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 body_n son_n 23 3 4.4127 3 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 44 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.
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
the morning was the second day And God sayd Let the waters under the heavens bee gathered-together unto one place and let the dry land appeare and it was so And God called the dry land Earth and the gathering together of the waters he called Seas and God saw that it was good And God said Let the earth bud-forth the budding-grasse the herbe seeding-seed the fruit-tree yeelding-fruit after his kinde whose seed is in it selfe upon the earth and it was so And the earth brought-forth budding-grasse the herb seeding-seed after his kinde and the tree yeelding fruit whose seed was in it selfe after his kinde and God saw that it was good And the evening was and the morning was the third day And God sayd Let there be lights in the outspred-firmament of the heavens to separate betweene the day and the night and let them be for signes and for seasons and for dayes and yeares And let them be for lights in the outspred-firmament of the heavens to give light upon the earth and it was so And God made the two great Lights the greater light for the rule of the day and the lesser light for the rule of the night also the starres And God set them in the outspred-firmament of the heavens to giue light upon the earth And to rule over the day and over the night and to separate betweene the light and the darkenesse and God saw that it was good And the evening was and the morning was the fourth day And GOD sayd Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving-thing the living soule and fowle that may flye above the earth on the face of the outspred-firmament of the heavens And God created the great Whales and every living creeping soule which the waters brought forth abundantly after their kinde and every winged fowle after his kinde and God saw that it was good And God blessed them saying be fruitfull and multiply and fill the waters in the seas and let the fowle multiply in the earth And the evening was and the morning was the fift day And God said Let the earth bring forth the living soule after his kinde cattell and creeping thing and beast of the earth after his kinde and it was so And God made the beast of the earth after his kinde and the cattell after their kinde and every creeping thing of the earth after his kinde and God saw that it was good And God sayd Let us make Man in our image according to our likenesse and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowle of the heavens and over the cattell and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth And God created Man in his image in the image of God created he him male and female created he them And God blessed them and God sayd unto them Be fruitfull and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowle of the heavens and over every living thing that creepeth on the earth And God sayd Behold I have given to you every herb seeding seed which is upon the face of all the earth and every tree in the which is the fruit of a tree seeding seed to you it shall be for meat And to every beast of the earth and to every fowle of the heavens and to every creeping thing upon the earth which hath in it a living soule every green herb for meat and it was so And God saw every thing that hee had made and behold it was very good and the evening was and the morning was the sixt day Annotations BOoke of Moses so it is intituled in Mark 12. 26. called elsewhere the booke of the law of Moses 2. King 14. 6. Luke 2. 22. being indeed the booke of the Law of the Lord by the hand of Moses 2. Chro. 34. 14. Of this Moses his birth education authority and death see Exod. 2. and 4. c. Numb 12. Deut 34. He was forty yeares a Philosopher in King Pharaohs Court in Egypt Forty yeares a shepheard in the land of Madian and forty yeares a King and Law-giver of Israel leading them through the wildernesse of Arabia and dying an hundred and twenty yeares old hee was buried of God Act. 7. 22. 23. 29. 30. 35. 36. Deut. 3● 4● and 34. 5. 6. 7. His writings are approved of by the Prophets after him by the testimonie of Christ and his Apostles and by the Church of God in all ages Nehem. 8. 1 2 3. Dan. 9. 11. 13. Mal. 4. 4. Luke 16. 29. 31. and 24. 27. 44. Acts 15. 21. Rev. 15. 3. Genesis that is Generation so the Greeke version calleth this booke because it setteth forth the generations of the heavens and earth and of Adam or mankind Gen. 2. 4. and 5. 1. How beit in Hebrew the five bookes of Moses have no names but by the first words of them as this booke is called Breshith that is In the beginning Vers. 1. In the beginning namely of the Creature which God created as our Saviour expoundeth it Mark 13. 19. the whole frame whereof is called the World Mat. 24. 21. Beginning therefore is here extraordinary and supernaturall of the Creature or Creation and so of time The Chaldee paraphrase called Ierusalemy translateth it In wisedome so sundry Hebrewes apply this mystically to the wisedome of God whereby the world was created as it is written The Lord by wisdome founded the earth Prov. 3. 19. and in wisdome hast thou made them all Psal. 104. 24. R. Menachem on Gen. 1. Many Christian writers also apply it unto Christ the wisdome of God by whom he made the world 1. Cor. 1. 24. Heb. 1. 2. Prov. 8. 27. 30. God in Hebrew Aelohim which signifieth the Almighties or Almightie-powers his name is most used in this forme plurall but ioyned with a word singular hee created because God is but one Deut. 6. 4. although in power infinite in person or manner of being there are three which beare witnesse in heaven the Father and the Word and the holy Spirit and these three are one 1 Ioh. 5. 7. The Father is this Creator as is shewed in Eph. 3. 9. The Word or Sonne is the Creator Heb. 1. 8. 10. Col. 1. 16. so is the Holy spirit as is here in the second verse and in Psal. 33. 6. and 104. 30. Iob 26. 13. and 33. 4. Hereupon Solomon saith Remember thy Creators Eccles. 12. 1. and God saith Let us make man Gen. 1. 26. The Apostles apply the generall name God to the persons severally unto the Father Heb. 1. 1 2. unto the Sonne Acts 20. 28. Rom. 9. 5. and unto the Holy Ghost Acts 5. 3. 4. The Hebrew Doctors have left records of this mystery though at this day that nation understands it not Come and see the mysterie of the word Aelohim there are three degrees and every degree by it selfe alone that is distinct and yet notwithstanding
ANd it was when men began to multiply on the face of the earth and daughters were borne unto them That the sonnes of God saw the daughters of men that they were faire and they tooke unto them wives of all which they chose And Iehovah said My spirit shall not strive with man for ever for that he also is flesh and his dayes shall be an hundred and twentie yeeres There were Giants in the earth in those dayes and also after that when the sonnes of God went-in unto the daughters of men and they bare children to them they were mighty men which were of old men of name And Iehovah saw that the wickednesse of man was much in the earth and every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was onely evill every day And it repented Iehovah that he had made man on the earth it grieved him at his heart And Iehovah said I will blot-out man whom I have created from the face of the earth from man unto beast unto the creeping-thing and unto the fowle of the heavens for it repenteth me that I have made them But Noe found grace in the eyes of Iehovah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THESE are THE GENERATIONS OF NOE Noe was a just man perfect in his generations Noe walked with God And Noe begat three sonnes Sem Cham and Iapheth And the earth was corrupt before God and the earth was filled with violent-wrong And God saw the earth and loe it was corrupt for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth And God said unto Noe An end of all flesh is come before me for the earth is filled with violent wrong from the face of them and behold I destroy them with the earth Make for thee an Arke of Gopher trees nests shalt thou make in the Arke and shalt pitch it within and without with pitch And this the fashion which thou shalt make it of three hundred cubits the length of the Arke fifty cubits the bredth of it and thirty cubits the height of it A cleare-light shalt thou make to the Arke and in a cubit shalt thou finish it from above and the doore of the Arke shalt thou set in the side thereof with lower second and third stories shalt thou make it And I behold I doe bring the Flood of waters upon the earth to destroy all flesh which hath in it the spirit of life from under the heavens every-thing that is in the earth shall give-up the ghost But I will stablish my covenant with thee and thou shalt enter into the Arke thou and thy sonnes and thy wife and thy sonnes wives with thee And of every living thing of all flesh two of every sort shalt thou bring into the Arke to keep alive with thee they shall be male and female Of the fowle after his kinde and of the beast after his kinde of every creeping thing of the earth after his kind two of every sort shall come unto thee to keepe them alive And take thou unto thee of all meat that is eaten and thou shalt gather it to thee and it shall bee for thee and for them for meat And Noe did according to all that God commanded him so did he Annotations MEn Hebr. Adam put generally for men as the Greeke translateth and the last words of this verse doe confirme so the Chaldee saith the sonnes of man The posterity of Kain is hereby meant who increased faster then Seths did and sought so to doe by taking moe wives Gen. 4. 19. Vers. 2. the sons of God the men of the Church of God for unto such Moses saith ye are the sonnes of Iehovah your God Deut. 14. 1. so 1 Ioh. 3. 1. The name God in Hebrew Aelohim is in the forme plurall and sometime Princes are so named Exod. 21. 6. Psal. 82. so the Chaldee here translateth the sonnes of Princes understanding as I thinke Seth and the other Patriarchs daughters of men meaning of Kains posterity that were out of Gods Church Gen. 4. 14. and because they were not borne againe of God by the immortall seed of his word 1 Ioh. 3. 9. 10. 1 Pet. 1. 23. they continued children of the old Adam and naturall man still So Paul saith 1 Cor. 3. 3. walke ye not as men that is as unregenerate men fayre or goodly Hebr. good to weet of countenance as is expressed Gen. 24. 16. the Chaldee translateth it fayre tooke unto them that is tooke to themselves and regarded not the counsell of their godly parents who should by right take wives for their children nor the will of God whose law after forbad such prophane mariages Deut. 7. 3. 4. The like is noted of Esau Gen. 26. 34. 35. and 28. 8. 9. Thus corruption grew in families which they chose that is which they loved and liked following their owne affections So my chosen Esay 42. 1. is interpreted my beloved Mat. 12. 18. and choosing is often used for liking or delighting Ps. 25. 12. and 119. 173. Esay 1. 2. and so the Chaldee translateth it here Into this sinne Solomon also s●ll 〈◊〉 King 11. 1. 2. Vers. 3. my spirit This is that holy spirit of Christ by which he preached in the Patriarches and especially in Noe to the disobedient spirits of the olde world 1 Pet. 3. 18. 19. 20. 2 Pet. 2. 5. not strive or not judge that is not contend in judgement for so this word is elsewhere also used Eccles. 6. 10. and may here import both contending by preaching disputing convincing in the mouthes of the Patriarches as Nehem. 9. 30. and by inward motions and checks of conscience which his spirit gave them for their sinnes against which they that struggle fall into the sinne against the holy Ghost despiting the spirit of grace Heb. 10. 29. So the Spirit of God is sayd to be tempted resisted grieved Acts 5. 9. and 7. 51. Esay 63. 10. Ephes. 4. 30. with man or in man implying both the contending of the Prophets outward and of Gods spirit inwardly as before is observed Here the Church declined is called man or Adam to note their corrupt estate The Greek trāslateth it my Spirit shall not continue in these men The Chaldee paraphraseth This evill generation shall not continue before me for ever understanding as it seemeth by the Spirit mans naturall soule and life which God would take away by the Flood he also that is these also which are my peculiar professant people is flesh that is is fleshly not having the spirit but walking after their owne lusts as Iude vers 19. 16. The flesh and the Spirit are also thus opposed Rom. 7. 5. 6. and 8. 8. 9. Gal. 5. 16. 17. So the Chaldee here saith For that they are flesh and their workes evill And this is the state of all men in their first birth for that which is borne of the flesh is flesh Ioh. 3. 6. 120. yeares meaning that so long time by Noes preaching and building the Arke they should have space given them
that is two of each This number of seven was after much used in sacrificing as Iob 42. 8. 1 Chron. 15. 26. Num. 23. 1. 14 29. male and his female the Hebrew is man and his wife which the Greeke and Chaldee translateth male and female and so the Hebrew it selfe is in the next verse for the fowles It is the manner of the Hebrew tongue to call all living creatures by the name of man and wife and their young ones sonnes Lev. 1. 5. and things also without life woman and sister Exod. 26. 3. The mystery of things may by such names the better be descerned for beasts cleane and uncleane figured out men as the vision shewed to Peter manifesteth Act. 10. 11. 20. 28. two the Greeke explaineth it two two that is by twoes as before by sevens and in the 9. verse following the word two is doubled Vers. 3. seven to weet of the cleane and two of the uncleane as was before of beasts And so the Greek expresseth it Vers. 4. seven dayes hence Hebr. to yet seven daies that is the seventh day after this as vers 10. So yet three dayes 2 Chron. 10. vers 5. is in vers 12. shewed to be in the third day So in Gen. 40. 13. The Hebrew to is sometime used for after as Exod. 16. 1 Psal. 19. 3. Num. 33. 38. Ier. 41. 4. Ezr. 3. 8. I will cause Hebr. I causing it is spoken as if it were then in doing for the more certainty So thou heaping coles Prov. 25. 22. is translated thou shalt heape Rom. 12 20. forty dayes This time of vengeance is after used for the time of humiliation as Moses Elias and Christ our Lord fasted forty dayes and forty nights Deut. 9. 9. 11. 1 King 19. 8. Mat. 4. 2. And forty daies respite was given to Niniveh Ion. 3. 4. as thrice 40. that is 120. yeeres to the old world before it was drowned Gen. 6. 3. blot out or wipe out that is destroy and abolish This the Hebrew Doctors expound to be out of the land of the world to come the land of the living R. Menachem on Gen. 7. and the Apostle placeth their spirits in prison 1 Pet. 3. 19. living substance every thing that standeth up or subsisteth This word is also used Deuteron 11. 6. and Iob. 22. 20. Vers. 6. 600 yeere old Hebr. a sonne of 600. yeeres that is going in his 600 yeere See Gen. 5. 32. and hereafter in vers 11. waters or as the Greeke hath the Flood of water Vers. 7. his sonnes wives Thus but a few that is eight soules were saved by water as the Apostle observeth 1 Pet. 3. 20. And here againe Noes rare faith and obedience is set forth Heb. 11. 7. because or for feare of Hebr. from the face Vers. 9. and two that is by twoes as v. 2. Vers. 10. at the seventh or as the Greeke saith after seven dayes see before v. 4. Vers. 11. the 600 yeere or In the yeere of 600 yeres that is while Noe was living in the 600 yeere of his life which was from the creation of the world the 1656 yeere and this was the beginning of that yeere of his life for hee continued a yeere in the Arke Gen. 8. 13. and lived 350 yeere after the flood and dyed 950 yeere old Gen. 9. 28. 29. the second moneth to weet of the yeere agreeable in part to that we now call October for the end and revolution of the yeere was about the moneth which we call September Exod. 23. 16. and 34. 22. and so the new yeere then began this was after called the moneth of Ethanim 1 King 8. 2. where the Chaldee paraphraseth that they called it of old the first moneth but now saith he it is the seventh moneth For the yeere changed the beginning of it ecclesiastically upon the comming of Israel out of Aegypt see Exod. 12. 2. and Lev. 23. 39. compared with Exod. 23. 16. Some take it here to bee meant of the second moneth according to the Iewes ecclesiasticall account that is April of the great deepe that is of the waters which had by the providence of God beene put into treasuries or store-houses under the earth Iob 28. 4. 10 Psal. 33. 7. Deut. 8. 7. As also of the Ocean sea which sometime is called the Deepe Iob 38. 16. 30. and 41. 31. Psal. 106. 9. the windowes or sluices flood-gates of heaven that is of the ayre as is noted on Gen. 1. 7. So Esay 24. 18. This denoteth the extraordinary violent falling of the waters from above as the former did their springing up from beneath Hereupon waters deeps floods and the like are used for great afflictions whereby the life is indangered Psal. 69. 2. 3. 15. 16. Vers. 12. the raine or shower that is vehement raine After this manner the Israelites were baptized in the cloud and sea when the clouds streamed downe waters 1 Cor. 10. 1. 2. Psal. 77. 18. Exod. 14. 24. 25. And now was Noe saved in the arke in the midst of the waters and was spiritually baptized into Christs death by faith 1 Pet. 3. 20. 21. Heb. 11. 7. Vers. 13. In this selfe same Hebr. In the strength or body of this day So Gen. 17. 23. Levit. 23. 14. Ios. 10. 27. Vers. 14. every beast that is some of every sort two of the uncleane as before v. 2. every wing that is of every sort for some are winged with fethers others with skin as Batts Therefore the Greeke translateth here as before according to his kind Vers. 15. went in of their owne accord miraculously God so moving them that they seemed beforehand to know the wrath of God that should come on the world Vers. 16. shut him in or shut the doore upon him or after him the Greeke saith shut the Arke on the outside of him And this was to keepe him safe and as the Chaldee translateth protect him from the violence of the raine also that no other should come in for so the like speech seemeth to import in 2 King 4. 4. 5. The record of this grace to Noe is found in sundry heathen Writers they say Deucalion when waters drowned all the rest was with his wife preserved in a ship or arke Ovid. Metamorph l. 1. Lucian de Dea Syriae Noe was of the Greekes called Deucalion as Iustin Martyr Apol. 1. testifieth and the name implieth so much it being made of the wet and of the sea Vers. 17. 40 dayes that is large dayes comprehending nights also as v. 4. and so the Greeke expresseth it forty dayes and forty nights See the notes of Gen. 1. 5. from or from upon but the Greek saith from the earth and the Hebrew meghnal from upon is sometime onely from as Exod. 10. 28. Therefore that which in 2 Chron. 33. 8. is written from upon the Land in 2 King 21. 8. is but from the land So from by me Gen. 13. 9. Vers. 18. went upon the face that is as the Greeke translateth was caried
