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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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grace or words of grace Luk. 4. 22. which was powred out in the lips of Christ Psal. 45. 3. which set forth by similitude of the pleasant lilie and sweet my●rh-oile doe note out the comfort and sweetnesse of the Gospell in the hearts of them that beleeve Vers. 14. The Chrysolite in Hebrew Th 〈…〉 it is a precious stone of a golden sea-green colour see Exod. 28. 20. These hands of Christ likened unto or adorned with gold rings whose hollow place of foyle is set and filled with the Chrysolite signifie his precious pure and glorious workes acceptable and honourable before God and men his bowels that is his breast and belly for in them the bowels are contained as the heart liver c. but he nameth bowels to denote his inward affections outwardly manifested So the heart is said to bee among the bowels in Psal. 22. 15. and the liver is joyned therewith in Lam. 2. 11. where also the bowels are in Greeke translated the heart See before on verse 4. bright yvorie Hebr. brightnesse of yvorie meaning most bright polished faire and glorious overlaid or which is covered and so adorned with Saphirs for in Gen. 38. 14. this word is used for covered where the Greek and Chaldee expound it adorned These bowels of Christ like burnisht yvorie decked with Saphirs which are precious stones of a sea blew or heavenly colour signifie his hearty and heavenly affections love mercy commiseration c. towards God his Law and his people as he saith in Psal. 40. 9. thy Law is within my bowels and bowels are inward-affections in 2 Cor. 7. 15. and joyned with mercies in Phil. 2. 1. and used for tender-mercy in Luk. 1. 78. and Pauls great longing after the Saints is said to be in the bowels of Iesus Christ Phil. 1. 8. The Chaldee Paraphrast applyeth these to the body of the Church of Is●ael the twelve Tribes who shined as hee saith like lampes were polished in their workes like Elephants tooth or yvorie and shone like Saphi●s Vers. 15. His legges piliars of marble under the name legges the thighes also are comprehended and all down to the feet which are the instruments to beare sustaine and remove the body from place to place so the legges of a man and the strength of an horse are mentioned in Psal. 147. 10. to signifie mans might and swiftnesse And as yron legs denoted a strong Kingdome Daniel 2. 33. 40. so the strength of Christ in his wayes and government is resembled by marble-pillars and the uprightnesse and purity thereof by the colour of white-marble or alabaster founded or grounded set fast as on a foundation sockets of solid gold that is Christs feet on which his legges are set as pillars on their sockets to sustaine and stay them up are of solid gold firme and stable pure and glorious so that his way is perfect his ancles slip not 2 Sam. 22. 33. 37. his fo●t standeth in righteousnesse Psal. 26. 12. he walketh safely in his way and his foot stumbleth not Prov. 3. 23. with these feet in justice he treadeth downe his enemies Psalme 110. 1. Esay 26 6 2 Sam. 22. 39. 43. but bringeth good tidings of peace to his people Nahum 1. 15. that all they are blessed which trust in him Psal. 2. 12. whereas confidence in an unfaithfull man in the day of trouble is like a f●ot out of joint Prov. 25. 19. his countenance or his sight appearance forme that is his personage for this word meaneth not his face only but his whole person to see to he is like Lebanon goodly great high glorious So in 2 Sam. 23. 21 a man of countenance that is a goodly personable man is by another Prophet called a man of measure that is of great and goodly stature 1 Chron. 11. 23. Lebanon a goodly mountaine in the North part of the land of Canaan see Song 4. 8. As Christs large glorious and everlasting Kingdome was signified by a stone that became a great mountaine and filled the whole earth Dan. 2. 35. 44. and other kingdomes also are figured by mountaines Ier. 51. 25. so the largenesse eminency and glory of Christ in his Kingdome is here resembled by mount Lebanon choice that is goodly excellent for things that excell are chosen before other and these words choice and good or goodly are joyned together in the praise of men as in 1 Sam. 9. 2. or of trees Ezek. 31. 16. and choice Cedars are mentioned in Ier. 22. 7. so here Christ is choice as the Cedars meaning goodly excellent flourishing and continuing in vigour the just man groweth as a Cedar in Lebanon Psal. 92. 13. Vers. 16. his palate or the roofe of his mouth 〈◊〉 which as the tongue and lips is the instrument of speaking and so figuratively used for speech or words Prov. 5. 3. sweetnesses or sweets sweet things which properly is meant of sweet meates and drinkes as in Nehem. 8. 10. Prov. 24 13. but applyed to the words of God which are sweet to the soule as honey or other sweets to the taste Psalme 19. 10. and 119. 103. Here the palat or mouth of Christ being likened to sweet things signifieth his words doctrines promises comfo●ts proceeding from his spirit and being plainly and powerfully uttered to bee pleasant wholesome comfortable to the soules of such as doe discerne and beleeve them as the Spouse before said his fruit was sweet unto her palat or taste Song 2. 3. So the Wisedome of God saith in Prov. 8. 7. my palate that is my mouth shall speake the truth And the Chaldee here paraphraseth The words of his palate are sweet as honey he is altogether or all every whit of him is desires that is much to be desired he is wholly amiable which the Chaldee expoundeth all his commandements are to bee desired Thus Christ is both generally and in particulars commended and magnified by the tongue of his Spouse unto the daughters of Ierusalem as by the tongue of Paul he was crucified among the Galathians Gal. 3. 〈◊〉 when his sufferings were declared But as he is the power of God and the wisedome of God unto them which are called when to others he is a stumbling blocke and foolishnesse 1 Cor. 1. 23. 24. so here he is to his Spouse and her friends glorious and beautifull but to the world hee is base and ignominious a worme and not a man the reproch of men and contemned of the people Psal. 22. 7 his visage marred more then any man and his forme more then the sonnes of men growing up as a root out of a dry ground having no forme nor comelinesse no beauty that wee should desire him Esay 52. 14. and 53. 2. CHAPTER VI. VVHither is thy beloved gone O thou fairest among Women whither is thy beloved turned-aside that wee may seeke him with thee My beloved is gone-downe to his garden to the beds of spice to feed in the gardens and to gather Lilies I am my beloveds and my beloved
is faire and commendable among the unfruitfull trees and all the world knoweth it so the Lord of the world was faire and commendable among the Angels when he was revealed upon Mount Sinai at the time that hee gave the Law unto his people at that time I desired to sit in the shadow of his Divine majesty and the words of his Law were sweet to my palate and the reward of his precepts is reserved for me in the world that is to come Vers. 4. the house of wine that is either the wine celler the place where wine is kept or rather the banquetting house where wine is drunke For cellars are called the treasuries or store-houses of wine in 1 Chron. 27. 27. Wine besides that it slaketh thrist cheareth also the heart of man Psal. 104. 15. causeth him to forget his sorrow and misery Prov. 31. 6 7. comforteth the sicke by cherishing and augmenting the vitall spirits By this the Church signifieth encrease of grace from Christ as the fruit of the vine excelleth the fruit of the apple tree and is more comfortable unto the heart And as her troubles and tentations were increased so was his grace towards her for spirituall consolations for as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ 2 Cor. 1. 5. This house of wine is like that in Prov. 9. 1. 5. where wisedome having builded her house c. inviteth the simple to come and eate of her bread and drinke of the wine which she hath mingled Of the Hebrewes Iarchi expoundeth this wine house to be the Tabernacle of the congregration where the interpretation explanation of the Law is given answerable to which now is the assembly of the Saints though it may also be understood of Gods booke or Scripture the true wine-celler that affordeth spirituall comforts his banner or his standard a flag or ensigne spred abroad a warlike signe as in ch 6. 4. 10. the Church is said to bee terrible as an army with banners And the banner lifted up is a signe of fighting with ioy and victory as in Psal. 20. 6. We will shout-joyfully in thy salvation and in the name of our God we will set up the banner So Christs banner over her signified his defence and the victory which he giveth over all her enemies Sin Satan and the world also the signe that as all souldiers doe camp under their owne standards Num. 2. 