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A46823 A help for the understanding of the Holy Scripture intended chiefly for the assistance and information of those that use constantly every day to reade some part of the Bible, and would gladly alwayes understand what they read if they had some man to help them : the first part : containing certain short notes of exposition upon the five books of Moses, to wit Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomie : wherein all such passages in the text are explained as were thought likely to be questioned by any reader of ordinary capacity ... / by Arthur Jackson ... Jackson, Arthur, 1593?-1666. 1643 (1643) Wing J67; ESTC R35433 692,552 595

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Moabites the Edomites the Amalekites c. ●t is no way likely that a clause should be here inserted concerning the destruction of all mankind So that I make no question but as in the following verse the subduing of the Edomites is foretold under two severall expressions Edom shall be a possession and Seir also shall be a possession for his enemies so here also the conquest of the Moabites is likewise expressed first by smiting the corners of Moab and then by destroying all the children of Sheth the Moabites being called the children of Sheth either because some one of their progenitours the sonnes of Moab famous in his time was called Sheth and thence they were called the children of Sheth or else because this people did mightily boast of the antiquity of their nation and so did vainly style themselves the children of Sheth and so are called by Balaam ironically by way of deriding them for that their vain boasting that ancient people the children of Sheth How this prophecy was literally accomplished in David is evident 2. Sam. 8. 2. where it is said that he smote Moab and measured them with a line casting them down to the ground even with two lines measured he to put to death and with one full line to keep alive and so the Moabites became Davids servants But withall it is spiritually meant of Christs vanquishing them and all other his enemies either by his word converting them or by his power subduing them and so agreeth with that of the Prophet Esa 11. 4. He shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked Vers 18. And Edom shall be a possession Seir also shall be a possession c. That is the Edomites that inhabit mount Seir shall also be subdued by the Israelites This was likewise literally fulfilled in David of whom it is said 1. Chron. 18. 13. that he put garisons in Edom and all the Edomites became Davids servants and thereupon he sung that triumphant song Psal 60. 8. Moab is my washpot over Edom will I cast out my shooe but especially it was fulfilled in Christ whose conquest over these and other his enemies the Prophet sets forth most gloriously Esa 6● 1 2. c. Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah c. Vers 19. Out of Jacob shall come he that shall have dominion and shall destroy him that remaineth of the citie That is of the cities of the Edomites of whom he had spoken in the foregoing verse The meaning is that he should destroy them all not suffering any to escape that even those few that shall shut up themselves in the most fortified places and remain a while safe when others are destroyed sha●l at length partake with the reft But in Christ shall this be most eminently fulfilled who having destroyed his enemies here with a great destruction shall at his second coming destroy all that remain Vers 20. Amalek was the first of the nations but his latter end shall be that he perish for ever That is thou hast been reputed the first and chief of the nations and wert indeed the first that made warre against Israel but as glorious as thou art now thy end shall be utter destruction as thou wert the first-fruits of the nations vanquished by the Israelites so art thou appointed still to be destroyed till thou be rooted f●om the face of the earth This was fulfilled in part by Sanl 1. Sam. 15. but principally by Christ Vers 21. And he looked on the Kenites and took up his parable c. Not the people of Canaan so called G●n 15. 19. for we reade not that they continued undestroyed till the Assyrians carryed them away to Babylon as it is said of these Kenites vers 22. But by the Kenites are here meant the Midianites one principall family or people amongst them being put for the whole nation for such a people there was amongst the Midianites whence Jethro Moses father in law priest of Midian is called the Kenite Judg. 1. 16. and his posterity also Judg. 4. 11. Now Heber the Kenite which was of the children of H●bab the father in law of Moses had severed himself from the Kenites and they are next named because they bordered upon Amalek and dwelt many of them amongst the Amalekites 1. Sam. 15. 6. And Saul said unto the K●nites Go depart get you down from among the Amalekites c. Strong is thy dwelling place and thou puttest thy nest in a rock This he speaks as alluding to their name for Ken signifieth a nest Vers 22. Neverthelesse the Kenite shall be wasted untill Asher shall carry thee away captive That is they shall endure much at the hand of severall enemies which was in part accomplished when the Midianites were vanquished by Gedeon Judg. 7. 2. and shall at length be carryed away captive by the Assyrians who together with the Jews carried all the nations away round about them Jer. 25. 9. and particularly we reade of Kenites mentioned after the return of the people out of Babylon 1. Chron. 2. 55. Vers 23. And he took up his parable and said Alas who shall live when God doth this In these words are implyed how grievous calamities would in a manner befall all nations when the Assyrians should make that havock of which he had made mention in the foregoing verse and when those troubles should happen whereof he prophecyeth in the following words Vers 24. And ships shall come from the coast of Chittim c. Kittim or Chi●tim was one of Japhets posterity who seated themselves in Macedonia Cilicia Cyprus and other the Grecian Islands By Chittim here Expositours therefore do commonly understand Macedonia and other parts of Greece and thereto agreeth that in 1. Maccab. 1. 1. when it is said that Alexander sonne of Philip the Macedonian came out of the land of Chittim But yet because in Dan. 11. 30. it is generally almost held that by the ships of Chittim are meant ships that came out of Italy therefore here also they hold that by Chittim is meant Italy and indeed it is pro●●ble enough that though the Greek Islands were ordinarily called Chittim yet the Greeks passing over from thence into Italy and planting themselves there even Italy was af●erwards also called Chittim and so both may be here comprehended under this word Chittim to wit both the Greek Islands and Italy Now concerning these ships that should come from the coast of Chittim Balaam pr●phecieth here first that he should afflict Ashur secondly that he should afflict Eber thirdly that he also that is the people of Chittim should perish for ever for the first that these ships that came from the coast of Chittim should afflict Ashur if we understand by Chittim the Grecians the accomplishment hereof is clear for Alexander the great Grecian Monarch did utterly vanquish the Persian Empire to whom the Assyrians that came of Ashur
upon thee unexpectedly Vers 3. Blessed shalt thou be in the citie and blessed shalt thou be in the sield That is in all places Vers 4. Blessed shall be the fruit of thy body and the fruit of thy ground c. That is blessed shalt thou be in all thy possessions Vers 5. B●●ssed shall be thy basket and thy store That is blessed shalt thou be in the use of all that thou hast Vers 6. Blessed shalt thou be when thou comest in and blessed shalt thou be when thou goest out That is in all thy imployments publick or private Vers 9. The Lord shall establish thee an holy people unto himself c. This chiefly is meant of spirituall blessings of being Gods peculiar people and the firm perpetuity of ●he covenant made with them and it is added in the last place as the chief ●iece 〈◊〉 their happ●nesse V●●● ●0 And all the people of the earth shall see that thou art called by the n●me of the Lord c. That is that thou art the peculiar people of God for the meaning is that all nations should plainly perceive by the singular blessings that shall be heaped upon this people that God did indeed own them for his speciall people and that they were called by his name as sonnes are called by the name of their 〈…〉 and wives by the names of their husbands V●●● 12. The Lord shall open unto thee his good treasure the heaven c. Mos●s calls the heavens the Lords good treasure because he keeps there in store those things wherewith he causeth the earth to yield abundance of increase for the enriching of those that dwell therein as the rain to water the ground the heat of the sunne and the influence of the moon and starres to make all things therein to grow and prosper c. Vers 13. And the Lord shall make thee the head and not the tail c. That is thou shalt be highly esteemed above other nations and not scorned and despised as a base and contemptible people Vers 15. All these curses shall come upon thee and overtake thee That is there shall be no avoyding these judgements though thou triest all wayes and with all the skill and diligence that can be used dost endeavour to escape and fly from these miseries yet it shall not be thou mayest sometimes think that thou art gotten out of danger but thy hopes shall be in vain these judgements shall still pursue thee and at last overtake thee Vers 21. The Lord shall make the pestilence cleave unto thee c. That ●s God will send the pestilence into thy cities and towns and you shall be no wayes able to rid your selves of it when it is among you in vain shall any means be used to stay the spreading of the infection because the Lord shall command it to cleave unto you and to continue amongst you Vers 23. And the heaven that is over thy head shall be brasse and the earth that is under thee shall be iron It is not without cause that Moses saith not The heavens shall be brasse and the earth iron but the heaven that is over thy head shall be brasse and the earth that is under thee shall be iron for the Lord intended that this should give them a hint of fear by shewing them how God had hemmed them in with judgements on every hand if they should walk rebelliously against him Vers 24. The Lord shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust c. That is in stead of rain there shall fall upon thy grounds trees plants c. powder and dust which the wind and other things raise in times of drought Vers 28. The Lord shall smite thee with madnesse and blindnesse c. It is a spirituall madnesse and blindnesse and astonishment of heart which God here threatens to wit when God deprives men of the use at least of their understanding that they stand in a manner like a blind man or one that is suddenly amazed or astonished not knowing which way to turn themselves or shall do such things which if they were not bewitched as S. Paul saith of the Galatians Gal. 3. 