21. 19. compared with 1 Chr. 20. 5. yet the event and history after sheweth that the Canaanites also were indeed under this curse when the Israelites conquered their land And that Noe pronounced this judgement by Gods spirit But Cham is not exempted hereby from the curse although his sonne be named as Sem is not exempted from the blessing in the next verse where Iehovah his God is named So Iakob is said to blesse Ioseph Gen. 48. vers 15. when Iosephs children had their blessing verse 16 c. And the curse of the wicked reacheth unto the fruit of their body Deut. 28. 18. a servant of servants that is a most base and vile servant the Chaldee saith a working servant Canaans name did also portend his condition being of Canagh to humble bow or presse downe And as servitude is here brought upon men for a curse so the Scriptures under the name of servants signifying sinfull men doe shut such out from the kingdome of God Ioh. 8. 34. 35. Gal. 4. 30. 31. Among the Heathens also such an estate was counted miserable God taketh away halfe the understanding of those men that are brought into servitude saith Plato in his 6 booke of Lawes from Homer Vers. 26. the God of Sem under this Sem also himselfe receiveth a blessing for blessed is the people whose God Iehovah is Psal. 144. 15. and eternall life is implyed herein for God hath prepared for them a City of whom hee is not ashamed to bee called their God Heb. 11. 16. and Sem is the first man in Scripture that hath expresly this honour By the God of Sem also may bee meant Christ who came of Sem according to the flesh but is also God over all blessed for ever Amen Rom. 9. 5. Sem by interpretation is a Name which is also used for renowme Gen. 6. 4. and Christ hath a name above every name whereat all knees bow Phil. 2. 9. 10. servant to them or to him that is to Sem and Iaphet and specially to Sem the Hebrew signifieth both them and him So in the verse following the Chaldee translateth to them the Greek his servant Vers. 27. perswade or shall perswade or as the Greeke and Chaldee translate it inlarge The originall word properly signifieth to perswade entise or allure by faire and kind words and is applied to Gods drawing of men unto him by the Gospell Hos. 2. 14. and in the Hebrew there is allusion to his name Iaphth le Iepheth Perswade the perswasible It meaneth by fayre alluring words to perswade unto faith and obedience and so is a prophesie or prayer that the Gentiles which come of Iapheth should be brought to the faith of the Gospell This word of perswading is often used for drawing men to Christ Act. 17. 4. and 18. 4. and 19. 8. and 28. 23. 24. and it is the speciall worke of God Ioh. 6. 44. Act. 11. 18. Inlarging also is not only of roomth to dwell in which may be implyed in this blessing of Iapheth who had moe sons then either Cham or Sem but oftentimes of the heart by wisdome love and comfort as in 1 King 4. 29. 2 Cor. 6. 11. Esa. 60. 5. But it is another Hebrew word in those places hee may dwell or and hee shall dwell in the tents of Sem that is be united with the Churches of the Iewes the posterity of Sem which was fulfilled when the Gentiles became joynt heyres and of the same body and joint partakers of Gods promise in Christ the stop of the partition wall being broken down c. Ephes. 3. 6. and 2. 14. 19. Although it may further imply the graffing of Iaphets children into the stocke of the Church when Sems posterity the Iewes should be cut off as Paul sheweth in Rom. 11. 11. 12. 15. 17. c. So the Reubenites are said to dwell in the Hagarims tents after the Hagarims were subdued and falne 1 Chron. 5. 10. The Church of Christ is here and often called Tents or Tabernacles which are a flitting and movable dwelling because such is our estate on earth here we have no continuing City but wee seeke one to come which hath foundations c. Heb. 13. 14. and 11. 9. 10. So the tents of Iudah Zach. 12. 7. signifie the Church and the tents of Iakob Mal. 2. 12. and the tents of the Saints Rev. 20. 9. The Hebrew Doctors have gathered from this prophesie that they should speake in Iaphets tongue which in the ages following was the Greeke within the tents of Sem Thalmud Hierosol in Megilah This was fulfilled by the Apostles speaking and writing the Gospell in Greeke Vers. 29. he died in the yeere from the worlds creation 2006. and did see Tharah the father of Abram the tenth generation after him before his death CHAP. X. 1 The generations of Noes three sonnes after the Flood 2 The sons of Iaphet 6 The sonnes of Cham 8 amongst whom is Nimrod the mighty hunter and King 15 and the twelve families of Canaan 19 the borders of their land 21 The sonnes of Sem father of the Hebrewes ANd these are the generations of the sonnes of Noe Sem Cham and Iapheth and unto them were borne sons after the Flood The sonnes of Iapheth Gomer and Magog and Madai and Iavan Th 〈…〉 and Meshec and Thiras And the sons of Gomer Ascanaz and Riphath and Thoga 〈…〉 And the sons of Iavan Elisa and Tharsis Kitim and Dodanim Of these were the Iles of the nations divided in their lands every man after his tongue after their families in their nations And the sonnes of Cham Cush and Mizraim and Phut and Canaan And the sons of Cush Seba and Havilah and Sabtah and Regmah and Sabtaca and the sonnes of Regmah Sheba and Dedan And Cush begat Nimrod he began to be a mighty-one in the earth He was mighty in hunting before Iehovah therefore it is said As Nimrod mighty in hunting before Iehovah And the beginning of his Kingdome was Babylon and Erech and Acad and Chalneh in the land of Shinar Out of that land went-forth Assur and hee builded Niniveh and Rechoboth the citie and Calach And Resen betweene Niniveh and Calach the same is a great City And Mizraim begat the Ludims and the Anamims and the Lehabims and the Naphthuchims And the Pathrufims and the Casluchims from whence came out the Philistims and the Caphthorims And Canaan hee begat Sidon his first-borne and Cheth And the Iebusite and the Amorite and the Girgasite And the Evite and the Arkite and the Sinite And the Arvadite and the Samarite and the Chamathite and afterward were the families of the Canaanite spred abroad And the border of the Canaanite was from Sidon as thou commest to Gerar unto Gaza as thou commest to Sodom and Gomorrha Admah and Seboim unto Lashah These are the sonnes of Cham after their families after their tongues in their lands in their nations And there was borne also to Sem himself the father
Ismael sonne of Agar the Aegyptian mocked and persecuted Isaak Gen. 21. 9. Gal. 4. 29. which fell out thirty yeeres after the promise Gen. 12. 3. which promise was 430 yeeres before the Law Gal. 3. 17. and 430 yeeres after that promise came Israel out of bondage Exod. 12. 41. Vers. 14. will judge that is punish as their sinnes deserve the judgements that God brought on the Egyptians are summed up in Psal. 105. 27. 36. and 78. 43. 51. handled at large in Exodus great substance or riches both of their owne and of the Egyptians whose jewels of silver gold and garments they caried away Exod. 12. 35 36. Vers. 15. unto thy fathers that is shalt die the body returning to the earth the spirit to God that gave it Eccles. 12. 7. with whom are the spirits of just and perfect men Heb. 12. 23. See this promise fulfilled in Gen. 25. 8. Vers. 16. the fourth generation This promise was verified when Eleazar the son of Aaron the sonne of Amran the sonne of Kohath came out of Egypt and parted the land of Canaan to Israel Ios. 14. 1. Kohath being one that went into Egypt with Iaakob Gen 46. 11 26. 1 Chron. 6. 2 3. of the Amorite that is the Amorites and other sinfull nations mentioned after verse 19 29 21. towards whom Gods patience should bee shewed till the measure of their sinnes were filled vp A like phrase is used Mat. 23. 32. Vers. 17. going downe the going downe of the sun and darknesse usually noteth calamities comming upon people Amos 8. 9 10. Esa. 5. 30. and 8. 22. and 9. 1 2. a smoking oven Heb. an oven of smoke but as a crowne of thornes Mat. 27. 29. is resolved a thornie crowne Mar. 15. 17. so this here as the Greeke translateth it a smoking oven or fornace And this word oven is used to note our great afflictions Mal. 4. 1. Psal. 21. 10. Lam. 5. 10. Luke 12. 28. So this smoking oven may represent Egypt the place of Israels affliction called by another like name an ●ron fornace Deut. 4. 20. Ier. 11. 4. The Ierusalemy Thargum applyeth this vision to Gehenna or hell Fyre prepared for the wicked a lampe or torch of fire that is a burning lampe the Greeke turneth it lampes of fire and the Hebrew often useth one for many see Gen. 3. 2. and 4. 20. This representeth the covenant betweene God and Abrams seed for deliverance out of that smoking oven of Egypt For at the Law-giving lightnings called lamps appeared on mount Sinai Exod. 20. 18. and Christ was seene of Daniel and Iohn with his eyes like lamps and flames of fire Dan. 10. 6. Rev. 1. 14. and the salvation of Gods people is likened to a burning lampe Esay 52. 1. Also the living-creatures appeared to Ezekiel like lamps Ezek. 1. 13. and Gods people are compared to virgins with lamps Mat. 25. 1. which passed by this passage of the lampe or lampes to which onely the Greeke referreth it the Lord would signify the making of the covenant betweene him and his people as the next verse sheweth So from a like action in Ierm 34. 18 19 20. the Lord blameth them that performed not the covenant which they made before him when they cut the bullock in twaine passed betweene the parts thereof threatning for it that their carkasses should be for meat to the foule of the heavens though here Abram drove the foules away p●●●●s the Greeke calleth them dichotomies that is divisions into two parts Vers. 18. stroke Hebrew cut a covenant that is made or stroke and as the Greeke translateth it disposed a covenant or Testament called usually cutting because of the slaying and cutting of beasts at the making of it as this place and Ier. 34. 18. doe shew The holy Ghost in Greeke expresseth this word carath cut sundry wayes as by poieo make Heb. 8. 9. sunteleo make perfect Heb. 8. 8. diatithemi dispose Heb. 8. 10. all from Ier. 31. 31 32 33. and entellomai command Heb. 9. 10. from Exod. 24. 8. Of a covenant see Gen. 6. 18. give I or I have given The time past is often used in actions present and to come So the Greeke here translateth I will give Of this gift see Gen. 13. 15. But the Hebrew Doctors scan the word thus Hee saith not I will give but I have giuen and yet Abraham had now begotten no children But because the word of the holy blessed God is a deed therefore he so speaketh Midras tillim in Psal. 107. 2. the river called Sichor Ios. 13. 3. Euphrates Hebrew Phrath see Gen. 2. 14. This promise was accomplished in Davids dayes 2 Sam. 8. 3. c. and in Salomons 2 Chron. 9. 26. Vers. 19. The Kenite that is Kenites or Keneans and so the rest see Gen. 10. 16. The Chaldee calleth these Salameans and so in Numb 24. 21. Here are tenne peoples reckoned whose lands Abrams seed should possesse Afterward they are usually counted seven Deut. 7. 1. Acts 13. 19. it seemeth some were wasted or mixed confusedly with the rest before the Israelites came into their possession So in Psal. 83. 7 8 9. there are ten nations reckned all confederates against Gods people CHAP. XVI 1 Sarai being barren giveth Hagar her Egyptian maid to Abram 4 Hagar being with child and afflicted for despising her mistresse runneth away 7 An Angel sendeth her backe to submit her selfe 11 and telleth her of her childs name and conditions 15 Hagar beareth Abram a son whom he calleth Ismael ANd Sarai Abrams wife did not bearchildren unto him and shee had an handmayd an Egytian and her name was Hagar And Sarai said unto Abram Behold now Iehovah hath restrained me from child-bearing goe in I pray thee unto my handmayd it may be I shall be builded by her and Abram hearkned to the voice of Sarai And Sarai Abrams wife tooke Hagar the Egyptian her handmaid at the end of ten yeeres of Abrams dwelling in the land of Canaan and she gave her to Abram her husband to bee to him for a wife And hee went-in unto Hagar and shee conceived and she saw that shee had conceived and her mistresse was despised in her eyes And Sarai said unto Abram my wrong is upon thee I have given my handmaid into thy bosome and she seeth that she hath conceived and I am depised in her eyes Iehovah judge betweene me and thee And Abram said unto Sarai Behold thy handmaid is in thy hand doe to her that which is good in thine eyes And Sarai afflicted her and she fled from her face And the Angell of Iehovah found her by a fountaine of waters in the wildernesse by the fountaine in the way of Shur And hee said Hagar Sarais handmaid from whence commest thou and whether wilt thou goe And she said I am fleeing from the face of my mistresse Sarai And the Angell of Iehovah said vnto her Returne to thy mistresse and humble thy selfe under her hands And the Angell of
mortification and regeneration of nature The same word is applyed figuratively to other parts as to the lips of a stammerer which use superfluity in speaking Exod. 6. 30. and to the heart covered with a fat skinne Lev. 26. 41. Esay 6. 10. to the ●are stopped that it cannot heare Ier. 6. 10. And spiritually all sinne is signified by this superfluous foreskin as the Apostle mentioneth the superfluity of maliciousnesse to bee put away Iam. 1. 21. and the uncircumcision of our flesh is joyned with our estate dead in sinnes Col. 2. 13. The Hebrew Doctors also did thus understand it for the foreskinne of the heart in Ier. 4. 4. the Chaldee paraphrast there expoundeth the wickednesse of the heart and in Deut. 10. 16. the Greek interpreters translate it hardnesse of heart The uncircumcised eare in Ier. 6. 10. and heart in Lev. 26. 41. the Chaldee calleth foolish and uncircumcised persons in Ezekiel 28. 10. and 31. 18. are in the Chaldee wicked and sinners the superfluous foreskin signifieth the strength of uncleannesse saith R. Menachem on Gen. 17. And in speech of Adams sinne the Iewes have a proverb that the first man Adam drew over or gathered his superfluous-foreskin that is broke the covenant of his God and became a sinner R. Menachem on Gen. 3. Also when the word is applyed unto trees it signifieth the impuritie of the fruits which might not be eaten of Lev. 19. 23. and the Hebrew Doctors write that as Epicures and they that deny the Law of God the Resurrection of the dead the comming of the Redeemer and other such like so he that draweth over or gathereth his superfluous foreskin that is maketh him-selfe againe uncircumcised hath no part in the world to come that is in eternall life but shall bee cut-off and perish and be damned for their great wickednesse and sinne for ever and ever Maimony in Misn. treat of Repentance ch 3. S. 6. asigne or token which sheweth one thing to the eye another thing to the mind The Apostle calleth it also a seale Rom. 4. 11. which serveth for assurance of the thing signified And so the Hebrew Doctors use the phrase of sealing their off-spring with the signe of the holy covenant Maimony in Misn. treat of Circumcision ch 3. S. 3. And that they tooke not this for a carnall signe appeareth by their words in the booke called Zohar where treating upon this Section of the Law they say At what time a man is sealed with this holy seale of this signe of Circumcision thenceforth he seeth the holy blessed God properly and the holy soule is united with him If he be not worthy that he keepeth not this signe what is written By the breath of God they perish Iob 4. 9. for that this seale of the holy blessed God was not kept But if he be worthy and keepe it the holy Ghost is not separated from him Our Apostle openeth the mystery more heavenly whiles hee calleth the signe of circumcision a seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4. 11. and if thou be a transgressor of the Law thy circumcision is made uncircumcision Circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit not in the letter Rom. 2. 25. 29. Vers. 12. a son of eight dayes that is a man child of eight dayes old meaning in the 8 day Which time was so strict that if the eight day fell to bee the Sabbath yet they circumcised the child therein Ioh. 7. 22. And so it is in the Hebrew Canons Circumcision in the time thereof driveth away the Sabbath that is a man must omit the keeping of the Sabbath for to circumcise in due time Maimony treat of Circumcision ch 1. S. 9. God appointed the eighth day as the first convenient time For creatures new borne were counted as in their blood and unclean for seven dayes and in the eighthday they might be offered unto the Lord Levit. 22. 27. and so in mankind Levit. 12. 2. 3. The same number of dayes was observed in many other things as for the consecration of the Priests Levit. 8. 33. 35. and 9. 1. the clensing of Lepers Levit. 14. 8. 9. 10. and of persons with uncleane issues Lev. 15. 13. 14. the clensing of polluted Nazirites Num. 6. 9. 10. and for purifying the altar Ezek. 43. 26. 27. and sundry the like In all which as the Sabbath day ever came over their heads within that space which day was a signe of sanctification from the Lord Exod. 31. 13. so Christ ending all figures and resting the Sabbath day in the grave rose up from death the eighth day which was the first of the weeke following whose death was a full clensing of all our sinnes and his rising againe our justification Mark 16. 1. 2. 6. Rom. 4. 25. And in him are wee circumcised with the circumcision done without hands in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ being buried with him in Baptisme Col. 2. 11. 12. R. Menachem on Gen. 17. saith Circumcision was therefore done on the eighth day that the Sabbath might pass over it for there is no eighth day without a Sabbath shall be circumcised by the parents masters or Magistrates The Hebrew Doctors say the charge lyeth upon the father to circumcise his sonne and upon the master to circumcise his servants borne in the house or bought with money If the father or master transgresse and circumcise them not c. then the Iudges are commanded to circumcise him whether it be son or servant in due time that there be no uncircumcised left in Israel nor among their servants If the thing bee hidden from the Iudges and they circumcise him not when he is wexen great he is bound to circumcise him-selfe And every day that passeth over him after he is wexen great and he circumciseth not himselfe loe hee breaketh the commandement Maimony treat of Circumcis ch 1. S. 1. 2. male who had by nature that foreskin of the flesh to be cut off the females wanting it were not to keep this rite though they were as well as men within the covenant of grace in Christ Gal. 3. 28. and therefore baptisme the signe of the covenant now under the Gospell which is come in place of Circumcision Col. 2. 11. 12. is given both to men and women Act. 8. 12. Moreover the woman is comprehended under the man as her head 1 Cor. 11. 3. who onely had this signe in his flesh with effusion of blood which alwaies had respect unto and accomplishment in the blood of Christ figured by the male Heb. 9. 22. 23. 24. Here also the Hebrewes write that a child who is borne as if he were circumcised without a foreskin the blood of the covenant must bee made to drop from him in the eighth day A child that is both male and female must also be circumcised the eighth day Likewise if any be cut out of the side of his mothers body And who so hath two
