Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n aaron_n appoint_v moses_n 37 3 6.6155 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 40 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

inheritances by the name of Lets as Come up with me into my lot Iudg. 1. 3. And not lands onely but whatsoever befalleth unto men frō the hand of God is called a lot as This is the portion of them that spoile us and the lot of them that rob us Esay 17. 14. and Thou hast neither part nor lot in this matter Act. 8. 21. and That they may receive forgivenesse of sins and a lot that is inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith c. Act. 26. 18. The part of the lot that is of the inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. So that in the Greek used by the Apostles Cleros a lot and Cleronomia a division by lot is the common name of an inheritance 1 Pet. 5. 3. Ephes. 1. 14. 18. Vers. 56. According to the lot Hebr. At or Vpon the mouth of the lot as the lot whereon the name of the tribe or of the inheritance is written shall speake This lot being of the Lord figured the diversities of gifts in the Church which the Spirit of God divideth to every man severally 〈◊〉 will 1 Cor. 12. 4. 11. as also the dispensation of his graces concerning our heavenly inheritance which the Election onely obtaineth that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth Rom. 11. 7. and 9. 11. Vers. 57. of the Levites who though they had no inheritance in the land vers 62. yet were they to have 48 cities and their suburbs for their habitation Num. 35. which also fell unto them by lot Ios. 21. 4. c. Vers. 58. Korachites or Korhites of Korah the sonne of Izhar the sonne of Kohath the sonne of Levi Num. 16. 1. Korah himselfe died in the rebellion but his sonnes died not Num. 26. 11. therefore they are reckoned here for a familie in the fourth generation from Levi which is one degree further than the other families And whereas in Exod. 6. 16. c. there are reckoned of Gershon two sonnes Libni and Shimei here the familie of the Libnites is mustered but Shimei left out There Kohath hath foure sonnes Amram and Ishar and Hebron and Vzziel here Vzziel is omitted neither is Ishar named but in his sonnes the Korhites Vers. 59. she bare to Levi by she understand Levies wise or Iochebeds mother Sol. Iarchi expoundeth it his wise bare her in Egypt she bare to Amram that is Iochebed Amrams wife who was also his aunt bare to Amram Exo. 6. 20. Marie Hebr. Mirjam she was a prophetesse see Exod. 15. 20. Num. 12. 1. Vers. 60. unto Aaron was borne Here Moses children Gershon and Eliezer are againe omitted see the notes on Num. 3. 38. Vers. 61. and Abihu died and they had no sonnes Num. 3. 4. See the historie in Levit. 10. Vers. 62. 23 thousand who at the former numbring were but 22 thousand Num. 3. 39. So they increased in the wildernesse a thousand males Vers. 65. dying they shall die i. they shall surely die this was threatned for their rebellion refusing to go into the promised land Nū 14. and the fulfilling of Gods judgment is here shewed and Iosoua in Greeke Iesus the son of Naue these two survived because they faithfully followed the Lord Num. 14. 24. 38. See the Annotations there In that all the rest were dead save these two it sheweth that all the 600 thousand men now mustered which should conquer Canaan were a valiant company betweene 20 and 60 yeares of age none being above 60 but Caleb and Iosua and as they were in body so in minde being trained up these 38 yeares in the study of the Law and ordinances of God and beholding his workes having Moses and Aaron for their leaders and Gods good spirit for their instructer Neh. 9. 20. CHAP. XXVII 1 The daughters of Zelophehad sue for an inheritance 5 Moses bringeth their cause before the Lord who granteth their request 8 The Law of inheritances when a man dieth without a son 12 Moses is bidden goe up and see the land and is told of his death for his trespasse 15 He requesteth of the Lord that a man may be set governour in his place 18 The Lord appointeth Iosua to succeed him 22 And Moses by imposition of hands ordaineth him to his office THen came the daughters of Zelophehad the sonne of Hepher the son of Gilead the son of Machir the son of Manasses of the families of Manasses the son of Ioseph and these are the names of his daughters Machlah Noah Hoglah and Milcah and Tirzah And they stood before Moses and before Eleazar the Priest and before the Princes and all the congregation at the doore of the Tent of the Congregation saying Our father died in the wildernesse and he was not among the Congregation of them that gathered themselves together against Iehovah in the congregation of Korah but in his sinne he died and hee had no sonnes Why should the name of our father be done away from among his family because he hath no sonne Give unto us a possession among the brethren of our father And Moses brought their cause before Iehovah And Iehovah said unto Moses saying The daughters of Zelophehad speake right giving thou shalt give them a possession of an inheritance among the brethren of their father and thou shalt cause the inheritance of their father to passe unto them And thou shalt speake unto the sonnes of Israel saying If a man die and he have no sonne then ye shall cause his inheritance to passe unto his daughter And if hee have no daughter then ye shall give his inheritance unto his brethren And if he have no brethren then ye shall give his inheritance unto the brethren of his father And if his father have no brethren then ye shall give his inheritance unto his kinsman that is next to him of his familie and he shall inherit it it shal be unto the sonnes of Israel for a statute of judgement as Iehovah commanded Moses And Iehovah said unto Moses Go thou up into this mountaine of Abarim and see the land w ch I have given to the sons of Israel And thou shalt see it and thou also shalt be gathered unto thy peoples as Aaron thy brother was gathered For ye rebelled against my mouth in the wildernesse of Zin in the strife of the congregation to sanctifie me at the water before their eyes that is the water of Meribah of Kadesh in the wildernesse of Zin And Moses spake unto Iehovah saying Let Iehovah the God of the spirits of all flesh set a man over the congregation Which may go out before them and which may go in before them and which may lead them out and which may bring them in that the congregation of Iehovah be not as sheep which have no shepherd And Iehovah said unto Moses Take unto thee Iosua the son of Nun a man in whom is the spirit and lay thine hand upon him And cause
in the Law another inward in the heart 2 Cor. 3. 13. 14. c. And as without a veil the people could not heare Moses so except the Law be veiled and hath as it were a new face upon it the naturall man cannot endure the glory of it so terrible it is to the conscience of sinners R. Menachem here observeth how the former Ancients of Israel at the reading of the Booke of the Law covered their faces and said hee that heareth from the mouth of the reader is as hee that heareth from the mouth of Moses Vers. 34. tooke off the veil whereof there was no use in the sight of God who doth not onely know himselfe the use and end of his Law but sheweth the same also to others which was likewise here figured for when men shall be turned to the Lord the veile shall be taken away 2 Cor. 3. 16. Vers. 35. put the veil againe on hereby signifying the continuall glory of his ministery and infirmity of the people till both of them be done a way Which is accomplished by the Gospell the ministration of the Spirit and of righteousnesse which exceeds in glory so that Moses ministery hath no glory in this respect for Christ taketh away the veil so that we may both stedfastly looke to the end of the Law which is abolished and all of us with unveiled face beholding as in a glasse the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord 1 Cor. 5. 8. 18. CHAP. XXXV 1 Moses commandeth the people from the Lord to keepe the Sabbath 4 to bring willing offrings of gold silver brasse and other stuffe for the Tabernacle and furniture thereof 20 The people goe and bring voluntary gifts 22 Men and women bring their Iewels and ornaments and other stuffe such as they had 25. The wise women spin the stuffe 27 The Rulers bring precious stones and spices 30 Bezaleel and Aholiab are shewed to be the men whom God had filled with his Spirit and Wisedome to doe the worke of the Sanctuary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Moses gathered together all the Congregation of the sonnes of Israel and said unto them These are the words which Iehovah hath commanded to doe them Sixe dayes shall worke be done but on the seventh day there shall be to you holinesse a Sabbath of sabbatisme to Iehovah whosoever doth any worke therein shall be put-to-death Ye shall kindle no fire in any of your habitations upon the Sabbath day And Moses said unto all the Congregation of the sonnes of Israel saying this is the thing which Iehovah hath commanded saying Take yee from amongst you an offring unto Iehovah whosoever is willing in his heart let him bring it the offring of Iehovah Gold and silver brasse And blew and purple and scarlet and fine-linnen and Goats hayre And Rams skins dyed-red and Tachash skins and Shittim wood And oile for the Light and spices for the anointing oile and for the incense of sweet-spices And Beryll stones filling stones for the Ephod and for the Brest plate And every wise harted among you shall come and make all that Iehovah hath commanded The Tabernacle the tent thereof and the covering thereof the taches thereof and the boards thereof the bars thereof the pillars thereof and the sockets thereof The arke and the bars there of the Covering-mercy-seat and the veile of the covering The Table and the barres thereof and all the vessels thereof and the shew-bread And the Candlesticke for the Light and the vessels thereof and the lamps thereof and the oile for the Light And the Altar of incense and the bars thereof and the anointing oyle and the incense of sweet spices and the hanging veile of the doore for the doore of the Tabernacle The Altar of Burnt offring and the grate of brasse which is for it the bars thereof and all the vessels thereof the Laver and the foot thereof The tapestry-hangings of the Court the pillars thereof and the sockets thereof and the hanging-veile of the gate of the Court The pinnes of the Tabernacle and the pins of the Court and their coards The garments of ministery to minister in the holy-place the garments of holinesse for Aaron the Priest and the garments of his sonnes to minister-in-the-priests-office And all the congregation of the Sonnes of Israel departed from the presence of Moses And they came every man whose heart stirred him up and every one whose spirit made him willing they brought the offring of Iehovah for the worke of the Tent of the Congregation and for all the service thereof and for the garments of holinesse And they came the men with the women every-one that was willing hearted they brought bracelets and eare-rings and rings and tablets all jewels of gold and every man that offered offred an offring of gold unto Iehovah And every man with whom was found blew and purple and scarlet and fine-linnen and Goats hayre and Rammes skinnes dyed red and Tachash skinnes brought them Every one that offred an offring of silver and of brasse they brought the offring of Iehovah and every one with whom was found Shittim wood for any work of the service brought it And every woman that was wise hearted did spinne with her hands and they brought the spun-worke the blew and the purple and the scarlet and the fine-linnen And all the women whose heart stirred them up in wisedome spunne Goats hayre And the Rulers brought Beryll stones and filling stones for the Ephod and for the Brest-plate And spice and oyle for the Light and for the anointing oyle and for the incense of sweet-spices Every man and woman whose heart made them willing to bring for all the work which Iehovah had commanded to make by the hand of Moses the sonnes of Israel ● brought a willing offring unto Iehovah And Moses said unto the sonnes of Israel See Iehovah hath called by name Bezaleel the sonne of Vri the sonne of Hur of the tribe of Iudah And he hath filled him with the Spirit of God in wisedome in understanding and in knowledge and in all workmanship And to devise cunning-worke to worke in gold and in silver and in brasse And in ingraving of stone to fill and in carving of wood to work in all cunning works And hee hath given into his heart for to teach he and Aholiab the sonne of Ahisamach of the Tribe of Dan. He hath filled them with wisedome of heart to make all worke of the ingraver and of the cunning-workman and of the embroiderer in blew and in purple in scarlet and in fine-linnen and of the weaver even of them that doe any worke and that devise cunning workes Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 HEre beginneth the 22 Section of the Law See Gen. 6. 9. and 28. 10. Vers. 2. holinesse that is a day of holinesse or an holy day and signe of holinesse from the Lord See Exod. 31. 13.
Sol Iarchi expoundeth it Prepare yourselv●s for vengeance and so he saith in ser. 12. 3. Sanctifie that is prepare them for the day of slaughter The 20 verse sheweth that this may be implied wept in the eares in ver 20. wept before the Lord and so the Chaldee turneth it here I● meaneth that the Lord had seene and heard their complaint for weeping is often joyned with lifting up the voyce or crying out as Ger. 27. 39. Iudg. 2. 4. and 21. 2. 1 Sam. 11. 4. and 24. 16. and 30. 4. Verse 20. Vntill a moneth of dayes to wit yee shall eat as the Greeke expresseth Meaning a whole moneth as a yeare of dayes is an whole yeare 2 Sam. 14 28. So in Gen. 29. 14. loathsome Hebr. to loathsomnesse or alienation which the Greek translateth to choler the Chaldee to offence that is offensive have despised or contemptuously refased set at nought which the Greeke translateth disobeyed the Lord the Chaldee rejected the Word of the LORD who is the Chaldee saith whose Majestie or Divine presence remaineth among you Verse 22. to suffice them so the Greeke and Chaldee expound the Hebrew Ma●sa which usually signifieth to finde but here is used for obtaining that which is sufficient so in Ios. 17. 16. Iudg. 21. 14. Here Mose sheweth that the thing promised was unpossible in mans judgement both in respect of the multitude of men and length of time and therefore he mentioneth beasts and fishes which also are flesh 1 Cor 15. 39 but speaketh not of fowles as thinking least of all that they should be filled with them yet God sufficed them with such verse 31. So Philip said unto Christ Two hundred 〈…〉 worth of bread is not sufficient for this multitude that every one may have a little Ioh. 6. 7 9. Verse 23. hand waxed short that is power abated the Greeke expoundeth it Shall not the Lords hand be sufficient the Chaldee thus Shall the word of the Lord be hindered Hand is often used for power as being the instrument wherewith power is shewed Deut. 32. 36. Ios. 4. 24. and 8. 20. shortnesse signifieth lessening and is applied sometime to the Lords Spirit as in Mic. 2. 7. is the spirit of Iehovah shortned Sometime to his hand as here and in Esai 59. 1. Behold Iehovahs hand is not shortned that it cannot save and in Esai 50. 2. Is my hand shortned at all that it cannot redeeme or have I no power to deliver where the latter sentence explaineth the former Verse 25. they prophesied this was a gift and effect of Gods Spirit upon them and is elsewhere so explained as upon the handmaids in those dayes I will powre out my spirit Ioel 2. 29. that is I will power out of my spirit and they shall prophesie Act. 2. 18. So in Act. 19. 2. 6. And when Saul was anointed to be King the Spirit of God came upon him and hee prophesied 1 Sam. 10. 6 10. Prophesying was not onely a foretelling of things to come but sometime a declaring of the word of God unto the people see Exod. 7. 1. Gen. 20. 7. And thus Paul saith He that prophesieth speaketh unto men to edification and exhortation and comfort 1 Cor. 14. 3. Sometime it was a singing of praises unto God as they that prophesied with Harps with Psalteries and with Cymbals to confesse and to praise the LORD 1 Chron. 25. 1 3. did not adde that is prophesied no more but that day as God spake the ten commandements and added not that is spake no moe or after such a manner to the people Deut. 52. 2. Thus the Greeke here translateth and they added no more and Sol. Iarchi saith they did not adde i. they prophesied not save that day onely so it is expounded is Siphre Howbeit the Chaldee translateth it ceased not in a contrary signification which sometime is in the Hebrew words But seeing the Chaldee so expoundeth that also in Deut. 5. 22. that the Lord ceased not which seemeth to meane a continuance till all those ten words were finished we may likewise understand him here to meane a continuance for that day as Saul in Naioth prophesied all that day and all that night 1 Sam. 19. 24. and not a continuance alwayes for this seemeth to be a temporary gift and miracle for confirmation of their Office as in 1 Sam. 10. 6 11. Verse 26. Medad in Greeke Modad the spirit in Chaldee the spirit of prophesie that were written by Moses in a booke or in papers as the Hebrews thinke and so were appointed among the rest to come to the Tabernacle verse 16. 24. but went not out for what cause the Scripture sheweth not but by comparing this their fact with others it is probable that as Saul when hee should have beene made King withdrew and hid himselfe among the stuffe 1 Sam. 10. 22. so these two unwilling to take the charge upon them withdrew their shoulders and came not to the Tabernacle yet the Lord by his Spirit found them out for whither shall men goe from his Spirit or whither shall they flee from his presence Psal. 139. 7. The Hebrewes have here their uncertaine conjectures Sol. Iarchi saith They were all written expresly by their names and should have beene taken by Lots For the count was made for the twelve tribes out of every tribe six except two tribes of which were but five Moses tooke seventy two papers or 〈◊〉 and on seventy of them he wrote AN ELDER and on two A PART and he chose six out of every tribe so there were seventy and two Then he sa●● unto them take up your papers out of the basket Who so tooke up with his hand a paper on which was written AN ELDER he was sanctified to that office but he in whose hand came up A PART unto him he said The Lord will not have thee Verse 28. of his choise young men in Greeke his chosen one the Chaldee saith of his young men The originall word signifieth also youth whereupon some translate it the minister of Moses frō his youth but this seemeth not fit for Moses shepheards life in Midian from which he came but a little before this argueth the contrary forbid thou them This he spake of envious zeale for his master Moses sake as the verse following sheweth that he would not have the use of the gift of prophesie common or because they obeyed not Moses to come out as he commanded So the disciples forbade one that cast our devils in Christs name because he followed not with them Luk 9. 49 50. Marke 9. 38. Targum Ionathan explaineth it M. Lord Moses request mercy from before the Lord and forbid them the spirit of Prophesie Verse 29. Enviest thou or Hast thou en●isus zeale or jealousie for my sake which is a prohibition Have it not as Thinke ye that I am come to give peace on earth Luke 12. 51. that is Thinke it not Mat. 10. 34. but O who shall give or and O
Princes of the congregation the called of the assembly men of name And they gathered themselves together against Moses and against Aaron and said unto them Yee take too much upon you for all the congregation all of them are holy and Iehovah is among them and wherefore lift ye up your selves above the Church of Iehovah And Moses heard it and fell upon his face And hee spake unto Korah and unto all his congregation saying Even in the morning Iehovah will make knowne him that is his and who is holy and whom he will cause to come neere unto him even him whom he hath chosen hee will cause to come neere unto him This doe yee take unto you censers Korah and all his congregation And put ye fire in them and put incense on them before Iehovah to morrow and it shall be that the man whom Iehovah doth choose he shall be holy ye take too much upon you ye sons of Levi. And Moses said unto Korah Heare I pray you ye sons of Levi Is it a small thing for you that the God of Israel hath separated you from the congregation of Israel to bring you neere unto him to serve the service of the Tabernacle of Iehovah and to stand before the congregation to minister unto them And he hath brought thee neere and all thy brethren the sonnes of Levi with thee and seeke yee the Priesthood also For which cause thou and all thy congregation are gathered together against Iehovah and Aaron what is he that ye murmure against him And Moses sent to call Dathan and Abiram the sons of Eliab and they said We will not come up Is it a smal thing that thou hast brought us up out of the land that floweth with milke and honey to kill us in the wildernesse that thou makest thy selfe a Prince over us even making thy selfe a Prince Moreover thou hast not brought us into a land that floweth with milke honey givē unto vs an inheritāce of field vineyard wilt thou dig out the eies of these men we will not comeup And Moses was very wroth and he said unto Iehovah Respect not thou their offering I have not taken one asse from them neither have I hurt one of them And Moses said unto Korah Thou and all thy congregation be yee before Iehovah thou and they and Aaron to morrow And take yee every man his censer and put incense on them and bring ye neere before Iehovah every man his censer two hundred and fiftie censers and thou and Aaron each man his censer And they tooke every man his censer and put fire on them and put incense on them and they stood at the doore of the Tent of the congregation and Moses and Aaron And Korah gathered against them all the congregation unto the doore of the Tent of the congregation and the glory of Iehovah appeared unto all the congregation And Iehovah spake unto Moses and unto Aaron saying Separate your selves from among this congregation and I will consume them as in a moment And they fell upon their faces and said O God the God of the spirits of all flesh shall one man sin and wilt thou be fervently wroth with all the congregation And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto the congregation saying Get you up from about the Tabernacle of Korah Dathan and Abiram And Moses rose up and went unto Dathan and Abiram and the Elders of Israel went after him And he spake unto the congregation saying Depart I pray you from the tents of these wicked men and touch not any thing that is theirs lest ye be consumed in all their sinnes And they went up from the Tabernacle of Korah Dathan and Abiram on every side and Dathan and Abiram came out and stood in the doore of their Tents and their wives and their sonnes and their little ones And Moses said Hereby ye shall know that Iehovah hath sent me to doe all these workes for I doe them not of mine owne heart If these men die as all men die and they be visited after the visitation of all men Iehovah hath not sent me But if Iehovah create a new thing and the earth open her mouth and swallow up them and all that appertaine unto them and they goe downe alive unto hell then ye shall know that these men have provoked Iehovah And it was as he had made an end of speaking all these words that the ground clave asunder which was under them And the earth opened her mouth and swallowed up them and their houses and all the men that appertained unto Korah and all their substance And they and all that appertained unto them went downe alive unto hell and the earth closed upon them and they perished from among the Church And all Israel that were round about them fled at the voice of them for they said Lest the earth swallow up us And a fire came forth from Iehovah and devoured the two hundred and fiftie men that offered incense And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest that he take up the censers out of the burning and scatter thou the fire yonder for they are hallowed The censers of these sinners against their owne soules and let them make them broad plates for a covering of the Altar for they offered them before Iehovah and they are hallowed and they shall be for a signe unto the sonnes of Israel And Eleazar the Priest tooke the brazen censers which they that were burnt had offered and they were made broad plates for a covering of the Altar A memoriall unto the sonnes of Israel that not any stranger which is not of the seed of Aaron come neere to offer incense before Iehovah that he be not as Korah and as his congregation as Iehovah spake by the hand of Moses unto him And on the morrow all the congregation of the sonnes of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron saying you have killed the people of Iehovah And it was when the congregation was gathered against Moses and against Aaron that they looked towards the Tent of the congregation and behold the cloud covered it and the glory of Iehovah appeared And Moses and Aaron came before the Tent of the congregation And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Get you up frō among this congregation I will consume them as in a moment and they fell upon their faces And Moses said unto Aaron Take the censer and put fire thereon from off the Altar and put on incense and goe quickly unto the congregation and make atonement for them for fervent wrath is gone out from before Iehovah the plague is begun And Aaron tooke as Moses had spoken and ranne into the midst of the Church and behold the plague was begun among the people and he put on incense and made atonement for the people And he stood betweene the dead and the living and the plague was stayed And they that died in the plague were
rebellion see Num. 14. 2 3 c. Verse 27. In the hatred or for the hatred of Ie 〈…〉 wherwith he hateth us that is for that the Lord hateth us as in the Greeke version See 〈…〉 phrase in Gen. 19. 16. and 29. 20. Hos. 3. 〈…〉 evill saying Moses would not have to come 〈◊〉 of the mouth of their enemies Deut. 9. 28. and it sheweth the height of their sinne which imp●●ed that to hatred wherein God manifested his 〈◊〉 Deut. 4. 37. and 7. 8. Vers. 28. to melt that is discouraged or as the Chaldee translateth it broken The Greeke saith Have turned away our heart David amplifieth this 〈…〉 litude in Psal. 22. 15. My heart is as wax it 〈…〉 ten c. So Ios. 2. 11. and 7. 5. and 14. 8. Es●● 19. 1. These brethren were ten of the twelve Spies sent to view the Land Num. 13. 28. c. 〈…〉 kims in Greeke and Chaldee Giants see N●● 13. 28. 33. where it is singular Anak Vers. 30. He the Chaldee paraphraseth his 〈◊〉 will fight for you Verse 31. bare thee this word meaneth not bearing of the body onely but bearing of their infirmities and suffering the evils and troubles in the education of them as a father doth in his children which the Greeke explaineth by etrophophsrese a word that Paul useth in Act. 13. 18. where the Syriak expoundeth it nourished or as some copies have it etropophorese hee suffered their manners Verse 32. yet in this thing or for this word notwithstanding this exhortation and encouragement you beleeved not in Iehovah Chald. in the word of the LORD This unbeleefe Paul noteth to be the cause why they entred not into the Lords rest Heb. 3. 1 2. 18. 19. Verse 33. Who went namely by his Arke Fire and Cloud the signes of his presence Numb 10. 33. 34. or who goeth to wit still before you Verse 35. If there shall that is surely there shall not as Paul openeth the phrase Heb. 3. 11. 18. Though Moses intreated for the people Num. 14. 13. 19. and the Lord pardoned them that they were not then destroyed Num. 14. 20. yet hee sware and so it was irrevocable and without repentance Psal. 110. 4. that they should not come into the promised land See the notes on Num. 14. see that is come into and enjoy as to see good is to enjoy the same Psal. 106. 5. Verse 36. Caleb one of the twelve Spies who was faithfull see Num. 13. 6. 30. and 14. 6. c. fully followed Hebr. fulfilled after Iehovah which the Greeke translateth followed the things pertaining to the Lord. This he did being guided by another spirit Num. 14. 24. Verse 37. with me with Aaron also for they both were in one transgression and punishment Num. 20. 10 12 24. for your sakes for the people provoked his spirit whereupon hee uttered his sinne with his lips Psal. 106. 32 33. his sinne proceeded also from unbeleefe see Num. 20. 12. Thus God shewed severity towards all after many provocations and by it the people were taught that not Moses Law but Iesus Gospel should bring them into their heavenly rest Vers. 38. Ioshuah or Iehoshuah in Greeke Iesus he was another of the Spies see Num. 13. 8. 16. and 14. 6. 38. standeth that is ministreth or is thy servant as the phrase meaneth Gen. 18. 8. and so hee is named Moses minister Ios. 1. 1. strengthen by word and signe which was imposition of hands whereby Moses put off his honour upon Iesus and hee was filled with the Spirit Num. 27. 18. 20. 23. Deut. 34. 9. Verse 39. for a prey to be spoiled and devoured of the enemy of this their speech see Num. 14. 3. they shall goe in after forty yeares wandring in the wildernesse and bearing their fathers whoredomes see Num. 14. 31. 33. So God sheweth grace to weaklings and babes in Christ 1 Cor. 1. 28. Mat. 11. 25. Verse 40. way of that is which leadeth towards the red sea where Israel had beene baptized Exod. 14. and whither they were now led againe to learn repentance and a new life See Num. 14. 25. Vers. 41. sinned The people mourned greatly when they heard that evill tidings from the Lord confessed their sinne and offered amendment Num. 14. 39 40. but their repentance was not according to God for presently they rushed into another extremity neither could they reverse the decree passed against them his weapons of war or the weapons of his warre which is an Hebrew phrase very common translated in Greeke his weapons of War so in Dan. 9. 24. citie of thy holinesse that is thy holy citie and the house of my praier Esay 56. 7. that is my house of praier and many the like pressed forward assayed of your owne accord or thronged as the Greeke translateth gathered together the Chaldee yee began The Hebrew word is used here onely in Num. 14. 44. there is said they loftily presumed or lifted up themselves answerable to their presumption here following Vers. 42. I am not the Chaldee expoundeth it my majestie or presence dwelleth not among you see Num. 14. 42. smitten in Greeke broken or crushed The Lord threatned their fall by the sword of the Amalekites and Canaanites Num. 14. 43. Verse 43. were presumptuous or were proud arrogant compare Num. 14. 44. The people having by their evil heart and unfaithful departed from the living God would returne to him by the workes of their own hands w ch was a presumptuous sin and shewed their repentance not to be sincere but that the flesh repined and strugled against the chastisements of God not willing to beare the punishment of their iniquitie See the notes on Num. 14. Verse 44. Amorite with the Amalekites See Numb 14. 45. Bees doe or Bees vse to doe which when they are angred get them together and flie on the faces of their provokers see Psal. 118. 12. Our sinnes are enemies like Bees many compact in the hive of the heart being troubled and provoked they become more eager and fierce sting and pursue us They cannot be subdued but by faith in Christ as they that were stung of Serpents were healed by him Num. 21. for by the workes of the Law no sinne can be expelled Rom. 7. 7 8. c. Hormah the Greeke saith from Seir unto Herma see Num. 14. 45. Verse 45. returned the Greeke saith yee sate downe and wept heard not Chaldee accepted not your praier This figured how Israel following the Law of justice could not attaine unto it because they sought it not by faith but as it were by the works of the Law Rom. 9. 31 32. Verse 46. Kadesh a large wildernesse where Israel abode long as appeareth by Num. 13. 27. and 20. 1. 14 21. Iudg. 11. 17. Deut. 2. 14. CHAP. II. 1. The storie is continued that the Israelites were not suffered to meddle with the Edomites 9. nor with the Moabites 19. nor with the Ammonites 24. but with Sihon the Amorite who refusing peace and