2. so shee under the Gospell the ensigne of Christs love towards her love that wherewith Christ hath loved us 1 Iohn 4. 10. wherefore some reade it thus his standard was love toward me By love the Church is redeemed Ephes. 5. 25 by it everlasting consolation is given us and good hope through grace 2 Thess. 2. 16. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us Romanes 5. 5. Vers. 5. Stay or Sustaine Strengthen Uphold ye me The Church in her soule sicknesse speaketh to her friends the Ministers of Christ and other Christians that they with the comfortable doctrines and promises of the Gospell applyed unto her conscience would stay and uphold her ready to fall as into a swowne through trouble of minde because of her owne infirmities and want of feeling of Christs grace and blessing Thus in figure when Isaak had blessed Iakob he saith with corne and wine I have sustained him Gen. 27. 37. Spiritually we are sustained and strengthned by the words and promises of Christ which comfort the heart quicken the spirit and strengthen faith when it is weake as it is said Be ye also patient stablish or strengthen your hearts for the comming of the Lord draweth nigh Iam. 5. 8. and I long to see you that I may impart unto you some spirituall gift to the end you may be established Rom. 1. 11. And example may be seene in Iudah when Ezekias spake unto their heart and said Bee strong and couragious c. for there be moe with us then with him with him is an arme of flesh but with us is Iehovah our God to helpe us and to fight our battels And the people stayed or rested themselves upon the words of Ezekias King of Iudah 2 Chron. 32. 6. 7. 8. Likewise in the Apostles who preaching the Gospell confirmed or stablished the soules of the Disciples Acts 14. 21. 22. and 18. 23. with flagons to weer of wine which at banquets was wont to bee distributed by flagons When David had brought the Arke of God into his place and had offred burnt-offrings and peace-offrings and blessed the people he dealt to every 〈…〉 of Israel both man and woman to every one a loafe of 〈◊〉 and a good peace of flesh and a flagon 1 Chr. 〈…〉 2. 3 meaning a flagons or pot of wine as flagons of grapes that is of wine made of grapes are mentioned in Hos. 3. 1. So here with flagons of the 〈◊〉 of grace and consolation which Gods people have distributed among them in the spirituall banquet of the Gospell doth the Church desire to be sustained Flagon are named for the wine in them as the cup for the wine therein Luk. 22. 20. The Hebrewes after their wonted manner apply this to the doctrine of the Law as the Chaldee paraphrast here saith Receive ye ô Moses and Aaron the voice of the words of the Lord out of the midst of the fire and bring me into the house of doctrine and sustaine me with the words of the Law wherewith the world is delighted But it is the Law which causeth the sicknes of the soule as the Apostle sheweth in Rom. 7. and the Gospell of Christ healeth it Luke 4. 18. strow me a bed or spread mee make me a couch boulster me up The originall Raphad signifieth properly to spread abroad as a bed to lye on Iob 17. 13. and so it is translated by the Greeke Stoibasate which is to strow a bed as they were wont with hearbes or to stuffe and boulfter up Thus it is of like meaning with the former word for they used beds and couches at banquets Amos 6. 4. Esth. 1. 5. 6. or it further signifieth her falling downe as into a swowne and as one not able to stand is to lye down on her couch which she desireth may bee made and boulstred with the apples the comfortable doctrines and fruits of Christ forementioned in verse 3. which the Chaldee explaineth the interpretation of the holy words which are sweet like the apples of the garden of Eden sicke of love in languishing with desire to enjoy the comforts of my beloved The Greek translateth it wounded of love The originall word signifieth also weaknesse as in Iudg. 16. 7. 11. This speech implieth a want of feeling and enioying the presence and comforts of Christ as by her after speech is manifest when she saith I adjure you ô daughters of Ierusalem if ye finde my beloved that ye tell him that
used for continuing and increasing Exod. 19. 19. The like is in Gen. 12. 9. at the end or after as the Greeke translateth it here and in v. 6. Vers. 4. of Ararat that is of Armenia a country neere Assyria and Mesopotamia mentioned also in 2 King 19. 37. Esay 37. 38. Ier. 51. 27. The Greek here calleth them as the Hebrew Ararat but in Esay 37. 38. it translateth it Armenia Also the Chaldee here calleth them mounts of Kardu which many Writers witnesse to be hills in Armenia And the name Ararat seemeth to bee turned into Armenia of Aram that is Syria and Minni wherof see Ier. 51. 27 or of Ararat Minni compounded Vers. 5. tops Hebr. the heads Vers. 6. that Noe opened Hebr. and Noe opened we may leave the word and as doth the Greeke and our English speech also beareth which the Hebrew it selfe elsewhere sheweth may bee done as 2 King 14. 10. and why shouldst thou meddle but in 2 Chron. 25. 19. and is left out so in 2 Chron. 18. 12. and is set downe which in 2 King 22. 13. is left out So it may be in many other places as Gen. 22. 4. Vers. 7. a Raven an uncleane fowle Deut. 14. 14 sent forth forty dayes after the tops of the mounts appeared to see if the waters were abated as the Greek addeth and as the next verse sheweth of the dove For the Raven would have fed on the dead karkasses if any had appeared Prov. 30. 17. returning that is flying to and fro returning to the arke but not into the same which the Dove after did vers 9. whereupon the Greeke interpreters as it seemeth translated it returned not Noe had no tydings of the waters abating brought by this messenger therefore he sendeth another the Dove which returning with an Olive leafe or branch vers 11. signified the glad tidings of peace by the ministery of the Gospell and of the Spirit which the Dove represented Mat. 3. 16. but the ministery of the Law letter which the Raven seemeth here to figure out giveth the heart of man no evidence that the waters of Gods wrath for sinne are any whit abated Vers. 8. a Dove from him the Greeke saith after him meaning the Raven This Dove seemeth to be sent out seven dayes after the Raven as may bee gathered by the 10. verse where is mentioned Noes waiting other seven dayes Of the sending forth of this Dove and of her returning unto Noe whom heathens name Deucalion there is express mention in humane Writers Plutarch dialog de industr animal abated Hebr. lightned that is decreased so in v. 11. Vers. 10. he waited or patiently abode so in v. 12. did againe send or added to send so in v. 12. did not adde to returne and verse 21. I will not adde to curse that is not curse any more Vers. 11. leafe or branch as it is elsewhere englished Nehem. 8. 15. a signe that the waters were low and spiritually a token of grace and peace in Iesus Christ brought in the mouth that is the word and doctrine of the Ministers of the Gospell compared unto Doves Mat. 10. 15. Esay 60. 8. Romanes 10. 15. which came unto the Church in the evening of times in these last dayes Heb. 1. 1. Vers. 13. the 601 yeere to weer of Noes life as the Greeke expresseth in the first to weet the first moneth as the Greeke addeth and the Hebrew before in v. 4. and after in v. 14. plainly speaketh but affecting brevity such words are often omitted So after the first of the moneth that is the first day as the first of the feast Mat. 26. 17. is expounded by the holy Ghost the first day of the feast Marke 14. 12. Vers. 14. the 27 day of the moneth By this it appeareth that Noe was in the arke a full yeere or yeere of dayes containing 365 dayes according to the course of the Sunne For he entred the ark the 17 day of the second moneth in the 600 yeere of his life Gen. 7. 11. 13. and there he continued till the 27 day of the second moneth in the 601 yeere of his life as the 13 and 14 verses of this 8 th Chapter shew Now the twelve moneths of the Hebrewes had 354 dayes for sixe moneths had each of them thirty dayes and the other sixe moneths had each 29 dayes which make 354 to which adde 11 dayes till the 27 of the 2 moneth full ended and there are dayes 365. Vers. 19. after their families that is the male with his female not confusedly rushing out all together but in order and after their kind as the Greeke translateth Families are here attributed to the bruit creatures as before man and wife Gen. 7. 2. Vers. 20. built an Altar of earth as is probable by the Law after given in Exod. 20. 24. an Altar of earth shalt thou make unto me And such the Nations after used mentioning Altars of grasse and of turfe Uirgil Aeneid 12. Horat. l. 1. od 19. An Altar is called in Hebrew Mizbeach that is a sacrificatory or place of slaying the sacrifice for the sacrifices were killed upon it or by it Gen. 22. 