the child and she sate over-against him and lifted up her voice and wept And God heard the voice of the lad and an Angell of God called to Hagar out of heaven and said unto her what aileth thee Agar feare not for God hath heard the voice of the lad there where he is Arise lift up the lad and hold him in thy hand for I will make of him a great nation And God opened her eyes and she saw a well of water and she went and filled the bottell with water and gave the lad drinke And God was with the lad and he grew and dwelt in the wildernesse and was a shooter with bow And he dwelt in the wildernesse of Pharan and his mother tooke him a wife out of the land of Egypt And it was in that time that Abimelech and Phicol prince of his host said unto Abraham saying God is with thee in all that thou dost And now sweare unto me here by God If thou shalt lye unto me or to my son or to my newphew according to the kindnes that I have done vnto thee thou shalt do unto me and unto the land in the which thou hast sojourned And Abraham said I will sweare And Abraham reproved Abimelech because of a well of water which Abimelechs servants had violently-taken away And Abimelech said I know not who hath done this thing and also thou didst not tell mee and I also did not heare it but to day And Abraham tooke sheepe and oxen and gave to Abimelech and both of them stroke a covenant And Abraham set seven ewe-lambes of the flocke by themselves And Abimelech said unto Abraham what meane here these seven ewe-lambes which thou hast set by themselves And hee said for the seven ewe-lambes thou shalt take of my hand that they may be to me for a Testimonie that I have digged this Well Therefore he called that place Beer-sheba because there they sware both of them And they stroke a covenant in Beer-sheba and Abimelech rose-up and Phicol the Prince of his host and they returned into the land of the Philistines And hee planted a tree in Beer-sheba and he called there on the name of Iehovah the eternall God And Abraham sojourned in the land of the Philistines many daies Annotations Visited This word signifieth a remembrance providence care and performance of that which was spoken be it good or evill For good as here and Gen. 50. 24. Exod. 4. 31. Luk. 1. 68. and often For evill and so it meaneth punishment Exod. 20. 5. Psal. 89. 33. Num. 16. 29. The Chaldee here translateth remembred and the Hebrew implyeth that as 1. Sam. 15. 2. Vers. 2. conceived hereupon her faith is commended Heb. 11. 11. By saith Sarah her selfe received strength to conceive seed and was delivered of a child when when she was past age because shee judged him faithfull who had promised in his or to his oldage so vers 7. the set time promised the yeere before Gen. 18. 10. Hereupon Isaak is sayd to be borne of a freewoman by promise and after the spirit Gal. 4. 22 23 29. and this birth is set forth as an example of Gods mercy to and increase of his Church by the covenant of grace in Christ under the new Testament whereof Sarah was a figure Esay 51. 2 3. Gal. 4. 24. 28. Vers. 3. Isaak which signifieth Laughter or Ioy this name was foreappointed him of God Gen. 17. 19. Vers. 4. son of 8 daies or 8 daies old but understanding in the 8 day as the Greeke translateth it see the Law Gen. 17. 12. Isaak is the first that wee read of circumcised at this age Vers. 6. made me or made laughter to me that is joy as the Chaldee translateth it as if shee had said hath made me to laugh or rejoyce The word is sometime used for laughing to scorne or mocking as v. 9. Ezek. 23. 32. and so some understand it here laughter at me that is hath made me to be laughed at meaning of the profane which would laugh mocke as did Ismael verse 9. Though both may bee implyed in the word yet the first seemeth most proper and according to the prophesies Rejoyce thou barren which didst not beare Esay 54. 1. which hath reference to this birth Gal. 4. 22. 27. 28. Esay 51. 2. 3. with me or at me but the Greeke translateth it rejoyce with me the Chaldee also turneth it into joy And so the Prophet Rejoyce yee with Ierusalem and be glad with her all ye that love her Esay 66. 10. which Ierusalem was figured out by this Sarah Gal. 4. 22 26. Vers. 7. should have given sons Hebrew hath given sons so noting the certainty speaking as of a thing done By sonnes is meant any sonne or child as the Greeke explaineth it see Gen. 46. 23. The like admiration is spoken by the Church Esay 49. 21. who hath begotten me these The Chaldee paraphrast referreth this to God saying faithfull is he that said to Abraham and hath fulfilled it that Sarah should give sucke Vers. 8. weaned The Hebrew word signifieth an exchange of one thing for another and so in weaning from milke to stronger meat which as it signified in Isaak a growth in strength of nature so is it in the faithfull a signe of growth in grace and understanding 1 Cor. 3. 1 2. Heb. 5. 12 13 14. and of abstaining from worldly childish pleasures Psal. 131. 2. and Isaak being a figure of all the children of promise Gal. 4. 28. we may hereupon gather the reason why Abraham made so great a banquet at Isaaks weaning So at Samuels weaning hee was presented to the Lord with a spirituall feast or sacrifice 1 Sam. 1. 22 24. Vers. 9. laughing that is deriding or mocking for so laughing often signifieth as Gen. 19. 14. Ezek. 23. 32. Lam. 1. 7. it meaneth also abusing otherwise whereupon laughter and scorne followeth as Gen. 39. 14. 17. also idolatrous laughing or play as Exod. 32. 6. Hereupon the Ierusalemy paraphrast referreth it to this latter of laughing in Gods worship the Greeke translateth it playing with Isaak her sonne which word playing is sometime used for fighting 2 Sam. 2. 14 16. and by laughing or mocking the Scripture often noteth a contemptuous and malignant carriage Iob 30. 1. and 12. 4. Lam. 3. 14. Mat. 27. 29. But the Apostle plainly calleth it persecuting and saith as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the spirit even so it is now Gal. 4. 29. And here beginneth by an Egyptians son that 400 yeeres affliction spoken of in Gen. 15. 13. Vers. 10. this bondwoman shee figured the old Testament and her sonne such as are under the works of the law Gal. 4. 24. and the mother being to be cast out it is likely shee was the cause or an abettor of her sons evill not be heire or not inherit under which inheritance is figured heavenly blessings in Christ and life everlasting Gal. 3.
Ismael dyed wicked then by his fathers to whom he was gathered are meant the soules of wicked men before him which are spirits in prison 1 Pet. 3. 19. Vers. 18. they that is Ismaels sonnes dwelt In Greeke he dwelt Shur a place in the wildernesse see Gen. 16. 7. The Chaldee there and here calleth it Chagra did he fall meaning either that his lot did befall him so to dwell or that he so dyed as the word fall sometime signifieth Psal. 82. 7. Gen. 14. 10. But the Greeke here translateth it he dwelt so also doth the Chaldee paraphrast so the plaine text was before in the promise Gen. 16 12. and to make to fall is to divide by lot an inheritance to dwell in Ios. 23. 4. Psal. 78. 55. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the sixt Section of the Law called The generations of Isaak See Gen. 6. 9. Vers. 19. the generations that is the history of the off-spring of Isaak and things that befell unto him as Gen. 2. 1. and 5. 1. and 6. 9. Vers. 20. old Hebr. son of fourty yeere so v. 26. see Gen. 5. 32. the Syrian the Hebrew name is Aramite which the holy Ghost in Greeke calleth Syrian Luke 4. 27. See Gen. 10. 22. Padan Aram the same that Aram Naharajim Gen. 24. 10 for the Greeke turneth them both Mesopotamia of Syria Aram is Syria Gen. 24. 10. and 10. 22. Padan in the Syrian tongue is a payre or couple and the country of Aram lying betweene a couple of rivers is so named Padan Aram and sometime onely Padan as Gen. 48. 7. Vers. 21. for or directly-for as the force of the Hebrew word implyeth and before his wife so it seemeth to bee some solemne prayer which they made together directly for this matter having lived twenty yeeres together without any child and Isaak wexen old into the 60 yeere of his life ver 26. God exercising his faith hereby as he had done Abrahams Gen. 15. 2. The Iewes have a tradition that Isaak went with his wife to mount Morijah to the place where he had beene bound Gen. 22. 9. and prayed there Pirke R. Eliezer ch 32. Vers. 22. strugled-together or bruised themselves by strugling which did presage the contrarietie that should be betweene these two brothers and so betweene the children of God of this world if so c. an unperfect speech which in her passion she uttered the Greeke translateth it if it shall so be with me why is this unto me why have I conceived if I must feele such things to enquire or seeke either by private prayer or by asking some Prophet The Ierusalemy Thargum taketh it in this last sense and saith she went to the Schoole of Sem the great Howbeit Sem was dead about ten yeeres before this but by Abraham or Heber the great Patriarch then living shee might well inquire of God Others as R. Eliezer Perek 32. take it to be meant of her praying unto God Vers. 23. Two nations that is fathers of two nations and divers peoples Edomites and Israelites the greater to weet in dignity which came naturally by the first birthright or the elder The Hebrew Rab whereof great men and masters are called Rabbies Iohn 1. 39. Mat. 23. 8. signifieth a superiour in dignity The holy Ghost in Greeke translateth it the greater Rom. 9. 12. Hereby Esau and his posteritie are meant shall serve as came to passe carnally when the Aedomites of Esau became servants to David and to the Israelites which were of Iakob 2 Sam. 8. 14. and spiritually when Iakob got of Esau the first birthright and bereaved him of the blessing Gen. 25. 33. and 27. 29. For servitude came in with a curse and figureth reprobation Gen. 9. 25. Iohn 8. 34. 35. Gal. 4. 30. 31. Therefore from hence the Prophet teacheth that God loved Iakob and hated Esau Mal. 1. 2. 3. and the Apostle gathereth the doctrine of Gods election and reprobation saying when Rebekka had conceived by one even by our father Isaak the children being not yet borne neither having done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth it was said unto her the greater shall serve the lesser as it is written Iakob have I loved but Esau have I hated Rom. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Vers. 25. red a signe of the cholericke cruell and bloody disposition found in Esau himselfe and in his posterity Gen. 27. 40. 41. Obad. 1. 10. Ezek. 25. 12. So the cruell persecuting Dragon was of red colour Rev. 12. 3. The Hebrew Doctors say Esau the wicked was drawne after the workes of judgement mystically signified in these words And by thy sword shalt thou live Gen. 27. 40. and therefore he was red R. Menachem Rakenat on Gen. 25. And in Bresith rabbah they note how hee was red and his meat was red Gen. 25. 30. end his land was red as in Gen. 32. 3. c. And he that takes vengeance on him is red and in red clothing Song 5. 10. Esay 63. 1. 2. all over Hebr. all of him like a mantle of hayre which the Greek translateth like a rough hide This also signified his strong fierce and crafty nature For hayre is a signe of naturall strength and nature being corrupted hairinesse denoteth the power of corruption therefore when Lepers were purified all their hayre was to be shaven off Lev. 14. 8. So the Hebrewes say that his hayrinesse signified the strength of uncleannesse which came out of him R. Menachem on Gen. 25. Esau by interpretation Made or Perfected as being of a more strong and perfect constitution naturall then other children rather like a man then a babe Vers. 26. the heele or foot sole as if he would have pulled backe his brother from the birth and have beene before him or at least for to overthrow him Which as God by their former strugling in her body and now by this behaviour did signifie so the Prophet mentioneth it after to Iakobs children how he thus strove for the grace of the first birthright which they by sin suffered themselves to be deprived of Hos. 12. 2. 3. This manner of birth that Iakobs hand held his brother by the heele was also extraordinarily strange and perillous for the life both of mother and child See the like after in Gen. 38. 28. he called that is every one called as in vers 25. it is written they called or he was called so vers 30. See the notes on Gen. 16. 14. Iakob that signifieth one that should hold by the foot or overthrow his brother Vers. 27. a cunning huntsman Hebr. a man knowing hunting of the field ranging the fields for to hunt beasts Of a disposition much like Ismaels Gen. 16. 12. or Nimrods Gen. 10. 9. perfect of a religious honest plaine and simple disposition without guile or wickednesse as the Greeke translateth vnfeighned See Gen. 6. 9. dwelling or sitting in tents that is either keeping
to wife And the sonnes of Iakob answered Sechem and Hamor his father with deceit spake because hee had defiled Dinah their sister And they said unto them wee cannot doe this thing to give our sister to a man that hath a superfluous-fore-skin for that were a reproach unto us Onely in this will we consent unto you if ye will be as we are that every male of you be circumcised Then will we give our daughters unto you we will dwell with you and wee will become one people And if ye will not hearken unto us to bee circumcised then will wee take our daughter and we will be gone And their words were good in the eyes of Hamor and in the eyes of Sechem Hamors sonne And the yongman delayed not to doe the thing because he had-delight in Iakobs daughter and hee was more honourable then all the house of his father And Hamor and Sechem his sonne came unto the gate of their citie and spake unto the men of their citie saying These men they are peaceable with us therfore let them dwell in the land and trade therein for the land behold is large of spaces before them let us take their daughters to us for wives let us give unto them our daughters Onely in this will the men consent unto us for to dwell with us for to become one people if every male among us be circumcised even as they are circumcised Their cattell and their substance and every beast of theirs shall not they be ours onely let us consent unto them and they will dwell with us And unto Hamor and unto Sechem his sonne hearkened all that went-out of the gate of his citie and they were circumcised every male all that went-out of the gate of his citie And it was in the third day when they were sore that two sonnes of Iakob Simeon and Levi Dinahs brethren took each-man his sword and came upon the citie in confidence and they killed every male And they killed Hamor and Sechem his sonne with the edge of the sword and tooke Dinah out of Sechems house and went-out The sonnes of Iakob came upon the slaine and spoiled the citie because they had defiled their sister They tooke their sheepe and their oxen and their asses and that which was in the citie and that which was in the field And all their wealth and all their little-ones and their wives they tooke-captive and spoyled and all that was in the house And Iakob said to Simeon and to Levi ye have troubled me to make mee to stinke among the inhabitants of the land among the Canaanites and among the Pherizzites and I am few in number and they will gather themselves together against me and smite me and I shall bee destroyed I and my house And they said Should hee deale with our sister as with an Harlot Annotations THe daughters that is the women as Gen 30. 13. Vpon what occasion she went to see them Moses telleth not the Hebrew Doctors say the maids of Sechem went abroad with timbrels to play c. Pirkei R. Eliezer ch 38. and that it was on a solemne feast day which they kept in that country Ioseph Antiq. b. 1. God noteth Dinahs going out as an occasion of her evill and after reacheth yong women to be keep rs at home Tit. 2. 5. So among the Iewes virgines were after this wont to be kept in 2 Maccab. 3. 19. Dinah was now about 14. yeers of age Iakobs onely daughter Vers. 2. Hamor called in Greeke Emmor So in Act. 7. 16. Evite H●br Chivvite see Gen. 10. 17. humbled or afflicted that is defiled her vers 5. for this word is applied onely to adulterous and unlawfull copulation as in Deut. 21. 14. 22. 24. 29. Iudg. 19 24. 2 Sam. 13. 12. 14. Eze. 22. 10. 11. Vers. 3. spake to the heart or as the Greeke translateth according to the minde of the damsell that is kindly on his part and such things as liked and comforted her who it seemeth was sorrowfull for this injury done her as Thamar was in like case 2 Sam. 13. 19. 20. So the Chaldee translateth hee spake consolations to the heart A like phrase is used for kinde and comfortable speaking in Gen. 50. 21. Esa. 40. 2. Hos. 2. 14. And that which in Ioh. 11. 19. is said to comfort them the Syriak there translateth to speake with their heart So in 1 Thes. 2. 11. Vers. 5. that he namely Hamors sonne as the Greeke translation addeth held his peace or kept-silence as deafe concealing his griefe and asswaging it with consideration of Gods chastisement as other godly men did in their troubles Levit 10. 3. Psal. 39. 10. Thus Iakob ruling his owne spirit did better then his sonnes that tooke the citie verse 27. Prov. 16. 32. Vers. 7. folly in Israel or against Israel that is as the Greeke and Chaldee doe explaine it a filthy and ignominious fact on his part vile foolish and filthy to the Church of God an ignominie and reproach Moses writeth this according to the speech used in his time when to doe folly in Israel was meant of wicked acts done to the scandall of the Church as Deut. 21. 21. Ios. 7. 15. Iudg. 20. 6. Israel being put for his posterity the Israelites see Gen. 19. 37. should not the Chaldee addeth it was not right or meet to be done So the Law commandeth there shall be no whore of the daughters of Israel Deut. 23. 17. and whordome should not be named among the Saints Eph. 5. 3. Vers. 8. is affected or is fastened cleaveth with desire love and delight as this word implyeth the setting of the love upon any Deut. 21. 11. 7. 7. Vers. 10. before you free for you to choose where you like and to possesse it See Gen. 13. 9. and 10. 15. The Greeke addeth broad before you as verse 21. get firme possessions or hold your selves as possessors in it Vers. 11. finde grace and have my request granted see Gen. 33. 15. Vers. 12. Very largely aske Hebr. Multiply yee upon me vehemently dowry a gift of the man unto the woman or her parents before and in respect of mariage See the law hereof Exod. 12. 16. 17. Vers. 13. and spake to weet deceitfully or when they spake unto them Vers. 14. they said This the Greeke referreth to Simeon and Levi Dinahs brethren superfluous or uncircumcised-foreskin see Gen. 17. 11. Vers. 15. Onely in this or But with this condition The Greeke translateth In this we will bee like unto you so in verse 22. where the Greeke addeth the word Onely circumcised cut in the flesh see Gen. 17. 10. And herein was their deceit pretending to have them like themselves in religion and politie intending when they were sicke of their circumcising to kill them verse 25. Vers. 18. good that is as the Greeke hath pleasing Vers. 20. the gate where the publike assembly of the citizens used to bee for all matters of the common