1. if they were not blind or drunk or mad as we use to say they would never Accordingly therefore by groping at noon-day in the following verse all the effects are meant of this brutish stupidity and spirit of giddinesse wherewith the Lord in his just judgement doth many times strike men as when they shall cast themselves headlong into manifest dangers and shall not be able to apprehend the occasions of helping themselves or doing good to themselves though never so clearly proffered unto them when men shall runne on securely in those sinnes which the very light of nature must needs tell them are the high-way to hell and when Gods anger is clearly discovered by his judgements yet they will not see it when they shall live under plentifull means of grace and yet shall continue ignorant or wilfully reject both Christ and heaven and indeed in this regard we may well say that the Jews did thus through Gods just judgement grope at noon-day and so still do unto this houre in that the light of the Gospel shining upon them they would not nor will yet acknowledge Christ their promised Messiah which makes the Apostle say 2. Cor. 3. 14. that untill this day there is a vail over their minds in the reading of the old testament and Rom. 11. 8. God hath given them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear unto this day Vers 30. Thou shalt betroth a wife and another man shall ly with her c. The sting of the judgement here threatned lies in this that their enemies should lie with those they had newly betrothed to be their wives before themselves had enjoyed them and so it is likewise in the particulars following that they should be bereaved of their new-built houses before they had dwelt a day in them and of their vineyards before themselves had eaten of the fruit of them Though it be misery enough at any time to have those things taken away by enemies wherein we delight yet it is a great aggravation of this misery when after we have taken much pains to get them and have set our hearts upon them and are filled with hope and expectation of enjoying the fruit of our labours then on a sudden they should be snatched away and so all our hope should be quite dashed and others should enjoy all the swee● we had laboured for Vers 32. Thy sonnes thy daughters shall be given unto another people thine eyes shall look and fail with longing c. The judgement here threatned is first that they should behold with their eyes when their children were carried away captive which is a great aggravation of this calamity for it is not so great a vexation to heare of the losse of goods or children as to have
stain and dishonour upon themselves that they were not indeed the children of God But the translation in our Bibles doth best agree with the scope of the place their spot is not the spot of my children that is their wickednesse is greater then can stand with the condition of being my children The best of Gods children have their spots and blemishes their infirmities and corruptions But to live in the ordin●ry practice of grosse sinnes and to give themselves over to wicked courses are degrees of evil which are not compatible with true grace these spots are ●ot the spots of his children who must be holy as their father in heaven is holy And this is that which Moses here chargeth upon the Israelites though in regard of outward profession the Lord was their father and they his children as himself afterwards saith vers 6. Is not he thy father that hath bought thee c. yet the wickednesse of their lives was evidence enough that they were not such indeed and in truth their spot is not the spot of his children They are a perverse and crooked generation Moses calls them cr●●ked because both their hearts and wayes were so dissonant to the right rule of Gods will and Law and perverse because they were so untoward and untractable that nothing would work upon them to mend any thing that was amisse in them and the word generation in this clause a perverse and crooked generation implyes both the generality of their Apostacy and the spring from whence their wickednesse proceeded to wit originall sinne that corruption of nature which they drew from their parents Vers 6. Is not he thy father that hath bought thee hath he not made thee and established thee To convince them of that grosse ingratitude wherewith he had charged them in the foregoing words Do ye thus requite the Lord oh foolish people and unwise he puts them in mind of that which was of all other the greatest of the mercies which he had afforded them natuely that he had chosen them to be his peculiar people and so had entred into a covenant with them that he would be their father and that they should be his sonnes and his daughters for that he speaks of their being his children by adoption is manifest the phrase here used thy father that hath bought thee implying plainly that they were not his children by nature but that he redeemed and bought them and so adopted them to be his children and the next clause also is to the very same purpose Hath he not made thee and established thee for it is not meant so much of making them men and women as of making them his people and by a sure covenant establishing them to be his sonnes and daughters and so the word is elsewhere used for a degree of grace after creation as Isa● 43. 7. where the Lord speaking of Israel saith I have created him for my glorie I have formed him yea I have made him Vers 8. When the most high divided to the nations their inheritance c. Two severall wayes this verse may be probably expounded first thus That when God by his providence did dispose of the severall nations that came out of the loyns of Adam in the severall parts of the world allotting to one nation one countrey and another to another even as a man that hath some great Lordship divides it out by parcels to severall tenants and this the Lord did in the age after the confusion of tongues at Babel for every nation did then plant themselves according as God by his eternall decree had determined and set the bounds of their habitation Acts 17. 26. then did he set the bounds of the people according to the number of the children of Israel that is he chose the children of Israel to be his onely peculiar inheritance where they were there was his people and where their bounds ended there was an end of his people and there the bounds of the heathen began But secondly thus That when God did at first divide the earth amongst the severall nations and bring every one of them to countreys which by his eternall decree he had determined for their habitation even then did he think of Israel before they were yet a people and took care that they should have a competent portion reserved for them to wit the land of Canaan which was for their use put into the hands of the Canaanites to whom he allotted so much of the earth as he knew would serve for the Israelites and so as it is said here he set the bounds of the people according to the number of the children of Israel and indeed this last exposition doth best agree with the words of the text and is therefore embraced by the most Expositours Vers 9. For the Lords portion is his people Jacob is the lot of his inheritance That is the Israelites are that portion of mankind whom he was pleased to redeem out of the bondage of Satan to make them his peculiar people and therefore it was that he took speciall care of them They are called his portion and inheritance first because they were to be entirely his they were to acknowledge no other Lord c. secondly to signifie that not onely they but their children after them were to be the Lords successively thirdly to intimate the precious account the Lord made of them that the Lord would delight in them and would keep them and plead for them as men do for their inheritance as we know what Naboth said unto Ahab 1. Kings 21. 3. The Lord forbid it me that I should give the inheritance of my fathers unto thee Again they are called the lot of his inheritance or as it is in the Hebrew the cord of his inheritance in allusion to the custome of those times when they used to divide land amongst men by lots and to measure it out with a line or cord and the rather happely because the land of Canaan was so divided amongst the Israelites See Numb 26. 55 56. Vers 10. He found him in a desert land and the wast howling wildernesse The wildernesse is called the wast howling wildernesse because of the howling both of beasts and birds that usually keep in such wild and desolate places and it may be also because of the dolefull complaints of those that travelling those deserts do often perish for want of food But why is it said that the Lord found the Israelites in a desert land and in the wast howling wildernesse Not because the Lord never took them to be his people till they were in the wildernesse for they were the Lords people when they were in Egypt I have seen saith the Lord to Moses the affliction of my people which are in Egypt Exod. 3. 7. and it was the Lord that brought them thence out of the tender compassion that he had of them but either because it was in the wildernesse to wit at Sinal that he first entred solemnly