her husband so long as hee liveth but if the husband be dead she is loosed from the law of the husband So we also are become dead to the Law by the body of Christ that we should be to another even to him who is raised from the dead Rom. 7. 1 2 4. Therfore upon this death of Moses God speaketh unto Israel to go over Iordan into the Land Ios. 1. according to the mouth in Greeke and Ghaldee by the word The day of his death by the Iewes tradition was the seventh of Adar which we call February so Ionathan in his Thargum on this place saith On the seventh day of the moneth of Adar Moses the Master of Israel was borne and on the seventh day of the moneth of Adar he was taken out of the world Vers. 6. he buried him that is Iehovah buried him or Michael that is Christ who is Iehovah one with the Father Iude vers 9. Signifying that none but Christ should abolish the Law and Ordinances given by Moses Rom. 8. 3. Gal. 3. 13 14. Coloss. 2. 14 16 17. Heb. 9. 9 10 11 c. and 10. 1 9. And this was a speciall honour unto Moses person whom the Lord loved when he was dead and buried his corps which we finde not done to any man else in the world which he will also raise up incorruptible and glorious at the day of his appearing in a valley he died in the mountaine Deut. 32. 50. but was buried in a valley over against Beth-Pehor the Greeke saith neere to the house of Phogor of which place see Deut. 3. 28. no man knoweth God would not have Moses Sepulchre to be knowne though the devill contended with him hereabout Iude vers 9. because there should be no occasion of superstition or idolatry thereby as is thought of some Chazkuni saith that none which inquire of the dead as Deut. 18. 11. might seeke unto him The chiefe cause seemeth to be a mysterie that the Law whereof Moses was the minister being once dead and abrogated by Christ should never more be sought after but quite abolished out of the conscience of sinners that the grace of Christ may live raigne alone See Gal. 4. 9 10 11. and 5. 4. Also that the legall rudiments should by the comming of the Gospell be taken away from Israel never to be found or enjoyed by them any more For Christ destroyed both their Citie and Sanctuary as was foretold in Dan. 9. and they have been many daies without a King and without a Prince and without a sacrifice and without an image and without an Ephod and without Teraphim and so shall be untill they returne and seeke the Lord their God and the sonne of David their King Hos. 3. 4 5. Vers. 7. yeeres old Hebr. sonne of 120. yeeres so the yeere of his death fell out in the 2553. yeere of the world and his yeeres accord with Noes preaching and preparing of the Arke Genes 6. 3. his eye in Greeke his eyes his eye-sight failed him not as did Isaaks Gen. 27. 1. The eye is also used for the outward appearance and colour of a thing as Exod. 10. 5. Numb 11. 7. so it may be meant here also his visage was not wrinkled Chazkuni here expoundeth it the shining of his face mentioned in Ex. 34. 30. his naturall moisture his radicall humour wherein the life and strength of the body consisteth which when it is spent and dried up a man dieth The Greeke translateth his lips were not corrupted the Chaldee saith the brightnesse of the glory of his face was not changed having reference to Exod. 34. 30 c. sled that is departed from him Thus outwardly and inwardly Moses retained his vigour beauty and naturall strength that he died not through feeblenesse or defect of nature as most men did at his age though he had beene a man of sorrowes and broken with many cares for the people And hereby the continuall force of the Law is signified the power wherof decaieth not in the conscience of sinners by number of daies or multitude of workes till God take it away and abolish it by grace in Christ. The Law hath dominion over a man as long as he liveth whiles we are in the flesh the passions of sinnes which are by the Law do worke in our members to bring forth fruit unto death Rom. 7. 1 5. Vers. 8. the plaines of Moab in Greeke Araboth Moab by Iordan over against Iericho as v. 1. thirty daies so long they mourned also for Aaron see Num. 20. 28. Vers. 9. Iosua in Greeke Iesus the sonne of Nave of wisdome in Greek of understanding the spirit of wisdome meaneth wisdome ministred by the spirit of God wherein he was a figure of Iesus Christ who being full of the holy Spirit entred upon the worke of his ministration here on earth Luke 4. 1 c. On him the spirit of the Lord rested the spirit of wisedome and understanding the spirit of counsell and might the spirit of knowledge and of the feare of the Lord Esa. 11. 2. laid or imposed his hands upon him of this see Numb 27. 18 23. As Moses by imposition of hands authorized Iesus the sonne of Nun and bare record unto him so the Law of Moses which was in the heart and bowels of Iesus the sonne of God gave authority and bare record unto him Heb. 7. Acts 26. 22 23. Moses himselfe appeared talking with Iesus and speaking of his decease which he should accomplish at Ierusalem Luke 9. 30 31. hearkened unto him that is obeyed him as after also they promised in Ios. 1. 16. 17 18. See the notes on Num. 27. 20. Vers. 10. knew face to face the Chaldee saith was revealed unto him face to face So in Exod. 33. 11. it is said Iehovah spake unto Moses face to face as a man speaketh unto his friend and in Num. 12. 8. he said with him will I speake mouth to mouth See the Annotations there Vers. 12. the mighty hand that is workes wrought with a mighty hand and powerfull government and administration according to that which is said Humble your selves therefore under the mighty hand of God c. 1 Pet. 5. 6. great terrour that is workes done with great terrour which the Greeke translateth great marvels the Chaldee great visions These things doe magnifie Moses office and administration that the Lawes which he hath written confirmed by such signes and wonders might be acknowledged to be of God wherefore he and his writings are worthily celebrated thorowout the world confirmed of God himselfe Numb 12. 7 8. approved and expounded by all the Prophets after him by Christ himselfe and his Apostles so that they which heare not him will not be perswaded though one rose from the dead Luk. 16. 31. But unto us God hath raised up a Prophet like unto Moses as he promised Deu. 18. 18. Act. 3. 21. even Iesus the sonne of the Most high a man approved of God among
God sent the Prophets following yea his owne Son and his Apostles to open and explaine the mysteries which Moses had closely and briefly penned that now by their helpe through the Spirit of the Lord we may all d 2 Cor. 3. 17. 1● with unveiled face behold as in a glasse the glory of the Lord and perceive how the law was given by Moses but e Ioh. 1. 17. grace and truth is come by Iesus Christ. The literall sense of Moses Hebrew which is the tongue wherein he wrote the Law is the ground of all interpretation and that language hath figures and propieties of speech different from ours those therefore in the first place are to be opened that the naturall meaning of the scripture being knowne the mysteries of godlinesse therein implied may the better be discerned This may be attained in a great measure by the scriptures themselves which being compared doe open one another For darke and figurative speeches are often explained as When God saith I live Num. 14. 21. 28 this we are to understand as an oath for elsewhere he saith I have sworne by my selfe Esa. 45. 23. and to expresse this Paul alledgeth it I live saith the Lord Rom. 14. 11. Also when he saith I am the Lord that healeth thee Exod. 15. 26. hereby he intendeth the pardoning of our sinnes for where other scriptures speake of healing his people Esa. 6. 10. Mat. 13. 15. elsewhere it is interpreted the forgiving of their sinnes Mark 4. 12. So he rolled himselfe on the Lord Psal. 22. 9. is in plainer speech he trusted Math. 27. 43. and Christ who should be an ensigne of the peoples Esa. 11. 10. is under that phrase prophesied to rule over the nations Rom. 15. 12. When Moses saith God smote the Sodomites with blindnesses Gen. 19. 11. he meaneth very great or extreame blindnesse noted by that word in the plurall number as where the Prophet mentioneth weeping of bitteruesses Ier. 31. 15 the Apostle expoundeth it weeping and great mourning Mat. 2. 18. So when he teacheth us to sweare by the name of the Lord Deut. 6. 13. under it he implieth the confession of his name and truth as when another Prophet speaketh in like sort of swearing Esa. 45. 23. Paul expoundeth it Confessing unto God Rom. 14. 11. Oft times we shall see in Moses and the Prophets a defect of words which reason teacheth are to be supplied as Adam begat in his likenesse Gen. 5. 3. that is begat a sonne The Scripture sheweth us to supply such wants as I the God of thy father Exod. 3. 6 that is I am the God Mat. 22. 32. Samuel saith Vzza put forth to the Arke 2 Sam. 6. 6. another doth explaine it Vzza put forth his hand to the Arke 1 Chron. 13. 9. One Prophet writeth briefly I with scorpions 2 Chron. 10. 11. another morefully I will chastise you with scorpions 1 King 12. 11. One saith no more but in the ninth of the moneth 2 King 25. 3. another supplieth the want thus In the fourth moneth in the ninth of the moneth Ierem. 52. 6. So thy servant hath found to pray 1 Chro. 17. 25. that is hath found in his heart to pray 2 Sam. 7. 17. and many the like Here men may see the reason why translators doe sometime adde words which are to be discerned by the different letter for the originall tongue affecteth brevity but we desire and need plainnesse of speech Yea this may helpe in weighty controversies as Iesus tooke bread and blessed and brake Matth. 26. 26. here some imagining a tranfubstantiation of the bread blame those that translate he brake it as adding to the scripture whereas such additions are necessarily understood many a hundred time in the Bible and the same Apostle else-where saith Christ blessed and brake Matth. 14. 19. when another writeth he blessed them and brake Luk. 9. 16. which a third Evangelist explaineth he blessed and brake the loaves or bread Mark 6. 41. againe hee saith a man shall leave father and mother Matth. 19. 5. when Moses plainely saith his father and his mother Gen. 2. 24. But such usuall defects all of any judgement will soone understand On the other hand but more seldome there is an abundance of words though not in vaine which in other languages may be made fewer and the holy Ghost approveth it As where Moses writeth a man a prince Exod. 2. 14. Stephen saith onely a prince omitting the word man Act. 7. 27. So one Prophet saith men shooters 1 Sam. 31. 3. another saith but shooters 1 Chron. 10. 3. Esay saith a man of his counsell Esa. 40. 13. Paul abridgeth it his councellor 1 Cor. 2. 16. And one said saying on this manner 2 Chron. 18. 19. or one said on this manner 1 King 22. 20. with sundry other of like sort But the change of names words and letters as also of number time person and the like is very frequent and needfull to be observed As Moses calleth a man Iob Gen. 46. 13. elsewhere hee nameth him Iashub Num. 26. 24. Ashbel Gen. 46. 21. is by another Prophet named Iediael 1 Chron 7. 6. Nebuchad nezer 2 King 25. 1. is also Nebuchad-rezar ler. 52. 4. Iether an Ismaelite by nature 1 Chro. 2. 17. is Iithra an Israelite by grace 2 Sam. 17. 25. Hoshea is called also Iehoshua Numb 13. 16. and Ieshua Ezra 3. 2. in Greck Iesus Act. 7. 45. So enemie 1 King 8. 37. 44. is written enemies 2 Chron. 6. 28. 34 iniquitie Ier. 31. 34. is iniquities Heb. 8. 12. And contrariwise Matthew saith they brought the Asse and the colt and put on them their clothes and set Iesus upon them Matth. 21. 7. which Marke sheweth to be meant of the Colt only and that Iesus sare upon him M●k 11. 7. So the theeves are said to revile Christ Matth. 27. 44. when one of them did it Luk. 23. 39. Likewise heare ye but understand not Esa 6. 9. or ye shall heare but shall not understand Act. 28. 26. and the way before me Mal. 3 1. or the way before thee Matth. 11. 10. Smite thou the sheepheard Zach. 13. 7. which Christ citeth thus I will smite the sheepheard Matth. 26. 31. and I tooke the thirtie peeces of silver Zach. 11. 13. or they tooke them Matth. 27. 9. Of which changes there are many and of great use throughout the Scriptures Questions are as in other languages so in the holy tongue used for carnest affirmations deprecations denials forbiddings wishes and the like as when the people said Why should we dye Deut. 5. 25. it was both an asseveration that they should dye and a prayer against it The Scripture openeth it selfe as why doth he speake blasphemies Mark 7. 2. which another Evangelist writeth this man blasphemeth Math. 9. 3. And art thou come to torment us Mat. 8. 29. wherein was implied I pray thee torment me not Luk. 8. 28. So are they not written 2 King 20. 20. is affirmed behold
to repent or else then to perish This long-sufferance of God the Apostle mentioneth in 1 Pet. 3. 19. 20. 2 Pet. 2. 5. and sheweth the summe and end of his preaching to be that they might bee judged according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the spirit 1 Pet. 4. 6. that is they repenting and turning unto Christ the body might be dead because of sinne but the spirit be life because of righteousnesse Rom. 8. 10. So the Chaldee here saith A terme shall bee given them of 120 yeares if they will convert So many were the yeeres of Moses life Deut 34. 7. Vers. 4. Gyants in Hebrew Nephilim which hath the signification of falling as being Apostates faine from God and being fierce and cruell to men falling on them as Iob. 1. 15. and whom they made by feare and force to fall before them Such were men of great stature that other men were as grashoppers in respect of them Num. 13. 33. The Chaldee calleth them Gibbaraja that is mighty men and so Nimrod was Gibbor that is mighty on the earth Gen. 10. 8. the Greeke nameth them Giganies whereof our English is derived and the Greeke Poets feyned them to be borne of the earth noting them to be earthly minded not caring for heaven and borne also of such parents after that that is as before so after God had threatned their destruction that they were not bettered or brought to repentance went in namely into the chamber as is expressed Iudg. 15. 1. and consequently companyed with them in like sense as knowing is used before Gen. 4. 1. So David went in to Bathsheba Psal. 51. 2. Abram to Agar Genes 16. 2. Iaakob to his wife Gen. 29. 21. a modest phrase they bare to weet the women last mentioned or they the men begat children to themselves The Hebrew implyeth both mighty men the Greeke translateth this also Giants and it seemeth to bee an explanation of their former name men of name that is of renowm famous and renowmed Contrary hereto is men without name Iob 30. 8. Vers. 5. wickednesse or malice evill every imagination or the whole fiction the word is generall for all and every thing that the heart first imagineth formeth purposeth 1 Chron. 28. 9. and 29. 18. Luke 1. 51. every day or all the day that is continually The Greeke translateth thus and every one mindeth in his heart carefully for evils all dayes Vers. 6. it repented Iohovah This is spoken not properly for God repenteth not 1 Sam. 15. 29. but after the manner of men for God changing his deed and dealing otherwise then before doth as men doe when they repent So 1 Sam. 15. 11. the earth hereby teaching that there was none on earth whom God respected So that but for the second man Christ the Lord from heaven 1 Cor. 15. 47. whom Noe beleeved in the world had now beene consumed So the Hebrew Doctors as the Zohan upon this place saith man on the earth to except the man above or the superior Adam who was not on the earth it grieved him The Scripture giveth to God joy griefe anger c. not as any passions or contrary affections for he is most simple and unchangeable Iam. 1. 17. but by a kind of proportion because he doth of his immutable nature and will such things as men doe with those passions and changes of affections So heart hands eyes and other parts are attributed to him for effecting such things as men cannot doe but by such members God is said to be grieved for the corruption of his creatures contrariwise when he restoreth them by his grace hee rejoyceth in them Esay 65. 19. Psal. 104. 31. Of these phrases spoken concerning God the Hebrew Doctors write thus Forasmuch as it is cleare that God is no corporall or bodily thing it is also cleare that not any corporall accident or occurrence doth befall unto him neither composition nor division nor place nor measure nor going up nor comming downe nor right hand nor left hand nor face nor back-parts nor sitting nor standing neither beginning nor ending nor number of yeares neither is he chāgeable for nothing can cause him to change Neither is there in him death or life as the life of a corporall living thing nor folly nor wisedome according to humane wisedome nor sleepe nor waking nor anger nor laughter nor joy nor griefe nor silence nor speech as the sonnes of Adam speake c. but all these and the like things spoken of him in the Law and Prophets are parabolicall and figurative As when it is said Hee that sitteth in the heaven doth laugh Psalm 2. and the like of all such our wise men have said The Law speaketh according to the language of the sonnes of Adam And so he saith Doe they provoke me to anger Ier. 7. 19. againe hee saith I am the Lord I change not Mal. 3. 6. and if he be sometime angry and sometime joyfull then is he changeable But all these things are not found save in persons obscure and base that dwell in houses of clay whose foundation is in the dust but he the blessed God is blessed and exalted above all these Maimony in Iesud hatorah chap. 1. S. 11. 12. Vers. 7. blot-out that is destroy and abolish from man that is both men and beasts For as the beasts were made for man Gen. 1. 28. so they became subject to vanity and destruction through mans iniquity Gen. 3. 17. Rom. 8. 20. Vers. 8. found grace that is obtained favour or mercies as the Chaldee translateth it So this phrase is interpreted in Greeke sometime finding grace Heb. 4. 16. sometime finding mercy 2. Tim. 1. 18. and grace is opposed unto workes and unto debt Rom. 11. 6. and 4. 4. And it is a speciall title of God that he is named Gracious Exod. 34. 6. and a speciall prerogative of his people that they find grace in his eyes as after of Lot Gen. 19. 19. of Moses Exod. 33. 12. of David Act. 7. 45. of Marie Luke 1. 30. And the letters of * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Noes name are the letters of * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grace in Hebrew the order being changed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These three letters in the Hebrew Bibles do signifie the Parasha or great Section of Moses law which was a Lecture on the Sabbath day read in the Iewes Synagogues as is observed Act. 15. 21. to which was added a Lecture out of the Prophets Act. 13. 15. And the first Paragraph or Section which is from the creation hitherto they call Breshith that is In the beginning this second which reacheth to the twelvth Chapter they call Noe and so the rest There are in all 54. Sections in the Law which they read in the 52 Sabbaths joyning two of the shortest twice together that the whole might be finished in a yeares space Hereof the Hebrew Doctors write thus It is a common custome throughout all Israel that
containing sixe hand bredths or a foot and a halfe so 300 cubits make 450 foot height or stature By these measures here set downe the Arke was by proportion like in shape rod Coffin for a mans body sixe times so long as it was broad and ten times so long as it was high which was commodious for swimming and steddinesse against windes fit also to figure out Christs death and buriall and ours with him by mortification of the old man as the Apostle apply eth this type to baptisme 1 Pet. 3. 20. 21. whereby wee are become dead and buried with Christ Rom. 6. 3. 4. 6. Vers. 16. A 〈◊〉 light whether by one or by many windowes is uncertaine after there is mention of a window that was in the Arke Gen. 8. 6 The Hebrew Zohar which the Chaldee translateth Neh●r Light is not found in the Scripture but here of it Zaherajim is used for the noone day light Some Hebrew Doctors say it was a precious stone hanged in the Arke which gave light to all creatures which were therein Pirk R. Eliezar chap. 23. This clear-light signified the enlightning of the Church by the holy Ghost as the doore signified faith in Christ Ephes. 1. 17. 18. Ioh. 10. 9. in a cubit or unto a cubit it from above by it seemeth the Arke to be meant rather then the light or window which Arke had the roofe arched or bowed but a cubit that it might bee almost flat yet so as the water might easily slide off third stories or third nests that is roomes as v. 14. So many distinct stories there are also within mans bodie And Paul maketh three parts of man body soule and spirit 1 Thess. 5. 23. Likewise in Moses Tabernacle and in Solomons Temple were three rooms the Courtyard the Holy place and the Most holy Exod. 25. and 27. 1 King 6. The Church also figured by the Arke hath three states before the Law under the Law and under Christ Rom. 5. 13. 14. Ioh. 1. 27. Vers. 17. I doe bring or am bringing the Lord hereupon is said to sit at the flood Psal. 29. 10. as being the judge from whom this wrath proceeded and moderator in mercy to Noe. the flood or deluge the Hebrew mabbul is a peculiar naine to this flood which drowned the world and made all things fade and dye on earth whereof it hath the name In Greeke the holy Ghost calleth it Kataclysmos of the abundant shedding and inundation of the waters Mat. 24. 38. Vers. 18. I will establish that is make sure and stable and faithfully keepe my covenant For so the word importeth and other Scriptures open it as establish thou 2 Sam. 7. 25. is expounded let it bee faithfull or sure 1 Chron. 17. 23. and to stablish the words of a covenant 2 King 23. 3. is to doe or performe them 2 Chron. 34. 31. and to continue in doing them Gal. 3. 10. with Deut. 27. 26. my covenant or testament a disposition of good things faithfully declared which God here usually calleth his as arising from his grace towards Noe vers 8. and all men but implying also conditions on mans part and therefore is elsewhere named our covenant Zach. 9. 11. The Apostles call it Diathekee that is a Testament or Disposition and it is mixed of properties both of covenant and of testament as the Apostle sheweth in Heb. 9. 16. 17. c. and of both may be named a testamentall covenant or a covenanting testament whereby the disposing of Gods favours and good things to us his children is declared and thou shalt enter c This explaineth the Covenant made on Gods part that hee would save Noe and his houshold from death by the Arke and on Noes part that he should in faith and obedience make and enter into the Arke so committing himselfe to Gods preservation Heb. 11. 7. And under this the covenant or testament of eternall salvarion by Christ was also implyed the Apostle testifying that the antitype or like figure hereunto even Baptisme doth also now save us 1 Pet. 3. 21. which baptisme is a seale of our salvation Mar. 16. 16. wives Hereupon the Apostle observeth how in the Arke a few that is eight soules were saved by water 1 Pet. 3. 20. Vers. 19. two or by twoes that is by paires which is after explained to be seven of every clean and two of every uncleane beast Gen. 7. 2. Thus God sheweth himselfe to be the saver of man and beast Psal. 36. 7. to keepe alive that is that thou maist keepe alive as the Greeke explaineth it that thou maist nourish Observe how verbs indefinite doe often times include though not expresse a certaine person especially such as was spoken of before as Eccles. 4. 17. or 5. 1. they know not to do evill that is they know not that they doe evill Zach. 12. 10. they shall mourne and to be bitternesse that is and they shall be in bitternesse This the Hebrew text it selfe sometime manifesteth as Esa. 37. 18. 19. they have laid wast and to cast their gods c. that is and they have cast their gods as is written 2 King 1● 18. So in 1 Chron. 17. 4. build me an house to dwell in for which in 2 Sam. 7. 5. is written build me an house for me to dwell in Likewise in the Greek as Suzetein to question that is they questioned Mar. 1. 17. for which another Evangelist saith Sunelaloun they spake together Luke 4. 36. not lawfull to eate Luke 6. 4. that is for him to eate Mat. 12. 4. not to enter Luke 22. 40. or that ye enter not Mat. 26. 41. Also the holy Ghost so translateth as to be my salvation Esay 49. 6. which Paul citing saith that thou maist be my salvation Act. 13. 47. So in Gen. 19. 20. and 23. 8. Exod. 9. 16. and often through-out the Scriptures Vers. 20. shall come to thee to weet of their owne accord by my instinct Signifying hereby that Noe should not need to hunt for them So it was before with Adam in Gen. 2. 19. to keepe alive that is that thou maist keepe them alive as before in vers 19. Or to be kept alive as the Greeke here translateth to be nourished with thee For a verb indefinite active is often to be understood passively as a time to beare Eccles. 3. 2. that is to be borne What to doe Est. 6. 6. that is what shall be done So for to declare my name Ex. 9. 16. is by the Apostles authority translated that my name may bee declared Rom. 9. 17. See Gen. 2. 20. and 4. 13. Vers. 22. And Noe did it This commendeth Noes singular faith and obedience in undertaking and performing so great a worke full of infinite doubts feares troubles charges c. wherefore hee hath of the holy Ghost this good report By faith Noe being spoken to of God of things not seene as yet moved with reverence or using carefulnesse preparedan Arke to the saving of his house by the
these two signifieth in Ezek. 3. 6. The Greek translateth of a smal voice of a slow tongue the Chaldee of a heavy speech and of a deep tongue This as other things in Moses may have reference to the effect of the Law which he administred as on the contrary the Psalmist prophesying of Christ had his tongue the penne of a speedy writer Psal. 45. 2. and the Spirit which is received not by the works of Moses law but by the hearing of faith in Christ Gal. 3. 2. causeth prophesie and other words of wisdome and knowledge Act. 2. 18. 1. Gor. 12. 8. 10. causeth the lips of those that are asleepe to speake Song 7. 9. By the Hebrew cannons no Priest that stammered lisped or was of an heavy mouth or tongue might lift up his hands to blesse the people Maimony in Misneh treat of Prayer chap. 15. S 〈…〉 Soe the notes on Num. 6. 23. Vers. 11 hath made or as the Greek translateth hath given Heb put the mouth to 〈◊〉 open eyed or open cared for the Hebrew word signifieth both these Esa. 42. 7. 20. and may have reference here to both The Greeke tranflateth the seeing Compare Psal. 146. 8 Esa. 61. 1. and 33. 5. 6. Vers. 12. I will be The Chaldee expounds it my word shall be the Greeke I will open thy mouth will t●aoh by my spirit as Christ in like manner promiseth his Apostles Matth. 10. 19. 20. Mark 13. 11. Luke 12. 11. 12. Vers. 13. by the hand thou shouldest that is by his hand or ministery whom thou shouldest send as being fitterthand or by the hand of any other whom thou wilt send The Chaldee and That gum Ierusalemy translate by the hand of him whom it is meet to send and the Greeke 〈◊〉 choose an● then able man whom thou wilt send Moses 〈◊〉 greatnesse of the worke would with draw his shoulder through infirmity God hereby 〈…〉 wing the imperfection of Moses administration and impossibility of the law to bring men to perfection when Moses could not bring Israel into the promised land 〈◊〉 3. 24. 25. 27. 28. Romans 8. 3. Hebrewes 7. 19. The hand of one is usually put for his ministerie as Moses now was s●m of God by the hand of the Angel which appeared to him in the bush 〈◊〉 7. 35. See Exodus 9. 35. Psal. 97 2● Hag. 1. 1. Mal. 1. 1. Vers. 24. speaking speake that is speake well and eloquently Thus God distributeth his gifts by measure diversly to one is given by the spirit the word of wisedome to 〈…〉 ther the word of knowledge to another kindes of tongues to another the interpretation of tongues c. 1 Cor. 12. 8. 10. So among the Apostles 2 Cor. 11. 6. and 10. 10. Mar. 3. 17. Of this Aaron see after in Exod. 6. 20. 26. Vers. 15. the words which I have spoken to thee as the Greeke saith my words God signifying hereby that the Priests which came of Aaron should receive their doctrine from the Law which was given by Moses as Ezek. 44. 24. Mal. 4. 4 Levit. 6. 8. 9. I will be the Chaldee faith my word shall be the Greeke I will open thy mouth as vers 12. Verse 16. hee shall bee or it shall bee that hee shall be the word is doubled for more vehemency and assurance a mouth that is a spokes-man or as the Chaldee saith an interpreter In Exod 7. 1. he is callled his Prophet a God the Chaldee saith Rab that is a Master and the Ierusalemy Thargum addeth an inquirer of Doctrine from before the Lord. The Greeke translateth in things pertaining to God which very phrase Paul useth in Hebrewes 5. 1. The Hebrew Elohim God is after attributed to Iudges and Magistrates Exod. 22. 8. 9. Psal. 82. 6. and the reason is rendred by Christ because the word of God is given to them Ioh. 10. 34. 35. Here Moses though the yonger brother Exodus 7. 7. is preferred before Aaron his elder so God oftentimes disposed see Gene● 25. 23. and 48. 19. Vers. 17. this rod which was turned into a serpent as the Greeke addeth for explanation In verse 20. it is called the rod of God it was before Moses shepherds staffe Vers. 18. Iether called after Iethro in Greeke Iethor see Exod. 3. 1. in peace or with peace the Greeke translateth with health or welfare Vers. 19. thy saule that is thy life as Genesis 19. 17. So the Chaldee well explaineth it that sought to ●ill thee Though sometime to seeke the soule is taken in the good part as none seeketh for my soule Psal. 142. 5. that is careth for me or for my life yet usually it signifieth seeking to kill one and is sometime explained seeking the soule to take it away as 〈◊〉 Kings 19. 10. This phrase is often used So Matth. 2. 20. Vers. 20. sonnes two Gershom and Eliezer Exodus 18. 3 4. an asse the Greeke translateth 〈◊〉 as moe then one and often the Hebrew putteth the singular for many See Genesis 3. 2. This may argue Moses poore estate as Christs Zichar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●od of God that is which God had appo 〈…〉 him to worke miracles with as verse 3. 17. So the Chaldee explaineth it the rod whereby miracles should be done from before the Lord. So in Exod. 17. 9. Vers. 21. have put or shall p 〈…〉 t in thy hand that is give thee power to doe What wonders signifie see on Exodus 7. 3 make strong or make 〈◊〉 fast 〈◊〉 and hard that hee shall not re●ut or yeeld therefore i● Exodus 7. 3. God useth another word I will den and so the Greeke translateth this here As before God 〈◊〉 Pharaohs heart to hate his people Psalme 105. 25. so now hee is said to make-strong and to harden his heart and of King Sichon the Lord hardened his spirit and made his heart strong or obstinate Deuteronomie 2. 30. and hardned the hearts of the other Canaanites Ioshua 11. 20. and made fatte and hardened the hearts of the Israelites Esay 6. 10. Iohn 12. 40. and gave them the spirit of slumber Romans 11. 8. As hardnesse is sinne so Pharaoh hardened his owne heart Exodus 9. 34. and so all wicked men Psalme 95. 8. but as it is a judgement and punishment for sinne GOD hardneth using hereunto sundry meanes sometime withdrawing his outward word and workes Psalme 147. 19. 20. Matthew 11. 21. 23. sometime the inward working of his spirit Genesis 6. 3. and sending outward meanes to deceive them 1 Kings 22. 20. 23. or strong delusions to blinde their mindes 2 Thes. 2. 10. 11. Romans 11. 8. 10. or making his word which they abuse to be the favour of death unto them 2 Corinthians 2. 15. 16. 1 Pet. 2. 8. or giving them over to a reprobate minde Romans 1. 28. or to Satan to be blinded and deluded unto destruction 2 Corinthians 4. 4. 1 Kings 22. 22 2 Thessal 2. 9. 12. So God is said to determine and to doe those things but justly