Iosephs good affection and godlinesse And this was one occasion which his brethren tooke to hate him So Christ was hated of the world for testifying that the workes thereof were evill Ioh. 7. 7. Vers. 3. of old-age unto him that is of his old-age borne when his father was old so Gen. 44. 20. The Chaldee applieth this old age to Iosephs manners saying he was a wise sonne unto him And others say was not Benjamin also a sonne of old age But because Iakob saw by the spirit of prophesie that Ioseph should reigne therefore he loved him above all his sonnes Pirkei R. Eliez ch 38. many colours Hebr. passim that is varieties and so the Greeke hath poikilon various or manifold to weer in threeds and colour an embroydered coat such kings daughters used to weare 2 Sam. 13. 18. Such God spiritually clotheth his Church withall Psal. 45. 14. 15. Ezek. 16 10. 13. and thereby is signified the varietie of wisedome and manifold graces given to his people Ephes. 3. 10. 1 Pet. 4. 10. Song 1. 9. 10. And Christ had such above his fellowes Psal. 45. 8. Heb. 1. 9. Vers. 4. with peace or unto peacé that is peaceably gently lovingly for of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Matth. 12. 34. The Greeke translateth no peaceable thing Vers. 5. dreamed by such meanes God used of old to shew unto men what he was about to doe Gen. 41. 25. Iocl 2. 28. Numb 12. 6. 1 King 3. 5. Such dreames were to bee regarded as oracles of God other have their deceits and vanities see Gen. 20. 3. And God sent dreames to his people sometime to comfort sometime to chasten and afflict the 〈…〉 Matt. 2. 19. 22. Iob 7. 13. 14. the more Hebr. they added yet to hate him So Christ and his disciples for declaring Gods word were hated of men as Ioh. 17. 14. I have given them thy word and the world hath hated them This storie of Ioseph is a patterne of afflictions which the godly suffer in this world for Christs sake and for the word of their testimony and it ministreth comforts to the distressed V. 7. binding Hebr. sheaving or sheaf-binding This being harvest worke and harvest usually signifying the latter time or end Psal. 126. 5. 6. Matt. 13. 39. Rev. 14. 15. God foreshewed not the present but future honour which Ioseph should have after many dayes of sorrow Also when his brethren went into Egypt for corne this dreame was fulfilled Gen. 42. 6. within or in the midst of a field compassed or stood-round about and this is a signe of honour to him that is compassed Therefore the testimoniall of Gods glorious presence usually is in the midst and others stand about Num. 2. 17. Rev. 4. 3. 4. So Exod. 18. 13. Ps. 7. 8. 142. 8. bowed downe or did obeysance as was fulfilled in Gen. 42. 6. Vers. 8. reigning reign that is in deed reigne so after in deed rule and in verse 10. in deed come They apply this dreame unto themselves as did also the Madianites Iudg. 7. 13. 14 which aggravated their sinne in resisting Gods manifested will Ioh. 15. 22. The manner of speaking is also a denyall shalt thou reign that is thou shalt not see Gen. 18. 17. Thus Moses and Christ himselfe were refused by their people Act. 7. 27. 35. Luk. 19. 14. Vers. 10. brethren Abrahams seed were likened to starres for multitude Gen. 22. 17. here Iakobs children are likened to starres for glory shining as lights in the world Phil. 2. 15. and in Dan. 8. 10. they are also the host of heaven Iakob and his wife are here the sunne and moone such honour God vouchsafeth to his contemned servants And Ioseph in this as in many other particulars may resemble Iesus at whose name all knees must bow Phil. 2. 10. Vers. 11. observed laid it to heart howsoever for the present he gave his sonne a light rebuke not fully perceiving the end of the thing Thus is it spoken also of Mary the mother of Christ Luke 2. 19. 51. Vers. 14. the peace that is the welfare or how they prosper as the Greeke explaineth it if they be well See Gen. 41. 16. As Ioseph here so Christ was sent to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel not onely to know but to procure their peace Matt. 15. 24. Luk. 19. 42. to Sechem which was about 60. English miles distant from Chebron There also was that great massacre committed a while before by Iakobs sonnes Gen. 34. The danger of the place might make Iakob more careful to inquire of their welfare V. 15. a man The Hebrew Doctors understand this of the Angel Gabriel called in Dan. 9. 21. the man Gabriel Pirket R. Eliez ch 38. but this is uncertain Vers. 16. seeking my brethren this setteth forth Iosephs care diligence So the Sonne of man came to seeke and save that which was lost Luk. 19. 10. Vers. 17. Dothan or Dothain for both waies it is written The Greeke calleth it Dothaim It was a place about 8. miles from Sechem In this towne was Elizeus the Prophet 2 King 6. 13. Vers. 18. craftily conspired or malignantly as the Greeke translation saith This word is also used in Psal. 105. 25. and Num. 25. 18. of the Egyptians and Madianites craftily plotting against the Israelites So the husbandmen conspired the death of the Sonne of God Luk. 20. 14. This is the heire come let us kill him Vers. 19. master of dreames this they speake in mockage the Greeke translateth it a dreamer The Hebrew phrase meaneth one that hath great skill in dreaming or a captaine dreamer as his brethren are after called masters of arrowes that is cunning archers for their malicious practises against him Gen. 49. 23. and a master of anger is an angry furious man Prov. 22. 24. and 29. 22. Vers. 20. one of the pits or some pit this setteth forth their inhumane cruelty that would kill their brother and not vouchsafe him honest buriall to which they next adde a lye to dissemble their murder and a contempt of the oracles of GOD which they sought and thought to defeat So running headlong together into a world of wickednesse envie carying them Acts 7. 9. Gen. 49. 23. Vers. 21. delivered him to weet in respect of death which they intended against him in soul that is so as to take away his life smite him dead A like phrase is in Ier. 40. 14. Deut. 19. 6 11. for which in Numb 35. 11. 15. is said to smite a soule so also in Levit. 24. 17. 18. where soule is put for the life of man or beast See Gen. 19. 17. Smiting is used for killing Gen. 4. 15. Vers. 22. that or to the end that The Greeke addeth sor he sought that he might deliver him It appeareth by Gen. 42. 22. that Ruben exhorted them to more then they would yeeld unto Vers. 23. stript Ioseph so Iesus also was stripped by the wicked Mat. 27. 28. Here Ioseph in the
brother Benjamin that it is my mouth that speaketh unto you And you shall tell my father of all my glory in Egypt and of all that ye have seene and ye shall haste and bring-downe my father hither And he fell upon his brother Benjamins necke wept and Benjamin wept upon his necke And hee kissed all his brethren and wept upon them and afterward his brethren spake with him And the voyce was heard in Pharaohs house saying Iosephs brethren are come and it was good in the eyes of Pharaoh and in the eyes of his servants And Pharaoh said unto Ioseph say unto thy brethren this doe ye lade your beasts and goe get ye to the land of Canaan And take our father your houses and come unto me and I will give you the good of the land of Egypt and yee shall eate the fat of the land And thou art commanded this doe ye take unto you out of the land of Egypt wagons for your little ones and for your wives and take-up your father and come And your eye let it not spare your stuffe so the good of all the land of Egypt is yours And the sonnes of Israel did so and Ioseph gave them wagons according to the mouth of Pharaoh and gave them provision for the way To all of them hee gave to ech man changes of garments and to Benjamin he gave three hundred shekels of silver and five changes of garments And to his father he sent after this manner tenne hee-asses carying of the good things of Egypt and tenne shee-asses carying corn and bread and victuals for his father by the way And hee sent away his brethren and they departed and hee said unto them bee not stirred one against another by the way And they went-up out of Egypt and came to the land of Canaan unto Iakob their father And they told him saying Ioseph is yet alive and that he is ruler over all the land of Egypt and his heart fainted for he beleeved them not And they spake unto him all the words of Ioseph which hee had spoken unto them and hee saw the wagons which Ioseph had sent to cary him and the spirit of Iakob their father revived And Israel said it is enough Ioseph my sonne is yet alive I will goe and see him before I dye Annotations REfraine or containe himselfe by force from crying out and manifesting himselfe as hitherto he had done Gen. 43. 31. This word the Prophet applyeth also unto God who having long refrained himselfe in the afflictions of his people will in the end for their deliverance crie out like a travelling woman c. Esa. 42. 14. Vers. 2. gave forth his voyce that is cried-aloud An Hebrew manner of speaking often used as Numb 14. 1. 2 Chron. 24. 9. Psal. 46. 7. and 68. 34. and 77. 18. So the Greeke Hee sent forth his voyce with weeping Vers. 3. suddenly troubled or appalled with feare and hasty troubled thoughts Occasioned by the conscience of their former wickednesse and the beholding of Iosephs present glory So when the spirit of grace shall be powred upon the Israelites they shall see Iesus whom they have pierced and shall mourne for him c. Zach. 12. 10. Rev. 1. 7. Vers. 4. he whom Hebr. me which word either may be omitted as that observed on Gen. 5. 29. or expressed in English he added for vehemencie sake and to assure his brethren that he was Ioseph Vers. 5. anger or displeasure griefe as Gen. 4. 5. that is be not angry or displeased with your selves Hee would have them-moderate the sorrow for their sin with consideration of Gods providence that turned it unto good The Greeke translateth let it not seeme bad unto you Here Ioseph is farre from revenge or insulting against his troubled brethren so Christ prayed for his crucifiers Luke 23. 34. and by his Apostles comforted them with hope of the blotting out of their sinnes when the times of refreshing should come from the presence of the Lord Acts 3. 14. 15. 17 18. 19. Vers. 6. earing that is ploughing or tillage of the land the Chaldee saith sowing This seemeth to be for lacke of corne which therefore in the last yeere Ioseph supplied Gen. 47. 23. Vers. 7. to put for you a remnant that is to preserve for or unto you a remainder that you and yours might remaine alive The contrary whereof is in 2 Sam. 14. 7. The Greeke translateth that there might be left unto you a reminant to preserve-life unto you that is to keepe you and yours alive Or to preserve alive unto you as the Greeke turneth it to nourish up of you a great remnant by a great escaping or evasion that is by a great deliverance or according to the Greeke interpretation by a great multitude-that-escape having respect to the great multiplication of them in Egypt according to Gods promise Gen. 15. 13. 14. The Hebrew escaping or Evasion is used for a company or remnant that escape danger 2 Chron. 30. 6. Esa. 10. 20. as captivitie is a company of captives Numb 21. 1. Deut. 21. 10. and so the Greeke here translateth it a remnant Vers. 8. but God whose wisedome and providence ruleth all and his goodnesse turneth the evill actions of men oftentimes to good events therefore is this ascribed to GOD rather then to them Gen. 50. 20. Psal. 105. 17. So Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles the people of Israel did against Iesus whatsoever Gods hand and his counsell determined before to be done Act. 4. 27. 28. put mee for or as the Greeke explaineth it made me as a father so acknowledging God to bee his exalter as he had beene his afflicter A father is used for any teacher guide counceller c. Iudg. 17. 10. 11. Vers. 10. Goshen in Greeke Gesem a province in the land of Egypt fat and fertile good for to feed cattell lying next to the land of Canaan see Gen. 46. 28. 29. and 47. 1. 6. 27. Vers. 11. impoverished Greeke worne-out that is perish with povertie thy house that is houshold in Greeke thy sonnes Vers. 12. my mouth and not an interpreter as did before Gen. 42. 23. for an interpreter is an other mans mouth Exod. 4. 16. The Chaldee saith in your tongue I speake with you Vers. 14. wept through joyfull passion of mind See Gen. 29. 11. Vers. 15. spake being refreshed by his words from their-amazed feare which keepeth men from speaking Psal. 77. 5. By speaking may also be implied the confession of their sinne and feare for the same So Moses spake Exod. 19. 19. that is acknowledged his feare and infirmity Heb. 12. 21. Vers. 16. the voice that is the fame or rumour of this thing good in the eyes that is pleasing they liked well of it See Gen. 16. 6. The Greeke here translateth Pharaoh was glad Vers. 18. Your houses that is your housholds as v. 11. The Chaldee saith the men of your houses the Greeke your goods the good that is
the good things the Greeke addeth of all the good things So after in verse 20. and 23. the fat the Chaldee translateth the good the Greeke the marrow that is the best fruits see Gen. 27. 28. Vers. 19 thou art commanded thou Ioseph hast authority from me and full power The Greeke expresseth it thus and thou command thou these things that they take wagons c. As Pharaoh here sheweth himselfe bountifull and gracious to Iakobs house for Iosephs sake so God hath promised for Iesus sake to make Kings the nursing fathers of Israel Esa. 49. 1. 23. Vers. 20. let it not spare that is not regard your stuffe or vessels or let it not be grieved to leave your stuffe behinde you The eye-sparing or pittying is a common phrase see Deut. 7. 16. and 19. 13. 21. Ezek. 7. 4 9. and 16. 5. and 20. 17. c. Vers. 21. the mouth that is the commandements verse 19. or words as the Greeke explaineth it So in Iob 39. 30. Eccles. 8. 2. See Gen. 24. 57. provision or food as the Greeke hath Vers. 22. changes of garments robes or upper garments which they used in those countries often to shift putting off and on as wee doe clokes or gownes The Chaldee translateth them stoles or robes and the Gr●●ere double stoles after to Benjamin changeable stoles Such were wont to be given for honor or reward Iudg. 14. 12. 19. So in Rev. 6. 11. white stoles or robes are given to the soules under the altar Also Rev. 7. 9. 14. shekels or shillings this word the Chaldee also addeth see Gen. 20. 16. Vers. 23. after this manner as many robes and shekels as he gave Benjamin so the Greek translateth according to the same things Or as this that followeth viz. tenne asses c. Vers. 24. be not stirred or make no stirre that is as the Greeke translateth be not angry the Chaldee contend not or fall not out by the way The word signifieth stirring with anger and rage as Prou. 29. 9. 2 King 19. 27. or with griefe as 2 Sam. 18. 33. This he spake because some perswaded and the rest save Ruben consented to the selling of him into Egypt Gen. 37. that now they should make no stirre about these and the like things and Rubens former words in Gen. 42. 22. occasioned this charge Vers. 26. and that he or leaving out the word that as superfluous as the Greeke translateth and he ruleth all Egypt For in the Hebrew words sometime are redundant as is observed on Gen. 7. 17. and 17. 4. fainted or was weakened with unbeliefe that is doubted of that they said yet daunted with the newes they brought So the Chaldee interprets it doubting or wavering and the Greeke astonishment For unbeliefe and doubting weakeneth the heart Rom. 4. 19. 20. Mat. 14. 31. See also Gen. 15. 6. Vers. 27. revived the Greeke expresseth it by a word anezopurese which signifieth the reviving or stirring-up of fire that is buried under ashes which word Paul useth in 2 Tim. 1. 