the waters above from the waters beneath therefore it is certainly more probably held that it is said here that the firmament should divide the waters which were under the ●irmament from the waters which were above the firmament not because there are any waters above the heavens where the sunne moon and starres are set vvhich are a part of the firmament vers 17. but because they are above that part of the firmament vvhich is from the face of the earth and sea to the clouds vvhich is also called the open firmament of the heaven vers 20. for by the waters which are above vvatry clouds are meant as is evident in many other places of Scripture Psal 18. 11. His pavillion round about him were dark waters and thick clouds of the skies Psal 104. 3. Who layeth the beams of his chambers in the waters who maketh the clouds his chariot c. Psal 147. 8. Who covereth the heaven with clouds who prepareth rain for the earth Jer. 10. 13. When he uttereth his voice there is a multitude of waters in the heavens And so the firmament is said to be in the midst of the waters because part of those vvaters of the deep forementioned vvere lifted up by the mighty povver of God and spread abroad into thin vapours bound up in thick clouds Job 26. 8. and so that part of the firmament wherein the birds ●ly vers 20. vvas in the midst of the waters and divided the waters above from the waters beneath Vers 9. And God said Let the waters under the heaven be gathered together unto one place and let the dry land appear God having the first day created the earth but as yet without form vers 2. a rude and indigested lump of a slimy and muddie substance and drowned as it were in a deep gulf of waters now on the third day it was by the same almighty power of God compacted into a solid Masse and received its form and so the waters descended to the place that God had found●d for them Psal 104. 8. They go up by the mountains they go down by the valleys to the place thou hast founded for them to wit those concavities and vast hollow places in the body of the earth wherein the Seas and other waters are now held called therefore the Storehouses where God laid up the depth Psal 33. 7 He gathereth the waters of the sea together as an heap he layeth up the depth in Store-houses and thus the earth and vvater together made an entire Globe Nor need vve be troubled that the vvaters are said to be gathered together into one place for besides that all seas and rivers are but as so many branches and arms of the great Ocean vvhere into they all runne E●cl 1. 7. All the rivers run into the Sea yet the sea is not full unto the place from whence the rivers come thither they return again the meaning of those vvords may be onely this that the waters under the heaven vvere to be gathered and runne together each to their severall place Vers 11. And God said Let the ●arth bring forth c. And thus the Lord in great vvisdome 1. caused the earth to yield her increase before the sunne vvas created by the heat vvhereof novv the earth is vvarmed and so doth fructifie that hereby we might learn to ascribe the fruits of the ●arth to God rather then to the sunne 2. He made ready all kind of food for the living creatures that vvere aftervvards created on the sixth day Vers 12. And the earth brought forth grasse and herb yielding seed c. Hereby is meant both that God did then by his almighty vvord give to the earth a povver to bring forth all kind of herbs and plants and trees unto the end of the vvorld and also that he did at the present cause it actually to bring them forth and that in their full perfection the herb yielding seed and the tree yielding fruit as man aftervvards vvas created not a child but a perfect man and therefore vve see that vvhen the serpent tempted him vvhich vvas immediately after his creation the tree of knovvledge of good and evil had fruit fully ripe upon it Chap. 3. 6. The woman saw that the tree was good for food and that it was pleasant for the eyes vvhich is indeed an argument of much vveight to prove that the vvorld began vvith the Autumne and that at first the yeare vvas counted to begin then And God saw that it was good That is God approved them all to be good And indeed even those poysonous herbs and plants vvhich vvere on this day created are good and usefull in their kind and meat for some creatures nor should have ever been hurtfull to man if man had not sinned Vers 14. And let them be for signes That is to signifie things to come both naturall and ordinary and supernaturall and extraordinary For so we find by continuall experience that the divers colour and hew of the Sunne and Moon as likewise the rising and setting of divers Constellations of the starres do foreshew fair and foul weather storms and tempests c. and hereby both seamen and husbandmen and physicians receive very helpfull insinuations of the fittest opportunities for their severall affairs yea oftentimes by Eclipses Comets and sometimes by other supernaturall signes God foreshews the heavy calamities he intends to bring upon men insomuch that those that dwell in the utmost parts of the earth are afraid at his tokens Psal 65. 8. so it is said Luke 21. 25 26. There shall be signes in the Sunne and in the Moon and in the Starres and upon the earth distresse of Nations with perplexitie the sea and the waves roring mens hearts failing them for fear and Act. 2. 19 20. I will shew wonders in heaven abov● and signes in the earth beneath bloud and fire and vapour of smoke The sunne shall be turned into darknesse and the moon into bloud yet this is no warrant for fortune-tellers and such as by searching under what Planet men are born will undertake to for●tell and divine what good and evil shall befall them both in their life and death for this is a vanitie and wickednesse which the Sc●ipture doth every where deride and condemne Deut. 18. 10. There shall not be found among you any one that maketh his sonne or daughter to passe through the fire or that useth divination or an observer of times or an enchanter or a witch Isa 47. 13. Let now the Astrologers the starregazers the monethly prognosticatours stand up and save thee from these things that shall come upon thee And for seasons To wit Summer and Winter Spring and Autumne which come by the course of the Sunne as that approcheth nearer to us or goeth further from us yea God hath appointed the Moon also for seasons Psal 104. 19. for thereby we account the moneths and their severall seasons and the Starres likewise and Constellations which arise and set
vvith the vvicked and so he saved Lot for Abrahams sake It is true indeed that God had respect to the piety and righteousnesse of Lot in delivering him for so the Apostle faith 2. Pet. 2. 7 8. That he delivered just Lot and that because the righteous soul of this good man was vexed from day to day in seeing and hearing the filthy conversation of those vvicked vvretches but this doth not exclude that vvhich is here said concerning Abraham There may be divers causes of one and the same effect the main cause of all vvas Gods free grace both to Abraham and Lot and not any merit in them but subordinate hereunto there vvere also other inducements to vvit the joynt respect that the Lord had to the righteousnesse of Lot his faithfull servant and to the intercession of Abraham as here is expressed Vers 30. For he feared to dwell in Zoar c. The cause of this fear is not expressed but may probably be thought to have been either that seeing the abominable sinnes of that citie he feared lest God vvould also destroy that or else that he doubted lest because of his escape the people vvould fall upon him as the cause of the overthrovv of those neighbouring cities and indeed his hiding himself in the cave makes this most probable Vers 31. And there is not a man on the earth to come in unto us c. Some conceive that they did verily think that all nations of the earth vvere destroyed by fire but many things make this improbable 1. Their knovvledge that Zoar vvas not destroyed and that the Angels had promised that it should not be destroyed 2. Their seeing that the shower of fire which had burnt up those cities of the plain reached not so farre as the mountains wherein at present they were 3. The remembrance of Abraham their uncle a righteous man not like to be destroyed and 4. That last clause after the manner of all the earth which seems to be spoken of the time present that they were deprived of that society with man which every-where else they did enjoy Others conceive that she meant onely this that there was not a godly man with whom onely they durst marry They take the perishing of their sisters in Sodom to be a punishment of God upon them for their marrying with the wicked Sodomites not daring to do so therefore and grieving by this means to be deprived of the common blessing of mankind they resolve upon a more wicked course But I rather conceive thus of the place Lot and his daughters flying in some great fear into the mountain and being there in a manner mured up in a cave his eldest daughter utters these words as a complaint that by this solitary life they were deprived of all hope of marriage the common blessing of all the earth There is not a man in the earth to come in unto us That is here we live in a cave without society of any but our selves and it is to us all one as if there were not a man upon the earth Come let us make our father drink wine c. But indeed any of these expositions may be imbraced for whatever absurdity there is in their resolutions must be ascribed to their fear that passion blinding men and driving them upon any absurd thoughts or courses Vers 32. Let us make our father drink wine To wit the wine which they had brought from Zoar. Vers 37. And called his name Moab c. Moab is by interpretation of the father and Benammi is sonne of my people or sonne of my kindred In both names ●here was a memoriall of their incestuous procreation That which these daughters of Lot it seemed boasted of was their having children of their own kinne not of the f●ithlesse and cursed nations CHAP. XX. Vers 1. ANd Abraham journeyed from thence c. The cause of this remove is not expressed but in likelyhood it was because of some inconveniency arising from the late fearfull destruction of Sodom Vers 2. And Abimelech king of Gerar c. Abimelech was the common title of the kings of Palestina as Pharaoh was of the kings of Egypt Psal 34. the title A Psalme of David when he changed his behaviour before Abimelech Vers 3. But God came to Abimelech in a dream by night By that which we reade verse 17. So Abraham prayed unto God and God healed Abimelech and his wife and his maid-servants c. it appears that presently upon the taking of Sarah the Lord struck Abimelech with a dangerous sicknesse and plagued his Court with a strange disease Now in his sicknesse the Lord by a dream the extraordinary glory whereof was undoubtedly such that Abimelech might easily perceive it came from heaven informs him of the cause and tells him he was a dead man which must be understood conditionally unlesse he restored Abrahams wife vers 7. Now therefore restore the man his wife for he is a Prophet and he shall pray for thee and thou shalt live and if thou restore her not know thou that thou shalt surely die c. Vers 4. Wilt thou slay also a righteous nation That is him and his people vers 18. For the Lord had fast closed up all the wombes of the house of Abimelech Vers 7. For he is a Prophet They are called Prophets in the Scripture to whom the Lord did more familiarly reveal his will then to other men and by whom he did teach and instruct others Such was Abraham Gen. 18. 17 18 19. And the Lord said Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do seeing that Abraham shall surely become a great nation c. For I know that he will command his children and his houshold after him c. And of this the Lord gives notice to Abimelech 1. That he might not dare to detain Sarah because her husband was not an ordinary man but a Prophet one in speciall favour with God whose wrongs God would surely avenge Psal 105. 15. Touch not mine Anoynted and do my Prophets no harm 2. That he might hope by his prayers being a man so prevalent with God to have the plague removed that was laid upon them Vers 12. And yet indeed she is my sister c. He addes to excuse himself that it was not altogether false which he had faid because it was true in a sense that she was his sister as in the same sense Lot and he are called brethren Gen. 13. 8. For we be brethren namely because she was the daughter of his father though not of his mother And for the clearing this the Hebrews hold that Sarah was that Iscah the daughter of Haran Abrahams brother as being the sonne of Terah though by another woman for this being yielded she was indeed the grandchild of Terah Abrahams father and so might be called the daughter of his father as Jethroes daughters are called Revels who was their grandfather Exod. 2. 18. and yet withall not be the daughter