Gen. 2. 3. and 6. 20. Verse 16. it is the sinne c. or sinne is laid upon thy people It may be understood of the Egyptians as if the sinne or fault were theirs and so the Chaldee explaineth it Thy people sinneth against them that is against thy seruants the Israelites Or sinne and so punishment is laid upon thy people us the Israelites without cause and so the Greeke translateth wilt thou therefore wrong thy people Sinne is often used for punishment See Gen. 4. 7. Vers. 19. them in evill that is both themselves as the Greeke translateth it and the people over whom they were to be in an evill case saying vnderstand from verse 13. and 18. the taske-masters and the king also saying or after it was said see verse 14. Vers. 20. lighted upon that is met with as unlooked for or fell upon them with hard words as verse 21. It is the word used before in verse 3. and Gen. 28. 11. Vers. 21. judge the Chaldee saith be avenged An intemperate speech and an example of great infirmitie imputing the cause of their troubles to Gods ministers forgetting their former faith and thankefulnesse Exod. 4. 31. to stinke that is as the Greeke expla●neth it to be abhorred see Gen. 34. 30. to give or and hath given as to hold the arke 1 Chro. 13. 9. is expounded and held it 2 Sam. 6. 6. Vers. 23. delivering thou c. that is thou hast not at all delivered nor shewed any likelihood as yet thereof And here Moses himselfe bewraieth the remnants of his former infirmitie Exod. 4. 10. 13. CHAP. VI. 1 God comforteth Moses renewing his promise by his name Iehovah 5 and remembrance of his covenant 6 Hee sendeth him with these comforts unto Israel 9 but they hearken not unto him 11 He sendeth him againe to Pharaoh though Moses is loth to goe 14. The genealogie of Ruben 15 of Simeon 18 of Levi of whom came Moses and Aaron 28 A repeating of Moses mission to Pharaoh and his exception against it AND Iehovah said unto Moses Now shalt thou see what I will doe to Pharaoh for by a strong hand shall hee send them away and by a strong hand shall he drive them out of his land 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 AND God spake unto Moses and said unto him I am Iehovah And I appeared unto Abraham unto Isaak and unto Iakob by the name of God Almightie but by my name Iehovah was I not knowne to them And also I established my covenant with them to give unto them the land of Canaan the land of their sojournings in the which they sojourned And also I have heard the groaning of the sons of Israel whom the Egyptians keepe in servitude and I have remembred my covenant Therefore say thou unto the sonnes of Israel I am Iehovah and I will bring you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians and I will rid you out of their servitude and I will redeeme you with a stretched out arme and with great judgments And I will take you to me for a people and I will be to you a God and yee shall know that I am Iehovah your God which bringeth you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians And I will bring you in unto the land which I did lift up my hand to give it to Abraham to Isaak and to Iakob and I will give it to you for an heritage I am Iehovah And Moses spake so unto the sonnes of Israel but they hearkened not unto Moses for anguish of spirit and for hard servitude And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Goe in speake unto Pharaoh King of Egypt that he send away the sonnes of Israel out of his land And Moses spake before Iehovah saying Behold the sonnes of Israel have not hearkened unto mee and how shall Pharaoh heare mee and I am of uncircumcised lips And Iehovah spake unto Moses and unto Aaron and gave them a charge unto the sonnes of Israel and unto Pharaoh the king of Egypt to bring forth the sonnes of Israel out of the land of Egypt These be the heads of their fathers houses the sonnes of Ruben the first-borne of Israel Enoch and Phallu Hezron and Carmi these be the families of Ruben And the sonnes of Simeon Iemuel and Iamin and Ohad Iachin Zohar Saul the sonne of a Canaanitesse these are the families of Simeon And these are the names of the sonnes of Levi acording to their generations Gershon and Kohath and Merari and the yeers of the life of Levi were an hundred seven and thirtie yeeres The sons of Gershon Libni Shimei according to their families And the sonnes of Kohath Amram and Ishar and Hebron and Vzziel and the yeeres of the life of Kohath were an hundred three and thirty yeers And the sons of Merari Mahali Mushi these are the families of Levi according to their generations And Amram tooke Iochebed his aunt unto him to wife and she bare to him Aaron and Moses and the yeeres of the life of Amram were an hundred seven and thirty yeeres And the sonnes of Ishar Korah and Nepheg and Zichri And the sonnes of Vzziell Misael and Elsaphan and Sithri And Aaron tooke Elisabet daughter of Amminadab sister of Naasson unto him to wife and shee and she bare unto him Nadab and Abihu Eleazar and Ithamar And the sonnes of Korah Assir and Elkanah and Abiasaph these are the families of the Korhite And Eleazar sonne of Aaron tooke unto him one of the daughters of Putiel unto him to wife and she bare unto him Phinehas these are the heads of the fathers of the Levites according to their families This is that Aaron and Moses unto whom Iehovah said Bring out the sonnes of Israel from the land of Egypt according to their armies These are they which spake to Pharaoh King of Egypt to bring out the sonnes of Israel from Egypt this Moses and Aaron And it was in the day when Iehovah spake unto Moses in the land of Egypt That Iehovah spake unto Moses saying I am Iehovah speake thou unto Pharaoh King of Egypt all that I speake unto thee And Moses said before Iehovah Behold I am of uncircumcised lips and how shall Pharaoh hearken unto me Annotations BY a strong hand that is by force and constraint God even compelling him thereto by his judgments ●s verse 6. and Exod. 3. 20. This was fulfilled Exod. 12. 31. 33. and 13. 3. 9. celebrated alwaies after Deut. 6. 21. 22. and 26. 7. 8. Psal. 136. 10. 11. 12. Ier. 32. 20. 21. Dan. 9. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the fourteenth Section or Lecture of the Law called of the beginning of the third verse And I appeared See Gen. 6. 9. and 28. 10. Vers. 3. Almighty or Alsufficient see Gen. 17. 1. The Greeke translateth being theit God The two titles here expressed Ael God and Shaddai Almighty are not used in Scripture till Abrahams time and in speech to him Gen. 14. 18. and
Greeke and Chaldee translate gathered this explaineth the former word in verse 19. Verse 21. set not his heart that is regarded not See Exod. 7. 23. he left or he also left But the word also or and may be omitted as is shewed on Gen. 8. 6. Vers. 23. gave voices that is sent noyses of thunder so the Scripture elsewhere speaketh of the voice or noise of thunder Rev. 6. 1. and thunders uttered their voices Revel 10. 3. And although sometime voices and thunders are mentioned distinctly as in Rev. 4. 5. and 8. 5. yet here by voices seeme to be meant thunders So at the giving of the Law Exod. 19. 16. and 20. 18. haile with such God killed also the Canaanites Ios. 10. 11. And unto Iob he saith Hast thou seene the treasures of the Haile which I have reserved against the time of trouble against the day of battell and war Iob. 38. 22. 23. Vnto this seventh plague of Egypt the Lord compareth the seventh plague of the Antichristians where upon the viall poured out into the aire there were voices and thunders and lightnings and earthquake such as was not since men were upon the earth and a great haile of talent weight fell upon men for which they blasphemed God Rev. 16. 17. 18. 21. fire went that is ranne along on the ground as the Greeke translateth it which was extraordinary and most terrible so that not the haile onely but the lightnings and fierie flames consumed their cattle as the Psalmist witnesseth Psal. 78. 47. 48. and 105. 32. 33. So in other judgements haile and fire is mentioned in the destruction of Davids enemies and of the Assyrians Psal. 18. 13. 14. 15. Esay 30. 30. 31. Vers. 24. catching it selfe that is one flash of lightning taking hold of another so the flames infoulding themselves did increase and burne more terribly This word is used onely here and in Ezek. 1. 4. The Greeke translateth it inflaming or setting on fire which word the Apostle useth I am 3. 6. and so the Chaldee saith inflaming it selfe And David calleth it fire of flames Psal. 1 5. 32. a nation or to a nation which the Greek explaineth since there was a nation upon it A like phrase is in Re 16. 18. since men were upon the earth Ver. 25. from man c. that is both men beasts every tree the Gr. saith all the trees meaning of all sorts for there were some left remaining for an after plague Exod. 10. 5. A like phrase is in Act. 10. 12. all four footed beasts c. before in verse 6. Vers. 26. no haile So God had preserved them from former plagues v. 6. and ch 8 ver 22. and so God promiseth to preserve his people in quiet resting places when it shall haile on the forrest Esa. 32. 18. 19. Ver. 28. for it is enough or and let it be enough so the Greeke Interpreters tooke it t●anslating and let it cease voices of God that is thunders from God or mighty loud thunders as mountaines of God Psal. 26. 7. are high and strong mounts see the notes on Gen. 30. 5. and 23. 6. The Greeke retaineth the Hebrew phrase no longer stay Hebr. ye shall not adde to stand that is to stay or remaine as the Greek translateth or as the Chaldee expounds it be delaied V. 29. my hands Hebt my palmes that is as the Chaldee explaineth it my hands in prayer So in v. 33. The spreading out of the palmes of the hands was a common gesture used in prayer as kneeling also was signifying a desire that they might receive from God the things they craved so Salomon did when he prayed 2 Chron. 6. 13. and David Psal. 143. 6. and Ezra Ezr. 9. 9. and others Iob 11. 13. Like this was the lifting up of the hands where of see Exod. 17. 11. is Iehovah's or belongeth to Iehovah as the Creator Possessor Governor of all things doing whatsoever he pleaseth in heavens earth seas c. Psal. 135. 6. Of this sentence there is often mention and great use in the Scriptures see Deut. 10. 14. 15. Psal. 24. 1. c. 1 Cor. 10. 26. 28. V. 30. will not yet feare this the event shewed to be true v. 35. Hereby it appeareth that the prayers of the faithful may remove temporary plagues even from the wicked and impenitent Compare 1 King 18. 42. 45. Exod 32 11. 14. 34. 35. V. 31. in the eare the Hebrew Abib signifieth a greene eare of corne with the stalke Levit. 2. 14. Of it the month when corde was newly ripe is called Abib where of see Exod. 13. 4. bolled or in the stalke the Greeke translateth it seeding V. 32. ●ye or the graine called Zea or Spelt in Hebrew Cussemeth of this is mention also in Ezek. 4. 9. Esay 28. 25. The Hebrew Doctors count it a kinde of wheat as Maimony sheweth in treat of Leven ch 5. S. 1. hidden Hebrew darke or obscure that is hid under ground not to be seen the Greeke translateth it lateward Vers. 33. haile ceased This sheweth the effect of Moses faith and prayer the Apostle noteth the like of Elias who prayed and it rained not on the earth by the space of three yeeres and sixe moneths and he prayed againe and the heaven gaveraine Iam. 5. 17. 18. This is written for our comfort for they were men subject to like passions as we are The same is to be observed in Exod. 10. 18. 19. and the other plagues which Moses by prayer tooke away Vers. 34. made heavie that is obstinate and hard See Exod. 7. 14. Vers. 35. waxed strong was made fast and hard see Exod. 4. 21. by the hand that is by the ministerie or prophesie of Moses who had signified so much before verse 30. So Gods word came by the hand of Haggai Hag. 1. 1. by the hand of Malachy Mal. 1. 1. and by the hand of all the Prophets 2 King 17. 13. that is by them as his ministers and instruments And the hand of the Lord sometime is the spirit of prophecie 2 King 3. 15. CHAP. X. 1. God sheweth Moses wherefore he hardned Pharaohs heart 3 Locusts are threatned to bee sent 7 Pharaoh moved by his servants inclineth to let Israel goe but changeth his minde 12 The eighth plague Locusts come upon Egypt 16 Pharaoh confesseth his sinns asketh forgivenesse and desireth Moses prayer 19 The Locusts are taken away and Pharaohs heart is hardened 21 Darkenesse the ninth plague is sent upon Egypt 24 Pharaoh would send Israel away but stay their cattell 25 Moses refuseth to leave a hoofe behind 27 Pharaoh is hardned and forbiddeth Moses on paine of death to see his face any more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 AND Iehovah said unto Moses Goe in unto Pharaoh for I have made heavie his heart and the heart of his seruants that I may set these my signes in the midst of him And that thou maist tell in the eares of thy sonne and of thy sonnes so●●e the things
fire and the thunders and the lightnings and he went neere into the thicke darknesse and a voice spake unto him and we heard it Moses Moses goe say unto them thus and thus And so it is said face to face the Lord spake with you Deut. 5. 4. c. This standing at mount Sinai it selfe alone was an evident confirmation of his prophesie that it was truth and without all suspicion in it as it is written Lo I come unto thee in the thicke cloud that the people may heare when I speake with thee and may beleeve in thee for ever Exodus 19. 9. So that before this thing they beleeved not in him with such a beleefe as continueth for ever but with a beleefe that had doubtfull conceits and thoughts after it Maimony in Misn. in Iesudei hatorah ch 8. S. 1. Vers. 10. sanctifie them that is bid them and looke that they doe sanctifie and holily prepare themselves that they may be humbled at my feet to receive my words as Deut. 33. 3. This was by cleansing themselves from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit 2 Cor. 7. 1. inwardly by faith Act. 15. 9. outwardly by washing their garments whereof see Gen. 35. 2. and their bodies as appeareth by other places that shew the sanctifying of the priests and people Levit 8. 6. and 15. 5. 6. 8. 13. 16. 18. 21. 22. c. and abstaining from their wives as after followeth here verse 15. Which things figured our sanctification and cleansing by Christ Iesus with the washing of water by the Word even the washing of regeneration and renewing of the holy Ghost Ephes. 5 26. Tit. 3. 5. From this precept the Hebrew Doctors gather their doctrine and practice for baptizing all whom they admit unto their Church and covenant as Maimony sheweth in Asurei Biah ch 13. and is more fully set downe in the annotations on Gen. 17. 12. V. 11. the third day which is thought to be the day that after was called Pentecost the 50. day after the Passeover then was a yeerly feast Exo. 23. 16. Lev. 23. 15. 16. c. Act. 20. 16. On this day the fiery law was now given on mount Sina on this day the fiery tongues were after given for preaching the Gospell in Ierusalem Acts 2. 1. 2. c. And many mysteries are of the third day in the Scriptures see the notes on Gen. 22. 4. Vers. 13. touch it or touch him that is the man or beast that shall touch the mountaine shall be so execrable unto you as yee shall not touch it with hand but stone it or shoot it through These ordinances were outward concerning the mount that might be touched terrible that the people could unbeare that which was commanded and shewed the nature and use of the law contrary to the Gospell on mount Sion as Paul explaineth it Heb. 12. 18. 20. 22. c. with a shot with arrow or dart as the Apostle in Greek openeth the Hebrew phrase shooting shot through Heb. 12. 20. the sound of the trumpet or the sounding trumpet called in Hebrew Iobel translated in Greeke voices and trumpets but the Apostle seemeth to expresse it by the sound or eccho of the trumpet Hebr. 12. 19. the Chaldee turneth it the trumpet Every 50. yeare was of the sounding of trumpets called Iobel the Iubilee Levit. 25. 10. see the annotations there and Ios. 6. 4. 5. is drawne long or draweth that is continueth the sound and so there be an end of the trumpets sounding shall goe up that is as the Chaldee paraphraseth when the trumpet shall be withdrawne they shall have leave to goe up and as the Gr. translateth when the voyces the trumpets the cloud are departed from the mountaine they shal goe up So that whiles the signes of Gods Majestie were on the mount the people were forbidden to approach but when they were ceased the people might goe up as to any other common mount wheras untill that time the mountaine was sanctified verse 23. Vers. 15. unto a wife or to a woman that is any of you unto his wife to lie with her as the Ierusalemy Thargum expoundeth it the ministerie of the bed A like speech passed betweene Achimelech the priest and David about eating of the holy bread 1 Sam. 21. 4. 5. This was for the more humiliation and preparing of the people as Paul teacheth that man wife may abstaine with consent for a time that they may give themselves to fasting and prayer 1 Cor. 7. 5. It seemeth also by the Law in Levit. 15. 18. that there was a figurative uneleannesse by all such copulation see the annotations on that place Vers. 16. voyces that is thunders see Exod. 9. 23. heavy that is very thicke cloud the Greeke translateth darkesome clouds These were signes of Gods glorious presence and of his judgements against the breakers of his Law the Prophets use the like words to signifie his Majestie Psal. 18. 9. 10. 12. 14. and 97. 2. 4. And these things were now done by the ministery of Angels Act. 7. 53. Gal. 3. 19. for God came with ten thousands of saints Deut. 33. 2. trumpet shewing the nature of the Law to manifest Gods will mens transgressions and to warne them of the wrath deserved Esay 58. 1. Ezek. 33. 3. Rom. 3. 20. and 4. 15. trembled or was afraid The spirit of bondage which was in the people caused them to feare Rom. 〈◊〉 15. for they were not perfect in the love of God 1 Iohn 4. 18. Vers. 17. to meet with God as the Chaldee paraphraseth with the Word of the Lord. Thus Moses as a Mediatour stood betweene the Lord and the people because they were afraid Deut. 5. 5. Gal. 3. 19. at the nether part without the bounds that Moses had limited vers 12. They flood here as the Hebrews write after the order that Moses mentioneth in Deut. 29. 10. 11. when after 40. yeeres he renewed the covenant First there were the firstborne the priests Exod. 19. 22. which came neare unto the Lord after them the Heads of the Tribes the Rulers after them the Elders then the officers after them all the men of Israel then the little ones after them the women and then the strangers Aben Ezra on Exod. 19. Vers. 18. on a smoke With clouds and smoke God often manifested his glorious presence to his people Exod. 40. 34. 35. 2 Chro. 5. 14. and 6. 1. and 7. 1. 2. Esay 6. 4. Rev. 15. 8. there was the hiding of his power Hab. 3. 4. descended God who filleth heaven and earth Ier. 23. 24. is said to descend or come downe to certaine places when hee there manifesteth his glory and it is spoken of him after the manner of men See the notes on Gen. 6. 6. and 11. 5. in fire for Gods Word is like to fire Ier. 23. 29. and his law was firie Deut. 33. 2. as hee himselfe is a consuming fire Deutro 4. 24. Thargum Ierusalemy explaineth it thus because the
reached but to the Iubilee so sometime it is but during life as 1 Sam. 1. 22. Thus by all meanes God provided to keepe men out of bondage as he had brought them out of Egyptian servitude to be his servants Levit. 25. 42. Nehem. 5. 8. And the Apostle saith If thou canst be made free use it rather 1 Cor. 7. 21. Especially God taught them hereby to labour for the Libertie which Christ at his Iubilee should bring unto them Ioh. 8. 32. 34. 36. and not to be the servants of men 1 Cor. 7. 23. And by this outward state of servants led them from the bondage of the Law at mount Sina to the freedome of the Gospell at mount Sion Galat. 4. 24. 25. 26. c. For the aule through the eare signified the sharpe iron precepts which men were bound to obey in their going out and comming in their whole administration till either the death of the master or the Iubilee did release them So the Apostle saith The Law hath dominion over a man as long as he liveth c. When wee were in the flesh the passions of sinnes which were by the Law wrought effectually in our members to bring forth fruit unto death but now we are delivered from the Law that being dead wherein we were held that we should serve in ne 〈…〉 of the spirit and not in oldnesse of the letter Romans 7. 1. 5. 6. Vers. 7. sell his daughter which the Hebrew canons say hee might not doe but while shee was a girle under the age and state of mariage not after neither might he sell her but for extreme povertie when he had nothing left of goods moveable or unmoveable unto the cloathes on his backe Maimony treat of Servants chap. 4. Sect. 1. 2. An example hereof was among the poore Iewes returned our of Babylon Nehem. 5. 1. 5. 8. maid-servant or hand maid see Gen. 16. 1. This servitude by the Law must bee but till the seventh yeere as was before for men-servants whom the Magistrates sold or till the Iubilee if it fell out before Deut 15. 12. Levit. 25. 40. or by the Hebrew canons till the death of her master as the servants that is as slaves basely and with dishonour for the Hebrew men and women might not be made to serve as servants but as hired persons and sojourners Levit. 25. 39. 40. Although therefore this by some is referred to the former law of men-servants in verse 2. 3. c. yet the Greeke translation changeth the gender and so understandeth it of bond-women or slaves And the Iew Doctors referre it to that which followeth in verse 26. 27. that an Hebrew handmaid goeth not out for losse of limme as of eye tooth c. but must receive satisfaction for such hurts as any other of Israel according to the Law in verse 24. Maimony treat of Servants chap. 4. Sect. 6. Vers. 8. evill that is displeasing as the Greeke also translateth it that he doe not betroth her unto himselfe o●to his sonne verse 9. Or who hath betrothed her to himselfe for the Hebrew hath both readings the first in the line the latter in the margine And the writing differeth in the eye * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lo not and to to himselfe but hath no difference in the eare so Moses hearing it of God did by his spirit write both and the margine is that which in the Hebrew is noted to be read The Hebrew Doctors in Thalmud Bab. in Nedarim chap. 4. fol. 37. b. say The words read and not written and written and not read were the tradition of Moses from mount Sinai that is as the Hebrew scholion on that place noteth so Moses received in Sinai and delivered to Israel The Chaldee version in this and other the like places translateth according to the margin an evident proofe that these divers readings were not added by the Masorites as some thinke seeing the Masorites were not so ancient The Greeke copies here varie some having hath betrothed her to him othersome hath not betrothed and so The●lotio and Symmachus also translated hath not betrothed The meaning seemeth to bee if he take dislike of her either before or after shee is betrothed By the Iewes canons An Hebrew maid might not be sold but unto one who either himselfe or his sonne might betroth her when she was mariageable As a man might not sell his daughter to his sonne because she was not meet for her master who was her brother nor for her masters sonns because shee was his fathers sister Maimony treat of Servants chap. 4. Sect. 11. shall he let her or cause her to be redeemed the Greeke translateth he shall redeeme her The Hebrewes say If her master have bethrothed her to him-selfe or to his sonne she is as other betrothed women and goeth not out but by the death of her husband or by bill and the commandement to betroth is before the commandement to redeeme If her master dye his sonne cannot betroth her to himselfe because she goeth out free by her masters death Maimony treat of Servants chap. 4. Sect. 7. 8. to a strange people that is to any stranger the Chaldee interprets it to another man And Maimony in the foresaid place Sect. 10. saith he may not sell her nor give her to another man whether he be one farre off or neere and if he either sell or give her it is nothing that he doth unfaithfully transgressed or dealt deceitfully and treacherously failing of that which was expected at his hands The Chaldee translateth he hath ruled over her Vers. 9. of daughters which the Chaldee explaineth of the daughters of Israel as is right and custome to be done with all other maids which are not servants This may be understood of giving a a dowrie as Exod. 22. 16. 17. and all other priviledges of a free woman Vers. 10. take him this the Greeke interpreteth take to himselfe though it may imply both the father and the sonne forespoken of her mariage dutie the due benevolence betweene man and wife such as the Apostle speaketh of 1 Cor. 7. 3. and so the Greek translateth it conversation or companying together the Hebrew Doctors also explain it from the phrase in Gen. 19. 31. to goe in unto her after the way of all the earth Vnto these three the Hebrewes adde seven moe their words are When a man marieth a wife whether she be a virein or otherwise be she great or small a daughter of Israel or a proselyte he oweth unto her ten things and she oweth foure Of the ten three are in the Law her food her rayment and her mariage duty that is to goe in unto her after the manner of all the earth And seven are by the doctrine of the Scribes The first is the principall of the dowrie which for a maid was fiftie shekels as is noted on Exod. 22. 17 and the other are called conditions of the dowrie and they are these to heale her
he would have observed as mysticall As the Arke signified Gods presence and the Table with shewbread the Church standing before him so this Candlesticke signified his Law in the light whereof his people doe serve him Psal. 119. 105. Pro. 6. 23. 2 Pet. 1. 19. And the sundry branches bowles knops and flowers shew the varietie of things and of delivering them in the Scripture some easie some hard to be understood 2 Pet. 3. 16. some histories some prophesies some parables c. Vers. 33. made like almonds the Chaldee translateth figured and the Greeke figured with almond nuts and this some referre to those also which follow the knop and the flower as if they had that forme The Almond tree hath the name in Hebrew of hastie bringing forth blossomes and fruit and God likeneth the hastie performance of his word unto It Ier. 1. 11. 12. So Aarons rod miraculously bare almonds Num. 17. 8. Vers. 37. seven lamps or the lamps thereof seven which figured the seven spirits that is the manifold graces of the Spirit of God as is written there were seven lamps of fire burning before the throne which are the seven spirits of God Revel 4. 5. be that is the priest as is expressed Exod. 27. 21. Lev. 24. 3. See the notes there to ascend that is as the Chaldee translateth to burne for that the flame ascends upward So in Exod. 27. 20. But the Greeke version here understands it of setting the lamps upon the top of the branches of the candlesticke● 〈◊〉 over against the face that is right forward or straight before it as the like phrase signifie 〈…〉 Ezek. 1. 9. 12. See also Numb 8. 2. Verse 39. a talene this is the greatest weight which 〈◊〉 use it contained three thousand she●els of which were two sorts common and holy as is shewed on Gen. 20. 16. This talent as all other weights about the Sanctuary being sacred was an hundred and twenty pound weight or three thousand holy shekels See the notes on Exodus 38. 24. 26. Vers. 40. that thou make or and make to wit all these things mentioned in this Chapter and those which follow as the Apostle expoundeth it see that thou make all things according c. Heb. 8. 5. And of tentimes things set downe in this manner are expounded universally as 2 Chron 6. 30. thou onely knowest the heart of the sonnes of men that is of all the sonnes of men 1 King 8. 39. So the word shall be established Deuter. 19. 15. that is every word 2 Cor. 13. 1. and till I put thine enemies Psal. 110. 1. that is all of them 1 Cor. 15. 25. as wee for give our debtors Matth. 6. 12. that is every one indebted to us Luk. 11. 4. and many the like patterne in Greeke type hereupon the Apostle noteth that the priests of Israel served unto the example and shadow of heavenly things Hebr. 8. 5. So all this glorious furniture of the Tabernacle was not for worldly pompe but for spirituall mysterie of heavenly graces which should be injoyed by Christ whereof see Revel 4. and 21. chapters Neither might Moses alter the matter forme or fashion of any particular from the patterne shewed him but was strictly bound unto it and so did observe it Exodus 39. 42. 43. CHAP. XXVI 1 God commandeth to make a Tabernacle with ten curtaines embroidered 7 And a Tent over it of eleven certaines of Goats haire 14 And a covering for the Tent of Rams skinnes and a covering of Tachash skinnes 15. The boards of the Tabernacle of Shittim wood 19 The sockets of silver 26 The bars of Shittim wood 31 The embroidered vesle betweene the most holy place and the holy 36 The hanging vesle for the doore AND thou shalt make the Tabernacle with ten curtaines of fine linnen twined and blew and purple and scarlet with Cherubims the worke of a cunning workeman shalt thou make them The length of one curtaine shall be eight and twenty cubits and the bredth foure cubits of one curtaine one measure shall be for all the curtaines Five curtaines shall be coupled together one to another and five curtaines coupled together one to another And thou shalt make loopes of blew upon the edge of the one curtaine from the selvedge in the coupling so shalt thou make in the uttermost edge of the curtaine in the second coupling Fiftie loopes shalt thou make in the one curtaine and fiftie loopes shalt thou make in the selvedge of the curtaine which is in the second coupling the loopes being one right over against another And thou shalt make fiftie taches of gold and shalt couple together the curtaines one unto another with the taches and it shall bee one Tabernacle And thou shalt make curtaines of go 〈…〉 〈◊〉 for a Tent over the Tabernacle eleven curtaines shalt thou make them The length of one curtaine shall be thirtie cu●its and the bredth foure cubits of one curtaine one measure shall be for the eleven curtaines And thou shalt couple together five curtaines by themselves and sixe curtaines by themselves and shalt double the sixt curtaine in the forefront of the Tent. And thou shalt make fiftie loopes on the edge of the one curtaine the outmost in the coupling and fiftie loopes on the edge of the curtaine of the second coupling And thou shalt make fiftie taches of brasse shalt put the taches into the loops and shalt couple together the Tent and it shall be one And the overplus that remaineth of the curtaines of the Tent the halfe curtaine that remaineth shall hang over on the backe sides of the Tabernacle And a cubit on this side and a cubit on that side in the remainder in the length of the curtaines of the tent it shall bee hanging over on the sides of the Tabernacle on this side and on that side to cover it And thou shalt make a covering for the tent of Rams skins died red and a covering of Tachash skins above And thou shalt make boards for the Tabernacle of Shittim wood standing up Ten cubits shall be the length of a board and a cubit and halfe a cubit the bredth of one board Two tenons for one board set in order one against another so shalt thou make for all the boards of the Tabernacle And thou shalt make the boards for the Tabernacle twenty boards for the South ●●de Southward And fo●●ie sockets of silver shalt thou make under the twenty boards two 〈…〉 unde● one board for his two tenons and two sockets under another 〈◊〉 for his 〈…〉 And for the second side of the 〈…〉 on the North side twenty 〈…〉 And the● fortie socke●s of silver 〈…〉 〈…〉 one ●●ard and two soc 〈…〉 another board And for the sides of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt ●ake 〈…〉 And two boards shalt thou make for th 〈…〉 of the 〈◊〉 in the two sides And they shall be equally joyned be 〈…〉 〈…〉 shall bee perfectly 〈…〉 the he●d of it unto one ring so 〈…〉