6. for stirring-up the gift of God The Chaldee also here translateth the holy spirit restod upon Iakob Vers. 28. enough or much The Greeke translateth It is a great-thing to mee if my sonne Ioseph yet live and the Chaldee faith it is great joy unto me CHAP. XLVI I Iakob sacrificing at Beersheba is comforted of God concerning his journey 5 Thence ●e with his company goeth into Egypt 8 The number of his family that went into Egypt 28 Iudah is sent to Ioseph who commeth to meet Israel his father 31 He instructeth his brethren how to answer to Pharaoh ANd Israel journied and all that he had and came to Beersheba and sacrificed sacrifices unto the God of his father Isaak And God said to Israel in visions of the night and said Iakob Iakob and hee said loe here I am And hee said I am God the God of thy father feare not to goe downe into Egypt for I will make of thee there a great nation I will goe downe with thee into Egypt and I will also bringing bring thee up and Ioseph shall put his hand upon thine eyes And Iakob rose-up from Beer-sheba and the sonnes of Israel caried Iakob their father and their little-ones and their wives in the wagons which Pharaoh had sent to cary him And they took their catrell and their substance which they had gathered in the land of Canaan and came into Egypt Iakob and all his seed with him His sonnes and his sonnes sonnes with him his daughters and his sonnes daughters and all his seed brought he with him into Egypt And these are the names of the sonnes of Israel which came into Egypt Iakob and his sonnes the first-borne of Iakob Ruben And the sonnes of Ruben Enoch and Phallu and Hezron and Carmi. And the sonnes of Simeon Iemuel and Iamin and Ohad and Iachin and Zohar and Saul the sonne of a Canaanitesse And the sonnes of Levi Gershon Kohath and Merari And the sonnes of Iudah Er and Onan and Selah and Pharez and Zarah and Er and Onan dyed in the land of Canaan and the sonnes of Pharez were Hezron and Hamul And the sonnes of Issachar Thola and Phuvah and Iob and Simron And the sonnes of Zabulon Sered and Elon and Iahleel These be the sonnes of Leah which she bare unto Iakob in Padan-Aram and Dinah his daughter all the soules his sonnes and his daughters were thirtie and three And the sonnes of Gad Ziphion and Haggi Suni and Ezbon Eri and Arodi and Areli And the sonnes of Aser Iimnah and Iisvah and Iisvi and Beriah and Serah their sister and the sonnes of Beriah Cheber and Malchiel These are the sonnes of Zilpah whom Laban gave to Leah his daughter and she bare these unto Iakob sixteene souls The sonnes of Rachel Iakobs wife Ioseph and Benjamin And there was borne to Ioseph in the land of Egypt whom Asenath daughter of Potipherah Priest of On bare unto him Manasseh and Ephraim And the sonnes of Benjamin Belah and Becher and Ashbel Gera and Naaman Aechi and Rosh Muppim and Huppim and Ard. These are the sonnes of Rachel which were borne to Iakob and all the soules fourteene And the sonnes of Dan Chushim And the sonnes of Naphtali Iachzeel and Guni and Iezer and Sillem These are the sonnes of Bilhah whom Laban gave to Rachel his daughter and she bare these unto Iakob all the soules were seven All the soules that came with Iakob into Egypt which came out of his thigh besides the wives of Iakobs sonnes all the soules were sixtie and sixe And the sonnes of Ioseph which were borne to him in Egypt were two soules all the soules of the house of Iakob that came into Egypt were seventie And he sent Iudah before him unto Ioseph to signifie before him to Goshen and they came into the land of Goshen And Ioseph bound his charret and went-up to meet Israel his father to Goshen and he presented himselfe unto him and
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
his death Galath 3. 13. Ierem. 4 4. Lament 1. 13. and 2. 4. This charge to rost it with fire the Iew Doctors observed precisely holding it unlawfull to bake it any manner of way also to heat a furnace and taking away all the fire to hang the Lambe therein and so ●ost it or the like they say was unlawfull Maimony Korban Pesach chapter 8. S. 9. 10. the purt●nance or the inward meaning that the Lambe must bee roasted all and whole not cut into peeces To signifie our full Communion with Christ whole and undivided 1 Cor. 1. 13. 30. Gal. 2. 20. Vers. 10. till the morning they were to eat up all if they could at that meale To teach care for the present injoying of Christ by faith and of his whole covenant without delay For by the morning the change of our estate is often signified Psalme 30. 6. Esay 17. 14. 2 Kings 19. 35. for our sleepe is an image of death And the Iewes have recorded that though it was lawfull to eat all the night long till the day dawning yet might none of the company eat againe after hee had slept though it were in the beginning of the night Maimony Korban Pesach chapter 8. S. 14. So Manna might not be left till the morning Exodus 16. 19. nor some other sacrifices Lev. 22. 30. burne that so it might be consumed and such was the law for other sacrifices which by being reserved over-long were made abhominable to bee eaten and must therefore be burned Lev. 7. 15. 18. 19. 6. 7. So flesh of the sacrifices that touched any uncleane thing might not be eaten but burnt Levit. 7. 19. Hereby also God might teach Israel that when the morning the time of grace in Christ is come there should be no longer reservation of those legall shadowes which should haue their accomplishment and end at our Lords death and bee condemned as unlawfull as if they were burned by the fire of GODS Word and Spirit Colossians 2. 16. 17. Gal. 4. 9. 10. 11. Hebr. 13. 9. 10. And so the Prophets fore-told that the daies should come when it should no more be said The Lord liveth which brought up the sonnes of Israel out of the land of Egypt Ier. 16. 14. neither should they say any more The A●ke of the covenant of the Lord for it shall come no more to winde neither shal they remēber it c. Ier. 3. 16. Vers. 11. girded this signifieth a readinesse to take a journey or any other work in hand 2 King 4. 29. and 9 1. Ier. 1. 17. Luk. 12. 35. 36. and figured the girding of the loynes of the minde with strength justice veritie c. Prov. 31. 17. Esay 11. 5. Eph. 6. 14. Wherefore the Apostle saith Gird up the loynes of your minde be sober and hope perfectly for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Iesus Christ 1 Pet. 1. 13. shooes on another signe first of readinesse to goe forth Esay 5. 27. Acts 12. 8. secondly of deliverance out of bondage as the contrary to goe ●arefoot was a signe of captivity Esay 20. 4. and thirdly of joyfulnesse for their deliverance from affliction as contrariwise in sorrow men went barefoot 2 Sam. 15. 30. It was also a figure of the Gospell of peace wherewith our feet should be ready and firme Ephesians 6. 15. Of which the Holy Ghost saith How beautifull are thy feet with shooes O Princes daughter Song 7. 1. staffe to sustaine their infirmities and this in their hand was also for expedition to the journey Zach. 8. 4. Mark 6. 8. Compare herewith Iakobs speech with my staffe I passed over this Iordan Genesis 32. 10. in haste because they were now in danger and for it to goe out of Egypt in haste Deut. 16. 3. and so in haste and as with violence to apprehend and apply Christ unto them by faith Matth. 11. 12. The originall word signifieth an hastening away through feare or amazement as in Deut. 20. 3. and so may signifie the sudden feares wrought in the conscience by the Gospell of Christ at the first preaching thereof as in Act. 2. 37. though after it giveth comfort and peace This manner of eating was peculiar unto the first pasche in Egypt neither were the generations following bound to these rites when they were come to their rest in Canaan as is before noted on verse 6. Neither did Christ and his Disciples thus eat it for they stood not girded with staves in their hands but sate or rather lay downe leaning one on anothers breast as was then the Iewes manner in signe of their rest and security otherwise than they had in Egypt as their Doctors teach in the Thalmud treat of the Passeover See Marke 14. 18. Iohn 13. 12. 25. Also Esaias prophesied yee shall not goe out in haste nor depart by fleeing away c. Esay 52. 12. Passeover called in Hebrew Pesach and after in the Ierusalemitane language Pascha which name the Evangelists keepe also in the Greeke Matth. 26. 2. c. and in other tongues it is now called Pasche wee in old English called it F●reld at this day we name it the Passeover according to the interpretation of the Hebrew word which signifieth to fare passe o● 〈◊〉 over as God did over the houses of the Isra 〈…〉 verse 13. 27. And as the festivall time so the Lambe then killed is called the Passeover Luke 2. 41. and 22. 7. and the Lambe of GOD Christ is so named also 1 Corinthians 5. 7. because for his sake God passeth over us and destroyeth us not with the world Iohn 3. 16. 18. Seven famous Passeovers are recorded in Scripture to have beene kept The first this which Israel kept in Egypt The second that which they kept in the wildernesse Numbers 9. The third which Iesus kept with Israel when hee had newly brought them into Canaan Iosh. 5. 10. The fourth in the reformation of Israel by King Ezekias 2 Chron. 30. The fifth under King Iosias 2 Chronicles 35. The sixt by Israel returned out of the captivity of Babylon Ezr. 6. 19. The seventh that which Iesus our Saviour desired so earnestly and did eat with his disciples before he suffered Luke 22. ●5 c. At which time that legall Passeover had an end and our Lords Supper came in the place The memoriall of Christ our Passeover sacrificed for us Vers. 12. the gods the Chaldee translateth the idols the same is againe mentioned in Num. 33. 4. And after a like thing is prophesied the Lord shall come into Egypt and the idols of Egypt shall bee moved at his presence Esay 19. 1. and againe he shall breake the images of the house of the sunne c. and the houses of the gods of the Egyptians shall be burnt with fire Ieremie 43. 13. So Laban lost his idols when Israel fled from Syria Genes 31. 19. 30. the idols and images of Babylon perished when it was destroyed Ierem. 50. 2. and
following here shew as also to try the faith of his people which even here at first was turned to unbeleefe and rebellion verse 11. 12. Deut. 8. 2. Psalme 106. 7. Migdol in Greeke Magdol the name of a citie of the Egyptians Ier. 44. 1. by interpretation it signifieth a Tower Baal-zephon in Greeke Beelsepphon The Ierusalemy Thargum expoundeth it the idoll of Zephon and so it seemeth to be an idolatrous place or monument of the Egyptians as Baal-Pehor was the Idoll of the Moabites Num. 25. 3. and Baalmehon the name whereof the Israelites changed when it came into their possession Num. 32. 38. For as Israel passed from Egypt to Canaan God did let them see the abominations and idols of the nations whereof hee warned them to beware Deut. 29. 16. 17. 18. Vers. 3. intangled or perplexed not knowing what to doe as the Greeke translateth they wander or stray and the word is used in Ioel 1. 18. of cattell perplexed for want of pasture So Pharaoh seeing the Israelites to take this indirect way thought they were afraid of the wildernesse and in perplexity of mind whereupon he hardned himselfe to follow after and bring them againe into his bondage Vers. 4. make strong that is as the Greeke saith harden so after verse 8 17. See Exodus 4. 21. honoured or as the Greeke translateth gloried will get me honour by their destruction vers 17. 18. For God hath glory by wrath upon the wicked as by mercy upon the elect Roman 9. 22. 23. So Ezekiel 28. 22. Vers. 6. bound in Greeke joyned to wit the horses to his chariot made ready So Gen. 46. 29. Vers 7. captaines or Princes the third sort of governours in the kingdome having the name of three or third the Chaldee calleth them Mighties Vers. 8. a high hand that is powerfully openly and boldly like armed men as in Exod. 13. 18. and in the sight of the Egyptians Num. 33. 3. not like f●gitives So to sinne with a high hand Num. 15. 30. is to doe it boldly and openly The Chaldee changeth the phrase saving they went out with uncovered or open head which meaneth openly boldly cheerfully as the covering of the head signifieth sorrow and shame 2 Sam. 15. 30. Ier. 14. 4. Vers. 9. army Hebr. power used for an army or host as the Greeke here translateth it so in verse 17. 28. And here againe is to be understood they followed and overtooke them Vers. 10. were fore afraid or feared vehemently This was for want of faith and love towards God Matth. 8. 26. 1 Iohn 4. 18. But was occasioned by the straits they now were in the congregation of Israel was shut in from the foure parts of the world before them was the sea behind them followed the enemy and on each side of them were wildernesses full of fiery Serpents which did bite and kill men with their venome saith the Chaldee paraphrase upon Song 2. 14. Vers. 11. at all or none a double deniall shewing the earnest passion and distemperature of their unfaithfull and unthankfull minds Of this David said they remembred not the multitude of thy mercies but rebelled at the sea at thered sea yet he saved them for his names sake Psal. 106. 7 8. Vers. 12. Let us alone or Cease from us They returne to their former rebellious cariage in Egypt mentioned in Exod. 6. 9. Vers. 13. feare not the Greeke saith be bold or of good comfort whom ye have seene or as the Greeke translateth so as ye sec meaning they should see them no more alive but dead as verse 30. not againe see Hebr. not adde to see By these promises God would stay their murmurings strengthen their faith and shew his grace to an undeserving people for which hee is after celebrated in Neh. 9. 9. thou heardest their cry by the red sea Vers. 14. shall hold your peace or shall bee silent shall cease from speaking or doing any thing in this battell The originall word is often used for ceasing to heare or speake as they that are deafe but applied also to actions signifieth silence or ceasing from deeds as they that neglect and sit still 2 Sam. 19. 11. Psal. 83. 2. and 50. 3. Esay 42. 14. 15. It may also be meant hold ye your peace that is cease from murmuring against God and me Verse 15. wherefore Hebr. what that is For what criest thou God encourageth Moses to goe on with the worke in hand which the peoples murmuring began to hinder So after in Exod. 17. 4 hee cried unto the Lord upon the like occasion Though here no words of prayer bee mentioned yet Moses might cry unto God by the Spirit which maketh intercession for the Saints with groanings which cannot be uttered Rom. 8. 26. The Chaldee paraphrast turneth it I have accepted thy prayer speake to the sonnes of Israel c. as if he had cried our for feare of wrath to come upon them for their sinne as they deserved So elsewhere another Chaldee paraphrast on Song 1. 9. more plainly saith When Pharaoh and his host were drowned Israel also had likewise perished if Moses the Prophet had not stretched out his hands in prayer before the Lord and turned away the Lords wrath from them A like preservation of them by Moses prayer is after recorded in Deut. 9. 13. 14. 19. 20. Verse 16 thy rod where with miracles were done in Egypt Exod. 4. 2. and 7. 9. c. the rod of God Exod. 17. 9 it signified the Word of God which is the rod of his mouth wherewith hee smiteth the earth Esay 11. 4. but feedeth his people Mic. 7. 14 cleave it that is forcibly divide and as the Greeke translateth rent it It is a commandement implying a promise Vers. 17. honoured upon or as the Greeke turneth it glorified in Pharaoh get me glory and honour upon him The Lord knew that they dealt proudly against his people so hee made himselfe a name as it is this day Nehem. 9. 10. Vers. 19. the Angell that is Christ called Iehovah Exod. 13 21. So the Hebrew Doctors have acknowledged this Angell to be Michael the great Prince who was made a wall of fire betweene the Israelites and the Egyptians Pirkei R. Eliezer chap. 42. And others of them say this Angell was Shechinah the presence or Majestie of God and called an Angell and Prince of the world because the government of the world to by his hand R. Menachem upon this place This 19. verse and 20. and the 21. following have every of them in the Hebrew 72. letters from which the Hebrew Rabbines have their curious speculations of so many Angels concurring in this glorious worke of dividing the sea and leading Israel through it Vers. 20. a cloud and darknesse that is the cloud was thicke and darke to the Egyptians and made light or illumined the night to the Israelites And so the Chaldee paraphrase and Thargum Ierusalemy explaineth it the cloud was halfe light and halfe darknesse the light gave