9. 10. Lev. 1. 11. It was a holy place and sanctified the offering Mat. 23. 19. Exod. 29. 37. and so was a figure of Christ by whom we offer the sacrifice of praise alwayes to God Heb. 13. 10. 15. And it is a tradition of the Iewes that the place where Noe built this altar was the place where Abraham afterward built an Altar to offer Isaak Gen. 22. 2. and where Kain and Abel offered before See the notes on Gen. 4. 3. every cleane beast of the bullocks sheep and goats see the notes on Gen. 7. 2. So in Pirke R. Eliezer chap. 23. it is said Noe brought of the kind of cleane beasts a bull a sheepe and a goat and of the kind of cleane fowles turtle doves and young Pigeons and built an Altar and offered c. burnt-offrings named in Hebrew gnoloth that is ascensions for that they went up in fire to the Lord all except the skin upon the altar as Moses sheweth saying It is the burnt-offring because of the burning upon the altar all the night unto the morning Leviticus 6. 9. Therefore the Holy Ghost in Greeke calleth them holocautomata that is whole burnt-offerings and sheweth how they figured Christs body offered up unto God for us Hebrewes 10. 6. 10. and our reasonable service of God by him whiles we present our bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God Rom. 12. 1. Externall burnt offerings were in use in the Church before the Law given at mount Sinai as appeareth by this and Exod. 10. ●5 and 18. 12. Vers. 21. the smell or the odour savour It hath the name originally of respiration and it signified Gods gracious acceptation of the sacrifice offered as 1 Sam. ●6 19 let him smell an offring Lev. 26. 31 I will not smell the smell of your sweet odours So in
former teares to proceed not from true repentance And in hating his brother for the blessing hee shewed himselfe to bee of that wicked one as was Kain 1 Ioh. 3. 12. 15. This hatred continued also in his posterity against Iakob Obad. v. 10. 11. c. for my father the Hebrew phrase as also the Greeke is of my father but the meaning is for my fathers death as the like speeches otherwhere manifest Ezek. 24. 17. Ier. 6. 26. and at burials they used to mourne seven daies Gen. 50. 10. The Greeke translateth Let the daies of my fathers mourning be nigh that I may kill Iakob my brother so making it a wish for his fathers speedy death and the Hebrew also will bear that translation yea his words are such as may imply not a stay till his fathers death but that hee would with the first opportunity kill Iakob and so his father would soone die with sorrow Thus meaning he would be a double parricide And Rebekah with the first sent Iakob away to prevent danger Vers. 42. comforteth himselfe in respect of his losse of the blessing with this purpose and hope to kill thee So the comfort of the wicked is grounded on evill The Greeke translateth he threatneth thee and the Chaldee he layeth wayt for thee Vers. 43. flee thou or flee for thy selfe and for thy safety Here the blessing brought speedy persecution and exile upon Iakob which his mother counselled him in faith to undergoe rather then for his life to make accord with Esau and to forgoe his first birthright now obtained Vers. 44 a few daies these fell out to bee twenty yeeres as the sequele of the history sheweth Gen. 31. 38. and Rebekah saw him no more as the Hebrew Doctors gather by the time of her death which they thinke was before Iakob came againe See the notes on Gen. 35. 8. Vers. 45. why should I be the Greeke turneth it lest I be bereaved and she speaketh of the losse of them both for that Esau for his murder was also to be killed by the law in Gen. 9. 6. or if man had not punished him God might have cursed and cast him out as he did Kain Gen. 4. 11. 16. of Cheth the Greeke saith daughters of the sonnes of Cheth the Chethites whom Esau had maried Gen. 26. 34. 35. This griefe she tooke for an occasion also to get Isaaks consent unto Iakobs departure of the land that is of the inhabitants of the land whether Chethites or any other of the Canaanites see Gen. 11. 1. wherefore have I that is what good will my life doe me meaning none at all CHAP. XXVIII 1 Isaak blesseth Iakob and sendeth him to Padan Aram for a wife 9 Esau seeing it marieth Machalath the daughter of Ismael 10 Iakob by the way hath a dreame and vision of a ladder 13 God appearing promiseth to blesse him and bring him home againe 16 Iakob awaking and moved with reverence of the place annointeth a stone set up for a pillar and nameth the place Bethel 20 and maketh a vow to honour God there when he shall returne in peace ANd Isaak called Iakob and blessed him and commanded him and said unto him Thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan Arise goe to Padan Aram to the house of Bethuel thy mothers father and take to thee a wife from thence of the daughters of Laban thy mothers brother And God Almighty blesse thee and make thee fruitfull and multiply thee and be thou an assembly of peoples And he give to thee the blessing of Abraham to thee and to thy seed with thee that thou maist inherite the land of thy sojournings which God gave unto Abraham And Isaak sent-away Iakob and he went to Padan Aram unto Laban son of Bethuel the Syrian the brother of Rebekah mother of Iakob and Esau. And Esau saw that Isaak had blessed Iakob and sent him to Padan Aram to take unto him a wife from thence when he blessed him and commanded him saying thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan And Iakob had obeyed his father and his mother and was gone to Padan Aram. And Esau saw that the daughters of Canaan were evill in the eyes of Isaak his father Then went Esau unto Ismael and tooke Machalath daughter of Ismael son of Abraham the sister of Nebajoth unto his wives to him to wife 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Iakob went-forth from Beersheba and went to Charran And he lighted upon a place and taried there all night because the sunne was gone-downe and he tooke of the stones of the place and put for his pillowes and lay-downe in that place And he dreamed and behold a ladder set-up on the earth and the head of it reaching to the heavens and behold the Angels of God ascending and descending on it And behold Iehovah was standing above it and said I Iehovah the God of Abraham thy father and the God of Isaak the land that which thou lyest upon to thee will I give it and to thy seed And thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth and thou shalt spread-abroad to the sea and to the East and to the North and to the south and blessed shall be in thee all families of the earth and in thy seed And behold I will be with thee and will keepe thee in all the way that thou shalt goe and will returne thee againe unto this land for I will not leave thee untill that I have done that which I have spoken unto thee And Iakob awaked out of his sleepe and he said Surely Iehovah is in this place and I knew it not And he feared and said how fearefull is this place this is no other but the house of God and this is the gate of heavens And Iakob rose-up-early in the morning and took the stone that he had put for his pillowes and set it for a pillar and he powred oile upon the head thereof And hee called the name of that place Bethel but Luz was the name of the citie at the first And Iakob vowed a vow saying If God will be with mee and will keepe mee in this way which I am going and will give me bread to eat and rayment to put on And I returne in peace unto my fathers house and Iehovah shall be to me a God And this stone which I have set for a pillar shall be the house of God and of all that thou shalt give to me I will tithing givethe-tenth unto thee Annotations BLessed him God hereby confirmed Iakobs faith against doubts and feares both of things past and to come while his father now wittingly and willingly blesseth him and comforteth him against future troubles that might befall him in his pilgrimage The Hebrew Doctors say Better is the end of a thing then the beginning thereof Eccles. 7 8. the first blessings where with Isaak blessed Iaakob were of the dew of heaven and corne of the earth Gen. 27. 28. the after