Exod. 30. 24. and that which he taketh away he casteth into the place of the ashes by the Altar and lighteth the lampe which was out and the lampe which he findeth not out he dresseth it The lampe which is middlemost when it is out he lights not it after it is made cleane but from the Altar in the Court but the rest of the lampes every one that is out he lighteth from the lampe that is next He lighteth not all the lampes at one time but lighteth five lampes and stayeth and doth the other service and afterwards commeth and lighteth the two that remaine He whose dutie it is to dresse the Candlesticke commeth with a vessell in his hand which is called Cuz and it is of gold like to a great pitcher to take away in it the wekes that are burnt out and the oile that remaineth i● the lamp● and lighteth five of the lamps and leaveth the vessell there before the Candlesticke c. and goeth 〈◊〉 afterwards ●e commeth and lighteth the two lamps and taketh up the vessell in his hand and boweth himselfe downe to worship and goeth his way Maim treat of the daily Sacrifices c. 3. S. 12. 13. 16. 17. The like they have in other records as for the measure of oile in T 〈…〉 yl treat Menacheth chap. 10. fol. 88. Three l●gges of oile and a halfe for the Candlesticke 〈◊〉 a logge for every lampe And for the order in the same 〈◊〉 in Ioma c. 3. fol. 33. The cleans●●g of the 〈◊〉 Altar was before the trimming of 〈◊〉 ●ive lamps and the tri●●●ing of the five lamps before the blood of the daily sacrifice and the blood of the daily s●●rifi●● before the trimming of the two lamps and the trimming of the two lamps before the burning of incense c. This charge of the Priests to order the lamps signified how Christ and his ministers should continually looke unto the puritie of doctrine and preaching of the light of the Gospell from evening to morning in the darke place of this world till the day dawne the day-starre arise in our hearts Rev. 1. 13. and 2. 1. Deut. 33. 10. Ioh. 5. 35. Eph. 3. 8. 9. 2 Pet. 1. 19. 20. 21. Matth. 4. 16. CHAP. XXVIII 1 Aaron and his sonnes are set apart for the Priests office 2 Holy garments are appointed 6 The Ephod● 8 And the curious girdle of it 9 The two Beryll stones on the shoulders thereof on which the names of the twelve Tribes were graven 15 The Brestplate of judgement with twelve precious stones therein 21 on which the names of the twelve Tribes of Israel were graven 22 The golden chaines to fasten it 26 And the golden rings for the same 30 The Vrim and Thummim 31 The Robe of the Ephod with Pomgranats and Bels. 36 The golden plate of the Miter 39 The fine linnen Coate the Miter and the Girdle 40 The Coats for Aarons sonnes with their girdles and bonnets 42 and their linnen breeches 43. The Priests must we are their garments in their administration AND thou take neere unto thee Aaron thy Brother and his Sons with him from among the Sonnes of Israel that he may minister-in-the-Priests-office unto mee Aaron Nadab and Ab●hu Eleazar and Ithamar Aarons Sonnes And thou shalt make garments of Holinesse for Aaron thy Brother for honour and for beautifull glory And thou speake unto all the wise hearted whomsoever I have filled with the spirit of wisedome and let them make Aarons garments to sanctifie him that he may minister-in-the Priests-office unto me And these are the garments which they shal make a Brestplate and an Ephod and a Robe and a Coat of circled-work a Miter and a Girdle and they shall make garments of Holinesse for Aaron thy brother and for his Sonnes that hee may minister-in-the-Priests-office unto mee And they shall take gold and blew and purple and scarlet and fine linnen And they shall make the Ephod of gold of blew and of purple of scarlet and fine linnen twined the worke of a cunning workeman It shall have the two shoulder-peeces joyning together at the two edges thereof and it shall bee joyned together And the curious girdle of his Ephod which is upon it shall be of the same according to the worke thereof of gold of blew and purple and scarlet and fine linnen twined And thou shalt take two Beryll stones and shalt grave on them the names of the Sonnes of Israel Six of their names on the one stone and the names of the fix that are remaining on the second stone according to their births The worke of an engraver in stone like the engravings of a signet shalt thou engrave the two stones with the names of the sonnes of Israel inclosed in ouches of gold shalt thou make them And thou shalt put the two stones upon the shoulders of the Ephod stones of memoriall for the sons of Israel and Aaron shall beare their names before Iehovah upon his two shoulders for a memorial And thou shalt make ouches of gold And two chaines of pure gold at the ends shalt thou make them of wreathen worke shalt fasten the wreathen chaines to the ouches And thou shalt make the Brest-plate of judgement the worke of a cunning workeman like the worke of the Ephod shalt thou make it of gold of blew purple scarlet and fine linnen twined shalt thou make it Foursquare shall it be doubled a spanne the length thereof and a span the bredth therof And thou shalt embosse in it embosment of stones foure rowes of stones a row a Sardius a Topaz a Smaragd the first row And the second row a Chalcedonie a Saphir a Sardonyx And the third row an Hyacinth a Chrysoprase and an Amethyst And the fourth row a Chrysolyte and a Beryll and a Iasper they shall be set in gold in their embosments And the stones shall be with the names of the Sons of Israel twelve according to their names like the engravings of a signet every man with his name they shall be according to the twelve Tribes And thou shalt make upon the Brestplate chains at the end of wreathen worke of pure gold And thou shaft make upon the Brestplate two rings of gold and shalt put the two rings on the two ends of the Brestplate And thou shalt put the two wreathings of gold in the two rings on the ends of the Brestplate And the other two ends of the two wreathings thou shalt fa●●en on the two ouches and shalt put them on the shoulders of the Ephod before it And thou shalt make two rings of gold and shalt put them upon the two ends of the Brest-plate upon the border thereof which is in the side of the Ephod inward And thou shalt 〈◊〉 two other rings of gold and shalt put them on the two shoulders of the Ephod underneath towards the forepart thereof over-against the coupling thereof above the curious girdle of the Ephod And they shall binde the Brestplate by
is the man that doth this and the sonne of man that layeth hold on it that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it Maimony treat of the Sabbath chap. 30. Sect. 15. Vers. 14. that soule the Chaldee translateth that man shall be destroied This cutting off the Iewes understand to be untimely death by the hand of God when a man so violateth Gods Law as there are no witnesses whereby men should punish him See Gen. 17. 14. And of the Sabbath thus they write that for doing worke therein if a man doe it willingly and presumptuously he is guilty of cutting-off to perish by the hand of God and if there bee witnesses that see him he is to be stoned to death as was performed in Num. 15. 35. 36. and if he doe it of ignorance or errour he is bound to bring the sin offring appointed for the same according to the Law in Numb ●5 27. 30. Maimony in treat of the Sabbath chap. 1. Among the heathen Romanes their Flamins or Priests might see no work done on their holy daies but by a cryer gave men warning to the contrary and who so obeyed not was 〈…〉 ulcted and gave a beast for a sacrifice Albeit they might doe things whereof dammage would follow if they were omitted as to pull an oxe out of a ditch to underset an house ready to fall c. Macrob Saturn booke 1. chap. 16. Vers. 15. of Sabbathisme that is of cessation and rest See Exod. 16. 23. The Greeke translateth it a rest holy to the Lord. Vers. 16. to observe Hebrew to doe see the notes on Exod. 34. 22. Vers. 17. me the Chaldee translateth Betweene my Word and the sonnes of Israel that Word is Christ by whom the Sabbath is truely sanctified to his Church Hebrewes 4. From this Scripture the Hebrewes gather that onely Israel was charged with the sabbath day and not the nations of the world Talmud in Betsah chap. Iom tob So from Exod. 16. 29. Yet thus also they say It is unlawfull to speake to an Infidel to doe any worke for us on the Sabbath day although he be not charged to keepe the Sabbath and although he be spoken to before the Sabbath Maimony treat of the Sabbath chap. 6. Sect. 1. Howbeit this opinion of theirs seemeth not agreeable to Gods will for the Sabbath was to be kept before the Law was given at mount Sinai Exod. 16. 23. even from the Creation Gen. 2. 2. 3. therefore it was given to all the world was refreshed the Greeke and Chaldee doe translate hee ceased and rested This is spoken of God after the manner of men who are refreshed by rest from their workes Of such manner speeches see what is noted on Genesis 6. 6. Vers. 18. of stone that so the record of them might remaine for ever Iob 19. 24. These Tables were the worke of God even as the writing was the writing of God Exod. 32. 16. and these being broken in peeces Exod. 32. 19 two other tables of stone like them were hewed out by Moses but written againe by the Lord Exod. 34. 1. 4. After this Christ by the Spirit of God writeth his Law not in Tables of stone but in fleshly Tables of the hear● 2 Cor. 3. 3. and these fleshly tables are also the work of God as he saith I will take the stonie heart out of their bodies and I will give them an heart of flesh Ezek. 11. 19. The Minde and the Heart are the spirituall tables Heb. 8. 10. in the one such things are written as men should know and beleeve in the other such as should be done or omitted The first Tables which God made signified the stonic hearts which all men have by nature now corrupted in which notwithstanding God hath left his Law written so that they doe by nature the things of the Law and shew the worke of the Law written in their hearts Rom. 2. 14. 15. though still they continue hard and stonie and their sinfull nature is not changed The second tables of stone signified the heart of the Iewes hewed and polished by Moses and his legall ministerie in whose heart God also wrote his Law wherein they rested and made their boast of God and knew his will and had the information of knowledge and of the truth in the Law Rom. 1. 17. 18. 20. Howbeit their heart continued stonie and unchanged so that they which taught others taught not themselves neither could they stedfastly looke on Moses face nor see the end of that which i● abolished but their mindes were blinded and even to this day a veile is laid upon their heart Rom. 2. 21. 2 Cor. 3. 7. 13. 14. 15. The third which are tables of flesh is the worke of Christ by his Spirit giving us new hearts and writing his Lawes in them 2 Cor. 3. 3. Ezek. 36. 26. Heb. 8. 10. These things both of the weakenesse of Moses ministerie and of the grace of Christ the ancient Hebrew Doctors acknowledged as in their glosse upon Song 1. 1. Let him kisse me c. there mentioning that request of the people in Exod. 20. 19. Speake thou with us c. they say Moses taught them the Law and whatsoever they learned they forgat againe Then they came unto Moses and said O that God would shew him-selfe againe and kisse us with the kisses of his mouth that his doctrine might be fastened in our hearts Moses said unto them This cannot be done now but it shall be in the dayes of Christ as it is written Ier. 31. 33. I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts Midrash Cant. 1. 1. finger which signifieth Gods Spirit as I with the finger of God cast our divels Luk. 11. 20. which is expounded the Spirit of God in Matth. 12. 28. That which was written was according unto all the words which the Lord spake with Israel in the mount out of the midst of fire Exod. 20. Deut. 9. 10. CHAP. XXXII 1 The people in the absence of Moses cause Aaron to make a Calfe 6 They sacrifice thereunto 7 God certifieth Moses of their sinne 10 and his purpose to consume them therefore 11 Moses intreateth for the people 14 The Lord repenteth concerning the evill against them 15 Moses commeth down with the Tables 19 and upon sight of their sinne hee breaketh them 20 He destroyeth the Calfe 22 Aarons excuse for himselfe 25 Moses causeth the Idolaters to be slaine 28 The Levites are the executioners 31 Moses prayeth that either the sinne of Israel be forgiven or himselfe to be blotted out of the Booke of God 34 God spareth the people for the present but after plagueth them AND the people saw that Moses delayed to come down out of the mountaine and the people gathered themselves together unto Aaron and said unto him Rise-up make gods for us which may goe before us because this Moses the man which brought us up out of the land of Egypt we know not what is become of
unto the evill of thy people which thing is here implyed but the Hebrew phrase meaneth also the evill of punishment which God should repent of that is not inflict upon them speaking after the manner of men as in Gen. 6. 6. Therefore the Chaldee addeth repent of the evill which thou thinkest to doe to thy people which is confirmed by v. 14. V. 13. by thy selfe God having no greater to sweare by and by such an oath willing to shew the immutability of his counsel as Paul expoundeth it Heb. 6. 13. 17. The Chaldee translateth by thy Word see Gen. 22. 16. 17. 18. unto which place this praier of Moses hath speciall reference where also the blessing of all nations in Christ is mentioned which is the ground of this request and of Gods yeelding thereunto So the Hebrew Doctors after a sort acknowledged saying Then Moses returned sought mercy at the face of the Lord and the Lord remembred the inclination of Isaack who was bound by his father in mount Morijah upon the Altar and the Lord turned from his anger and caused his divine-presence to dwell in the midst of them as before Thargum in Cant. cap. 1. vers 13. cap. 2. vers 17. Vers. 15. on the one Hebr. on this side and on this This manner of writing on both side was also in other mysticall books Ezek. 2. 10. Rev. 5. 1. It signified in respect of the Law it selfe that it hath both the outward letter and inward spirituall meaning Ro. 7. 14. Gal. 4. 24. in respect of men that the Law should be written outwardly in their actions before men and inwardly in their hearts before God Matth. 5. 16. Heb. 8. 10. Rom. 2. 28. 29. See the notes on Exod. 31. 18. Vers. 16. the worke of God herein they differed from the second tables which were the worke of Moses Exod. 34. 1. It is a tradition of the Iewes that these first tables were bewen out of the Saphir of the throne of Gods glory mentioned in Exod. 24. 10. Thargumin Cant. cap. 1. verse 11. Vers. 17. Ioshua or as the Greeke writeth him Iesus see Exod. 17. 9. of them that shout or of them that answer or sing Hebrew of answering or singing The Chaldee translates it it is not the voice of strong men which overcome in the warre neither is it the voice of weake men which are discomfited discomfiture or weakenesse of such as are overcome singing for play and voluptuousnesse good cheare c. as in v. 6. Therefore the Chaldee translates it the voyce of them that play and the Greeke addeth of them that sing for wine Vers. 19. his hand or his hands that is each of his hands the Hebrew hath both readings the first by the vowels and margine the other by the letters in the line So in Exod. 35. 11. Lev. 9. 22. and 16. 21. Deur 2. 33. breake them to signifie the breaking of the covenant by reason of their sin For that Moses did this advisedly and by the motion of Gods Spirit appeareth by his relation of it againe in Deut. 9. 16. 17. Wherefore the Tabernacle of the congregation wherein the Lord was to be sought was upon this pitched a farre off from the campe untill by Moses intreaty reconciliation was made between God and the people Exod. 33. 7. 9. c. Vers. 20. small even as dust Deut. 9. 21. that it might utterly be abolished and that they might drinke thereof the waters of the brooke that came downe out of the mount Deut. 9. 11. from the Rocke in Horeb Ex. 17. 6. which Rock was Christ 1 Cor. 10. 4. drinke By this they were taught the way of salvation from their sins whiles Moses that is the Law giveth the knowledge of sin condemnation for the same Rom. 3. 20. Gal. 3. 10. and forceth men unto Christ the Rocke from whom doe flow the waters of life wherin all sinne is swallowed up to the repentant beleeving sinner who by drinking the dust thereof with the waters of the Gospel into their owne bowels doe acknowledge the curse which they have deserved and doc judge themselves who are else to be condemned of the Lord Gal. 3. 24. Ezek. 36. 31. and 20. 43. 1 Cor. 10. 31. Compare Num. 5. 17. 19. c. V. 22. aroset or lie in evill as the Apostle useth a like speech of the world 1 Ioh. 5. 19. or are in evill that is are very evill as Gods works are said to be in faith Ps. 33. 4. that is most faithfull or true the woman is said to be in the transgression 1 Tim. 2. 14. that is the transgressor and many the like The Greeke translateth thou knowest the violent-force of this people Vers. 34. there came out Aaron here is not so free in confessing his owne sinne as he did the peoples but speaketh of the Calfe as if it had beene made rather by hap then by his art verse 4. But Aarons sinne was so great as the Lord was very angry with him to have destroied him had not Moses praied for him also Deut. 9. 20. for he had made the people naked unto their shame as after in verse 25. Compare Aarons excuse with Adams Gen. 3. Vers. 25. naked in the shame of their sinnes deprived of the glory and protection of God as naked unarmed men to bee devoured of their enemies Compare Gen. 3. 10. Rev. 3. 18. and 16. 15. The Greeke translateth it dissipated or scattered for Aaron had dissipated them for a rejoycing to their adversaries unto shame or infamie and as the Greeke translates it a rejoycing or mockerie which the Chaldee paraphraseth thus to blot them with an evill name in their generations So the Thargum on Solomons Song cap. 1. vers 12. saith hereof the wicked of that generation rose up and made a golden calse together with the mixed people which were among them and they made their workes to stinke and their evill name went out into the world And Paul applieth the like against the Iewes Through breaking the law dishonourest thou God For the name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you Rom. 2. 23. 24. amongst those that rose up against them or by their adversaries For a people naked without Gods protection are easily by their enemies foyled and put to shame as in Num. 14. 42. 43. 45. 2 Chron. 12. 5. and 28. 5. 6. Vers. 26. the gate the publike place of judgement see Gen. 34. 20. Deut. 17. 5. Ruth 4. 1. 11. let him come this word supplied also by the Greeke Moses through haste and earnestnesse omitteth See the like in Gen. 13. 9. and 11. 4. and 23. 13. The Chaldee also addeth it saying They that feare the Lord let them come unto me Vers. 28. 3000 men the principall authors of this wickednesse for that many moe were guilty also of the same appeareth by verse 30. c. Vers. 29. Fill your hand that is Consecrate your selves and your service to the Lord a phrase taken from the
the Apostle followeth Rom. 9. 15. bee mercifull or have compassion commiseration As this teacheth that Gods grace mercy and compassion is the cause of our happines so in that he doth this to whom he will it sheweth Gods freedome in communicating his grace where he pleaseth without wrong to any So that which Moses asked for all the people v. 16. God restraineth to his owne will according to his election of grace excluding all others and mans owne will and works Wherefore Paul citing this text concludeth So then it is not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercy Rom. 9. 15. 16. The ancient Hebrews saw this grace of God though now they be ignorant of it For R. Menachem on this place writeth how God shewed Moses at that time his treasures and he said O Lord of the world whose is that great treasure Hee answered who so hath good workes to him will I give his wages and who so hath none I will doe and give unto him freely as it is written I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious This exposition accordeth with Pauls in Rom. 4. 4. 5. and 3. 24. Ver. 20. my face that is see and know my glorie as it is perfectly by reason of sinne Rom. 3. 23. and of the weaknesse of the flesh which alwaies feareth death when God appeareth as Deut. 5. 24. 25. Iudg. 13. 22. Esay 6. 5. Dan. 10. 8. Rev. 1. 17. But after this mortall hath put on immortality we shall see God as he is even face to face 1 Ioh. 3. 2. 1 Cor. 13. 12. So the Hebrews hence doe observe whiles men live they are not counted-worthy when they die they shall be counted worthy to see the face of God R. Elias in Reshith choc●●a● fol. 41. 4. And R. Menachem here saith after his death he should attaine unto it for it is treasured up for the just against the time to come Vers. 22. clift or hole cave which is a place of hiding for feare as in Esay 2. 21. Song 2. 14. The Rocke on which Gods people are set is spiritually God himselfe in Christ and faith in him Psal. 18. 3. 32. Matth. 16. 18. cover this sometime signifieth safe protection Psal. 91. 4. sometime a covering with feare and affliction Iob 3. 23. Lam. 3. 43. Here it is meant in the first sense my hand or my palme the hollow of my hand which also is sometime the instrument of helpe Psal. 91. 4. 12. and 119. 173. sometime of affliction Iob 13. 21. and 33. 7. It may also meane my cloud for as a cloud arose in the sight of Elias servant like a mans hand 1 King 18. 44. so Elihu calleth the clouds Cappajim that is hands Iob 36. 32. The Chaldee here translateth it my Word which is the title of Christ Ioh. 1. 1. So in the verse following the Chaldee saith And I will take away the word of my glory Vers. 23. backe parts or after parts the things behinde me This may be understood of an imperfect image of the glory of God such as man is able to behold in this life where wee see through a glasse darkely opposed to the state which is to come when we shall see face to face or eye to eye as 1 Cor. 13. ●2 Esay 52. 8. And it is spoken of God after the manner of men for properly he being a Spirit infinite and incomprehensible hath neither face nor back-parts nor any such thing as is noted on Gen. 6. 6. Some referre this to the vision which Moses saw of Christ transfigured upon the mount Matth. 17. 2. 3. where also a cloud over-shadowed the disciples v. 4. If we apply it unto Christ his back-parts may be understood of his afflictions and sufferings which in this life his people doe see and are partakers of as in the life to come they shall behold his face and partake of his glory Matth. 10. 38. Phil. 3. 10. 13. 14. 1 Ioh. 3. 2. Psal. 17. 15. The Hebrewes say God made knowne unto Moses that which no man knew before him nor shall know after him that he apprehended in his knowledge the truth of the Essence of God distinctly from the essence of other things as a man whose backeparts are seene and his whole body and rayment is attained unto in ones knowledge from other bodies of men Maimony in Iesudei hatorah chap. 1. Sect. 10. It is a tradition of the Iewes that God now appeared like Sheliach tsibbur the Messenger or Minister of the congregation clad with a robe R. Menachem on Exod. 33. and so Maimony in Iesudei hacorah chap. 1. Sect. 9. saith Moses saw him on the Sea like a mighty warriour and on Sinai cladlike a Minister of the congregation be seene the Greeke addeth seene of thee but it is more generall of no man as in verse 20. And by seeing is not meant onely with the outward eye but with the heart or understanding according to that phrase in Eccles. 1. 16. mine heart hath seene because the mind of man cannot apprehend God who is incōprehensible Iob 11. 7. 1 Tim. 6. 16. R. Menachem here saith Observe how he saith not My face thou shalt not see but SHALL NOT BE SEENE as if he should say there is no power in any creature to comprehend it CHAP. XXXIV 1 God willeth Moses to hew two tables of stone on which he would write againe the words of the covenant 4 Moses having done so went up into the mount 5 The Lord descendeth in a cloud and proclaimeth his Name 8 Moses worshippeth and int●●ateth God to goe with them 10 God maketh a covenant with them warning them 12 of the Idolatry of the Canaanites 16 and mariages with them 18 He reneweth the commandement of the feast of unleavened bread and of sanctifying their first-borne 21 Of the Sabbath 22 Of other feasts and rites about sacrificing 28 Moses after forty dayes in the mount commeth downe with the Tables 29 His face shineth and he covereth it with a veile ANd Iehovah said unto Moses Hew thee two Tables of stone like the first and I will write upon the Tables the words which were on the first Tables which thou brakest And bee thou ready in the morning and come up in the morning unto mount Sinai and present thy selfe unto me there upon the top of the mount And let no man come up with thee neither let any man bee seene throughout all the mount neither let the flockes nor herds feed before that mount And he hewed two tables of stone like the first and Moses rose up early in the morning and went up unto mount Sinai as Iehovah had commanded him and tooke in his hand the two tables of stone And Iehovah descended in the cloud and he stood with him there and he proclaimed the name of Iehovah And Iehovah passed by before him and he proclaimed Iehovah Iehovah God pittifull and gracious long suffering and much in mercy and truth Keeping mercy