light unto Israel and the darknesse gave darknesse unto the Egyptians The Greeke translateth and there was darknesse thicke darknesse and the night came A like manifestation of Gods glorie the Psalmist celebrateth He set darknesse his secret place round about him his pavillion darknesse of waters that is of watrie clouds thicke clouds of the skies Psal. 18. 12. Vers. 21. to goe backe O s●a what ailed thee that thou fleddest Psalme ●14 5. The waters saw thee ô God the waters saw thee they trembled the depths also were troubled Psal. 77. 17. This worke of God figured the afflictions of this world made easie for Christs people to passe thorow by the power of God Ps. 66. 12. Esay 43. 2. east winde which being violent is used to denote Gods anger Ier. 18. 17. Ezek. 19. 12. Psal. 48. 8. And of this worke the Prophet saith was thy wrath Lord against the sea Habakkuk 3. 8. and David saith he rebuked the sea and it was dried up Psal. 106. 9. It figured also the power of Gods Spirit for the salvation of his Church by Christ Esay 11. 15. who for the help of his people flyeth swiftly on the wings of the wind Ps. 18. 11. dry land Come see the works of God he is fearfull in his doing toward the sons of men he turned the sea into dry-land Psal. 66. 5. 6. cloven or forcibly divided into parts as Psal. 136. 13. from which the Iew Doctors teach that there were 12. according to the number of the twelve tribes of Israel Pirkei R. Eliezer c. 42. and Thargum Ierusalemy on Deut. 1. 1. Vers. 22. went in following the Lord by faith for he led them by the right hand of Moses with his glorious arme dividing the water before them to make himselfe an everlasting name Esay 63. 12. and by faith they passed through the red sea as by dry land which the Egyptians assaying to doe were drowned Heb. 11. 29. And in this sea they were baptized 1 Cor. 10. 2. a wall standing up stedfast as an heape Psal. 78. 13. so they went safely God led them through the deepe as an horse in the wildernesse that they should not stumble as a beast goeth downe into the valley the Spirit of the Lord quietly led the people to make himselfe a glorious name Esay 63. 13. 14. Vers. 24. watch or ward custodie so called because men kept watch and ward there certaine houres in the night As here and in 1 Sam. 11. 11. is mentioned the morning watch so in Lam. 2. 19. the beginning of the watches and in Iudg. 7. 19. the middle watch is spoken of in Luk. 12. 38. the second and third watch and in Matt. 14. 25. the fourth watch of the night which in Mar 13. 35 are named evening midnight cock-crowing and day-dawning See also after in v. 27. looked and manifested his presence with Israel and wrath against Egypt for the clouds streamed downe waters the skies gave out a sound Gods arrowes also or hailestones went abroad the voice of his thunder was in the aire lightnings lightned the world the earth trembled quaked Psal. 77. 18. 19. pillar of fire wherein God did as it were ride upon his horses his chariots of salvation for his people Habak 3. 8. 9. troubled the campe or made a tumult in their host and terribly strooke them downe The Ierusalemy Thargum here saith God threw downe upon them pitch and fire and haile-stones and astonished the host of the Egyptians This word is after used when God promiseth to destroy the Canaanites from before his people Deut. 7. 23. And David in like sort celebrateth his victories saying he sent out his arrowes and scattered them and he hurled forth lightnings and troubled them Psalme 18. 15. Vers. 25. heavily Hebrew with heavinesse Greeke by force For the raine and tempest so softned the ground that they could drive but slowly and with much adoe Egyptians Hebrew the Egyptian said let meflee spoken as of one man to note their joynt consent So in v. 26. Vers. 26. shall returne the Greeke translateth let the water returne and cover the Egyptians The word cover is borrowed from v. 28. This was done with a wind as before v. 21. Exod. 15. 10. Vers. 27. the looking forth or turning towards of the morning at the day dawning which time the Scripture noteth both for judgement upon the wicked as in this place and for mercy to the city of God as in Psal. 46. 6. It was also the time of Christs resurrection Matt. 28. 1. 2. The like phrase is of the evening in Gen. 24. 63. shooke off that is cast away destroyed so this word is elsewhere used Iob 38. 13. Nehem. 5. 13. Herein God recompenced them according to their workes for they had drowned the children of Israel in the river Exod. 1. 22. and now they themselves were drowned in the sea This overthrow of the Egyptians was also a figure of Christs victory over our spirituall enemies by subduing our iniquities and casting al our sinnes into the depths of the sea Micah 7. 15. 19. Vers. 29. walked or went on dry land as before so whiles the waters retired and drowned the Egyptians Of this miracle Asaph sung O God thy way was in the sea and thy pathes in the many waters and thy foot-steps were not knowne thou didst lead thy people like a flocke by the hand of Moses and Aaron Psal. 77. 20. 21. Alike marvellous worke was at the river Iordan when Israel entred in Canaan Ios. 3. 16. Vers. 30. shore Heb. lip of the sea Vers. 31. hand that is handy worke so in Psalme 109. 27. the Chaldee translateth it the power of the great hand in Iehovah the Greeke translateth beleeved God so in Gen. 15. 6. where is shewed that the Apostles approve the version in Moses that is in the word which Moses taught them from God as the Chaldee explaineth it they beleeved in the word of the Lord and in the prophesie of Moses his servant So in 2 Chro. 20. 20. it is said beleeve in Iehovah c. beleeve in his Prophets and in Exod. 19. 9. that they may beleeve in thee It meaneth trust or confidence in the faithfulnesse of any as in 2 Cor. 2. 3. Gal. 5. 10. A like speech is of Sion in Esay 14. 32. the poore of his people shall trust in it So in 1 Sam. 12. 18. the people feared Iehovah and Samuel See further in the notes on Exod. 19. 9. CHAP. XV. 1 The song of Moses and Israel wherein they celebrate Gods power and grace for drowning the Egyptians and saving of Israel in the red sea 13 for leading his people through the wildernesse 14 for terrifying the nations round about 17 for seating his people in Canaan 20 Marie and the women answer the men in singing Gods praise 22 The people in the wildernesse are brought to bitter waters 25 a tree sweetneth them 27 At Elim are twelve wels and seventie palme trees THen sang
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
his secret parts See the annotations on Exodus 28. 4. c. fitly-girded the Greeke saith tyed-fast a signe of making him strong and ready in heart to doe his service see Exod. 29. 5. Vers. 8. the Breast-plate called the Breast plate of judgement the making and meaning whereof is shewed on Exod. 28. 15. c. Urim and Thummim that is Lights and Perfections in Greek Manifestation and Truth see Exod. 28. 30. These ornaments of the high Priest figured the perfection of all graces in Christ whom the legall Priests typed Heb. 5. 1. 5. c. Vers. 9. crowne of holinesse the holy diademe on which these words Holinesse to Iehovah were graved whereof see Exod. 28. 36. 38. and 29. 6. It was a signe of the holinesse and excellencie of his calling by the gifts of Gods spirit upon him and figured Christs mediation for his Church for now Aaron did beare the iniquity of the holy things which the sonnes of Israel should hallow in all the gifts of their holy things c. Exod. 28. 38. Vers. 10. the anoynting oyle called the oile of holy anointing it was made of Mirrhe Cinamon Calamus Cassia and oile olive Exod. 28. 23. 24. 25. and it figured the graces of the Spirit upon Christ and his Church Esa. 61. 1. 1 Ioh. 2. 20. 27. Vers. 11. seven times to signifie a full sanctification see the notes on Levit. 4 6. Vers. 12. head and it ran down upon his beard and on the coller of his garments Psalme 133. 2. This anointing signified the graces of Gods spirit whereby their ministration of Gods word became a sweet savour unto God in them that heard it 2 Cor. 2. 15. 16. He anointed him after that he had cloathed him as is said in Targ. Ionathan and first ●e poured it upon his head and afterwards put it betweene his eye browes and drew it with his finger from the one to the other saith Sol. Iarchi on Levit. 8. Vers. 14. sin-offring Hebr. the sin-bullocke see Exod. 29. 10. c. layed or imposed their hands so renouncing and disburdening themsel●●● of their sinnes which now were imputed to the sacrifice a figure of Christ. See the notes on Exod. 29. 10. and Levit. 1. 4. Vers. 15. killed it whereby Christs death for sin was shadowed for without shedding of blood is no remission Hebr. 9. 22. 28. hornes of this rite see Levit. 4. 7. 25. and Exod. 29. 12. purified or clensed-from sinne see the notes on Exod. 29. 36. the blood that which remained sanctified it the Altar was by these rites sanctified that from thenceforth atonement might be made for the sins of the people by the sacrifices that should daily be offred thereon for after this the Altar sanctified the gifts and oblations upon it Mat. 23. 19. Vers. 16. fat or suet see Lev. 3. 3. 4. 5. and 4. 8. Exod. 29. 13. caule of the liver said in Levit. 3. 4. 10. to be the caule above the liver And they used to take a little of the liver with the caule as the Hebrewes doe record Maimony treat of Offring the sacrif chap. 1. Sect. 18. Vers. 17. without the campe a figure of Christ suffering without the gate of Ierusalem Heb. 13. 12. See the annotations on Exod. 29. 14. Levit. 4. 12. and 6. 30. Vers. 18. Burnt-offring the law and signification hereof see in Levit. 1. and Exod. 29. 15. c. Here for the Priests as the former Sin-offring taught them to have Christ for their justification and atonement for the forgivenesse of their sins so this Burnt-offring taught them to exspect by Christ their transformation by the renewing of their minde to present their reasonable service even their bodies for a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God Rom. 12. 1. 2. Vers. 21. of rest in Greeke of sweet-odour in Chaldee to be accepted with favour See Gen. 8. 21. Exod. 29. 18. So after in verse 28. Vers. 22. fillings of the hand that is as the Greek saith of perfection or of consecration see Exod. 29. 9. 19. This Ram was a kinde of Peace-offring as Sol. Iarchi here saith The ram of filling the hand is the ram of Peace offrings or of perfections for they filled a●d perfected the Priests in their Priesthood It signified a sanctification of their calling office administration by the sacrifice of Christ whom Paul calleth the Consecrator Heb. 12. 2. through whom they should with thankefulnesse and joy performe the worke of their ministerie Vers. 24. foot these rites signified both the sufferings of Christ whose hands and feet where pierced and how the Priests should in Christ bee sanctified to heare receive the word from God to administer the same unto others and to walke themselves accordingly See Exod. 29. 20. 1 Cor. 11. 23. and 9. 27. sprinkled the blood that is all the residue of the blood as in Thargum Ionathan is explained which being sprinkled on the Altar figured the perfection of their consecration to bee in Christ. V. 25. the rumpe or tayle whereof see Lev. 3 9. Vers. 26. oiled Hebr. bread of oile meaning tempered with oile as Exod. 29. 2. wafer which also was unlevened and anointed with oile Ex. 29. 2. These Meat-offrings of the Priests signified now they and their service of God should be without leaven of hypocrifie errour wickednesse with sincerity and truth and with the gracious oile of his spirit given up unto God acceptably in Christ Esay 66. 20. Psal. 141. 2. 1 Cor. 5. 8. 1 ●oh 2. 20. 27. See the annotations on Levit. 2. Vers. 27. waved that is moved to and fro of these and their signification see the notes on Exodus 29. 24. 27. Vers. 28. upon the Burnt-offring this Sol Iarchi expoundeth after the Burnt-offring adding withall and we finde not that the shoulder of the Peace-offring was offred in any place saving in this For usually the shoulder as well as the Breast was given to the priest Levit. 7. 32. 33. 34. Here Moses who was Priest extraordinarily hath the breast onely v. 29. Vers. 29. part or to Moses for a part or portion see Exod. 29 26. Vers. 30. upon the Altar which sanctified the things upon it and figured Christ from whom they were to receive blood for atonement and justification and oile of grace for sanctification that both their persons office and administration might be acceptable unto God his Father Vers. 31. at the doore which the Greeke explaineth in the court see before on verse 3. In Exod. 29. 31. it is called the holy place and in verse 32. the doore of the Tent. 〈◊〉 commanded Moses speaketh this in the person of God whose commandement it was Exod. 29. 32. The Greeke for more plainnesse translateth as it was commanded me Else-where the holy Ghost translateth an active passively see Gen. 15. 6. Exod. 9. 16. and 20. 12. Vers. 32. the remainder which cannot be eaten that night but remaineth till the morning Exodus 29. 34. Vers. 33. day of fulfilling that is the
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
or spirit of divination see Levit. 19. 31. their bloods upon them in Greeke they are guiltie in Chaldee worthy to be killed See before on verse 9. CHAP. XXI 1 Lawes concerning the Priests mourning for the dead 6 Of their holinesse 7 and mariage 9 The Priests daughter that playeth the whore is to be burnt 10 Lawes concerning the high Priests mourning 13 and his mariage 16 The Priests that have blemishes must not minister in the Sanctuarie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 AND Iehovah said unto Moses Say unto the Priests the sonnes of Aaron and say unto them For a soule he shal not defile himselfe among his peoples But for his neere-kinne that is nigh unto him for his mother and for his father and for his son and for his daughter and for his brother And for his sister a virgin that is nigh unto him which hath not beene to any man for her he shall defile himself He shall not defile himself being a chief man amōg his peoples to prophane himselfe They shall not make baldnesse upon their head and the corner of their beard they shall not shave and in their flesh they shall not cut any cutting They shall be holy unto their God and shall not prophane the name of their God for the Fire offrings of Iehovah the bread of their God they doe offer and they shall be holinesse They shall not take a wife that is an whore or prophane neither shall they take a woman put-away from her husband for hee is holy unto his God And thou shalt sanctifie him for he offreth the bread of thy God he shall be holy unto thee for I Iehovah which sanctifie you am holy And the daughter of any Priest if she prophane her selfe to commit-whordome she prophaneth her father she shall be burnt with fire And the Priest that is great among his brethren upon whose head the oile of anoynting was poured and hath filled his hand to put on the garments shall not make bare his head nor rent his garments Neither shal he goe-in to any soules of the dead for his father or for his mother hee shall not defile himselfe Neither shall he goe-out of the Sanctuarie nor prophane the Sanctuarie of his God for the crowne the anointing oile of his God is upon him I am Iehovah And he shall take a wife in her virginities A widow or one put-away or prophane or an whore these shall he not take but a virgine of his peoples shall he take to wife And he shall not prophane his seed among his peoples for I Iehovah doe sanctifie him And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto Aaron saying Any man of thy seed in their generations in whom there shall be a blemish hee shall not approch to offer the bread of his God For any man that hath in him a blemish shall not approach a man blinde or lame or flat-nosed or that hath any thing superfluous Or a man in whom there shal be the breaking of a foot or the breaking of a hand Or that is crook-backt or hath a smal-spot or a confusion in his eye or scurse or scab or hath his stones broken No man that hath a blemish in him of the seed of Aaron the Priest shall come-nigh to offer the Fire-offrings of Iehovah a blemish is in him he shall not come-nigh to offer the bread of his God Hee shall eat the bread of his God of the holy of holies of the holies But hee shall not goe-in unto the Veil nor come-nigh unto the Altar because a blemish is in him he shall not prophane my Sanctuaries for I Iehovah doe sanctifie them And Moses spake it unto Aaron and unto his sons and unto all the sons of Israel Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth after the Hebrewes ●●count the one and thirtieth section or Lecture of the Law See Gen. 6. 9. THe Priests After the generall rules of holines for all the people here followeth a speciall law for the holinesse of the Priests their office was to make atonement for the people and to sanctifie them therefore must they have a care to sanctifie themselves And as when God forbiddeth his people to seeke unto such as have familiar spirits c. he telleth them of a Prophet whom he would raise up unto them by whom they might know his will Deut. 18. 10. 11. 15. so it is observed here by the Hebrewes as Baalhatturim and Chazkuni that immediately after the Law against familiar spirits and wizards Levit. 20. 27. this Law is given for the Priests that the people might have no occasion to seeke unto the former but might come unto the Priests and they should inquire for them by Vrim and Thummim the sonnes of Aaron Targum Ionathan addeth the males and Sol. Iarchi saith the sonnes and not the daughters of Aaron because the lawes following concerned not the women So in the Hebrew canons it is said Aarons daughters are not forewarned pollution by the dead but the Priests the sonnes of Aaron Likewise the prophane Priests might defile themselves for this is but for the sonnes of Aaron that may execute the Priests office A yong Priest is to bee warned by the elder Priests not to defile himselfe c. and his father is to traine him up in holinesse Maimony tom 4. treat of Mourning chap. 3. sect 11. 12. for a soule to weet of the dead as is expressed in verse 11. else-where called a dead soule Numbers 6. 6. meaning a dead bodie for properly at death the soule departeth Gen. 35. 18. and the dead defileth not till his seale be departed saith Maimony tom 3. in Tumath meth chap. 1. sect 15. wherefore the Chaldee here translateth for the dead and Targum Ionathan for the sonne of man that is dead But the Greeke retaineth the Hebrew phrase for soules So before in Levit. 19. 28. hee shall not that is any Priest shall not defile himselfe in Greeke they shall not be defiled This pollution might be by the funerall of the dead for who so touched any dead body or came into a tent or house where any dead body lay or touched a grave he was uncleane seven daies Numbers 19. 14. 16. so by bearing the dead hee was uncleane by proportion from the Law in Levit. 11. 25. And by the Hebrew canons if a man came within foure cubits that is sixe f●●● of the dead he was uncleane Maimony treat of Mourning chap. 3. sect 13. among his peoples in Greeke among their nation that is as Chazkuni explaineth it among all Israel for they are his peoples So peoples are used for the tribes of Israel in Deut. 33. 3. Iudg. 5. 14. Act. 4. 27. Vers. 2. his neere-kin those of his consanguinity see this word in Lev. 18. 6. Sol. Iarchi here understandeth the Priests wife by it as one for whom hee might defile himselfe See the notes on verse 3. This law is for the inferiour Priests but the high Priest might not defile himselfe