now doe this take of the prais-worthy fruit of the land in your vessels and cary downe to the man a present a little baulm and a little honey spices and myrrh terebinth-nuts and almonds And take in your hand double money and the money that was restored into the mouth of your baggs ye shall cary againe in your hand peradventure it was an over-sight And take your brother and arise goe-againe unto the man And God Almighty give you mercies before the man that he may send-away with you your other brother and Benjamin and I if I be bereaved of-my-children I am bereaved And the men tooke this present and tooke double money in their hand and Benjamin and arose and wentdown-to Egypt and stood before Ioseph And Ioseph saw Benjamin with them he sayd to him that was over his house bring the men to house and slay a slaughter of beasts and make-ready for the men shal eat with me at noone And the man did as Ioseph had said and the man brought the men into Iosephs house And the men feared because they were brought into Iosephs house and they sayd for the matter of the money that was returned in our bagges at the first are we brought-in to roll himselfe upon us and to fall upon us and to take us for servants and our asses And they came neer unto the man which was over Iosephs house and they spake unto him at the doore of the house And sayd Oh my lord comming-downe we came-down at first to buy food And it was when we came to the Inn and opened our baggs that behold every-mans money was in the mouth of his bagge our money in the weight thereof and wee have brought it againe in our hand And other money have wee brought-downe in our hand to buy food we know not who put our money in our baggs And he said peace be to you feare not your God and the God of your father hath given to you the treasure in your bags your mony came unto me and he brought out Simeon unto them And the man brought the men into Iosephs house and gave them water and they washed their feet and he gave provender to their asses And they made ready the present against Ioseph came at noone for they heard that they should eate bread there And Ioseph came to house and they brought unto him the present which was in their hand into the house and they bowed-downe-themselves unto him to the earth And he asked them of their peace and said is there peace to your father the old-man of whom you spake is hee yet alive And they said there is peace to thy servant to our father he is yet alive and they bendeddowne-the-head and bowed-themselvesdowne And hee lifted-up his eyes and saw Benjamin his brother his mothers-son and sayd is this your younger brother of whom you spake unto me and he said God be gracious unto thee my son And Ioseph made-hast for his bowels did yern towards his brother and he sought where to weep and entred into a chamber and wept there And he washed his face and went-out and refreyned himselfe and sayd set-on bread And they set-on for him by himselfe alone and for them by themselves alone and for the Egyptians that did eat with him by thēselves alone because the Egyptians might not eat bread with the Hebrewes for that is an abhomination unto the Egyptians And they sate before him the first-borne according to his first birthright and the yongest according to his youth the men marvelled each man at his neighbour And he tooke-up measses from before him unto them and Benjamins measse was five times more then the measses of any of them and they dranke and largely-dranke with him Annotations BUy Hebrew breake so after vers 4. 20. c. See Gen. 41. 56. Vers. 3. protesting that is did solemnly and earnestly protest even with oath Gen. 42. 15. Of this phrase see Gen. 2. 17. be or as the Greeke translateth unlesse your yonger brother come with you Verse 7. asking that is straitly asked see ver 3. They excuse themselves as having not done it purposely but of necessitie which they could not honestly avoyd tenour Hebrew mouth of these words that is as the Greeke translateth according to this asking of his did we knowing know that is did or could we any way know or certainly know Ver. 8. yong-man meaning Benjamin who was now above 30. yeeres of age being but seven yeers yonger then Ioseph Vers. 9. will I be a sinner or sin that is be guilty as a violator of my faith and subject to punishment according So the word sinners is used in 1 King 1. 21. all dayes of my life or for ever Vers. 11. praise-worthy-fruit Hebrew of the musicke or melodie of the land meaning the best fruits most commendable and for which songs of praise are given to God So the Greeke translateth it fruits and the Chaldee that which is laudable So a blessing is sayd to bee in the cluster of grapes Esay 65. 8. baulm or rosen see Gen. 37. 25. Therebint nuts or nuts of the turpentins tree So the Greeke translateth it Terebinth The word is not found elsewhere in holy scripture By this present Iakob thought to procure favour as hee did before Gen. 32. 20 c. for a mans gift maketh roome for him bringeth him before great men Prov. 18. 16. So Kings bring presents to Christ Psal. 72. 10. Verse 12. double money because the famine continuing it was like corne was dearer an over-sight or errour Greeke an ignorant act Hereupon justice required that the money should bee restored Verse 14. if I be or when I be bereaved a like phrase is in Esth. 4. 16. if I perish I perish Both of them seeme to bee a committing of themselves and of the event of their actions unto God in faith which if it fell out otherwise then they wished they would patiently beare Vers. 16. him that was over that is his steward so verse 19. and 44. 1. see Gen. 41. 40. a slaughter as is wonnto be killed for a feast So in Prov. 9. 2. 1 Sam. 25. 11. Gen. 31. 54. Vers. 18. for the matter or because of the money as the Greeke translateth So gnal debar signifieth because or concerning Exod. 8. 12. to roll that he may roll namely the Lord of the land by rolling meaning violent oppression as the Chaldee expoundeth it domintering and the Greeke false accusing or calumniation See the like phrase in Iob 30. 14. to fall or to fell that is cast downe himselfe which the Chaldee translateth seeke an occasion against us A guilty conscience made them fearfull and suspicious So Gods workes of grace through our sinne and ignorance doe occasion our feare Iudg. 13. 32. 23. Mat. 14. 25. 26. 27. Vers. 20. Oh or Vnto me understand looke or let thine eyes be as the phrase is more fully expressed in Iob 6. 28. and 7. 8. The Greeke and Chaldee
sanctified 1 Cor. 15. 20. Rom. 11. 16. Ioh. 12. 24. the parching breaking grinding c. figured his suffering for us being bruised for our iniquities Esa. 53 5. Whereby he was offred for a sweet favour unto God And with him we are partakers in our measure Rom. 8. 17. Colos. 1. 24. Vers. 15. shalt put Heb. shalt give which the Greeke translateth shalt poure oile which was according to other meat-offrings a log of oile and an handfull of frankincense signifying the graces of God in Christ and his members and the sweet odour of his oblation for us See more in the notes on Levit. 23. 10. touching this manner of service CHAP. III. 1 The Peace-offrings of the herd 6 and of the stocke 7 either Sheepe 12 or Goat AND if his oblation be a sacrifice of Peace-offrings if he offer it of the herd whether it be male or female he shall offer it perfect before Iehovah And he shall lay his hand upon the head of his oblation and he shall kill it at the doore of the Tent of the Congregation and Aarons sonnes the Priests shall sprinkle the blood upon the Altar round-about And he shall offer of the sacrifice of the Peace-offrings a Fire offring unto Iehovah the fat that covereth the inwards and all the fat that is upon the inwards And the two kidneyes and the fat which is upon them which is upon the flanks the caule above the liver with the kidneyes he shall take-away it And Aarons sonnes shall burne it on the Altar with the Burnt-offring which is upon the wood that is on the fire it is a Fire offring of a savour of rest unto Iehovah And if his oblation for a sacrifice of Peace-offrings unto Iehovah be of the flock male or female he shall offer it perfect If he offer a Lamb for his oblation then shall he offer-it before Iehovah And he shall lay his hand upon the head of his oblation and he shall kill it before the Tent of the congregation and Aarons sonnes shall sprinkle the blood thereof upon the Altar round-about And hee shall offer of the sacrifice of the Peace-offrings a Fire offring unto Iehovah the fat thereof and the whole rumpe it shall he take-off hard-by the backbone and the fat that covereth the inwards and all the fat that is upon the inwards And the two kidneyes and the fat that is upon them which is upon the flankes and the caule above the liver with the kidneyes he shall take-away it And the Priest shall burne it upon the Altar it is the bread of the Fire offring unto Iehovah And if his oblation be a Goat then he shall offer it before Iehovah And he shall lay his hand upon the head of it and he shall kill it before the Tent of the congregation and Aarons sonnes shall sprinkle the blood thereof upon the Altar round-about And hee shall offer thereof his oblation a Fyre offring unto Iehovah the fat that covereth the inwards and all the fat that is upon the inwards And the two kidneyes and the fat that is upon them which is upon the flankes and the caule above the liver with the kidneyes he shall take away it And the Priest shall burne them upon the Altar it is the bread of the Fire offring for a savour of rest all the fat is Iehovahs It shall be an eternal statute for your generations through-out all your dwellings any fat or any blood ye shall not eat Annotations HIs oblation his korban which the Greeke translateth his gift unto the Lord so korban is by the Euangelift expounded a gift Mark 7. 