here also taken unto their assembly mine honour be thou not united implying that he would not give the least consent or approbation to a fact so foul Now this severe censure of that treacherous and bloudy crueltie of Simeon and Levi in the slaughter of the Shechemites is a notable evidence that th● Authour of that Apocryphall book of Judeth where this fact of Simeons is highly extolled wrote not by the inspiration of that spirit of God by which the Patriarch Jacob was guided when he uttered this prophecy and consequently that that Book is no part of the Canonicall Scripture Vers 7. I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel Jacob speaks here as in the person of God as usuall it is in the Scriptures to ascribe the work of God to the Prophets who are onely his messengers to foreshew what he will do How this prophecy was fulfilled in the tribe of Levi every one knows who were here and there dispersed abroad and placed in severall cities all the land over that so they might teach and instruct the people in the law of God wherein also the goodnesse of God is observable that turned as it were this curse into a blessing for though the dividing and scattering of them was in it self a punishment yet that they w●re dispersed for that end to be as the mouth of God unto the people to feed them with knowledge and understanding herein they were exceedingly honoured As for the tribe of Simeon how this prophecy was accomplished in them we may see also Josh 19. 1 c. who were not planted apart by themselves in the land of Canaan as the other tribes were but had their inheritance intermingled with that of Judah out of vvhose lot in severall places here and there those of Simeon had certain cities and villages assigned them and therefore vve see that vvhen Moses blessed the severall tribes before his death Deut. 33. he made no mention at all of this scattered tribe of Simeon and that aftervvards they vvere forced many of them at least to seek a nevv habitation partly in Mount Seir and partly in Mount Gedor 1. Chron. 4. 39 43. by force of arms driving out the Amalekites and other inhabitants and so planting themselves in their room Novv herein also vvas the punishment denounced against Simeon svveetned also in that though they vvere thus divided and scattered yet it vvas an honour to them that they vvere at first joyned vvith the royall tribe of Judah and that aftervvards God made them victorious over those uncircumcised nations in vvhose countrey they planted themselves vvhen their first habitation by reason they multiplied so greatly vvas too little for them Vers 8. Judah thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise Alluding to his name vvhich signifieth confession or praise Gen. 29. 35. And she conceived again and bare a sonne and she said Now will I praise the Lord. And the meaning is that the name of this tribe should be famous and eminent amongst the rest not onely in regard of the temporall government but much more in regard that out of him Christ should come Heb. 7. 14. For it is evident that our Lord sprang out of Judah Thy hand shall be in the neck of thy enemies That is thou shalt put them to flight and subdue them This prophecy of the valour and prevailing power of Judah was fulfilled when that tribe became the leader Num. 10. 14. In the first place went the standard of the camp of the children of Judah Judg. 1. 1 2. The children of Israel asked the Lord saying Who shall go up for us against the Canaanites first to fight against them And the Lord said Judah shall go up as also in those Worthies of this tribe Othniel Judg. 3. 9 10. David 2. Sam. 8. 1. Solomon 1. Chron. 22. 9. but especially in Christ who hath vanquished all the powers of darknesse Thy fathers children shall bow down before thee This is spoken in relation to that regall power that should be established in the tribe of Judah to which all the Israelites should submit themselves and purposely that he might comprehend all the posteritie of Jacob even all the tribes of Israel he saith not thy mothers children but thy fathers children shall bow down c. Yet it is most exactly accomplished in the spirituall kingdome of Christ Phil. 2. 10. That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow Vers 9. Judah is a lions whelp c. The tribe of Judah is here compared to a lion thereby the better yet to expresse their mighty strength and courage how terrible they should be unto their enemies and how great and glorious their conquests should be that look as a lion the king of beasts flies upon any beast he meets with and tears them in pieces and returning from his prey coucheth down and feedeth upon his prey or lieth at rest and none dare disquiet him or offer to take his prey from him so should Judahs kings conquer and subdue their enemies and then returning with victorie should quietly and peaceably enjoy their spoils and conquests without disturbance But especially is this spoken in relation to Christs unresistable power and glorious conquests who is therefore called the lion of the tribe of Judah Rev. 5. 5. Vers 10. The sceptre shall not depart c. till Shiloh come Shiloh is by interpretation the Prosperer the Safemaker the Prince of peace or as others think his sonne or her sonne is doubtlesse meant of the Messiah the Lord Christ who is indeed the onely Saviour of mankind the onely Peace-maker betwixt God and us and the sonne of Judah and that as being the sonne of the Virgin Mary who was of Judahs tribe so that the drift of these words was to foretell of what tribe the Messiah should be to wit of the tribe of Judah and at what time he should come to wit that after once the regall dignitie should be settled in that tribe which was done when David was anoynted king the government should never be taken from him at least so farre but that there should be a Lawgiver from between his feet nor his kingdome and commonwealth be utterly ruined and abolished untill the Messiahs coming The chief difficultie of this place is in making good the truth of this prophecy concerning the continuance of Judahs principalitie and kingdome untill the Messiahs coming and that because it is evident 1. That after Jechoniah and Zedekiah the two last kings of Judah they had no more any king of that royall house of David nor of the tribe of Judah for so Jeremiah prophecied concerning Jechoniah Jer. 22. ●0 Thus saith the Lord Write ye this man childlesse a man that shall not pro●per in his dayes for no man of his seed shall prosper sitting upon the throne of David and ruling any more in Judah yea so Ezekiel prophecied concerning the utter overthrow of that crown and regall dignitie Ezek. 21. 27. I will
were laid upon this bullock and that the true sacrifice for our sinnes should suffer without the gates of Jerusalem Heb. 13. 11 12 13. For the bodies of those beasts whose bloud is brought into the Sanctuary by the high priest for sinne are burnt without the camp wherefore Jesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the gate c. It is a sinne-offering And therefore thus to be ordered as is above appointed Vers 15. And thou shalt take one ramme c. That is one of those two rammes before mentioned verse 1. The sacrifice for sinne being first offered without which no other offering could have been accepted for God heareth not sinners now followeth the burnt-offering which was first a shadow of Christ who after that he had offered himself to God as a sacrifice for sinne did then ascend up into heaven there to prepare a place for his ●edeemed ones secondly a signe of our regeneration as the other was of the expiation of our sinnes by Christ signifying that through him we shall and must be clensed from sinne crucified to the world and present our whole man bodies and souls a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God Rom. 12. 1. And thirdly to teach the priests for whose consecration it was offered that being purified by the Spirit of God they must deny themselves and consecrate themselves wholly to God to serve him in their office holily and faithfully all the dayes of their life Vers 16. And thou shalt take his bloud and sprinkle it round about c. It figured the sprinkling of Christs bloud as for our reconciliation so also our sanctification 1. Pet. 1. 2. Through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the bloud of Christ Vers 19. And thou shalt take the other ramme c. This was for a congratulatory or peace-offering Now these were offered usually either to obtain some blessing or to give thanks for something already received in both respects was this offered at the priests consecration both by way of thankfulnesse for the honour done him in his calling and to beg of God that he would prosper him in the execution of it And Aaron and his sonnes shall put their hands upon the head of the ramme c. Signifying that from God in Christ figured in that ramme they expected not onely justification and sanctification as in the two former sacrifices but also consecration to their office and ability to perform the same Vers 20. And take of his bloud and put it upon the tip of the right eare of Aaron c. The eare hand and foot are anointed with bloud to intimate the sanctifying of all their parts by Christs bloud to make them fit for the priesthood And these are put for all because the eare is the signe of obedience Psal 40. 6. Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire mine ears hast thou opened especially in hearing the word from Gods mouth which they should teach unto the people And again the hands and feet are the instruments of action not onely in their ministery but in their whole conversation And sprinkle the bloud upon the altar round about c. See the notes upon vers 10. for this tended to the same end Vers 21. And thou shalt take of the bloud that is upon the altar and of the anointing oyl c. Though this bloud and oyl mingled together was sprinkled upon the holy garments of Aaron and his sonnes yet we may well think it was done so that it might not marre the beauty and glory of their garments and then some little drops of bloud sprinkled here and there would rather be for the honour then the defiling of their garments Now this was done to signifie that by the bloud of Christ and the oyl of his graces they were sanctified for the work of their ministery Vers 22. For it is a ramme of consecration That is offered as a peace-offering in liew of his consecration Vers 24. And thou shalt put all in the hands of Aaron c. To wit all those things mentioned in the two former verses amongst which the right shoulder is also named In other peace-offerings the breast and the right shoulder were set apart from the rest of the sacrifice and given to the priests for their portion Levit. 7. 31 32. The breast shall be Aarons and his sonnes and the right shoulder shall ye give unto the priest for an heave-offering of the sacrifice of your peace-offerings But here the breast onely was given to Moses as he that extraordinarily did now the priests work the shoulder was together with the fat and other things waved by the priests and then by Moses burnt upon the altar and the reason was doubtlesse because there were many priests among whom the breast and shoulder were in future times divided whereas here onely Moses executed now the work of the priest and therefore the breast alone was given unto him for his portion and the shoulder was burnt upon the altar and offered to the Lord. And shalt wave them for a wave-offering before the Lord. By shaking it thus to and fro they did as it were disclaim all their interest in that offering and resigne it as a thing wholly consecrated to God and besides this waving it to the East West North and South might imply that all Nations should in Christ have cause to praise God Vers 26. And it shall be thy part Because he was now in the stead of the priest yet he hath not all viz. not the shoulder which was afterward the priests portion because this breast was enough to imply that he had done the priests work Vers 27. And thou shalt sanctifie the breast of the wave-offering c. This is not spoken of the present but is an ordinance for the future what shall be then the priests because Moses had now the breast onely therefore this is now Inserted that the priests were to have both breast and shoulder Vers 29. And the holy garments of Aaron shall be his sonnes after him c. And thus though the man was changed yet the high priest seemed in a manner the same appearing before God in the same garments a sweet type of that one high priest after the order of Melchisedec Vers 30. And that sonne that is priest in his stead shall put them on seven dayes So many dayes were the solemnities of Aaron and his sonnes consecration at the present to continue ver 35. Seven dayes shalt thou consecrate them during which time they were to abide at the doore of the tabernacle day and night to keep the watch of the Lord Levit. ● 33 35. And ye shall not go out of the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation in seven dayes untill the dayes of your consecration be at an end for seven dayes shall he consecrate you Therefore shall ye abide at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation day and night seven dayes
There was a meat-offering that was alwayes to be joyned with their burnt-offerings for which direction is given elsewhere but here direction is given onely for voluntary meat-offerings and therefore it is said When any will offer a meat-offering c. neither is there any set quantity here appointed but it is left free to the offerer to bring what he pleased whereas for the meat-offering that was brought together with their burnt-offerings of the herd or of the flock there is an expresse law how much there should be of it to wit a tenth deal of flower mingled with the fourth part of an hin of oyl Numb 15. 4. Now these voluntary meat-offerings were for the same end that the burnt-offerings were both to make atonement for them and also to testi●ie their consecrating of themselves to God but withall particularly they were by way of acknowledgement that all their provision they had of his bounty So then the meat-offering signified First Christ his oblation of himself of which the Apostle speaks Ephes 5. 2. Christ hath loved us and given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour and again Heb. 10. 8 9 10. When he said Sacrifice and offering and burnt-offerings and offering for sinne thou wouldst not neither hadst pleasure therein which are offered by the law Then said he Loe I come to do thy will O God! He taketh away the first that he may establish the second By the which will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Secondly Christians wonne to God by the Gospell and then consecrated to his service Esay 66. 20. They shall bring all your brethren for an offering to the Lord out of all nations to my holy mountain Jerusalem saith the Lord as the children of Israel bring an offering in a clean vessel into the house of the Lord. Thirdly all our Evangelicall sacrifices of prayer and praysing God with other services done to the Lord and to his saints for his sake Mal. 1. 11. In every place incense shall be offered unto my name and a pure offering And last of all more particularly their acknowledgement of Gods bounty in all the food they injoyed and therefore it was that in all these meat-offerings they are appointed to bring fine slowre without any mixture of branne to signifie the purity of all Evangelicall sacrifices He shall poure oyl upon it and put frankincense thereon The oyl poured upon the flowre figured the graces and comfort of the holy Ghost whereby we serve God with a willing mind and a chearfull spirit Ye have an unction from the holy one saith the Apostle speaking of this oyl of Gods spirit 1. John 2. 20. and the sweetnesse both of the oyl and frankincense signified how sweet and acceptable their services were unto God in and through the mediation of Christ who hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Ephes 5. 2. whence it was that the Prophet told the Jews that their incense was in vain when God regarded not their sacrifices Jer. 6. 20. To what purpose cometh there to me ●ncense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre countrey your burnt-offerings are not acceptable nor your sacrifices sweet unto me Vers 2. And the priest shall burn the memoriall of it upon the altar That is the handf●ll which he had taken out of the meat-offering which should in stead of all put God in mind which is spoken of God after the manner of men of all this offering which the offerer had given to the Lord and of the covenant which he had made to accept it and withall be a memoriall to the offerer that he acknowledged all the store he had to be from God and therefore to be consecrated wholly to his service and that God would take in good part the offering he had now brought him Vers 3. And the remnant of the meat-offering shall be Aarons and his sonnes To eat the same in the Sanctuary Levit. 6. 16. And the remainer thereof shall Aaron and his sonnes eat with unleavened bread shall it be eaten in the holy place in the court of the tabernacle c. It is a thing most holy of the offerings of the Lord made by fire And therefore onely to be eaten by the priests that offer it Of other offerings others might eat but of the most holy things whereof part was burnt on the altar onely the priests Vers 4. And if thou bring an oblation of a meat-offering baken in the oven These were prepared and baked within the Sanctuary as it seems by Ezekiel 46. 20. This is the place where the priests shall boil the trespasse-offering and the sinne-offering where they shall bake the meat-offering and 1. Chron. 23. 28 29. Their office was to wait on the sons of Aaron c. both for the shew-bread and for the fine flowre for meat-offerings and for the unleavened cakes and for that which is baked in the pan and for that which is fried It shall be an unleavened cake of fine flowre mingled with oyl or unleavened wafers anointed with oyl See the notes upon Exod. 29. 2. and upon the 11. verse of this chapter Vers 11. No meat-offering which ye shall bring unto the Lord shall be made with leaven This must be understood onely of these voluntary oblations part whereof was to be burnt upon the altar for with some eucharisticall or thank-offerings they might bring leavened cakes Levit. 7. 13. as also in the first-fruits Levit. 23. 17. but these were not burnt upon the altar And where leaven was not to be used in the oblation the part remaining the priests might not eat with leaven Levit. 6. 16. because part of the offering was burnt upon the altar Now leaven was thus generally forbidden First to put them still in mind of their deliverance out of Egypt a type of their redemption by Christ Secondly to teach them to worship God as he had appointed and to know that all humane devices therein are an abomination to God Thirdly to shew the perfect purity of Christ in whom there was not the least leaven of sinne and the sincerity that must be in our evangelicall sacrifices for leaven signifieth sinne of all sorts in doctrine and manners distastfull to God and infectious to men Luke 12. 1. Beware ye of the leaven of the Pharisees which is hypocrisie 1. Cor. 5. 8. Let us keep the feast not with old leaven neither with t he leaven of malice and wickednesse but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth For ye shall burn no leaven nor any hony in any offering of the Lord made by fire Not onely leaven but hony also is forbidden First because it hath a kind of leavening nature Secondly the more fully to exclude all humane devices in Gods worship the sweetnesse of hony might be a pretence of mixing it with their sacrifices when neither
