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A11649 Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, the booke of the Psalmes, and the Song of Songs, or, Canticles VVherein the Hebrevv vvords and sentences, are compared with, and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions, and other records and monuments of the Hebrewes: but chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures, Moses his words, lawes and ordinances, the sacrifices, and other legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of Israel, are explained. With an advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew text, and allegation of the Rabbines in these annotations. As also tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the annotations upon each severall booke. By Henry Ainsworth.; Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, and the booke of the Psalmes Ainsworth, Henry, 1571-1622? 1627 (1627) STC 219; ESTC S106799 2,398,875 1,194

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R of it is taken away The Greeke version favoureth this for it translateth yet they kindled fire upon Moab Vers. 31. the land of the Amorite in Greeke all the cities of the Amorites This countrey which before had been the Moabites was conquered by the Amorites and so became their land and was taken from them by Israel and inhabited as is after shewed in Numb 32. 33 34 c. Vers. 32. Iazer a citie also that had beene sometime the Moabites Ier. 48. 32. but ●ow the Amorites the land about it was goodly pasture ground and was after given to the tribe of Ga● Numb 32. 1 3 34 35. daughters that is the townes or villages as the Greeke and Chaldee explaine it see vers 25. Vers. 33. the way of Bashan that is as the Greeke translateth the way which leadeth unto Basan This Basan which the Chaldee calleth Matnan was a goodly soile the pastures nourished strong and fat cattell whereto the Scripture hath often reference as in Deut. 32. 14. A 〈…〉 s 4. 1. Mic. 7. 14. Ierem. 50. 19. Og another King of the Amorites a Giant of great statute See Deut. 3. where this historie is repeated and inlarged Vers. 35. they possessed or they inherited his ●and These countries God gave unto Israel as the first-fruits of their inheritance after their wearisome travels and troubles in the wildernesse by which they were to be encouraged against the residue of their enemies beyond the river as Moses afterward saith Thine eyes have seene all that Iehovah your God hath done unto these two Kings so will Iehovah doe unto all the kingdomes whither thou passest ye shall not feare them for Iehovah your God he will fight for you And Iehovah will doe unto them as hee did to Sihon and to Og Kings of the Amorites and to the land of them whom he destroyed Deut. 3. 21 22. and 31. 4. For which also they were to be thankfull unto God and sing his praises as David after teacheth them saying Confesse ye to Iehovah for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever To him which smote great kings for his mercy endureth for ever And slew famous kings for his mercy endureth for ever Sihon king of the Amorites for his mercie endureth for ever And Og the king of Bashan for his mercie endureth for ever And gave their land for an heritage for his mercie endureth for ever Even an heritage unto Israel his servant for his mercie endureth for ever Psal. 136. 1. 17. 22. CHAP. XXII 〈◊〉 Balak king of Moab sendeth for Balaam a Prophet to curse Israel 8 Balaam consulting with the Lord is forbidden to goe 15 Balak sendeth the second time and Balaam asking againe of the Lord is permitted to goe 22 An Angell would have slaine him If if his asse had not turned aside which dumbe 〈◊〉 speaking with mans voice forbade the Prophets foolishnesse 31 Balaams eyes being opened seeth the Angell confesseth his sinne and offereth to turne 〈◊〉 but is willed to goe forward 36 Balak goeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Balaam and entertaineth him royally ANd the sonnes of Israel set forward and encamped in the plaines of Moab on this side Iordan by Iericho 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Balak the sonne of Zippor saw all that Israel had done to the Amorites And Moab was sore afraid of the people because they were many and Moab was irked because of the sonnes of Israel And Moab said unto the Elders of Midian Now will this company lick up all that are round about us as the oxe licketh up the greene grasse of the field And Balak the sonne of Zippor was King of Moab at that time And hee sent messengers unto Balaam the sonne of Beor to Pethor which is by the river of the land of the sonnes of his people to call him saying Behold a people is come out from Egypt behold they cover the eye of the land and they abide over against me Now therefore come I pray thee curse me this people for they are mightier than I peradventure I shall be able to smite them and shall drive them out of the land for I know that he whom thou blessest is blessed and he whom thou cursest is cursed And the Elders of Moab and the Elders of Midian went and divinations in their hand and they came unto Balaam and spake unto him the words of Balak And he said unto them Lodge here 〈◊〉 ●ight and I will bring you word againe as Iehovah shall speake unto me and the Princes of Moab abode with Balaam And God came unto Balaam and said What men are these with thee And Balaam said unto God Balak the sonne of Zippor King of Moab hath sent unto me Behold a people is come out from Egypt and covereth the eie of the land now come curse me them peradventure I shall be able to fight against them and shall drive them out And God said unto Balaam Thou shalt not goe with them thou shalt not curse the people for they are blessed And Balaam ●ose up in the morning and said unto the Princes of Balak Goe you unto your land for Iehovah refuseth to give me leave to go with you And the Princes of Moab rose up and came unto Balak and said Balaam refuseth to come with us And Balak yet againe sent Princes moe and more honorable than they And they came to Balaam and said to him Thus saith Balak the sonne of Zippor Be not thou letted I pray thee from comming unto me For honouring I will honour thee very greatly and whatsoever thou shalt say unto me I will doe come therfore I pray thee curse me this people And Balaam answered and said unto the servants of Balak If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold I cannot goe beyond the mouth of Iehovah my God to doe lesse or more And now I pray you tarry you also here this night that I may know what Iehovah will speake unto me more And God came unto Balaam by night and said unto him If the men be come to call thee rise up goe with them but yet the word which I shall speake unto thee that shalt thou doe And Balaam rose up in the morning and sadled his Asse and went with the Princes of Moab And Gods anger was kindled because hee went and the Angell of Iehovah see himselfe in the way for an adversarie against him and hee was riding upon his Asse and two of his young men were with him And the Asse saw the Angell of Iehovah standing in the way his sword drawne in his hand and the Asse turned aside out of the way and went into the field and Balaam smote the Asse to turne her into the way And the Angell of Iehovah stood in a path of the vineyards a wall being on this side and a wall on that side And the Asse saw the Angell of Iehovah and shee thrust her selfe unto the wall and thrust Balaams foot against the wall and he smote her againe
sittest for ever in heaven thy memoriall or remembrance of thee so Psa. 135. 13. from Exod. 3. 15. Vers. 14. the appointed time promised for restauration of the Church as Dan. 9. 2. 24 25. c. Ier. 29. 10. Vers. 15. delight or doe favour the stones though ruinous as Nehem. 2. 13 c. and 4. 2. Zach. 1. 12. Vers. 18. the lowly so the Greeke here turneth it which elsewhere we call heath that groweth in the wildernesse Ier. 17. 6. and 48. 6. by the name in Hebrew it seemeth to be some naked shrub and so a fit resemblance of Gods afflicted people made low naked and desolate by their enemies Or we may turne it the broken downe or ruined from Ier. 51. 58. Vers. 19. This shall be or Let this be written to wit for remembrance to ages after as Ex● 17. 14. Deut. 31. 19. 21. This sheweth these to be prophesses for our times created that is restored and made a new as Ps. 104. 30. Esa. 65. 18. created in Christ Iesus unto good workes Eph. 2. 10. So a people borne Psal. 22. 32. Vers. 20. the height of his holinesse that is his holy high place or his high sanctuary meaning heaven This is taken from Deut. 26. 15. Vers. 21. groaning or mournfull cry so Psal. 79. 11. sonnes of death appointed to die as Psal. 79. 11. Vers. 24. in the way in the course of my life see Psal. 2. 12. He respecteth the affliction of Israel in the way that God led them thorow the wildernesse Deut. 8. 2 3. Vers. 25. take me not away or make me not ascend see Iohn 12. 32. The Chaldee addeth take mee not away out of this world bring mee unto the world that is to come Vers. 26. Afore-time that is At the beginning as Heb. 1. 10. where these things spoken to God are applied to Christ to prove his god head Vers. 27. shalt stand that is endure or continue as the Greeke expresseth it Heb. 1. 11. change them by folding them up as the Greeke explaineth Heb. 1. 12. for the heavens when they are changed shall be folden like a booke Esa. 34. 4. V. 28. art the same or art he that is unchangeable Mal. 3. 6. Iam. 1. 17. Vers. 29. shall dwell to wit in Sion vers 14. 22. as is also expressed Psal. 69. 36 37. before thee that is so long as thou dost dure meaning for ever as the Greeke well explaineth it So before the Moone and Sunne Psal. 72. 5. 17. is so long as the Moone and Sunne endure PSAL. CIII David stirreth up his soule to blesse God for his mercies 6 He remembreth Gods former actions to his people 8 His pitie 9 Patience 10 Clemency 15 Mans frailty 17 Gods constancy in his graces for which all are to blesse him A Psalme of David MY soule blesse thou Iehovah and all my inward parts the Name of his Holinesse My soule blesse thou Iehovah forget not all his rewards That mercifully pardoneth all thine iniquities that healeth all thy sicknesses That redeemeth thy life from the pit of corruption that crowneth thee with mercy and tender pitties That satiateth thy mouth with good things thy youth is renewed as an Eagles Iehovah doth justices and iudgements to all oppressed He made knowne his waies to Moses his actions to the sonnes of Israel Iehovan is pittifull and gracious long suffering and much of mercy Hee will not contend to continuall aye neither keepe his anger for ever He hath not done to us according to our sinnes nor rewarded us according to our iniquities But as is the height of the heavens above the earth so strong is his mercy over them that feare him As farre remote as the East is from the West so farre hath he removed our trespasses from us As a father hath pitty on his sonnes Iehovah hath pitty on them that feare him For he knoweth our forming remembring that we are dust Sorry man his daies are as grasse as a flower of the field so flourisheth he For a wind passeth over it and it is not and the place thereof shall not know it any more But the mercy of Iehovah endureth from eternity and unto eternity upon them that feare him and his justice to the childrens children To them that keepe his covenant and that remember his precepts for to doe them Iehovah hath firmely prepared his throne in the Heavens and his Kingdome ruleth over all Blesse Iehovah ye his Angels mighty of strength doing his Word hearkning to the voice of his Word Blesse Iehovah all ye his hosts his ministers doing his pleasure Blesse Iehovah all ye his workes in all places of his domination my soule blesse thou Iehovah Annotations ALl his rewards that is any of his benefits All is often used for any Psal. 147. 20. 1 King 10. 20. and rewards for benefits see Psal. 13. 6. Vers. 3. sicknesses all diseases griefes and punishments in soule or body and spiritually sinnes are meant by the word sicknesses Exod. 15. 26. Deut. 28. 59 61. Esa. 33. 24. See also Psal. 41. 5. and 147. 3. Vers. 4. pit of corruption death and the grave the Chaldee saith from Gehenna or Hell whither men hasten by their sinnes till God by chastisement bringeth them to repentance and then spareth them See this at large handled Iob 33. 19 23 24 27 28 30. Vers. 5. good things Hebr. the good thing see the Notes on Psal. 65. 5. is renewed or thou renewest thy selfe as an Eagle as thy youth thy flesh being fresher than in childhood thou returning to the dayes of thy youth as is said Iob 33. 25. This change is by the renewing of the minde Rom. 12. 2. wrought by the holy Ghost Tit. 3. 5. The Chaldee applieth it to renuing in the world to come as an eagles which casteth her feathers yeerely and new grow up whereby she seemeth fresh and young flyeth high and liveth long Compare Esa. 40. 31. Vers. 6. justices that is all manner justice and that which is chiefest Things are often spoken of plurally for their excellency So wisdomes Pro. 9. 1. Vers. 7. his waies wherein men ought to walk as Exod. 18. 20. Psal. 25. 4 5. or wherein him-selfe walketh his administration his workes as Psal. 77. 20. Iob 40. 14. This latter seemeth most meant here by comparing it with Exod. 33. 13. and 34. 6 7. Vers. 8. long suffering or slow to anger see Psal. 86. 15. Vers. 9. contend or chide compare Esa. ●7 16. keepe understand his anger as both Greeke and Chaldee do explaine it sometime the Hebrew it selfe manifesteth the defect as he set 1 Chron. 18. 6. that is he set garrisons 2 Sam. 8. 6. This phrase is taken from the Law Lev. 19. 18. So Ier. 3. 5. Nahum 1. 2. See also Psal. 109. 21. Vers. 13. Iehovah hath pitty the Chaldee expounds it the Word of the Lord hath pitty So in verse 19. for Iehovah is the Word of the Lord. Vers. 14. our forming that is our formed nature and
c. and thus it might be Davids infirmity or indeed every man in respect of God is alier and unable to helpe in time of need Numb 23. 19. Rom. 3. 4. Psal. 33. 17. Vers. 12. for all so the Greeke supplieth the word for and by rewards he meaneth benefits as vers 7. Compare 1 Thes. 3. 9. 2 Chron. 32. 25. Vers. 13. the cup of salvations or of healths that is of thanksgiving for Gods saving health and deliverance of me For mercies received the Israelites used to offer peace or thanke offerings whereof they did eat and rejoyce before the Lord and at their bankers tooke up the cup of wine in their hands and blessed God called thereupon the cup of blessing 1 Cor. 10. 16. So our Lord at the feast of the Passeover tooke the cup and gave thankes Luk. 22. 17. call on that is pray and praise God or call in that is proclaime and preach Gods mercies so vers 17. Vers. 15. Precious c. that is God will not easily suffer his Saints to be slaine see Psal. 72. 14. So the soule is said to be precious when the life is spared 1 Sam. 26. 31. 2 King 1. 13. Vers. 16. handmaid borne thy servant in thy house see Psal. 86. 16. bands that is hast set me at liberty as Iob 39. 8. from afflictions Esa. 28. 22. a similitude taken from captives Esa. 52. 2. Vers. 17. confession that is a thanke-offering see Psal. 50. 14. PSAL. CXVII The Gentiles are exhorted to praise God for his mercy and truth PRaise Iehovah all ye Gentiles laud him all ye peoples For his mercy is mighty towards us and the faithfulnesse of Iehovah endureth for ever Halelu-jah Annotations GEntiles or nations all which are exhorted to glorifie God for obtaining mercy by Christ who hath received us into the glory of God as the Apostle sheweth from this Scripture Rom. 15. 7. 11. PSAL. CXVIII An exhortation to praise God for his mercy 5 The Psalmist by his experience sheweth how good it is to trust in God 19 Vnder the type of the Psalmist the comming of Christ in his kingdome is expressed COnfesse ye to Iehovah for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Let Israel now say that his mercie endureth for ever Let the house of Aaron now say that his mercy endureth for ever Let them that feare Iehovah now say that his mercy endureth for ever Out of straight affliction I called on Iah Iah answered me with a large roomth Iehovah is for me I will not feare what man can doe unto me Iehovah is for me with them that helpe mee and I shall see on them that hate me It is better to hope for safety in Iehovah than to trust in man It is better to hope for safety in Iehovah than to trust in bounteous Princes All nations compassed me but in the name of Iehovah I cut them off They compassed me yea they compassed mee but in the name of Iehovah I cut them off They compassed mee as Bees they were quenched as a fire of thornes but in the name of Iehovah I cut thē off Thrusting thou thrustedst me to fall and Iehovah holpe me Iah is my strength and song and he hath beene to me for a salvation A voice of shouting of salvation is in the tents of the just the right hand of Iehovah doth valiantnesse The right hand of Jehovah is exalted the right hand of Iehovah doth valiantnesse I shall not die but live and shall tell the works of Iah Iah chastising chastised me and gave me not to the death Open ye unto me the gates of justice that I may enter into them may confesse Iah This gate of Iehovah into which the just shall enter I will confesse thee because thou hast answered me and hast been to me for a salvation The stone which the builders refused is become for head of the corner This was of Iehovah it is marvellous in our eies This is the day Iehovah made let us be glad and rejoyce in it Oh Iehovah save now oh Iehovah prosper now Blessed be hee that commeth in the name of Iehovah wee blesse you out of the house of Iehovah God is Iehovah and hath given light unto us binde ye the feast offerings with cords unto the hornes of the Altar Thou art my God and I will confesse thee my God I will exalt thee Confesse yee to Iehovah for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Annotations FOr he or that he is good so vers 29. Vers. 4. that feare strangers of all nations as before he mentioned the Church and Ministers see Psal. 115. 9. Vers. 5. with a large roomth that is by bringing me into it as is expressed Ps. 18. 20. and 4. 2. Vers. 6. for me to wit an helper as the Greeke explaineth which the Apostle followeth Heb. 13. 6. So the Chaldee saith the word of the Lord is for mine helpe so in vers 7. See also Ps. 56. 5 12. Vers. 7. with them that helpe mee in stead of all helpers see a like phrase Psal. 54. 6. The Greeke saith mine helper see on them to wit their reward or vengeance as the Chaldee explaineth See Psal. 54. 9. and 91. 8. Vers. 10. but in c. or in the name of Iehovah I trust that I shall cut them off The Greek agreeth with the former the Chaldee with this latter and so in the verses following Vers. 12. were quenched or on the contrary were kindled as both the Greeke and Chaldee doe translate it Sundry words signifie contraries as barac to blesse and to curse 1 King 21. 13. The fire of thornes is both soone kindled and soone quenched so Christs enemies for or but in the name c. Vers. 13. Thrusting c. that is Thou diddest sorely thrust speaking to the enemie the Chaldee explaineth it my sinne thrust mee to fall Thrusting thrust is an Hebraisme often used as after vers 18. So Cutting shall be cut off Numb 15. 30. that is shall die without mercy Heb. 10. 28. Vers. 14. song or melodie that is whom I sing laud unto This is taken from Exod. 15. 2. so Isa. 12. 3. for a salvation or a salvation that is hath saved or rescued me against mine enemies as 2 Sam. 10. 11. where the like phrase is used so after vers 21. the word for may be omitted as sometime in the Hebrew it selfe 2 Chron. 18. 21. compared with 1 King 22. 22. Vers. 15. salvation that is victorie as Psal. 98. 1. or thankes for salvation as Psal. 116. 13. See Rev. 19. 1. tents that is dwelling places but spoken of as in warres or for short continuance as Heb. 11. 9. So tents of the Saints Rev. 20 9. See also 2 Chron. 31. 2. Vers. 18. gave or delivered so Ezek. 31. 14. Vers. 19. gates of justice that is of Gods Sanctuary the gates whereof were to be opened by the Priests and Levites for men to come and serve the Lord 1 Sam. 3. 15. called gates of
vaporous clouds drawne from the end of the earth or sea commeth rain as it is said he calleth for the waters of the sea and powreth them out on the faoe of the earth Amos 5. 8. So Ier. 10. 13. and 51. 16. with the raine or to the raine so fire and water are mixed in one cloud treasures or cosfers store-houses see Psal. 33. 7. Vers. 8. from man c. that is both men and beasts see Psal. 78. 50 51. Exod. 12. 12 29. Vers. 9. Pharaoh the King who was plagued first in Egypt and after drowned in the red sea Exod. 7. and 8. and 9. and 10. and 14. Vers. 10. Many or ample great nations the Amorites Canaanites c. Vers. 11. Ogh a giant whose bedsted was of iron nine cubits long and foure broad See Num. 21. 23 35. Deut. 3. 11. kingdomes thirtie and one as is reckoned Iosh. 12. 9 24. Vers. 12. a possession or heritage see Psal. 78. 55. Vers. 14. for or concerning his servants this is taken from Deut. 32. 36. Vers. 15. idols compare this that followeth with Psal. 115. 4. c. Vers. 19. house of Israel that is the posteritie of Israel so after of Aaron to whom the Priest-hood was committed Exod. 28. 1. Vers. 20. of Levi which were taken from among the sons of Israel and given and joyned with the Priests to minister unto them Num. 18. 2 6. ye that feare all strangers converts profelytes Act. 2. 5. and 10. 35. PSAL. CXXXVI An exhortation to confesse Gods goodnesse power and wisedome shewed in the creation of the world the deliverance of Israel out of Egypt and many other mercies COnfesse ye to Iehovah for he is good for his mercie endureth for ever Confesse ye to the God of Gods for his mercy endureth for ever Confesse ye to the Lord of Lords for his mercy endureth for ever To him that doth wondrous great things himselfe alone for his mercy endureth for ever To him that made the heavens with prudencie for his mercy endureth for ever To him that spread out the earth above the waters for his mercie endureth for ever To him that made the great lights for his mercle endureth for ever The Sunne for dommion by day for his mercie endureth for ever The Moone and stars for the dominions by night for his mercie endureth for ever To him that smote Egypt in their first-borne for his mercie endureth for ever And brought forth Israel from mids of them for his mercie endureth for ever With a strong hand and with a stretched out arme for his mercie endureth for ever To him that parted the red sea into parts for his mercie endureth for ever And made Israel to passe thorow the mids of it for his mercie endureth for ever And shooke off Pharaoh and his power into the red sea for his mercie endureth for ever To him which led his people in the wildernesse for his mercie endureth for ever To him which smote great Kings for his mercie endureth for ever And killed magnificent Kings for his mercie endureth for ever Sihon King of the Amorites for his mercie endureth for ever And Ogh the King of Bashan for his mercie endureth for ever And gave their land for a possession for his mercie endureth for ever A possession to Israel his servant for his mercie endureth for ever Which remembred us in our base estate for his mercie endureth for ever And hath redeemed us from our distresser for his mercie endureth for ever Which giveth bread to all flesh for his mercie endureth for ever Confesse yee to the God of heavens for his mercie endureth for ever Annotations MErcie the Hebrew Chesed signifieth a sacred affection of mercie pietie grace benignitie and bountifull good will towards any without respect of merit In man sometime it is the pious benigne affection wherewith hee doth good sometime the mercie or bountihed which he receiveth as in Isa. 40. 6. it is the glorious grace which man hath from God called by the holy Ghost in Greeke doxa glorie 1 Pet. 1. 24. usually the Greeke version hath for it eleos mercie which the New Testament alloweth Mat. 9. 13. from Hos. 6. 6. Hereof a godly man is called Chasid gracious or mercifull see Psal. 4. 4. Vers. 8. dominion or rule soveraigntie see Gen. 1. 16. Vers. 10. Aegypt or the Aegyptians see Psal. 78. 43 51. Vers. 13. parts or divisions By the Iewes tradition the red sea was parted into twelve several parts for every of the twelve tribes to goe thorow Vers. 15. shooke off that is overthrew so Exod. 14. 27. Vers. 18. magnificent mightie and excellent mentioned after and Psal. 135. 10 11 12. Vers. 24. redeemed or delivered broken off and pulled away as by violence for so also the word signifieth Psal. 7. 3. Vers. 25. bread that is food Bread is used for all meats so in the Greeke to buy bread Mark 6. 36. is to buy meat or victuals Mat. 14. 15. Therefore this word is used also for beasts food Psalm 147. 9. Vers. 8. make my bed or spread my couch in Greeke descend Compare Amos 9. 2. Vers. 9. wings of the morning or day-dawning which is said to have wings for that it speedily flieth over all the aire of the sea meaning the furthest parts of the world for so the sea often signifieth Psal. 65. 6. and 72. 8. Isa. 24. 14. Vers. 11. shroud over-dim me as with the darke twi-light or shall bruise shall crush me downe as Gen. 3. 15. so the Greeke shall tread me downe Vers. 12. darkneth that is hideth Compare Iob 34. 22. Ier. 23. 24. as is c. or like darknesse like light that is they are equall as that which in Mat. 22. 30. is like in Luk. 20. 36. is equall Vers. 13. covered that is safely kept and protected as the Greeke saith holpen me or covered me with skin and flesh c. as Iob 10. 11. Vers. 14. fearefully or in fearefull sorts to wit I am made or these are fearefull things the Chaldee saith thou hast done fearefull things marvellously made or excellently made elsewhere this word is used for separated from and excelling others see Psal. 4. 4. Vers. 15. my bone that is bones any of them or my substance or strength for thereof the bone is named embrodered that is cunningly wrought with Nerves Sinewes Veines variety of limbs A similitude taken from broiderie worke Psal. 45. 15. nether places of the earth so hee calleth his mothers wombe because of Gods secret and unknowne making of men there Eccles. 11. 5. And thus may the like phrase Ephes. 4. 9. be understood of Christs incarnation Vers. 16. My unformed substance or Mine embryon which is the body in the wombe before it hath perfect shape or unwrought up as the Greeke here translateth it The Hebrew name is of wrapping or winding up like a bottome my wound-up masse or body all of them all my members wound up in that my embrion or unperfected substance Or generally
the Iebusite the inhabitant for which in 1 Chron. 11. 4. is written the Iebusite the inhabitants which plainly sheweth this name to be put for the whole nation See also before Gen. 3. 2. and 4. 20. Iebus the sonne of Canaan in his country was a City called by his name Iebus and Salem and last of all Ierusalem Iudg. 19. 10. Gen. 14. 18. 1 Chron. 11. 4. These and their brethren before and after named dwelt in the land which God gave the Israelites the Amorites who were a mighty people whose height was like the height of Cedars and they were strong as okes Amos 2. 9. Girgasite called also Gergesons Mat. 8. 28. and Gadarens Luke 8. 26. who desired Christ to depart out of their coasts Mat. 8. 34. Vers. 17. the Evite Hebr. Chivvite in Greeke Euite that is Evites a people mentioned after in Gen. 34. 2. and 36. 2. Exod. 3. 8. of them came the Gibeonites whose lives were spared by Iosua Ios. 11. 19. The rest which follow dwelt also in cities neere the former as the Arkite in Arka by the bottome of mount Lebanon the Semarite in Semaraim which after fell to the Benjamites Ios. 18. 22. and so the rest Vers. 19. Sidon a City in the North west part of Canaan the borders of the land which God gave the Israelites are here briefly described but purposely and largely in Num. 34. Gaza a City of the Philistines Iudg. 16. situate in the South-west of Canaan Sodom in Hebrew Sedom of this and the rest see the history Gen. 18. and 19. They lay in the South-east part of the land of Canaan Vers. 21. there was borne to weet an off-spring or children set downe afterward Such words are often to be understood as is shewed on Gen. 4. 20. sonnes of Heber or of Eber that is of Gods Church which when others fell away continued in Hebers posterity of whom came Abram the Hebrew Gen. 14. 13. and his children were called Hebrews Gen. 39. 14. 17. Exod. 1. 15. 16. And though Sem were father of many moe sonnes then of Hebers yet are they counted Sems in speciall for retaining his faith and promises as Rom. 9. 8. So on the contrary Cham is called the father of Canaan Gen. 9. 18. who had other sonnes also but on Canaan his youngest was Chams curse visibly executed Gen. 9. 25. as Sems blessing was on Hebers seed Gen. 14. 13. 19. brother of Iapheth he was also brother of Cham but the Scripture calleth them brethren more especially that are allyed also in qualities as Sem and Iapheth for good Gen 9. 23. 27. Simeon and Levi for evill Gen. 49. 5. the elder or the great to weet in birth for Iapheth was borne before Sem as is observed in Gen. 5. 32. and the Greeke version here plainly sheweth that Iapheth was the elder So greater is used for elder lesser for younger in Gen. 27. 1. 15. and often in the Scriptures Vers. 22. Elam of whom came the Elamites which seated in a Province called Elam in the upper part of Persia Dan. 8. 2. Esay 21. 2. They proved enemies to the sonnes of Heber and were for it punished but in the end obtained mercy Esay 22. 6. Ier. 49. 36. 39. Act. 2. 9. Assur or Ashshur of him came the Assyrians and their land was named Assyria much spoken of in the Scriptures they were the scourge of Israel Hebers children 2 King 15. 19. 29. Esay 10. 5. and 36. 1. c. Arphaxad or Arpachshad he hath no speciall genealogy or country in Scripture but that heris the father of our Lord Christ after the flesh Luk. 3. 36 Lud of whom came the Lydians a people in Asia differing from Lud sonne of Mizraim sonne of Cham of whom came the Lydians in Africa neere Cush or Ethiopia See before v. 13. Aram of whom came the Aramites that is after the Greeke Syrians enemies also to Gods people Iudg. 3. 10. 2 Sam. 8. 5. 6. 1 King 20. c. For Aram seating in the land of Shur in Asia his country is therefore called in the Hebrew by his name Aram in the Greeke Syria as of Asshur commeth Assyria the new Testament alwayes followeth the Greeke name Luke 4. 27. Mat. 4. 14. Arams land had many parts as Padan Aram Gen. 28. 2. Aram Naharaim or Mesopotamia Gen 24. 10. Aram of Damascus 2 Sam. 8. 6. Aram Zobah Psal. 60. 2. Aram Maacah 1 Chron. 19. 6. and Aram beth Rehob 2 Sam. 10. 6. Vers. 24. Salah Heb. Shelach Vers. 25. Phalee or Phalee as Luke 3. 35. in Hebrew Peleg that signifieth division Vers. 20. Ioktan or Ioktan of him and his posterity though here are reckoned many sonnes the Scriptures make little mention but by their names compared with countries names in humane writers they seeme to have seated in the East Indies and there to have increased to mighty nations but falne from the faith of their father Heber that they are not worthy to be reckned for his seed Chasarmaveth in Greeke Sarmoth this mans posterity seeme to have dwelt in Sarmatia a great Country beyond Germany and named as is like of this man Vers. 27. Hadoram in Greeke Hedorra of the first part of this name Hado some thinke Hodu that is India was so called Esth. 1. 1. Vers. 29. Ophir in Greeke Oupheir from this mans land in India Solomons ships fetched store of fine gold precious stones c. 2 Chron. 9. 10. 13 21. 1 King 9. 27. 28. and the gold it selfe was called by figure of speech Ophir Iob 22. 24. and in other languages Obruson and Obryzum of Ophyrizum pure gold Vers. 30. their dwelling Hebr. their seat Mesha in Greeke Massee Sephar in Greeke Saphera Vers. 32. the families in Greeke the tribes or kinreds By this genealogy here compared with the names of nations in humane Writers it appeareth how God hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth and hath determined the times before appointed and the bounds of their habitation Act. 17. 26. CHAP. XI 1 One Language was in all the world 3. The building of Babel 5 for which God sent the confusion of languages 10 The generations and lives of the second ten Patriarchs as 11 of Sem 12 Arphaxad 14 Salah 16 Heber 18 Phaleg 20. Ragau 22 Saruch 24 Nachor 26 Thara and Abram 30 whose wife Sarai is barren 31 Thara and Abram remove from Vr of the Chaldees towards Canaan but tarry at Charran where Thara dyeth ANd all the earth was of one lip and of one speech And it was when they journyed from the east that they found a plaine in the land of Shinar and they seated there And they sayd every man to his neighbour Goe too let us make bricks and burne them with a burning and they had bricke for stone and slime had they for morter And they said Goe too let us build us a City and a Tower and let the top thereof reach to the
