David gave this character of his enemies Psal 55.19 Because they have no changes therefore they fear not God What shall we say of them who fear not God though they have many changes such changes I mean as Job felt and cryed out of in the bitterness of his soul Chap. 10.17 Changes and war are against me And 't is conceived that Elihu aimed particularly at Job in this passage as if he were the man who though under great changes and in great troubles ye● behaved himself unlike those who truly fear the Lord. Thirdly Note It is so much the duty of man to fear God that it may well be supposed of all men that they fear him He can scarce be looked upon as a man who doth not fear God Doth he know himself to be a weak man who doth not tremble at the remembrance of the Almighty God Doth he know himself to be a sinful man who doth not tremble at the remembrance of the holy of the most holy God This duty of fear is due to God upon so many accounts even common accounts from man that we may conclude surely every man feareth God Shall we not fear him who is incomprehensibly great in power and in judgment and in plenty of justice What! not fear him who made us and preserveth us who feeds and cloaths us What! nor fear him in whose hand our breath is and all our wayes These and many more are common accounts upon which all men may see both reason and their own engagement to fear God So then as because it is so much the duty of a Son to honour his Father and of a Servant to fear his Master therefore the Scripture supposeth all Sons and Servants doing it Mal. 1.6 A Son honoureth his Father and a Servant his Master He doth no● say a Son ought to honour his Father and a Servant his Master but he honoureth or doth honour That person deserveth not the name of a Son that doth not honour his Father nor is he worthy the name of a Servant that doth not honour his Master Now I say as the Scripture takes it for granted upon this ground the naturalness of the duty th●t every Son honours his Father and every Servant his Master so it doth and so may we that every man feareth God And doubtless if a Son or Servant deserves not to bear the name of these relations unless they honour and fear Father and Master how much less do they deserve to be called Men who do not fear God the Almighty God! Again from those two particular heads upon which this fear is gr●unded First Therefore with respect to the power and justice of God Secondly Therefore with respect to the mercy and tenderness of God Note Fi●st God is to be feared because he is so full of power and justice then especially when by some eminent and special act of providence he declares his power and is doing justice By how much the more God puts himself forth in his power and justice by so much the more he is to be feared 'T is prophesied Rev. 15.3 that when God shal shew forth his great power and execute the severity of his justice upon Antichrist then they who shall get the victory over the beast and over his image c. shall sing the Song of Moses the servant of God and the song of the Lamb saying Great and marvelous are thy works Lord God Almighty just and true are thy wayes thou King of Saints What followeth Who shall not fear thee O Lord and glorifie thy Name The vengeance to be poured upon Babylon will be so great a demonstration of Gods power and justice that it will give occasion to all men the faithful especially yea it will call upon them aloud to fear God Who shall not fear thee As if he had said surely there is no man so stupid so stout-hearted or so hard-hearted but if he see God in or at this wo k he will have dreadful apprehensions of him and fear befo●e him Yet this is not spoken of such a fear as Christ hath fore-told shall seize upon and possess the hearts of men before his glo●ious appea●ing Luke 21.25 26. There shall be signes in the Sun and in the Moon and in the Stars and upon the Earth distress of Nations with perplexity the Sea and the Waters roaring mens hearts failing them for fear c. It shall not be I say such a fear a hea●t-failing but a heart-enlarging fear not such a● fear as they have or rather as hath them who have their hope only in this life these shall fear with an amazing desponding despairing fear but such a fear as they have who through grace have risen up to a full assurance of hope or are begotten again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for them The second ground of this fear is the mercy and goodness of God who though he be thus powerful and just yet he will not afflict that is he will not afflict without mercy and tenderness to his people Hence observe God is to
be feared because he is so gracious and full of compassion even while he doth afflict There is mercy with God not to afflict that 's sparing mercy and therefore he is to be feared there is mercy also with God in moderating our afflictions that 's sparing mercy too and therefore he is to be feared The graciousness of God manifested somtimes in sparing to afflict us and often in afflicting us sparingly should move us to fear him both greatly and alwayes and if sparing mercy should move us to fear him then much more should forgiving and pardoning mercy When the Lord Exod. 34.6 7. Passed by before Moses and proclaimed The Lord God merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression and sin c. At this proclamation of grace Moses vers 8. made haste and bowed his head towards the earth and worshipped How graceless then are they who when they hear that God is gracious merciful and abundant in