Moses and Aaron fell on their faces before all the assembly c. Either to pray unto God for them as in Numb 6. 22. or to testifie their great sorrow and astonishment of mind or to intreat the people not to proceed in their rebellion for now happely Moses spake that Deut. 1. 29 30 31. Then I said unto you Dread not neither be affraid of th●m the Lord your God which goeth before you he shall fight for you c. Vers 6. And Joshua the sonne of Nun and Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh which were of them that searched the land rent their clothes In signe of sorrow and detestation of those blasphemous speeches which the people had uttered against God Vers 8. If the Lord delight in us then he will bring us into this land c. That i● unlesse by this rebellion we provoke God so farre that he take no more delight in us Vers 9. For they are bread for us That is we shall easily consume and devour them to wit with the sword according to that expression Deut. 32. 42. I will make mine arrows drunk with bloud and my sword shall devour flesh and this I conceive is opposed to that speech of the other incredulous searchers of the land chap. 13. ver 32. The land through which we have gone to search it is ● land that eateth up the inhabitants thereof Their defence is departed from them c. In the Hebrew it is their shadow is departed from them but thereby is meant their desence covert and protection that whereby men are preserved from dangers as the shadow g●ards a man from the scorching heat of the sunne as Psal 91. 1. He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most high shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty and Psal 121. 5. 6. The Lord is thy keeper the Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand The s●nne shall not smite thee by day nor the moon by night and the meaning is that God had now forsaken them as appears by the following clause whic● is opposed against this and the Lord is with us so that the aim of Joshua and Caleb in these words was to assure the people that however God had hitherto preserved them from being destroyed because their iniquity was not then full yet now he had withdrawn his help from them and would certainly give them up to destruction and that they had no cause therefore to fear them but might go boldly against them as against a naked people left destitute of ●ll means to preserve and shelter them for what are strong cities and high walls to defend a people whom God hath forsaken Vers 10. And the glory of the Lord appeared in the tabernacle c. The Lord seeing the danger his faithfull witnesses were in did suddenly cause the cloud the usuall signe when God meant to speak to Moses concerning his people to descend upon the tabernacle and that no doubt in a more glorious appearance then ordinarily thereby to astonish the people and to stop them in that furious attempt they were going about Vers 17. And now I beseech thee let the power of my Lord be great according as thou hast spoken saying c. Two severall wayes these words may be understood first of the power of God in carrying the Israelites into Canaan and because this would be an act of wonderfull mercy in God to do this for a people that had now so horribly rebelled against him therefore the next words are added according as thou hast spoken saying The Lord is long-suffering c. or secondly of the power of God in pardoning their sinne let the power of my Lord be great that is by pardoning this people now let it be seen how great thy power is in this regard how able thou art to forgive a people that by so many sinnes and so exceeding great do still provoke thee Nor need it seem strange that Moses speaking of God after the manner of men should make it an act of power to forgive since the power of man is in nothing more seen then in overcoming his anger and pardoning those whom he may destroy according to that of Solomon Prov. 16. 32. He that is slow to anger is better then the mighty and he that ruleth his spirit then he that taketh a citie Vers 18. The Lord is long-suffering and of great mercy forgiving iniquity and transgression and by no means clearing the guilty c. The drift of Moses prayer and so also of his alledging these words which the Lord had spoken concerning himself being to procure of God that he would shew mercy to the Israelites and not to poure out his wrath upon them as their sinne had deserved it may seem strange that he should adde the last clause that God would by no means clear the guilty but would visit the iniquity of the fathers upon the children c. But for the resolving of this doubt we must know that these words being taken joyntly with those which went before do no way crosse the aim of Moses prayer and that because he did not sue to God that he should not punish the sinne of this people but onely that he would not utterly destroy them as he had before threatened vers 12. and accordingly the drift of Moses plea in these words is this That since God had said of himself that he was a long-suffering God and that though he would by no means clear the guilty c. yet withall he was a God of great mercy and ready to forgive the iniquities of his people that he would now according to this which he had said deal with this people namely that he would in wrath remember mercy and not sweep them quite away as dung from the face of the earth Vers 20. And the Lord said I have pardoned according to thy word That is I will not destroy them all as one man I will not cut off the whole nation as at first I threatned but will onely punish these rebells and leave their posterity to inherit the land Vers 21. But as truly as I live all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord. This some understand of the glory which the Lord would get to himself by the just punishment that he would inflict upon this unbelieving and rebellious people for their refusing to enter into that good land whereunto he had brought them others ag●in understand it of the glory he would get by the miraculous and glorious thing● that he would do for his people in carrying them into the land of Canaan but I conceive that both may be best included Moses had pleaded with God that if he utterly destroyed this people the nations would say that he was not able to bring them into the lan● To this therefore the Lord answers that he would not destroy them but would carry their posterity into the land which he had promised them and that with working so many strange wonders
dayly buckets of waters poured out upo● them and as corn that is sown in watry grounds which must needs flourish and grow mightily whence is that Esa 32. 20. Blessed are ye that sow beside all waters that send forth thi● her the feet of the ox and the asse And his King shall be higher then Agag c. That is then all the Kings of the earth for though the Kings of the Amalekites be here onely instanced in who were called by this name Agag as the Egyptian Kings by the name Phara●h because they were now most po●ent ver 20. Amalek was the first of the nations yet under this all other Kings are comprehended This was fulfilled in Saul 1. Sam. 15. 7 8. And Saul sm●te the Amalekites from Havilah untill thou comest to Shur that is over against Egypt And ●e took Agag the King of the Amalekites alive and utterly destroyed all the people with the edge of the sword and so also in the glory of Israels kingdome in David and Solomons dayes but especially in Christ Psal 89. 27. Also I will make him my first-born higher then the Kings of the earth Vers ● God brought him forth out of Egypt he hath as it were the strength of an unicorn See the note upon chap. 23. vers 22. Vers 9. He couched he lay down as a lion c. Which is meant of their safe and secure peace See the note upon Gen. 49. 9. Vers 11. I thought to promote thee unto great honour but lo the Lord hath kept thee back from honour That is blame not me therefore for giving thee no reward for taking so long a journey but blame thy God c. Vers 12. And Balaam said unto Balak Spake I not also to thy messengers c. That is you have no cause to blame me I could not help it I told you before I durst not do it without Gods leave Vers 14. I will advertise thee what this people shall do to thy people in the lattor dayes That is many years hereafter for though by the latter dayes in the old Test●ment are often meant the times of the Messiah and much that Balaam afterwards saith is concerning the kingdome of the Messiah yet this expression here must not be restrained to the times of the M●ssiah because he foretells many things that were to be partly accomplished in the dayes of David which was about foure hundred years after this but by the latter dayes here is onely meant that these things he now would tell him should be done along time af●er this and this happely he said the rather because being to tell him of the destruction of his people the Moabites by the Israelites hereby he would in part decline the anger of Balak by telling him that this should not happen in his dayes Vers 17. I shall see him but not now I shall behold him but not nigh c. This is meant of that Starre of whom he speaks in the next words There shall come a starr● out of Jacob and a sceptre shall rise out of Israel which is doubtlesse meant of a king of the seed and posterity of Jacob who should shine as a starre in the firmament in regard of the resplendent glory of his person and kingdome and this king was David or Solomon as types of Christ for in their dayes the kingdome of Israel was raised to an exceeding height of splendour and glory and David it was that did vanquish the Moabites 2. Sam. 8. 2. c. as it is said in the following words that this king should do and secondly it was principally Christ himself that king of glory that enlightner guide and comforter of his people who saith of himself Rev. 22. 16. I am the root and the off-spring of David and the bright and morning starre and of whom S. John saith John 1. 9. That was the true light which lightneth every man that cometh into the world who was therefore as some conceive discovered to the Wise men by a starre Matth. 2. 2. to shew that he was that starre of whom Balaam had long since prophecyed Now therefore whereas Balaam saith here of this king I shall see him but not now I shall behold him but not nigh either the meaning of this is onely that what he saith of this king should not be accomplished now in his dayes nor in the time that was nigh approching but long ●fter when he should see him to wit in his po●terity after many generations and then it may be meant either of David or Chri●t or if it be meant of a personall seeing this starre out of Jacob then it can be understood onely of Christ and of the ●ight which such wicked wretches as Balaam was shall have of him at the day of judgement and it is as if he had said There shall a time come though it be not nigh at hand when I shall see him to wit when every eye shall see him Rev. 1. 7. but the wicked afarre off as it is said the rich man saw Abraham Luke 16. 