profaneth the Name of God and if it be before ten of Israel hee profaneth it publikely and he disanulleth the affirmative precept for sanctifiyng Gods name and transgresseth against the prohibition of profaning his name Maimony tom 1. in Iesudei hatorah ch 5. sect 4. Vers. 22. with a male or with man-kinde this was the sin of Sodom Gen. 19. 5. and of other heathens Rom. 1. 27. called the going after other flesh Iuce vers 7. They that thus sinned were by Moses Law to be stoned to death Lev. 20. 13. by the law of Christ they shall bee shut out of the kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6. 9. 10. like copulation with a woman Hebrew with the lyings or copulations of a woman Vers. 23. to lye downe thereto or that it may lye with her which sense the Greeke version also affordeth So in Lev. 20. 16. where such beastlinesse is punished with death And whether it be tame-beast or wild-beast or fowle all are to be stoned to death Maimony in Issureibiah ch 1. sect 16. confusion in Greeke a detestable thing Vers. 24. in any of these or in all these which Targum Ionathan expoundeth in any-one of all these every of which the Hebrewes call Nakednes after the scripture phrase and they say There are also other women which are forbidden by tradition and the doctrine of the Scribes these they call Secondaries as being second or next to the foresaid nakednesses and of them there be 20. women and they are these 1 The mothers mother and this is infinite as the mothers mothers mothers mother and so all upward are unlawfull 2 The mother of his mothers father onely and no further are forbidden 3 His fathers mother infinite as the fathers mothers mothers mother and all upward are unlawfull 4 The mother of his fathers father and no further 5 The wife of his fathers father infinite Though she were the wife of our father Iakob or Noe shee is unlawfull for every of us 6 The wife of his mothers father and no further 7 The wife of his fathers brother by the mother 8 The wife of his mothers brother whether by the mother or by the father 9 His sons daughter in law that is his sons sons wife infinite though it should be his sons sons sons sons wife even to the worlds end So that Noe if he were now living might never marry with any widow that had been wife to any of his sons 10 His daughters daughter in law or sonnes wife and no further 11 The daughter of his sons daughter no further 12 The daughter of his son son and no further 13 The daughter of his daughters daughter onely 14 The daughter of his daughters son onely 15 The daughter of his wives sons son onely 16 The daughter of his wives daughters daughter onely 17 The mother of his wives fathers mother onely 18 The mother of his wives mothers father only 19 The mother of his wives mothers mother onely 20 The mother of his wives fathers father onely So there are found of these which are secondarily unlawfull foure which are infinite The mothers mother and all upward The fathers mother and all upward The grandfathers wife and all upward The sons son wife and all downward Maimony in Ishoth or 〈…〉 of Wives ch 〈◊〉 sect 6. Vers. 25. doe visit or have visited that is punished or as the Greeke translateth recompensed the time past being used for the more certainty 〈…〉 the thing were already done spueth or v 〈…〉 teth out with ●othsomnesse and indignation 〈◊〉 the Greek explaineth it So after in Lev. 20. 〈◊〉 Vers. 26. any of these or any of all these abo 〈…〉 tions So in vers 29. stranger or sojourner 〈◊〉 Greeke proselyte Vers. 28. the nation in Greeke the nations 〈◊〉 Chaldee the peoples Vers. 29. the soules that is the persons 〈…〉 rooted out or destroyed as the Greeke and Chald 〈…〉 explaine it Of this judgement see Levit. 20. 〈◊〉 Gen. 17. 14. Vers. 30. my charge Hebrew my keeping or 〈…〉 die that is which I command to be kept In Greek my ordinances in Chaldee the custodie of my 〈◊〉 statutes of abominations that is most abo 〈…〉 statutes meaning their sinfull practices which 〈…〉 orow custome grew to be as a Law amongst them CHAP. XIX Sundry lawes teaching 2 holinesse 3 obed 〈…〉 4 and true religion To leave some of the fruits of the Land for the poore 11 Against lying swearing defraud 〈…〉 sing and unrighteousnesse 16 Against talebearing hate revenge 19 unlawfull mixtures and fornication 23 The law for uncircumcised fruits 26 Against observing heathenish manners 29 whoredome 31 familiar spirits 32 To honour the ancients 34 to love strangers 36 to have just ballances 37 and to observe all Gods statutes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto all the Congregation of the sonnes of Israel and say unto them Ye shall be holy for I Iehovah your God am holy Ye shall feare every-man his mother and his father and keepe my Sabbaths I am Iehovah your God Turne yee not unto Idols and make not to your-selves molten gods I am Iehovah your God And when ye sacrifice a sacrifice of Peace offring unto Iehovah yee shall sacrifice it for your favourable acceptation In the day that ye sacrifice it it shall bee eaten and on the morrow and that which remaineth untill the third day shall bee burnt in the fire And if it be eaten at all in the third day it is a polluted-thing it shall not bee favourably-accepted And they that eate it every one shall beare his iniquity because he hath profaned the holy thing of Iehovah and that soule shall be cut-off-from his peoples And when ye reape the harvest of your land thou shalt not wholly-rid the corner of thy field in reaping neither shalt thou glean the gleaning of thy harvest And thou shalt not gather-the-single-grapes of thy vineyard nor gleane the grapes that are broken off of thy vineyard thou shalt leave them for the poore and for the stranger I am Iehovah your God Ye shall not steale neither falsly-deny nor deale-falsly any-man with his neighbour And ye shall not sweare by my name to falshood and thou shalt not profane the name of thy God I am Iehovah Thou shalt not fraudulently-oppresse thy neighbour neither rob him the work of him that is hired shall not abide-all-night with thee untill the morning Thou shalt not curse the deafe and before the blinde thou shalt not put a stumbling-blocke but thou shalt feare thy God I am Iehovah Ye shall not do unrighteousnesse in judgment thou shalt not respect the person of the poore nor honor the person of the great man in justice shalt thou judge thy neighbour Thou shalt not walke a talebearer among thy people thou shalt not stand against the blood of thy neighbour I am Iehovah Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart rebuking thou shalt rebuke thy neighbour and not beare sin for him
4. the holinesse● of holinesses that is the most holy things as the Arke Table Candlesticke Altar c. which the Kohathites were to beare vers 5. 7. 9. 11. 15. These are generally named the Sanctuarie Num. 10. 21. and 3. 28. Vers. 5. setteth forward or removeth journieth from Mount Sinai towards Canaan and this was when the cloud was taken up from off the Tabernacle by the Lord Num. 10. 11 12. the veile of the covering called in Greeke the shadowing veile by the Apostle the second veile Heb. 9. 3. which was made of blew purple scarlet and fine linnen with Cherubims and was hanged betweene the holy place and the most holy Exod. 26. 31. 33. This veile figured the flesh of Christ Heb. 10. 20. as the Arke principally signified Christ also Gods presence with his church in him See the notes on Exod. 25. 10. 17. the Testimonie the Tables of Gods law which were in the Arke as in the heart or bowels of Christ Exo. 25. 16. Psal. 40. 8. This Arke of the testimonie was covered with the veile whiles the Tabernacle did stand Exod. 40. 3. and now when the Tabernacle is to be taken down and removed the Arke is covered with the same veile Vers. 6. shall put Hebr. shall giue in Greeke put over to wit over the Arke and veile Tachash skin in Greeke hyacinth or blew colour skin see Exod. 25. 5. This was to cover it from all injury of weather as raine or the like even as the whole Tabernacle when it stood was covered with such Exod. 26. 14. ●●ai 4. 5 6. It was also to signifie the hiding of these mysteries for a time see after on vers 13. 〈…〉 a cloth wholly of blew these were those clothes or garments of ministerie mentioned in Exod. 31. 10. above upmost and herein the Arke had the preeminence of glory above all the other holy things for their upmost coverings were of skin but the Arke had above the skinne a cloth of blew or skie colour for the honour of Christ whom it figured the barres thereof made to beare the Arke with them Exod. 25. 14 15. see the annotations there Vers. 7. of Shew-bread Hebr. table of faces or of presence meaning of the bread of Presence or Shew-bread as the Chaldee here explaineth it and Moses elsewhere expresseth They were twelve cakes representing the twelve tribes of Israel or whole church see the annotations on Exod. 25. 30. and Lev. 24. 5. of blew the Greeke ●ere translateth it purple to cover withall Heb 〈…〉 of covering or of powring out of these seo the notes on Exod. 25. 29. continuall bread or bread of continuance so called because it was alwaies upon the table and when the old was taken off new was set on every sabbath as is noted on Levit. 24. 8. Vers. 8. sccarlet Onely the Arke representing Christ and the Table with Shew bread representing the church had three coverings all the other holy things had but two And none was covered with scarlet but this Table onely Vers. 9. of the light in Greeke inlightning or shining candlesticke see the notes on Exod. 35. 14. This was a figure of Gods Law Psal. 119. 105. Prov. 6. 23. 2 Pet. 1. 19. Vers. 10. upon a staffe or upon a leaver or barre such as things are removed and caried with betweene two or moe Num. 13. 23. The Greeke translateth it upon barres so in vers 12. Chazkuni noteth here that it is said upon a staffe and not under a staffe lest that which was caried should bee dragged on the ground Vers. 11. Altar of Gold the Incense altar which stood within the holy place a figure of Christs mediation for his church and of their presenting their prayers unto God by him See the notes on Exod. 30. 1 6. Vers. 12. instruments or vessels of ministerie Censers cups c. or such as are mentioned in 2 King 25. 14 15. Sanctuarie Hebr. sanctitie in Greeke the holies a staffe in Greeke barres as vers 10. Vers. 13. the ashes from the altar This the Greeke translateth They shall put a covering upon the altar The Altar of brasse which stood in the courtyard is heremeant of purple Onely the brazen altar wa● covered with purple as the Table onely with scarlet vers 8. and these two colours are sometime used one for another as They put on him a scarlet robe Mat. 27. 28. for which in Ioh. 19. 2. is written they put on him a purple robe so in Mark 15. 17. they clothed him with purple all these colours signified the heavenly dignity of these holy things by the blood of Christ. And although the Altar of brasse stood in the open court where all might see it yet when they removed it also was covered as the other holy things Vers. 14. Vessels or instruments as vers 12. fire-pans of these and the rest see the notes on Exod. 27. 3. At the end of this verse the Greeke version mentioneth the Laver Exod. 30. 18. which in Moses is here altogether omitted thus And they shall take a purple cloth and cover the Laver and the base or foot thereof and shall put them into a covering of ●y●ointh skin and shall put them upon barres It seemeth to be not without mystery that Moses mentioning fire-pans flesh-hookes and other lesse things should quite omit the Laver which usually is reckoned among the holy things of the Sanctuarie Exod. ●5 16. and 38. 8. and 39. 39. and 40. 30. And as in Melchisedeks history in Gen. 14. he omitted his parentage kindred birth and death from which silence in the holy story the Apostle reasoneth as if he had beene without parents or kindred beginning of dayes or end of life Heb. 7. So here if it may be lawfull to conjecture the like the Laver is left uncovered and alwaies open to the eyes of the people that it might be a lively representation of Gods grace in Christ continuing and opened as an ever-springing fountaine that by the washing of the new birth by repentance and faith in the bloud of Christ we may in all our travels at all times cleanse our hands and feet our workes and wayes as the sacrificers did from the Laver Exod. 30 19 20. That albeit the face of the church is sometime hid as the Tabernacle wrapped up and the Light of the Word shineth not nor publike worship performed yet alwaies Gods elect having faith in him may wash and purge themselves in Christ his bloud unto forgivenesse of sinnes sanctification of the spirit and saluation Vers. 15. the sanctuary Hebr. Sanctity or Holinesse that is as the Greeke explaineth it Holy things see Num. 3. 28. This covering of the Sanctuary besides that it was for the honour and defence thereof had also a further mystery For as Moses put a veile upon his face Exod. 34. 33. that the sonnes of Israel could not stedfastly looke to the end of that which is abolished 2 Cor. 3. 1● so the Tabernacle which our fathers caried with
Priest but through the veile that is his flesh he is entred into heauen it selfe now to appeare unto the face of God for us Heb. 8. 2. 4. and 10. 2. 20. and 9. 24. Thus shall ye blesse The Priest blessed standing as it is written to stand before Iehovah to minister unto him and to blesse in his name Deut. 10. 8. And it was with lifting up of hands as it is said And Aaron lift up his hand towards the people and blessed them Levit 9. 22. which gesture our Lord Christ also used when he blessed his disciples Lu. 24. 50. The Hebrew Doctors understand the word Thus to imply both matter and manner wherof they haue sundry traditions as Thus shal ye blesse standing Thus with lifting vp of hands Thus in the holy tongue that is Hebrew Thus with your faces against the peoples faces Thus with an high voyce Thus by Gods expressed name Iehovah if ye blesse in the Sanctuarie It is not lawfull for the Priests in any place to adde any blessing unto these three verses as to say like Deu. 1. 11. The Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many moe as ye are or any the like Maimony in treat of Prayer chap. 14. sect 11. 12. The manner they also say was thus The Priests went up to the banke or stage after that the Priests had finished the daily morning service and lifted up their hands on high above their heads and their fingers spred abroad except the high Priest who might not lift his hands higher than the Plate whereof see Exod. 28. 36. and one pronounced the blessing word by word till the three verses were ended And the people answered not after every verse but they made it in the Sanctuary one blessing and when they had finished all the people answered Blessed be the Lord God the God of Israel for ever and ever And he pronounced Gods name as it is written with I●●h but in the citie or countrey they pronounced it Adonai Lord for they mention not the name as it is written save in the Sanctuary onely And after Simeon the just was dead the Priests left off blessing by Gods proper name Iehovah even in the Sanctuary to the end that no man which was not honest and of good esteeme might learne it The Priests blessing is not pronounced in any place but in the holy Hebrew tongue as it is said THVS SHAL YE BLESSE c. The lifting up of hands is by ten Priests of the number A Synagogue which is all of Priests they all lift up hands and the women and children answer Amen If there remaine ten Priests moe than they which are gone up the banke the ten answer Amen A Congregation wherein there is no Priest but a Minister onely he lifteth not up his hands but when he is come to conclude with peace he he saith Our God and the God of our fathers ble 〈…〉 us with the threefold blessing in the Law written by Moses thy servant which was pronounced out of the mouth of Aaron and his sonnes the Priests with thy Saints as it is said THE LORD BLESSE THEE AND KEEP ETHEE c. A Priest that hath lift up his hands in one Synagogue and goeth to another Synagogue and findeth the Congregation at prayer and they are not come to the Priests blessing he lifteth up his hands for them and blesseth them though it be oft times in a day Maim treat of prayer chap. 14. sect 9 10 11. and chap. 15. sect 9 10 11. By these their traditions it appeareth that the not pronouncing of Gods name Iehovah as it is written was a device of their owne first restrayning it to the Sanctuary and blessing onely at last omitting it in the Sanctuarie also lest it should be by the unworthy polluted as they supposed Yea so farre went they in this their precisenesse as they say that their first wise men taught not this name to their disciples or sons which were of honest conversation but once in seven yeeres Maim ibidem c. 14. sect 10. And this it seemeth they did because the nations corrupted the name calling him Iao Iave Iabe Ievo Iovis and sundry other wayes as in humane writers is yet to be seen and applyed those names sometime to false Gods Of the meaning of this name Iehovah see the Annotations on Gen. 2. 4. and Exod. 6. 3. and of blessing see Gen. 14. 19. 20. Vers. 24. Iehovah blesse thee The name Iehovah thrice repeated in this blessing is a mysterie of the Trinitie in the Godhead the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost into whose name we are baptised Mat. 28. 19. which Iehovah is one and his name one Deut. 6. 4. Zach. 14. 9. So the Apostle beginneth wishing Grace and Peace from him which Is and which Was and which Is to come that is Iehovah God the Father and from the seven Spirits which are before his throne that is the Holy Spirit whose graces are seven that is manifold and plentifull but though there be diversities of gracious gifts yet it is the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 4. and from Iesus Christ Revel 1. 4 5. And another Apostle concludeth The grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Spirit 〈◊〉 with you all Amen 2 Cor. 13. 14. Which as all other blessings are derived from this set downe by Moses who sheweth the grace of God the Father in blessing that is giving all good things both for this life and that which is to come as it is written Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things in Christ c. Ephes. 1. 3. This blessing God offered the Iewes when he sent his Sonne Iesus to blesse them in turning away every one of them from his iniquitie Act. 3. 26. The Hebrew Doctors as R. Menachem Rakanat on th●● place have also noted how this name of God Iehovah is thrice mentioned and every time with 〈◊〉 different accent in the Hebrew implying a mysterie which cannot better be applyed than to the three distinct persons of the holy Trinitie 〈◊〉 thee in grace and good estate and safe from evill as it is said Iehovah will keepe thee from all evill hee will keepe thy soule Psal. 121. 7. And for good it is spoken in 1 Chron. 29. 18. So our Saviour prayeth Holy Father keepe through thine owne name those whom thou hast giuen me that they may be one as we are and keepe them from the evill Iohn 17. 11. 15. Ver. 25. his face to shine upon thee or his countenance to shine to be lightsome unto thee For face the Chaldee putteth Shecinah the Divine Maiestie whereby Christ seemeth to be meant as is noted on Exod. 34. 9. Gods face sometime signifieth his anger as Levit. 20. 6. Psal. 21. 10. and. 34. 17. sometime his favour Psal. 21. 7. But the light or shining of his face
Phaddasour see Numb 1. 10. Verse 72. In the eleventh day so the Greeke translateth it which in the Hebrew and Chaldee phrase is In the day of eleven dayes So in ver 78. In the day of twelve dayes which the Greeke expoundeth In the twelfth day Pagiel in Greeke Phageel the sonne of E●ran Verse 84. dedication of the Altar The Chaldee called sonathans expoundeth it the dedication of the anointing of the ●ltar Here God summeth up the offrings of the Princes the number of vessels and the weight of them and the number of all their sacrifices to shew how acceptable this their service was unto him which he so largely set downe in the particulars and in the generall And as the Altar now dedicated was a type of Christ so the oblations of the Princes of the twelve tribes shewed the faith hope and love of Israel towards God in Christ of whom the Apostle giveth this testimonie Now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our fathers unto which promise our twelve tribes instantly serving God day and night hope to come Acts 26. 6 7. And they are an example unto all Princes of the earth how they should honour the Lord with their persons and substance and willingly offer to the maintenance of his continuall publike service as is promised unto Ierusalem They shall bring gold and incense and they shall shew forth the praises of the Lord. All the flockes of Kedar shall be gathered together unto thee the rams of Nebaioth shall minister unto thee they shall come up with acceptance upon 〈◊〉 Altar and I will glorifie the house of my glory And the sonnes of strangers shall build up thy wals and their kings shall minister unto thee Esai 60. 6 7 10. And the Nations of them which are saved shall walke in the light of it and the kings of the earth doe bring their glory and honour unto it Rev. 21. 24. See examples of the like liberality in Neh. 7. 70 71 72. Ez 2. 68 69. 1 Chr. 29. 6 7 8. Verse 85. Every Hebr. one 2400. shekels The reason of this exactnesse of their weight severally and joyntly was for the honour of the Lords Sanctuary and vessels of the same all which were holy for which cause also at the returne of the Iewes out of Babylon the vessels of the house of God were delivered by weight and received againe at Ierusalem by weight for they were holy and therefore warily to be kep● and they were taken by number and by weight of every one and all the weight was written at that time Ezr. 8. 25 27 28 29 30 33 34. Verse 86. an hundred and twentie so there was iust the twentieth part of the weight of all the silver vessels in these twelve golden cups And Ionathan in his Thargum maketh these 120 shekels answerable to the 120 yeeres of Moses life Verse 87. their meat-offering the Greeke version addeth their meat-offerings and their drinke-offerings which though they were not mentioned before yet were to be understood by the sacrifices that were offered For by the Law every burnt offering was to have with it a meat-offering of flower mingled with oyle and wine for a drinke-offering the appointed measure of them is to be seene in Num. 15. 3 12. Verse 88. sixtie so all the beasts which the 12 Princes offered at this dedication were two hundred fifty and two of which two hundred and foure were Peace offerings whereof themselves with the Priests did eat and so kept a feast with joy before the Lord for his mercy towards his people See Lev. 7. 15. 29 34. Verse 89. to speaker with him that is with God of him speaking or of one speaking which the Greeke translateth of the Lord speaking And Thargum Ionathan expoundeth it of the Spirit speaking Herein Moses excelled all other Prophets in that the Lord spake so familiarly with him See the notes on Num. 12. 8. the covering mercie seat thus the promise was fulfilled I will meet with thee there and I will speake with thee from above the covering mercie seat Exod. 25. 22. And hereupon the most holy Place of the Sanctuary where the Arke and the Mercie-seat was is called Debir the Oracle or speaking place 1 Kings 6. 23. And the Covering mercie seat or Propitiatorie being a figure of Christ Rom. 3. 25. as it is noted on Exod. 25. 17. it was a Testimonie of Gods grace to his Church in Christ his Sonne by whom hee alwayes spake unto our fathers but more clearely unto us in these last dayes Heb. 1. 2. And whereas it is said in Lev. 1. 1. the Lord spake unto Moses out of the Tabernacle this place sheweth how it is to be understood as Sol. Iarchi here saith Two Scriptures contradict one another the third commeth and decideth the case betweene them One Scripture saith The Lord spake unto him out of the Tabernacle which was without the veile and another Scripture saith I will speake unto thee from above the Mercy-seat This commeth and decideth it betweene them Moses went into the Tent and there he heard tho voyce that came from above the Mercy-seat The voyce came out from heaven to between the Cherubims frō thence it came out into the Tent of the congrega●on From hence also some of the Hebrews gather as Chazkuni here noteth that the beginning of the booke of Leviticus was when the dedication here spoken of was finished and he spake unto him the Hebrews observe how this HEE SPAKE VNTO HIM is doubled to shew that the voyce came from heaven to the mercie-seat and from thence spake with him for all the speech with Moses was from heaven in the day time and was heard from betweene the two Cherubims according to that in Deut. 4. 36. Out of heaven he made thee to heare his voyce c. and thou heardest his words out of the midst of the fire R. Menachem on Num. 7. CHAP. VIII 1 How the Lampes were to be lighted and what was the workemanship of the Candlesticke 5 A commandement to cleanse the Levites with sprinkling shaving and washing of cloathes 8 To offer two bullockes for a Burnt-offering and a Sin-offering to make atonement for them 10 The Israelites were to impose hands on them 11 And Aaron to wave them 14 The Levites are separated to serve in the Tabernacle in stead of all the first-borne of Israel 20 The commandement is performed concerning the Levites and they enter upon their service 23 The age and time when they were to begin and when to leave off their service 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto Aaron and say unto him when thou makest the lampes to ascend up the seven lamps shall give light over against the face of the Candlesticke And Aaron did so he made the lampes thereof to ascend up over against the face of the Candlesticke as Iehovah commanded Moses And this worke of the Candlesticke was
Esai 58. 1. and 27. 13. Ezek. 33. 3. Rev. 4. 1. 1 Cor. 14. 8. So the Hebrewes say the trumpets were to be made of silver if of any other kinde of metall they were unlawfull Maim in Cle hammikdash ch 3. sect 5. The tongue of the just is as choise silver Prov. 10. 20. and the words of the LORD are pure words as silver tried c. Psalm 12. 7. beaten worke wrought with the hammer beaten into a plate of one whole peece so the golden Candlesticke was Exod. 25. 31. It signified the labour of the ministers of God giving themselves continually to praier and to the ministerie of the word Act. 6. 4. that the trumpets may give a cleare and certaine sound for and unto the people for the calling for to call together the congregation This was the first of the foure speciall uses of these trumpets when the people rested to assemble them unto the Lord in his Sanctuarie for to heare his word to pray and to doehim worship As Blow the trumpet in Sion sanctifie a fast call a solemne assembly Gather the people sanctifie the congregation c. Ioel 2. 15 16. and Blow the trumpet in the new moone c. Psalm 81. 4. It signified that all the meetings of the Church should be sanctified by the word of God and prayer for the journeying to cause the camps that is the people in their camps or tents to take their journeyes This was the second use of the trumpets to sanctifie by their sound the journeyes and travels of Gods people that as their rest so all their motions might be in God by the conduct of his word and spirit Thus were there three things to be observed at their removings the Lords taking up of the cloud Num. 9. 18. 22. the sound of the trumpets Num. 10. 2. 5. 6. and the prayer of Moses Num. 10. 35. Verse 3. And they that is the Priests shall blow as is expressed in vers 8. The Greeke translateth thou shalt blow meaning Moses by the Priests whom he appointed thereto with them with both of them for when but one was blowne the Princes onely assembled vers 4. Verse 4. with one the Latine translateth it once but the Greeke better with one trumpet● heads that is captaines governours of thousands in Greeke Chiliarchs see Exod. 18. 21. Thus was there one trumpet for the rulers and one for the people that all their assemblies might be in the name and by the signe of the Lord and the Governours might have their meeting apart but not the people without the Governours presence for wha●soever concerned the people it belonged also to the Princes with them in resting or journeying peace or warre And all assembled unto Moses the chiefe and figure of Christ Heb. 3. 1 2. Verse 5. And if ye blow or And ye shall blow an alarme and the camps c. So after and thus the Greeke translateth it an alarme or a broken sound in Hebrew Trugnah which is generally any loud broken ringing noise either with trumpets as here or with mens voices and shoutings as in 1 Sam. 4. 5. and this either a ioyfull shout and triumphant noise as Num. 23. 21. Psal. 47. 6. Ezr. 3. 11 12. or a mournfull cry as Ier. 20. 16. See the notes on Levit. 23. 24. This broken sound or alarme was fittest to stir vp and incourage the mindes of the people to rise and march forward to battell against the Canaanites as the former continued equall sound was for their quiet assembling vnto the seruice of God and hearing of his Law And unto this difference the Apostle hath respect when he saith If the trumpet give an uncertaine sound who shall prepare himselfe to the battell 1 Cor. 14. 8. And therfore also the Greeke here and often otherwhere translateth it signe or signification because by it the people distinctly perceived what they were to doe Andir signified how God by his trumpeters the Prophets and Apostles hath distinctly signified his will unto his Church for all things needfull to furnish them unto all good works 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. and such should be the teaching of all his Ministers The Hebrew Doctors have understood the former blowing with an equall continued sound to be a signe of mercy to Israel and this alarme or broken sound to be a signe of judgment against their enemies R. Menachem on Num. 10. saith The blowing of trumpets signified mercies therefore in the time of assembling the people he saith And they shall blow with them and all the assembly shall assemble themselves unto thee Num. 10. 3. for the gathering of them is in mercy as it is written Returne ô LORD unto the ten thousand thousands of Israel Numb 10. 36. Likewise And he was King in Iesurun when the beads of the people the tribes of Israel were gathered together Deut. 33. 5. But their journeying was with an alarme Num. 10. 5. because the divine Majestie went before them and it is written Rise up LORD and let thine enemies be scattred Num. 10. 35. So the walls of Iericho fell with an alarme or shout Iof. 6. 20. because Gods Majestie went before them to consume their enemies c. on the East side which were Iudah Issachar and Zabulon Num. 2. 3-7 Verse 6. on the South side Reuben Simeon and Gad Num. 2. 10. c. for their journeyes or according to their journeyings that is not for these two quarters onely but for the other also as Chazkuni observeth for all the foure camps Here therefore the Greeke version addeth by way of explanation And ye shall sound the third alarme and the camps that encampe towards the West shall 〈◊〉 their journey and ye shall sound the fourth alarm● and the camps that encampe towards the North 〈◊〉 take their journey The like is signified also by F● Iosephus in Antiq. Iudaic. lib. 3. c. 11. Where the Latine version misseth interpreting Noton the backe part of the Tabernacle which was westward when it meaneth the South and the third 〈◊〉 Liba westward he turneth Southward when Li 〈…〉 is one of the westerne winds as sheweth Aul. Gellius in Noct. Attic. l. 2. c. 22. Vers. 8. a statute for ever an everlasting ordinance the outward rite continuing till Christs comming the spirituall use abiding still for ever that by the preaching of the word and prayer the Ministers of God should guide his people in all their affaires Vers. 9 yee goe to warre Hebr. yee come to warre which the Greeke translateth come forth But comming is often used for going as in Ion. 1. 3. comming that is going to Tharshish the distre 〈…〉 in Greeke the adversaries that resist you This was the third use of the trumpets to be sounded in time of warre and tribulation whereof there be examples in Israels warre against the Midianites Num. 31. 6. in the Iewes war against the Aposta●e Israelites when they said Behold God is with us for a captaine and his Priests with sounding trumpets to