Chaldee keepeth here the word used in the former verse the present all that is inough of all the Greeke turneth it plurally all things A more full acknowledgment and contentation then Esaus who said he had much vers 9. he took it Iakob herein had the preeminence for it is more blessed to give than to receive Act. 20. 35. and Abram would not bee inriched by the king of Sodom Gen. 14. 23. The Hebrew Doctors in Bresith rabbah here say that all the gifts which Iakob gave to Esau the kings of the world shall restore unto the King Christ as Psal. 72. 10. Vers. 12. and goe meaning unto Seir where hee would lovingly entertaine his brother and gratifie his kinenesse By Iakobs answer in vers 14. it seemeth he did so understand him Vers. 13. with yong or giving-sucke as the Chaldee translateth it The Hebrew may imply both as 1 Sam. 6. 7. Vers. 14. will lead on or will gently-lead softly As Iakob here with his flocke so Christ the good sheepherd is prophesied to deale with his people Esa. 40. 11. the foot of the worke that is the pace of the cattell as they are able to goe called a worke because about them his labour was imployed So in Exod. 22. 8. Thus Christ preached as men were able to heare Mark 4. 33. so did his Apostles becomming weake to the weake 1 Cor. 3. 2. 9. 22. Rom. 15. 1. For foot the Greek translateth leisure Vers. 15. appoint or set and consequently leave as the Greeke and Chaldee doe translate it So in Exod. 10. 24. let mee finde grace that is grant my desire and leave none So to finde grace is to have a request granted Gen. 34. 11. and 47. 25. 1 Sam. 25. 8. Or as the Greeke translateth it is inough that I have found grace as being a thankfull refusall and so the Hebrew phrase seemeth elsewhere to import as in Ruth 2. 13. 2 Sam. 16. 4. Vers. 17. an house in Greeke houses they were cottages for present use for hee stayed not there long Succoth that is boothes or tents hereof the place had the name and so the citie that was after there builded was called Succoth Iudg. 8. 15. 16. Likewise the place whither Iakobs sonnes first came after they went out of Egypt was called Succoth Exod. 12. 37. and in memoriall of their dwelling in boothes God appointed a yeerely feast for all the people called the feast of Succoth that is of boothes or tents made of green boughes of trees wherein they dwelt seven daies in a yeere Levit. 23. 34 42. 43. V. 18. came safe or came in peace sound whole he and all that he had having got the victory over all troubles and dangers according to the promises of God Gen. 31. 3. 32. 28. The Hebrew Salem is so interpreted here by the Chaldee paraphrase safe or sound but the Greeke maketh it the name of a place to Salem the citie of the Sichimites Howbeit we finde elsewhere no mention of such a citie Yet if so it be understood it is an other then that Salem where Melchisedek raigned Gen. 14. 18. which was Ierusalem from which this Salem was 40. miles distant In Ioh. 3. 23. there is mention of a Salem by Enon where Iohn baptised which is thought to bee that Saalim spoken of in 1 Sam. 9. 4. Sechem or Sychem as in Greeke it is called Act. 7. 16. called also Sichar Ioh. 4. 5. Padan Aram or Mesopotamia of Syria as the Greeke hath it See Gen. 25 20. encamped pitched his tents Vers. 19. he bought yet was that land given of God to him and his fathers Gen. 12. 6. 7. but hoc was a pilgrim on it as were they Heb. 11. 9. and in hope of that promise in time to be fulfilled he purchased this field as Ieremie bought a field for like signification Ier. 32. 9. 15. After it became the portion of Ioseph his children Ios. 24. 32. Hamor or Emmor as it is written Act. 7. 16. in Hebrew Chamor 100. lambs so the Greek Chaldee both translate the word Others thinke they 〈…〉 ere pieces of money on which the images of lambs were stamped So in Ios. 24. 32. Iob 42. 11. It hath beene an ancient custome in many nations to buy and sell not onely for money but by exchange of one thing for another as among the Greekes Homer Iliad 8. Vers. 20. an altar for thanksgiving to God as his fathers had done Gen. 12. 7. and 13. 18. c. El Elohe Israel that is God the God of Israel so named as a 〈…〉 stimoniall of his faith and a memoriall of the mercie of God who gave him that new name Gen. 32. 28. The like Moses did Exod. 17. 15. calling his altar Iehovah Nissi The Greek here translateth he called upon the God of Israel also the Chaldee he sacrificed upon it before God the God of Israel About this time fell out the departure of Iudah from his brethren and mariage with a Canaanitish woman mentioned in Gen. 38. 1. c. see the annotations there CHAP. XXXIV 1 Dinah Iakobs daughter is ravished by Sechem 4 He sueth to marie her 8 Hamor his father followeth the suit 13 Iakobs sonnes offer the condition of Circumcision to the Sechemites 20 Hamor and Sechem perswade them to accept it 25 The sonnes of Iakob upon that advantage slay them 27 and spoile their citie 30 Iakob for it reproveth Simeon and Levi. ANd Dinah the daughter of Leah which shee bare unto Iakob went-out to see the daughters of the land And Sechem the sonne of Hamor the Evite prince of the land saw her and he took her and lay with her and humbled her And his soule clave unto Dinah the daughter of Iakob and he loved the damsell and spake to the heart of the damsell And Sechem said unto Hamor his father saying Take mee this maid to wife And Iakob heard that he had defiled Dinah his daughter and his sonnes were with his cattell in the field and Iakob held his peace untill they were come And Hamor the father of Sechem went-out out unto Iakob to speake with him And the sonnes of Iakob came out of the field when they heard it and the men were grieved and they were very wroth because hee had done folly in Israel in lying with Iakobs daughter and so should not be done And Hamor spake with them saying Sechem my sonne his soule is affected unto your daughter I pray you give her unto him to wife And make yee mariages with us and take yee our daughters unto you And yee shall dwell with us and the land shall bee before you dwell and trade you therein and get firme possessions therein And Sechem said unto her father and unto her brethren let mee finde grace in your eyes and what ye shall say unto mee I will give Very largely-aske of me dowry and gift and I will give according as ye shall say unto me and give yee unto mee the damsell
Hebrew doctors gathered from Deut. 21. 13. she shall bewaile her father and her mother a moneth of daies those thirtie daies they might not trim the haire of their head or beard nor weare white new garments nor marrie and the like Maimony ibidem ch 6. Vers. 11. inhabitants Hebrew inhabitant and Canaanite See Gen. 10. 16. heavy in Greek great as before in verse 9. was called Hebrew he that is every one called see the notes on Gen. 16. 14. The mourning Hebr. Abel Mizaim Vers. 15. peradventure or it may be The guilty conscience causeth feare Levit. 26. 36. rewarded him that is done of our owne accord unto him Vers. 16. commanded that is sent some on their message to Ioseph and after went themselves verse 18. The word command is effectually to procure a thing to be done as God commandeth his blessings and mercies by effectuall sending them Psal. 42. 9. and Levit. 25. 21. Deut. 28. 8. where the Greeke translateth send Here the Greeke expoundeth it they came unto Ioseph and said Vers. 17. of the God by this speech they seem both to insinuate their repentance and faith to obtaine mercy at Gods hand and use a reason to obtaine the like at Iosephs For if we forgive men their trespasses our heavenly Father will also forgive us otherwise not Mat. 6 12. 14. 15. Wherefore it is said forgive one another even as God for Christs sake forgave you Ephes. 4. 32. But the Hebrew Doctors observe a difference betweene dammage to our neighbour in his goods and hurts or injurie to his person which here was Iosephs cause They say hee that doth his neighbour dammage in his goods when hee hath paid that which hee ought to pay atonement is made for him But he that hurteth his neighbour although hee gave unto him for satisfaction the five things namely 1. dammage it selfe as when eye must bee given for eye tooth for tooth 2. for the smart 3. for his healing 4. for his resting from his labour 5. for his shame or dishonour of which see the notes on Exod. 21. 19. yet atonement is not made for him yea though he should sacrifice to God all the Rams of Nebaioth Esay 60. 7. yet atonement is not made for him nor his iniquitie forgiven unill he request it of him that was hurt and he doe forgive him Maimony in Misneh Tom. 4. treat of Hurt and dammage chap. 5. S. 9. Vers. 21. unto their hart that is friendly comfortably and which pleased them as that which came into Solomons heart 2 Chron. 7. 11. is expounded that which he was pleased to do 1 King 9. 1. See also the notes on Gen. 34. 3. Here Ioseph is an example of lenitie and readinesse to forgive and to doe good for evill as Christ teacheth all Matt. 5. 44. So the Hebrew canons say It is unlawfull for him that is hurt to bee cruell and not to forgive this is not the way of the seed of Israel But when hee that did the hurt doth request it and aske grace of him once or twise and hee kneweth that hee turnes from his sinne and repenteth of his evill hee shall forgive him Maimony in his said treat of Hurt and dammage ch 5. S. 10. Vers. 23. third generation or third sonnes So was his blessing begun to bee accomplished Gen. 49. 22. and 28. 19. borne that is brought up Of Machir see Num. 32. 39. Vers. 24. visiting c. that is will surely visit meaning in mercy See Gen. 21. 1. This was a testification of his faith in Gods promises as is written by faith Ioseph at his ending made mention of the departure of the sonnes of Israel and gave commandement concerning his bones Heb. 11. 22. The land of Canaan was a signe of their heavenly inheritance as before is shewed on Gen. 12. 5. 17. 8. Heb. 11. 13. 14. 16. and there Christ rising from the dead should bee the first fruits of them that slept by whom the resurrection of the dead which Ioseph exspected was to come 1 Cor. 15. 20. 21. 22. And there many bodies of the Saints which slept arose and came out of the graves after Christs resurrection Matt. 27. 52. 53. Vers. 25. from hence or from this place the Greeke addeth with you This charge was fulfilled when at their going out of Egypt Moses tooke the bones of Ioseph with him Exod. 13. 19. which afterward were buried in Sechem Iakobs purchase and Iosephs sonnes heritage Ios. 24. 32. Stephen sheweth that the other Patriarchs the sonnes of Iakob were buried also in Sychem in the land of Canaan Act. 7. 16. Vers. 26. old Hebrew sonne of 110. yeeres Gen. 5. 32. The same was the age of Iesus or Iosuah when he dyed the conqueror of Canaan and one of Iosephs seed Ios. 24. 29. an arke or chist coffin to be ready at their removall out of Egypt This death of Ioseph whereat the first book of Moses endeth was after the creation of the world 2369. yeeres ANNOTATIONS VPON THE SECOND BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED EXODVS VVHEREIN BY CONFERRING THE HOly Scriptures comparing the Chaldee and Greeke versions and other records of the Hebrewes MOSES his Words Lawes and Ordinances are explained BY HENRY AINSWORTH PSAL. 103. 7. The Lord made knowne his wayes unto Moses his acts unto the sonnes of Israel ACTS 7. 38. This is that Moses which was in the Chruch in the wildernesse with the Angel which spake to him in the mount Sina and with our fathers who received the lively Oracles to give unto us IOHN 1. 17. The Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Iesus Christ. LONDON ¶ Printed by Miles Flesher for John Bellamine and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. The Summe of EXODVS THis second booke of Moses sheweth the increase and oppression of Israel in Egypt the sending of Moses to deliver them the tenne plagues of God upon Egypt the bringing out of Israel with strong hand the leading of them through the sea where Pharaoh was drowned the safe conducting of them in the wildernesse the Covenant betweene God and them at Mount Sina where he gave them Lawes and Iudgements and Statutes ordaining a Priesthood for his service and erected a Tabernacle for to dwell therein among them More particularly ISrael increase are oppressed in Egypt and their sonns drowned Chap. 1 Moses his birth education pietie and persecution 2 Moses keeping sheepe seeth a vision and is sent to deliver Israel 3 He is confirmed by signes is sent with Aaron to Pharaoh and Israel 4 Pharaoh resisteth and vexeth Israel they cry out of Moses and grieve him 5 God incourageth Moses and sends him again to Israel and Pharaoh 6 Moses worketh miracles and is resisted by Pharaohs sorcerers 7 Egypt is plagued with Frogs Lice and Flies Pharaoh is hardned 8 Moe plagues of Murrain Boyls and Haile yet Pharaoh resisteth 9 Plagues of Locusts and Darknesse Pharaoh is more hardned 10 Egypt is appointed to the spoile
the good of Israel I have seene for vengeance upon those that oppresse them In this sense Zacharie said at his death The Lord see it and require it 2 Chron. 24. 22. their taskemasters or his taskmaster speaking of the people as of one man see the notes on Gen. 22. 17. Taskmasters here properly are Exactors and is generally used for such as require and exact either money as in 2 King 23. 35. or any debt Deut. 15. 2. or otherwise doe oppresse any Esa. 53. 7. Here the Greeke translateth it workmasters the Chaldee rulers They figured spirituall tyrants also from whom will deliver his people Esa. 9. 4. and 14. 2. and 60. 17. Vers. 8. am come downe to wit in this vision as the Chaldee translateth I doe appeare or am revealed See Gen. 11. 5. them Hebr. him that is the people The Greeke translateth it them so doth the Holy Ghost in Act. 7. 34. the hand that is the power and dominion as Gen. 16. 6. and 32. 11. So Christ came to deliver us out of the hands of our enemies Luk. 1. 74. whereof this now was a type milke and honey under which all other blessings are comprehended there was no lacke of any thing Deut. 8. 7. 8. 9. Of this country see the notes on Gen. 12. 5. and as the land figured out a heavenly country so milke and honey signified spirituall blessings in Christ Song 4. 11. Psal. 19. 11. Esa. 55. 1. 1 Pet. 2. 2. This praise of the land is often mentioned by this phrase as in Exod. 13. 5. and 33. 3. Lev. 20. 24. Deut. 6. 3. and 11. 9. Ios. 5. 6. Ier. 11. 5. Ezek. 20. 6. And the Israelites upon the first view acknowledged it so to be Num. 13. ●● and yeerely professed the same by Gods co 〈…〉 nt Deut. 26. 9. 15. Yet the rebellious despised it and called Egypt a land that floweth with milke and honey Num. 16. 13. 14. Canaanite that is as the Greeke and Chaldee translate Canaanites Chethites c. See Gen. 10. 16. and 15. 20. So after verse 17. Vers. 10. send thee The secret inspiration which Moses had before from God Exod. 2. 11. Acts 7. 25. is here become an open calling and full commission and hee whom the Israelites had refused saying who made thee a ruler and a judge the same did God send to be a ruler and deliverer by the hand of the Angel which appeared to him in the bramble-bush Act. 7. 35. This sending of Moses is also mentioned as a mercie of God Psal. 105. 26. Mich. 6. 4. Hos. 12. 13. unto Pharaoh the Greeke addeth king of Egypt in Act. 7. 34. it is I will send thee into Egypt bring thou in Greeke thou shalt bring See the notes on Gen. 20. 7. Vers. 12. Certainly or Because I will be the Chaldee saith because my word shall be thine helpe this the present apparition of my glory in the bush which thou seest or this that followeth ye shall serve God at this mount The first was a signe to st engthen Moses in his businesse with Pharaoh Exod. 5. 22. 23. the latter to confirme him against the many rebellions of Israel mentioned in Num. 11. 10. 11. 14. 15. Deut. 9. 22. 23. 24. at this or by this mount This was fulfilled when at mount Sinai the law being given the tabernacle was made and sacrifice and other service performed unto God Exod. 19. and 25. c. which being a mount in the wildernesse in Arabia the worshippers children thereof were in bondage as was Agar and figured the old Testament and those under the same by Moses law Gal. 4. 24. 25. Now wee by Christ are not come thither but unto mount Sion where all the house of Israel and all in the land are to serve the Lord Heb. 12. 18. 22. Ezek. 20. 40. Rev. 14. 1. Vers. 13. what is his name This may imply after what manner and to what end God had now appeared whether for mercie or judgement For God by names manifesteth his workes as after appeareth in Exod. 6. 3. So the Hebrews teach in Elle shemoth rabba upon this place that when God judgeth his creatures hee is called Elohim God when he warreth against the wicked hee is called Sabaoth Lord of hosts when he doth mercie unto the world he is called Iehovah as in Exod. 34. 6. Iehovah Iehovah God mercifull and gracious Vers. 14. I am that I am The Hebrew Ehjeh asher ehjeh properly signifieth I will bee that I will be the Greek translateth I am he that Is. And God is called He that Is that was and that will bee Rev. 16. 5. where this name Ehjeh is opened as also the name Iehovah whereof see Gen. 2. 4. Exod. 6. 3. It implieth Gods eternall and unchangeable Being in himselfe before whom all nations are as nothing Esa. 40. 17. and the constant performing of all his words to be now and for ever that which he was before to Abraham Isaak and Iakob verse 15. So Iesus Christ yesterday and to day the same and for ever Heb. 13. 8. The Rabbines doe thus also explaine this name in Elle shemoth rabba upon this text The blessed God said ●●to Moses say 〈◊〉 them 〈◊〉 have beene and I the same now and I the same 〈◊〉 time to come c. I 〈◊〉 or I will be hath sent c. The Chaldee paraphrase called Ionathans giveth both expositions I ●e that was and hereafter will be hath sent me unto you Vers. 15. my memoriall or the memoriall of mee that whereby I will be remembred and mentioned alwaies To this the Prophets referre us as in Hos. 12. 5. Iehovah God of hosts Iehovah is his memoriall and Iehovah thy name is for ever Iehovah thy memoriall is to generation and generation Ps. 135. 13. and 102. 13. and generation or of generation that is all generations or ages The Chaldee supplieth the word and as the Hebrew elsewhere doth in Psal. 135. 13. saying to every generation and generation Vers. 16. Elders or Senatours in Greeke the senate such were not onely aged men but teachers and governours of the people as among other nations See Gen. 50. 7. By the Elders things were orderly communicated with the multitude as Exod 12. 3. 21. and 19. 3. 7. visiting the Greeke translateth with visitation that is surely or carefully visited and that in mercy as Gen. 21. 1. Albeit from the word twise repeated some of the Hebrewes gather a visitation in mercy concerning Israel and a visitation in judgment concerning the Egyptians for their afflicting of Israel as was promised in Gen. 15. 14. R. Menachem on Exod. 3. Vers. 17. Egypt or the Egyptians as vers 8. and as the Greeke translateth here Canaanite that is Canaanites Chethites c. See verse 8. Vers. 18. met with us that is appeared unto us and so called and commanded us to offer him sacrifice Men are said to meet with God by praier and hee to meet them by appearing and speaking unto
17. 1. name Iehovah which name denoteth both Gods being in himselfe and his giving of being unto that is the performance of his word and promises as is observed on Gen. 2. 4. in which latter respect he here saith he was not knowne to their fathers by this name or as the Greeke and Chaldee translate he manifested not nor make knowne this name They being sustained by faith in Gods almighty power without receiving the thing promised Act. 7. 5. Heb. 11. 9. 10. But now their children should receive the promise and so have full knowledge and experience of Gods power and goodnes and of the efficacie of that his name Iehovah which therefore they sung to his praise upon their full deliverance from the Egyptians Exod. 15. 3. So upon performance of further promises or judgements he saith they shall know him to be Iehovah Esay 49. 23. and 52. 6. and 60. 16. Ezek. 28. 22. 23. 24. 26. and 30. 19. 25. 26. And Christ in whom all Gods promises are yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1. 20. having fulfilled all things for our redemption manifesteth himselfe by this name in the interpretation thereof as that he is Alpha and Omega th● beginning and the ending the Lord who Is and who was and who Is to come even the Almighty Revel 1. 8. 17. 18. Otherwise neither Abraham nor Isaak nor Iacob was without the knowledge of this name Iehovah altogether for by it also in part God revealed himselfe to them as Gen. 15. 7. 8. and 26. 24. 25. and 28. 13. But as the glorious ministration of the Law is said to have no glory in respect of the excellent glory of the Gospel 2 Cor. 3. 10. so this is spoken by comparison here The Iewes of a long time have not used this name but for it they reade Adonai that is Lord. One of themselves hath written thus Why doe the Israelites pray in this world and are not heard Because they know not the plaine name of God which is Iehovah in the world to come the world of the Messias God will make it knowne unto them and then they shall be heard Ialkut in Psal. 91. This restimony is true upon them not for the sound of the letters but for the want of faith in Christ who is called Iehovah our Iustice Ierem. 23. 6. when they shall be converted unto him God will heare them Ioh. 16. 23. Vers. 4. established or erected frame and sure see Gen. 6. 18. this was done to Abraham with expresse limitation of the time of Israels release out of Egypt Gen. 15. 13. 18. sojournings or peregrinations pilgrimage see Gen. 17. 8. and 26. 3. and 35. 27. Vers. 6. the burdens the Greeke saith from the power the Chaldee from amidst the tribulation of the servitude of the Egyptians so in verse 7. This mercie is remembred in Psal. 81. 7. firetched our that is lifted up on high as both the Gr. and Chaldee doe explaine it and it signifieth Gods might and open manifestation with continuancie of the same against Egypt till the redemption of Israel were fully performed Deut. 4. 34 2 King 17. 36. Esay 9. 12. 17. 11. Vers. 7. a God or for a God this was the covenant with Abraham see Gen. 17. 7. Vers. 8. life up my hand that is sweare as the Chaldee explaineth it I sweare by my word to give it Of this signe see Gen. 14. 22. Hereof is that speech Iehovah hath sworne with his right hand c. Esay 62. 8. will give it under which figure eternall life in heaven was implied also to the faithfull as is noted on Gen. 12. 5. which Paul confirmeth in Heb. 11. 10. 16. and the Hebrew Doctors say of this that it signified the Ierusalem that is above R. Menachem on Exod. 6. Vers. 9. anguish Hebrew shortnesse that is anger griefe and discouragement of spirit that they could not patiently endure their troubles the Greeke translateth it pusill●●imity or feeblenesse of minde So the short of spirit is opposed to the man slow to wrath Prov. 14. 29. and shortnesse of spirit in Iob was trouble and discouragement Iob 21. 4. A like phrase is of shortnesse of soule whereof see Numb 21. 4. And this griefe and discouragement of Israel was so great that they wished rather to bee let alone that they might serve the Egyptians than to have any further proceeding in this businesse Exod. 14. 12. servitude or bondage which was upon them as the Chaldee addeth the Greeke translateth for hard works And this was the outward cause added to their inward discouragement and little faith Vers. 12. of uncircumcised lips Hebrew superfluous or uncircumcised of lips that is as the Gr. translateth not eloquent as the Chaldee saith of an heavy speech the same which Moses complained before in Exod. 4. 10. but figuratively spoken as having uncircumcised lips that is many superfluous words or unsanctified and so unfit to speake to the King So Esaias complained of polluted lips Esay 6. 5. Of this word superfluous See Gen. 17. 11. Vers. 13. unto that is as the Greeke addeth to goe unto to bring forth that is that they might bring forth so ver 27. see the notes on Gen. 6. 19. Thus Gods worke and faithfulnesse was not hindred by mens unfaithfulnesse neither was Israel saved for their owne righteousnesse who from the first to the last shewed themselves rebellious as Moses after telleth them Deut. 9. 4. 5. 6. 7. 24. Ver. 14. heads that is as the Greeke translateth chiefe governors or captaines This genealogie following is to shew the natural stocke of Moses and Aaron Levites verse 26. 27. and the time of Israels deliverance according to Gods promise verse 16. 18. 20. Enoch Hebrew Chanoch in Greeke Enoch see Gen. 46 9. c. Ver. 16. 137. yeeres This mans age with his sons ver 18. and Nephewes verse 20. serve for the opening of that speech concerning Israels peregrination Ex. 12. 40. see the notes there Vers. 20. his aunt that is his fathers sister as saith the Chaldee paraphrase in the Masorites Bible but the Chaldee set out by Arias Mont. hath the daughter of his fathers sister and the Greeke saith the daughter of his fathers brother neither of them well for she was the daughter of Levi Exod. 2. 1. and so sister to Amrams father Vers. 21. Korah he proved a rebell against Moses Numb 16. 1. c. Vers. 22. Vzziel of him and his two sonnes mention is made in Levit. 10. 4. where he is called Aarons uncle Vers. 23. Elisabet so the Greeke writeth this name and the new Testament Luk. 1. 5. and so we in English the Hebrew soundeth it Elishebangh She was of the tribe of Iudah being the Prince Naassons sister Numb 2. 3. 1 Chron. 2. 3. 10. Nadab and Abihu these dyed before the Lord by a fire Levit. 10. 1. 2. Eleazar hee succeeded his father Aaron in the high priesthood Numb 20. 25. 26. c. Of the priests that were of him and his brother
before is noted doe understand not onely of the streets but not out of the roome nor society where it is to bee eaten a bone to foreshew that not a bone of Christ our Passeover should be broken as was fulfilled Ioh. 19. 33. 36. which signified his victory and deliverance out of affliction and death from which he rose the third day as Psal. 34. 20. 21. the Lord keepeth all his bones not one of them is broken And in hope of resurrection Ioseph gave charge of his bones and they were caried into Canaan Heb. 11. 22. Exo. 13. 19. The bones of the Passe over were burnt with the flesh that remained v. 10. as is testified by the Hebrew Doctors who also say that though it were a little kid whose bones were tender yet might they not eate them for that were the breaking of the bones Maimony in Korban Pesach ch 10. S. 2. 9. Vers. 47. doe it that is prepare offer and eate the pasche as is ordained For neglect and not doing it men were to be cut off Numb 9. 13. Vers. 48. a strangers The Greeke translateth when any proselyte come unto you and so the Chaldee saith when a stranger shall become a proselyte or joyne himselfe with you So this differeth from that which was before in v. 22. and also in ver 45. and is meant of a third sort of strangers that were converts in Greeke called proselytes such as were joyned to the Iewes Church Act. 13. 43. and 2. 10. Matth. 23. 15. Such they were wont to call strangers within the covenant and just strangers to distinguish them from strangers within the gates that did but dwell among them mentioned in Deut. 14. 21. and here in v. 45. doe the Passe-over that is keepe or celebrate it This phrase is used in Matt. 26. 18. Heb. 11. 28. and then so not onely himselfe but his male children must be circumcised ere hee might bee admitted to the Passeover for he was yet in his sinne whiles his children were through his default uncircumcised see Gen. 17. 12. 13. 14. Exod. 4. 24. 26. And thus the Iewes have interpreted this place that as the circumcision of himselfe if it be omitted debarreth him from doing the Passeover so doth the circumcision of his sons and of his servants c. and if hee kill it before hee doe circumcise them it is unlawfull Maimony in Korban Pesach chap. 5. S. 5. uncircumcised the Chaldee turneth it profane person So God saith No stranger uncircumcised in heart nor uncircumcised in flesh shall enter into my Sanctuary Ezek. 44. 9. And the Hebrew Doctors say Whiles the power of uncleannesse and the superfluous foreskin is upon him hee is unfit to be united with the divine Maiesty c. R. Menachem on Exod. 12. Vers. 49. that sojourneth the Greeke here as in ver 48. translateth the proselyte that is come among you So the obedient heathens might by faith in Christ have part in all the holy things with Israel alwaies for in Christ all are one Galat. 3. 28. Act. 15. 9. And unto strangers is promised inheritance with the tribes of Israel in the holy land Ezek 47. 22. 23. The Iew Doctors of old have thus written concerning this Moses our master gave the inheritance of the Law and commandements to Israel onely as it is written Deut. 33. 4. the inheritance of the congregation of Iakob and unto any of the other nations that willingly joyned himselfe a proselyte as it is written Numb 15. 15. as yeeare so shall the stranger be before the Lord. But whosoever is not willing they force him not to receive the law and the commandements But they force all that come into the world to receive the commandements given to the sonnes of Noe whereof see on Gen. 9. 4. and who so receiveth not them is killed and be that receiveth them is called the stranger that sojourneth c. Maimony in Misneh treat of Kings ch 8. S. 10. Likewise in their commentary upon Exodus called Elle shemoth rabbah upon Exod. 12. they say This is that which is written in Esay 56. 3. And let not the sonne of the stranger that hath joyned himselfe to the Lord speake saying The Lord hath utterly separated mee for Iob saith The stranger shal not lodge in the street Iob 31. 32. And why Because the holy blessed God exeludeth no creature but receiveth all For his gates are open every houre and whosoever would be received in he entreth and is received For this it was said by Iob the stranger shall not lodge in the street And againe he saith in the person of God I will open my doores to the traveller Iob. 31. 32. Rabbi Barachias said In whose person speaketh Iob this Doubtlesse because it shall be that the strangers shall be Priests ministring to the holyblessed God as it is written and the stranger shall be joyned them Esay 14. 1. and this joyning is not meant but of the Priests as it is written joyne mee unto one of the Priests offices 1 Sam. 2. 36. For it shall come to passe that proselytes shall eate of the Shew-bread c. CHAP. XIII 1 God commandeth to sanctifie all the Firstborne unto him 3 to remember the day of their going out of Egypt 5 to keepe the feast of Vnlevened bread in Canaan 8 to shew their sonnes the cause thereof 12 to set apart for the Lord the firstlings of beasts 16 Phylacteries for a signe of Gods former mercies 17 The way by which God led Israel in the wildernesse 19 The carying of Iosephs bones with them 20 Israel campeth in Etham 21 God guideth them by a pillar of a cloud and pillar of fire AND Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Sanctifie unto me every first-borne that which openeth every wombe among the sonnes of Israel of man and of beast it is mine And Moses said unto the people Remember this day in which ye came out from Egypt from the house of servants for by strength of hand Iehovah brought you out from hence no levened bread shall bee eaten This day you come out in the moneth of Abib And it shall be when Iehovah shall bring thee into the land of the Canaanite and the Chethite and the Amorite and the Evite and the Iebusite w ch he sware unto thy fathers to give thee a land flowing with milke and honey that thou shalt serve this service in this moneth Seven daies thou shalt eat unlevened cakes in the seventh day shall be a feast to Iehovah Vnlevened cakes shall bee eaten seven daies and no levened bread shall bee seene with thee and no old leven shall bee seene with thee in all thy border And thou shalt shew thy sonne in that day saying because of that which Iehovah did unto mee when I came out from Egypt And it shall bee to thee for a signe upon thy hand for a memoriall betweene thine eyes that Iehovahs Law may be in thy mouth for with a strong hand hath Iehovah brought
the campe and called it the Tent of the congregation and it was that every one which sought Iehovah went out unto the Tent of the congregation which was without the campe And it was when Moses went out unto the tent all the people rose-up and stoood every man at the doore of his Tent and looked after Moses untill he was entred into the Tent. And it was as Moses entred into the Tent the pillar of the cloud descended and stood at the doore of the Tent and he spake with Moses And all the people saw the pillar of the cloud stand at the doore of the Tent and all the people rose-up and bowed-them-selvesdowne every man at the doore of his Tent. And Iehovah spake unto Moses face unto face as a man speaketh unto his friend and he returned into the campe and his minister Ioshua the Son of Nun a yong-man he departed not from within the Tent. And Moses said unto Iehovah See thou saist unto me Carie-up this people and thou hast not let me know whom thou wilt send with me yet thou hast said I know thee by name and also thou hast found grace in mine eies Now therefore I pray thee if I have found grace in thine eyes shew mee O now thy wayes and let me know thee that I may find grace in thine eyes and consider that this nation is thy people And hee sayd My presence shall goe And I will give thee rest And hee sayd unto him If thy presence goe not carie us not up hence For wherein shall it be knowne here that I have found grace in thine eyes both I and thy people Is it not in that thou goest with us So shall we bee marvellously-separated I and thy people from all the people which are upon the face of the earth And Iehovah said unto Moses I will doe this thing also which thou hast spoken for thou hast found grace in mine eies and I know thee by name And he said I pray thee shew me thy glory And he said I will make all my goodnesse passe before thee and will proclaime the name of Iehovah before thee and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious and will be mercifull to whom I will be mercifull And hee said thou art not able to see my face for no man shall see my face and live And Iehovah said Behold there is a place by mee and thou shalt stand upon a rocke And it shall bee while my glorie passeth by that I will put thee in a clift of the rocke and will cover thee with my hand while I passe by And I will take away my hand and thou shalt see my backe-parts but my face shall not bee seene Annotations THy seed that is as the Chaldee saith thy Sons the Greek saith your seed He respecteth chiefly the promise to Abraham Gen. 12. 7. which he would performe notwithstanding their unfaithfulnesse Verse 2. an Angel in Greeke my Angell of whom see Exodus 23. 20. 23. Though this is thought of some to bee meant of another Angell see the notes on Exodus 32. 34. I will drive The Greeke expounds it thou shalt drive Canaanite that is as the Chaldee translateth Canaanites c. see Gen. 10. 16. Vnto the six nations here mentioned the Greeke addeth the Gergesite to make up the number of Seven as in Deut. 7. 1. Verse 3. Vnto a land for explanation the Greek addeth And I will bring thee into a Land milke a figure of heavenly blessings see the notes on Exodus 3. 8. I will not goe to wit with a visible signe of my presence as in the cloud so the Chaldee translateth I will not cause my presence or Majestie to goe up in the middest of thee So after in verse 5. And now God had withdrawne the cloudy pillar the signe of his gracious conduct from them as appeareth by verse 9. 10. So in the Thargum or Chaldee paraphrase on Cant. 2. 17. the Hebrew Doctors say The Sonnes of Israel made the golden calfe and the glorious cloud which overshadowed them was taken away and they remained uncovered c. stiffe or hard necked that is stubborne and disobedient see Exod. 32. 9. Vers. 4. evill word that is hard or heavy rydings mourned shewed their mourning by their habit gesture c. as the words following manifest and the force of the originall word implyeth 2 Sam. 14. 2. Dan 10. 2. 3. The Greeke translateth they mourned in mourning weeds Verse 5. to the sons of Israel the Hebrewes as R. Menachem on this place doe observe that this manner of speech was in the way of mercy for 〈…〉 therto he had called them THY PEOPLE Exodus 32. 7. and THE PEOPLE Ex. 33. 1. But now he calleth them by their beloved name Sons of Israel I will come up to wit if thou repent not so it is a threatning of judgmēt as the Gr. also translateth Looke that I bring not another plague vpon you and consume you Or it may be Englished If I should goe up in the middest of thee I should consume thee to wit unlesse thou repent and walke better thy ornament that is humble thy selfe and shew fruits of repentance The Greeke saith now therefore put 〈◊〉 the garments of your glorie and your ornament The Chaldee expounds it the ornament of thy armour so in v. 6. and I will know God speaketh after the manner of men who judge by the actions that appeare as in Gen. 18. 21. and 22. 12. for otherwise God knoweth all his workes from the beginning of the world Act. 15. 18. The Greeke interpreters understood it of Gods making knowne to others and manslateth I will shew what I will doe unto thee Vers. 6. from the mount that is farre from it as being unworthy to come neere unto God whose glory was yet upon the mount which burned with fire Deut 9. 15. V. 7. a Tent or the Tent not that which after was the place of publike worship for it was not yet made Exod. 36. but either Moses owne Tent as the Greeke translateth his Tent or some other for this speciall use Tent of the congregation which was the name of that glorious Tent which God commanded to be made see Exod. 29. 4. The Gr. translateth it the Tabernacle of testimony the Chald. the Tabernacle of house of doctrine This which should have beene in the midst of the host Num 2 17. was now placed far out of it signifying Gods displeasure against and departure from his people Prov. 15. 29. According to which situation are the complaints of holy men made to God in their tentations Psal. 10. 1. and 35. 22. and 38. 22. sought Iehovah the Chaldee paraphraseth that sought doctrine or information from the face of the Lord. V. 8. and stood to looke and observe with reverence what signes of grace Moses should have from the Lord about this businesse in hand for reconciling him unto his people The Hebrewes in their Thargum on Solomons song apply hereunto