23. And shall smite the corners of Moab and destroy all the children of Sheth The meaning of th●s clause is that the king that should arise out of Israel of whom he was now speaking should vanquish and destroy the whole kingdome and people of the Moabites for by smiting the corners of Moab is meant either his destroying of their Princes who were the chief strength of their kingdome as the corner-stones of a house are the chief strength of a building or his smiting of the whole countrey in every quarter and corner of it and by the second clause and destroy all the children of Sheth the same thing is repeated in other words as it is usuall in these prophecies of Bala●m to joyn two severall expressions of one and the same thing I know that many Expositours hold that by the children of Sheth here are m●ant all the sonnes of men ●nd that because from Noah who came from the stock of Sheth Adams sonne all nations had their originall and so they conceive this to be a prophecie of Christ subduing the whole world unto him and that he should destroy his enemies of all nations that should rise up against him according to that of David Psal 72. 11. All kings shall fall down before him all nations shall serve him and Psal 2. 8. Ask of me and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession But this Exposition for two reasons seems very improbable first because it is evident th●t all the severall branches of this prophecy are literally meant of David though spiritually also of Christ of whom David was a type Now this clause that he should destroy all the children of Sheth cannot be meant of David if by the children of Sheth be meant all the nations of the world and secondly because whilest Balaam is here fore●elling what should befall the severall neighbouring nations as the
Lord commanded me at that time to tea●h you statutes and judgements c. That is besides the ten commandments written by the Lord himself he at that time also gave me other statutes and judgements which he commanded me to teach you Vers 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves c. Lest again confidence of themselves should make the Israelites slight this warning of avoiding all idolatry in these words he implyes how prone mans nature is to this sinne charging them to be jealous of themselves in this regard and to watch diligently over themselves lest they should be drawn away into this grosse and brutish finne Vers 19. Which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven Moses speaking here against worshipping the sunne moon and starres and then adding this clause which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven he doth therein imply with what admirable wisdome God hath disposed these lights in severall parts of the heaven whereby the sunne moon and starres do according to their severall stations give light sometimes to one part of the earth sometimes to another and some starres do onely shine in some parts of the world and others to other parts B●● withall the chief drift of this clause is to shew what a baseness● of mind it 〈◊〉 be in Gods people to worship such things as are given for servants unto all men even to infidels and heathens Vers 20. But the Lord hath taken you and brought you forth out of the iron furnace c. This is added to imply in what a speciall tie they were bound to be carefull above other people not thus to dishonour God first because God had redeemed them out of the iron furnace that is the furnace wherein iron is melted and so Egypt is called to set forth the miserable and cruell oppression which there they underwent enough to dissolve the spirits of the stoutest and to have wasted and consumed any people and secondly because having thus redeemed them out of Egypt he had taken them to himself as a people of inheritance that is his own people purchased for himself upon whom this blessing should remain from generation to generation Vers 21. Furthermore the Lord was angry with me for your sakes c. This is added first to set forth the wondrous care that God took of them who was angry with Moses for their sakes because he did not sanctifie the Lord in the eyes of the children of Israel Numb 20. 12. secondly to manifest Gods love and mercy to them granting them that favour which he denied his servant Moses to wit of carrying them into that good land of Canaan thirdly to give them a hint how carefull they had need to be to walk uprightly with God who was so farre displeased with him because of his infidelity Vers 24. For the Lord thy God is a consuming fire even a jealous God c. The Lord is here called a consuming fire because of his ex●eeding great indignation against his people when they provoke him by their rebellions and because when he resolves to take vengeance on them he doth many times consume and destroy th●m even as the fire burns up all that stands in its way and again he is called a j●alous God with respect unto the covenant which he made with his people wherein he had taken them to be his spouse and had engaged himself to be as a husband to them and so was as jealous of having the worship due onely to him to be given to any creature as husbands use to be of their wives dealing falsely with them and Solomon we know saith of jealousie that the coals thereof are coals of fire which hath a most vehement flame Cant. 8. 6. Vers 25. When thou shalt beget children and childrens children and shalt have remained long in the land c. That is be not secure and bold to sinne because you are therein settled for if you do God will soon cast you out again Vers 26. I call heaven and earth to witnesse against you c. This obtestation of heaven and earth may be understood of God and the Angels in heaven and men on earth But I rather conceive it to be meant of the dead and unreasonable creatures and that hereby is implyed first that as surely as there was a heaven and an earth so surely should they perish from off the land secondly that the bruit creatures were not so stupid as they if notwithstanding all these warnings given them they should neverthelesse go after strange gods Vers 34. Or hath God assayed to go and take him a nation from the midst of another nation by temptations c. The miracles and wonders which God wrought in Egypt are here called temptations because he did thereby try both the Egyptians to see whether they would be wonne to yield to him and let the people of Israel go and the Israelites to see whether they would be wonne to ●ear the Lord and to trust in him who had done so great and wonderfull things for them Vers 37. And because he loved thy fathers therefore he chose their seed after them c. Not for any thing which he saw in you or in your fathers did he choose you to be his peculiar people but of his own free grace and love and from that love of his it was merely that he brought thee out of Egypt in his sight that is the eye of his providence being still fixed upon them even as a father causes his child to go before him that he may keep his eye upon him and no● suffer him to fall into any danger Vers 44. And this is the law which Moses set before the children of Israel c. He meane●h that which hereafter followeth this therefore is a preface to the next chapter where the repetition of the laws beginneth Vers 49. And all the plain on this side Jord●● Eastward even unto the sea of the plain c. See chap. 3. 17. CHAP. V. Vers 1. ANd Moses called all Israel and said unto them c. That is all the elders and chief of the people It was not possible that so many hundred thousands as the Israelites now were should hear Moses speaking to them But as Exod. 12. 3. where Moses and Aaron were appoined to speak unto all the congregation of Israel vers 21. it is said that they called for all the elders of Israel so it was here Vers 3. The Lord made not this covenant with our fathers c. That which Moses here speaks of is that which he made with the Israelites at Horeb when he gave them the law as is expressed in the former verse The Lord saith he made not this covenant with our fathers that is with our fathers in Egypt or it may be meant of the Patriarchs Abraham and Isaack and Jacob even including all from Adam unto Moses yea and all their ancesters before the giving of
it was also that this monument was set up in mount Ebal vers 4. the mount whence the curse was denounced vers 13. against them that continued not ●n all things written in the law to signifie that those that sought salvation in the law must needs be left under the curse and secondly together with this monument there was an altar built and set up vers 5. whereon they offered sacrifices vers 6 7. to teach them that the righteousnesse and salvation which could not be attained by the works of the law was to be sought in Christ of whom this altar was a type and who is indeed the end of the law for righteousnesse to every one that believeth Rom. 10. 4. Vers 5. And there shalt thou ●uild an altar unto the Lord thy God an altar of stones See the note upon Exod. 24. 4. Thou shalt not life up an iron tool upon them See the notes on Exod. 20. 24 25. Vers 9. This day art thou become the people of the Lord thy God To wit because they had at this time in a solemn manner renewed their covenant with God Vers ●12 These shall stand upon mount Gerizzim to blesse the people c. Moses here enjoyns the people that when they had set up the monument of stones on mount Ebal whereon the law was written and the ●ltar mentioned vers 5. and had offered sacrifices thereon as God had commanded them they should then afterwards in a solemn manner give their consent to the blessings and curses that should be pronounced by the priests upon those that should keep and upon those that should break Gods laws and the manner enjoyned for the doing hereof was this Six of the tribes were to stand upon mount Gerizzim to wit Simeon and Levi and Judah and Issachar and Joseph and Benjamin where by the tribe of Joseph is meant the two distinct tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh the sonnes of Joseph who are here joyned together as one because Levi is here reckoned as one of the twelve and these were all the posteritie of Leah and Rachel and then the six other tribes were to ●tand upon mount Ebal to wit Gad and Asher Dan and Naphtali who were the sonnes of the handmaids and with them the Tribes of Reuben who for his sinne lost his birthright and Zebulun the youngest of Leahs sonnes and so the tribes being thus divided the priests came with the ark Josh 8. 32. into the little valley that was betwixt these two mountains and there first they pronounced the blessings happely turning their faces towards mount G●rizzim and then all the tribes that stood on mount Gerizzim answered Amen and then turning again to mount Ebal they pronounced the twelve curses that are afterwards set down in the latter end of this chapter and then all the tribes that stood on mount Ebal answered Amen Indeed in Josh 8. 