was when they were complainers evill in the eares of Iehovah and Iehovah heard and his anger was kindled and a fire of Iehovah burnt among them and consumed them in the utmost part of the campe And the people cryed out unto Moses and Moses prayed unto Iehovah and the fire sunke downe And he called the name of that place Taberah because the fire of Iehovah burnt among them And the mixt multitude that was among them lusted with lust and the sonnes of Israel also returned and wept and said Who shall give us flesh to eat We remember the fish which we did eat in Egypt for nought the cucumbers and the melons and the leekes and the onions and the garlicke But now our soule is dryed away there is nothing at all onely out eyes are unto the Manna And the Manna was as Coriander seed the colour of it as the colour of Bdelium The people went about and gathered it and ground it in milles or beat it in a morter and baked it in pannes and made cakes of it and the taste of it was as the taste of the best moisture of oyle And when the dew fell downe upon the campe in the night the Manna fell downe upon it And Moses heard the people weeping throughout their families every man in the doore of his tent and the anger of Iehovah was kindled greatly and in the eyes of Moses it was evill And Moses said unto Iehovah Wherefore hast thou done evill to thy servant and wherefore have I not found grace in thine eyes that thou layest the burden of all these people upon me Have I conceived all this people have I begotten them that thou shouldest say unto me Beare them in thy bosome as a nursing father beareth the sucking child unto the land which thou swarest unto their fathers Whence should I have flesh to give unto all this people for they weepe vnto me saying Give us flesh that wee may eate I am not able my selfe alone to beare all this people for it is too heavie for me And if thou doe thus unto me kill me I pray thee kill me if I have found grace in thine eyes and let mee not see mine evill And Iehovah said unto Moses Gather unto me seventie men of the Elders of Israel whom thou knowest that they are the Elders of the people and the officers of them and take them unto the Tent of the Congregation that they may stand there with thee And I will come downe and will speake with thee there and I will take of the spirit which is upon thee and will put it upon them and they shall beare with thee the burden of the people and thou shalt not beare it thy selfe alone And say thou unto the people sanctifie your selves against to morrow and ye shall eat flesh for you have wept in the eares of Iehovah saying Who shall give us flesh to eat for it was well with us in Egypt therefore Iehovah will give you flesh and ye shall eat Ye shall not eat one day nor two dayes nor five dayes nor ten dayes nor twentie dayes Vntill a moneth of dayes untill it come out at your nostrils and it bee unto you loathsome because that you have despised Iehovah who is among you and have wept before him saying Wherefore now came we forth out of Egypt And Moses said The people amongst whom I am are six hundred thousand footmen and thou hast said I will give them flesh and they shall eat it a moneth of dayes Shall the flocks and the herds be slaine for them to suffice them or shall all the fishes of the Sea be gathered together for them to suffice them And Iehovah said unto Moses Is Iehovahs hand waxed short thou shalt see now whether my word shall come to passe unto thee or not And Moses went out and spake unto the people the words of Iehovah and he gathered the seventie men of the Elders of the people and made them stand round about the Tent. And Iehovah came downe in a cloud and spake unto him and tooke of the Spirit that was upon him and gave it unto the seventie men the Elders and it was when the Spirit rested upon them they prophesied did not adde And there remained two of the men in the campe the name of the one was Eldad and the name of the second Medad and the Spirit rested upon them and they were of them that were written but went not out unto the Tent and they prophesied in the campe And there ran a young man and told Moses and said Eldad and Medad doe prophesie in the campe And Ioshua the sonne of Nun the minister of Moses one of his choise young men answered and said My lord Moses forbid thou them And Moses said unto him Enviest thou for me but O who shall give that all the people of Iehovah were prophets that Iehovah would give his spirit upon them And Moses gathered him-selfe into the campe he and the Elders of Israel And there went forth a winde from Iehovah and brought Quailes from the sea and let them fall by the campe as it were a dayes journey on this side and as it were a dayes journey on that side round about the campe and as it were two cubits above the face of the earth And the people stood up all that day and all the night and all the next day and they gathered the Quailes he ●hat gathered least gathered ten homers and spreading they spred them for themselves round about the campe The flesh was yet betweene their teeth it was not yet cut off when the anger of Iehovah was kindled against the people and Iehovah smote the people with a very great plague And hee called the name of that place Kibroth hattaavah because there they buried the people that lusted From Kibroth hattaavah the people journeyed unto Hazeroth and they were in Hazeroth Annotations ANd the people Hitherto in this booke Gods grace to his people hath beene manifested in the ordering directing and governing of them in the Wildernesse towards their promised inheritance now followeth their unthankfulnesse and unworthy carriage among so great blessings by their many murmurings and rebellions whereby both the disobedient nature of man and the impossibilitie of the Law to bring men unto God is declared when they were complainers or as complainers that is even complainers very murmurers grudging and shewing themselves discontented with their esta●e and as is likely for their so long travell in that Wildernesse three dayes journey before they came to a resting place 〈…〉 10. 33. and thus Sol. larchi here expou 〈…〉 So whereas they should have rejoyced in the 〈◊〉 now among them they shewed themselves 〈◊〉 mourners sorrowfull and as the Greeke 〈…〉 teth murmuring Of such murmurers and complainers the Apostle also speaketh Iude verse 〈◊〉 evill this seemeth to have reference to the first the people was evill that is wicked and so 〈◊〉 pleasing the Lord the Greeke referreth
〈◊〉 Sol. Iarchi here saith The strength of Moses became feeble as a woman when the holy blessed God shewed him the punishments that he would bring upon them the people for this he said before him If thus kill mee first kill me or killing me that is kill me quite and out of hand the word is doubled for more vehemency and speed see mine evill that is my misery and affliction By seeing evill is meant the feeling or suffering of miserie as to see death is to dye Luke 2. 26. Psal. 89. 49. and as on the contrary to see the salvation of God meaneth the fruition or enjoying thereof Psal. 50. 23. and 91. 16. Compare with this Elijahs speech 1 Kings 19. 4. Verse 16. Gather unto me in Chaldee Gather before me and Thargum Ionathan explaineth it Gather in my name seventy worthy men This is answerable to the number of the seventy soules of the house of Israel which went downe into Egypt Gen. 46. 27. Exod. 1. 5. Deut. 10. 22. and to the 70 Elders which went up unto the Lord at mount Sinai Exod. 24. 1 9. From hence the Hebrewes in their commonwealth continued their chiefes Senate in Ierusalem of 71 Elders as here there were 70 and Moses the Prince So they record in Talmud Bab. in Sanhedrin ch 1. and Maimony in Sanhedrin c. 1. s. 3 4 5 explaineth it thus there was in Israel first a great court or judgement hall in th● Sanctuary and that was called the great Synedrion and their number was 71 as it is written Gather to me 70 men c. and Moses was chiefe over them as it is said And let them stand there with thee Numb 11. 16. loe here are 71. The greatest in wisedome among them all they set him for head over them and he was called Nasi the Prince in every place and hee stood in stead of Moses cur Master And they placed the greatest among the 70 next 〈◊〉 the head and he sate on his right hand and was call 〈…〉 Ab beth din the father of the judgement hall A 〈…〉 the residue of the 70 sate before him according 〈◊〉 their eares and according to their dignitie wh●seever was in wisedome greater than his 〈◊〉 nearer unto the Prince on his left hand And they sate as in the forme of an halfe circle round so that the Prince with the Father of the Court might see them all Moreover they set two Iudgement halls each of 23. Iudges the one at the doore of the Court of the Sanctuary the other at the doore of the mountaine of the Temple And in every citie of Israel wherein were 120. fathers of families or moe they set a lesser Synedrion which sate in the gate of the citie as it is written And establish judgement in the gate Amos 5. 15. And their number was 23 Iudges and the wisest among them was head of them and the residue sate in a round like halfe a circle that hee which was head might see them all If it were a citie which had not 120 men in it they set therein three Iudges for there is no judgement hall of lesse than three that there might be moe or fewer if there hapned to be among them dissention in judgement But every citie which had not in it two wise men the one fit to teach the whole Law and the other skilfull to heare and skilfull to demand and make answer they set no Synedrion therein although it had in it two thousand Israelites c. the officers in Greeke the Scribes and Targum Ionathan addeth in Egypt as if these were such as are mentioned in Exod. 5. 14. and of them Sol. Iarchi also understandeth it What these Officers were after in the common-wealth of Israel is noted on Deut. 16 18. Here it seemeth to be meant of such Elders and Officers as were well knowne and had approved themselves for wisedome and good carriage for which they might with comfort be preferred to this high Senate for they that have ministred well as the Apostle saith purchase to themselves a good degree 1 Tim. 3. 13. Afterwards in Israel about the choise of these chiefe Magistrates it is thus recorded Our wise men have said that from the great Synedrion they sent into all the land of Israel and made diligent inquirie whomsoever they found to be wise and afraid to sinne and meeke c. they made him a judge in his citie And from thence they preferred him to the gate of the mountaine of the house of the Lord and from thence they promoted him to the gate of the Court of the Sanctuary and from thence they advanced him to the great judgement hall Maim in Sanhedrin chap. 2. sect 8. stand there or present themselves there with thee They were to stand before the Tabernacle to present themselves unto God and to receive authoritie from him and with Moses who was to be chiefe over them The Hebrewes from this word with gather a likenesse unto Moses saying They constitute none in the Synedrion but Priests Levites and Israelites whose genealogie is knowne c. as it is said in Num. 11. 16. WITH THEE which are like thee in wisedome religion and genealogie Maim in Sanhedrin ch 2 sect 1. Vers. 17. I will come downe to wit in signe or apparition as the Chaldee translateth I will reveale my selfe and Targum Ionathan addeth I will reveale my selfe in the glory of my Majestie this was in the cloud vers 25. I will take or will separate in Chaldee will increase of the spirit that is on thee meaning the gifts of the Spirit as prophesie vers 25. and other meet for their charge for there are diversities of gifts but the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 4. So spirits are named for spirituall gifts 1 Cor. 14. 12. 32. and the Holy Ghost for the gifts of the Holy Ghost Ioh. 7. 39. Act. 19. 2. 6. Thus the spirit of Elijah rested on Elish● 2 King 2. 15. when he had the same gifts and power of prophesie miracles c. Neither was Moses spirit hereby diminished for as Sol. Iarchi saith Moses in that houre was like unto the Lamp that was left burning on the Candlesticks in the Sanctuary from which all the other lamps were lighted yet the light thereof was not lessened any whit God shewed hereby that none without gifts of his Spirit are fit for office and government Exo. 18. 21. Deut. 1. 13. Act. 6. 3. The Hebrewes have this rule Any Synedrion King or Governour that shall set up a Iudge for Israel that is not fit and is not wise in the wisdome of the Law and meet to be a Iudge although he be wholly amiable and have in him other good things yet he that setteth him up transgresseth c. Maim in Sanhedrin chap. 3. sect 8. V. 18. Sanctifie in Chaldee prepare your selves so to sanctifie warre is to prepare therefore Ier. 64. 51. 28. It meaneth an holy prepara 〈…〉 o receive the gifts that they desired
will I speake with him and in vision and not in darke speeches and the similitude of Iehovah shall hee behold and wherefore were yee not afraid to speake against my servant against Moses And the anger of Iehovah was kindled against them and he went away And the cloud departed from off the Tent and behold Marie became leprous as snow and Aaron looked upon Marie and behold she was leprous And Aaron said unto Moses Alas my lord I beseech thee lay not the sinne upon us wherein we have done foolishly and wherein we have sinned I beseech thee let her not be as one dead of whom when hee commeth out of his Mothers wombe halfe his flesh is even consumed And Moses cried out unto Iehovah saying O God I beseech thee heale her now And Iehovah said unto Moses And if her father had spitting spitted in her face should she not be ashamed seven dayes let her be shut seven dayes out from the campe and after let her be gathered in And Marie was shut out from the campe seven dayes and the people journeyed not till Marie was gathered in againe And afterward the people journeyed from Hazeroth and encamped in the Wildernesse of Pharan Annotations MArie in Hebrew Mirjam in Greeke Mariam she was a Prophetesse sister of Moses and Aaron Ex. 15. 20 she it was that began the quarrell as in the originall it appeareth Marie she spake therefore she not Aaron was plagued with leprosie v. 10. As Satan prevailed first with Eve then by her with Adam Gen. 1. 3. so here first with Marie and then by her with Aaron the high Priest And as the former sin of lust for flesh began among the baser sort Num. 11. 4. so this sin of ambition and vain glory began among the chiefest of the Church for these three Moses Aaron and Mary were the chief guides whom God sent before his people Mic. 6. 4. because or upon occasion for the sake Aethiopian Hebr. Cushite which the Greeke translateth Aethiopian This seemeth to be no other than Zipporah the Midianiresse who Moses had married Ex. 2. 16 21. because the Midianites dwelt in Cush his land they were called Cushites or Aethiopians and it may be also because they were tawny coloured like them For otherwise Cush was the son of Cham Gen. 10. 6. whereas Midian was the son of Abraham the son of Sem Gen. 25. 1 2. The Chaldee in stead of Cushith saith Faire which may be spoken by the contrary Iosephus Philo and some others take this wife not to be Sipporah but another Aethiopians taken to wit to wife that is married so in 1 Chron. 2. 19 21. 2 Chron. 11. 20. Nah. 6. 18. and 10 30. By this it seemeth the marrying of that woman who was not of the stocke of Israel and who hindred him from circumcising his son Exod. 4. 24 25 26. was the occasion of their murmuring Howbeit the Hebrew Doctors make his not companying with his wife to be the occasion for that he being a Prophet daily conversant with the Lord and frequenting his Tabernacle abstained from her lest he should have legall pollution which would have kept him from the Sanctuary Levit. 15. 16 31. Compare also Exod 19. 15. Thus the Chaldee expoundeth it for hee had put away or abstained from the faire wife which he had taken And Sol. Iarchi thus for he had taken a Cushite woman and had now put her away Verse 2. by Moses or in Moses as speaking of inward revelation by the Spirit The Targum called Ionathans paraphraseth thus Hath the Lord spoken onely indeed with Moses who is separated from copulation of the bed meaning with his wife also by us or in us as David said The spirit of Iehovah spake in me 2 Sam. 23. 2. Here Sol. Iarchi addeth for explanation hath he not spoken also by us and yet we have not separated our selves from the way of the earth meaning from mutuall societie such as is between man and wife a phrase taken from Gen. 19. 31. But it may be understood as before is noted that they would not have Moses esteemed the onely Prophet who had so stained himselfe by marriage with a strange woman Their drift was by disgracing Moses for his infirmitie to grace and advance themselves against which it is said Let us not be desirous of vaine-glory provoking one another envying one another Gal. 5. 26. heard it that is took notice of this their speech to reprove and punish it So of Reubens sin it is said Israel heard it Gen. 35. 22. Or God is said to heare it as a witnesse of that which it may be they murmured in secret as in Psal. 59 8. swords are in their lips for who say they doth heare and in Psal. 55. 20. God will heare and afflict them See also Psal. 94. 7 8 9. Vers. 3. meeke the originall word hath affinitie with affliction and lowlinesse for by affliction this vertue is furthered Lam. 3. 27 28 29 30. and is seated in the heart and spirit as the Apostle mentioneth a meeke and quiet spirit 1 Pet. 3. 4. As Moses so Christ is set forth for an example of meekenesse Mat. 21. 5. and 11. 29. It is a vertue which keepeth a meane in anger and avenging of our selves when we are offended wronged and contemned above all the men or more than any man This commendation the Spirit of God giveth of Moses though by Moses owne pen as the Apostle also writeth in his own behalfe 2 Cor. 11. 5 6 10 22 c. and 12. 11 12. although Moses is noted to have been very angry sundry times Exod. 11. 8. and 16. 20. and 32. 19. Levit. 10. 16 Num. 16. 15. and 31. 14. and 20. 10 11. compared with Psal. 106. 32 33. Vers. 4. said suddenly so shewing the greatnesse of his displeasure against them which suffered no delay Psal. 64. 7. Prov. 6. 15. Esai 30 13. and preventing any that mought thinke Moses complained to God and sought revenge Thus God who will be a swift witnesse against evill doers Mal. 3. 5. suddenly rose to plead the cause of his meekest servant Compare Psal. 50. 19 20 21. yee t●ree both parties are judicially summoned to appeare before the Lord in the Tent of his habitation as he riseth up to judgement to save all the meeke of the earth Psal. 76. 9 So in Num. 16. 16. Verse 5. came downe in Chaldee revealed him-selfe see Gen. 11. 5. of the cloud as the throne o● his glory out of which he used to appeare speake unto them Psal. 99. 7. Num. 16. 42. Vnto these apparitions those visions of Iohn hath reference Rev. 10. 1 2 3. and 14 14 c. Vers. 6. a Prophet among you or of you Hebr. your Prophet which the Chaldee expoundeth 〈◊〉 there shall be Prophets to or among you What this word Prophet meaneth see in the notes on Gen. 20. 7. Exod. 7. 1. I Iehovah so the Chaldee also explaineth it or it may be
returned from searching the land at the end of fortie dayes And they went and came to Moses and to Aaron and to all the congregation of the sonnes of Israel unto the Wildernesse of Pharan to Kadesh and brought backe word unto them and unto all the congregation and shewed them the fruit of the land And they told him and said We came unto the land whither thou sentest us and surely it floweth with milke and honey and this is the fruit of it Neverthelesse the people is strong that dwelleth in the land and the cities sensed very great and moreover we saw the children of Anak there Amalek dwelleth in the land of the South and the Chethite and the Iebusite and the Amorite dwelleth in the mountaine and the Canaanite dwelleth by the sea and by the coast of Iordan And Caleb stilled the people before Moses and said Going up let us goe up and possesse it for we are well able to overcome it But the men that went up with him said We be not able to goe up against the people for they are stronger than wee And they brought up an evill report of the land which they had searched unto the sonnes of Israel saying The land thorow which we have gone to search it is a land that eateth up the Inhabitants thereof and all the people that we saw within it are men of statures And there we saw the Giants the sonnes of Anak which come of the Giants and we were in our owne eyes as grashoppers and so we were in their eyes Annotations Here beginneth the 37 section of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Law see Gen. 6. 9. IEhovah spake By Moses relation after it appeareth that when God had led his people from mount Horeb to Cadesh Barnea thorow the great and fearfull Wildernesse and they were come to the mountaine of the Amorites then Moses said See the LORD thy God hath given the land before thee Goe up possesse it And all the people came neere unto Moses and said We will send men before us and they shall search out the land for us and bring us word againe by what way we shall go up c. That word liked Moses well and he tooke of them twelve men and sent them to spie out the land Deut. 1. 19 24. So where here it is said Iehovah spake c. it is not meant that this motion came first from the Lord but the people first spake of it to Moses he consulted with the Lord about it and the Lord approved or at least permitted the thing which they desired Verse 2. Send thou or Send for thee which Sol. Iarchi expoundeth to this sense I comm●●● thee not if thou pleasest send for as much as Israel came and said wee will send men c. Deut. 1. 22. that they may search or and let them search or espie by searching round about and the word implieth the action of the heart and minde not of the eyes onely Eccles. 1. 13. and 7. 25. Thus God let them goe search or espie the land which hee him-selfe before had espied for them Ezek. 20. 6. and went before them in the way to search them out a place to pitch their tents in in fire by night and in a cloud by day Deut. 1. 33. of Canaan that is as the Greeke translateth of the Chanaanites named as the chiefe for it was the land of seven mightie nations Deut. 7. 1. I give or am giving so he speaketh as of a thing present for more assurance one man one man an Hebrew phrase meaning of every tribe one man excepting the tribe of Levi for of them none was sent because they were to have no inheritance in the land Deut. 18. 1. a ruler or a prince not of the baser sort because the businesse was weighty whereupon their rebellion following was of the more note Verse 3. at the mouth or according to the mouth that is the word of the LORD as the Chaldee translateth and the Greeke by the voice of the Lord and this Sol. Iarchi expoundeth by his permission So in the commentarie called Phesikta f. 47. it is said The election of the Spies was according to the mouth of the LORD not that God commanded them to send them If thou sayest why did he not forbid them to send To accomplish their desire and to render them their recompense and to give unto Ioshua and Caleb a goodreward heads that is as the Greeke saith Chiefe-rulers and Chazkuni expoundeth them Captaines over thousands as in Exod. 18. 25. Verse 4. Shammua in Greeke Samiel sonne of Zacchour Verse 5. Shaphat in Greeke Saphat sonne of Souri Verse 6. Caleb in Greeke Chaleb son of Iephonne See 1 Chron. 4. 15. His name signifieth Hartie and he brought Moses word againe as it was in his heart Ios. 14. 7. Verse 7. Iigal in Greeke Igad Verse 8. Hoshea in Greeke Auses son of Naue Verse 9. Palti or as in Greeke Phalti Verse 10. Gaddiel in Greeke Goudiel sonne of Soudi Verse 11. of Ioseph He was father of Ephraim in vers 8. as well as of Manasseh here and sometime Ioseph is named for Ephraim Ezek. 37. 16. 19. Revel 7. 8. Here he is named as father of Manasseh who was his first-borne Ios. 17. 1. although the Hebrewes give another reason namely because both of them uttered an ill report Ioseph of his brethren Gen. 37. 2. and the Prince of Manasseh of the land which Hoshea of Ephraim did not Chazkuni on Num. 13. Verse 13. Sethur in Greeke Sadour Verse 14. Nahbi or Nachbi in Greeke Naabi sonne of Sabi Verse 15. Geuel in Greeke Goudiel Verse 16. These are the names Chazkuni here obserueth He sent no spie of the tribe of Levi because he had no portion in the land Nun called also Non 1 Chron. 7. 27. in Greeke Naue Ioshua or Iehoshua called sometime Ieshua Neh. 8. 17. in Greeke Iesus and so the New testament writeth him Act. 7. 45. Heb. 4. 8. that signifieth 〈◊〉 Saviour Mat. 1. 21. And this name Moses gave him by the spirit of God either as foreseeing that be should be his successor and save the people from their enemies the Canaanites or as Sol. Iarchi here noteth praying for him that the Lord would save him from the counsell of the wicked spies But Chazkuni readeth it Moses had called Hoshea the sonne of Nun Ioshua not that he now first called him Ioshua but before when he was made his 〈…〉 ister and found grace in his eyes Wee finde him called Ioshua before they came to mount Si 〈…〉 i Exod 17. 9. and after this when Moses is ready to die hee is called Hoshea in Deut. 32. 44. where Chazkuni saith thus At the first when hee was taken to bee Moses minister Moses called him Ioshua for so is the manner of Kings to change the name of their ministers Gen. 41. 45. Dan. 1. 7. But now when hee is made King himselfe his first name is restored neverthelesse
20. Aaron what is he to wit other than the Minister of God So the Apostle saith Who is Paul and who is Apollo but ministers by whom ye beleeved 1 Cor. 3. 5. And thus had Moses said in their former murmurings What are wee that ye murmure against us your murmurings are not against us but against Iehovah Exod. 16. 7 8. Vers. 12. We will not come up An obstinate answer and refusall of the meanes of their bettering by Moses debating the matter with them so might they have been perswaded to disist from their evill course and have found mercie By comming up is meant unto the publike place of judgement whither in the Scripture phrase men are said to goe up as in Deut. 25. 7. Ruth 4. 1. And in Ezra 10. 7. 8. whosoever would not goe to Ierusalem at the time appointed by the Princes and the Elders all his substance should be forfeited and himselfe separated from the Church of those that had been in captivitie Of Dathan and Abiram Sol. Iarchi here observeth that Their owne mouth caused them to offend or signified their fall they were not but to goe downe to wit alive into hell verse 33. Vers. 13. out of the land of Egypt as is added in Targum Ionathan which having beene the place of their bondage and miserie an iron furnace unto them Deut. 4. 20. they here call it a land flowing with milke and honey so despising their redemption God their Redeemer who laid their bring from thence for a ground of their obedience unto him Exod. 19 4 5. and 20. 2. even making or also making thy selfe a Prince that is without God of thine own presumption advancing thy selfe onely wholly and continually The doubling of the word is to aggravate their crimination This latter branch the Greeke translateth Thou art a Prince as if it were spoken in derision Verse 14. not brought us according to promise Exod. 3. 8. and 33. 3. Lev. 20. 24. of field that is as the Chaldee explaineth it of fields and vineyards one named generally for many as is noted on Gen. 3. 2. dig out the eyes that is make them blinde as the Chaldee expoundeth it so in Iude. 16. 21. 1 Sam. 11. 2. of these men or as the Greeke translateth it of those men which may be meant of the whole congregation as if they were so blinde that they could not espie his fraud or it may have speciall reference to Korah and his company And thus Chazkuni here explaineth it Thou hopest to dig out the eyes of Korah and of all his congregation as though they had no eyes to see and understand this offence that thou hast brought us up from the good land of Egypt and hast not performed unto us that which thou promisedst to bring us into a land that floweth with milke and honey but hast said In this wildernesse they shall be consumed and there they shall die Num. 14. 35. Moreover thou hast perverted judgement against us and therefore we will not come up unto thee for we beleeve thee not concerning the triall of this matter Verse 15. very wroth or very much grieved see the notes on Gen. 4. 5. Respect not or Looke not Turne not the face unto which the Chaldee expoundeth Accept not with fauour their oblation their offering or their Meat-offering their Minchab whereof see the annotations on Levit. 2. and on Gen. 4. 3. This Sol. Iarchi expoundeth their incense which they shall offer before thee to morrow so it hath reference to Korah his company 2. 7. and 17. But others as he saith explaine it thus 〈◊〉 that they have a part in the daily sacrifices of the 〈◊〉 gregation let not their part be accepted be●●re 〈◊〉 And thus some understand this imprecation to be against Dathan and Abiram onely as Chazkum saith The reason why Moses cursed Dathan 〈◊〉 Abiram was because when Moses sent to call them they said we will not come up It was not their 〈◊〉 to convert for though the Lord should have said I have chosen Aaron yet they would have m●●ined against the Priesthood But Korah and the 250 men which tooke upon them to take every man his ce 〈…〉 because they were in hope that the Lord had not sent him concerning his brother Aaron but that he had done it of his owne minde he would not curse o●● asse that is not the vilest beast the Greeke translateth it the desire of any of them that is any de●●rable thing They mistooke and read Cham●● for Chamur because the Hebrew letters * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dand 〈…〉 be one like another as is also noted on Gen. 4 18. But Iosippus noteth it to be one of the 13 places which the Lxxij Interpreters changed purposely lest Prolemie the King at whose request they ●●rned the Law into Greeke should say Hee 〈…〉 asse but some other gift he did take Verse 16. Thou and all thy congregation The Greeke expoundeth it Sanctifie thy congregation and be ye ready before the Lord c. Because their rebellion was against God verse 11. therefore Moses committeth the deciding of the controversie unto God Ver. 18. at the doore in the court-yard of the Sanctuary and Moses and Aaron Targum Ionathan explaineth it they on the one side and 〈◊〉 and Aaron on the other side Verse 19. assembled against them all not onely the 250 forementioned but the generall mu 〈…〉 tude too ready to incline to his faction See verse 41. glorie of Iehovah in the cloud over the Sanctuary as it did at other times in the like cases 〈◊〉 42. Num. 12. 5. and 14. 10. Verse 21. as in a moment or even in a moment suddenly and as the Greeke translateth at once So in verse 45. and thus God had before threatned after they had made the ●●lfe Exod. 33. 5. Verse 22. God of the spirits of all flesh By all flesh is meant all mankinde as in Gen. 6. 13. 〈◊〉 40. 5. 6. Ezek. 20. 48. and 21. 4 5. Ioel. 2. 28. and so it is explained in Iob 12. 10. the spirit of 〈◊〉 fl●●h of man And the Lord is called God of the spirits o● men both as he is creator of them who ●orm 〈…〉 the spirit of man within him Zach. 12. 1. called therefore the Father of spirits Heb. 12. 9. and as the preservation ordering and government 〈◊〉 them is in his hand both in life and death 〈…〉 hand is the soule of all living and the spirit of 〈…〉 of man Iob 12. 10. Therefore Moses useth the like phrase when he prayeth that a governour might be substituted in his stead Num. 27. 16. Targum Ionathan explaineth it God that putt●●● the 〈◊〉 of the soule in the bodies of all the sonnes of men and Targum Ierusalemy thus God which rulest 〈◊〉 the soules of all flesh Chazkuni saith which knowest the spirit of every one of them The Greeke translateth God of the Fathers and of all flesh understanding as it seemeth by spirits such