people saith the Greeke version offred-it-for-sin The Greeke translateth purified it so the word sometime meaneth but it figured also a purifying of others from sinne thereby as Levit. 6. 26. and so the Chaldee here expoundeth and he made atonement by the blood thereof as the first spoken of in vers 8. and so he burnt it without the campe as the other was in verse 11. for which he was reproved by Moses Levit. 10. 16. 17. Vers. 16. the manner or the ordinance Hebr. the judgement the Greeke saith as was meet It respecteth the Law in Levit. 1. Vers. 17. filled that is tooke his handfull out of it see Levit. 2. 2. of the morne that is which was daily to be offred every morning as God commanded Exod. 29. 38. 39. 40. This therefore was extraordinary that as the daily meat-offring was to testifie their thankfulnesse for Gods ordinary and daily mercies so this for his speciall grace now manifested Chazkuni explaineth it thus It teacheth that there were two Meat-offrings one with the Burnt-offring and one by it selfe Sol. Iarchi saith All this he did after the daily Burnt-offring Vers. 18. sprinkled according to the law in Levit 3. 2. The Greeke translateth he poured it Vers. 19. fat Hebr. fats so in vers 20. rumpe or tayle to weet of the ram see Levit. 3. 9. that which covereth in Greeke the fat which covereth the inwards and so the text explaineth it in Levit. 3. 9. Vers. 20. they put the fat Hebr. the fatts Sol. Iarchi saith After the waving the Priest that waved gave them to another Priest to burne them Vers. 21. waved as was commanded Lev. 7. 30. c. By these sacrifices the sanctification of the people was signified by the Sin-offring and Burnt-offring they had remission and justification from their sinnes and reconciliation unto God by the Meat-offring their renovation by the spirit and by the Peace-offrings their thankefulnesse unto God whom they honour with the fruits of his owne graces all these obtained by faith in Christ and in his death for he of God is made unto us wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1. 30. Vers. 22. lift-up his hand or his hands as the Hebrew vowel and reading in the margine both shew so the Greeke translateth hands See Exod. 32. 19. R. Menachem giveth this reason why it is written Hand to signifie the right hand because that was listed up higher then the left The lifting up of the hand was a gesture used in speaking or signifying of any weighty thing Esa. 49. 22. and particularly in swearing Gen. 14. 22. praying Psal. 28. 2. and blessing eyther of God Psal. 134. 2. or of men as in this place So Paul speaking of prayer useth the phrase of lifting up holy hands 1 Tim. 2. 8. and David let the lifting up of my hands be as the evening sacrifice Psal. 141. 2. blessed them This appertained to the Priests office to blesse the people in the name of the Lord for ever Deuter. 10. 8. 1 Chron. 23. 13. and was accomplished by our high Priest Christ Iesus when having finished his ministery on earth hee lift up his hands and blessed his disciples Luk. 24. 50. The forme of Aarons blessing is prescribed in Num. 6. 23. 27. see the annotations there And this being done in the Lords name by his Priests a figure of Christ whom God hath sent to blesse us Act. 3. 26. without all contradiction the lesse is blessed of the greater Heb. 7. 7. came downe from the banke or hilly place of the altar which was higher then the other ground see Exod. 20. 26. So in Thargum Ionathan it is explained he came downe from the Altar with joy after that he had finished the making of the Sin-offring c. On the contrary Christ when hee had blessed went up into heaven Luke 24. 51. from making or doing that is offring as vers 7. After that he had done as before is shewed Vers. 23. went into the Tent the Priest went in according to the law in Exod. 30. 7. 8. to burne incense on the golden altar Moses went in with him in likelihood to direct him how to doe the service so Sol. Iarchi here explaineth it But hee addeth withall an other exposition thus When Aaron saw that they had offred all the oblations and done all the workes and the Majestie of God came not downe to Israel he was grieved and said I know that the holy blessed God is angry with me and for my sake the Majestie of God commeth not downe to Israel c. Immediately Moses went in with him and prayed for mercie and the divine Majestie came downe unto Israel After this manner Thargum Ionathan also expoundeth it they blessed This was a second blessing by Moses and Aaron when the people were dismissed Vnto which and the like at other times especially on Atonement day Levit. 16. David prophesying of Christs dayes seemeth to have reference in Psal. 118. 26. Wee blesse you out of the house of Iehovah glory the visible signe of Gods glory and favour out of his holy place either by the fire mentioned in the next verse or by a clowd as was in Exod. 16. 10. and 40. 34. or by them both It was a token of his gracious acceptance of them and of their service as after in 1 King 8. 10. 11. 12. Vers. 24. from before Iehovah the Greeke translateth from the Lord. And it was either from heaven as after in Solomons dayes Fire came downe from heaven and confirmed the Burnt-offring and sacrifices 2 Chron. 7. 1. or out of the Tabernacle By this miracle God confirmed the people touching the doctrine and ordinances given by Moses and the priesthood now committed to Aaron and his sonnes as appeareth by the prayer of Elias when the like miracle was shewed from heaven Let it be knowne this day day that thou art God in Israel and that I am thy servant and that I have done all these things at thy word 1 King 18. 36. consumed or ate up by which signe the church was assured that their sacrifices were accepted See Psal. 20. 4. The like was at the dedicating of Solomons Temple 2 Chro. 7. 1. 2. 3. and at Elias sacrifice 1 King 18. 38. 39. This Fire which now came from God was nourished on the Altar as the Hebrewes say unto Solomons time Chazkuni here writeth thus The fire which came-out from the Lord in the daies of Moses went not up from the brazen Altar untill he came into the eternall House that is into Solomons temple so called because of that promise in 2 Chron. 7. 16. that Gods name should be there for ever And that Fire which came downe in the dayes of Solomon went not up from the Altar of Burnt-offring untill it went up in the dayes of Manasseh Of the departing of that fire in Mana●ses dayes wee finde no mention in the Scriptures But after Solomons Temple was destroyed and the second builded the
he had offred for himselfe so he might doe for the ignorances of the people as the Apostle saith Heb. 9. 7. within the veile into the most holy place a figure of heaven whither Christ the fore-runner entred for us and whither also our hope the sure Anker of our soules entreth by him Heb. 6. 19. 20. and 10. 19. 23. Vers. 16. because of or from the uncleannesses that is purging it from them Hereby appeareth the horrour of sinne for though the people never went into the Holy place much lesse into the Most holy yet such was the power of their iniquities that the holy Altar Arke and Sanctuarie it selfe was defiled in the sight of God and could not bee cleansed without blood so our sinnes doe defile Gods Church and his most holy ordinances therein and doe come up into heaven it selfe wherein to we can have no entrance but by the blood of Christ cleansing us and our way and purging our consciences from dead workes to serve the living God Heb. 9. 7. 11. 14. c. and all or in all their sinnes see after on verse 21. that dwelleth that is is placed and remaineth the Greeke translateth builded unto which phrase Paul hath reference speaking of Christs greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands that is not of this building Hebr. 9. 11. The Temple of his bodie Ioh. 2. 21. and veile of his flesh Hebr. 10. 20. were by imputation of our sinnes made as unclean and sprinkled with his owne precious blood that he might reconcile us unto God Esa. 53. 2 Cor. 5. 19. 21. It was necessary that Moses Tabernacle and Solomons Temple the patternes of things in the heavens should be purified with these sacrifices forementioned but the heavenly things themselves with better sacrifices then these Heb. 9. 23. Vers. 17. not be any man neither of the people nor of the Priests onely the high Priest himselfe performed this service in the fight of God Figuring herein our high Priest Christ Iesus on whom God laid the inquitie of us all Esa. 53. 6. who his 〈◊〉 selfe bare our sinnes in his owne body on the tree 1 Per. 2. 24. who hath by himselfe purged our sinnes Hebr. 1. 3. and God by him hath reconciled all things 〈◊〉 himselfe even by him whether they be things in earth or things in heaven Colos. 1. 20. no creature helping no nor comprehending the riches of his grace wherein he hath abounded towards us in 〈◊〉 wisedome and prudence and hath gathered together in one all things in Christ both which are in the heavens and which are on earth even in him Eph. 1. 8. ●0 These things the Angels desire to looke into 1 Pet. 1. 12. and now unto the Principalities and powers in heavenly-places is made knowne by the Church the manifold wisedome of God Eph. 3. 10. V. 18. shall goe out from the most holy place to the Altar of incense which stood in the holyplace and of the blood of the goat both bloods mixed together in a basin as before is noted and put Hebr. and give so this was a striking of his finger with the blood upon the hornes And hee beg●● they say at the Northeast horne so to the Northwest then to the Southwest and so to the Southeast Maimony in Iom hakipp. chap. 4. sect 2. And of this when God first appointed the Altar to be made he said Aar on shall make atonement upon the hornes of it 〈◊〉 in the yeere with the blood of the Sin-offring of at 〈…〉 ments Exod. 30. 10. This Altar being for incense which figured praiers Psal. 141. 2. and the horses signifying the power of Christs mediation as from which voices or answers to the praiers of the saints were heard Revel 9. 13. the cleansing of them by the blood of the Sin-offring shewed how the infirmities in the faith praiers of the Saints are to bee holpen and purified by the death and blood of Christ. Vers. 19. blood upon it After the Priest had put blood upon the foure hornes he removed the coles and ashes which were on the golden altar so that the gold appeared then he sprinkled of the mixed blood on the cleane place of the altar seven times by the south side by the place where he had finished the putting therof upon the hornes And he went out and poured the residue of the blood at the westerne bottome of the brazen altar that was without Maim in Iom hakipp. chap. 4. sect 2. seven times for a full and perfect purification as in verse 14. from the uncleannesses the imperfections and sinnes which the people fell into in their most holy service and prayers Vers. 21. shall impose or shall lay both his hands which he now did in the name of the people by this signe discharging them and laying the burden of all their sinnes upon the beast a figure of Christ. See the notes on Levit. 1. 4. and all their sinnes or in or with all their sinnes But the Greeke translateth it and and so the Hebrew often signifieth as is noted on Gen. 2. 3. and on Exod. 17. 10. These three comprehend sinne of all sorts which the Priest confessed in generall with the three names here used as in the ages following is recorded and asked mercy also for them all saying Oh Lord thy people the house of Israel have sinned and done iniquitie and trespassed before thee Oh Lord make-atonement now for the sinnes and for the iniquities and for the trespasses that thy people the house of Israel have sinned and unrighteously done and trespassed before thee as it is written in the law of Moses thy servant that in this day he shall make-atonement for you c. Maimony in Iom hakipp. chap. 4. sect 2. shall put Hebr. shall give that is affixe or fasten them upon the head of the goat which being also figure of Christ shewed how our sinnes should be imputed unto him and God would lay upon him the iniquitie of us all that hee which knew no sinne should be made sinne for us Esa. 53. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 21. a fit man or a man appointed and prepared Hebr. an opportune a timely man which the Greeke translateth aready man the Chaldee a man that is prepared or appointed to goe and Sol. Iarchi expoundeth it appointed for it from the day before Of this the Hebrewes write that in the ages after the live goat was led away by one of the Priests thereto appointed unto a rocke in the wildernesse twelve miles that is ninetie furlongs distant from Ierusalem Every mile they say was seven furlongs and an halfe They made ten boothes betweene Ierusalem and that rocke in the wildernes betweene every boothe there was a miles space and in every boothe one man or more that some might accompany him that led the goat from one boothe to the next So there being a mile that is two thousand cubits betweene boothe and boothe that was a Sabbaths dayes journey and so farre they might
grapes which remain afterward are 〈◊〉 for any man c. Maim in Mattanoth gnan chap. 1. sect 9. 10. 11. I am Iehovah by whose commandement this law was stablished in Israel to the end that they might remember their owne poverty and bondage which they indured in Egypt and that by doing these works of mercy the Lord might blesse them in all the work of their hands Which reasons M ses rendteth of this precept in Dent. 24. 19. 22. Vers 11. not steale see the notes on Exod. 20. 15. In that he speaketh as to many ye shall not Chazkuni here gathereth that he that seeth one steale 〈◊〉 holdeth his peace he also stealeth as doth the principal in the theft falsly-deny in Greeke not lye it is a generall word for lying or denying of things in respect either of God as Prov. 30. 9. or of men as Lev. 6. 2. And unto this latter of denying other mens goods that are in their hand doe the Hebrewes referre this prohibition Maimony rom 3. treat of Oathes ch 1. s. 8. deale falsly or lye in violating covenants as Gen. 21. 23. Psal. 44. 18. or swearing falsly or any other way Ver. 12. to falshood or falsly in Greek to an unjust thing The contrary is required Thou shalt sweare the Lord liveth in Truth in Iudgement and in Instice Ierem. 4. 2. And Gods Name is of large signification as is noted on Exod. 20. 7. so that whether one use any of Gods proper names or describe him by other words as hee that liveth for ever bee that created heaven and earth c. as Rev. 10. 6. or any the like it is a full oath And by swea 〈…〉 is understood cursing also which is of the same nature as in Gen. 24. 8. 41. the same thing is called an 〈◊〉 and a curse or exsecration So the He 〈…〉 canons say Whether one sweare by Gods proper name or by any of his surnames as by him whose 〈◊〉 is Gracious or whose name is Mercisull or any the like an any language loe it is a full oath And so an 〈◊〉 and a curse is an oath As when a man saith Cursed 〈◊〉 be of the Lord or of him whose name is Gra 〈…〉 Mercifull who soever hath eaten this thing and himselfe hath eaten it loe he hath sworne falsly Likewise 〈◊〉 that saith nay nay twise by way of oath or yea yea and mentioneth Gods name or surname loe it is as if he 〈◊〉 sworne And so hee that promiseth I will not doe this or that and mentioneth Gods name or surname it is an oath Maimony in Misneh tom 3. treat of O 〈…〉 es ch 2. sect 2. c. not Profane or pollute but contrariwise shalt sanctifie it as Levit. 22. 32. The wordnet in the former branch is here againe necessarily understood as often in the scripture and so the Greeke version addeth it ye shall not profane By this not onely false but rash vaine unadvised needlesse oathes and all other abuses of Gods name are forbidden as is noted on Exodus 20. 7. The Hebrews say Although he that sweareth vainly or falsly bebeaten by the Magistrate and being a sacrifice to the Priest yet is there not a 〈…〉 made thereby for all the iniquity of his oath for it is written in Exodus 20. 7. the Lord will not hold him innocent he is not freed from the judgement of the God of heaven untill bee have his payment from him for the great Name which he hath profaned as it 〈◊〉 written Thou shalt not profane the name of the Lord thy God I am the Lord. Therefore a man must beware of this iniquity more then of all transgressions This is me of the heavy iniquities although for it there bee as eutting off nor death by the Magistrates yet is 〈◊〉 in it a profanation of the holy Name which is greater then all iniquities It is necessary to warne children much and to teach their tongues the words of truth without swearing that they fall not into a custome to sweare continually as doe the heathens And this thing 〈…〉 eth as a dury upon their parents and upon school 〈…〉 sters And it is a great good thing for a man 〈◊〉 to sweare at all Maimony treat of Oathes ch 12. sect 1. 2. 8. 12. Accordingly are wee to understand the doctrine of our Saviour when hee saith S 〈…〉 not at all Mart. 5. 34. Whereby he forbiddeth not the lawfull use of oathes commanded of God Deut. 6. 13. but all abuse in common speech which was and is accustomed most sinfully to the high dishonor of God Vers. 13. fraudulently-oppresse in Greeke doe 〈…〉 or injurie This word signifieth to oppresse by 〈◊〉 the next to oppresse-by-violence see the 〈◊〉 Lev. 6. 2. Both these did Iohn the Baptist 〈…〉 bid unto the souldiers Luk. 3. 14. rob or violently-oppresse and plucke-by-force as it is said of Ben●jah he plucked the speare out of the Egyptians 〈◊〉 2 Sam. 23. 21. For these sinnes fraudulent 〈…〉 and robbery the Prophets doe often blame Israel Ezek. 22. 29. Ier. 22. 3. Esay 3. 14. Eccles. 4. 1. Psal. 62. 11. It commeth from covetousnesse as is said they covet fields and take them by rapine Mich. 2. 2. and proceedeth unto murder as he that is greedy-of-gaine taketh away the life of the owners thereof Prov. 1. 19. The Hebrewes say Who so desireth his neighbours house wife goods or any other thing which it is possible for him to get of him when he hath thought in his heart how he might get that thing and his heart is allured with the thing he transgresseth this Law Thou shalt not desire Deut. 5. 21. and Desire is not but in the bea rt onely Desire bringeth a man to Coveting and Covetize bringeth him to Robbery For if the owners will not sell the thing though he would give a great price then falleth he to rapine Mic. 2. 2. And if the owners stand up against him to rescue their goods or to forbid him to rob then he falleth to shedding of blood Goe and learne by the fact of Achab and Naboth Loe thou maist learne that he which Desireth transgresseth one prohibition and he that getteth the thing which he desireth by importuning the owners or requesting it of them transgresseth two prohibitions therefore it is written Thon shalt not Covet and Thou shalt not Desire And if he take it by robbery he transgresseth three prohibitions And who so robbeth his neighbour of the worth of a farthing is as if he tooke his life from him Prov. 1. 19. Maimony in treat of Robbery ch 1. s. 10. c. If a man finde and keepe backe a thing which his neighbor hath lost he transgresseth also this Law as is noted on Deut. 22. 1. the worke that is the wages for the worke as the Greeke translateth it wages So in Iob. 7. 2. an hireling looketh for his worke that is for the reward of his worke and in Ier. 22. 13. Woe unto him c. that
same that was in verse 27. and may imply the male as well as the female that neither of them might be killed with their yong in one day but the Greeke and Chaldee versions apply these things to the female The Hebrewes say The prohibition concerning IT AND THE YONG THEREOF is of force concerning the female for it may be certainly knowne that it is her yongling and if it be certainly knowne that this beast was the father of it they doe not kill them both in one day but if he kill them he is not beaten for the thing is doubtfull whether it be of force concerning the males or not Maimony tom 2. in Shechitach ch 12. sect 11. or sheepe or goat or any cleane beast which was lawfull to bee eaten for commmon meat This prohibition hath not place but concerning cleane beasts only it is of force even for mixtures of diverse kinds as if a Roe engender with a Goat or a Goat with a Roe it is unlawfull to kill it and the yong in one day Maimony in Shechitah ch 12. sect 8. it and the yong Hebrew and the son The Hebrew also speaketh as of the male him and his son but the Greeke and Chaldee translate her and her son not kill either for sacrifice to God or for common food The Hebrewes doe so explaine it saying He that killeth it and the yong thereof in one day the flesh is lawfull to be eaten but the killer is to be beaten Lev. 22. 28. And he is not beaten but for the killing of the latter therefore if hee kill the one of the two and his fellow come and kill the other his fellow is to be beaten The prohibition concerning it and the yong thereof is of force at all times and in all places for common beasts and for sanctified whether they be holy things that are to be eaten or not to bee eaten Therefore if the first kill in the court of the sanctuary and the second without or the first without and the second within the court whether they be both common or both holy or one common and the other holy he that killeth the later is to bee beaten as for killing IT AND THE YONG THEROF The prohibition is not but for the killing onely as it is said YE SHALL NOT KILL c. He that killeth a cow and afterward killeth two of her yong is to beaten with two beatings if he kill her two yong-ones and afterward killeth her he is beaten but once If he kill her and her yong and her yonglings yong hee is beaten twice If two men receive two beasts the one the damme and the other the yong and they come for judgement he that received the first killeth first and the other must stay till the morrow Maim in Shechitah c. 12. s. 1. 2. 3. 12. 13. Compare herewith the Law in Deut. 22. 6. where the bird with her yong or eggs may not bee taken together It shewed Gods mercie to the creatures in that he would not have the dam and the yong killed in a day so Targum Ionathan paraphraseth on this Law thus My people the sons of Israel as our father is mercifull in heaven so be ye mercifull on earth a cow or an ewe it and the yong thereof ye shall not slay in one day in one day of this the Hebrews say the day goeth after the night as if he kill the first in the beginning of the fourth night hee may not kill the second till the beginning of the fift night And so if he kill the first in the end of the fourth day before evening he may kill the second in the beginning of the fift night But if be 〈◊〉 the first in the evening of the fift night hee may not k 〈…〉 the second till the sixt night Maimony in Shechitah ch 12. sect 17. Vers. 29. of confession or of thanksgiving which was a kind of peace offring see Lev. 7. 12. Vers. 30. untill the morning If it were kept longer then the time appointed of God it became polluted was to be consumed with fire and might not be eaten upon paine of Gods wrath upon them for such iniquitie Levit. 7. 18. See the annotations there as also on Exod. 12. 10. Vers. 31. I am Iehovah Targum Ionathan explaineth it thus I am the Lord who will give a good reward to them that keepe my preceptss and my lawes Vers. 32. not prophane Gods name is prophaned or polluted by the wilfull presumptuous breach of any one of all his commandements as the Hebrew Doctors teach from this and other like places see the notes on Exod. 20. 7. Levit. 18. 21. and 19. 12. doe sanctifie you God the sole●thor of our sanctification doth this in Christ by his Spirit 1 Corinth 1. 2. and 6. 11. the outward means wherof is his word and ordinances of the same Iohn 17. 17. Ephes. 5. 26. And these legall ordinances which stood in meats and drink and divers washings and carnall rites imposed on them untill the time of reformation sanctified unto the purifying of the flesh Hebrewes 9. 10. 13. but the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offred him-selfe without blemish unto God is it which purg 〈…〉 our conscience from dead workes to serve the 〈◊〉 God Hebrewes 9. 14. and 10. 10. and by one offring he hath perfected for ever them which are sanctified Heb. 10 14. CHAP. XXXIII 1 The feasts of the Lord. 3 The Sabbath 4 The Passeover and unlevened-cakes 9 The sheafe of first-fruits 15 The feast of Pentecost 22 Gleanings to be left for the poore 23 The feast of Trumpets 16. The day of Atonement 33 The feast of Tabernacles ANd Iehoah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto the sonnes of Israel and say unto them The solemne-feasts of Iehovah those which ye shall proclaime convocations of holines these are my solemne-feasts Six dayes shall worke be done but in the seventh day shall be a Sabbath of sabbatisme a convocation of holinesse ye shall not doe any worke it shall be a Sabbath to Iehovah in all your dwellings These are the solemne-feasts of Iehovah convocations of holinesse those which ye shall proclaime in their appointed-season In the first moneth in the fourteenth day of the moneth betweene the two-evenings shall be the Passeover to Ieovah And in the fifteenth day of the same moneth shall bee the feast of unlevened cakes unto Iehovah seven daies yee shall eate unlevened cakes In the first day ye shall have a convocation of holinesse yee shall not doe any servile-worke But ye shall offer a Fyre offring unto Iehovah seven daies in the seventh day shall be a convocation of holinesse yee shall not doe any servile worke And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto the sonnes of Israel and say unto them When ye be come into the land which I give unto you and shall reape the harvest thereof then ye shall bring a sheaf the first-fruit of your harvest unto the Priest
courtyard of the Sanctuarie and threshed it and fanned it and purged it cleane And they took a tenth par● that is an Omer Exod. 16. 36. and put it in the fire c. as it is written in Levit. 2. 14. Green●eares-of-corne parched in the fire corne beaten out of the full-eare Wee have beene taught that this is spoken 〈◊〉 the meat-offring of the sheafe onely And after that 〈◊〉 have parched it they spread it in the courtyard and the winde bloweth on it Then they grinde the three Se●●● or Bushel of barley and take out of all a tenth part or Omer and that is waved and the residue is redeemed and may be eaten by any man But this tenth par● of barley flowre they take and mixe it with a log 〈◊〉 halfe pinte of oile on the sixteenth day of Nisan And they put upon it an handfull of frankincense Levit. 2. 15. as upon other Meat-offrings and wave it and burne some of it on the altar as Levit. 2. 16. and the residue is eaten by the Priests as all other Meat-ofrings are Maimony in Tamidin c. chap. 7. and Talmud Bab. in Menachoth chap. 10. The reas●n why this oblation was of barley was for that it was first ripe in the land of Canaan to weet at the ●east of the Passover but wheat harvest w●s after at Pentecost or the feast of Weekes Exod. 34. 22. Therefore in Ruth 2. 23. barley harvest is ●er before wheat harvest so in Egypt the barley was ●●red before the wheat or rye Exod. 9. 31. 32. And in Ruth 1. 22. when Ruth came to Bethelem in 〈◊〉 beginning of barley harvest there the Chaldee giveth this paraphrase in the beginning of the Passeover and in that day the sonnes of Israel began to reape●●● sheafe of the wave-offring which was of barley ●aving reference to this Law V. 11. for your favourable acceptation in Greeke acceptable for you that is that you and your ot●ation may be accepted in favour If you offer it according to this right it shall be acceptable for you 〈◊〉 Iarchi on Levit. ●3 the morrow after the s●●bath Hebr. on the morrow of the sabbath that is the day after the Sabbath meaning not the ordinary Sabbath which was every seventh day of the weeke but the Sabbath of the Passeover which was alwaies the fifteenth day of Nisan or March the first day of unlev●ned bread called the Feast Numb 28 17. on which dayes were 〈…〉 Levit. 23. 32. 39. so the morrow after was alwaies the sixteenth day of Nisan as is before noted And so the Chaldee here translateth it after the good day that is the feast and the Greeke faith On the morrow of the first of the Sabbathes because the first day and the seventh day were both Sabbathes verse 7. 8. And Targum Ionathan expl●●neth it After the good day the first day 〈…〉 Passeover the Priest shall wave it 〈…〉 Greeke offer it How this waving was per 〈…〉 see the notes on Exod. 29. 24. Levit. 3. 5. Vers. 12. shall ●ffer H●br and Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or make meaning for sacrifice See Exod. 10. 25. of his first yeere Hebr. sonne of his yeere that is not above a yeere old see Exod. 12. 5. This Lambe was to be brought with the sheafe or Omer of first fruits besides all other sacrifices for the feast mentioned in Num. 28. 19. 24. So Iarchi saith It came as a bounden duty with the Omer And it figured Christ our perfect unblemished Lamb 1 Pet. 1. 19. by whom those first fruits and in them all the other fruits were sanctified and made acceptable to God Vers. 13. two tenth deales to weet of an Ephah that is two O●ners This was twise so much as by the Law was appointed for a Lambe which ordinarily was but one tenth deale Numb 15. 4. neither was it doubled for any other save for this Lambe offred with the wave sheafe See the annotations ●n Numb 15. 12. fine flowr of wheat as was for all ordinary meat-offrings Levit. 2. Exod 19. 2. oile to weet oile olive and a log or halfe pinte of oile was the stint for every tenth deale or Omer of flow●e Maimony in Magnaseh 〈…〉 noth chap. 12. sect 7. of rest in Greek of sweet smell the Chaldee expounds it to be accepted with favour of an Hin a measure containing twelve logs every log being so much as sixe egges See the notes on Exod. 29. 40. and 30. 24. And here the quantitie of wine is not doubled as was before in the flowre but is a fourth part onely which was the measure prescribed for the drinkeoff●ing of every ordinary lambe Numb 15. 5. So ●archi here not●th Though the Meat offring thereof was doubled yet the drinke-offring was not doubled Vers. 14. not eat bread c. God here by taught them that they had no right to eare of any of the fruits of the land which was his Levit. 25. 23 untill by offring the first fruits with a Lambe sacrifice they had made publike profession both of their faith in Christ to come and of their thankefulnesse to God for his mercies The Hebrewes say It was unlawfull to reape in the land of Israel any of the five kindes of corne before they had reaped the shease of wave offring Levit. 23. 10. They brought no meat-offring drinke-offring or first-fruits of new fruits before they brought the sheafe and if they brought any it was not allowable Maimony in Ta●idin chap. 7. sect 13. 17. After the offring of the sheafe new corne was lawfull to be eaten out of hand and they that dwelt ●ore off from Ierusalem might eat thereof after mid-day the 16. of Nisan for they knew that the Synedri●● would not be negligent herein in offring the sheaf T 〈…〉 d Bab. in Menachoth chap. 10. greenee●●es or full-eares see Levit. 2. 24. The Hebrewes say this is meant of the five kindes of graine onely which are wheat ●ie oats and two kindes of ba●ley whosoever did eat of any of these five kindes new so much as an olive before the offring of the shease in the 16. of Nisan was by the law to be beaten And who so did eat of bread and of parched-corne and of greene eares of any of those five hee was to be beaten three times for these are three prohibitions distinct one from another bread and 〈…〉 ed corne and greene-eares Maimony tom 2. treat of Forbidden meats chap. 10. ●ect 2. 3. the oblation of your God in Greeke the gifts unto your God He meaneth those forespoken of for as it was unlawfull for men to eat so the Hebrewes say They might bring no Meat-offring to God of the new-fruits before the sheafe Matmony tom 3. in Issure mizbeach chap. 5. sect 9. Vers. 15. ye shall number This commandement is unto every man of Israel and in every place but women and servants are free from counting faith Maimony in Tamidin chap. 7. sect 24. from the morrow or on the morrow the Chaldee