a stranger such as were not of the Priests stock for other Israelites are counted strangers in this case So a stranger is here expounded by larchi a Levite or an Israelite of the heave-offring which the Chaldee expoundeth the separated thing the Greeke the first fruits it meaneth The sanctified things of the sons of Israel Num. 18. 8. 11. 19. The reason hereof was because by her mariage shee went out of her fathers house into her husbands as on the contrary a common Israelitesse by mariage with a Priest became of his house and might eate The Hebrewes say Two things are contained in this prohibition that if she a priests daughter be defiled and made an whore or profane as Lev. 21. 7. it is unlawfull for her to eate of the heave-offrings for ever according to the judgment of every prophane person for the prophane is as the stranger in all respects And if she be maried to an Israelite 〈◊〉 may never eate of the Wave-brest and of the Heave-shoulder Lev. 7. 34. although shee bee divorced or her husband dye whereof the next verse speaketh Maim in Trumoth ch 6. sect 7. Ver. 13. no seed no son saith the Chaldee version This is understood also either if she had no child or if her children be all dead as is after shewed as in her youth so that though shee hath brought forth no seed yet if she be with child shee may not eate of the holy things Maim in Trum. ch 8. s. 2. of her fathers bread The Hebrew doctors say We have heard this expounded of the bread and not all the bread shee returneth to eate of the heave-offrings but not of the wave-brest and heave-shoulder Maimony in Trumoth ch 6. sect 9. Hereupon also they inferre An Israelitesse which hath had seed by a Priest she eateth for her childs sake be it male or female though it be seeds seed unto the worlds end for it is said AND SHE HAVE NO SEED As the seed of an Israelite from a Priests daughter disableth her from eating so the seed of a Priest from an Israelitesse inableth her to eat An Israelites daughter that is maried to a Priest and he dye and she have a sonne by him if she be maried after to an Israelite she may not eate of the Heave-offrings If the Israelite dye and she have a sonne by him she may not eate because of that her son by the Israelite if that sonne of hers by the Israelite dye 〈◊〉 may eat for her first sons sake A Priests daughter that is maried to an Israelite and she have a sonne by him if she be againe maried to a Priest she may eat of the heave-offrings If he dye and she have a son by him 〈◊〉 may eate If her son dye which she had by the priest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not eat because of her son which she had by the Israelite If her son dye which shee had by the Israelite the returneth to her fathers house as in her youth and eateth of the Heave-offrings not of the brest or shoulder An Israelites daughter that is maried to an Isra 〈…〉 first and have a son by him and after is maried to a Priest eateth of the heave-offring If he dye and she have a son by him she eateth for her last sons sake for loe ●e enableth her to eat as his father inabled her to eate Maimony ibidem c. 6. s. 12. 13. 17. 18. 19. Vers. 14. a man that is any stranger formentioned which belongeth not to the Priests familie Targum Ionathan expoundeth it a man of Israel in ignorance or through unadvised errour But if hee doe it presumptuously hee is guilty of death by the hand of God vers 9. of beating by the hand of the Magistrate adde the fift The stranger that eateth of the heave-offrings in ignorance payeth the principall and the fift part Though hee knoweth it to bee the heave-offring and that it is forbidden him but knoweth not whether hee is guity of death for it or no loe this is ignorance and he payeth the principall and the fift part Whether he eate or drinke or anoynt himselfe with it and whether he eate the heaveoffring that is cleane or that is uncleane in ignorance he must pay the principall the fift Whosoever payeth the principall and the fift payeth to the owners and the fift part to any Priest that he will And he never payeth but according to the price that it was worth at the time when he did eate it whether it bee cheaper at the time when hee payeth for it or dearer Maimony in Trumoth c. 10. s. 1. 2. 16. 25. See also the annotations on Lev. 5. 15. 16. Vers. 15. not profane by suffring the holy things to be eaten of strangers as before which they heave-up that is offer or as the Greeke and Chaldee expound it separate unto or before the Lord. Vers. 16. O● cause them to beare or And they shall not cause them to beare which may be understood of the Priests that they should not by their negligence cause or suffer the people to bear the punishment of their trespasse and this the Greeke favoureth saying And bring upon them iniquity Or it may be referred to the people that they should not cause them selves to beare iniquity that is the punishment of trespasse for eating the holy things The Chaldee translateth And they receive upon them iniquities and sinns when they eat in uncleannesse their holy-things Whereupon some of the Hebrewes as Sol. Iarchi here observeth understand this word them of the Priests themselves These Lawes for cleannesse corporall in all such as partaked of Gods holy things led them and us to spirituall cleannes in our communion with Christ his graces that we should have our hearts purified by faith Act. 15. 9. and sprinkled from an evill conscience and our bodies washed with pure water Hebrewes 10. 22. that cleansing our selves from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit wee may perfect our holinesse in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7. 1. For if we walke in the light as God is in the light wee have fellowship one with another and the blood of Iesus Christ his sonne cleanseth us from all sinne 1 Iohn 1. 7. But if wee eate and drinke of his holy things unworthily we eate and drinke judgment to our selves 1 Cor. 11. 29. Ver. 18. all the sonnes in Greeke all the congregation of Israel These lawes following doe concerne things which were to be offred unto God in what condition and state they ought to bee before they came upon his altar therefore the speech is directed both unto Priests and people Any man Hebrew man man that is whosoever Targum Ionathan saith yong man or old man or of Heb. and of the stranger which the Gr. translateth or of the proselytes joyned unto them in Israel which were heathens converted to the faith of Gods people So differing from the alien in vers 25. his oblation in Greeke gifts by which name the sacrifices
restraint as the other legall ordinances untill the Iubile of the Gospel for then Barnabas a Levite sold his field that hee might injoy a better inheritance among the saints Act. 4. 36. 37. Howbeit the Hebrew doctors understand this Law otherwise and say The Priests and the Levites which sell any field of their cities 〈…〉 ny house c. doe redeeme them after this manner they sell fields though it be neer to the Iubile and redeeme them out of hand and they redeeme houses in the walled cities at any time when they please though it bee after many yeeres Lev. 25. 32. Maimony in Iobel chap. 13. sect 7. And this law against selling they expound of alteration or changing thus In the Levites cities they may not make of a citie the suburbs nor of the suburbs a citie nor of the suburbs a field nor of a field suburbs as it is written the field of the suburbs of their cities shall not be sold Lev. 25. 34. We have beene taught that this which is said SHALL NOT BEE SOLD meaneth shall not be altered but the field and the suburbs and the citie shall all three of them be as they are for ever Maimony ibidem sect 4. 5. Vers. 35. waxen poore or brought low as vers 25. and 39. hand faileth or hand is moved which the Greeke translateth and he bee weake or impotent in his hands by thee that is unable to relieve himself This phrase is here once applied to the land in Deut. 32. 35. and often other where to the foot the moving or sliding whereof is also a decay or falling into evill strengthen him or take hold on him and so confirme his weake hands that is as the Greeke translateth helpe or relieve him So God is sayd to strengthen or hold the right hand of Cyrus when he inabled him to subdue nations Esay 45. 1. so of Christ in Esay 42. 6. and of his people when hee helpeth them against their enemies Esay 41. 12. 13. According to this law is that in Deut. 15. 7. 8. 10. where God commandeth to open the hand to lend and to give unto the poore and it is reckoned for one of the sinnes of Sodom that shee strengthened not the hand of the poore and needy Ezek. 16. 49. even the stranger that is though he be a stranger and none of thine owne nation or as the Greeke translateth thou shalt helpe him as a stranger and saj●urner Wherby God may intend the naturall Israelites which were but strangers and sojourners with him verse 13. which is also the state of all the Saints on earth 1 Pet. 2. 11. that he may or and hee shall live so the Gr. saith and thy brother shall live with thee By living is meant the recovering of him-selfe out of his miserie as elsewhere life is opposed to sicknesse ruine and other miseries Esay 38. 9. Nehem. 4. 2. 1 Chron. 11. 8. Gen. 45. 27. Therefore God commandeth to let the poore man have sufficient for his need Deuteronomy 15. 8. see the annotations there Hereby also was figured that such as are poore in spirit ought to bee comforted and such as are impoverished by sinne should bee sought after for their recovery by admonition exhortation prayer c. that life may be given them 1 Thes. 5. 14. 1 Ioh. 5. 16. Iam. 5. 16. 20. V. 36. biting-usurie of this see what is noted on Ex. 22. 25. increase or multiplication overplus that is when one taketh more then he lent So in Ezek. 18. 8. 13. 17. Spirituall usury and exaction which under this Law is also forbidden is when the Law is urged upon the conscience of repentant sinners more then is meet whereby his life with God which is by faith in Christ is empeached or when the rudiments of the Law which Christ hath freed his people from are layd as a yoke upon their neckes and burden upon their consciences both which are hinderances of that true life and joy which God by the Gospel and Spirit of his Sonne ministreth unto the Saints Matth. 18. 28. 33. Gal. 2. 14. 21. and 4. 9. 10. 11. and 5. 1. 2. c. Acts 15. 1. 10. 11. Esay 9. 8. Vers. 39. waxen poore in Greeke be humbled or brought low as vers 25 be sold for extreame povertie debt or theft as 2 King 4. 1. Exod. 22. 3. See the notes on Exod. 21. 2. not serve thy selfe in Greeke hee shall not serve thee of a servant of a slave or bondman as to compell him to doe base and slavish works The Hebrewes say It is unlawfull for an Israelite when he buyeth any Hebrew servāt to make him serve in things vile which are proper for servants or slaves to doe as to cary his vessells after him to the bath or to untie his shoes c. Lev. 25. 49. Which is to be understood of an Hebrew servāt because his soule is east downe by his sale but an Israelite which is not sold it is lawfull to use his ministerie as a servants for lo he doth not such worke but willingly and of his owne minde Maimony tom 4. treat of Servants chap. 1. sect 7. This Law Solomon kept as it is said but of the sons of Israel did Solomon make no servant but they were men of warre his servants his princes his captatins c. 1 Kin. 9. 22. Vers. 40. as a sojourner in Greeke or a sojourner meaning that he should be used kindly reverently and as a brother vers 46. The Hebrew canons say Every Hebrew servant or handmaid their master is bound to make them equall to himselfe in meat in drinke in clothing in dwelling as it is said in Deut. 15. 16. because he is well with thee so that thou maist not eate white bread and he eate browne bread or thou drinke old wine and he drinke new or thou sleepe on a fetherbed and he sleepe on straw c. Hereupon they say who so buyeth an Hebrew servant buyeth himselfe a master c. Neverthelesse it is necessary that the servant behave himselfe with a servants behaviour in those services which he doth unto him Maim in Servants ch 1. s. 9. yeere of Iubile which was the yeere of liberty for all manner Hebrew servants therefore No Hebrew maid or Hebrew manservant was in use in Israel but at the time when the Iubile was in use whether it were a servant that sold him-selfe or that was sold by the Synedrion Maimony in servants chap. 1. sect 10. Vers. 41. goe out from with thee the Greek saith he shall goe out to remission into liberty For what cause or after what sort soever he hath beene sold the Iubile released him which was a figure of the time of grace whereby now Christ hath freed us from the servitude of sin and Satan Ioh. 8. 32. 36. Rom. 6. 14 18. The Hebrew doctors say He whom the Synedrion sold served six yeeres Exod. 21. 2. from the day of his sale and in the beginning of his seventh
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
of life Iohn 6. 48 51. Heb. 2. 9 10. 1 ●et 3. 18. But though the Manna was thus hard as wheat to be ground yet it used to melt as it lay on the earth with the heat of the Sunne that they gathered it onely in the morning Exod. 16. 21. baked or boyled coqued the word is sometime used for baking as in 2 Sam. 13. 8. though usually it signifieth to 〈◊〉 the best moisture oyle fresh oyle w ch hath no ranke favour The Hebrew Leshad is the best o●ly moisture in mans body Psal. 32. 4. so here it is the best sweet moisture of oyle which is the uppermost part It had also the taste of wafers with honey Ex. 16. 31. And here the Greeke translateth it wafers of oyle and the Chaldee paste or cakes with oyle So it was both pleasnt and wholsome food and the taste of oyle and honey figured the sweetnesse of grace which we by faith perceive in Christ the true Manna Psal. 119. 103. Song 5. 16. 〈◊〉 Pet. 2. 3. Verse 9. ●ell downe upon it and upon the Manna fell dew againe which when it was drawne up by the Sunne then the Manna appeared Exod. 16. 13 14. so the Manna lay as it were hidden between two dewes But after was manifested and given them of God freely every day a wheat which they sowed not nor laboured for but had for the taking up a meat which they knew not neither had their fathers knowne it whereby they were taught that man liveth not by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord Deut. 8. 3. Verse 10. throughout or by their families so the sinne was generally spred among the people in the doore that is openly and sinned not in secret onely but as it were proclaimed their iniquitie and stirred up themselves and one another to follow their lusts Verse 11. done evill to thy servant that is afflicted me for evill when it commeth from God meaneth trouble and affliction wherewith he chastiseth his servants and exerciseth their faith and patience as Ier. 18. 8. Esai 45. 7. Amos 3. 6. that thou layest Heb. for to lay or to put so it hath reference to the former part of the speech See the notes on Gen. 6. 19. the burden the weighty care and charge so in Deut. 1. 12. The Greeke here translateth it anger but after in vers 17 violence or assault This sheweth the great charge that lieth upon governours so Paul mentioneth the caere of all the Churches which came upon him daily 2 Cor. 11. 28. Verse 12. Have I conceived so also the Greeke translateth it but the Chaldee saith Am I the father of all this people are they my sonnes begotten them Hebr. begotten it or brought forth it speaking of the people as of one man begotten as by a father or brought forth as by a mother So the Apostle applieth both similies to himselfe saying to the Corinthians Ye have not many fathers for in Christ Iesus I have begotten you through the Gospell 1 Cor. 4. 15. and to the Galathians My children of whom I travell in birth againe untill Christ be formed in you Gal. 4. 19. In this complaint of Moses the weaknesse of the Law is signified w ch begetteth no children to God Rom. 7. 4. 5 c. and 8. 3. but by the word of Truth the Gospell and by beleefe in Christ we are borne of God I am 1. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 23 25. 1 Ioh. 5. 1. in thy bosome that is lovingly tenderly carefully which Moses the Lawgiver could not doe as is done by Christ of whom it is said He shall feed his flocke like a shepheard he shall gather his lambes with his arme and be are them in his bosome he shall gently lead those that are with young Esai 40. 11. a nursing father This sheweth the love mildnesse gentlenesse w ch should be in governours and so it is said unto the Church Kings shall be thy nursing fathers c. Esai 49. 23. And the Apostle saith Wee were gentle among you even as a nurse cherisheth her children we exhorted and comforted and charged every one of you as a father doth his children 1 Thes. 2. 7. 11. Accordingly the Hebrewes have this rule for all governours of the Church It is unlawfull for a man to governe with statelinesse over the congregation and with haughtinesse of spirit but with meeknesse and feare And every pastour that bringeth more terrour upon the congregation than is for the name of God he shall be punished and shall not see himselfe to have a learned wise son as it is said in Iob 37. 24. Men do therfore feare him he respecteth not any that are wise of heart And so it is not lawfull for him to governe them with contemptuous carriage although they be the common people of the land neither may he tread upon the heads of the holy people although they be unlearned base they are the sons of Abraham Isaacke and Iacob and the armies of the Lord that brought them out of the land of Egypt by great might and by strong hand but he must be are the toyle of the Congregation and their burden as Moses our Master of whom it is said AS A NVRSING FATHER BE ARETH THE SVCKING CHILD c. Maimony in Misn. tom 4. in Sanhedrin ch 25. sect 1 2. That w ch Moses speaketh of a Nursing father the Chaldee that goeth in the name of Ionathan and Targum Ierusalemy calleth Pedagoga which word Paul useth when he saith the Law was our P●dagogue or Schoolemaster unto Christ Gal. 3. 24. whose graces were figured by that land whither Moses now was to lead them as is shewed in the annotations on Gen. 12. 5. Verse 13. flesh to give By these complaints Moses sheweth his insufficiencie to governe this people and to supply their wants neither indeed could he bring them into the promised land but died ere they came thither Deut. 34. whereby the impossibility of the Law was signified that it could not bring men unto God or satisfie or restraine the lusts that reigne in our members though the Law it selfe is holy Rom. 7. 5 12. But what the Law could not doe in that it was weake through the flesh God hath done sending his owne Sonne Rom. 8. 3. who giveth us not flesh to satisfie our carnall lusts but his owne flesh to be the food of our soules which he hath given for the life of the world and which who so eateth hath eternall life Ioh. 6. 51. 54. Verse 15. if thou doe thus to leave the whole burden upon me still Here the word thou spoken to God is of the foeminine gender contrary to common rule of speech At for Attah which some thinke doth intimate Moses trouble of mind as if he could not perfectly utter his word● and the like is in Deut. 5. 27. where the people terrified with the Majestie of God when he gave his Law said unto Moses Speake thou At unto