burneth them defileth ●is cloathes the time of the burning of them till they be turned to ashes Levit 16. 28. Maim ibidem c. 5. Vers. 9. a man that is cleane this man is said in Targum Ionathan to be a Priest the ashes It is reported that After they had finished the burning of her they beat her with staves her and all the wood of the pile wherewith she was burned and sifted all with sives and whatsoever was blacke which possibly they could pound and make it ashes either of her flesh or of the wood they pounded it till it was made ashes and that which had no ashes in it they left the same and every of her bones that remained unburnt they pounded Maimony in Pharah ch 3. sect 3. As the burning of the heiffer signified the sufferings of Christ Hebr. 13. 11 12. so the ashes were the monument of his most base and utmost afflictions for ashes were used as greatest signes of sorrow and misery 2 Sam. 13. 19. Iob 30. 19. and 42. 6. Ier. 6. 26. and to be brought to ashes upon the earth is noted for the extremity of Gods fiery judgements Ezek. 28. 18. But the memoriall of Christs most ignominious death is to be kept as a most glorious monument of our life justification and sanctification through faith in his name 1 Cor. 11. 24. 26. Gal. 6. 14. Phil. 3. 8 9 10. without the campe to signifie that they which would have part in the death of Christ must goe forth unto him without the campe bearing his reproach Heb. 13. 13. in a cleane place figuring a cleane heart and pure conscience in which only the monuments of Christs death are reserved by faith Act. 15. 9. Heb. 10. 22. Eph. 3. 17. The Hebrews say They gathered not any of her ashes to lay it up in the court of the Sanctuary but they divided all the ashes into three parts One part they put in the place called the Cheil the Fort or Frontier and another part in mount Olivet and the third was parted to all the Wards or Custodies of the Levites That which was parted to all the Wards the Priests sanctified therewith and that which was put in mount Olivet the Israelites sprinkled with it and that which was put in the Cheil was reserved and laid up as it is written AND IT SHALL BE FOR THE CONGREGATION FOR A RESERVATION to teach that they laid up some of it And thus they laid up some of every heiffer which they burned in the Cheil And they did burne nine red heiffers after they were commanded this precept till the desolation of the second Temple The first was done by Moses our Master the second by Ezra and seven after Ezra till the Temple was destroyed And the tenth shall be done by the King Christ who be reveiled with speed Amen So be the good will of God Maimony in Pharah ch 3. sect 4. This last speech of the Iew sheweth their zeale without knowledge for wee know that the Sonne of God is come and hath given us an understanding that wee may know him that is true and we are in him that is true even in his Sonne Iesus Christ 1 Ioh. 5. 20. and by him was this legall type as all other accomplished as it is written If the ashes of an heiffer sprinkling the uncleane sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the bloud of Christ. who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience from dead workes to serve the living God Hebr. 9. 13 14. Wherefore Christ the King hath been ●evealed and they have done unto him whatsoever they would but even unto this day when Moses is read a veile is laid upon their heart so that they cannot stedfastly looke to the end of that which is abolished neverthelesse when it shall turne to the Lord the veile shall be taken away 2 Cor. 3. 15 16. Then shall they looke upon him whom they have pierced and they shall mourne for him as one mourneth for his only sonne and shall be in bitternesse for him c. Zach. 12. 10. And this day God cause to come with speed Amen for a reservation or for an asservation a keeping that is to be reserved or kept See the like phrase in Exod. 16. 32 33 34. Num. 17. 10. Sol. Iarchi here saith That which was in the Cheil or Fort was put there for a reservation according to that sore-noted out of Maimony But this may be understood of all the ashes and not of a third part only which was kept for the use of Israel as after followeth for the congregation Hence the Hebrewes say that all Israelites were sit to keepe it Therefore any of the common people which bringeth a vessell out of his house though an earthen vessell and saith This vessell is cleane for the Sinne water l●e it is cleane they sanctifie in it and sprinkle out of it though that vessell is uncleane for the Sanctuary and for the heave-offering And so any of the common people that shall say I am cleane for the Sin-water or that hath the Sin-water by him and saith it is cleane hee is to be trusted for there is no man of Israel too vile for it Maim in Pharah ch 13. sect 12. water of separation that is water to be sprinkled for separation to be sprinkled on such as are separated and removed because of uncleannesse from other people This appeareth by vers 13. where it is said because the water of separation was not sprinkled upon him The Hebrew Niddah which properly signifieth a separation or removall for uncleannesse is sometime figuratively used for uncleannesse it selfe which is to be done away as in 2 Chron. 29. 5. Ezra 9. 11. Whereupon the water which cleanseth it is called the water of separation which the Greeke and Chaldee versions call water of sprinkling because it was sprinkled on the uncleane to purifie him vers 18. 19. According to which phrase Christs bloud is called the bloud of sprinkling Hebr. 12. 24. because it purifieth the conscience and was figured by this sprinkling water Heb. 9. 13 14. a purification for sin Hebr. a sin which word as it is often used for a Sin-offring or sacrifice that expiateth sinne as in Lev●● 4. 3 c. so here it is the name of that water which purified sinne as a●ter is manifested in vers 12. c. Wherefore the Greeke translateth it is a sanctification or a purification And these two names here given to this water the Prophet useth when he foretelleth the grace of Christ In that day there shall be a fountaine ●pened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem for Sinne and for Separation Zach. 13. 1. that is for a purification for sinne and for a water of separation for uncleannesse which the Greeke there interpreteth for a removall away and for a sprinkling Vers. 10. shall wash as when any bloud of the Sin-offering was sprinkled on
God Exod. 4. 20. and 17. 9. might be kept also in the Sanctuary and after in verse 11. it is said Moses smote the rocke with his rod. speake ye unto the Rocke He saith not smite the rocke yet in verse 11. Moses smote the rocke and in vers 10. he spake to the people but it is not said that he spake to the rocke as here he was commanded Some others thinke that Gods intendment in bidding him Take the rod was to smite the Rocke with it and that he sinned not in smiting it but in unbeleefe for which he is blamed in vers 12. it shall give forth his water or the waters of it this promise of God was that whereon the faith of Moses and Aaron should have rested thou shalt bring forth God was he that brought forth and gave water to the people as is often mentioned to his glory He clave the Rockes in the wildernesse and gave drinke as out of the great deepes and brought forth streames out of the Rocke c. Psal. 78. 15 16. So in Psal. 105. 41. and 114. 8. Deut. 8. 15. Nehem. 9. 15 20. But that worke is here ascribed to Moses ministerially for that the waters should come out at his speaking So in other workes of grace the Ministers of the Word are called Saviours Obad. vers 21 for in the faithfull performance of their office they both save themselves and those that heare them 1 Tim. 4 16. Vers. 9. from before Jehovah that is out of the Tabernacle for so the phrase importeth as in Num. 17. 7. Exod. 16. 33 34. Vers. 10. Heare now ye rebels As here he speaketh to the people who was bidden speake to the Rocke vers 8. so the manner of his speech sheweth great passion of minde more than at other times and the Scripture noteth that now the people had bitterly provoked his spirit so that he spake unadvisedly uttering his anger with his lips Psal. 106. 33. shall we bring forth water a speech of doubting and unbeleefe both in Moses and Aaron as in vers 12. God blameth them because they beleeved not in him So before when Moses said Shall the flockes and the herds be slaine for them c. he was blamed with this answer Is the Lords hand waxed short Numb 11. 22 23. Moses was sore moved against this latter generation of Israelites who had seene so many miracles and their fathers perished for rebellion and yet they were not bettered hee might feare lest for their sinning like their fathers the Lord would leave them as he after speaketh in Numb 32. 14 15. Vers. 11. lifted up his hand another signe of indignation being joyned with smiting twice the doubling of his stroke shewed also the heat of his anger Sol. Iarchi on this place conjectureth that 〈◊〉 smote it twice because at first it brought forth b●● drops of water because God had not bidden him smite it but speake unto it much water or many waters He clave the rockes in the wilderrasse and gave drinke as out of the great deeps Psal. 78. 15. The unbeleefe of man maketh not the faith of God without effect Rom. 3. 3. Moses and Aaron beleeved not God to sanctifie him vers 12. yet he faithfully kept his promise and sanctified himselfe vers 13. the Congregation dranke Thus the Lord know his people in the wildernesse in the land of droughts Hos. 13. 5. And they thirsted not when be led them thorow the desarts he caused the waters to flow out of the rockes for them he clave the rockes 〈…〉 so and the waters gushed out Esai 48. 21. The 〈◊〉 out of the Rocke besides the refreshing which it gave unto their bodies was also a spirituall 〈◊〉 from that spirituall Rock Christ 1 Cor. 10. 4. who being smitten for our transgressions Esai 53. with the rod of the Law which worketh wrath Rom. 4. 15. from him proceedeth the living water wherewith the Israel of God may quench their thirst for ever John 4. 10 14. For who so beleeveth in him out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water even the waters of the holy Ghost Ioh. 7. 38 39. To these waters every one that thirsteth is called to come freely Esai 55. 1. Rev. 22. 17. their cattell that water which was both a naturall and spirituall refreshing to the people is given also to the beasts for their naturall thirst because the signes and seales of Gods grace are such in respect of the use of them to those unto whom they are sanctified of God for that purpose So the waters of Iordan were sanctified for Baptisme unto repentant and beleeving sinners Matth. 3. 6. which out of that use were common waters And now not only the Israelites cattell but the wilde beasts also of the wildernesse had benefit by this mercy of God to his people whereunto the Lord hath reference when he saith by his Prophet The beast of the field shall honour me the dragons and the owles because I give waters in the wildernesse rivers in the desart to give drinke to my people my chosen Esai 43. 20. Vers. 12. ye beleeved not in me the Chaldee expoundeth it ye beleeved not in my word Thus unbeleefe was here the chiefe sinne and cause of other sinnes as before in the people Numb 14. so here in Moses and Aaron who were 〈◊〉 partners in the transgression And this their sinne is called a rebellion against the mouth of the Lord Numb 27. 14. and a transgression Deut. 32. 51. which word as R. Menachem here noteth implieth salfhood as in Lev. 6. 2. it is joyned with false deniall and the Apostle saith Hee that beleeveth not God hath made him a lier 1 Ioh. 5. 10. to sanctifie me inwardly in the heart by faith outwardly by obedience to doe that which I commanded and by both to ascribe unto mee the glory of my truth and power So when it is said Sanctifie the Lord of hosts Esai 8. 13. the Apostle expoundeth it Sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts 1 Pet. 3. 15. in the eyes the Greeke translateth it before the sons of Israel This seemeth to be the reason of Gods severity at this time against Moses and Aaron more than before when Moses bewrayed also his unbeleefe in Num. 11. 21 22 23. because he now publiquely dishonoured God before all the people which did aggravate the sin whereas the former time he did it not in their eyes but in private before the Lord. therefore Chazkuni observeth that this word implieth an oath Neither indeed could Moses repentance or prayer get this sentence to be reversed for when the Lord hath sworne he will not repent Psal. 110. 4. 〈◊〉 ye shall not bring This chastisement was grievous unto Moses so that he besought the Lord that he might goe over and see the good land but the Lord was wroth with him for the peoples sakes and would not heare him Deut. 3. 23 26. And as God here spake so it came to passe for Aaron died in
valleyes I will make the wildernesse a poole of water and the dry land springs of water c. That they may see and know and consider and understand together that the hand of Iehovah hath done this and the Holy one of Israel hath created it Esay 41. 17 18 20. And againe A fountaine shall come forth of the house of the LORD and shall water the valley of Shittim ●oel 3. 18. Vers. 17. Then sang Israel Singing here was in them a signe of mi●th and joy as in Iam. 5. 13. and of beleefe in God and thankfulnesse as in Psal. 106. 12. and signified the spirituall joy which the faithfull have in Christ concerning which it is prophesied With joy shall yee draw water out of the wells of salvation And in that day shall yee say Praise Iehovah call upon his name declare his doings among the people c. Esay 12. 3 4. Spring up or Ascend O Well Answer ye to it that is sing or shout ye to it or sing ye of it The word Answer here meaneth to sing one after another as when they sung at the red sea Mary answered them that is sung after the men Exod. 15. 21. and in 1 Sam. 18. 7. the women answered one another as they plaied on instruments and sung the victory So in Psal. 147. 7. Answer yee that is Sing yee to Iehovah with confession And the order of the words may be thus Answer or Song ye unto it Spring up O Well A like phrase is in Esay 27. 2. A vineyard of red wine answer ye unto her or Answer that is Sing ye unto her A vineyard of red wine For the Scripture it selfe often changeth the order of words and sentences as I will put my lawes into their minde and write them on their heart Hebr. 8. 10. or put them into their heart and write them on their mind Hebr. 10. 16. So in Esay 〈…〉 1. compared with Rom. 10. 20. and Deut. 5. 16. with Eph. 6. 2. Mat. 21. 〈◊〉 39 with Mar. 12. 8. many the like See the notes on Gen. 5. 6. By this song they celebrate the miracle and memory of the Well which God gave them and if they sung it at the first when they assembled to diggeit it shewed also their faith in the promise of God who had said he would give them water and so they speake unto the Well as Moses was bidden speake to the Rocke Numb 20. 8. that it should ascend or spring up according to the word of the Lord. This Targum Ionathan explaineth it Ascend ô Well ascend ô Well did they sing unto it and it ascended Or if they sang it after it is a memoriall and celebration of Gods goodnesse and faithfulnesse as he had spoken unto them Ascend ô Well that is Come up into our heart or memory answer or sing ye of it that it may never be forgotten And ascending or comming up is often used in this sense as in Ier. 3. 16. neither shall it ascend or come up on the heart neither shall they remember it and in Ier. 51. 50. Remember the Lord a far off let Ierusalem ascend upon your heart that is come into your mind Vers. 18. The Well the Princes digged it or O Well which the Princes digged which the Nobles of the people delved where digged and delved are two words of the same meaning as in the Hebrew Caphar and Carah The Princes and Nobles of Israel digging this Well and the memory thereof thus celebrated by the song of Israel setteth forth the glory of this gracious gift of God unto his people and figured the labours and industry of the governours of the Church to bring forth the waters of the Spirit by the preaching of the word and opening of the Scriptures 2 Chron. 17. 7 8 9. Gal. 3. 2. 1 Tim. 5. 17 18. Hebr. 13. 7 17. 1 Pet. 1. 10 11 12. So in ages following this Well was renowmed being called Beer Elim that is the Well of the Mightie ones Esay 15. 8. with the Law-giver or by the Law-giver that is together with him and by his direction as in vers 16. understanding by the Law-giver Moses as in Deut. 33. 21. or God himselfe as in Esa. 33. 22. the LORD is our Law-giver And the Law-giver in Israel was a figure of Christ Gen. 49. 10. Iam. 4. 12. The Chaldee taketh one here to be used for many and translateth it the Scribes as Ezra the Priest is called a Scribe of the words of the commandements of the Lord and of his statutes to Israel Ezr. 7. 11. with their staves a staffe or rod in the hand of governors was a signe of their power and authority from God wherefore the Scripture useth these words for such signification Numb 17. 2 3 c. Psal. 23. 4. and 110. 2. Ier. 48. 17. 1 Cor. 4. 21. So the Greeke translateth this here when they ruled over them The Hebrewes have feigned many things of this Well of the springing and running of it from place to place and of the mysteries of it concerning Israel but our Saviour is the best Expositor who hath taught us to apply the brasen Serpent fore-spoken of to himselfe and his dying for the people Iob. 3. 14. and this Well of water which was the next token of grace to Israel in the wildernesse to the waters of the Spirit which is a Well springing up to eternall life in such as beleeve in him Iohn 4. 10. 14. and 7. 37 38 39. Also the Hebrewes themselves doe thus far testifie in Midrash Koheleth on Eccles. 1. 9. As the first Redeemer Moses brought downe Manna Exod. 16. so the last Redeemer Christ shall doe Psal. 72. 16. And as the first Redeemer caused a W●● to spring up so the last Redeemer shall cause waters to spring up as it is said And a fountaine shall come forth of the house of the LORD and shall water the valley of Shittim Ioel 3. 18. to Mattanah which is by interpretation a Gift and is likely to be the name of a place as the Greeke version also confirmeth though neither it nor those that here sollow are rehearsed by these names in Numb 33. where all their journeyes are told neither is it here expressed by Moses that they journeyed to these places but such words may well be understood Chazkuni on this Scripture saith this is added to that before in vers 13. They camped on the other side of Arnon which is in the wildernesse c. and from that other side which is in the wildernesse which in Numb 33. 46. is Almon Diblathaim they came to Mattanah called in Numb 33. 47. the Mounts of Abarim before Nebo the name of a place on the North side of the river Arnon in the beginning of the land of Sihon and it is called Mattanah a Gift because there began the gift of the land unto Israel Deut. 2. 24. 31. But afterward hee sheweth another interpretation that from the wildernesse a place of drought
fruitfull Uine Gen. 49. 22. Vers. 35. Shuthelah in Greeke Southala Becher this some thinke to be he which is called Bered in 1 Chron. 7. 20. Tahan or Tachan in Greeke Tanach by transposition of letters Vers. 36. Eran in 1 Chron. 7. 26. called Edan or Laadan so the Greeke here writeth him Eden for the likenesse of the Hebrew letters whereof see the Annotations on Gen. 4. 18. and Num. 2. 14. Of this Eran or Edan came Iosua the sonne of Nun 1 Chro. 7. 26 27. And here Ephraims sonnes sonne is head of a familie as was before in Iudahs tribe vers 21. Vers. 37. 32 thousand c. he had before 40 thousand Num. 2. 19. so eight thousand of this tribe are now diminished Vers. 38. Bela in Greeke Bale he was Benjamins first-borne 1 Chron. 8. 1. Ashbel called Iediael 1 Chron. 7. 6. Benjamins second sonne 1 Chron. 8. 1. The Greeke here writeth him As●ber or as some copies have it Asubel Abiram or Achiram in Greeke Acheiran elsewhere he is named Aechi Gen. 46. 22. and Achrah the 〈◊〉 sonne of Benjamin 1 Chron. 8. 1. Vers. 39. Shephupham in Greeke Sopha● in 1 Chron. 7. 12. he is called S●uppim in Gen. 46. 22. Muppim Hupham otherwise Huppim Gen. 46. 22. 1 Chron. 7. 12. Vers. 40. Ard in Greeke Ader so in 1 Chro. 8. 3. the Hebrew writeth him Adar the familie understand as the Greeke also supplieth of Ard the familie of the Ardites Here Benjamin hath but seven families who in Gen. 46. 21. had ten Vers. 41. 45 thousand c. hee had before but 35 thousand and 400. Num. 2. 23. now his number is increased ten thousand and two hundred that though his families were diminished yet hee had the greatest increase of men of warre amongst all the tribes save Manasseh and Aser Vers. 42. Shuham or Shucham called by transplacing of letters Hushim or Chushim in Gen. 46. 23. in Greeke Same Vers. 43. 64 thousand c. of one familie of Dan there sprang so many thousand men that none of all the tribes save Iudah have the like multitude and he is increased 17 hundred men moe than at the former numbring Num. 2. 26. Vers. 44. Iimnah in Greeke Iamein 〈◊〉 in Greeke I●sovi Betweene these there was another called Iisvah Gen. 46. 17. whose familie here omitted seemeth to be perished Vers. 45. Cheber or Heber in Greeke Cheber of his posteritie see 1 Chron. 7. 32. Here Asers sonnes sonnes are also heads of families as were before in Iudah and Ephraim vers 21. and 36. Vers 46. Serah or Serach in Greeke Sara mentioned also in Gen. 46. 17. 1 Chron. 7. 30. Vers. 47. 53 thousand c. when before 〈◊〉 had but 45 thousand and five hundred Num. 2. 28. that his increase in the wildernesse was elev●● thousand and nine hundred men of warre none but Manasseh was before him Vers. 48. Naphtali in Greeke Naphthal 〈…〉 Iachzeel in Greeke Asiel The foure families of Napthtali continue as in Gen. 46. 24. Vers. 50. 45 thousand c. wheras before he had been 53 thousand and 4 hundred Num. 2. 30. so that eight thousand fewer are at the last than at the first Vers. 51. and a thousand c. The number of all at the former count was 600 thousand and three thousand and 550 Num. 2. 32. so that now in the whole summe the host of Israel is decreased in their 38 yeares traveil eighteene hundred and twentie men exempting the Levites which were numbred apart Wherein Gods worke for them all in generall and for the tribes and families in particular is to be regarded When they were under bondage and affliction in Egypt they multiplied like fish and filled the land Exod. 1. for outward persecution increaseth the Church and lesseneth it not but when they were come out from that iron furnace and carried of God as on Eagles wings thorow the wildernesse in safetie they so provoked him by their murmurings rebellions and idolatries that he consumed their dayes in vanity and their yeares in hastie terrour Psal. 78. 17. 33. And though amongst other blessings God give them his lawes to direct them Exod. 20. c. and his good spirit to instruct them Neh. 9. 20. and led them like a flock by the hand of Moses and Aaron Psal. 77. 21. yet learned they not obedience but mount Sinai gendred to bondage Gal. 4. 24. and the Law wrought wrath Rom. 4. 15. and Moses their Law-giver could not bring them into the promised land but left that unto his successor Iesus the son of Nun who figured Iesus the Sonne of God by whom commeth grace and truth and the inheritance of the Kingdome of heaven Deut. 31. 2. 7. 14. Ioh. 1. 17. Rom. 6. 23. The speciall hand of God touching the tribes and the mothers that bare them and the families and persons that proceeded of them may thus be viewed Seven of the twelve tribes did increase in multitude as they travelled besides the tribe of Levi which also was a thousand at the last numbring moe than at the first ver 62. 1 Iudah increased 1900. 2 Issachar 9900. 3 Zabulon 3100. 4 Manasseh 20500. 5 Benjamin 10200. 6 Dan 1700. 7 Aser 11900. The summe of all increased was nine and fiftie thousand and two hundred besides the thousand Levites Notwithstanding the decrease of the five 〈◊〉 was more for 1 Reuben decreased 2770. 2 Simeon 37100. 3 Gad 5150. 4 Ephraim 8000. 5 Naphtali 8000. So the summe of all that were diminished was one and sixtie thousand and twentie men Observe also the worke of God in respect of Iakobs wives the foure mothers of the tribes Leah R 〈…〉 el Zilpah and Bilhah whom the holy Ghost mentioneth in Gen. 46. 15. 18 19. 25. 1 Leah was multiplied in Iudah 1900. in Issachar 9900. in Zabulon 3100. So the fruit of Leahs body increased in the wildernesse fourteene thousand and nine hundred besides the thousand of Levi. 2 Rachel was multiplied in Manasseh 20500. in Benjamin 10200. So Rachels increase was thirtie thousand and seven hundred 3 Zilphah Leahs handmaid increased in her son Aser eleven thousand and nine hundred 4 Bilhah Rachels handmaid was multiplied in her son Dan seventeene hundred Thus God unparted his blessing among them all but chiefly to Rachel whom Iakob loved for her increase was more than of all the other three They were likewise all of them partakers of his chastisements in their posteritie for 1 Leah was diminished in Reuben 2770. in Simeon 37100. so the lost of her increase in the wildernesse nine and thirtie thousand eight hundred and seventie men 2 Rachel was diminished in Ephraim 8000. 3 Zilphah lost in Gad her sonne five thousand one hundred and fiftie 4 Bilhah lost in Naphtali eight thousand men So the farre greatest losse was Leahs who now might weepe for her children because they were not as long after befell unto Rachel Mat. 2. 18. Againe as the twelve tribes camped in foure quarters about the
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
among the graves that the dead might come unto him in a dreame and make knowne unto him that which he asked of him And others there were that clad themselves with clothes for that purpose and spake certaine words and burned incense for the purpose and slept by themselves that such a dead person might come and talke with them in a dreame Maimony in treat of Idolatry c. 11. s. 13. Vers. 13. perfect with Iehovah that is in faith and love seeke unto him onely and as he doth so abhorre thou all such wicked persons Perfection or Sinceritie Integritie respecteth our upright conversation in body and minde as is noted on Gen. 6. 9. and to be perfect with the Lord is expounded in Greeke before the Lord and the Chaldee saith in the feare of the Lord but our Saviour more fully openeth it Be yee perfect even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect Matt. 5. 48. Vers. 14. not suffered thee Hebr. not given thee but hath taught thee better by his Law which the other nations want Psal. 147. 19 20. and will more fully informe thee by the Prophet whom he will raise up unto thee v. 15. So in Act. 14. 16. God in times past suffered all nations to walke in their owne waies Vers. 15. a Prophet so named of the Greeke Prophetes which signifieth a foreteller in Hebrew Nabi of uttering and interpreting the oracles of God as Aaron was Moses Prophet that is Interpreter Exod. 7. 1. and of seeing visions of God such a man was called a Seer 1 Sam. 9. 9. Vnto all the former Diviners Wizzards Charmers c. raised up to the heathens of the devill Moses here opposeth one Prophet to be raised up unto Israel of God and this was Christ raised up unto the Iewes as Peter applieth it saying Moses said ●●to the fathers A Prophet will the Lord your God raise up unto you c. yee are the children of the Prophets and of the covenant c. Vnto you first God having raised up his Son Iesus sent him to blesse you in turning away every one of you from his iniquities Act. 3. 22. 26. of thy brethren Christ was to be a man and of the stocke of the Iewes by promise because the people could not endure to heare the voice of God vers 16. and as in respect of his Prophesie so of his Priesthood For every high Priest is taken from among men Heb. 5. 1. and of his kingdome as in Deut. 17. 15. from among thy brethren shalt thou set a King over thee like unto me it is said There arose not a Prophet in Israel like unto Moses whom the Lord knew face to face in all the signes and wonders which the Lord sent him to doe c. Deut. 34. 10 11 12. This therefore cannot be understood of the ordinarie Prophets which were raised up in Israel but of Christ onely as the Apostles doe expound it Act. 3. 22. 26. And Christ was like unto Moses in respect of his office of mediation betweene God and the people Deut. 5. 5. 1 Tim. 2. 5. but greater than Moses as being the Mediator of a better Covenant or Testament which was established upon better promises Heb. 8. 6. Like him in excellencie for as Moses excelled all the Prophets in speaking with God mouth to mouth Numb 12. 6 7 8. so Christ excelled him and all men in that being in the bosome of the Father he hath come downe from heaven and declared God unto us Ioh. 1. 18. and 3. 13. Like him in faithfulnesse but therein also excelling for Moses was faithfull in Gods house as a servant but Christ as the Son over his owne house Heb. 3. 2. 5. 6. And like him in signes and wonders wherein he also excelled Moses as the historie of the Gospell sheweth for he was a Prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people Luk. 24. 19. a man approved of God among them by miracles wonders and signes which God did by him in the midst of thē Act. 2. 22. for he did among them the works wich none other man did Ioh. 15. 24. unto him that is not unto the Diviners Wizards or any such like but unto him and him onely as him thou shalt serve Deut. 6. 13. is expounded him onely Matt. 4. 10. And though this is principally meant of Christs person of whom God said heare him Matt. 17. 5. yet it implieth also his Ministers as himselfe said He that heareth you heareth mee Luk. 10. 16. Vers. 16. Horeb a mountaine called also Sinai Exod. 19. where the Law was given Deut. 5. 2. of the assembly or of the church when all Israel were assembled to heare the Law Exod. 19. 9 10 c. not heare again● Hebr. not adde to heare see Exod. 20. 19. where the people requested Moses to speake with them and not God of Iehovah the Chaldee translateth it of the word of the LORD that I die not or and let me not die as the Greeke translateth neither let us die Vers. 17. have well spoken or have done well in speaking The Greeke saith Rightly or Well all that they have spoken Although their speech proceeded from the spirit of bondage and feare manifested in them by the worke of the law in their consciences Rom. 8. 15. and they desired not Christ but Moses to speake unto them yet as the Law was a schoolemaster to leade them unto Christ Gal. 3. 14. so God tooke occasion hereby to preach and promise Christ unto them who is here not only in stead of all Diviners and Soothsayers but in stead of Moses himselfe who was the Minister of the Law which worketh wrath Rom. 4. 15. and was the ministration of death 2 Cor. 3. 7. But Christ hath redeemed us from the curse thereof Gal. 3. 13. and is here promised as a Prophet sent to blesse us Act. 3. 26. for the Law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Iesus Christ Io. 1. 17 Vers. 18. A Prophet meaning Christ him-selfe the interpreter and declarer of the word of God as vers 15. of whom the multitude said This is Iesus the Prophet Matt. 21. 11. raise up this also the people confirmed saying A great Prophet is risen up amongst us Luk. 7. 16. will give that is will put and stablish as the word given 1 Chron. 17. 22. is the same that established 2 Sam. 7. 24. The Chaldee expoundeth it I will give my words of prophesie Accordingly Christ said to his Father I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me Ioh. 17. 8. his mouth to signifie this Christ appeared with a sharpe two-edged sword proceeding out of his mouth Rev. 1. 16. which figured the sword of the Spirit the word of God Eph. 6. 17. for God had made his mouth like a sharpe sword Esai 49. 2. therwith he smote his enemies and for the comforts wherewith he refresheth his people his lips are likened to lilies dropping sweet-smelling myrrh Song 5.