11. Peace-offrings or Pay-offrings Hebr. a sacrifice of Payments or of pacifications or of perfections whereby men paid unto God Confession and thankes for their peace and prosperitie and for his performing of mercies and pacification and paid their vowes as is written Thy vowes are upon mee O God I will pay confessions unto thee Psal. 56. 13. and Peace-offrings are upon me this day have I payed my vowes Proverbs 7. 14. These sacrifices were of sundry sorts either for Confession or Thanks giving Lev. 7. 11. 12. or for a Vow or for a Uoluntary offring Levit. 7. 16. Here and usually in the law the word is Shelamim as of many payments or thankes due unto God for his many benefits as David professeth Psalme 116. 12. 14. 17. 18. but in Amos 5. 22. it is used singularly Shelem The Greeke often translateth it Eirenikee that is a Pacifying or Peace offring but here and most commonly Soterion a sacrifice of salvation offred unto God for his salvation of men The Chaldee hath the sacrifice of sanctities or sanctifications whether because none but clean sanctified persons might eat of it Leviticus 7. 19. 20. or for sanctifying the name of God by it Sol. Iarchi saith they are called Peace-offrings because they bring peace into the world as also because by them there is peace to the Altar to the Priests and to the owners that is every of these have a part in the Peace-offrings R. Menachem saith it is of like meaning as that in Esay 44. 28. He shall performe all my pleasure The mysterie of this sacrifice is opened in Hosea 14. 2. Take-away Lord all iniquity and receive or give good and we will pay the bullockes of our lips which the Greeke there translateth the fruit of our lips and the Apostle likewise saith By him that is by Iesus let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually that is the fruit of the lippes confessing to his name Heb. 13. 15. These Peace-offrings were also given when men in their troubles prayed unto God for peace and salvation Iudges 20. 26. and 21. 4 1 Chronicles 21. 26. That as the Burnt offring in Lev. 1. figured our reconciliation to God by the death of Christ and the Meat-offring in Lev. 2. our sanctification in him before God so this Peace-offring signified both Christs oblation of himselfe whereby he became our Peace and salvation Ephes 2. 14. 15. 16. Acts 13. 47. Heb. 5. 9. and 9. 28. and our oblation of praise thanks giving and prayer unto God in the middest of troubles tentations and spirituall combats which we fight by faith in this life so that we come boldly unto the throne of grace that we may receive mercy and finde grace to helpe in time of need Heb. 4. 16. or female herein it differeth from the Burnt-offring which was to be of the males onely Lev. 1. 3. By this distinction of sexes the Hebrewes gather that the beast which was neither perfect male nor female or both male and female though it had no other blemish was not fit for sacrifice Maimony in Issurei Mizbeach chap. 3. Sect. 3. Spiritually wee may apply this to the state of the Church in Christ in whom there is neither male nor female but all are one in him Gal. 3. 28. And that God accepteth not onely the sacrifice of Christ but ours also in him Heb.
saith after the feast day as in verse 11. and Targum Ionathan saith after the first good day of the Passeover And by the Hebrew canons They reckon from the beginning of the day th●r fore they reckon in the night from the night of the sixteenth of Nisan Maimony thidem chap 7. ●●ct 22. seven sabbathes that is as the Greek● and Chaldee expound it seven weekes So in Luk 18. 12. I fast tw●se in the Sabbath that is twise 〈◊〉 the weeke for the Iewes used and still doe to fast on the second and on the 〈◊〉 day of every weeke as is testified by R. Iudah in M●sar chap. 4. Likewise in Matth. 28. 1. the first of the Sabbath that is the first day of the weeke And hereupon this was called the feast of Weekes because of the ex●ct numbring Exod. 34 22. complete o. perfect intire that is wanting nothing as the word importeth la● 1. 4. Bat Sol. ●a ch● here saith It teatheth that they were to begin to number from the evening the mo●●ow after the Sabbath for else they were not complete Verse 16 the morrow after the seventh sa●●ath the Chaldee saith 〈◊〉 after the seventh weeke the Greek till the morrow of the last weeke of the seven fiftie dayes Hereupon the Hebrewes observe that it was commanded to number the dayes with the weekes And they held it needfull to blesse God every night which sanctified them by his commandements and commanded the numbring of the shease that is of the fiftie dayes from the waving of the sheafe Maimony in Tamidin chap. 7. sect 22 25. And of this word fiftie in Greeke Penteconta the feast is called in the new Testament Pentecoste Act. 2. 1. Cor. 16. 8. a new meat-offring of the first fruits of the wheat harvest as the former was of barley harvest therefore this was called also the day of the first fruits Numb 28. 26. Vers. 17. your habitations in the land of Canaan They bring not the two loaves but from the land and of new fruits saith Maimony in Timidin chap. 8. sect 2. for a wave-offring Hebr. bread of waving that is to be waved before the Lord. This was brought at the churches charge the manner is noted on Levit. 24. 8. two loaves or cakes which word is added both by the Greeke and Chaldee the manner of this service is said to be thus They brought three Sea●s that is an Ephah or Bushell of new whea● and did beat and tread them after the manner of all meat-offrings and ground them to flowr● and waved of them two tenth-deales that is two Omers and the residue was redeemed and might be eaten by any man These two cakes or loaves of new corne a tenth deale must be taken from ech Scah and an halfe Then they tooke the two tenth deales and kneaded them one by one and baked them one by one And the making of them might not be on the feast day nor on the Sabbath if the evening of this feast of Pentecost were a Sabbath they baked them in the evening of the Sabbath and they were eaten in the third day after their baking which was the feast day And it is expressed in the Law that they should be levened and thus they did it they brought leaven from some place and put it into the measure of the tenth deale and filled that tenth-deale with flowre and so levened it with that leven They made the length of each cake seven hand-bredthes and the bredth foure handbredths and the height foure fingers Maim in Tamidin chap. 8. sect 3 10. with leven in Greeke levened so Leviticus 2. 11. and 7. 13. Vers. 18. perfect in Greeke unblemished of the first yeere Hebr. sonnes of a yeere see Exod. 12. 5. one bullocke in Num. 28. 27. there are two bullockes and one ram here is one bullocke and two rammes those were an addition in respect of the feast day these are a further addition in respect of the two loaves therfore to be offred with them as before he saith The Hebrewes explaine it thus In the fiftieth day from the numbring of the sheafe is the feast of Weekes Exod. 34. 22. or of Pentecost Act. 2. 1. and it is a Retention or solemne assemblie and this day they offer more than other dayes two bullocks and aram and seven lambs all of them burnt offrings and a goat for a sin-offring and these are the offrings spoken of in Num. 28. 26. 27. 30. and they are the addition of the day And yet they bring more for this day a meat offring of new wheat in two leaves And they offer with the loaves a bullocke and two rammes and seven lambs all burnt offrings and a goat for a sin-offring and two lambs for Peace offrings and these are the oblations spoken of in Levit. 23. So there are to bee offred this day over and beside the two daily-sacrifices three bullockes and three rammes and fourteene lambs twenty beasts in all for burnt offrings and two goats for sinne which are eaten and two lambs for peace-offrings which are eaten Maimony in Tamidin chap. 8. sect 1. These sacrifices figured Christ unto them by whose death their sinnes should be pardoned their persons sanctified and their thanksgiving unto God made acceptable by whom also the fruits of the land were blessed unto them and as the wheat is better then barley so their first-fruits which they brought in signe of homage to the Lord was more of the wheat than of the barley and with many moesacrifices drinke-offrings which were usually given with all sacrifices the measure of them is ●er in Num. 28. 5. 7. 12. 13. 14. of rest in Greeke of sweet-smell in Chaldee which shall be accepted with favour Vers. 19. shall offer Hebr. shall doe as verse 12. a Sin-offring whereby they acknowledged their unworthinesse to appeare before God or to injoy the fruits of his land otherwise then by Christ their sacrifice of Atonement of Peace-offrings or of payments wherby they payed thanks and praises unto God for his mercies which being done also with sacrifices shewed that by Christ we must offer praise to God continually Heb. 13. 15. It is observed by the Hebrewes that the Church or Congregation never offred a●y Peace-offrings but these Maimony treat of Offring sacrifices chap. 1. sect 4. See the notes o● Leviticus 4. 14. Vers. 20. wave them with the loaves The 〈◊〉 is recorded to be thus They brought the two 〈◊〉 the Peace-offrings and waved them whiles they were yet alive and afterwards killed them and sayed them and tooke the brest and the shoulder of ech of them 〈◊〉 as in Levit. 7. 30. 32. and laid them downe by the 〈◊〉 loaves and the priest put both his hands under the● and waved them all together in the east side the place of all wave-offrings Afterward he burned the fats of 〈◊〉 the lambs and the rest of the flesh was eaten by the Priests Likewise the two loaves the high-priest 〈◊〉 the one of them and the