yeere hee went out a free man If the yere of release Deut. 15. 1. Fel within those six yeers yet he did serve therein but if the yeere of Iubile fel in them though he were sold but a yeer before the Iubile he goeth out free Lev. 25. 40. 41. A man may soll himselfe for mee then six yeeres if he sell himselfe for 10. or 20 yeeres and the Iubile fall out though within a yeere he goeth out at the Iubile If a man have sold himselfe or beene sold by the Synedrion and he runs away he is bound to make up the six yeeres but if the Iubile fall he goeth out free If he have been sicke either by a continued sicknes yeere after yeere or beene sicke by fits if the whole time of his sickene be lesse then foure yeers they are reckned among the six yeeres service out if he have been foure yeers sick he is bound to make good all the dayes of his sicknes as it is written Lev. 25. 40. As an hireling as a sojourner if the Iubile fall he goeth out Maim in Servants ch 2. sect 2. 3. 4. 5. his sons with him that is his children as the Greek translateth whether sonnes or daughters In Exod. 21. 3. there is the like for his wife And by the parable in Matth. 18. 25. it seemeth that in Israel men might be sold for debt they their wives and their children and all that they had and in 2 King 4. 1. the credit or would take the children bondmen for their fathers debt Howbeit the Hebrew Doctors understand these otherwise saying Every Hebrew servant his master is bound to finde his wife meat c. and so he is bound to finde his sons and daughters meat Of him whom the Synedrion sold it is said in Exod. 21. 3. if hee were the husband of a wife then his wife shall goe out with him If thou thinkest that when hee was bought his wife became a servant it is not so but to teach that his master was bound to give her food And of him that sold himself it is said in Lev. 25. 41. he and his sons with him And of him that was sold to an heathen it is said in Lev. 25. 54 he and his sonnes with him Whether they were the wife and children which he had at the time when he was sold or wife and children which he had after he was sold so that he tooke her with his masters consent but if he tooke her without his consent his master is not bound to finde her meat Though his master bee bound to finde his wife and children meat yet hath hee nothing of the labours of their hands but the wives labours are her husbands and whatsoever is due from a husband to his wife is due to her forasmuch as he is an Hebrew servant Maimony treat of Servants ch 3. sect 1. 2. Vers. 42. my servants their redemption from Pharaoh figured the redemption from Satan by Christ and their freedome that of which it is said ye are bought with a price ●ee not the servants of men 1 Cor. 7. 23. and now being made free from sinne and made servants to God ye have your fruit unto holinesse and the end everlasting life Rom. 6. 22. the sale of a servant that is not after the manner that servants or slaves are sold in the market publikely but privately and by way of honour Maimony in Servants ch 1. sect 5. Ver. 43. with rigour as the Egyptians ruled over Israel Exod. 1. 13. The Hebrewes describe it thus What is rigorous service It is service which is not determined and service whereof there is no need but the masters purpose is to make him worke and onely that he should not cease Hereupon our wise men have said that the master should not say unto him Digge under the vines untill I come for loe he giveth him no determined stint but hee is to say unto him dig till such an houre or unto such a place And so hee may not say to him Dig this place when there is no need to doe it c. Maimony in Servants chap. 1 sect 6. But this rigor fiercenesse or crueltie here forbidden extendeth forther even to all overmuch labour above that which is meet and they are able as the Greeke here translateth Thou shalt not racke him or afflict torment him with labour beating if their worke be not done Exod. 1. 14. and 5. 7. 8. 14. and threatning with hard words Ephes. 6. 9. and the like feare thy God and thereby abstaine from this evill see verse 17. V. 44. of the heathens as the Hebrew servants set at liberty by the Iubile figured Gods elect set free by Christ so the heathens brought into subjection and bondage may figure the reprobates whom Christ and his people shall rule with an yron rod Psal. 2. 9. Rev. 2. 26. 27. Or being understood of such servants as were bought and brought unto the faith of God were circumcised as in Gen. 17. 27. it might foreshadow the conversion of the heathens and bringing them into the perpetuall service of Christ and his Church Esay 56. 3. 6. 7. and 60. 3. 7. 10. 12. Compare that promise made by the Prophet The Lord will have mercy 〈◊〉 Iakob and will yet choose Israel and set them in the●● own land the strangers shall be joyned with them they shall cleave to the house of Iakob And the peoples shall take them and bring them to their place and the house of Israel shall possesse them in the land of the Lord for servants and handmaids and they shall take them captives whose captives they were and they shall rule over their oppressors Esay 14. 1. 2. Verse 45. of the sojou●n●●s or of the stranger inhabitants meaning such as were in the land but not joyned to the Church of Israel as the Chaldee paraphrast here calleth them uncircumcised sojourners these sojourners are opposed to the heathens out of the land round about them verse 44. that doe sojourne or that are strangers in Greeke that are among you of their fa●●the in Chaldee of their seed And this might bee if the mother onely were a stranger An Israelite the lyeth with a Canaanitish bondwoman for as much as she is a bondwoman he begetteth a Canaanite 〈◊〉 every respect and he is fold and bought and made to ser●● for ever as other bondmen Maimony in Servants chap. 9. sect 1. which accordeth with that law in Exod. 21. 4. Vers. 46. as an inheritance for your sonnes the Greeke translateth you shall divide or impart them unto your children These words possession and ●●heritance applyed thus to servants meane their subjection under their masters according to which phrase God is said to inherite in all nations Ps. 82. 8. and Christ to have the heathens c. for his inheritance and possession Psal. 2. 8. And in saying for your sons hee implieth a prohibition to sell the● to strangers especially if the servant were turned to the
Churches stature is made upright and tall like the P 〈…〉 e tree Song 7. 7. which grace when Israel rejected God bowed downe their backe alway Romans 11. 10. Vers. 14. not hearken to me that is as the Greeke saith not obey me and the Chaldee not receive my word So in verse 18. Here followeth many moe threatnings whereby God prophesied of their falling from him and his judgements upon them till they should be restored by grace verse 44. 45. So in Deut. 28. Vers. 15. despise or contemptuously reject as Israel did 2 King 17. 15. Ier. 6. 19. Ezek. 5. 6. and 20. 13. 24. lothe or abhorre as after in verse 43. he 〈…〉 th they would doe for which he repayed them according as the Prophet saith hath thy soule loathed Sion why hast thou smitten us and there is no healing for us Ier. 14. 19. all my Com. with this also they are charged in Ier. ●2 23. whatsoever thou commandedst them to dee they have not done breake or make frustrate as Gen. 17. 14. and this God foretelleth Moses that Israel would doe Deu● 31. 16. 20. and complaineth to Ieremie that they had done it Ier. 11. 10. and other Prophets charge them with the like Esa. 24. 5. Ezek. 16. 59. To bre 〈…〉 the covenant is expounded by the Apostle not continuing in it Heb. 8. 9. from Ier. 31. 32. as on the contrary to confirme it is to continue in doing 〈◊〉 things commanded Deut. 27. 26. with Gal. 3. 10. Vers. 16. appoint or constitute give charge 〈◊〉 that which should have authoritie over them shewing the power of Gods judgements Comp 〈…〉 Psal. 109. 6. suddaine-terrour speedy-plag 〈…〉 which shall consume in hast the perform 〈…〉 whereof is shewed in Psal 78. 33. hee consum 〈…〉 their dayes with suddaine-terrour So in Ierem. 15 8. Zeph. 1. 18. consumption or shaking-ague 〈…〉 Greeke scabbednesse so in Deut. 28. 22. and 〈◊〉 where the word is not used the burning-agu 〈…〉 or fever the Greeke here translateth it the 〈…〉 dise but better in Deut. 28. 22. the fever 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which hath the name orinally of burning This 〈◊〉 ease Christ cured on such as were ready to 〈◊〉 therewith Luk. 4. 38. 39. Ioh. 4. 47. 52. 〈◊〉 consume or make fayle in Chaldee that darken 〈◊〉 eyes this is referred to all the former disease 〈◊〉 the Greeke interpreteth it by a word that signifieth consuming with unnaturall heat Or thi● consuming of the eyes David complaineth in the person of Christ Psal. 69. 4. pine-away make languish with sorrow care paine and hunger as in Ier. 31. 25. filling is opposed to the pining soule the Greeke translateth make your soule to melt away The word is applied also to the languishing of the eyes Psal. 88. 10. but here and in Deut. 28. 65. to 〈◊〉 pining or languishing-sorrow of the soule meaning of the wholeman or life as the Chaldee 〈◊〉 translateth it the breathing-out of the soule 〈…〉 mies shall eate it The like is threatned in Deut. 28. 33. 51. and by other Prophets as Loe I will 〈◊〉 a nation on you from farre c. and they shall 〈◊〉 thine harvest and thy bread which thy sonnes and 〈◊〉 daughters should eat they shall eate up thy flockes 〈◊〉 thine herds they shall eate up thy vines and thy fig 〈…〉 Ier. 5. 17. The contrary is promised in Christ 〈◊〉 shall not plant and another eate c. they shall 〈…〉 bour in vaine Esa. 65. 22. 23. And the Lord 〈◊〉 sworne Surely I will no more give thy corne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 meat for thine enemies Esa. 62. 8. Vers. 17. set my face Heb. give my face which the Chaldee translateth mine anger so face is used for anger Levit. 20. 5. 6. Psal. 21. 10. 〈◊〉 that is as the Chaldee expoundeth broken in 〈◊〉 ye shall fall before your enemies Contrary to the blessing in vers 7. 8. and Deut. 28. 7. This judg●ment was executed Iudg. 2. 14. 1 Sam. 4. 2. and 〈◊〉 rule over you in Greeke persecute you This was verified Psal. 106. 41. They that hated them 〈◊〉 over them and in Nehem. 9. 28. After they had 〈◊〉 they returned to doe evill before thee therefore th 〈…〉 test them in the hand of their enemies so that they 〈◊〉 the dominion over them But when God sheweth mercy to Israel hee promiseth they shall rule 〈◊〉 their oppressours Esa. 14. 2. none pursueth This sheweth great fearefulnesse of heart through guiltinesse of conscience for sinne fearing where no feare is Psal. 53. 6. So in Pro. 28. 1. The wicked flee when no man pursueth Hereof there is a lively description in Iob 15. 20. 21. c. and the contrary in Psalme 27. 1. 2. c. Vers. 18. not hearken or not obey in Chaldee not receive my word as vers 14. Here God to shew his long-sufferance and the more to affect his people chastiseth by degrees according to the measure of their sinnes and prophesieth of their stubbornenesse who would not amend with light punishments whereof he after complaineth thus In vaine have I smitten your children they received no correction Ieremie 2. 30. seven times a certaine number for an uncertaine meaning many times seven is a complete number as is noted on Gen. 33. 3. Levit. 4. 6. Vers. 19. the excellencie or the pompe pride haugh●inesse of your strength called elsewhere the excellencie or pomp of the strong-ones Ezek. 7. 24. This is in particular applied to their Sanctuarie and religion in Ezek. 24 21. Behold I will profane my Sanctuarie the excellencie of your strength the desire of your eyes and the pitie of your soule Though it implieth generally all other things wherein strength and excellencie doe consist see Ezek. 30. 6 18. and 33. 28. will make Hebr. will give your heavens that is as the Chaldee translateth the heavens that are over you and so Moses expoundeth it in Deut. 28. 23. as yron the Chaldee explaineth it hard as yron that they shall not give-downe raine and the earth that is under you strong as brasse that it shall yeeld no fruit So in Deut. 28. 23. save that there Moses likeneth the heavens to brasse and the earth to yron This is contrary to the blessing promised in verse 4. And the complement hereof is shewed in Ier. 14. 1. 2. c. where a dearth is mentioned for which Iudah mourned her gates languished the cry of Ierusalem ascended their Nobles sent their little ones for water but they found none they returned with the vessels empty the ground was chapt for there was no raine in the earth the Hind calved in the field and forsooke it the wilde asses snuffed up the wind their eyes fayled because there was no grasse Vers. 20. her increase the increase or fruit ex●pected or which otherwise it should naturally yeeld so in Genes 4. 12. And this is an effect of the former restraining of raine as Hag. 1. 10. Deuter. 11. 17. The word increase is in Greeke translated spo 〈…〉 seed sowne and
him that continueth not in doing all things commanded Deut. 27. 26. Galat. 3. 10. and whosoever shall keepe the whole Law and yet fayleth in one point he is guiltie of all I am 2. 10. And here this nullitie of the former dayes is added onely to the third dutie of the Nazirite that he should not defile himselfe by the dead and not to either of the former two which might seeme to be greater Of this the Hebrewes have these observations A Nazirite that drinketh wine or eatch that which commeth of the vine though many dayes he destroyeth not or frustrateth not the dayes of his Naziriteship no not one day And so if he shall shave off a little haire of his head or either ignorantly or presumptuaously shave all his head c. he frustrateth but 30 dayes till he have lockes againe and after that he beginneth to reckon As if he vowed to be a Nazirite an 100 dayes and after 20 dayes his head is shaven then hee must wait 30 dayes till the hair of his head be grown and after 30 dayes he is to reckon 80 dayes for the complement of the dayes of his Naziriteship And all those 30 dayes all the particular duties of a Nazirite lye upon him onely they come not into his reckoning A Nazerite that is defiled whether pre●umptuously or ignorantly yea though it be by the pollution of an heathen by constraint he s 〈…〉 slratch all and must be shavē with the shaving for uncleannes bring the oblations for uncleannesse and is to began againe to reckon the dayes of his Naziriteship Num. 6 12. Yea though he be defiled in the day when the dayes of his Naziriteship are fulfilled and in the end of the day all is frustrate If he be defiled the day after the fulfilling that is the day when he bringeth the oblations of puritie he frustrateth 30 dayes onely and thus hee is to doe He is to bring the oblations for uncleannesse and shave for uncleannes and begin to reckon the Naziriteship of 30 dayes and then hee is to shave for cleannesse and bring the oblations of cleannesse mentioned in v. 14 c. And if he be defiled after any one of the bloods be sprinkled for him hee frustrateth not a whit but bringeth the rest of the oblations for cleannesse If he vow to be a Nazirite while he is uncleane by the dead his Naziriteship beginneth upon him if he defile himselfe the second time or drinke wine or shave his head he is to be beaten And if he cō●●ue in his uncleannes many dayes they profit him not for his account untill he 〈◊〉 sprinkled the third day and the seventh be washed in the seventh and that seventh day goeth into his account of Naziriteship for him that voweth while he is uncleane but a cleane Nazirite which is defiled he beginneth not to reckon till the eighth day and forward If he have an issue in his flesh be he man or woman all the dayes of their issue goe on in their reckoning although they be uncleane Levit. 15. and this was taught Moses at Mount Sinai And I need not speake how if a Nazirite be uncleane with other uncleannesses the dayes of his uncleannes go on in his reckoning and he loseth not any Maim in Nezir ch 6. s. 1. 8. and c. 7. s 9 10. Verse 13. the Law the third part of the Nazirites Law how heshould shew himselfe thankfull unto God when through his grace hee hath fullfilled his vow and is orderly to be discharged of the same he shall bring him he shall present himselfe to the Lord by the Priest or the Priest shall bring him It appeareth by Act. 21. 26. that the Nazirite was to goe into the Sanctuarie to signifie the accomplishment of the dayes of the sanctification or Naziriteship Some translate he shall bring it the oblation after mentioned and this the Greeke Version favoureth Sol. Iarchi expoundeth it he shall bring himselfe Vers. 14. shall offer or shall bring neere as the Greeke translateth hee shall bring his gift perfect in Greeke without blemish see Exod. 12. Peace-offerings in Greeke Salvation Of these sacrifices see Lev. 1. an● 3. and 4. 〈◊〉 for according to the rites there specified were they to be offered And whereas the Nazirite though he had fulfilled his vow without any pollution is here commanded notwithstanding to bring a Sin-offering c. it taught the secret and unseene guiltinesse which cleaveth to the most holy men in their best and most perfect works which without atonement by the blood of Christ cannot be pure and pleasing in the sight of God For though a man know nothing by himselfe yet is he not hereby 〈…〉 but he that judgeth him is the Lord 1 Cor. 4. 4. in whose sight no man can be justified by the workes o● the Law Gal. 2. 15 16. These 〈◊〉 〈…〉 〈◊〉 here saith were to looseth 〈◊〉 pro 〈…〉 s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●he Nazirite the fruit of 〈…〉 e his shaving and defiling by the dea 〈…〉 R. Mena 〈…〉 applieth th male 〈◊〉 for a b 〈…〉 〈…〉 ffering to the propertie of mercie and the female 〈…〉 Sin-offering to the propertie of judgment and the peace-offerings to the glory of Israel that setteth peace in the world Verse 15. and wafers The Hebrewes as Sol. Iarchi here say there were teno 〈…〉 ach sort ten cakes and ten wafers which Maimony in Nazir ch 8 sect 1. declareth thus And he bringeth with the ram for peace-offerings six tenth-deales of figure c. of them he baketh twenty cakes ten cakes of unleavened bread and ten wafers of unleavened bread and anointeth the twentie with the fourth part of a Log of oyle and he bringeth the twenty in one vessell See Lev. 7. 12. their meat-offering besides the former extraordinary cakes wafers he was to bring the ordinary meat-offering and drink-offerings appointed for all sacrifices whereof see Num. 28. Verse 16. shall offer them or shall bring them neere which words doe one explaine another in the Hebrew text as they brought neere burnt sacrifices 1 Chr. 16. 1. that is offred burnt sacrifices 2 Sam. 6. 17. For the order it is said He killed the sin-offering first and after that the burnt-offering and after that the peace-offerings and after that hee was shaved And if he were shaved after the killing of the sin-offering or of the burnt-offering it would serve Maim in Nazir ch 8. s. 2. shall doe that is shall offer as v. 11. his sin-offering whereby the Nazirite acknowledged himselfe a sinner even in the most sanctified time and actions of his life and that he could have no accesse unto God but by the sacrifice of Christ so mans best workes have no place in justification Rom. 3. 20. Verse 17. shall make or shall doe that is offer as verse 16. for a sacrifice of peace-offerings to give chan●es unto God by whose grace he had fulfilled his vow Therefore he rejoyced keeping a feast before the Lord for
ordinance for to strengthen the faith of Israel walking in his feare so the word them is to be understood both of people and Priests as it is said He will blesse the house of Israel he will blesse the house of Aaron he will blesse them that feare Iehovah the small with the great Psalm 115. 12 13. and his blessing it maketh rich and hee addeth no sorrow with it Prov. 10. 22. And whereas the Priests were sometime simple and sometime wicked men as the sonnes of Eli were sonnes of Belial 1 Sam. 2. 12. lest any should despise the ordinance of God for their unworthinesse this promise is here added And in the Hebrew Canons they have this rule Doe not marvell and say what avayleth the blessing of this simple priest For the receiving of the blessing dependeth not on the Priests but on the holy blessed God as it is written They shall put my name upon the sonnes of Israel and I will blesse them Numb 6. 27. The Priests doe the commandement which is commanded them and the holy blessed God in his mercy blesseth Israel according to his pleasure Maim treat of prayer chap. 15. sect 7. CHAP. VII 1 When the Tabernacle was set up anointed and sanctified the Princes of the tribes give six wagons and twelve Oxen for the service of the Sanctuarie which were given to the Levites of Gershon and Merari 10. The twelue Princes offer every one in his day vessels of silver and gold and cattell for sacrifices of all sorts at the dedication of the Altar 84. The summe and weight of all the vessels and number of all the sacrifices which the Princes did offer 89. God speaketh unto Moses from the Mercie-seat in the Tabernacle ANd it was in the day when Moses had finished the rearing up of the tabernacle had anointed it sanctified it all the instruments thereof the altar and all the instruments thereof and had anointed them and sanctified them Then offered the Princes of Israel heads of the house of their fathers they were the Princes of the Tribes they were those that stood over them that were mustered And they brought their oblation before Iehovah six covered wagons and twelve oxen a wagon for two of the Princes and an oxe for one and they brought them neere before the Tabernacle And Iehovah said unto Moses saying Take it of them that they may be to serve the service of the Tent of the Congregation and thou shalt give them unto the Levites to every man according to his service And Moses tooke the wagons and the oxen and gave them unto the Levites Two wagons and foure oxen he gave unto the sonnes of Gershon according to their service And foure wagons and eight oxen he gave unto the sonnes of Merari according to their service under the hand of Ithamar the sonne of Aaron the Priest But unto the sonnes of Kohath he gave none because the service of the Sanctuarie was upon them they should beare with shoulder And the Princes offered for the dedication of the altar in the day that it was anointed and the Princes offered their oblation before the altar And Iehovah said unto Moses One Prince for a day one Prince for a day shall they offer their oblation for the dedication of the altar And he that offered his oblation in the first day was Naasson the sonne of Amminadab of the tribe of Iudah And his oblation was one silver dish an hundred and thirtie shekels was the weight thereof one silver bason of seventie shekels by the shekel of the Sanctuarie both of them full of fine flowre mingled with oile for a meat-offering One cup of ten shekels of gold full of incense One bullocke a yongling of the herd one ramme one lambe of his first yeere for a Burnt-offering One goat-bucke of the goats for a sin offering And for a sacrifice of Peace-offerings two oxen five rammes five hee-goats five lambes of the first yeare this Was the oblation of Naasson the sonne of Amminadab In the second day offered Nethaneel the sonne of Zuar the Prince of Issachar He offered his oblation one silver dish an hundred and thirtie shekels was the weight thereof one silver bason of seventie shekels by the shekel of the Sanctuarie both of them full of fine flowre mingled with oile for a Meat-offring One cup of ten shekels of gold full of incense One bullocke a yongling of the herd One ramme one lambe of his first yeare for a burnt offering One goat-bucke o● the goats for a sin offering And for a sacrifice of Peace-offerings two oxen five rammes five hee-goats five lambs of the first yeare this was the oblation of Nethaneel the sonne of Zuar In the third day the Prince of the sonnes of Zabulon Eliab the sonne of Helon His oblation was one silver dish an hundred and thirtie shekels was the weight thereof one silver bason of seventie shekels by the shekel of the Sanctuarie both of them full of fine flowre mingled with oyle for a Meat-offering One cup of ten shekels of gold full of incense One bullocke a yongling of the herd one ramme one lambe of his first yeare for a burnt offering One goat-bucke of the goats for a sin offering And for a sacrifice of Peace-offerings two oxen five rammes five hee-goats five lambes of the first yeere this was the oblation of Eliab the sonne of Helon In the fourth day the Prince of the sonnes of Reuben Elizur the sonne of Shedeur His oblation was one silver dish an hundred and thirtie shekels was the weight thereof one silver bason of seventie shekels by the shekel of the Sanctuarie both of them full of fine flowre mingled with oyle for a Meat-offering One cup of ten shekels of gold full of incense One bullocke a yongling of the herd one ramme one lambe of his first yeare for a burnt-offering One goat-bucke of the goats for a sin offering And for a sacrifice of Peace-offerings two oxen five rammes five hee-goats five lams of the first yeare this was the oblation of Elizur the sonne of Shedeur In the fift day the Prince of the sonnes of Simeon Shelumiel the sonne of Zurishaddai His oblation was one silver dish an hundred and thirty shekels was the weight thereof one silver bason of seventy shekels by the shekel of the Sanctuarie both of them full of fine flowre mingled with oyle for a Meat-offering One cup of ten shekels of gold full of incense One bullocke a yongling of the ●erd one ramme one lamb of his first yeere for a Burnt-offering One goat-bucke of the goats for a sin offering And for a sacrifice of Peace-offerings two oxen five rammes five hee-goats five lambs of the first yeare this was the oblation of Shelumiel the sonne of Zurishaddai In the sixt day the Prince of the sonnes of Gad Eliasaph the sonne of Deguel His oblation was one silver dish an hundred and thirtie shekels was the weight thereof one silver bason of seventie shekels by
Esai 58. 1. and 27. 13. Ezek. 33. 3. Rev. 4. 1. 1 Cor. 14. 8. So the Hebrewes say the trumpets were to be made of silver if of any other kinde of metall they were unlawfull Maim in Cle hammikdash ch 3. sect 5. The tongue of the just is as choise silver Prov. 10. 20. and the words of the LORD are pure words as silver tried c. Psalm 12. 7. beaten worke wrought with the hammer beaten into a plate of one whole peece so the golden Candlesticke was Exod. 25. 31. It signified the labour of the ministers of God giving themselves continually to praier and to the ministerie of the word Act. 6. 4. that the trumpets may give a cleare and certaine sound for and unto the people for the calling for to call together the congregation This was the first of the foure speciall uses of these trumpets when the people rested to assemble them unto the Lord in his Sanctuarie for to heare his word to pray and to doehim worship As Blow the trumpet in Sion sanctifie a fast call a solemne assembly Gather the people sanctifie the congregation c. Ioel 2. 15 16. and Blow the trumpet in the new moone c. Psalm 81. 4. It signified that all the meetings of the Church should be sanctified by the word of God and prayer for the journeying to cause the camps that is the people in their camps or tents to take their journeyes This was the second use of the trumpets to sanctifie by their sound the journeyes and travels of Gods people that as their rest so all their motions might be in God by the conduct of his word and spirit Thus were there three things to be observed at their removings the Lords taking up of the cloud Num. 9. 18. 22. the sound of the trumpets Num. 10. 2. 5. 6. and the prayer of Moses Num. 10. 35. Verse 3. And they that is the Priests shall blow as is expressed in vers 8. The Greeke translateth thou shalt blow meaning Moses by the Priests whom he appointed thereto with them with both of them for when but one was blowne the Princes onely assembled vers 4. Verse 4. with one the Latine translateth it once but the Greeke better with one trumpet● heads that is captaines governours of thousands in Greeke Chiliarchs see Exod. 18. 21. Thus was there one trumpet for the rulers and one for the people that all their assemblies might be in the name and by the signe of the Lord and the Governours might have their meeting apart but not the people without the Governours presence for wha●soever concerned the people it belonged also to the Princes with them in resting or journeying peace or warre And all assembled unto Moses the chiefe and figure of Christ Heb. 3. 1 2. Verse 5. And if ye blow or And ye shall blow an alarme and the camps c. So after and thus the Greeke translateth it an alarme or a broken sound in Hebrew Trugnah which is generally any loud broken ringing noise either with trumpets as here or with mens voices and shoutings as in 1 Sam. 4. 5. and this either a ioyfull shout and triumphant noise as Num. 23. 21. Psal. 47. 6. Ezr. 3. 11 12. or a mournfull cry as Ier. 20. 16. See the notes on Levit. 23. 24. This broken sound or alarme was fittest to stir vp and incourage the mindes of the people to rise and march forward to battell against the Canaanites as the former continued equall sound was for their quiet assembling vnto the seruice of God and hearing of his Law And unto this difference the Apostle hath respect when he saith If the trumpet give an uncertaine sound who shall prepare himselfe to the battell 1 Cor. 14. 8. And therfore also the Greeke here and often otherwhere translateth it signe or signification because by it the people distinctly perceived what they were to doe Andir signified how God by his trumpeters the Prophets and Apostles hath distinctly signified his will unto his Church for all things needfull to furnish them unto all good works 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. and such should be the teaching of all his Ministers The Hebrew Doctors have understood the former blowing with an equall continued sound to be a signe of mercy to Israel and this alarme or broken sound to be a signe of judgment against their enemies R. Menachem on Num. 10. saith The blowing of trumpets signified mercies therefore in the time of assembling the people he saith And they shall blow with them and all the assembly shall assemble themselves unto thee Num. 10. 3. for the gathering of them is in mercy as it is written Returne ô LORD unto the ten thousand thousands of Israel Numb 10. 36. Likewise And he was King in Iesurun when the beads of the people the tribes of Israel were gathered together Deut. 33. 5. But their journeying was with an alarme Num. 10. 5. because the divine Majestie went before them and it is written Rise up LORD and let thine enemies be scattred Num. 10. 35. So the walls of Iericho fell with an alarme or shout Iof. 6. 20. because Gods Majestie went before them to consume their enemies c. on the East side which were Iudah Issachar and Zabulon Num. 2. 3-7 Verse 6. on the South side Reuben Simeon and Gad Num. 2. 10. c. for their journeyes or according to their journeyings that is not for these two quarters onely but for the other also as Chazkuni observeth for all the foure camps Here therefore the Greeke version addeth by way of explanation And ye shall sound the third alarme and the camps that encampe towards the West shall 〈◊〉 their journey and ye shall sound the fourth alarm● and the camps that encampe towards the North 〈◊〉 take their journey The like is signified also by F● Iosephus in Antiq. Iudaic. lib. 3. c. 11. Where the Latine version misseth interpreting Noton the backe part of the Tabernacle which was westward when it meaneth the South and the third 〈◊〉 Liba westward he turneth Southward when Li 〈…〉 is one of the westerne winds as sheweth Aul. Gellius in Noct. Attic. l. 2. c. 22. Vers. 8. a statute for ever an everlasting ordinance the outward rite continuing till Christs comming the spirituall use abiding still for ever that by the preaching of the word and prayer the Ministers of God should guide his people in all their affaires Vers. 9 yee goe to warre Hebr. yee come to warre which the Greeke translateth come forth But comming is often used for going as in Ion. 1. 3. comming that is going to Tharshish the distre 〈…〉 in Greeke the adversaries that resist you This was the third use of the trumpets to be sounded in time of warre and tribulation whereof there be examples in Israels warre against the Midianites Num. 31. 6. in the Iewes war against the Aposta●e Israelites when they said Behold God is with us for a captaine and his Priests with sounding trumpets to