signifieth From is sometime put for unto by the interpretation of the Holy Ghost himselfe as from Baale of Iudah 2 Sam. 6. 2. is by another Prophet explained to Baalah 1 Chron. 13. 6. So the Deliverer shall come from or out of Sion Rom. 11. 26. is the same that hee shall come unto Sion Esay 59. 20. Min hashamajim from heaven 2 Chron. 6. 21. is El hashamajim unto or in heaven 1 King 8. 30. Thus Mikkedem is to the East or Eastward Gen. 13. 11. Mitsts●phon is Northward 1 Sam. 14. 5. and sundrie the like Sinai is a mountaine in Arabia Gal. 4. 25. where God gave his Law Exod. 19. from or out of that mountaine God came unto Israel and as the Chaldee interpreteth was revealed there unto them and from thence came with his people to conduct them towards Canaan Or came unto Sinai and to his people there And this is the first chiefe blessing unto Israel Gods Law Tabernacle Statutes and Iudgments given them at Sinai after which hee called them to journey towards the Land of promise Deut. 2. 6 7. rose up as the Sunne ariseth for of that rising the Hebrew word is properly used The Chaldee translateth it the brightnesse of his glory from Seir appeared unto us So Esaias prophesying grace to the Church saith The glory of Iehovah is risen as the Sunne upon thee And of the heavenly Ierusalem which Christ hath built it is said The Citie hath no need of the Sunne neither of the Moone to shine in it for the glory of God doth lighten it and the Lambe is the light thereof Rev. 21. 23. from Seir the mountaine of the Edomites Deut. 2. 4. 5. As Israel compassed Edoms land they were stung with fiery serpents for their murmuring then God appointed the Brazen serpent a figure of Christ to be set up to heale them Num. 21 4. 9. And here was a second degree of grace whereby God shined unto them as he doth unto us by his Gospell after wee have beene under the Schoolemaster of his Law Rom. 7. 4 25. Gal. 3. 23 24 26. unto them or unto him meaning Israel therefore the Chaldee expoundeth it unto us shined forth or shined bright and cleare as the Sunne shineth in his strength This word is used for the cleare manifestation of Gods power in saving his people or punishing their enemies Psal. 82. and 94. 1. and 50. 2. The Greeke here translateth hee hastened from mount Pharan the Chaldee hee was revealed in his might upon mount Paran Pharan or Paran the name of a mount and of the wildernesse of the Ismaelites Gen. 21. 21. thorow which Israel travelled Num. 10. 12. Neere it Moses by the Spirit of God explained the law more cleerly repeated this booke of Deuteron Deut. 1. 1 c. So the Prophet after speaketh the Holy one came from mount Pharan Selah Habak 3. 3. Some of the Hebrewes understand these things otherwise thus Hee rose up from Seir unto them that is to the sonnes of Esan that they might receive the Law but they would not From thence hee went to the sonnes of Ismael that they might receive it but they would not And then he came unto Israel R. Sol. Iarchi on Deut. 33. So Ionathan in his Thargum on this place and R. Eliezer in Pirkei chap. 41. But unto us it sheweth the third degree of Gods grace who after wee are come unto Christ by faith doth sanctifie us by his Spirit informing us in his truth and waies and so prepareth us to enter into his heavenly rest as by Moses he prepared Israel to enter into the Land of Canaan Rom. 8. 2 3 11. Gal. 3. 2 14. and 4. 6. and 5. 16 18 of Saints Hebr. of sanctitie meaning spirits of sanctity which Ionathan in his Thargum expoundeth holy Angels So Stephen saith that Israel received the Law by thy disposition of Angels Act. 7. 53. and Paul calleth the Law the word spoken by Angels Heb. 2. 2. So wee by grace in Christ are come to ten thousands of Angels Heb. 12. 22. which are all ministring spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall bee heires of salvation Heb. 1. 14. Compare Psal. 68. 18. Or by Saints wee may understand the Israelites as in v. 3. with whom or for whom God came from Sinai from his right hand to wit went or at his right hand was the fire of the Law or of the ordinance Hebr. Esh dath of which word Dath the Greekes borrowed their word Tatto to order or ordaine the Legall fire or the fiery Law and it is so called because the Lord spake those words out of the midst of the fine Deut. 5. 22. and to shew the nature and effect of the Law which is like fire Ier. 23. 29. The Greeke translateth it Angels Angels with him the Chaldee thus his right hand wrote out of the midst of fire the Law he gave unto us Answerable to this Legall fire is that fire of the Law of the Spirit which was given with cloven tongues like fire Act. 2. 3 4. The Hebrewes say by tradition that the Law appeared written with blacke fire upon white fire before the Lord. R. Moses Gerundens and Sol. Iarchi on Deut. 33. which seemeth to be either mysticall or fabulous Vnto us the fire of the Law is the Spirit of God whiles wee being baptized with the holy Spirit and with fire Matth. 3. 11. are by the Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Iesus made free from the Law of sinne and death Rom. 8. 2. Vers. 3. Yea the lover of the peoples that is yea or certainly hee loveth or thou O God lovest the peoples or protectest them The Hebrew Chobeb signifieth a loving embracing or hiding as in the bosome and so implyeth Love and Protection And the peoples are meant of the tribes of Israel as in Iudg. 5. 14. after thee Benjamin among thy peoples and in Act. 4. 27. the peoples of Israel The Greeke translateth And he spared his people the Chaldee yea he loved them for tribes that is of his love chose and disposed them to be tribes It may imply also the strangers converted unto God And now in Christ there is neither Iew nor Greeke neither bond nor free for we are all one in him Gal. 3. 28. all his Saints that is the Saints of Israel as the Chaldee expoundeth all the Saints of the house of Israel Or the Saints of God as in Psal. 34. 10. Feare Iehovah yee his Saints So his Saints may be used for thy Saints as his commandements Dan. 9. 4. for thy commandements see the notes on Deut. 5. 10. in thine hand in thy power and custody under thy guidance care and protection Hand is often for power so the Chaldee here translateth with power hee brought them out of Egypt and in the hand is under the guidance and direction Num. 4. 28 33. so the Greeke here translateth and all the sanctified ones are under thine hand It noteth the safety of Gods
and the Kings of Canaan which were the strength and power of the world c. but their strength was weakned before him But the armes of eternity are rather meant here of the armes of the eternall God who is most ancient without beginning and eternall without ending who saith I am the first and I am the last and besides me there is no God Esay 44. 6. destroy speaking to Israel whom he would enable to destroy their enemies the Greeke translateth Perish speaking to the enemy So God by Christ not onely preserveth his people from harme but destroyeth him that hath the power of death that is the devill Heb. 2. 14. and with him all other enemies perish Vers. 28. alone secure from enemies as Ier. 49. 31. or alone and shall not be reckoned among the nations as Num. 23. 9. This dwelling in safety had accomplishment under Christ of whom it is said In his dayes Iudah shall be saved and Israel shall dwell safely Ier. 23. 6. the fountaine that is the people which flow out of Iakob as out of a well or fountaine so that fountaine is here used for a river or streame issuing from a fountaine as in Psal. 104. 10. and waters often signifie peoples Rev. 17. 15. Thus David calleth them of the fountaine of Israel Psal. 68. 27. and Esaias saith which are come forth out of the waters of Iudah Esay 48. 1. The Hebrew word sometime signifieth a fountaine sometime an eye in which latter sense some interpret it here the eye of Iakob shall looke unto a land of corne c. his heavens the heaven or aire over the land of Israel shall drop down deaw whereby it shall be fruitfull Thus Moses confirmeth to Iakobs seed the blessing which Isaak gave unto Iakob Gen. 27. 28. Spiritually heavens signifie the ecclesiasticall estate Revel 4. 1. deaw and raine signifie heavenly doctrine as Deuter 32. 2. Vers. 29. who is like thee not any people So David said What one nation in the earth is like thy people like Israel 2 Sam. 7. 23. See also Deut. 4. 7. by Iehovah or in Iehovah that is Christ called Iehovah our righteousnesse Ier. 23. 6. shield of thy helpe that is thine helpfull shield which aideth thee against thine enemies the Chaldee saith strong for thine helpe the Greeke thy helper will shield or protect thee sword is thy excellency in Greeke thy glorie or boasting that thou maist truly glory in his sword not in thine own as the Church doth in Psa. 44. 4 7. they inherited not the land by their own sword and my sword shall not save me Christ appeared with a two-edged sword in his mouth Rev. 1. 16. and with a sword in his hand as Prince of the Lords host Ios. 5. 13 14. and the sword of the spirit is the word of God Ephes. 6. 17. shall falsly deny shall dissemble that they were thine enemies and faine to be friends for feare This David acknowledged the sonnes of the stranger falsly deny unto me Psal. 18. 45. The Greeke translateth shall lie unto thee Chazkuni explaineth it thus They that are enemies to thee in their heart shall falsly deny unto thee through feare shall shew themselves thy friends shall be obedient to doe thy pleasure And Sol. Iarchi giveth an example as the Gibeonites which said From a very farre countrey thy servants are come c. tread on their high places or on their heights in Greeke thou shalt ride upon their necke see a like phrase in Psal. 66. 12. The Chaldee expoundeth it thou shalt tread on the joynts of the neckes of their Kings which thing was fulfilled in Iosuahs time Ios. 10. 24 25. By heights or high places are meant all the high and fortified places wherein the enemies kept for their safety as mountaines high walled Cities c. as David when he was safe from his enemies rejoyceth that God had set him upon his high places 2 Sam. 22. 34. And as it is the glory of God that hee treadeth upon the high places of the earth Amos 4. 13. Mich. 1. 3. and upon the high places or heights of the sea Iob 9. 8. so he communicateth this glory to his people that should vanquish all their enemies as was also said in Deut. 32. 13. he made him ride on the high places of the earth And by the weapons of their war-fare which are mighty through God they pull downe strong holds and cast downe every high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. Death shall be swallowed up in victorie 1 Cor. 15. and Satan himselfe shall be trodden underneath their feet Rom. 16. CHAP. XXXIV 1 Moses from mount Nebo vieweth the land 5 He dieth there and is buried of God 7 His age and vigour when he died 8 The Israelites mourne for him thirty dayes 9 Ioshua succeedeth him 10 The praise of Moses ANd Moses went up from the plaines of Moab unto mount Nebo to the top of Pisgah which is over against Iericho and Iehovah caused him to see all the land from Gilead unto Dan. And all Naphtali and the land of Ephraim and Manasseh and all the land of Iudah unto the hindmost sea And the South and the plaine of the valley of Iericho the Citie of Palme-trees unto Zoar. And Iehovah said unto him This is the land which I sware unto Abraham unto Isaak and unto Iakob saying unto thy seed will I give it I have caused thee to see it with thine eyes but thou shalt not go over thither And Moses the servant of Iehovah died there in the land of Moab according to the mouth of Iehovah And he buried him in a valley in the land of Moab over against Beth-peor and no man knoweth of his Sepulchre unto this day And Moses was an hundred and twenty yeeres old when hee died his eye was not dimme nor his naturall moisture fled And the sonnes of Israel wept for Moses in the plaines of Moab thirty daies and the daies of weeping of mourning for Moses were ended And Ioshua the sonne of Nun was full of the Spirit of wisedome for Moses had laid his hands upon him the sonnes of Israel hearkened unto him and did as Iehovah commanded Moses And there arose not a Prophet since in Israel like Moses whom Iehovah knew face to face In all the signes and the wonders which Iehovah sent him to doe in the land of Egypt to Pharaoh and to all his servants and to all his land And in all the mighty hand and in all the great terrour which Moses did in the eyes of all Israel Annotations MOses went up as God commanded him Deu. 32. 49. plaines of Moab in the wildernesse where Israel pitched and where Moses had explained all this Law unto them See Num. 22. 1. Deut. 1. 1. 5. The Greeke retaineth the Hebrew name Araboth Moab mount Nebo or of Nebo that from thence hee might view the holy land as Iohn from an high mountaine was shewed
the holy Ierusalem Rev. 21. 10. and Ezekiel likewise before him Ezek. 40. 2. Nebo was the name of a mountaine and of a Citie by it which was given for a possession to the Reubenites Numb 32. 37 38. 1 Chron. 5. 3 8. Pisgah in Greeke Phasga in Chaldee Ramatha so named of the highnesse of it See Deut. 3. 27. Ierecho in Greeke Iericho a Citie within the land of Canaan which the Israelites first conquered by faith causing the wall to fall downe Ios 6. Heb. 11. 30. See after on vers 3. caused him to see as in vers 4. or shewed him as the Greeke translateth from Gilead in Greeke the land of Galaad But Galead was on the outside of Iordan and given to Reuben Gad and halfe Manasseh Deut. 3. 12. 13. being conquered by Moses himselfe so that there was no need to view that but from that Countrey forward hee viewed all the rest Therefore the Hebrewes expound the word Eth by Min From saying From Gilead which was on the outside of Iordan towards the Sunne rising where in Moses was standing unto Dan which is the border of the land of Israel as it is written from Dan even to Beersheba 1 Sam. 3. 20. Chazkuni on Deut. 34. Others referre it to a spirituall vision of things to be done after in this Countrey as Ionathan in his Thargum paraphraseth The Word of the Lord shewed him all the Mighties of the land the valiant acts which should be done by Iephthe of Gilead and the victories of Samson son of Manoah of the tribe of Dan. Likewise Sol. Iarchi expoundeth it He shewed him the sonnes of Dan committing idolatry as it is written in Iudg. 18. 30. and the sons of Dan set up the graven image and he shewod him Samson that should come out of him for a Saviour By Dan here we are to understand Leshem or Laish a Citie in the furthest part of the land Northward called also Dan Ios. 19. 47. Iudg. 18. 27 29. Vers. 2. all Naphthali in Greeke all the land of Nephthali which lay also Northward in Galilee Matth. 4. 15. of Ephraim and Manasseh meaning the halfe tribe of Manasseh that dwelt within lordan this was in the middest of the land in Samaria see Ios. 16. and 17. 7 11. of Iudah which was the Southerne part of the Countrey Ios. 15. 1. c. for the land was farre more long than broad and by naming these few chiefe countries he implieth all the rest with them These also in Thargum Ionathan and Sol. Iarchi are applied to the captaines of the house of Naphtali that were joyned with Barak and the Kings which Iosua the sonne of Nun of the tribe of Ephraim should kill and the valiant acts of Gedeon sonne of Ioash of the tribe of Manasseh and all the Kings of Israel and kingdome of the house of Iudah that should rule in the land untill the Sanctuary should be destroyed at the last the hindmost or utmost sea that is the maine sea which was the Westerne coast see the notes on Deut. 11. 24. Vers. 3. the south in Greeke the wildernesse the utmost Cities of the tribe of the sonnes of Iudah towards the coast of Edom described in Ios. 15. 21. c. So in Num. 34. 3. your south quarter shall be from the wildernesse of Zin along by the coast of Edom c. Thus Moses viewed the land after the order that Abraham did at the first see Genes 12. 6 7 8 9. with the Annotations there God here sheweth Moses all the kingdomes and glory of Canaan from an high mountaine for his comfort and strengthening of his faith who saw the promises a farre off saluted them and died as did his godly forefathers Heb. 11. 9. 13. On the contrary the Deviil taketh Christ up into an excceding high mountaine sheweth him all the kingdomes of the world and the glory of them to draw him if he had beene able from the faith and service of God unto the worship of Satan Matth. 4. 8 9. the plaine of the valley of Iericho in Greeke the regions about Iericho this last part which Moses viewed was the first which the Israeliees possessed Ios. 2. 1. and 3. 16. and 4. 13 19. Sol. Iarchi here saith God shewed to Moses Solomon casting the vessels of the sanctuary as it is said In the plaine of Iordan did the King cast them 2 Chron. 4. 17. Citie of palme-trees so Iericho is called here and in 2 Chron. 28. 15. Iudg. 1. 16. and 3. 13. and of them and other fragrant fruits there growing as Balsam and the like the Citie had the name Ierecho by interpretation Odoriferous or Fragrant unto Zoar in Greeke Segor Thus the last part which Moses viewed was both neerest unto him and the pleasantest of all the land of Canaan for all the plaine of Iordan was well watered it was as the garden of the Lord Gen. 13. 10. Vers. 4. I sware that is I promised by oath see Gen. 12. 7. and 22. 16 17. Psal. 105. 9 10 11. thy seed in Greeke your seed in Chaldee thy sonnes caused thee to see in Greeke I have shewed it to thine eyes This view was by the marvellous worke and grace of God towards his servant that in one place and time hee should behold so large a Countrey and in it by the eye of his spirit so many mysteries as in that holy-land so called in Zuch 2. 12. were comprehended and it being the land of Immanuel or of Christ Esa. 8. 8. the beholding thereof was the beholding of the blessings to be enjoyed by Christ Iesus unto whō Moses and his Law is a Schoolemaster Gal. 3. 24. not goe over to wit over the river Iordan because Moses had not beleeved to sanctifie the Lord in the eyes of the sonnes of Israel Numb 20. 12. And as hee and others could not enter into the good land because of their unbeleefe Heb. 3. 19. so all that are of the workes of the Law and not of the saith of Christ though they may behold the blessing a farre off yet shall they not enter in to enjoy the same Gal. 3. 9 12. Rom. 9. 31. 32. Vers. 5. servant so he is often called even of God himselfe Ios. 1. 2. and in the new Testament as Rev. 15. 3. the song of Moses the servant of God This title he had in respect of his office being governour of Israel as David also had in Psal. 18. 1. and 36. 1. See Numb 12. died there in the mountaine Deut. 32. 50. as Aaron died on the top of mount Hor Num. 20. 28. In that the death of Moses immediatly followed after his viewing of the promised land it foreshewed the end and abrogation of Moses Law when men are come to the Gospell of Christ for after that Faith is come we are no longer under the Schoolemaster Gal. 3. 25. The Law hath dominion over a man as long as he liveth for the woman which hath an husband is bound by the Law to
and Maimony the chiefest of esteeme among them I am for this blamed those Writers generally condemned and to make them the more odious their heresies fables falshoods are displaied by him that from two or three late Rabbines and one Papist disputed against the sincerity of the Hebrew Text as before is to be seene I will not speake of the things by me noted but leave them to the judgement of the indifferent Reader nor justifie my selfe for all their allegations because they being taken from that confused heape of the Iewes traditions some of them may haply savour too much of their leven They that have laboured in this kinde before me have had their second thoughts altered both their own Annotations and translations in sundry points as their publike writings manifest But that such a generall censure should passe upon them all for my sake and the Wheat should bee plucked up because of the Tares seemeth not to proceed from love nor from a sound judgement And first the esteeme which all Christian Churches have had and yet have of such books of the Iewish Rabbines as were written in Greek and so came to be knowne more easily than other Chaldee and Hebrew workes might somewhat allay the rigour of this sentence For the storie of the Maccabees Ecclesiasticus Wisdome and the other Apocryphall writings of the Iewes notwithstanding the evils in them have beene and are translated commented upon and commended to be read for instruction 2 Other of the Rabbines as the Thalmud Maimony and the like have beene also by Expositors of the Scriptures and those of the best esteeme occasionally alleaged as Tremellius in his notes upon his version of the New Testament out of Syriak sundry times produceth them Beza in his large Annotations on Matth. 26. noteth from Iosephus Paulus Burgensis Tremellius and Scaliger sundry rituals of the Iewes about the Passeover and some such as I am taxed for because I name them on Exod. 12. Vatablus often recordeth the expositions of the Chaldee and learned Hebrewes And how many other have done the like in their Notes and Commentaries all men of learning and reading doe well know 3 To object the Iewes heresies fables and false expositions of many Scriptures is no sound reason to condemne the good things which are found in them For even among Christian writers and those of the ancients sundry such things are to be seen yet many profitable things are found in them for the opening of the Scriptures In the Apostles daies the Iewes were guilty of these sinnes Matth. 15. and 23. chap. Rom. 10. 3. Tit. 1. 14. 2 Pet. 1. 16. Yet Christ commanded to heare the Scribes Pharisees sitting in Moses chaire Mat. 23. 1 2. Now the eare trieth words as the mouth tasteth meat Iob 34. 3. and as by hearing their speeches the godly wise might discerne when they taught according to Moses and when they spake of themselves so by reading their writings men of understanding may doe the like at this day 4 The Apostles also in alleaging sometimes the testimonies of the Rabbines doe teach us that their writings are not wholly to be despised Paul nameth Iannes and Iambres the chiefe sorcerers of Egypt 2 Tim. 3. 8. out of the private Records of the Iewes as may yet be read in their Thalmud He rehearseth the persecutions of the godly under Antiochus recorded in the booke of the Maccabees Heb. 11. 35 c. Others speake of the contention between Michael and the devill about the body of Moses and of the prophesie of Enoch Iude v. 9. 14 15. of the marriage betweene Salmon and Rachab Matth. 1. 5. and the like Acts 5. 36. 37. 5. The Gentiles were fallen from God and turned his truth into a lie and corrupted religion with their fables and vanities Rom. 1. yet the Holy Ghost citeth and maketh use of 〈◊〉 sayings in the Scriptures Acts 1. 7. 28. 29. 1 Cor. 15. 33. Tit. 1. 12. And who hath ever interpreted the visions of Daniel and of the Apostle Iohn in the Revelation without the help of the stories of the Maccabees Iosephus Polybiu● Eusebius other humane Writers Wherefore as I my selfe have reaped light and profit by the things which I have read in such so have I noted sundry of them for the good of others As for the Exceptions taken against the Greeke version of the Bible so much approved by the holy Ghost in the new Testament and the Chaldee paraphrases they are such as before men of knowledge and understanding need no further reply Of the interpretation of the stone Iahalom in Exod. 28. 18. I Will onely annex a few words about a place of Scripture for the interpretation whereof I am specially blamed It is for expressing the Hebrew Iahalom in Exod. 28. 18. by the Greeke name Sardonix as I understand the Holy Ghost to expound it in Revel 21. 20. I am asked for proofe or shew of proofe that Iohn did translate all the 12. stones from Aarons breast 〈◊〉 the heavenly Ierusalem in Rev. 21. and am charged with presumption in obtruding my conceits upon the Holy Ghost and taking the name of God in vaine it is affirmed that Iahalom should be translated the Adamant or Diamond according to the example of the best Translators both new and old All men of any reading doe know how diversly those 12. stones in Exod. 28. are expressed by Interpreters that scarcely any two agree together if then among many I have somewhere missed in interpreting them it might be imputed to humane infirmity rather than to presumption especially seeing I ground my exposition upon that other Scripture Revel 21. My proofe or shew of proofe that the holy Ghost there translateth the 12. stones from Exod 28. is this 1. The continuall course of the Spirit of God throughout that booke of the Revelation which is to take matters words and phrases from Moses and the Prophets and apply them to the things there prophesied As in Revel 4. the Church is described from the ancient figure the Tabernacle of Moses and from the visions of other Prophets Esai 6. Ezek. 1. The number of 24. Elders according to the lots and divisions of the Priests and Levites by David in 1 Chron. 24. 3 19. and 25. 7 31. The foure living creatures answerable in number to the foure standards in the campe of Israel Numb 2. in shape to the living creatures in Ezek. 1. In Rev. 5. Christ is shewed like a Lambe slaine according to the sacrifice under the old Testament In Revel 6. Gods administration is set forth by the similitude of horses and riders as in Zach. 1. and 6. and with such judgement as the Prophets threatned of old Esai 34. 4. In Revel 7. Gods people are sealed on their foreheads according to Eze. 9. 4. and the twelve tribes of Israel are expressed by their names And so in other things throughout that booke as the studious Reader may observe which for brevitie I will now omit
confessed to be exceeding great Nat. Hist. l. 37. c. 1. And Claudius the Romane Emperour used to weare Emeralds and Sardonyches Plin. ibidem c. 6. so that the Latine Poets when they noted men for their statelinesse spake of their hands garnished with Sardonyches Martial l. 3. Iuvenal Sat. 6. and shew of what esteeme they were in saying gemma● princeps Sardonychus loculis quae custoditur eburnis Iuvenal Sat. 13. The reason alleaged from Rev. 7. 5 8. that the tribes are there reckoned up by the Holy Ghost with omission of Dan otherwise than they are reckoned in any place of the old Testament weakneth not but rather confirmeth that which I have said For as there is no new person put in stead of any tribe or new name given to any tribe but such as was given before in the old Testament so neither is it likely that in Rev. 21. any other new stone should be placed than such as agreeth with the description of Moses so that the Sardonyx should be looked for in Exo. 28. among the rest Againe the omission of Dan in Rev. 7. accordeth very well with the old Testament for though Iosephs sonnes Ephraim and Manasses made two tribes Genes 48. 5 6. Num. 1. 10 33 35. so that after a sort there were thirteene yet the Scripture usually nameth and reckoneth them but twelve that the name of the twelve tribes is famous also in the new Testament Luke 22. 30. Act. 26. 7. Iam. 1. 1. Rev. 21. 12. And when they are reckoned by the Prophets one commonly is omitted for either Ioseph is named in stead of his two sonnes as in Gen. 49. or if they two be mentioned Levi for his separation to the Lords service in the Tabernacle is omitted as in Num. 13. and often or if both hee and they be expressed some one of the other is let passe as Simeon is unnamed in the blessing of the tribes Deut. 33. Accordingly the Spirit of God in Rev. 7. naming Levi and Manasses and Ioseph for his sonne Ephraim was to omit the name of some other unlesse hee should have counted 13. tribes contrary to the course of the Scriptures and scope of the matter there in hand Why Dan is not named in Revel 7. or Simeon in Deut. 33. belongeth not to this question it sufficeth that there is no new practise in Rev. 7. differing from the Prophets neither need we looke for any innovation among the precious stones Rev. 21. Thus have I according to the measure of knowledge which God hath given me and as the extreme infirmity of my body would permit made answer to the chiefe matters objected especially such as concerne the Scriptures and may by them be decided Other things wherein I have shewed either mine owne or other mens judgement I will not contend about Let not any thing which I have written be accepted without triall or further than it agreeth with the truth The learned which have interpreted and opened the Scriptures have had their second thoughts and altered both their versions and Expositions in sundry 〈◊〉 as all men know but in part For things wherein I have missed I humbly crave pardon of God and of his people to such as have the spirit in them that lusteth after envie I wish a better minde to such as love the truth encrease of knowledge and grace and for ought that is good and profitable in my labours the praise therefore be unto him that is Authour of every good gift and worke the benefit thereof unto those that love his Name which be blessed for ever Amen ANNOTATIONS VPON THE BOOKE OF PSALMES WHEREIN THE HEBREW WORDS and sentences are compared with and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions but chiefly by conference with the Holy Scriptures BY HENRY AINSWORTH 2 SAM 23. 1 2. David the sonne of Iesse said And the man who was raised up on high the anointed of the God of Iakob and the sweet Psalmist of Israel said The Spirit of Iehovah spake by me and his word was in my tongue LVKE 24. 44. All things must be fulfilled which are written in the Law of Moses and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes LONDON Printed by John Haviland for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. A PREFACE CONCERNING DAVID his Life and Acts. DAVID the sonne of Iesse of the tribe of Iudah of the linage of Abraham in the a 1 Chron. 2. Matth. 1. 1. 17. fourteenth generation was borne in Bethlehem a towne in the tribe of Iudah in the land of Canaan about 2917 yeares after the creation of the world in the daies when Samuel the Prophet was Iudge of Israel He was the b 1 Chro. 2. 15. seventh and youngest of all Iesses sonnes of least esteeme among them and set to keepe his fathers c 1 Sam. 16. 11. sheepe In the three and twentieth yeere of his life he was by Samuel the Prophet privately in Bethlehem anointed d 1 Sam. 16. 13. King over Israel in the midst of his brethren and the Spirit of the Lord came upon him from that day forward He was e Vers. 12. ruddy of a beautifull countenance and goodly to looke to a f Vers. 18. cunning player on the Harpe a mightie valiant man of warre and prudent in speech and a comely person and the Lord was with him Who also gave him these testimonies and promises g Act. 13. 22. I have found David the sonne of Iesse a man after mine owne heart which shall fulfill 〈◊〉 my will h Psal. 89. 19. I have laid helpe on one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the people with whom i Vers. 21. my hand shall be established mine arme also shall strengthen him I will k Vers. 23 c. beat downe his foes before his face and plague them that hate him In my name shall his horne be exalted I will set his hand in the sea and his right hand in the rivers I will make him my first-borne higher than the Kings of the earth My mercy will I keepe for him for ever and my covenant shall stand fast with him his seed will I make to endure for ever and his throne as the daies of heaven c. After Davids anointing in Bethlehem he went againe and fed his l 1 Sam. 16. 19. fathers sheep but the Spirit of God wrought mightily in him He killed m 1 Sam. 17. Goliath the Philistian Giant from whose face n Vers. 24. all the men of Israel fled away for feare David overcame him in the name of the Lord of hosts with a sling and with a stone He was a cunning Musitian and o 1 Sam. 16. 23. playing on his Harpe with his hand he refreshed King Saul tho was vexed with an evill spirit from the Lord. He was imployed in warres against 〈◊〉 Philistians and p 1 Sam. 18. 5. whither soever Saul sent him