multitude and made examination of such as were meet to drinke to cause them to drinke and of such as should be j●alous of a woman and to cause her to be put away without dowrie And at all times they made the suspected woman to drinke The wisemen commanded the sons of Israel to be jealous of their wives c. but not in the midst of laughter or lightnesse nor in the midst of contention nor to bring terrour vpon them c. It is not meet for a man to containe himselfe and to be jealous before witnesses at the first but 〈…〉 wixt him and her in gentlenesse and by way of puritie and admonition that he may guide her in the right way and remove scandall And whosoever is not carefull of his wife and children and 〈◊〉 to admonish them and visit their waies continually untill he know that they are at peace from all sin and iniquitie he is a sinner as it is written i● Ioh 5. 24. AND THOU SHALT KNOW THAT THY TENT shall be in PEACE AND THOV SHALT VISIT THINE HABITATION AND SHALT NOT SIN M 〈…〉 in Sotah chap. 4. sect 1. 18 19. shall beare her iniquitie that is the punishment of her iniquitie as Lev. 20. 17 19 20. Ezek. 4. 4 5. And this tended to the glory of God who findeth out and punisheth all sin adultery in speciall Ezek. 13. 38. Mal. 3. 5. to the purging of the Church which should be as a new lump without the leaven of fornication 1 Cor. 5. 7. and to the paci●ying of mens jealous spirits with peace in their families By this severitie of God against secret whoredome above other sins we are taught what judgment remaineth for such as commi● idolatry which is spirituall whoredome Ezek. 23. 37. and often done in secret Ezek. 8. 12. for which sin God is jealous to visit the iniquitie of the fathers upon the children Exod. 20. 5. and will give them bloud in wrath and jealousie and they shall beare their lewdnesse and their abomination Ezek. 16. 38. 58. and 23. 35. so that the curse of the Law entreth as water into their bowels Dan. 9. 11. Psal. 109. 18. CHAP. VI. 1. The Law of the Nazarite what hee must abstaine from in his d●et habit and conversation whiles the vow is upon him 9. How when he is defiled he shall make an atonement by sacrifices let all fall which was done before and begin againe to observe his vow 13. What sacrifices the Nazarite must bring when his vow is fulfilled and what rites he is to performe withall 22. The Law how the Priests should blesse the people of the Lord. ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto the sonnes of Israel and say unto them A man or woman when he shall separate to vow a vow of a Nazarite to separate himselfe unto Iehovah He shall separate himselfe from wine strong drinke he shall not drinke vineger of wine or vineger of strong drinke neither shall he drinke any liquor of grapes nor eat grapes moist or dried All the dayes of his Nazariteship he shall not eat of any thing that is made of the wine vinetree from the kernels even to the huske All the dayes of the vow of his Nazariteship the rasour shall not passe upon his head untill the dayes be fulfilled which he separateth himselfe unto Iehovah he shall be holy letting the ●o●ks grow the haire of his head All the dayes that hee separateth himselfe unto Iehovah he shall not come at a dead soule For his father or for his mother for his brother or for his sister he shall not make himselfe uncleane for them when they die for the Nazariteship of his God is upon his head All the dayes of his Nazariteship he shall bee holy unto Iehovah And if the dead dieth by him unawares suddenly and he hath defiled the head of his Nazariteship then hee shall shave his head in the day of his cleansing in the seventh day shall he shave it And in the eighth day he shall bring two turtles or two young pigeons to the Priest to the doore of the Tent of the congregation And the Priest shal do the one for a Sin offring the other for a Burnt offering and shall make atonement for him for that he sinned by a soule and he shall sanctifie his head in that day And he shall separate unto Iehovah the daies of his Nazariteship and shall bring a lambe of his first yeere for a Trespasse offering and the former dayes shall fall because his Nazariteship was defiled And this is the Law of the Nazarite in the day when the dayes of his Nazariteship are fulfilled he shall bring him to the doore of the Tent of the congregation And hee shall offer his oblation unto Iehovah one he lambe of his first yeere perfect for a Burnt offering and one she lambe of her first yeere perfect for a Sinne offering and one ramme perfect for Peace offrings And a basket of unleavened cakes cakes of fine flowre mingled with oyle and wafers of unleavened cakes anointed with oile and their Meat offering and their drinke offerings And the priest shall bring them neere before Iehovah and shall make his Sin offering and his Burnt offering And the ramme hee shall make a sacrifice of Peace offerings unto Iehovah with the basket of unleavened cakes and the Priest shall make his Meat offring and his drinke offring And the Nazarite shall shave at the doore of the Te●t of the congregation the head of his Nazariteship and he shall take the haire of the head of his Nazariteship and put it on the fire which is under the sacrifice of Peace offrings And the priest shall take the sodden shoulder of the ramme and one unleavened cake out of the basket and one unleavened wafer and shall put them on the palmes of the hands of the Nazarite after he hath shaved himselfe of his Nazariteship And the priest shall wave them for a wave offring before Iehovah it is holy for the priest with the wave brest and with the heave shoulder and after the Nazarite may drinke wine This is the Law of the Nazarite who shall vow his oblation unto Iehovah for his Nazariteship besides that that his hand shall attaine according to his vow which he shall have vowed so shall he doe according to the law of his Nazariteship And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Speake unto Aaron and unto his s 〈…〉 es saying Thus shall yee blesse the sonnes o● Israel saying unto them Iehovah blesse thee and keepe thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iehovah make his face shine vpon thee and be gracious unto thee Iehovah lift up his face upon thee and giue unto thee peace And they shall put my name upon the sonnes of Israel and I will blesse them Annotations WHen he shall separate to wit himselfe This word separate signifieth to exempt after a speciall and maruellous manner from common estate as is noted on Levit. 27. 2. The Greeke
so the rest though they be ten c. and the residue of the goods are the brethrens If the brethren have sold or mortgaged their fathers lands the daughter taketh her livelihood from the purchasers even as a creditor taketh his debt of the purchasers Who so commandeth at his death that they should give his daughters no livelihood of his goods they doe hearken unto him for this is not of the nature of a dowrie Maimony tom 2. treat of Wives ch 18. sect 1. c. and ch 20. sect 1. c. Vers. 12. this mountaine of Abarim There were many mountaines of Abarim Num. 33. 47. by this mountaine therefore is meant one speciall which was called Nebo which was in the land of Moab over against Iericho Deut. 32. 49. And they were called Abarim of the fords or passages which were by them over Iordan into the land of Canaan Wherefore the Greeke version saith Goe thou up into the mountaine which is on this side Iordan of mount Naban or this mount Nabais And Mos. Gerundens explaineth it thus The mountaine of Abarim is mount Nebo as is expounded in Deut. 32. and is so called because it is by the fords of Iordan where they passe over into the land of Canaan see the land the land of Canaan saith the Greeke and so Moses expresseth it in Deut. 32. 49. Though this were some comfort unto Moses to see the land a farre off and salute the same as the faithfull fathers are said to doe the promises which they received not Heb. 11. 