Priests in their apparell with trumpets c. and praised the Lord whose mercy endureth for ever towards Israel Ezr. 3. 10 11. and likewise at the dedication of the wall of Ierusalem Nehem. 12. 27. 35. solemne feasts the ordinary feasts appointed of God whereof see Levit. 23. beginnings called in Greeke New Moones which were in Israel at the beginning of every moneth and were among the Solemnities Num. 28. 11. c. at which times trumpets and cornets were blowne as appeareth also by Psalm 81. 4. with the Trumpets Afterward God by David and the Prophets ordained other instruments whereon the Levites played called the instruments of musicke of the LORD 2 Chrō 7. 6. and they were Psalteries Harps Cymbals 1 Chron. 16. 5 6. Flutes or Pipes and Timbrels Psal. 149. 3. David also and the Prophets made Psalmes and Songs which some of the Levites sung whiles other played on the instruments 1 Chron. 25. and 16. 7 8. c. And the Hebrewes recording the manner of service in the Temple say There might not be fewer than twelve Levites standing upon the stage every day to sing th● song over the sacrifice alwaies And they sung the song with meuth without instrument There might not be fewer Psalteries than two nor moe than six not fewer Pipes than two nor moe than twelve not fewer Trumpets than two nor moe than an hundred and twenty not fewer Harpes than nine but as many moe alwaies as they would and but one Cymbal onely Maimony tom 3. in Cle hammikdash chap. 3. sect 3 4. over your Burnt-offrings a practise of this is shewed in Ezekialis time for he set the Levites in the house of the Lord with Cymbals with Psalteries and with Harps according to the commandement of David and of Gad the Kings Seer and of Nathan the Prophet for the commandement was by the hand of the Lord by the hand of his Prophets and the Levites stood with the instruments of David and the Priests with the Trumpets And Ezekiah commanded to offer the Burnt-offering upon the Altar and when the Burnt-offring began the Song of the Lord began with the Trumpets and with the instruments ordained by David King of Israel And all the Congregation worshipped and the singers sang and the trumpeters sounded all this continued untill the Burnt-offring was finished 2 Chron. 29. 25. 28. So when Solomon sacrificed at the dedication of the Temple the Levites that were singers and others with Cymbals Psalteries and Harps were arrayed in white linnen and stood at the East end of the Altar and with them 120. Priests sounding with trumpets And the trumpeters and singers were as one to make one sound to be heard in praising and thanking the Lord and they lift up their voice with the trumpets and cymbals and instruments of musicke and praised the Lord For he is good for his mercy endureth for ever 2 Chron. 5. 12 13. of your Peace-offrings The Hebrewes say they used to sing the Song over all the Burnt-offrings of the Congregation which were due to be offred and over the Peace-offrings of the solemne assembly at the time when the wine the drink-offering was powred out But the voluntary Burnt-offrings which the Congregation offred c. they sang not the song over them Maimony in Cle hammikdash ch 3. sect 3. So they understood this Law not for private mens sacrifices but for the publike Churches they did not blow save onely at the Congregations offring which was appointed them saith Chazkuni on Numb 10. This use of the trumpets signified the spirituall graces and joy that Gods people should shew forth in his service directed thereto by his Ministers Psal. 98. 6. and 150. 3. and 81. 3 4. Ezr. 3. 10. 2 Chron. 5. 12 13. Coloss. 3. 16. Ephes. 5. 18 19. Blessed are the people that know the shouting-sound or alarme of the trumpet Psal. 89. 16. Vers. 11. second yeere after Israel was come out of Egypt Num. 9. 1. second moneth which we now call Aprill the Hebrewes called it Ijar twentieth day the second Passeover being ended Num. 9. 11. when by Mount Sinai where the Law was given them they had abidden twelve moneths lacking ten daies as appeareth by comparing Exod. 19. 1 2. the cloud was taken up by the Lord which was a signe that now the people should remove Numb 9. 17. But they had withall word from the Lord who spake unto them saying Yee have dwelt long enough in this mountaine turne you and take your journey and goe to the mount of the Amorites c. Behold I have given the land before you goe in and posse 〈…〉 which Iehovah sware unto your fathers Deu● 1. 6 7 8. So both by word and signe God called them from Sinai the place of bondage by reason of the Law there given Gal. 4. 24 25. unto the land 〈…〉 promise which figured the state of grace and freedome by Iesus Christ see the notes on Gen. 〈◊〉 5. Verse 12. by their journeyes from Sinai to Taberah and Kibroth-hattaavah Num. 11. 3. 34. and 33. 16. from Kibroth-hattaavah to H 〈…〉 〈◊〉 from Hazeroth into the wildernesse of 〈◊〉 Num. 11. 35. and 12. 16. Pharan or 〈◊〉 the name of a wildernesse and mountaine in it mentioned againe in Deut. 1. 1. and 33. 2. In this wildernesse Ismael dwelt Gen. 21. 22. Verse 13. at the mouth that is the word as the Chaldee saith or by the voice as the Greeke translateth see Num. 9. 18. 23. the hand that 〈◊〉 the ministerie of Moses who ordered the blowing of the trumpets and sanctified the journey by prayer v. 35. Thus they had foure things at this first removall to confirme their faith in their 〈◊〉 vell through that terrible wildernesse the Word● God commanding them and the lifting up of his cloud for a signe visible the word of Mosses in pra●er and the sound of the trumpets for a signe 〈◊〉 ble And thus they were furnished with all go●d meanes to conduct them into their promised inheritance wherefore amongst other mercies or God to Israel the memoriall of this was after celebrate● that he led his people in the wildernesse for his 〈◊〉 endureth for ever Psal. 136. 16. Deut. 8. 15. 〈◊〉 63. 14. Ier. 2. 6. Verse 14. according to or with their armies that is with the armie of Issachar and armie or Zabulon both which were under the standard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dah Num. 2. 2 3. 9. So the Lion of Iudah as standard-bearer and figure of Christ goeth before them all to fight in the forefront of the 〈◊〉 against the Canaanites see Gen. 49. 8. Iudg. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verse 17. was taken downe after that the Priest had with veiles and clothes covered the Ark 〈…〉 other holy things in the Tabernacle as is prescribed in Numb 4. 5. c. The taking downe of the Tabernacle and removall thereof and setting it up in another place signified among other th 〈…〉 the instabilitie of that legall figurative worship which Christ at his comming
10. a Fire-offering in Chaldee an oblation This is meant as Sol. larchi saith but of the Meat-offering and of the oile for the wine was no Fire-offering because it was not put upon the fire Verse 11. or of the goats bee it kid or goat-bucke male or female old or young for the Law putteth no difference as is before observed and so noted by Chazkuni here As for the manner of offering these Meat-offerings the Hebrew canons say that they were not charged to bring frankincense with them as they were with the Meat-offerings that were brought alone Lev. 2. 1. but they were charged to have salt according to the Law in Lev. 2. 13. and this Meat-offering was all of it burnt upon the Altar in the Courty ard whereas of the other Meat-offering an handfull onely was burnt and the residue eaten by the Priests Lev. 2. 2 3. and the wine was powred upon the Altar Maim in Magn. hakorbanoth chap. 2. sect 1. Verse 12. so shall yee make readie or thus shall yee doe The Hebrewes say These Meat and Drinke-offerings whether they be for Burnt-offering or Peace-offerings must bee according to this measure for every one Num. 15. 12. they may not adde more to these measures nor diminish ought from them and if they doe diminish or adde more the whole is made unlawfull Except it bee the Lamb of Burnt-offering which they bring on the day that they wave the Omer of first-fruits Levit. 23. 12 13. for the Meat-offering thereof is two tenth-deales of fine flower mingled with the third part of an Hin of oile but though the flower thereof bee doubled yet is not the wine doubled but the wine for the drinke-offering is the fourth part of an Hin When they measure the Meat or Drinke-offering either of a particular person or of the congregation they mete it not by a measure of three tenth deales for a bullocke or of two for aramme but they measure all in one tenth deale which is in the sanctuarie likewise the oile c. The flower with the oile of the Meat-offerings hinder not the wine neither doth the wine hinder them neither doe the meat or drinke-offerings hinder the sacrifice But a man may bring his oblation to day his meat and drinke-offerings ten dayes after provided that he have not sanctified them in a ministring vessell For if he have put them into a ministring vessell of the Sanctuarie if they abide all night they become thereby unlawfull They may bring no Meat or Drinke-offerings save of common things they may not bring them of the heave-offering nor of the second tithe nor of the first-fruits but of common things onely Maimony in Magn. hakorbanoth chap. 2. sect 5. 8. 12 13. The Burnt and Peace-offerings served as other sacrificer to make atonement for the house of Israel Ezek. 45. 17. Levit. 1. 4. and figured Christs oblation of himselfe to reconcile us unto God his Father and to be our Peace Heb. 9. 14. and 10. 8. 10. Eph. 2. 14 15 16. The Meat-offering besides the signification that it had of Christ Eph. 5. 2. figured in speciall manner the faith and sanctimonie of his people and of their service of God Esai 66. 20. Rom. 15. 16. Psal. 141. 2. Mal. 1. 10 11. So the Lord by this addition of the Meat-offering to the other sacrifices in Canaan taught his people sanctitie in the faith and profession of the Gospell both touching their persons and actions and the Drinke-offerings of wine powred out upon and sanctified by the Altar were not onely a type of Christs bloud shed for remission of sinnes Mat. 26. 28 29. but of our fellowship with him in his afflictions even to be powred out upon the sacrifice and service of Christians faith Philip. 2. 17. 2 Tim. 4. 6. See the annotations on Levit. 2. Verse 13. home-borne the naturall Israelite Vers. 14. stranger in Greeke Proselyte the Gentile converted to the Iewes religion in your generations or throughout that is in all ages successively so in verse 15. Verse 15. Yee of the church or O Church or congregation or Concerning the church which in Targum Ionathan is expounded the whole church before Iehovah in the exercises of religion before the Lord for in civill things there was not one law for both Israelites and strangers Verse 16. one manner that is one manner of practise and obedience and one punishment for transgression Hebr. one judgement So in vers 24. Vers. 17. And Iehovah spake A second ordinance by the Lords authoritie is here imposed upon them that should come into the land of Canaan that they should give him a cake of the first of their dough which law is no where mentioned by Moses save in this place And as the former Law for sacrificing taught them holinesse by faith in Christ who should be sacrificed for his church so this commandement of First-fruits taught them to shew forth the fruits of faith by good workes which God appointed his people to walke in Verse 18. When yee come into the land As a promise is here included that God would bring them into that good land so a duty of thankfulnesse is commanded that they might remember and acknowledge his mercie and have his blessing continued upon them The Hebrewes doe observe that This COMMING differeth from all the COMMINGS mentioned in the Law for in them all it is said When thou art or shalt come When yee are come meaning after the possession thereof and dwelling therein but here it is said When yee come meaning after they were entred into it and did eat of the bread thereof they were bound to give the cake saith Sol. Iarchi on Num. 15. Now this they did before the land was parted for inheritance as appeareth in Ios. 5. 11 12. where they did eat of the old corne of the land and then the Manna ceased And as an Omer of Manna was reserved before the Lord for the generations of Israel that they might see and thankfully remember the bread which God gave them to eat in the wildernesse Exod. 16. 32 33. so a cake of the bread which he should give them in Canaan was to bee given unto him that they might acknowledge him to be the preserver and nourisher of them in the land for it is he that giveth bread unto all flesh because his mercie endureth for ever Psal. 136. 25. whither I bring you or am bringing you thither Hence the Hebrews say They were not bound by the Law to give the cake save in the land of Israel onely when all Israel were there c. Fruits without the land that are brought into the land owe the cake but the fruits of the land that are carried out of the land are discharged as it is said WHITHER I BRING YOV there are you bound both concerning the fruits of the land and the fruits without the land But by the doctrine of the Scribes they were to separate a cake also out of the
tribute to the Lord by this homage and tribute they were to acknowledge the victory to be of God and to shew their thankfulnesse for his salvation So David dedicated unto the Lord silver and gold of all nations which hee had subdued 2 Sam. 8. 11. 12. And Esaias prophesieth In that time shall a present be brought unto the LORD of hosts of a people scattered and peeled c. Esay 18. 7. one soule of 500 by soule is here meant person of mankinde and living body of beasts as after is explained And as the 12000 souldiers had much more of the spoile considering their small number than the other many thousands of the congregation so their tribute to the Lord was much lesse by proportion they giving but the five hundreth part when the congregation gave the fiftieth ver 30. God requireth lesse of them as their labour service and jeoparding of their lives had beene greater than their brethrens Vers. 29. unto Eleazar The Lord who was the inheritance of the Priests and Levites Dent. 18. 1 2. and had given them the ordinary heave-offerings which the Israelites offered unto him Num. 18. 19. giveth them also this extraordinary tribute which was levied for him So Abram gave to Melchisedek the Priest the tithe of the spoiles which he had gotten in warre Gen. 14. 20. And as the Levites had the tithes in Israel and the Priests had but a tenth of those tithes Num. 18. 21. 24. 26. 28. so is there here a like proportion allotted whiles the Levites had the fiftieth part vers 30. and the Priests but the five hundreth Vers. 30. one portion of fiftie or one taken or detained of fiftie so in vers 47. of the sheepe or of the flocke-beasts that is of sheepe and of goats for both these are implied under the name flocke as in Lev. 1. 10. of all beasts that is of all manner of beasts but this seemeth to be meant of the beasts fore-named onely and not of Camels or other uncleane beasts because in the particular summes after rehearsed vers 32. 39. there are no uncleane but Asses onely spoken of Chazkuni here saith If thou aske why God commanded not to take a tribute of the Camels seeing there were man camels there as it is written in the warre of Gideon against the Midianites Their Camels were without number Iudg. 6. 5. and 7. 12. the answer is The Scripture mentioneth those onely whereof they tooke the tribute and they tooke no tribute of uncleane beasts save of Asses because they are sanctified by the firstling of the Asse Exod. 13. 13. and 34. 19 20. which keepe the charge or observe the observation keepe watch and doe the service see the notes on Num. 18. 5. Vers. 32. the residue of the prey the cattell whose numbers follow are called the residue or remainder either because some had beene slaine for the souldiers to eat or in respect of the gold and silver and other such spoiles whereof there was no tribute levied Vers. 33. seventie and two thousand that is seventie thousand and two thousand as was explained in the former verse So after Vers. 35. soules of mankind Heb. soule of Adam meaning by soule the persons and by Adam or mankinde the women as after is explained For as at the first both man and woman were called Adam Gen. 5. 2. so the same name is often used for both sexes as here and in vers 40. 46 47. Vers. 40. two and thirtie So the whole number of beasts and girles which were the Lords tribute out of the Souldiers halfe was eight hundred and fortie which were given to Eleazar the Priest vers 41. Vers. 47. one portion of fiftie or one taken of fiftie as in vers 30. The particular summes as may be gathered by the former computation were six thousand seven hundred and fiftie sheep seven hundred and twentie oxen six hundred and ten Asses three hundred and twentie soules of young women the whole summe of them altogether was eight thousand and foure hundred which were taken out of the Congregations halfe and given to the Levites So the whole prize brought home from the Midianites and kept for the use of Israel was of beasts and women-kinde eight hundred thousand and fortie thousand out of which the Lord tooke for his Priests and Levites nine thousand two hundred and fortie Thus he enriched his people with the spoiles of their enemies and they in homage thankfulnesse to the Lord gave him one of five hundred out of the one halfe and one of fiftie out of the other halfe as Abram gave one of ten to Melchisedek the Priest of God of all the spoiles that he had taken from his enemies Gen. 14. 20. Vers. 48. the Officers or Bishops as in vers 14. Vers. 49. in our hand that is in our power under our leading and charge w ch the Greeke and Chaldee translate with us there lacketh not Heb. there is not numbred or mustered to wit as wanting or missing for in such musters the number is observed of those that are absent as of those presēt This was a rare and wonderfull mercie that twelve thousand men of Israel should vanquish so great a nation of Midian without losse of any mans life whereas commonly the sword devoureth one as well as another 2 Sam. 11. 25. But hereby appeareth that precious in the eyes of the LORD is the death of his Saints Psal. 116. 15. and a much like speech was uttered by our Saviour Of them which thou gavest me have I lost none Ioh. 18. 9. Moreover by this victory God encouraged his people to fight the residue of his battels against the Canaanites Vers. 50. an oblation for Iehovah or as the Chaldee explaineth it the oblation of the Lord in Greeke a gift to the Lord. This was a voluntary gift whereas the former levie was commanded v. 25 c. hath found that is hath gotten in this war jewels or instruments vessels atonement for our soules that is for our lives which God hath spared and that there be no plague amongst us as Exod. 30. 12. Herein also they might have respect unto their sinne in sparing the women alive for which Moses reproved them vers 14. 17. Thus though they found all alive yet were they not proud neither boasted of their valour but gave the glory unto God and in themselves they were humbled in conscience of their unworthinesse Vers. 51. every wrought jewell Hebr. jewell or instrument of worke that is cunningly wrought So as the matter was the best of gold the forme also was the best Chazkuni here saith The Scripture sheweth that they brought no broken instrument Vers. 52. shekels what the shekell waighed see on Gen. 20. 16. of the captaines or from the captaines that is Moses tooke the gold of them as in vers 51. and 54. Vers. 54. the Tent the Lords Tabernacle where it was a memoriall for them as the like is spoken of the halfe shekels w ch the Israelites gave when
God are taught to hold fast their inheritance in his promises and right in Christ which they enjoy by faith that as the Father hath made them meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light Coloss. 1. 12. so they may keepe the faith and grace which they have obtained unto the end 1 King 21. 3. Ezek. 46. 18. Iude vers 3. Hebr. 6. 12. ESAY 65. 9. I Will bring forth out of Jakob a seed and out of Judah an inheritor of my mountaines and mine elect shall inherit it and my servants shall dwell there EZEK 20. 35 36 37. I will bring you into the wildernesse of peoples and there will I plead with you face to face like as I pleaded with your fathers in the wildernesse of the land of Egypt so will I plead with you saith the Lord God And I will cause you to passe under the rod and I will bring you into the bond of the Covenant c. HEBR. 9. 15. Christ he is the Mediator of the New * Or Testament Covenant that by meanes of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Covenant they which are called might receive the promise of the eternall inheritance ANNOTATIONS VPON THE FIFTH BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED DEVTERONOMIE WHEREIN BY CONFERENCE OF THE Holy Scriptures by comparing the Greeke and Chaldee Versions and Testimonies of Hebrew Writers the Histories Lawes and Ordinances which MOSES a little before his death repeated and enlarged unto ISRAEL in this Booke are explained BY HENRY AINSWORTH IOSVA 1. 8. This booke of the Law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night that thou maiest observe to doe according to all that is written therein for then thou shalt make thy way prosperous and then thou shalt have good successe LVKE 16. 31. If they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rose from the dead LONDON Printed by John Haviland for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. The summe of the Booke of DEVTERONOMIE IN this fifth Booke Moses to prepare the Israelites unto their inheritance in the Holy Land rehearseth the chiefe things that had befallen them in their forty yeares travell thorow the wildernesse exhorteth them to the love of God and observation of his Law repeateth the ten Commandements and explaineth them particularly with the Ordinances to them belonging adding some moe which he had not before mentioned confirmeth the whole Law with promises to those that keepe it and threatnings to the disobedient reneweth the Covenant between God and his people prophesieth of things that should come to passe in ages following blesseth the Tribes of Israel with severall blessings and having viewed the Land of promise from an high mountaine he dyeth and is buried of God Iosua being his successor in the Government of the people More particularly MOses rehearseth Gods calling of Israel from Horeb towards Canaan The Officers set to governe them The Spies sent to view the land and the peoples rebellion following thereupon Chap. 1 How they passed by Edom Moab and Ammon but fought with the Amorites and conquered King Sihon 2 How Ogwas conquered and their Countries allotted to some tribes of Israel 3 An exhortation to obey Gods law and to shun idlatrie 4 Of the ten Commandements given at Horeb and how the people were affected at the giving of the Law 5 An exposition of the first Commandement how God should be knowne loved and obeyed 6 To root out the Canaanites and their Idolatrie 7 To beware lest forgetfulnesse of former mercies or plenty of good things in Canaan turne them from God 8 Moses would humble Israel under the Lord their God by remembrance of their former many rebellions and Gods mercies renewed and continued notwithstanding 9 and 10 Hee exhorteth them to love and obey the Lord by many weighty reasons 11 An explanation of the second Commandement of abolishing false worship and serving God according to his law 12 The third Commandement expounded against abuse of Gods name by false prophets inticers and revolters to Idolatry 13 The holy Communion of Gods people taught by shadowes of cleane meats tithes c. 14 The fourth Commandement explained by the rites of the Sabbath yeare and the solemne feasts c. 15 and 16 The fifth Commandement of obedience to governours civill and ecclesiasticall appointed of God but not to hearken to any heathenish ministers or false Prophets 17 and 18 The sixt Commandement touching man-slaughter wars murder by one unknowne c. 19 20 21 The seventh Commandement touching adultery rape fornication incest 22 The eighth Commandement touching usury payment of vowes liberty in anothers field pledges man-stealers wages almes justice weights and measures c. 23 24 25 The solemne profession of homage unto God in Canaan at the bringing of first-fruits tithes c. 26 Of writing the Law upon stones the blessings and curses openly pronounced and confirmed by the people 27 Moses promiseth many blessings to them that keepe the Law and threatneth many curses to the disobedient 28 The renewing of the Covenant betweene God and Israel 29 A promise of mercie to repentant sinners beleeving in Christ. 30 The people are encouraged to enter into Canaan with Iosua their Captaine Their falling from God is foretold 31 Moses song wherein he prophesieth of the state of Israel untill the latter daies 32 Before his death Moses blesseth the Tribes of Israel 33 Moses vieweth the land and dyeth is buried of God mourned for of the people and praised above all Prophets 34 THE FIFTH BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED DEVTERONOMIE CHAPTER I. 1 Moses speech in the end of the fortieth yeare briefly rehearsing the Story 6 Of Gods promise and offer to give Israel the Land of Canaan 9 Of Officers given them 19 Of Spies sent to search the Land 34 Of Gods anger for Israels incredulitie 41 and disobedience THese bee the words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side Iordan in the wildernesse in the plaine over against the red Sea betweene Pharan and Tophel and Laban and Hazeroth and Dizahab Eleven daies journey from Horeb by the way of mount Seir unto Kadesh-Barnea And it was in the fortieth year in the eleventh moneth in the first day of the moneth Moses spake unto the sonnes of Israel according unto all that Iehovah had commanded him unto them After he had smitten Sihon King of the Amorites which dwelt in Heshbon and Og king of Bashan which dwelt in Ashtaroth in Edrei On this side Iordan in the Land of Moab began Moses to declare this Law saying Iehovah our God spake unto vs in Horeb saying Yee have dwelt long enough in this mountaine Turne you and take your journey and goe to the mount of the Amorite and unto all his neighbours in the plaine in the mountaine and in the vale and in the south and by the Sea side to the land
translateth it Rabbah was the chiefe City of the Ammonites their royall City 2 Sam. 12. 26. The Greeke here translateth it the chiefe of a man which ordinarily is a foot and a halfe but the Chaldee here translateth it the cubit of the King Vers. 12. Reubenites Hebr. the Reubenite which the Chaldee expoundeth the tribe of Reuben so vers 16. Of this gift see Num. 32. 1. c. Vers. 13. of Manasses for conquering the Amorites there Num. 32. 39 40. Argob this the Chaldee calleth Tracona Basan in Chaldee Matnan Giants in Hebrew Rephaim which the Chaldee expoundeth Mighties Vers. 14. Basan Chavoth Iair the Chaldee saith Matnan the townes of Iair see Numb 32. 41. Vers. 15. Gilead in Greeke Galaad that is the rest of Galaad as vers 13. Vers. 17. Chinnereth or Kinnereth as the Greek writeth it which the Chaldee calleth Ginnosar in the new Testament Gennesaret Matt. 14. 34. see the notes on Numb 34. 11. sea of salt or salt sea see Gen. 14. 3. Ashdoth Pisgah in Greek Asedoth Phasga by interpretation the Streames or Sheddings-out that is the Springs of Pisgah or of the hill and so the Chaldee translateth it The shedding or powring-out of the waters of Ramatha Pisgah is a hill mentioned after in vers 27. and Ashdoth pisgah was afterward the name of a city there adjoyning in Reubens land Ios. 13. 20. So Ios. 12. 3. Vers. 18. you hee speaketh to the Reubenites and the rest on this side Iordan see Num. 32. 20. c. sonnes of power or sonnes of valour that is able and valiant men as in 2 Sam. 13. 28. bee yee sonnes of valour that is bee valiant men so in 2 King 2. 16. 1 Chron. 5. 18. The Greeke here expounds it every prudent man the Chaldee all armed men of the armie Vers. 21. Iosua in Greeke Iesus see Num. 27. 18. c. so will Iehovah doe The examples of Gods former mercies serve for the encouragement and strengthning of the faith of his people in the like or greater trialls that may follow such use also David made 1 Sam. 17. 36 37. and Paul 2 Tim. 4. 17 18. Vers. 22. he fighteth or he it is that sighteth or as the Greeke translateth will sight The Chaldee for Hee saith his Word As Moses here encouraged Iesus the sonne of Nun to fight the Lords battels in Canaan so Moses and Elias talking with Iesus the Sonne of God told him of his departing which hee should accomplish at Ierusalem Luk. 9. 30 31. at what time this figure was fulfilled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the 45 Lecture of the Law see Gen. 6. 9. Verse 23. I besought Iehovah for grace or I supplicated for grace unto Iehovah Here Moses repea●ing his earnest praier to goe into the land and Gods deniall of his request sheweth how greatly the peoples sinne and his owne displeased the Lord Num 20. Verse 24 Lord Iehovah or Lord God the Greeke hath Lord Lord See Gen. 15. 2. for what God meaning there is none The Chaldee turneth it thus That thou art God whose glorious habitation is in the heavens above and thou rulest in the earth beneath and there is note that can doe according to thy workes powerfull acts Hebr. powers whereby powerfull and mighty workes are often meant as Psal. 106. 2. and 145. 4. Matt. 7. 22. 2 Cor. 12. 12. Gal. 3. 5. Verse 25. mountaine that is mountainy countrey see Exod. 15. 17. Lebanon in Greeke Antili●anon in Chaldee the house of the sanctuary because the Temple was built of the Cedars that grew on mount Lebanon 1 King 5. 6 14. So the Temple is called Lebanon in Zach. 11. 1. But that seemeth not to be meant here but rather the mount Lebanon in the north part of the Land which was both an high and fragrant mountaine with sweet and goodly trees growing thereon whereto the Scripture hath reference in Song 4. 11. This great desire Moses had because of the promises which God had made to Israel to bee accomplished in that land the figure of our heavenly heritage Verse 26. for your sakes for they rebelling grieved Moses and caused him to sinne for which this wrath came upon him Num. 20. 3. 12. Psal. 106. 32 33. And the Lord sware that Moses therfore should not come into Canaan Deut. 4. 21. which oath Moses though he repented and intreated for grace could not get reversed for when the Lord sweareth he repenteth not afterward Psal. 110. 4. would not heare me Hebr. heard me● not or he arkened not unto me whereby Gods will is signified as David removed not the Arke 1 Chron. 13. 13 that is would not remove the Arke 2 Sam. 6. 10. for If wee aske any thing according to his will be heareth us 1 Ioh. 5. 14. Vers. 27. Pisgah the Greeke here translateth of the hewen hill because it seemeth they used to hewstones out of it as they did out of other mounts 2 Ch●●● 2. 18. The Chaldee of the height calleth it Ramatha see Deut. 34. 1. Seaward that is We stward as the Chaldee expresseth As the Fathers saw the promises a far off and b●leaved Heb. 11. 13. so Moses a ●arre off vieweth the promised Land and is comforted see Deut. 34. 1. 4. Vers. 28. Iosua or Iesus as vers 21. As Iesus not Moses bringeth Israel into the promised land So the Gospell of Iesus not the Law of Moses bringeth us into the kingdome of heaven Ioh. 1. 17. Gal. 2. 16. and 3. 12 13 24. So it is said of the Tabernacle that it was brought in with Iesus into the possession of the Gentiles Act. 7. 45. Verse 29. Beth-peor in Greeke the house of Phogor an Idol temple on the mount Peor where Baal-peor was worshipped see Num. 23. 28. and 25. 〈◊〉 Deut. 4 3. CHAP. IIII. 1 An exhortation to obedience unto the Law 6 because of the wisdome and righteousnesse 9 and the miraculous giving of the same 15 Against Images and worshipping of Creatures 25 which prevoke Gods anger and cause mens destruction 29. unlesse they repent and so finde mercy with the Lord. 32 No people like Israel who heard God speake and saw his wonders 37 and were his beloved and chosen 41 Moses appointeth three Cities of refuge on the out side of Iordan AND now Israel hearken thou unto the statutes and unto the judgments which I teach you for to doe that ye may live and goe in and possesse the land which Iehovah the God of your fathers giveth you Ye shall not adde unto the word which I command you neither shall yee diminish from it for to keepe the commandements of Iehovah your God which I command you Your eies have seene that which Iehovah did because of Baal-peor for every man which went after Baal-peor Iehovah thy God hath destroyed him from the middest of thee But yee that did cleave unto Iehovah your God are alive all of you this day Behold I have taught you statutes and judgments as Iehovah my God