goodness fear him not but grow wanton and abuse his kindness Now they who fear God upon the due consideration either of his power or goodness find their hearts First Much enlarged in the service of God or in doing the work and walking in the wayes of God Isa 60.5 Secondly This fear keeps their hearts to a close communion with God Jer. 32.32 I will put my fear in their heart and they shall not depart from me We usually not only depart but run from those whom we fear but the true fear of God Covenant-fear makes us cling about and keep close to him Thirdly This fear keeps up good thoughts and high estimations of God in the worst times or when he is pleased to bring the greatest troubles upon us An Israelite indeed who feareth the Lord and his goodness Hos 3.5 will say let God do what he will with him Truly God is good to Israel Psal 73.1 Let us consider whether we have these effects of a gracious fear working in our hearts upon the rememb●ance both of the power and mercy of God Men do therefore fear him He respecteth not any that are wise in heart These words as was touched before press the former duty of fearing God inferred from the greatness and excellency of his power judgment j●stice and mercy yet further upon us As if he ●ad said Men do therefore fear him Why Because He respecteth not any that are wise in heart that is in general he respects none who are so wise or wise in such a way as not to fear him upon those fore-mentioned grounds He respecteth not The word is seeth not There is an elegant paranomisie in this verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Videre 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●imer● the words which signifie to fear and to respect or see being very near in sound God doth not see them with respect who do not see him with fear He seeth not any that are wise in heart It cannot be meant of the ordinary sight of the eye that he seeth not the wise in heart God seeth clearly who they are Nor can it be meant of the common apprehension of the mind that he knoweth not the wise in heart God understands fully what they are It must be meant then of a seeing with liking or special approbation God seeth not the wise in hea●t so as to like or app ove them Our translation is full and clear to that fence He respecteth ●ot o● he regardeth not any that are wise in heart that is he takes no notice of them they are not pleasing to him Or thus He respecteth not any that are wise in heart that is as they fear not him so he is not afraid of them He respecteth not any that are Wise in heart O● w●se of heart But some may say Doth not God respect nor regard doth no● he take notice of those that are wise of heart Whom then doth he respect or regard of whom will he take notice if not of the wise in heart Hath the Lord any respect for fooles for ignorant men for ideots for sotts Surely men that are wise in heart are not only very amiable but honourable in the eyes of God Why then is it said He respecteth not any that are wise in heart I answer The wise in heart are of two sorts First there are some wise in heart who are so only in their own opinion in their own conceits or eyes they have great thoughts of their own wisdom and therefore as they are apt to despise men so they are far from the fear of God There is a wisdom in some men opposed to the fear of God whereas true wisdome in any man is the beginning of that fear as that fear is called the beginning of wisdom Psal 111.10 Qui sibi videntur esse sapientes Vulg. The vulgar Latine varie h the forme● part of the verse yet renders this latter part by way of glos● rather than translation They that seem to themselves to be wise and indeed the wise in heart whom God respecteth not are the proudly wise the selfishly wise such as are wise only in themselves and to themselves such as have only that wisdom which the Apostle calleth the wisdom of the flesh or the carnal mind Rom. 8.7 which is not subject to the Law of God nor indeed till mortified can be He that is carnally wise disputes the commands of God and takes the boldness to censure his works such wise men God respecteth not yea they are under his greatest disrespect Secondly Others are truly wise graciously wise wise for their souls wise for heaven wise for happiness submitting their wisdom to the will of God and doing his will They that are thus wise in heart the Lord respects and highly respects how can he do otherwise seeing this is the character of God himself Job 9.4 He is wise in heart and mighty in strength And as God is wise in heart so according to their line and measure they that are godly are wise in heart too Therefore taking our translation the wise in heart intended by Elihu must needs be those that are only carnally wise politickly wise na●urally wise that is wickedly wise or at best vainly or vain-gloriously wise Further should we take the wise in heart for those that are truly wise graci●usly wise yet it must be ackno●ledged that even ●hey may so mis-behave themselves as to miss present respect from God And doubtless Elihu observing that Job had spoken somewhat highly of himself and did not carry it humbly enough under the hand of God though his spirit was broken and brought down at last checks him here by telling him God respecteth not any that are wise in heart no not him in that case and frame of spirit as lifted up in his own wisdom Yea Taking wise in heart in this best sence for the graciously wise it is not for their wisdom and holiness that God respecteth or favoureth them As he will