33. it is not said that the tribes stood upon mount Gerizzim and upon mount Ebal but that they stood half of them over against mount Gerizzim and half of them over against mount Ebal But hereby one and the same thing is meant onely it is so expressed in Joshua either to intimate that th● tribes stood the one companie right opposite against the other or else rather because the people at least their rulers and officers stood on the first ascending of the hills and so indeed rather over against them then upon them Besides though there is no mention made here of the priests pronouncing the blessings but onely the curses yet in Joshua 8. 33. it is expressely said that Joshua read that is the priests by Joshuas appointment the blessings and the curses and therefore doubtlesse the blessings were read by the priests as well as the curses onely Moses passeth over the blessings either because they might be easily enough gathered from the contrary curses which are expressed or else as some conceive by this his silence in not mentioning the blessings to lead his prudent reader to look for the blessings by another which is Christ Acts 3. 26. God having raised up his sonne Jesus sent him to blesse you in turning every one of you away from his iniquities for silence in the holy storie often implieth great mysteries as the Apostle sheweth from Moses silence concerning Melchisedecs parents Heb. 7. 3 c. As for the reasons why the Lord would have the people in such a solemn manner to give assent to these blessings and curses thus pronounced in their hearing we may probably conceive it was first to teach them hereby that the law of God was just the sinner himself being judge and that he who breaks them must needs be self-condemned even by the light of a naturall conscience and secondly the better to restrain them from breaking these laws where there was no danger of being punished by the Magistrate by putting them in mind that these sinnes would however expose them to Gods curse And indeed the rather may we think that this God intended in this solemn service because most of the sinnes here particularly accursed are secret sinnes as secret idolatrie vers 15. the secret removing of the land-mark vers 17. incest and bestialitie and such other sinnes as men are usuall to conceal Some adde besides that mount Gerizzim being on the right hand of the priests and mount Ebal on the left hereby that day was shadowed forth when a blessing shall be pronounced on them at the right hand and a curse upon them at the left But whether there was any ground for this mysterie I question much What is fit to be further observed concerning this passage we may see in the foregoing note upon chap. 11. 29. Vers 14. And the Levites shall speak and say unto all the men of Israel with a loud voice c. That is the priests the Levites for so it is expressed Josh 8. 33. and indeed the Levites in generall stood upon mount Gerizzim amongst their brethren of the other tribes vers 12. Vers 15. Cursed be the man that maketh any graven or molten image c. Under this all sinnes against the first table are likewise accursed and so under the following particulars all sinnes against the second table And all the people shall answer and say Amen So subscribing to the justice of Gods law and as it were wishing that the curse might befall them if they should in any of these things transgresse Gods commandments Vers 18. Cursed be he that maketh the blind to wander out of the way And so also much more they that mislead simple men and women into any dangerous and damnable errour pernicious to their souls CHAP. XXVIII Vers 1. THe Lord thy God will set thee on high above all nations of the earth That is thou shalt excell all other nations both in r●gard of temporall blessings and especially in regard of spirituall and heavenly advancements Vers 2. All these ble●sings shall come on thee and overtake thee c. They shall come
them taken away before our eyes and therefore also is that added vers 24. So that thou shalt be mad for the sight of thine eyes which thou shalt see because doubtlesse the sorrow that enters to the heart by the eye doth usually cut deeper then tha● which enters by the eare● and secondly that their eyes should look and fail with longing for them c. whereby is meant either the failing and marring of their eyes by their extreme mourning and weeping for their children or else because there is mention made of longing for them that they should expect and wait for some help for the rescuing of their children even till eyes fail with waiting but all in vain in that they should never be able to deliver them Vers 33. The fruit of thy land and all thy labours shall a nation which thou knowest not eat up c. From whom the lesse mercy can be expected and withall God implyes how vain their hope of peace should be grounded with their friendship with all the nations about them since he was able to bring a nation upon them whom they know not and whom therefore they never feared Vers 36. The Lord shall bring thee and thy King which thou shalt set over thee c. Observable it is that it is so expressely noted that not onely they but their King also should be carried into captivity for first hereby is implyed the universalitie of the judgement in that not so much as their King should be able to escape out of the hand of those over-bearing enemies and secondly it is a great aggravation of any peoples misery when their Kings are cut off that are the chief hope of any state when the head is under water the whole body must needs be in great danger and therefore we shall find in publick judgements the people of God have still lamented above all for the losse of their prince as Lam. 4. 20. The breath of our nostrils the anointed of the Lord was taken in their pit of whom we said Vnder his shadow shall we live among the heathen And there shalt thou serve other gods wood and stone To wit either being seduced by the enticing perswasions of those idolaters amongst whom you shall live there or else forced to it by the tyranny of your Lor●s and masters In either of these cases it was a heavy judgement to Gods people as being an evil that endangered their souls and their eternall well-being as so it is here threatned as the most grievous of all miseries yet withall there is couched in these words too an exprobration of this peoples pronenesse to idolatry intimating that then they should ●ave gods enough and b●●lutted with superstitious will-worship to which they were so strongly 〈◊〉 Vers 37. And th●● 〈◊〉 ●●come an astonishment a proverb and a by-word word c. There is much included in this threatning as that their calamities s●ould be so great that their very enemies should be astonished at them and that they should be the common table-talk of those that had vanquished them But the chief thing intended is that they should be slouted and scorned and made a laughing-stock in all places whereever they came Vers 38. The stranger that is within thee shall get above thee very high c. Moses had before threatned that the enemies of their land should prevail against them and tyrannize over them but now he addes as a farther degree of misery that the very strangers that formerly lived amongst them onely by permission as sojourners should come to lord it over them and be in farre better condition then themselves and indeed it doth much increase mens distresse when they come to be so farre beneath those that were formerly as farre beneath them Vers 45. Moreover all these curses shall come upon thee and pursue thee and overtake thee c. See the foregoing note upon vers 15. Vers 48. He shall put a yoke of iron upon thy neck till he have destroyed thee Their bondage is here compared to a yoke of iron not onely because it should be so heavy and insupportable by reason of the many g ievous miseri●s they should suffer there but also because they should be no way able to break the yoke from off their necks that is to ridde themselves out of their bondage but should continue under it untill it had utte●ly co●sumed them Vers 49. And the Lord shall bring a nation against thee from farre from the end of the earth as swift as the eagle flyeth Th●t is sudde●ly unexpectedly and with unresistable violence And indeed the Babylonian the nation here intended is described to be a lyon with eagles wings Dan. 7. 4. and Nebuchadnezzar is likened to a great eagle with great wings as we ●ay see Ezech. 17. 3 12. and there is of●en mention made of their swiftnesse as Jer. 4. 13. Behold he shall come upon us as clouds and his charets shall be as a whirl wind his horses are swifter then eagles Lam. 4. 19. Our persecutours are swifter then the eagles of the heaven they persued us upon the mountains c. A nation whose tongue thou shalt not understand So that it shall not be possible to call for mercy at his hand Vers 5● And he shall besiege thee in all thy gates untill thy high and fenced walls come down wherein thou trustedst c. This last clause wherein thou ●rustedst is added not onely to intimate that the enemie that God would bring against them would batter down their strongest walls bulwarks but also by way of upbrayding them for putting too much confidence in such things as these which alas should be no help at all to secure them against those enemies that God would send to destroy them Vers 57. And towards her young one that cometh out from between her feet The Heb●ew word signifieth her af●er-birth and implyeth that the mother should devour both that and the child with it which much aggravates the judgement Vers 62. And ye shall be left few in number whereas ye were as the starres of heaven for multitude Which being dire●tly contrary to that which God had promised must needs be an evident signe of Gods displeasure against them Vers 63. The Lord will re●oyce over you to destroy you and to bring you to nought The drift of these words is to imply how great the indignation of the Lord against them should be that should make him not onely destroy but also rejoyce in destroying a nation that had formerly been so precious in his eyes and for whom he had done such great and wonderfull t●ings Nor doth this contradict what the Lord saith Ezek. 33. 11. As I live saith the Lord God I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked c. for though God doth not delight in the destruction of his creatures yet as there is an execution of justice done upon wicked men that despise his mercie the Lord is pleased with it and rejoyceth to