of God which is the maine argument to strengthen faith Numb 14. 9. Psal. 56. 4 5. and 60. 13 14. 〈◊〉 consuming Hebr. eating so Deut. 4. 24. The Chaldee translateth his word is a consuming fire suddenly or quickly hostily see the notes on Deut. 7. 22. Vers. 4. For my justice The Hebrew In is by the Greeke also here translated For and it often noteth the cause of a thing as Hos. 12. 13. in that is for 〈◊〉 So in Psal. 1. 2. Deut. 2● 16. Here he opposeth the second evill pride of heart against which he dealeth in all the rest of this Chapter Vers. 5. righteousnesse or uprightnes straitnesse equitie the Greeke translateth it here piety the Chaldee truth By naming iustice hee excludeth all merit of workes Deut. 6. 25. and by righteousnesse of heart all inward affections and purposes which men might plead notwithstanding that they faile in action Yet these two are the chiefe things which God respecteth in men Psal. 15. 1 2. 1 Chron. 29. 17. for the wickednesse Two causes are here shewed of this worke of God justice against the wicked inhabitants which should perish for their sinnes and mercie towards Israel whom he would doe good unto of grace Thus also hee dealeth concerning the heavenly inheritance the wicked are shut out for their evill works Iude v. 14. 15. But the Saints are saved by grace through faith not of workes lest any man should boast Ephes. 2. 8 9. the word the Greeke translateth stablish the covenant or testament hereby he calleth them wholly to Gods word and promise as Paul doth us in Gal. 3. 18. Rom. 15. 8. shewing that Iesus Christ was a minister of the circumcision for the truth of God to constrant the fathers promises and that the Gentiles might glorifie God for mercie Vers. 6. this good land a figure of heavenly blessings as is shewed on Gen. 12. 5. stiffe-necked or of a hard necke that is stubborne and rebellious see the notes on Exod. 32. 9. to which place Moses hath reference and from Gods testimonie there and their sinnes then and at other times convinceth them as being altogether unworthy that as another Prophet saith they might remember their wayes and all their doings wherein they had beene defiled and might loath themselves in their own eyes for all their evils that they had committed and might know that he was Iehovah when he had wroug 〈…〉 it with them for his names sake not according to their wicked wayes nor according to their corrupt doings Ezek. 20. 43 44. and 36. 31 32. Vers. 7. Remember forget not an earnest and effectuall manner of speaking to move unto carefull remembrance see the notes on Deut. 33. 6. against Hebr. with Iehovah which the Chaldee translateth before the Lord the Greeke yee have rebelliously performed things pertaining to the Lord. This generall charge he proveth by many particular instances following Vers. 8. H●reb or 〈◊〉 the mountaine where the Law was given their rebellion there is described in Exod. 32. destroyed you for there God said to Moses let me alone c. and I will consume them Exod. 32. 10. Vers. 9. 〈◊〉 the mount called up thither of God to receive the tables of the covenant and other ordinances Exod. 24. 12. 18. The time place occasion end and all circumstances greatly aggravated the peoples sinne Vers. 10. of stone the signification whereof is noted on Exod. 31. 18. finger signifying the Spirit as I with the finger of God cast out devils Luke 11. 20. that is with the Spirit of God Matt. 12. 28. So it figured the worke of God in our hearts writing there his Law as Yee are manifestly declared to be the Epistle of Christ ministred by us written not with inke but with the spirit of the living God not in tables of stone but in fleshie tables of the heart 2 Cor. 3. 3. Vers. 12. corrupted This word meaneth the corruption of Gods service and religion see the notes on Exod. 32. 7. and Gen. 6. 11 12 13. molten calfe the word calfe is expressed in v. 16. This molten calfe they worshipped and Moses said Oh this people have sinned a great sinne and have made them gods of gold Exod. 32. 8. 31. Vers. 13. saying Here the Greeke version addeth I have spoken unto thee once and twise saying I have seene c. I have seene by the Lords seeing and hearing of sinners is often meant a due regard of their sinnes to punish them in his anger Deut. 32. 19. Psal. 78. 21. and 90. 8. But when he pardoneth sinners he is said to hide his face from their sinnes and not to see them Psal. 51. 11. Num. 23. 21. Vers. 14. Let me alone which the Chaldee expounds Leave off thy prayer before me So in Exod 32. 10. Vers. 15. burned Hebr. burning the terrour of which sight onely might have kept them from this sinne in that the signes of Gods presence were not yet departed from their eyes See Exod. 19. 18. and 20. 18. two hands both hands full with blessings of the Lord for them if their unworthinesse had not turned them away Vers. 17. I took a the originall word signifieth a purposed taking hold and ●●ndling of a thing as they that goe to warre are said to take or handle the shield Ier. 46. 9. and they that expound the Law are said to handle it Ier. 2. 8. So Moses did this advisedly guided by Gods Spirit signifying that the covenant betweene God and them was now disa●ulled and broken and that the Law pertained not to them except to their condemnation for breaking the same See Exod. 32. 19. Vers. 18. I fell downe the Greeke expoundeth it I prayed before the Lord the second time as at the first Here Moses repeateth how by his humble intercession they escaped destruction and were reconciled againe unto God See the historie at large in Exod. 32. 31. c. fortie dayes the number of dayes and of yeeres sundry times mentioned in the Scripture 〈…〉 tion 〈◊〉 judgement See the 〈◊〉 7. 4. sinne the Greeke transleteth sinne respecting the manifold evill in this and their other ●●ansgressions Vers. 19. For I was the Greeke applying this to the time present also saith And I am afraid For the Lord though he pardoned it then reserved vengeance till another opportunity Exod. 32. 34. hearkened unto me that is as the Chaldee explaineth it accepted my prayer Vers. 20. with Aaron who made the calfe for them and would have excused himselfe but was guilty of death see Exod. 32. 21 24. Vers. 21. your sinne the Calfe is so called as being the thing wherein they sinned So Idols are called a sinne in Esa. 31. 7. the brooke that came out of the Rock Horeb which Rocke in figure was Christ 1 Cor. 10. 4. of which they drunke to signifie the abolishing of their sinne by Christ upon their repentance and faith see the notes on Exod. 32. 20. Vers. 22. at Taberah or in Taberah that is as both Greeke and
hee is God of Gods and Lord of Lords the great God the mightie and the fearefull which will not regard persons nor take reward Hee doth the judgement of the father lesse and widow and loweth the stranger in giving unto him bread and raiment Love ye therefore the stranger for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt Thou shalt feare Iehovah thy God him thou shalt serve and to him shalt thou cleave by his name shalt thou sweare He is thy praise and he is thy God which hath done for thee these great and fearefull things which thine eies have seene With seventie sonles did thy fathers goe downe into Egypt and now Iehovah thy God hath made thee as the starres of the heavens for multitude Annotations AT that time Moses rehearsing the mercies of God unto Israel for which they should love and obey him sheweth how upon his request God presently shewed the tokens of his grace by renuing the covenant the history whereof is in Exod. 34. hew thee herein they differed from the first Tables which were the worke of God Exod. 32. 16. These being of Moses hewing shewed the worke of Moses Law upon the heart of man which is to hew and polish it but not to change it from stone to flesh for that is the worke of Christ see the notes on Exod. 31. 18. 34. 1. come up Moses onely and no man with him was commanded to goe up to the top of the mount and it was to be in the morning the time of mercie see Exod. 34. 2 3. Of the mount Sinai and how it differed from mount Sion see the annotations on Exod. 19. and 20. an Arke of this there was no mention in Exod. 34. but in Exod. 25. there the Arke and Mercy-feat that covered it is commanded which was a figure of Christ. That seemeth to be the Arke here spoken of for any other temporary Arke we reade not of Vers. 2. on the first Gods law was the same and unchanged though the tables figuring mens hearts are changeable Vers. 3. Shittim wood which was a kinde of Cedar uncorruptible as the Greeke translateth it see the notes on Exod. 25. 5. in my hand the Greeke saith in my two hands as was in Deut. 9. 15. The Tables which God made and gave before were written on these which Moses made were hewed but empty till God wrote upon them so the Law is written in mens hearts and they doe by nature the things of the Law Rom. 2. 14 15. but corrupting themselves in the things that they know their hearts are hewed onely by Moses ministery and how ever they boast of the Law yet through breaking the Law they dishonour God Rom. 2. 23. till that be fulfilled which God hath promised I will put my lawes into their minde and write them in their hearts Heb. 8. 10. Vers. 4. the ten words that is ten commandements or Decalogue these were written by God himselfe but other lawes then rehearsed were written by Moses Exod. 34. 27 28. For there the Lord came downe in a cloud proclaimed his name renued the covenant and repeated the principall lawes Exod. 34. 5. c. day of the assembly or of the Church that is when the Church or people were assembled to heare the Law or to meet with God as Exod. 19. 17. Deut. 5. 22. So in Deut. 18. 16. And in Acts 7. 38. it is said This Moses is he that was in the Church or Assembl● in the wildernesse with the Angell which spake to him in the mount Sina and with our fathers who received the lively oracles to give unto us Vers. 5. in the Arke so the covenant remained in the midst of Israel and the Tables were not broken as at the first howbeit Moses face now shined at his second comming downe which terrified the people and caused him to veile his face an other signe of the weaknesse of his legall ministery see the notes on Exod. 34. 29. there they be for an evidence of Gods grace and testimony of his covenant renued with Israel Wherefore those Tables were called the Testimonie and the Arke wherein they were put the Arke of the Testimony see Exod. 25. 10. 16. 22. Vers. 6. journeyed the Arke of Gods covenant going before them to search out a resting place for them Numb 10. 33. So this was another testimony of their reconciliation with God and of his graces to bee communicated unto them in Christ. Beeroth by interpretation Wells or Pits which word is not mentioned in Num. 33. 31. but understood there Neither was it a place by mount Sinai from whence they first journeyed Numb 10. 33. but many stations from it as appeareth by Numb 33. 16. 31. Moses therefore keepeth not here the order of their travels but signifieth how they had gone many journeyes forward the Lord conducting thē Some of the Hebrewes as Aben Ezra doe thinke this was another place than that of the sonnes of Iaakan mentioned in Numb 33. and that hereby is meant Kadesh sonnes of Iaakan who was one of the posterity of Seir whom the Edomites drove out of their land 1 Chron. 1. 38. 42. Moses before named him Akan Gen. 36. 27. From the Pits or We 〈…〉 of these infidels God removed them towards the land of Canaan the promised holy land where by faith in Christ they might with joy draw waters out of the fountaines of salvation Esay 12. 3. Moserah called before in the plurall number Moseroth Numb 33. 30. and it was their station before they came to the wells of the sonnes of Iaakan though here Moses nameth it after Wherefore we 〈◊〉 here to understand againe from Moserah or Moserah The Greeke calleth it Misadai changing 〈◊〉 D. which is usuall as is noted on Gen. 4. 18. But Aben Ezra as before thinketh this Moserah 〈◊〉 the name of the wildernesse of mount Hor 〈◊〉 Aaron died and not the Moseroth spoken of 〈◊〉 Num. 33. there Aaron died not at Moserah unlesse it were the wildernesse of Hor as 〈◊〉 Ezra supposeth not at Beeroth but many jo 〈…〉 ey from it at mount Hor Num. 33. 37 38. We are therefore to understand these words thus 〈◊〉 or thither where Aaron died Or supplying the former word frō thence where Aaron died 〈◊〉 there out of the land of Canaan whereinto 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ght not enter because of his sin see the an 〈…〉 on s on Num. 20. 24. c. in his stead As 〈◊〉 〈…〉 at h of Moses and Aaron with their sister M 〈…〉 the King Priest and Prophetesse of Israel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 testification of the weaknesse and impossibility of the legall kingdome and priesthood to being them into the kingdome of God so the 〈…〉 nce of the Priesthood in Aarons poste 〈…〉 y was another signe of Gods grace towards Israel for reconciliation of them to himselfe and blessing them till Christ who hath a Priesthood that passeth not from him to another should come who is able perfectly to save them that come
raine of heavens A land which Iehovah thy God careth for the eyes of Iehovah thy God are continually upon it from the beginning of the yeere even to the end of the yeere And it shall be if hearkening ye shall hearken unto my commandements which I command you this day to love Iehovah your God and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soule That I will give the raine of your land in his time the first raine and the latter raine and thou shalt gather in thy Corne and thy new wine and thy new Oyle And I will give grasse in thy field for thy cattell that thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and be full Take heed to your selves lest your heart be deceived and yee turne aside and serve other gods and bow downe your selves to them And the anger of Iehovah be kindled against you and he shut up the heavens that there bee no raine and the land yeeld not her increase and ye perish quickly from off the good land which Iehovah giveth you And yee shall put these my words in your heart and in your soule and shall binde them for a signe upon your hand and they shall be for Phylacteries betweene your eyes And yee shall teach them your children speaking of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest in the way and when thou lyest downe and when thou risest up And thou shalt write them upon the doore-posts of thine house and on thy gates That your dayes may be multiplied and the dayes of your children in the land which Iehovah sware unto your fathers to give unto them as the dayes of the heavens upon the earth For if keeping yee shall keepe all this commandement which I command you to doe it to love Iehovah your God to walke in all his wayes and to cleave unto him Then will Iehovah drive out all these nations from before your faces and yee shall possesse nations greater and mightier than your selves Every place whereon the sole of your foot shall tread shall be yours from the wildernesse and Lebanon from the river the river Euphrates and unto the hindmost sea shall your coast be There shall not a man stand before you Iehovah your God will give the dread of you and the feare of you upon the face of all the land which yee shall tread upon as hee hath spoken unto you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Behold I set before you this day a blessing and a curse A blessing if yee shall hearken unto the commandements of Iehovah your God which I command you this day And a curse if yee will not hearken unto the commandements of Iehovah your God but turne aside out of the way which I command you this day to goe after other gods which yee have not knowne And it shall bee when Iehovah thy God hath brought thee in unto the land whither thou goest to possesse it that thou shalt put the blessing upon mount Gerizim and the curse upon mount Ebal Are they not on the other-side Iordan by the way of the going downe of the Sunne in the land of the Canaanite which dwelleth in the plaine over against Gilgal besides the Okes of Moreh For yee are passing over Iordan to goe in to possesse the land which Iehovah your God giveth unto you and yee shall possesse it and dwell in it And yee shall observe to doe all the statutes and the judgements which I set before your faces this day Annotations ANd thou shalt love or Love thou therefore Moses returneth to exhort Israel unto the love of God and to shew the same by their continuall obedience his charge or his custodie his observation which word is often used for a watch as in Exod. 14. 24. The Greeke translateth it charges or custodies meaning ordinances to be kept heedfully so in Gen. 26. 5. Lev. 8. 35. and 18. 30. Vers. 2. for I speake not with your children or that it is not your children or sonnes namely which have seene Gods greatnesse c. but your eyes are they that have seene c. vers 7. Hee commendeth Gods speciall favour to their owne persons more than to their fathers or to their children in shewing them his great workes for which they should the more love and obey him This he after confirmeth by many arguments the chastisement or nurture which the Chaldee translateth doctrine or instruction It implieth nurture both by words and workes as Deut. 4. 36. and 8. 5. Lev. 26. 18. Prov. 1. 2. and 4. 1. stretched out the Greek and Chaldee translate high arme See the notes on Deut. 4. 34. Vers. 3. deeds or acts in Greeke wonders Of these see the history in Exod. 7 c. And here is the first argument from Gods mighty workes in Egypt Vers. 4. arme or power forces So the Greeke translateth the power of the Egyptians See Exod. 15. 4. to their horses Hebr. to his horses and to his Chariots speaking of them as of one man or having respect to Pharaoh their King to flow or to swim and over their faces is like that in Lam. 3. 54. waters flowed over mine head He meaneth they were drowned the Sea covered them they sanke as Lead in the mighty waters Exod. 15. 10. destroyed or made them perish so that there remained not so much as one of them Exod. 14. 28. This was an extraordinary favour of God who oftentimes suffereth the oppressors to have the strong hand whiles the oppressed have the teares and no comforter Eccles. 4. 1. So this is the second argument from Gods power shewed at the Red sea Vers. 5. what hee did or the things which hee did in his continuall guiding them thorow that terrible wildernesse where they bewrayed their many infirmities and had experience both of his chastisements and of his mercies the third argument and motive unto obedience Vers. 6. Dathan of whose historie see Numb 16. This is the fourth argument of Gods greatnesse to perswade Israel unto his love for that hee had repressed the factious and mutinous rebels among themselves which would have subverted the order and ordinance of God concerning the Priesthood the meanes of the atonement and reconciliation betweene God and his people their houses that is housholds as the Chaldee expounds it the men of their houses See Numb 16. 32. at their feet that is in their possession the Greeke and Chaldee translate that was with them Vers. 7. have seene or are they that see Therefore this people above all other were bound to love the Lord. worke or deed that is workes as the Greeke translateth So in the verse following commandement for commandements Vers. 8. be strong in body and spirit to fight against the enemy as in Ios. 1. 6. 1 Ioh. 2. 14. Or be strong that is lively and healthfull as the Greeke translateth that ye may live and they that be strong Matth. 9. 12. are by another Evangelist said to be in health opposed to the sicke Luk. 5. 31. possesse
20. 9. And after every company they set officers couragious strong with halberts of iron in their hands who so would turne backe from the warre they have power in their hand to cut off his leg c. Maimony treat of Kings c. 7. s. 1. 4. Thus Israel had the word of God and his Ministers to encourage them that they might fight the battels of the Lord in faith they had also the holy Trumpets blown by the Priests that they might be remembred before the Lord and saved from their enemies Numb 10. 8 9. 2 Chron. 13. 12. And touching this Priest anointed for the war the Hebrewes teach it is a peculiar dignity to his owne person only not to his posterity and in the warre not in the Sanctuary He that is anointed for the warre his sonne is never ordained in his stead but hee is as other Priests if hee be anointed for the warre he is anointed and if he be not anointed he is not anointed And when the Priest anointed for the warre ministreth in the Sanctuary he ministreth in foure garments as the other Priests Maimony in Cle hamikdash ch 4. sect 21. Vers. 3. soft tender that is faint and fearefull as the Greeke translateth it dissolved or faint the Chaldee moved This softnesse or faintnesse of heart God threatneth as a plague Levit. 26. 36. and Iob acknowledged it so saying God hath softned my heart Iob 24. 16. and Rehoboam being soft-hearted could not withstand his enemies 2 Chron. 13. 7. Although therefore a soft heart in respect of God and his word is commendable 2 Kings 22. 19. yet in respect of our enemies it is here forbidden so in vers 8. and Esay 7. 4. hasten not away through feare troubled thoughts and want of faith David blameth this infirmity in himselfe Psal. 31. 22. and 116. 11. terrified or broken discouraged daunted with terrour the Greeke translateth decline not from their fac●● See the Annotations on vers 8. Vers. 5. the Officers in Greeke the Scribes of them see the notes on Deut. 16. 18. and before on vers 2. What man is there that is If any man or whosoever hath as in Psal. 34. 13. What man is he is expounded by the Apostle He that will 1 Pet. 3. 10. built a new house By the Hebrews this Law taketh place whether he hath built it or receiued it by purchase or it be given unto him for a gift or it fall unto him by inheritance But who so buildeth an house or planteth a vineyard out of the land of Israel he returneth not home for them Maimony in treat of Kings ch 7. sect 5. 14. not dedicated or not initiated that is begun to take possession of and to use it which was wont to be done with solemnity feasting and singing praise to God as the title of the 30. Psalme sheweth concerning Davids house lest he die this manner of speech sheweth danger as is noted on Genes 3. 3. and teacheth men to be resolute and to goe with their lives in their hands ready to expend them in Gods quarrell as Iudg. 9. 17. Act. 20. 22 23. 24. and 21. 13. For the sword devoureth one as well as another 2 Sam. 11. 25. Act. 12. 2. and another man Three reasons there seeme to be of this and the rest that follow Because the thoughts and cares of their houses lands wives c. might easily trouble men and hinder them from fighting the Lords battels with courage as the like things hindred those that were called to the great Supper Luke 14. 18 19. and no man that warreth intangleth himselfe with the affaires of this life that he may please him who hath chosen him to be a souldier 2 Tim. 2. 4. Againe God hereby sheweth compassion unto the weake whom he spareth for a time from hard service till they be growne strong and fit for to fight the good fight of faith 1 Tim. 6. 12. and 1. 18. Rom. 14. 1 4. Thirdly as his mercies towards Israel were many of them externall and concerned their comforts in this life so he would have them in speciall manner to enjoy the outward blessings bestowed on them Vers. 6. planted a vineyard This also the Hebrewes understand not of a vineyard onely but by proportion of an orchard oliveyard or the like Whether he have planted a vineyard or planted five trees for meat of any kinde or transplanted that is removed it from another place or grafted it so that it be bound to that law of uncircumcised fruit in Levit. 19. 23. or that he hath purchased it or tabeth it by inheritance or by free gift he returneth home But if hee hath planted but foure trees for food or five trees or moe that are barren or hath gotten a vineyard by rapine hee returneth not home therefore And so if a vineyard belong to two partners they returne not for it Maimony treat of Kings chap. 7. sect 6. not made it common or not profaned it that is not used the fruit thereof for common food which he could not doe by the Law till the fift yeere from the planting thereof Levit. 19. 23 24 25. The Greeke translateth hath not made merry or rejoyced with the fruit thereof Vers. 7. betrothed a wife whether maid or widow or if his brothers wife fall to him according to the law in Deut. 25. 5. though they be five brethren and one of them die all the rest doe returne home All these that are to returne from the battell are to returne when they heare the words of the Priest and to provide water and victuals for their brethren which are in the armie and to prepare the wayes for them Maim treat of Kings chap. 7. sect 79. Vers. 8. shall speake further Hebr. shall adde to speake See the notes on vers 2. soft or tender that is faint-hearted see vers 3. When Gedeon warred against the Madianites and made this prodamation of the two and thirty thousand men that were with him there returned two and twenty thousand and but ten thousand remained Iudg. 7. 3. melt not that is faint not or be discouraged in Greeke be not made fearefull An usuall phrase whereof see Deut. 1. 28. By this God taught his people to have faith in him and every man to encourage himselfe and one another in Gods assistance which they that did prospered as in the Reubenites warre against the Hagarites 1 Chron. 5. 20. the Iewes war against the Israelites 2 Chron. 12. 12 18. Iehosaphats warre against the Ammonites 2 Chron. 20. and many the like Of this point the Hebrewes say that after a man is entered into the warre hee should stay himselfe upon him that is the Hope of Israel and his Saviour in time of distresse and know that for the name of God he maketh warre and should put his life in his hand and not be afraid or adread nor thinke either of his wife or of his children but wipe the remembrance of them out of his heart and turne
thee c. So in Esay 46. 8. Shew your selves men make it returne to heart O yee transgressors and in Lam. 3. 21. This I make to returne to my heart therefore have I hope A like phrase is of the prodigall sonne in Luk. 15. 17. that hee came to himselfe Vers. 2. unto Iehovah the Chaldee expoundeth it unto the feare of the LORD This is true repentance both to leave the evill and to turne unto the good from which they departed So in Lament 3. 40. Let us search and try our waies and turne againe to the Lord. The contrary is complained of in Hos. 7. 16. they returne but not to the most high And here faith also is implyed for as to come unto Christ is to beleeve in him Ioh. 6. 35. so to turne unto the Lord with all the heart is to beleeve in him for with the heart man beleeveth unto righteousnesse Rom. 10. 10. and by faith the heart is purified Act. 15. 9. unto which obedience and good workes are adjoyned Iam. 2. 14 26. Vers. 3. will returne thy captivity will bring thee againe out of bondage under thine enemies which figured the bondage under sinne 2 Pet. 2. 19 20. Therefore the Greeke translateth it will heale thy sinnes that is will forgive them as healing in Matth. 13. 15. is expounded forgiving of sinnes Mark 4. 12. This is a promise of grace to be performed by Christ who preached deliverance to the captives Luk. 4. 18. and it is the joy of his people Psal. 14. 7. and 126. 1 2. and a figure of their salvation Esay 10. 22. compared with Rom. 9. 27. Him hath God exalted with his right hand to bee a Prince and Saviour for to give repentance to Israel and forgivenesse of sinnes Act. 5. 31. have compassion or shew tender mercie this is the cause of the former grace deliverance It is of Iehovahs mercies that we are not consumed because his compassions faile not Lament 3. 22. So the father of the Prodigall sonne seeing him a far off had compussion Luk. 15. 20. And this compassion or mercy respecteth mans misery Matth. 9. 36. and 14. 14. and gather thee So after the captivity of Babylon God promiseth He that scattered Israel will gather him and keepe him as a shepherd doth his flocke Ier. 31. 10. This worke Christ hath spiritually accomplished of whom it is said that hee should die not for the nation of the Iewes only but that also he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad Ioh. 11. 51 52. Therefore this gathering is often celebrated as in Psal. 107. 1 2 3. and 147. 1 2. and 106. 47 48. Vers. 4. If any of thine bee driven Hebr. If thy driven out speaking of every particular person and of all as one man The Greeke translateth If thy dispersion be that is thy dispersed which word is used in this sense in Ioh. 7. 35. 1 Pet. 1. 1. outmost part of the heavens that is of the world which seemeth to bee bounded by the heavens The Greeke translateth it from the end or outmost part of heaven unto the end of heaven which phrase Christ useth of gathering together his Elect at the last day Matt. 24. 31. See the notes on Deut. 4. 32. This promise Nehemias looked unto in his praier alleaging Gods words If yee transgresse I will scatter you abroad among the nations But if yee turne unto me and keepe my commandements and doe them though any of thine were driven out unto the outmost part of the heavens yet will I gather them from thence and bring them unto the place that I have chosen to set my name there Neh. 1. 8 9. thy God gather thee The Thargum called Ionathans expoundeth this to be the Word of the LORD and the performance to be by the hand of Elias and by the hand of the King Christ. Respecting as it seemeth the promise of Elias Mal. 4. 5 6. which was Iohn the Baptist the fore-runner of Christ Luk. 1. 16 17. Vers. 5. shalt possesse or shalt inherit it This is a promise of restoring them unto his Church figured by the land of Canaan Psal. 69. 36 37. Ezek. 36. 8 11 12 24 28 c. Vers. 6. will circumcise thine heart the Greeke translateth will purge or cleanse round about thine heart and both the Chaldee Paraphrasts expound it will take away the foolishnesse of thine heart and the foolishnesse of the heart of thy sonnes This is a promise of spirituall blessings in regeneration and sanctification by Christ in whom we are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands in putting off the body of the sinnes of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ buried with him in baptisme c. Col. 2. 11 12. And of this it is said Circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God Rom. 2. 29. See the Annot. on Gen. 17. The Hebrew Doctors in the Midrash or Commentary on Song 2. 12. from these words The time of pruning or of cutting the vines is come give this exposition For the time is come that Israel shall bee redeemed the time is come that the superfluous foreskin shall bee cut off which is spoken of in Deut. 30. 6. and the Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart c. where they apply this worke of grace unto Christ whom they looked for to love this is the effect of Christs circumcision that it taketh from us evill and giveth good Love being the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13. 10. and implying all other graces as it is said I will give them one heart and one way that they may feare me all daies c. Ier. 32. 39. And I will give them one heart and I will put a new spirit within you and I will take the stony heart out of their flesh and will give them an heart of flesh that they may walke in my statutes and keepe my ordinances and doe them c. Ezek. 11. 19 20. that thou maist live so the Greeke translateth the Hebrew phrase for thy life meaning the life of God here by saith and holinesse Rom. 6. 11 13. and hereafter for ever in heaven as to enter into life Matt. 18. 9. is expounded to enter into the kingdome of God Mark 9. 47. Vers. 7. will put Hebr. will give Here follow earthly blessings which God of his grace will adde unto the former spirituall Of which one is the curses upon their enemies concerning which it is said Thou wilt render unto them a recompence O LORD according to the worke of their hands thou wilt give them sorrow of heart thy curse unto them thou wilt persecute in anger and destroy them from under the heavens of the LORD Lam. 3. 64 65 66. Vers. 8. hearken to or obey the voice which the Chaldee interpreteth receive the Word of the LORD so in vers 10. The condition of obedience is set before the temporall blessings for
the side or by the side which in Thargum Ionathan is expounded in a coffer by the right side of the Arke Vers. 27. stiffe necke or hard necke which else-where is likened to an iron sinew Esay 48. 4. See Exod. 32. 9. Vers. 28. Elders of your Tribes in Greeke they are named by one word Phularcha● that is Rulers or Princes of your Tribes CHAP. XXXII 1 Moses song which setteth forth Gods mercies unto Israel their sinnes and his chastisements by sword famine pestilence and captivity 36 His mercie in Christ towards them in the end 46 Moses exhorteth them to set their hearts upon his words 48 God sendeth him up to mount Nebo to see the land of Canaan and die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 GIve eare ye heavens and I will speake and let the earth heare the sayings of my mouth My doctrine shall drop as the raine my speech shall distill as the deaw as the small rain upon the tender herbe and as the showres upon the grasse For I will proclaime the name of Iehovah give yee greatnesse unto our God The Rocke perfect is his worke for all his wayes are judgement God is faithfulnesse and without iniquity just and righteous is he They have corrupted themselves their spot is not the spot of his sonnes they are a crooked and perverse generation Do ye thus requite Iehovah O people foolish and unwise Is not hee thy Father that hath bought thee hath not he made thee established thee Remember the dayes of old consider the yeeres of generation and generation aske thy Father and he will shew thee thy Elders and they will tell thee When the most high divided inheritance to the nations when he separated the sons of Adam he set the bounds of the peoples according to the number of the sonnes of Israel For Iehovahs portion is his people Iakob is the line of his inheritance Hee found him in a land of wildernesse and in an empty place and howling of the desart hee led him about he instructed him he kept him as the apple of his eye As an Engle stirreth up her nest fluttereth over her young spreadeth abroad her wings taketh them beareth them on her wings Iehovah alone did leade him and there was no strange god with him He made him ride on the high places of the earth that he might eat the fruits of the field and he made him to sucke honey out of the rocke and oile out of the flinty rocke Butter of kine and milke of the flocke with fat of Lambes and of Rams of the breed of Bashan and of Goat-bucks with the fat of the kidneies of wheat and the bloud of the Grape thou diddest drinke pure wine But Iesurun wexed fat and kicked thou art wexen fat thou art growne grosse thou art covered with fatnesse then he forsooke God which made him and lightly esteemed the Rocke of his salvation They provoked him to jealousie with strange gods with abominations they provoked him to anger They sacrificed to devils not to God to gods whom they knew not to new gods that came lately up of whom your fathers were not afraid Of the Rocke that begat thee thou art unmindfull and hast forgotten God that formed thee And Iehovah saw it contemptuously abhorred them because of the provoking of his sons and of his daughters And he said I will hide my face from them I will see what their end shall be for they are a very froward generation sonnes in whom is no faith They have provoked me to jealousie with that which is not god they have provoked mee to anger with their vanities and I will provoke them to jealousie with those which are not a people I will provoke them to anger with a foolish nation For a fire is kindled in mine anger and shall burne unto the lowest hell and shall consume the land and her increase and set on fire the foundations of the mountaines I will heape evils upon them I will spend mine arrowes upon them They shall be burnt with hunger and devoured with the burning coale and with a bitter stinging plague and I will send upon them the teeth of beasts with the poyson of serpents of the dust Without the sword shall bereave and from the chambers terrour both the young man and the virgin the suckling with the man of gray haires I said I would scatter them into corners I would make the remembrance of them to cease from among men Were it not that I feared the wrath of the enemy left their adversaries should behave themselves strangely left they should say Our high hand not Iehovah hath done all this For they are a nation voyd of counsels and there is no understanding in them O that they were wise that they understood this that they would consider their latter end How should one chase a thousand two put ten thousand to flight except their Rocke had sold them and Iehovah had shut them up For their Rocke is not as our Rocke even our enemies being judges For their vine is of the vine of Sodom and of the blasted fields of Gomorrah their Grapes are Grapes of gall they have most bitter clusters Their wine is the poyson of dragons and the cruell venome of aspes Is not this laid up in store with me and sealed up in my treasuries To mee belongeth vengeance and recompence in the time their foot shall slide for the day of their calamity is neere and the things that shall come upon them make haste For Iehovah will judge his people and repent himselfe for his servants when hee shall see that the hand is gone and there is none shut up or left And hee shall say Where are their gods the Rocke in whom they trusted for safety Which did eat the fat of their sacrifices did drinke the wine of their drink-offerings let them rise up and helpe you let him bean hiding place for you See now that I I am he and there is no God with me I do kill and make alive do wound and I heale and there is none that delivereth out of mine hand For I lift up my hand to the heavens and say I live for ever If I whet my glittering sword and mine hand take hold on judgement I will render vengeance to my adversaries and will reward them that hate mee I will make mine arrowes drunke with bloud and my sword shall devoure flesh with the bloud of the slaine and of the captives from the beginning the revenges of the enemy Shout joyfully yee nations with his people for he will avenge the bloud of his servants and will render vengeance to his adversaries and will make atonement for his land for his people And Moses came and spake all the words of this song in the eares of the people hee and Hoshea the sonne of Nun. And Moses made an end of speaking all these words unto all Israel And he said unto them Set your heart unto all the words which I testifie among