13. yet his desire and earnest suit unto the Lord was that he might have gone over and seene it but he would not grant it him because he had sinned and God had denounced his death before Deut. 3. 23. 26. Num. 20. 12. See the Annotations on Deut. 34. where his viewing of the land is described Vers. 13. be gathered unto thy peoples in Greeke be added unto thy people meaning that he should die there and be buried Deut. 32. 50. and 34. 5 6. and his soule should be gathered unto his godly forefathers see Num. 20. 24. Vers. 14. For ye rebelled or For as much as yet rebelled against my mouth that is as the Greeke and Chaldee expound it against my word so in Num. 20. 24. to sanctifie me that is which word and commandement of mine was that ye by faith should sanctifie mee but yee sanctified mee not Wherefore the Greeke here translateth ye sanctified me not and so it is explained in Deut. 32. 51. because ye sanctified me not Meribah of Kadesh or strife of Kadesh as the Greeke translateth it of the contradiction of Kades the Chaldee the strife of Rekam By this name Kadesh it is distinguished from the other Meribah spoken of in Exod. 17. 7. So in Deut. 32. 51. V. 15. of the spirits of all flesh the Greeke translateth of the spirits and of all flesh so before in Num. 16. 22. It meaneth that God is both the Creator of all mens soules or spirits Eccles. 12. 7. Zach. 12. 1. and he that giveth them spiritual gifts of wisdome knowledge grace c. as spirits are used for spirituall gifts in 1 Cor. 14. 12. set or visit that is provide constitute for Bishop or overseer who therfore is called in v. 17. a shepherd or Pastor Though for the peoples sake the Lord was angry with Moses and would not let him goe into the good land Deut. 4. 21. yet such was Moses love unto them and care for their welfare that he procureth what in him lieth their good after his decease by having a faithfull governour set over them of God which is a blessing unto a land or people Eccles. 10. 17. Vers. 17. goe out before them by this phrase of going out and comming in and that which followeth leading out and bringing in is signified the administration of the officer and government of his people both in time of peace and of warre wherefore when Moses was old and the time of his administration expired he said I can no more goe out and come in Deut. 31. 2. So the Priests administration in the Lords house is called a going in thereto 1 Chron. 24. 19. The similitude is taken from a shepherd whose dutie is to goe before the sheepe and to lead them out that by his guidance they may goe in and out and sinde pasture as is spoken of our great shepherd the Lord Iesus whom this Iesus the successor of Moses prefigured Iohn 10. 3 4 9. which have no shepherd or no Pastor w ch estate is miserable as is noted of our Saviour that when he saw the multitudes he was moved with compassion on them because they fainted were scattered abroad as sheep having no shepherd Mat. 9. 36. Vers. 18. Iosua the son of Nun in Greeke Iesus the son of Naue so in the new Testament he is called Iesus Act. 7. 45. Heb. 4. 8. the spirit to wit the spirit of God meaning the gifts and graces of the Spirit as wisdome Deut. 34. 9. and the like The Chaldee expoundeth it the spirit of prophesie and Targ. Ionat. saith the spirit of prophesie from before the Lord remaineth upon him w ch accordeth with Num. 11. 24. But whether in prophesie or other graces he was but a shadow of Iesus the son of God to whom he gave not the spirit by measure Iob. 3. 34. lay thine hand or impose thine hand that is thine hands as the Greeke translateth and as Moses after sheweth in vers 23. which was a signe of his calling and ordination to his office as in Numb 8. 10. with which also it seemeth he received a greater measure of the Spirit as it is said And Iosua the sonne of Nun was full of the spirit of wisdome for Moses had laid his hands upon him Deut. 34. 9. Vers. 19. charge thou him or command him give him a charge for the faithfull executing of his office such as we reade of in Deut. 31. 7 8. Besides that which was now done by Moses God himselfe did after give him a charge in the Tabernacle Deut. 31. 14 15. Vers. 20. give of thine honour or give that is put of thy glory or of thy Majestie whereby the gifts fitting the government of Israel seeme to be meant as wisdome according to Deut. 34. 9. or some other exterior signe of his calling from God whereby the people might be obedient to him As it is said of Solomon when he sate on the throne of the Lord and all Israel obeyed him that the Lord magnified Solomon exceedingly before the eyes of all Israel and gave upon him the honour of the kingdom or royall majestie such as had not beene on any king before him in Israel 1 Chron. 29. 23 25. And the contrary is spoken of Antiochus that vile person they shall not give upon him the honour of the kingdome but he shall come in peaceably and obtaine the kingdome by slatteries Dan. 11. 21. The Chaldee translateth thou
Simeon with Reuben in the former blessing thus Let Reuben live and not die and let Simeon be many in number the voice when he praieth as the Chaldee translateth Receive O Lord the praier of Iudah when hee goeth forth to warre This blessing is to bee compared with Iakobs who likeneth Iudah to a Lions whelpe gone up from the prey c. Gen. 49. 9. and it had accomplishment in David who was of Iudah and a fighter of the Lords battels in which hee often praied as his Psalmes testifie Likewise in Abijah and the Iewes against Israel 2 Chron. 13. 14 18. in Asa warring against the Ethiopians 2 Chron. 14. 11 12 13. in Iehosaphat fighting against the Ammonites 2 Chron. 20. 5 6 18. in Ezekias against the Assyrians 2 Chron. 32. 20 21 22. and others But chiefly in Christ the Lion of the tribe of Iudah Revel 5. 5. him God did heare alwaies Ioh. 11. 42. bring thou him the Chaldee addeth in peace and Thargum Ionathan addeth from the battell in peace This had accomplishment as otherwise so in Davids returne to his people and kingdome 2 Sam. 19. 11 15. and Christs returne unto Israel whereof see Rom. 11. 26 31. be enough for him when he fighteth as God taught Davids hands to warre and his fingers to fight Psalme 144. 1. and girded him with strength to battell 2 Sam. 22. 35 40. The Greek translateth judge for him the Chald. execute vengeance for him on them that hate him So in Gen. 49. 8. thine hand Iudah shall bee in the necke of thine enemies be thou for by his owne strength no man shall prevaile 1 Sam. 2. 9. Therefore David often acknowledged God to be his helper Psal. 28. 7. and 40. 17. and 54. 4. and 63. 7. and 118. 7. c. Vers. 8. of Levi or unto Levi that is the tribe or posterity of Levi as in Thargum Ionathan it is said And Moses the Prophet blessed the tribe of Levi and said thy Thummim and thy Vrim by interpretation thy perfections and thy Lights these were mysteries put into the high Priests brest-plate whereof see the Annotations on Exod. 28. 30. so they signifie here the graces and office of the Priesthood which was committed to Aaron and his seed till Christ came who had the Priest-hood for ever after a more excellent order Heb. 6. 20. And the speech here may bee directed unto God who gave these mysteries to the Priest and so the Chald. explaineth it Thummim Vrim thou didst put upon the man that was found holy before thee and Sol. Iarchi saith Hee speaketh as to the Majestie of God Or it may be spoken to the tribe of Levi who had the Vrim and Thummim among them but appropriate to one mā only who was the high Priest a figure of Christ. with the man understand be with the man or to the man that is they belong to him with him they are and so let them remaine thy gracious saint thy mercifull pious or holy one or of thy holy one which title is given to God himselfe Ier. 3. 12. to Christ Psal. 16. 10. with Act. 13. 35 36 37. and to all godly men Psal. 149. 5. And here referring it to Aaron or to Christ the man thy holy one may meane one thing thy holy man as a man a Prince in Exod. 2. 14. or if wee read it the man of thine holy one it is meant the man of God and in Psal. 106. 16. Aaron is called the Saint of the LORD temptedst or triedst This word is sometime spoken of God as hee tempted Abraham Gen. 22. 1. and the Israelites in the wildernesse Deut. 8. 2 15 16. Sometime of men who are said to have tempted God and Christ Exod. 17. 2. 1 Cor. 10. 9. in Massah or in the temptation a place so called because there Israel tempted God Exod. 17. 7. or with temptation and so it is no propet name contendedst or strive●st pleadedst this also is sometime spoken of God whose contending with men is the blaming and punishing of them Esay 49. 25. Iob 10. 2. Ier. 2. 9. sometime of mens contending as Israel did with the Lord at the waters of Meribah or of Contention Numb 20. 