the throne of Gods glory which are set over the nations But wee are warned to beware how wee intrude our selves into those things which wee have not seene Coloss. 2. 18. Vers. 9. portion or part which hee hath divided unto himselfe Exod. 19. 5 6. and for whom he long before prepared an habitation And as he hath taken his people for his portion so they againe take him for theirs Psal. 142. 6. and hee is called the portion of Iakob Ier. 10. 16. and 51. 19. This word Paul applieth to our heavenly calling in Christ speaking of the portion of the inheritance of the Saints in light Coloss 1. 12. Iakob that is the posterity of Iakob which being the name of his infirmity before he was called Israel commendeth Gods love unto his when they were weake and unworthy And Iakob is the generation of them that seeke Gods face Psal. 24. 6. the line or the cord of his inheritance that is his heritage as by line or measure befallen or allotted to him and so his peculiar whom none other can challenge Compare Psal. 16. 6 7. Vers. 10. Hee found him that is God found Iakob meaning Iakobs posterity the Israelites whom God found and was present with them in the wildernesse to helpe them in all their miseries Therefore the Greeke translateth He sufficed him and the Chaldee He sufficed their necessities as finding is used for sufficing in Numb 11. 22. Gods people of themselves doe all goe astray like lost sheepe but hee seeketh and findeth them for their salvation Esay 53. 6. Psal. 119. 176. Luk. 15. 24 7. 32. land of wildernesse a wilde or desert land where no inhabitants were no dwelling citie no food to sustaine him Ps. 107. 45. Ier. 2. 6. See before in Deut. 8. 15. The wildernesse figured the peoples of the world Ezek. 20. 35. amongst whom Gods people straied till he found them up for when we were yet sinners and enemies he loved us and reconciled us to himselfe by the death of his Sonne Rom. 5. 8. 10. empty place in Chaldee a dry place Hebr. emptinesse a place not to be inhabited as appeareth by the opposition in Esay 45. 18. So all men naturally are emptie till they be filled with grace and made the habitation of God through the Spirit Eph. 2. 11 12 22. howling of the desart or yelling of Ieshimon the wildernesse is called a place of howling for the wilde beasts that dwell there or for the wants that men finde therein and Ieshimon which signifieth a desart or desolation may be taken for a speciall wildernesse so named as in Num. 21. 20. or generally for all desolate waste places and such was that which Israel wandered in Psal. 78. 40. The Greek and Chaldee translate it a waterlesse place and so in Esay 43. 20. God promiseth to give waters in Ieshimon or in the wildernesse It figured our estate in sinne without Gods Word and Spirit which are likened unto waters Esay 44. 3. Iohn 3. 5. and 7. 38 39. he led him about to wit in the wildernesse forty yeeres as Deut. 8. 2. Or hee compassed him about to wit with his love and providence so the Greeke translateth be compassed but and the Hebrew well beareth it Thus David saith to God thou wilt compasse me about with songs of deliverance Psal. 32. 7. and in Ier. 31. 32. compassing is used for going about to winne ones love and favour which may also be intended here The Chaldee translateth Hee placed them round about 〈◊〉 divine Majestie which may have reference to Israels encamping round about Gods Tabernacle N●m 2. instructed him or made them to understand to wit by his Law and by his Spirit as Ne 〈…〉 9. 18. 20. So the Chaldee explaineth it hee learned them the words of the Law apple of his 〈◊〉 or the blacke the sight of his eye that is with 〈◊〉 diligent care and love tendering them Thus D●vid prayeth Keepe me as the apple of the eye Psa. 17. 8. and the Prophet saith He that toucheth you 〈…〉 heth the apple of his eye Zach. 2. 8. Vers. 11. an Eagle the chiefest of all birds which similitude God therefore applieth to himse●●●here and in Exod. 19. 4. stirreth up or 〈…〉 th up her nest that is her young ones which 〈◊〉 Eagle rowseth up with her cry so God did 〈◊〉 people with his Word and promises whiles 〈◊〉 slept in their sinnes in Egypt This is decla 〈…〉 Ezek. 20. 5 6 7. and the history is in Exod. 4. 29 30 31. So to the Church it is said Awake 〈◊〉 put on thy strength O Sion c. Esa. 53. 1. and 〈◊〉 thou that sleepest and stand up from the dead 〈◊〉 Christ shall give thee light Eph. 5. 14. flut 〈…〉 th or moveth and cherisheth This is the word 〈◊〉 in Gen. 1. 2. the Spirit of God moved or flutte 〈…〉 upon the face of the waters That openeth the meaning here to be Gods motions by his Spirit in the hearts of his people spreadeth abroad as preparing herselfe to flight and thereby provoking her young to goe with her This God performed by spreading out the wings of his power against Egypt in plaguing them and for Israel in preserving them from those plagues so making way for his people to passe out of the place of their bondage taketh them that if they be slacke or negligent shee may procure them to come away So God by his Angels tooke hold on Lots hand and led him out of Sodom Genes 19. 16. and hasted the departure of Israel out of Egypt Exod. 12. on her wings in gentlenesse and for their safety not in her talents wherewith she beareth her prey And the Eagle soaring high her young being on her wings are safe from all danger Thus God lead Israel safe thorow the red sea Exod. 14. and into the wildernesse of Sinai where hee said unto them You have seene what I did to the Egyptians and I have borne you upon Eagles wings and brought you unto my selfe Exod 19. 4. So Christ giveth to the woman his Church two wings of a great Eagle that she might flee into the wildernesse into her place where she is nourished Rev. 12. 14. Vers. 12. alone lead or lead him alone which may be referred to Iehovah their onely leader and so the Greeke explaines it or to the people lead alone as in Num. 23. 9. Deut. 33. 28. they are said to dwell alone and thus the Chaldee interpreteth it lead him that is lead Israel conducting them thorow the wildernesse in safetie as Deut. 8. which mercie is often mentioned Psal. 78. 14. 52. 53. and 1 36. 16. Neh. 9. 12. The Angell of his presence saved them Esay 63. 9. with him with Iehovah or with Israel as the Greeke translateth with them God erected his Tabernacle and set his true worship in Israel without commixture with the idolatrie of the nation And unto that they should have kept themselves as Psal. 81. 8 9 10. The Chaldee parphraseth there
their foolish despising of the Lord forementioned v. 15. The Iewes understand these things of the Chaldeans which caried them captive and so grieved them because it is written Behold the land of the Chaldeans this was not a people c. Esay 23. 13. But the Apostles exposition is heavenly shewing therejection of the Iewes for refusing Christ and calling of the Gentiles esteemed of them fooles for which the Iewes were angry as appeareth by Rom. 11. 14. 1 Thess. 2. 15 16. which Gentiles are called foolish because they were carried away after dumbe idols 1 Cor. 12. 2. Whereupon it is said They are altogether brutish and foolish the stocke is a doctrine of vanities Ier. 10. 8. They became vaine in their imaginations and their foolish heart was darkened professing themselves to be wise they became fooles Rom. 1. 21 22. Vers. 22. kindled in mine anger or burneth from mine anger or through my nostrill that is by the breath thereof By fire is meant Gods fiery judgments which by the enemy drought blasting and otherwaies he would bring upon their land Amos 2. 2 5. So in Ezek. 30. 8. God saith hee will set a fire in Egypt which the Chaldee there expoundeth peoples strong as fire but here the Chaldee translateth For an East winde strong as fire commeth forth from before me in anger As before God withdrew his good things from them so now hee threatneth to inflict evils upon their land and upon their persons the lowest hell or the hell of lownesse that is the lowest part of the earth for so Sheol or Hell here and often meaneth as Num. 16. 30 32 33. See the Annotations on Gen. 37. 35. This meaneth a most vehement fire which should burne downeward even to the middest of the earth the earth or the land wherein Israel dwelt which should be wasted with war drought c. that no man should dwel no fruits should grow thereon for God turneth springs of waters into dry ground a fruitfull land into saltnesse or barrennesse for the wickednesse of them that dwell therein Psal. 107. 33 34. So upon the famine in Israel the Prophet complaineth The fire hath devoured the pastures of the wildernesse and the flame hath burnt all the trees of the field Ioel 1. 4 19. foundations of the mounts that is the strongest places of the land Ierusalem it selfe founded on the holy mountaines was destroyed by the fire of Gods wrath Amos 2. 5. Lament 2. 1 2 3. So it is said The Lord hath kindled a fire in Sion and it hath devoured the foundations thereof Lam. 4. 11. Vers. 23. I will heap or will adde I will consume will spend evils on them the Greeke saith I will gather together evils against them These plagues concerne the people as the former did their land arrowes that is plagues that shall come suddenly and swiftly Zach. 9. 14. Arrowes meane plagues of all sorts as the Scriptures mention the evill arrowes of famine Ezek. 5. 16. of pestilence Psal. 91. 5. and other sicknesses Psal. 38. 2 3. Iob 6. 4. of warres Ier. 50. 14. of thunder lightning c. 2 Sam. 22. 14 15. And among the Gentiles this phrase was used as the pestilence is called an evill arrow by Homer in Iliad 1. Vers. 24. burnt in Greeke consumed Moses useth a word not elsewhere found in Hebrew but in the Chaldee it signifieth to heat or burne and so it may intimate their destruction by the Chaldeans at what time they were so burnt with famine that their visages were blacke as a cole their skin clave to their bones Lament 4. 8. Others translate it filled or mested so it answereth to their sinne who had filled themselves and kicked vers 15. and now for a punishment should bee filled with hunger This the Chaldee favoureth translating it blowne up or swollen with famine And this is the first evill arrow of famine as Ezek. 5. 16. the burning cole hereby the lightning or hot thunderbolt seemeth to be meant as in Psal. 78. 48. or the burning carbuncle a fiery ulcer on the body as in Habak 3. 5. this word is joyned with the pestilence Properly the word signifieth fiery coles Song 8. 6. figuratively it is applied to arrowes that flie Psal. 76. 4. The Greeke and Chaldee here expound it devoured with fowles bitter in Greeke incurable stinging plague in Hebrew Keteb which is the name of a deadly stinging disease joyned with the pestilence in Psal. 91. 6. which the Apostle translateth a sting in 1 Cor. 15. 55. from Hos. 13. 14. and so the Greeke there expoūdeth it But here the Greek calleth it the disease Opisthotonos which is a strange vehement disease in the necke when by the stiffenesse of the nerves or sinewes the necke is strained backward to the shoulders and killeth a man within foure daies as Cornel. Celsus sheweth in l. 4. c. 3. But it seemeth here to be more generall for the pest and other terrible sicknesses wherby God soone cutteth off the life of man with bitternesse The Chaldee expoundeth it evill spirits the teeth Hebr. the tooth of beasts wild beasts to devoure men and cattell see Levit. 26. 22. Ezek. 5. 17. and 14. 21. serpents or creeping things wormes the Chaldee translateth it dragons that creepe in the dust The wild beasts kill by force wormes and serpents by secret subtilty Vers. 25. Without abroad out of the cities the sword of the enemy by warres bereave or rob to wit all sorts and sexes as after followeth Thus God threatneth his foure sore judgments mentioned in Ezek. 14. 21. Revel 6. 8. the sword and the famine and the evill beasts and the pestilence to cut off from them man and beast terrour inward terrours of conscience whereof see Iob 15. 20 24. terrours of death as Psal. 55. 5. and so the Chaldee translateth it dread of death meaning that they should even die through feare both the young man to wit shall be bereaved so all sorts shall be cut off with these judgements Vers. 26. scatter them into corners or drive them from corner to corner in Greeke disperse them in Chaldee destroy them Here God sheweth the measure of their punishments which though they deserved to have in all extremity yet hee would moderate in mercy Vers. 27. Were it not or but that I feare the wrath or provocation of the enemie God speaketh these things after the manner of men and in regard of his glory that the enemy should not blaspheme he would spare Israel from utter destruction So God pleadeth also with them in Ezek. 20. 13 14 21 22 44. behave themselves strangely or make strange of the matter deny and dissemble the truth of the thing which the Chaldee expoundeth magnifie themselves Compare Psal. 140. 8. Or it may meane the strange and inhumane dealing of the enemies against Israel Vers. 28. For they that is the Israelites as the next verse sheweth and it is a reason of the destruction which God thought to have brought upon
in hands He whose hands or palmes are cleane or free of evill So Iob 17. 9. This noteth good workes as purenesse of heart meaneth holy faith and affections Act. 15. 9. not lifted up his soule or my soule The Hebrew hath two readings by the letters in the line his soule and in the margine my soule as if this were spoken in the person of God and of him which then may be understood of swearing For this forme of words is used in the third Commandement Exod. 20. Thou shalt not lift up or take up the name of Iehovah thy God to false vanity But for Name here is put Soule And God is said to sweare by his soule that is by himselfe or his life Ier. 51. 14. Amos 6. 8. It was also the wont in Israel to take an oath thus As the Lord liveth and as thy soule liveth 1 Sam. 20. 3. 2 King 2. 2 4 6. Also concerning a mans owne soule in swearing this forme was used I call God for a record against my soule 2 Cor. 1. 23. And thus the Chaldee expounds it which hath not sworne in vaine to the condemnation of his soule Otherwise if this be not understood of vaine swearing the meaning is he that affecteth not or regardeth not vanity for so the lifting up of the soule also signifieth see Psal. 25. 1. to deceit or deceitfully Vers. 5. He shall receive or shall take up or beare away a blessing justice or righteousnesse wherof see Phil. 3. 9. Psal. 69. 28. Hereby also may be meant a benefit the fruit or reward of righteousnesse The Greeke turneth it mercy or almes and by justice mercies and benefits are sometimes meant Iudg. 5. 11. Psal. 112. 9. Dan. 4. 24. Vers. 6. of Iakob understand this is the generation of Iakob or this is Iakob these are true Israelites whom God will acknowledge for his Ioh. 1. 47. Rom. 9. 6. Iakob when he wrastled with an Angell saw God face to face and called the place Peniel that is Gods face or presence there he wept and prayed and bare away a blessing Gen. 32. 24 26 29 30. Hos. 12. 4. That history hath use here Vers. 7. Lift up yee gates c. This may first have reference to the gates and doores of the Temple into which the Arke the glory of Israel 1 Sam. 4. 21. should enter on which Arke betweene the Cherubims God was said to dwell 1 Sam. 4. 4. 1 King 8. 1 c. So the Chaldee expoundeth it gates of the house of the Sanctuary though in the 9. verse otherwise saying Lift up O ye gates of the garden of Eden your heads Secondly it may be referred to Christian men which are the true temple of God 1 Cor. 3. 17. at the doore of whose hearts he knocketh to have entrance Rev. 3. 20. doores of eternity that is strong durable everlasting doores which being referred to the doores of Solomons Temple note the perpetuall abiding of Gods Arke therein as 1 King 9. 3. Psal. 132. 13 14. whereas before the Arke was removed from place to place 1 Chron. 17. 5. Or being applied to Christians it noteth the eternall durance of the Church that enter may or and enter shall the King of glory that is the glorious King So Christ is called the Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2. 8. Iam. 2. 1. and the opening of the doores before him signifieth his entrance into and administration of the Kingdome as Isa. 45. 1. Vers. 10. Iehovah of hosts or as the Hebrew is Iehovah Tsebaoth for so the word is used by the Apostles untranslated in the Greeke Sabaoth Rom. 9. 29. Jam. 5. 4. It signifieth hosts or armies standing readie in martiall order and in battell ray and comprehendeth all creatures in heaven and in earth which are prest to doe the will of God Gen. 2. 1. 1. King 22. 19. Exod. 12. 41. PSAL. XXV Davids desire and confidence in God 4 He prayeth for instruction 7 and for remission of sins 8 He celebrateth Gods goodnesse and mercy to such as feare him 15 He prayeth for deliverance out of his afflictions and for the redemption of Israel 1. A Psalme of David VNto thee Iehovah lift I up my soule 2. My God in thee doe I trust let me not be abashed let not my enemies shew gladnesse over me 3. Yea all that earnestly expect thee shall not be abashed they shall be abashed that unfaithfully transgresse in vaine 4. Thy wayes Iehovah make thou mee to know learne me thy paths 5. Make me to tread in thy truth learne me for thou art the God of my salvation thee doe I earnestly expect all the day 6. Remember thy tender mercies Iehovah and thy kinde mercies for they are from eternitie 7. The sinnes of my youth and my trespasses remember thou not according to thy mercy doe thou remember me for thy goodnesse sake Iehovah 8. Good and righteous Iehovah is therefore will he teach sinners in the way 9. Hee will make the meeke to tread in judgement and will learne the meeke his way 10. All the paths of Iehovah are mercie and truth to them that keepe his covenant and his testimonies 11. For thy Name sake Iehovah even mercifully pardon wilt thou my iniquitie for it is much 12. Who is the man that feareth Iehovah hee will teach him in the way that hee shall chuse 13. His soule shall lodge in good and his seed shall inherit the land 14. The secret of Iehovah is to them that feare him and his covenant to make them for to know 15. Mine eyes are continually unto Iehovah for hee will bring forth my feet out of the net 16. Turne the face unto mee and bee gracious to me for I am solitary and poore afflicted 17. The distresses of my heart are inlarged bring thou mee forth out of my vexations 18. See mine affliction and my molestation and forgive all my sinnes 19. See mine enemies for they are multiplied and with hatred of violent wrong have they hated me 20. Keepe thou my soule and deliver me let me not be ashamed for I hope for safetie in thee 21. Let perfection and righteousnesse preserve me for I earnestly expect thee 22 Redeeme Israel O God from all his distresses Annotations OF David This Psalme is composed after the order of the Hebrew letters or Alphabet which care denoteth the weight and excellencie of the matter in it The same is to be observed of some other Psalmes as the 34. and 37. and 111. and 112. and 119. and 145. Lift I up my soule The Chaldee addeth in prayer This signifieth an earnest desire with delight and expectation or hope to have what he would For to lift up the soule is to desire Ier. 22. 27. and 44. 14. and a like phrase in Ezek. 24. 25. implieth both desire and delight and in Deut. 24. 15. the poore man is said to lift up his soule unto his hire or wages hoping by it to have his life sustained In this place every of these
directed and perfected The word noteth the ordering perfecting and fast stablishing of any thing and his way or thus to wit whose way he delighteth or affecteth So Gedeon his house Iudg. 8. 27. for Gedeon to wit or that is to say his house Vers. 24. shall fall to wit into sinne by occasion or infirmitie Gal. 6. 1. or into affliction and trouble Mic. 7. 9. Thus the Chalde● expoundeth it if he fall into sicknesse he shall not die For the just man falleth seven times and riseth againe Prov. 24. 16. upholdeth his hand and consequently raiseth him up A like phrase is of strengthing the hand Isa 8. 11. 1 Sam. 23. 16. Vers. 26. his seed that is his children or posterity are in the blessing or are appointed to the blessing as the heires thereof Gen. 28. 4. 1 Pet. 3. 9. and have still abundance though they give to others For the blessing of the Lord maketh rich Prov. 10. 22. And there is that scattereth and is more increased Prov. 11. 24. Vers. 27. dwell for ever that is thou shalt dwell as vers 3. The like promise is in Ier. 7. 5 7. V. 28. 〈◊〉 cut off a like judgmēt is in Iob 18. 19. He shall have neither son nor nephew among his people nor any posteritie in his dwellings See also Psal. 21. 11. and 109. 13. and the contrary Psal. 102. 29. Vers. 30. will meditate usually meditateth that is resoundeth uttereth as Psal. 35. 28. Vers. 31. in his heart so God commanded Deut. 6. 6. and there hath he promised to write his law Hebr. 8. 10. See also Psal. 40. 9. Isa. 51. 7. it shall not stagger understand his foot shall not stagger or faulter Iob 12. 5. Or any one of his steps or feet shall not stagger or slide Vers. 33. condemne him for wicked make or pronounce him wicked that is condemne him Opposed to justifying so Psal. 94. 21. Iob 9. 20. Vers. 35. daunting terrible sorely dismaying others with his terrour in Greeke lifted very high See Psal. 10. 18. spreading bare making bare that is thrusting forth and shewing himselfe greene that is fresh and flourishing as Dan. 4 1. It is not meant for colour onely but for juice and vigour So Psal. 52. 10. selfe-growing lawrell a tree that groweth in his naturall place which commonly sprout and thrive better than such as are removed to another soile therefore the Greeke explaineth it as the Cedars of Lebanon Vers. 37. the after end or the last or the posteritie This word is sometimes used for the end as Deut. 11. 12. and 32. 20. 29. Ier. 29. 11. sometime for posteritie of children left behinde as Ps. 109. 13. Dan. 11. 4. And thus it may be understood here specially in the verse following The Greeke translateth there is a remnant to the peaceable man Vers. 40. in him Chaldee in his word PSAL. XXXVIII David in sore afflictions intreateth God not to bee angry with him 5 complaineth of his sinnes and chastisements 11 of his owne weaknesse 12 of his friends forsaking him 13 and his enemies malice 16 yet his faith is in God whose helpe hee desireth A Psalme of David for to record IEhovah rebuke me not in thy fervent anger neither chastise me in thy wrathfull heat For thy arrowes are stucke in me and thou lettest downe thy hand upon me No soundnesse is in my flesh because of thy angry threat no peace is in my bones because of my sinne For my iniquities are gone over my head as a heavie burden they are too heavie for me My stripes do stinke are putrified because of my foolishnesse I am crooked I am bowed downe very vehemently all the day I walke sad For my flankes are full of parching and there is no soundnesse in my flesh I am weakned and crushed very sore I roare out for the groaning of my heart Lord before thee is all my desire and my sighing is not hid from thee My heart panteth my able strength forsaketh me and the light of mine eyes even they are not with mee My lovers and my nearest friends stand from before my stroke and my neighbours stand a farre off And they that seeke my soule set snares and they that seeke my evill speake wofull evils and all the day they meditate deceits And I as a deafe man heare not and as a mute man openeth not his mouth And I am as a man which heareth not and in whose mouth are no reproofes Because for thee Iehovah I doe hopefully wait thou wilt answer O Lord my God For I said lest they rejoyce at me and when my foot is moved doe magnifie against me For I am ready to halting and my paine is before me continually For I doe declare my iniquitie I am carefull for my sinne And my enemies are alive mighty and multiplied are they that hate mee falsly And they that repay evill for good are my adversaries for that I follow good Forsake me not Iehovah my God be not farre off from me Hasten to my helpe Lord my salvation Annotations FOr to record or to cause remembrance for commemoration to wit of Davids troubles as Psal. 132. 1. and of Gods mercies deliverances and prais●s for the same as Isa. 63. 7. The like title is of the 70 Psalme David appointed before the Arke singers of the Levites for to record and to confesse and to praise Iehovah the God of Israel 1 Chron. 16. 4. The Greeke addeth to the title A Psalme of David for remembrance concerning the Sabbath Vers. 2. neither Hebr. and where the word not is againe to be repeated as is noted Psal. 9. 19. and as is expressed Psal. 6. 2. where the like prayer is made Vers. 3. thy arrowes so Iob saith the arrowes of the Almighty are in me the venome whereof drinketh up my spirit Iob 6. 4. Arrowes are sicknesses or plagues of body or mind Psal. 18. 15. and 91. 5. thy hand in Chaldee the stroke of thy hand Vers. 4. no soundnesse or there is nothing sound or whole So Esai 1. 6. angry throat or detestation indignation See Psal. 7. 12. Vers. 6. my stripes or skarres properly such sore marks wounds or stripes as wherin the bloud and humours are gathered and doe appeare after beating named in English wailes foolishnesse The Hebrew svveleth meaneth rash and unadvised folly through want of prudencie Therefore though commonly in Greeke it is turned imprudencie yet sometime it is called unadvised rashnesse Prov. 14. 17. and Aevil the Foole is named rash or heady Prov. 10. 14. And by foolishnesse is meant usually viciousnesse or sinne and is so expressed by the Greekes Prov. 13. 16. and 15. 2. and 26. 11. and our Saviour numbreth foolishnesse among other evils that defile a man Marke 7. 22. Vers. 7. sad mournfully See Psal. 35. 14. Vers. 8. my flancks or loines parching or burning rosting so elsewhere he complaineth of the burning of his bones Psal. 102. 4. and so the Chaldee Paraphrast here taketh this word which may also
from the wicked and restored to Gods Sanctuary 5 He encourageth his 〈◊〉 trust in God IVdge me O God and plead my plea from the nation unmercifull from the man of deceit and injurious evill do thou deliver me For thou art the God of my strength why thrustest thou me away why goe I still sad for the oppression of the enemie Send thy light and thy truth let them lead me let 〈◊〉 bring me unto the mountain of thy holinesse and unto thy dwelling places And I will come unto the Altar of God unto God the joy of my gladnesse and confesse thee with harpe O God my God Why bowest thou downe thy selfe my soule and why makest thou a tumultuous stirre within me wait hopefully for God for yet I shall confesse him the salvations of my face and my God Annotations IVdge me This meaneth an examination of the cause giving sentence and executing of it by delivering the oppressed so judging is used for delivering 1 Sam. 24. 15. 2 Sam. 18. 19 31. Iudg. 3. 10. Pleading also ones plea is of like meaning see Psal. 35. 1. The Chaldee paraphraseth Judge me O God with judgement of truth for it is thy part to plead my plea. Vers. 2. my strength or my strong fort as Psal. 28. 8. for which in Psal. 42. 10. hee useth the word Rocke Vers. 3. dwelling places meaning the holy Tabernacle or Sanctuary which had severall roomes holy and most holy parted by veiles as also the Apostle observeth Hebr. 9. 2 3 6 7. or the high place at Gibeon where the tabernacle was in Ierusalem where the Arke was 2 Chro. 1. 3 4. for in both those places God dwelt and was worshipped But the first seemeth most proper because of Psal. 132. 5. See also Psal. 46. 5. and 84. 2. The Chaldee explaineth the former to be the mount of the house of thy Sanctuary and these latter the Schooles of the house of thy divine Majestie By Schooles meaning such places about the Sanctuarie as the Doctors sate in Luk. 2. 46. Vers. 4. And I will come or That I may come for so the Hebrew phrase may often be resolved and the new Testament useth both indifferently in the Greeke as Luk. 6. 37. and ye shall not be judged for which in Matth. 7. 1. it is that yee be not judged to the Altar Chaldee to offer an offering upon the Altar the joy of my gladnesse that is author of my gladsome joy meaning inward joy outwardly shewing it selfe in gladsome gesture Vers. 5. why bowest c. This verse is the same with Psal. 42. 12. of my face the Chaldee explaineth it for the redemption which is from his face for he is my God PSAL. XLIV The Church in memory of former favours when they inherited the Land 10 complaineth of her present evils being subject to persecutors 18 Professing her integritie in greatest afflictions 24 she fervently prayeth for succour To the Master of the Musicke to the sonnes of Korach an instructing Psalme O God with our eares we have heard our fathers have told to us the work thou wroughtest in their dayes in dayes of ol● Thou with thy hand didst dispossesse the heathens and didst plant them thou didst evill to the peoples and didst propagate them For not by their owne sword inherited they the land and their arme saved them not but thy right hand and thy arme and the light of thy face because thou didst favour them Thou art he my King O God command the salvations of Iakob In thee we shall push with the horne our distressers in thy name we shall tread downe them that rise up against us For I will not trust in my bow and my sword shall not save me For thou hast saved us from our distressers and our haters thou didst make ashamed In God we praised all the day and thy name for ever we will confesse Selah But now thou thrustest away and makest us ashamed and goest not forth with our armies Thou makest us turne backward from the distresser and they that hate us doe spoile for themselves Thou givest us as sheepe for meat and fannest us in the nations Thou sellest thy people for no wealth and increasest not by the prises of them Thou exposest us a reproach to our neighbours a scoffe and a scorne to them that be round about us Thou puttest us for a parable among the heathens a nodding of the head among the nations All the day my ignominie is before me and the abashing of my face covereth me For the voice of the reproacher and taunter for the face of the enemie and selfe avenger All this is come on us and we have not forgotten thee not dealt falsly against thy covenant Our heart hath not turned backward nor our stepping swarved from thy path Though thou hast crushed us in the place of Dragons and hast covered over us with the shadow of death If we have forgotten the name of our God and spred out our hands to a strange god Shall not God search out this for he knoweth the hid things of the heart But for thee wee are killed all the day are counted as sheepe of slaughter Stitre up why sleepest thou Lord awake thrust not away forever Wherefore hidest thou thy face forgettest thou our affliction and our oppression For our soule is bowed downe to the dust our belly cleaveth unto the earth Rise up for an helpfulnesse to us and redeeme us for thy mercy sake Annotations DIspossesse or disinherit the nations meaning the Canaanites as the Chaldee explaneth it Thou by thy strong hand didst cast out the peoples of Canaan and plantedst the house of Israel See examples hereof in the Amorites Numb 21. 32. and the other Kings of Canaan Ios. 12. seven nations greater and mightier than Israel Deut. 7. 1. plantedst them to wit our fathers the Israelites as Exod. 15. 17. a figure taken from the planting of vines whereof see Psal. 80. 9 c. the peoples that dwelt before in Canaan So Psal. 106. 34. didst propagate or send forth make spread as the vine sendeth out or dispreadeth the branches Psal. 80. 12. Ezek. 17. 6. Vers. 4. light of thy face thy favourable countenance in Christ See the note on Psal. 4. 7. and 89. 16. Vers. 5. thou art he that is Thou art the same my King as the Greeke expresseth it this noteth Gods unchangeablenesse See Psal. 102. 28. command procure by thy commandement See Psal. 42. 9. salvations of Iakob that is the full salvation the absolute deliverance of thy weake people the posterity of Iakob See Psal. 14. 7. Vers. 6. push with the horne a speech taken from Moses Deut. 33. 17. and meaneth a vanquishing or subduing 1 King 22. 11. Dan. 84. tread downe or tread under foot which signifieth both a subduing or destroying 2 Chron. 22. 7. and a contempt or setting them at nought Prov. 17. 7. and so the Greeke here translateth it we shall set at nought So after in Psal. 60.
Vers. 6. my vowes that is my prayers made with vowes as the Saints used Gen. 28. 20. Iudg. 11. 30 31. Hereupon prayer is called in Greeke Proseuche of powring out vowes to God inheritance to them so the Greeke also hath it or given me the inheritance of them that is such a blessing as usually thou bestowest on such as feare thee The Chaldee paraphraseth thou hast given an inheritance in the world to come to them that feare thy name Vers. 7. Thou wilt adde or prayer-wise adde thou c. so the rest daies unto daies or upon daies that is a long life of the King meaning himselfe and specially Christ who was to be his Sonne after the flesh So the Chaldee saith of the King Christ. See Psalm 72. and 89. 21 30 37 38. Vers. 8. He shall sit to wit on the throne that is reigne or sit that is dwell or abide as Psalm 140. 14. prepare or appoint as his due and readie portion The Heb● is Man a name whereby that prepared meat was called which God gave his people from heaven Psal. 78. 24. Vers. 9. day by day or day and day that is daily The Hebrew usuall phrase is day day so Psal. 68 20. Gen. 39. 10. Isa. 58. 2. Exod. 16. 5. sometime day and day as Hest. 3. 4. 2 Cor. 4. 16. So two two Mark 6. 7. for two and two The Chaldee maketh this paraphrase when I pay my vowes in the day of the redemption of Israel and in the day when the King Christ shall be anointed to reigne PSAL. LXII David professing his confidence in God discourageth his enemies 6 repeateth his assured confidence Teacheth the people to trust in God not in worldly things 12 Power and mercie belong to God To the Master of the Musicke over Ieduthun a Psalme of David YEt surely unto God my soule keepeth silence from him is my salvation Surely he is my rocke and my salvation mine high defence I shall not be moved much How long wil ye endevour mischiefe against a man ye shall be killed all of you ye shall be as a bowed wall as a fence that is shooved at Surely they consult to thrust him downe from his high dignity they delight in a lye with his mouth each of them blesseth with their inward part they curse Selah Yet unto God my soule keepe thou silence for from him is my expectation Surely he is my rocke and my salvation mine high defence I shall not be moved In God is my salvation and my glory the rock of my strength my safe hope is in God Trust ye in him in all time O people powre out your heart before him God is a safe hope for us Selah Surely the sons of base man are vanity the sons of noble man are a lye in balances to mount up they together are lighter than vanitie Trust not yee in oppression and in robbery become not vaine if powerfull wealth do increase set not the heart theron Once did God speak twice heard I this same that strength pertaineth to God And to thee O Lord mercy for thou wilt pay to man according to his worke Annotations OVer Ieduthun ●hat is over Ieduthuns posteritie who was a singer in Israel 1 Chron. 25. 3. or to Ieduthun See also Psal. 39. 1. Vers. 2. Yet surely or Only It is an earnest affirmation against some contrary temptation or speech and excludeth also other things So vers 3 5 6 7 10. keepeth silence or is sile● or still that is quiet submisse and as the Greeke explaineth it subject the rebellious affections being tamed and subdued See also Psal. 4. 5. Vers. 3. moved much or moved with a great moving Persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but 〈◊〉 perish not as 2 Cor. 4. 9. for God giveth the issue with the temptation 1 Cor. 10. 1 3. The Chaldee expounds it I shall not be moved in the day of great affliction Vers. 4. endevour mischiefe this word is not found elsewhere in the Scripture It denoteth both a purpose in minde and a thrusting forward in act of any mischievous deed against a man in Chaldee against a gracious man So man here is used as in Jer. 5. 1. if yee can finde a man that is a just and godly man yee shall be killed or will yee be murdered violently killed Some Hebrew copies varying a point or vowell give it an active signification will ye murder This the Greek followeth but the former sense here fitteth best a fense wall or mure another word than the former shooved at or thrust namely for to fall as is expressed Psal. 118. 13. Hereby is meant a great and sudden ruine as Isa. 30. 13. Ezek. 13. 13 14. Vers. 5. from his high dignity or excellencie whereunto he was exalted of God David speaketh this of himselfe therefore the Greeke hath mine honour and blameth them here for opp●gning his dignity as he did before in Psal. 4. 3. they d●light or readily like of and accept o● a deceivable lie each of them blesseth Hebr. they blesse but his mouth leadeth us to minde it of all in general every one in particular Compare Psal. 5. 10. Blessing is used for faire words and sometimes flattery Rom. 16. 18. Vers. 6. my expectation that is my salvation expected and hoped for as vers 2. Vers. 9. in all time that is alwaies See Psal. 34 2. powre out your heart that is the desires of your heart your prayers with teares A similitude taken from powring out of waters as is expressed Lam. 2. 19. powre out thy heart like water before the face of the Lord. This was practised in Israel when they drew water from their heart and powred it out by their eyes before the Lord 1 Sam. 7. 6. A like phrase is of powring out the soule Psal. 42. 5. 1 Sam. 1. 15. The Chaldee maketh this paraphrase Cast downe before him the prides of your heart pray before him with all your heart and say God is our hope for ever Vers. 10. noble man hereby is meant men of all degrees high and low See the notes on Ps. 49. 3. in ballances to mount up or to ascend meaning that all men together if they be put in one ballāce and vanity in another they will mount up that is be lighter than vanity it selfe And the word hebel vanity here used denoteth a vaine light thing as the breath of ones mouth or bubble on the water Vers. 11. in oppress●an that is in goods gotten by oppression extortion or fraudulent inj●●●●● this word importeth guilefull wrong as the next more open violent robberie See also Isa. 30. 12. become not vaine that is foolish and vile in respect of others and deceiving your selves For to make vaine is to deceive Ier. 23. 16. and to wax vaine is to be vile and come to nothing Iob 27. 12. Ier. 〈◊〉 5. Rom. 1. 21. This instruction which concerneth all men David applieth to his souldiers that they should not give themselves to the
tremble ye at his feet all the earth Say ye among the nations Iehovah reigneth the world also shall be stablished it shall not be moved hee will judge the peoples with righteousnesse Let the heavens rejoyce and the earth be glad roare let the sea and the plenty thereof Let the field shew gladnesse and all that therein is then let all the trees of the wood shout joyfully Before Iehovah for he commeth for hee commeth to judge the earth he will judge the world with justice the peoples with his faithfulnesse Annotations A New song c. see Psal. 33. 3. This Psalme is a part of that song wherewith God was celebrated when the Arke of his covenant was brought with joy into Davids citie from Obed-edoms house 1 Chron. 16. 23 c. And it containeth a prophesie of Christs kingdome and of the calling of the Gentiles from Idols to serve praise the living God Vers. 2. preach the good tidings or Evangelize see Psal. 40. 10. Vers. 4. praised and praise-worthy see Ps. 18. 4. Vers. 5. Vaine idols or things of nought as the Apostle openeth this word saying we know that an idoll is nothing in the world 1 Cor. 8. 4. Elim and Elohim in Hebrew are Gods of Strength Elilim idols as being Al-Elim not Gods without strength So elsewhere they are plainly called lo Elohim no Gods 2 Chron. 13. 9. unable to doe good or evill and unprofitable Ier. 10. 5. Esa. 44. 9. 10. And as the name of God is joyned with things to shew their excellencie Psal. 36. 7. so is this contrariwise to shew their vanity as of Physitians Iob 13. 4. of shepherds Zach. 11. 17. of false doctrine Ier. 14. 14. The Greeke here turneth it daimonia devils by which name idols are called 1 Cor. 10. 19 20. Rev. 9. 30. 2 Chron. 11. 15. Vers. 6. beateous glorie for this in 1 Chron. 16. 27. is written joyfulnesse Vers. 7. Give c. Compare Psal. 29. 1 2. The Chaldee expoundeth it Bring a new song to God Vers. 8. to his courts to his face or presence as 1 Chron. 16. 29. Vers. 9. of the sanctuary or of sanctity see Psal. 29. 2. tremble or be pained as in travell of child-birth Vers. 10. with righteousnesses that is most righteously Vers. 11. Let rejoyce or shall rejoyce and so the rest So Psa. 98. 7 8 9. The Chaldee paraphraseth Let the hosts of heaven rejoyce and the just of the earth be glad Vers. 13. with justice or in justice that is justly so Rev. 19. 11. Act. 17. 31. Psal. 9. 9. PSAL. XCVII The majestie of Gods kingdome 7 The Church rejoyceth at Gods judgements upon idolaters 10 An exhortation to godlinesse and gladnesse IEhovah reigneth let the earth be glad let the many iles rejoyce Cloud and gloomy darknesse are round about him justice and judgement are the stable-place of his throne Fire goeth before him and flameth round about his distressers His lightnings illuminate the world the earth seeth and trembleth The mountaines like waxe melt at the presence of Iehovah at the presence of the Lord of all the earth The heavens declare his justice and all peoples see his glory Abashed be all they that serve a graven thing that gloriously boast themselves in vaine idols bow downe your selves to him all ye Gods Sion heareth and rejoyceth and glad are the daughters of Iudah because of thy judgements Iehovah For thou Iehovah art high above all the earth vehemently art thou exalted above all Gods Ye lovers of Iehovah hate evill he keepeth the soules of his gracious Saints hee will deliver them from the hand of the wicked Light is sowne for the just and joy for the right of heart Rejoyce ye just in Iehovah and confesse to the remembrance of his holinesse Annotations IEhovah that is Christ called Iehovah our justice Ier. 23. 5. 6. of him and his reigne is this Psalme as the 7. verse manifesteth the many iles that is nations or gentiles dwelling in the iles as the iles shall wait for his Law Esa. 42. 4. which is expounded thus the Gentiles shall trust in his name Matth. 12. 21. So Esa. 60. 9. Vers. 2. gloomy darknesse see Psa. 18. 10. this noteth the terrour of his doctrine and administration Mal. 3. 2. Matth. 3. 12. as at the law giving Deut. 4. 11. The Chaldee saith A cloud of glory and gloomy darknesse stable-place establishment or base see Psal. 89. 15. Vers. 3. Fire severe judgements for Christs enemies as Esa. 42. 25. and 66. 15 16. Ps. 50. 3. Vers. 4. illuminate or have illumined as at the giving of the law there were thunders lightnings voices earthquakes c. Exod. 19. so the like proceed from the throne of Christ Rev. 4. 5. trembleth or is pained see Psal. 77. 17. Vers. 5. at the presence or from the face Vers. 6. The heavens heavenly creatures as thunder lightning tempest c. or the Angels as the Chaldee interpreteth See Psal. 50. 6. Vers. 7. vaine idols see Ps. 96. 5. allye Gods that is as the Greeke saith all ye his Angels see Psal. 8. 6. Vnto this the Apostle seemeth to have reference saying when he bringeth in his first begotten sonne into the world he saith And let all the Angels of God worship him Heb. 1. 6. Although the very words of the Apostle are found in the Greeke version of Deut. 32. 43. but the Hebrew there hath none such See the fulfilling of this Luk. 2. 13 14. Mark 1. 13. Rev. 5. 11 12. Vers. 8. daughters that is cities of Iudah the Christian Churches see Psal. 48. 12. Vers. 11. Light is sowen that is comfort and joy is reserved after trouble as Esth. 8. 16. but hidden for the present as seed in the ground for we are dead our life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3. 3. 4. it doth not yet appeare what we shall be 1 Ioh. 3. 2. Vers. 12. confesse to that is celebrate it See Psal. 30. 5. PSAL. XCVIII The Psalmist exhorteth the Iewes 4 the Gentiles 7 and all creatures to praise God for his salvation by Christ. A Psalme SIng ye to Iehovah a new song for he hath done marvellous things his right hand hath saved him and the arme of his holinesse Iehovah hath made knowen his salvation to the eies of the nations he hath revealed his justice He hath remēbred his mercy and his faithfulnesse to the house of Israel all the ends of the earth have seene the salvation of our God Shout triumphantly to Iehovah all the earth shout cheerefully shout joyfully sing Psalmes Sing Psalmes to Iehovah with harpe with harpe and voice of a Psalme With trumpets and voice of the cornet shout triumphantly before the King Iehovah Let the sea roare and the plenty thereof the world and they that sit therein Let the rivers clap the hands together let the mountaines shout joyfully Before Iehovah for hee is come to judge the earth he will judge the world in justice and the
workes and whored by their practises And the anger of Iehovah was kindled against his people and hee abhorred his inheritance And hee gave them into the hand of the heathens and their haters ruled over them And their enemies oppressed them and they were humbled under their hand Many times did hee deliver them and they bitterly provoked by their counsell and were brought downe by their iniquitie Yet he saw when distresse was on them when he heard their cry And he remembred toward them his covenant and repented according to the multitude of his mercies And gave them to tender mercies before all that led them captives Save thou us Iehovah our God and gather us from the heathens for to confesse unto the Name of thine holinesse to glory in thy praise Blessed bee Iehovah God of Israel from eternitie and unto eternitie and let all the people say Amen Halelu-jah Annotations THe powers that is the powerfull workes such as after follow verse 8 c. Thus also were Christs miracles named Mat. 11. 20 21. So after praise for praise-worthy acts cause to heare●● that is sound forth or display so as it may bee heard so Psal. 26. 7. Vers. 4. visit mee that is come and bestow thy salvation helpe or deliverance upon mee See Psalme 8. 5. and compare herewith Luke 1. 68 69. Vers. 5. To see That I may see or enjoy See the Notes on Psal. 27. 4. to glory or boast joyfully see Psal. 34. 3. thy inheritance that is the people whom thou inheritest see Psal. 28. 9. Vers. 6. sinned with our fathers This confession agreeth with the law Leviticus 26. 40. and with the practises of other godly Ieremy 3. 25. Dan. 9. 5. Vers. 7. turned rebellious the Greeke salth provoked to bitteruesses see Psal. 5. 11. By the red sea the Israelites distrusted God and murmured against Moses Exod. 14. 11 12. yet there he saved them vers 15. 16 c. thered Sea so the new Testament calleth it in Greeke Heb. 11. 29. but the Hebrew is the sea Suph that is the sea of sedge or sea weeds which grew therein Vers. 9. 〈◊〉 reb●●ked that is powerfully repressed the waves c. See the like Nahum 1. 4. Isa. 50. 2. Mat. 8. 26. Psal. 18. 16. in the deeps Israel went in the bottome of the red sea on dry ground the deepe waters being as walls on each hand of them Exod. 14. 21 22 29 See also Isa. 63. 11 12 13. Vers. 10. the hater Pharaoh and his host that pursued them Exod. 14. 23 24 30. Vers. 12. they sang as is expressed Exod. 15. Vers. 14. with lust that is greedily even weeping for desire of flesh to eat and loathing Manna Numb 11. 4. 6. Vers. 15. leannesse a sudden plague whereby the soules or lives of the fatrest of them were taken away see Psal. 78. 30 31. also Isa. 10. 16. Vers. 16. the holy one sanctified of the Lord to the worke of the Priesthood Exodus 29. 44. Levit. 8. 12 c. which Korah with other Levites envied opposing their own holinesse Num. 16. 1 3 5. Vers. 17. Dathan and Abiram princes with their families and all their goods went downe alive into hell Numb 16. 32 33. Vers. 18. the wicked 2●0 men that would burne incense to the Lord were burnt with fire from the Lord Numbers 16. 35. Korach was the chiefe of them Vers. 19. in Hereb a mount in the wildernesse called the mountaine of God Exod. 3. 1. 1 King 19. 8. for there God gave his Law and made a covenant with them Deut. 4. 10. and 5. 2. but while Moses was with God on the Mount they made themselves a god of gold Deuteronomy 9. 8 9 12. Exodus 32. 1 4 31. It was called also Sinai Psalme 68. 9. of bushes that there grew and Horeb of the drinesse for it was a waterlesse desart Deut. 8. 15. Vers. 20. their glorie that is their God so Ier. 2. 11. Thus did they like the heathens Rom. 1. 23. for me ●patterne structure or type as the Apostle calleth it in Greeke Heb. 8. 5. from Exodus 25. 40. Vers. 23. to abolish or that hee would destroy them and put out their name from under Heaven as is expressed Deut. 9. 13 14. in the breach in the gap which their sinne had opened for God as an enemy to enter and destroy them A similitude taken from warre when by a breach in the wall the enemy entreth the citie so Ezek. 13. 5. and 22. 30. But Moses earnest prayer stopped this breach Exodus 32. 11 14. destroying Heb. corrupting that is consuming them See Psal. 57. 1. Vers. 24. land of desire the pleasant land of Canaan which was to be desired for the pleasures and profits of it above all other Countries Ezek. 20. 6. Deut. 11. 11 22. This land they through unbeleefe refused to take possession of Num. 14. 1 2 3 c. Heb. 3. 19. So meat of desire is daintie meat Iob 33. 20. Vers. 26. his hand that is sware as the Chaldee explaineth for so lifting up the hand often signifieth as Gen. 14. 22. Rev. 10. 5 6. Deut. 32. 40. Nehem. 9. 15. How God sware against this people see Numbers 14. 21 23. Psalme 95. 11. Vers. 27. to fanne that is scatter see Psal. 44. 12. Ezek. 20. 23. Vers. 28. were joined or coupled yoked unequally with infidels which the Apostle forbiddeth 2 Cor. 6. 14. Baal-pehor the God of Moab and Madian to whom by Balaams counsell Israel joyned Numb 25. 3. and 31. 16. Revel 2. 14. Baal signifieth a Lord master husband or patron Pehor was the name of a mountaine where this god was worshipped and had a temple called Beth-pehor Numb 23. 28. Deut. 3. 29. Baal was a common name whereby the heathens called their gods 2 King 1. 2. Iudg. 8. 33. and so Israel also called the true God Hos. 2. 16. but for the shamefull abuse of Gods worship the Scriptures turne Baal a Lord into bosheth a shame as Ierub-besheth 2 Sam. 11. 21. for Ierub-baal or Gedeon Iudg. 8. 35. and 9. 1. Ish-bosheth 2 Sam. 2. 10. or Esh-baal 1 Chron. 8. 33. Mephi-bosheth 2 Sam. 9. 10. or Merib-baal 1 Chron. 8. 34. So the Greeke in 1 King 18. 25. for Baal hath Aischunes that is Shame Hereupon the Prophet saith they went to Baal-pehor and separated themselves unto that Shame Bosheth Hos. 9. 10. and so Ieremy calleth the Idols Shame or Confusion Ier. 3. 24. and 11. 13. the dead idols that have no life or breath and so are opposed to the living God Ier. 10. 5 10. 1 Thes. 1. 9. Vers. 29. brake in with violence killing 24. thousand men Numb 25. 9. Vers. 30. Phineas nephew of Aaron the Priest he being zealous for the Lord thrust thorow with a speare Zimri and Cozbi that wrought abomination Numb 25. 7 8 c. Vers. 31. for justice for a just action though done without ordinary authority and God rewarded him for it Numb 25. 11 12 13. Vers. 32. Meribah
his bosome his armes as Esai 49. 22. or lap Vers. 8. we blesse you the Chaldee addeth and they answer them not we blesse you c. taking this latter branch to be the harvest mens answer as in Ruth 2. 4. PSAL. CXXX The Psalmist praying out of deepe afflictions professeth his hope and patience and exhorteth Israel to the like A Song of degrees OVt of the deepes doe I call unto thee Iehovah Lord heare my voyce let thine eares be attentive to the voyce of my supplications for grace If thou shouldest observe iniquities O Iah Lord who shall stand But with thee is forgivenesse that thou maist be feared I earnestly expect Iehovah my soule earnestly expecteth and for his word doe I hopefully wait My soule for the Lord more than watchmen for the morning watchmen for the morning Let Israel hopefully wait for Iehovah for with Iehovah there is mercy and with him is much redemption And he will redeeme Israel from all his iniquities Annotations DEeps or low places that is great calamities Psal. 69. 3. 15. with hearty deepe affections and lowlinesse of minde Vers. 3. shall stand or can subsist meaning no man can Vers. 6. watchmen or warders keepers Which the Chaldee explaineth thus more than they which observe the morning watch which they observe that they may offer the morning sacrifice for or to the morning Vers. 8. his or their iniquities see the note on Psal. 25. 22. PSAL. CXXXI David professeth his humilitie and exhorteth Israel to hope in God A Song of degrees of David IEhovah mine heart is not haughty neither are mine eyes lofty neither walke I in great matters and too marvellous for me If I have not composed and stilled my soule as a weaned child with his mother as a weaned child with me is my soule Let Israel hopefully wait for Iehovah from this time and for ever Annotations HAughty or lifted up with pride see Deut. 17. 20. Prov. 16. 5. 2 Chron. 32. 25 26. Psal. 101. 5. marvellous that is too hard for me high and above my reach as Psal. 139. 6. Vers. 2. If I have not that is Surely I have an oath whereof part is concealed see Psal. 95. 11. Ier. 49. 20. composed or put fit and in order The Chaldee expoundeth it If I have not put my hand on my mouth and silenced my soule till it might heare the words of the Law as a weaned child on his mothers brests c. stilled or made silent refraining it from noisome lusts as a weaned child that is meeke modest humble submissive simple c. See Mat. 18. 1 2 3 4. PSAL. CXXXII Davids care to bring home the Arke of God 8 His prayer at the removing thereof 11 The Lords oath and promises to David to the Church A Song of degrees IEhovah remember unto David all his affliction How he sware unto Iehovah vowed unto the Mightie one of Iakob If I enter into the tent of mine house If I goe up on the pallet of my beds If I give sleepe to mine eyes slumber to mine eie-lids Vntill I find a place for Iehovah dwelling places for the Mighty one of Iakob Loe we heard it was in Ephrathah we found it in the fields of the wood We will goe into his dwelling places we will bow downe our selves at the footstoole of his feet Arise Iehovah to thy rest thou and the Arke of thy strength Let thy Priests be cloathed with justice and let thy gracious Saints joyfully shout For thy servant Davids sake turne not away the face of thine Anointed Iehovah sware unto David truth he will not turne from it of the fruit of thy wombe will I set upon thy throne If thy sonnes keepe my Covenant and my Testimony that I shall teach them also their sonnes even to perpetuitie shall sit upon thy throne For Iehovah hath chosen Sion hath desired it for his seat This is my rest even to perpetuitie here will I sit for I have desired it Her victuals I wil blessing blesse her poore I wil satisfie with bread And her Priests I will cloath with salvation and her gracious Saints shall shouting shout joyfully There will I make the horne of David to bud I have ordained a lampe for mine Anointed His enemies will I cloath with shame and on him his crowne shall flourish Annotations VNto David or for him that is for good unto him or David with all his affliction So Psal. 137. 7. affliction or humiliation afflecting care for to have the Arke brought home unto him 1 Chron. 13. 1 2 3 12. and 15. 1 2. c. or to build God an house 2 Sam. 7. 1 2. Vers. 2. the Mightie one in Greeke the God of Iakob so called first by Iakob himselfe Gen. 49. 24. This title is also given to other things as Psal. 78. 25. and 22. 13. Vers. 3. If I enter that is surely I will not enter see Psal. 95. 11. and 89. 36. Compare this care of David with the contrary negligence of the people Hag. 1. 4. 2 Sam. 7. 1 2. mine house mentioned 1 Chron. 15. 1. Vers. 5. finde that is prepare or build so Act. 7. 46. Also in Psal. 36. 3. finding is accomplishing for Iehovah that is for his Arke to rest in which the Chaldee explaineth a place for the house of the Lords Sanctuarie dwelling places or habitacles see Psal. 43. 3. Vers. 6. it Gods Arke vers 8. Ephra●hah the country of Ephraim the citie Shilo where Gods house and Arke had long continued Iudg. 18. 31. and 21. 19. 1 Sam. 1. 3. therefore an Ephraimite is called an Ephrathite Iudg. 12. 5. the fields of the wood in the citie of Kirjath-jearim that is the Citie of the woods where the Arke was twentie yeares after it came home from the Philistines 1 Sam. 6. 21. and 7. 1 2. It was also called Balle the plaines of Iudah 2 Sam. 6. 2. Vers. 7. at the foot stoole or towards it meaning the Sanctuarie see Psal. 99. 5. Vers. 8. thy rest the Sanctuary builded for thy name as 1 Chr. 28. 2. 2 Chr. 6. 41. Arke or Chist Coffer w ch was made of Shittim or Cedar wood overlaid with plates of gold whose cover called the Mercie-seat was also of pure gold on which were two glorious Cherubs of gold from whence God gave his Oracle Exod. 37. 1 2 6 7. Num. 7. 89. In this Arke were the two Tables of the Law or Testimonie written with the finger of God Deut. 10. 3 4 5. This Arke is called Gods strength and glorie Psal. 78. 61. For Arke of thy strength the Chaldee saith the Arke wherein thy Law is Vers. 9. cloathed with justice that is let them justly and holily administer their Priests office So Iob speaking of his just administration saith I put on justice and it cloathed me my judgement was as a robe and crowne Iob 29. 14. Therefore the Priests had holy garments to administer in Exod. 28. 2 3. In 2 Chron. 6. 41. and after here in
vers 16. the Priests are cloathed with salvation so Christ and his people Isa. 61. 10. Rev. 1. 13. and 19. 8. thy Saints the people of Israel 1 Chron. 15. 28. and specially the Levites which were singers in Gods Sanctuary So the Chaldee paraphraseth Let thy Priests be cloathed with the garments of justice and let the Levites thy Saints say praises for the oblations Vers. 10. Davids sake for the promises made to David or for Christs sake called often David see Psal. 18. 51. turne not away the face that is deny not the request as 1 King 2. 16 17 20. Vers. 11. truth that is a true oath a faithfull promise fruit of thy wombe or belly that is thy children see 2 Sam. 7. 12. And this prophesie respecteth Christ Act. 2. 30. Vers. 13. his seat or dwelling place see Ps. 68. 17. Vers. 15. victuals or meat see Psal. 78. 25. blessing blesse this noteth certainty and abundance of blessing Vers. 16. with salvation the minstration of the word whereby they save themselves and those that heare them Deut. 33. 10. 1 Tim. 4. 16. So Gods ministers are called Saviours Obad. 21. See before vers 9. The Chaldee translateth with garments of salvation or of redemption Vers. 17. the horne to bud or to grow that is the kingdome and power to increase as the Chaldee saith I will make a glorious King to bud in the house of David See Psal. 75. 5. and 89. 18 25. So Christ is called the horne of salvation Luke 1. 69. ordained a lampe or prepared a candle the bright glorie of the kingdome by a successour as 1 King 11. 36. and 15. 4. 2 King 8. 19. See Psal. 18. 29. Vers. 18. cloath with shame the Chaldee saith with garments of shame He meaneth they shall be disappointed and confounded in all their enterprises So Psal. 35. 26. and 109 29. crowne or diademe a signe of government and sanctitie therefore the Greeke turneh it sanctification see Psal. 89. 40. PSAL. CXXXIII The benefit of the communion of Saints A Song of degrees of David BEhold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell even together Like the good oile upon the head which went downe upon the beard the beard of Aaron which went downe upon the collar of his garmens Like the dew of Hermon which descendeth upon the mountains of Sion for there Iehovah hath commanded the blessing life unto eternitie Annotations TOgether in unitie and concord The Chaldee paraphraseth to dwell in Sion and Ierusalem like two brethren together Vers. 2. the good oile the balsam or oile of holy ointment made of the principall spices for the Lords Tabernacle and Ministers see Exod. 30. 23 25 26 30. the collar Hebr. the mouth that is the edge the upper hole or border which was bound about that it should not rent Exod. 39. 23. Vers. 3. Hermon an high and fertile mount without Iordan watered with the dew of heaven it was called also Shirion see Psal. 29. 6. which descendeth understand here againe and as the dew that descendeth for Hermon and Sion were farre asunder there where brethren dwell in unitie commanded appointed and sent effectually see Psal. 42. 9. PSAL. CXXXIV An exhortation to blesse God A Song of degrees BEhold blesse ye Iehovah all yee servants of Iehovah that stand in the house of Iehovah in the nights Lift up your hands in the Sanctuary and blesse Iehovah Iehovah blesse thee out of Sion he that made heavens and earth Annotations THat stand that is serve or minister as which stood before the King Ier. 51. 12. for which is written in 2 King 25 8. servant of the King Here is meant chiefly the Priests and Levites whose office was to stand and minister Deut. 10. 8. and 17. 12. Ezek. 44. 11 15. So Neh. 12. 44. the Priests and Levites that stood that is served See also Psal. 13 5. 2. The Chaldee expoundeth it that stand in the watches of the house of the Sanctuary of the Lord and doe praise in the nights in the nights keeping the watch of the Lord. See Levit. 8. 35. 1 Chron. 9. 33. Vers. 2. in the Sanctuary or towards the holinesse that is the most holy place where God dwelt betweene the Cherubims or in holinesse that is holily Vers. 3. blesse or will blesse thee speaking to Gods people Compare Num. 6. 24. Psal. 128. 5. and the promise Exod. 20. 24. In all places where I put the memory of my name I will come unto thee and blesse thee PSAL. CXXXV Gods servants are exhorted to praise him for his mercies to Israel 5 his power 8 his judgements on their enemies 15 The vanitie of Idols 19 An exhortation to blesse God Halel●●jah PRaise ye the Name of Iehovah praise him O ye servants of Iehovah That stand in the house of Iehovah in the courts of the house of our God Praise ye Iah for Iehovah is good sign Psalme to his Name for it is pleasant For Iah hath chosen to him selfe Iakob Israel for his peculiar treasure For I doe know that Iehovah is great and our Lord is above all Gods All that pleaseth Iehovah hee doth in the heavens in the earth in the seas and all deepe places He causeth vapours to ascend from the end of the earth hee maketh lightnings with the raine hee bringeth forth the wind out of his treasuries Who smote the first-borne of Egypt from man unto beast Sent signes and wonders in mids of thee O Egypt on Pharaoh and on all his servants Who smote many nations and slew mighty Kings Sihon King of the Amorites and Ogh King of Bashan and all the kingdomes of Canaan And gave their land for a possession a possession to Israel his people Iehovah thy Name is for ever Iehovah thy memorie is to generation and generation For Iehovah will judge his people and for his servants hee will repent himselfe The idols of the heathens are silver and gold the worke of the hands of men A mouth they have and speake not eyes they have and see not Eares they have and heare not also there is no breath in their mouth Like them be they that make them every one that trusteth in them O house of Israel blesse ye Iehovah O house of Aaron blesse ye Iehovah O house of Levi blesse yee Iehovah ye that feare Iehovah blesse Iehovah Blessed be Iehovah out of Sion which dwelleth in Ierusalem Halelujah Annotations HAlelu-jah that is praise or glorifie ye Iah it is a word of joyfull exhortation to sing praises to the Lord for his mercies and in the end of Psalmes is added as Amen for a chearefull acclamation see Psal. 104. 35. and 106. 48. Rev. 19. 1 3 6. Vers. 4. peculiar treasure or precious and singular possession proprietie so Deut. 7. 6. This was promised by the law Exod. 19. 5. but performed by Christ his redeeming and purifying of his people Tit. 2. 14. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Vers. 7. vapours or elevations in Greeke clouds for by
will runne the way of thy commandements when thou shalt inlarge my heart Psal. 119. 32. Vnder this promise of the Church is contained also the constant suffering of afflictions for and with Christ who being our Fore-runner and being consecrated through sufferings and so entring into his glory Heb. 2. 9. 10. Luke 24. 26. hath herein left us an example that we should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2. 21. and hath said If any man will come after me let him deny himselfe and take up his crosse daily and follow mee Luke 9. 23. Therefore it is written Let us lay aside every weight and the sinne which doth so easily beset us and let us run with patience unto the race that is set before us looking unto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12. 1. 2. into his chambers This sheweth the benefits which they finde that follow Christ they are brought not onely into the Kings palace as in Psal. 45. 16. but into his privy chambers the most secret safe and quiet roomes of his Palace Chambers are places of greatest secrecy 2 King 6. 12. Luke 12. 3. Matth. 6. 6. and of most safety Deut. 32. 25. Ezek. 21. 14. and in such the Bridegroom and Bride used to rejoyce together Ioel 2. 16. Iudg. 15. 1. Hereby is signified the revelation of the mystery of the Gospell the Secret of the Lord which is revealed to them that feare him Psal. 25. 14 and the spiritual comforts which they reape thereby for Eye hath not seene nor eare heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God and thus we have the mind of Christ 1 Cor. 2. 9. 10. 16. and are brought into such chambers as by knowledge are filled with all precious and pleasant riches Prov. 24. 4. Into them Paul as a friend of the Bridegroome endevoured with great strift to bring the Church that their hearts might be comforted being knit together in love and unto all riches of the fulnesse of understanding to the acknowledgement of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ in whom are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Coloss. 2. 1. 2. 3. In these chambers also the Saints are kept safe from evill Psal. 27. 5. delivered from the wrath and judgements of God due for their sinnes and comforted by the words of Christ against the persecution of men that in him they may have peace though in the world they have tribulation Ioh. 16. 33. Therefore unto them hee saith Come my people enter thou into thy chambers and shut thy doores about thee hide thy selfe for a very little moment untill the indignation be overpast Esa. 26. 20. Be glad and rejoyce be glad inwardly and rejoyce outwardly these comforts they finde in the Kings chambers whose Kingdome is not meat and drinke but righteousnesse and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. Wherefore they say I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord my soule shall be joyfull in my God for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation he hath covered me with the robe of righteousnesse as a bridegroome decketh himselfe with ornaments and as a bride adorneth her selfe with jewels Esay 61. 10. and thus they rejoyce with joy unspeakeable and full of glory receiving the end of their faith even the salvation of their soules 1 Pet. 1. 8. 9. will remember thy loves or will record rehearse make-mention of thy loves more then wine or which are better then wine as in vers 2. The foresaid joy of the Saints redoundeth to the praise and glory of Christ whose loves manifested by his sufferings death resurrection ascension and the graces and benefits flowing from them to his Church are remembred inwardly recorded and mentioned outwardly For they with joy drawing water out of the wells of salvation doe say in that day Praise the Lord call upon his name declare his doings among the people make mention that his name is exalted Esay 12. 3. 4. I will mention the loving kindnesses of the Lord the prayses of the Lord according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us and the great goodnesse towards the house of Israel which he hath bestowed on them according to his mercies and according to the multitude of his loving kindnesses Esay 63. 7. I will make mention of thy righteousnesse even of thine onely Psal. 71. 16. I will make thy name to bee remembred in every generation and generation therefore peoples shall confesse thee for ever and aye Psalme 45. 18. The upright love thee Hebr. uprightnesses or righteousnesses love thee whereby righteous or upright persons are meant the virgins fore-mentioned in vers 3. who have upright hearts and righteous conversation as pride in Ier. 50. 31. is for a proud person sin in Prov. 13. 6. is for a sinner thankesgivings in Nehem. 12. 31. for companies of thanksgivers and many the like So this fruit commeth by remembring and mentioning Christs loves that the righteous are confirmed and increased in love towards him more and more as the Apostle wrote to them that beleeved on the name of the Sonne of God that they might beleeve on the name of the Sonne of God that is might be confirmed continued and increased in their beleefe 1 Iohn 5. 13. The Hebrewes ignorant of Christ have applied these things unto Gods ancient mercies towards them in the giving of his Law as the Chaldee paraphrast saith When the people of the house of Israel was come out of Aegypt the divine-presence of the Lord of the world was their guide by the pillar of a cloud by day and by the pillar of fire by night The just men of that generation said O Lord of all the world Draw us after thee and wee will runne after the way of thy goodnesse and bring us neere to the bottome of the mount Sinai and give us thy Law out of thy treasure-house which is in the Firmament and we will be glad and rejoyce in the 22 letters with which it is written and we will remember them and will love thy Godhead and will depart from after the idols of the peoples and all just men which doe that which is right before thee shall feare thee and love thy commandements But the Law being the ministration of death though it was glorious hath no glory in respect of the ministration of the Spirit and of righteousnesse which exceedeth in glory 2 Cor. 3. 7. 10. Therefore the new Testament being now confirmed in Christ those former things which were figures and shadowes are no more remembred as was prophesied in Ier. 3. 16. Vers. 5. I am blacke Hitherto hath beene the Churches first speech unto Christ testifying her faith and love now follow her words to the daughters of Ierusalem against the scandals and offences that might arise for the