13. By reason of this diversuse of these words the understanding of this blessing is also divers thus Thy Thummim and thy Vrim O God be with the man thy gracious Saint Aaron and his seed whom thou temptedst with tentation contendedst with him for his sinne at the waters of Meribah Num. 20. 12 13. Or thy Thummim and thy Vrim O Levi bee with Aaron and his seed the man of thy gracious God whom thou with the other Israelites temptedst in Massah c. Exod. 17. 2. Numb 20. Or thus Thy Thummim and thy Vrim O Levi is with or ●e longs unto the man thy gracious Saint Christ Iesus whom thou temptedst in Massah c. 1 Cor. 10. 9. In this last sense the weaknesse of the Leviticall Priesthood is implied which kept not Vrim and Thummim but lost them at the captivity of Babylon Ezra 2. 63. and it is not knowne that they ever had them more untill by Christ our High Priest after the order of Melchisedek they were restored by the Light and Truth of the Gospell The Chaldee interpreteth it in Aarons or Levies praise Thummim and Vrim thou didst put upon the man or cloathedst with them the man that was found holy before thee whom thou tem ptedst with tentation and hee was perfect thou provedst him at the waters of contention and hee was found faithfull This may seeme not well to accord with the history in Num. 20. touching Aarons person yet the Hebrews as Sol. Iarchi on this place say of the Levites that they murmured not with the other murmurers And of Levi God saith by his Prophet My covenant was with him life and peace and I gave them to him for the feare where with he feared mee c. Mal. 2. 5. And againe They kept his testimonies and the ordinance that hee gave them Psal. 99. 7. The Greeke translateth And of Levi hee said Give yee Levi his Manifest-ones and his Truth that is his Vrim and his Thummim to the holy man whom they tempted in tentation they reviled him at the water of Contradiction This interpretation may well bee applied unto Christ also as before is shewed Vers. 9. who saith or who said of his or unto his father c. I respect him not I see not or looke not upon him The Greeke translateth That saith to his father and to his mother I have not seene or I respect not thee This is meant either of the Priests continuall duty who by the Law if his father mother brother or child did die hee might not mourne for them but carry himselfe as if hee did not respect know or care for them as is said of the High Priest that was anointed and cloathed with the ornaments and had Vrim and Thummim upon his heart for his father or for
thy judgements to the King and thy justice to the Kings sonne That he may judge thy people with justice and thy poore afflicted ones with judgement The mountains shall bring forth peace to the people and the hills with justice He shall judge the poore afflicted of the people he shall save the sonnes of the needy and shall breake downe the fraudulent oppressour They shall feare thee with the Sunne and before the Moone to generation of generations Hee shall come downe like the raine upon the mowen grasse as the showers the dispersed moisture of the earth In his dayes shall the just man flourish and multitude of peace untill the Moone be not And he shall have dominion from sea unto sea and from the river unto the ends of the land They that dwell in dry places shall kneele before him and his enemies shall licke the dust The kings of Tharshish and of the Iles shal render an oblation the kings of Sheba Seba shall offer a present And all kings shall worship him all nations shall serve him For he shall deliver the needy that cryeth out and the poore afflicted and him that hath no helper He shall mercifully spare the poore and needy and shall save the soules of the needy He shall redeeme their soule from fraud and violent wrong and precious shall their bloud be in his eyes And he shall live and he shall give to him of the gold of Sheba and shall pray for him continually shall blesse him all the day There shall bee a parcell of Corne in the land in the top of the mountaines the fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon and flourish shall they of the City as the herbe out of the earth His name shall be for ever his name shall be continued before the Sunne and they shall blesse themselves in him all Nations shall call him blessed Blessed be Iehovah God the God of Israel which doth marvellous things himselfe alone And blessed be the name of his glory for ever and let all the earth be filled with his glory Amen and Amen Ended are the prayers of David sonne of Iesse Annotations FOr Solomon the Greeke addeth a Psalme of David for Solomon and the last verse sheweth it to be made by David and it concerneth Christ and his Kingdome figured by Solomon Song 3. 11. and therfore called by his name as elsewhere he is called David Hos. 3. 5. Such also is the title of the 127. Psalme Kings sonne to whom the right of the Kingdome belongeth by birth and inheritance So Christ was King Davids sonne and borne King of the Iewes Mar. 11. 10. Mat. 2. 2. and 22. 42. to him the Father gave all judgement Iohn 5. 22. The Chaldee expoundeth the King to bee Christ and the Kings sonne to be King Davids son Vers. 2. That he may or Let him judge that is governe thy people in justice that is justly wherefore he is named Melchizedek that is King 〈◊〉 justico Heb. 7. 2. of whom it was prophesied behold a King shall reigne in justice Isa. 32. 1. Vers. 3. The mountaines shall bring forth or shall beare to wit as their fruit for so this phrase importeth Iob 40. 15. This and the rest that follow may also bee read prayer-wise let the mountaines beare c. The Chaldee paraphraseth The dwellers on the mountaines shall bring peace to the people of the house of Israel peace that is prosperitie plenty of fruits which should be injoyed with peace as all Solomons dayes Israel dwelt without feare every man under his vine and figtree 1 King 4. 25. And under Christ the worke and effect of justice is peace quietnesse and assurance for ever Isa. 32. 17. Rom. 5. 1. the mountaines drop downe new wine and the hils flow with milke Ioel 3. 18. Amos 9. 13. hils with justice that is the hils also shall beare peace with justice both peace and justice as these two are said to kisse each other Psal. 85. 11. and Christ is King both of justice and peace Heb. 7. 2. his Kingdome is justice peace and joy Rom. 14. 17. It may also be read for justice Vers. 4. shall judge that is shall deliver see the notes on Psal. 43. 1. save the sonnes of the needy that is the needy persons in Chaldee shall redeeme the sonnes of miserie that is such as are in wretched case the fraudulent oppressor whom the Greeke here calleth sycophant which word is used for injurying by forged cavillation Luk. 19. 8. and 3. 14. See before in Psal. 62. 11. Vers. 5. They shall feare men shall reverence that is worship and serve thee So feare is used for worship Isa. 29. 13. Mat. 15. 9. with the sun or before the sun as is after expressed vers 17. as the Hebrew ghnim with is elsewhere used for before Est. 7. 8. and before the sun and moone meaneth continually so long as they shine on the earth which is so long as the world endureth Gen. 8. 22. Psal. 89. 37 38. The Chaldee intrepreteth it with the rising of the sunne and in the light of the moone that is at morning and evening day and night as the twelve Tribes are said so instantly to serve Act. 26. 7. Vers. 6. the mowen grasse the medow which being mowen in the beginning of Summer craveth raine that it may grow againe The orginall word signifieth also a shorne fleece of wooll which sense some keepe here and referre it to the deaw that fell on Gedeons fleece when the land was dry and againe on the land when the fleece was dry Iudg. 6. 37 40. Solomon and Christ are here said to come downe as raine in respect of the doctrine and administration of judgement by them So Moses said My doctrine shall drop as the raine c. Deut. 32. 2. and Iob said they waited for me as for the raine c. Iob 29. 23. and the Lord shall come unto us as the raine c. Hos. 6. 3. the dispersed moisture understand which are the moisture that is which showres doe moisten the earth Zarziph the Hebrew word used only in this place hath the signification of dispersing moisture or water as is by showers God having divided spouts for the raine whereby it is strowed abroad upon the earth Iob 38. 25. Wherefore the former word showers implieth raine that falleth with manifold or millions of drops as Psal. 65. 11. Vers. 7. multitude of peace to wit shall be or shall flourish and this Shalom peace may respect the name of Shelomoh or Solomon which signifieth peaceable as was promised to David Behold a son is borne to thee which shall be a man of rest for I will give him rest from all his enemies round about therefore his name is Solomon and I will send Salom peace and quietnesse upon Israel in his daies 1 Chron. 22. 9. moone be not or be taken away as the Greeke explaineth it that is till the worlds end as before vers 5. Vers. 8. from sea to sea