forme of ●a●h often used of the Lord Ezek. 18. 3. and 20. 33. and 5. 11. Whereupon it is said And thou shalt sweare Iehovah liveth c. Ier. 4. 2. and where hee saith in the Prophet I have sworne by my selfe Esai 45. 25. the Apostle expresseth it with these words I live saith the Lord Rom. 14. 11. And the signe of an oa●h was the lifting up of the hand so both of them are joyned in Deut. 32. 40. I lift up my hand to 〈◊〉 and say I live for ever Wherefore the oath 〈◊〉 God here sware is signified by the lifting up of his hand in Psal. 106. 26. and Ezek. 20. 15. 〈…〉 lled with the glorie that is all peoples of the earth shall see and acknowledge the powerfull and just administration of the Lord unto his glorie and honour Compare Esai 6. 3. and Psal. 72. 19. where Christs kingdome is prophesied of with whose glory all the earth is full Verse 22. my glorie under this all Gods glorious works are comprehended as powers are used for powerfull workes Matth. 7. 22. and 11. 20. 1. Cor. 12. 10. 2 Cor. 12. 12. signes that is miracles miraculous and significant workes ten times hereby may be meant no certaine number but many times as in Gen. 31. 7. Iob. 19. 〈◊〉 so ten is for many in Levit. 26. 26. It may also be taken properly for now they had sinned ten times First at the red sea Exod. 14. 11 12. then in Marah Exod. 15. 23 24. againe in the wildernesse of Sin Exod. 16. 2. then twice about Manna Ex. 16. 20. 27 28. after that at Rephidim Exod. 17. 1 2 3. then by the Calfe at Horeb Ex. 32. at Taberah Num. 11. 1. and againe at Kibroth Hattaavah Num. 11. 4. and now the tenth time by their rebellion in Pharan Verse 23. If they shall see that is as the Greeke translateth it Surely they shall not see This also is an oath whereby God sweareth they shall not see that is not goe in to enioy the land as is explained by David in Psal. 95. 11. I sware in my anger if they shall enter into my rest which the Apostle openeth thus He sware that they should not enter into his rest Hebr. 3. 18. So If a signe be given Marke 8. 12. is more plainly expounded A signe shall not be given Matth. 16. 4. which I sware unto that is which I sware to give unto your fathers Deut. 1. 35. this was the land of Canaan Gen. 12. 5. 7. called the holy land Zach. 2. 12. the land of Iehovah Hos. 9. 3. the land of Immanuel that is of Christ Esai 8. 8. for it was a figure of the heavenly inheritance to bee obtained by Christ Hebr. 11. 9 10. therefore the keeping of them out of this land figured also the excluding of them and of all unbeleevers out of the kingdome of heaven Heb. 3. 12 19. and 4. 1 2 3 11. Verse 24. spirit in him or with him that is he was guided by another spirit than the ten spies The same is to be understood of Ioshua as appeareth by Num. 32. 12. though not here mentioned This other spirit was the spirit of faith which the Law cannot give Gal. 3. 2. the spirit of adoption of sonnes not of bondage to feare againe Rom. 8. 14 15. by the guidance of this spirit Caleb constantly followed the Lord obtained the promised inheritance he followed me fully Hebr. he fulfilled after me so in Deut. 1. 36. and Ios. 14. 8 9. 14. By this manner of speech is meant a full and constant following and obedience unto the end the contrary whereof was in Solomon of whom it is said he fulfilled not after the LORD as did David his father 1 Kings 11. 6. and in this people of Israel now generally of whom God saith they fulfilled not after me Num. 32. 11. The Greeke translateth it he followed me the Chaldee he fulfilled or accomplished after my feare Chazkuni expoundeth it he hath accomplished the word after me and compareth it with that phrase in 1 Kings 1. 14. I will come in after thee and fulfill that is confirme thy words his seed in Chaldee his sonnes shall possesse it shall inherit it thus both the Greeke Chaldee do interpret it or shall cause to inherit it that is leave it to their posteritie for an inheritance as it is written It shall be thine inheritance and thy childrens for ever Ios. 14. 9. The word is also used in a cōtrary meaning to disinherit as before in v. 12. so it may here be trāslated shal disinherit it that is disinherit and drive out the inhabitants of it and seize upon it as in Ios. 8. 7. ye shall disinherit or seise upon the citie and thus it agreeth with Calebs speech If so be the LORD will be with me then I shall disinherit them or drive them out as the LORD said Ios. 14. 12. In this latter sense Sol. Iarchi here expoundeth it drive it out that is they shall drive out the Anakims and people that are therein This promise Moses related unto Caleb and in the name of the Lord he sware unto him for the performance of it Ios. 14. 9. Verse 25. Now Hebr. And. dwelt or dwelleth Heb. sitteth in the valley after in vers 45. they are said to dwell or sit in the mountaine and sitting as it is often put for dwelling so sometime for lying in wait as in Ios. 8. 9. which may be meant here Chazkuni expoundeth this place thus that as the spies were afraid of Amalek Num. 13. 29. so with them the holy blessed God made them afraid And wheras it is here said in the vally and in v. 45. in that mountaine he accordeth them thus that the most of them sate in the valley some few of them in the mountaine those few warred against them and therfore it is written WHICH SATE IN THAT MOVNTAINE to imply that there were of them which sate in another place or it may be they dwelt in the vally and when they heard that the sons of Israel came against them they went up into the mountaine and lay in wait for them there and wee find that sitting sometime meaneth lying in wait as it is written in Psal. 10. 8. He sitteth in the waiting place of the villages tomorrow turne yee The people were now in Kadesh from whence they sent the spies Num. 13. 26. Deu. 1. 19. after this their rebellion and the slaughter following they abode in Kadesh many dayes and then turned and journeyed into the wildernesse by the way of the red sea Deut. 1. 46. and 2. 1. Chazkuni here saith Tomorrow meaneth after this time for loe they abode in Kadesh many dayes before they began to compasse mount Seir and it is like that phrase in Exod. 12. 34. when thy son shall aske thee tomorrow journey you or journey for you which some understand to mean for your good see Gen. 12. 1. the way of the red
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
not unfitly doth Moab hereby as it were prophesie of their owne destruction for the strength and beautie of Israel may well be likened hereto as Iosephs was by Moses to his first-borne bullocke Deut. 33. 17. and the wicked are as grasse and shall soone be cut downe and wither as the greene herbe Psal. 37. 2. And though at this time Israel might not meddle with Moab for they had other enemies to prey upon and the oxe loweth not when he hath fodder Iob 6. 5. yet Ba 〈◊〉 their Prophet foretold of a starre and scepter that should rise out of Israel and sinite the corners of Moab Num. 24. 17. which was fulfilled in part by David who smote Moab and they became his servants 1 Chron. 18. 2. And God further prophesieth their destruction afterward I have broken Moab like a vessell wherein is no pleasure saith the LORD Ier. 48. 38. Vers. 5. Balaam so written after the Greeke and the New Testament Rev. 2. 14. in Hebrew Bilghnam He was a Diviner or Scothsayer as is said in Ios. 13. 22. Balaam also the sonne of Beor the Diviner did the sonnes of Israel s●ay with the sword where the name Diviner or Soothsayer is to be understood of the sonne Balaam not of the father Beor as the like phrase in Esai 37. 2. sheweth where it is said Unto Esaias the sonne of Amos the Prophet which another Scripture explaineth thus Unto Esaias the Prophet the sonne of Amos 2 King 19. 2. And that Balaam was indeed such a kinde of man is after shewed by Moses in Num. 24. 1. The Apostle calleth him a Prophet 2 Pet. 2. 16. and false prophets are called Diviners Ier. 27. 9. and their prophesying Divination Ezek. 13. 6 7 23. What a Diviner was is shewed on Deut. 18. sonne of Beor so the Greeke here writeth that which in Hebrew is Beghnor But the Apostle Peter writing from Babylon 1 Pet. 5. 13. calleth him sonne of Bosor 2 Pet. 2. 15. For in the Baby lonian or Chaldee language the Hebrew letter * 〈◊〉 Ghnajn is often pronounced like S whereupon the Greeke Interpreters sometime put S in stead thereof as Gnamnciud Num. 1. 10. is in Greeke Semioud and in Ier. 46. 17. Saon heghnebir the Interpreters taking it for a proper name expresse it in Greeke thus Sao neeshe 〈…〉 so Iehojadangh in Ier. 29. 26. is in Greeke Iodese Hosheangh in Num. 13. 8. is A●ses and Ieshuangh Ezr. 2. 2. is Iesus and many the like Pethor in Greeke Phathourra it was a citie in Mesopotamia or Aram Num. 23. 7. Deut. 23. 4. the countrey where Abraham first dwelt Act. 7. 2. Gen. 24. 4 10. and there he served strange gods Ios. 24. 2. In this countrey all the Patriarchs except Benjamin the heads of the tribes of Israel were borne and brought up Gen. 35. 26. till Iakob their father fled the land after he had there served for a wife and for a wife had kept sheep Hos. 12. 12. Gē 31. 21. Iakobs posteritie hereupon professed their father to be an Aramite or Syrian Deut. 26. 5. and from Aram is Balaam now sent for to curse them And as it was in the East countrey Num. 23. 7. so the Easterne land was infamous for Divination and such like arts see Esai 2. 6. by the river to wit Euphrates called the river by excellencie because it was the greatest Gen. 15. 18. so in Ios. 24. 2. 15. 2 Sam. 10. 16. 1 King 4. 24. 1 Chron. 19. 16. And thus the Chaldee here explaineth it to Pethor of Aram which is by Euphrates they cover Hebr. it covereth speaking of the people as of one The Scripture useth the singular or plurall number indifferently as is noted on Gen. 22. 19. th● eye that is the face or sight as the Greeke translateth of the land or earth See the like phrase in Exod. 10. 5. 15. abide sit or dwell over against mee These words implied reasons to perswade Balaam to come for their comming out of Egypt intimateth that they being strangers had no right to invade the land their covering the face of the land shewed their number to be great and they having subdued the Amorites and filled their land could not easily be resisted their abiding over against Moab was a signe as they thought that Israel would next invade their countrey But in all this the truth of Israels case and carriage was concealed for here is no meation how God had of old promised them the land of Canaan Gen. 15. 18. or how the Canaanites wickednesse was growne so great that their land should spue them out Lev. 18. 24 25. neither speaketh he of their wrongfull oppression and bondage in Egypt and miraculous deliverance from thence Exod. 1. c. nor how Israel being come had not harmed either Edom or Moab but passed by them in peace Deut. 2. 4. 8 9. 13. and warred onely with the cursed Canaanites devoted unto destruction Though Moab could not but know these things as well as Edom Num. 20. 14 15. c. yet would he mention none of them neither was he content that his brother Israel should doe to the Canaanites as Moab himselfe and Edom and Ammon had done before to the Emims Horims and Zamzummims whom they had cast out of their inheritances and dwelt in their steads Deut. 2. 9 10 12 20 21. For this conspiracie with Balaam and his endevour to destroy Gods people it is said Balakarose and warred against Israel Ios. 24. 9. Vers. 6. Now therefore come Hebr. And now come His purpose being by a curse upon them to bereave them of Gods favour and protection hee would have him to come that by neerenesse of his person and by beholding them his speech might have more vehemencie of spirit and better effect as he supposed So Elisha the Prophet turned backe and looked on the children whom hee cursed in the Name of the Lord 2. Kings 2. 24. And on the contrary when Isaak would blesse his sonne he called him neare and kissed him and smelling the savour of his garments he uttered a more powerfull blessing Gen. 27. 26 27. and so did Iakob to Iosephs children Gen. 48. 9. 10 c. And for this cause Balak led Balaam when hee was come unto high mountaines from whence he might view them whom he was to curse Num. 22. 41. and 23. 9. 14. 28. curse me this or curse for me this people The curse was first laid upon the creatures by God himselfe for sinne Gen. 3. and heavy effects followed thereof the earth cursed brought forth thornes and briers in stead of wholesome fruits Gen. 3. 17 18 and cursed againe for Cains wickednesse it yeelded no more the strength thereof Gen. 4. 12. the figtree cursed by Christ suddenly withered Mark 11. 21. And when the curse is duly pronounced by Prophets and men of God it wanteth not effect as the curse-bringing water of jealousie which should cause the belly of the polluted to swell and her thigh to rot Num.
in the Annotations on Gen. 18. 10. and 25. 31. what hath God wrought that is how wonderfull things God hath wrought for them The Greeke translateth it What God shall performe He teacheth that all the valiant acts of Israel should not be done by themselves but by God for them as it is shewed in Psal. 44. 1 2 c. Wherefore it is written Lord thou wilt ordaine peace for us for thou also hast wrought all our workes in us Esay 26. 12. And so the Apostle saith It is God which worketh in you both to will and to doe of his good pleasure Philip. 2. 13. and he which hath begun a good worke in you will performe it untill the day of Iesus Christ Phil. 1. 6. Vers. 24. as a couragious Lion Of these names of Lions see the Annotations on Gen. 49. 9. Of the Lions nature Solomon saith it is strongest among beasts and turneth not away for any Prov. 30. 30. Here the blessing which was specially given to the tribe of Iudah Gen. 49. is applied to all Israel which were in Christ the Lion of the tribe of Iudah Rev. 5. 5. for just men are bold as a Lion Prov. 28. 1. lift up himselfe a signe of stoutnesse courage and Majestie By this and the former rising up is meant the valiant onset which they should make upon their enemies the Canaanites whereof the booke of Iosua is a testimony and under them were figured the spirituall enemies of the salvation of Israel Satan sinne the world c. which the Church of Christ should resist and overcome by faith 1 Pet. 5. 9. and 2. 11. 1 Ioh. 5. 4. untill he cat the prey that is as the Chaldee and Targum Ionathan expound it untill he have killed his enemies Signifying hereby Israels constant fighting of the Lords battels not lying downe or giving themselves rest till they had gotten a full victory This was in part fulfilled in the conquest of Canaan at the end whereof the two tribes and an halfe returned with much riches cattell silver gold c. to divide the spoile of their enemies with their brethren Ios. 22. 3 4 8. And when David having fought the battels of the Lord sang unto his praise I have pursued mine enemies and destroyed them and turned not againe untill I had consumed them 2 Sam. 22. 38. But chiefly it is performed by the grace of God in Christ against the enemies of our soules whereof it is thus prophes●ed And the remnant of Iakob shall be among the nations in the middest of many peoples as a renting Lion among the beasts of the forrest as a young Lion among the flockes of sheepe who if he goe thorow both treadeth downe and teareth in pecces and none can deliver Thine hand shall be lifted up upon thine adversaries and all thine enemies shall be cut off Mic. 5. 8 9. And this spirituall warfare is not like the battels of the world with confused noise and garments rolled in bloud Esay 9. 5. but with the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God Ephes. 6. 17. in much patience in afflictions in necessities in distresses in stripes in imprisonments in tossings to and fro in labours in watchings in fastings by purenesse by knowledge by long-suffering by kindnesse by the holy Ghost by love unfeigned by the word of truth by the power of God by the armour of righteousnesse on the right hand and on the left c. 2 Cor. 6. 4. 7. For even Christ himselfe whē he was called the Lion of the tribe of Iuda appeared like a Lamb as it had been slaine Revel 5. 5 6. and his people for his sake are killed all the day long are counted as s●●epe for 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ghter and yet in all these things are more than 〈…〉 qutrours through him that loved them Rom. 8. 36 37. Vers. 25. Neither cursing curse him in Greeke Neither curse mee him with curses neither blessing blesse him that is neither curse Israel at all nor blesse him at all Here Balaks indignation against Balaam and sinne against God is increased rejecting his owne Prophet resisting the word of the Lord now the second time and when hee could doe no evill to Israel he would hinder them from good Vers. 27. per adventure it will be right in the eyes of God that is it will please God as the Chaldee expoundeth it and so the Greeke saith if it may please God This is Balaks third and last attempt against the Church of Christ in another place as Satan tempted Christ himselfe thrice in three severall places which not succeeding he then left him Matth. 4. 1 11. And whereas before the King supposed that Balaams seeing of the whole multitude was the let why hee did not curse them hee now perceiveth God to be the cause and therefore by sacrifices in a place idolatrous he seeketh to obtaine his favour Vers. 28. the top of Pe●r the name of a mountaine called in Greeke Phogor and in Chaldee the top of the high-place of Peor where the Moabites used to sacrifice unto their idoll called Baal peor Num. 25. 2. 3. 18. and there they had a temple called Beth-peor or the house of Peor Deut. 3. 29. and neare it was a citie called Beth-peor which the Israelites had taken from King Sihon and it was after given for a possession to the Reubenites Ios. 13. 15 20. In this idolatrous mountaine the King hoping to be heard of God maketh supplication with new altars and sacrifices so continuing the abuse of his religion bent against the wil of God and to the destruction of his people CHAP. XXIV 1 Balaam leaving inchantments prophesieth by the Spirit of God the happinesse of Israel 10 Balak in anger dismisseth him 14 but before his departure he prophesieth of the Starre of Iakob and the distruction of some nations ANd Balaam saw that it was good in the eyes of Iehovah to blesse Israel and he went not as at other times to meet with inchantments but he set his face toward the wildernesse And Balaam lifted up his eies and he saw Israel abiding in tents according to their tribes and the Spirit of God was upon him And he tooke up his parable and said Balaam the sonne of Beor assuredly saith and the man whose eye is open assuredly saith Hee assuredly saith which heard the oracles of God which saw the vision of the Almightie falling and having his eyes uncovered How goodly are thy tents O Iakob thy tabernacles O Israel As the valleyes are they spread forth as gardens by the river side as Lign-aloes-trees which Iehovah hath planted as Cedar trees beside the waters He shall poure waters out of his buckets and his seed shall be in many waters and his King shall be higher than Agag and his kingdom shal be exalted God brought him forth out of Aegypt hee hath as the strengths of an Vnicorne he shall ●at up the nations his distressers and shall breake their bones and pierce them thorow with
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
for a continuall Burnt-offering yee shall make ready these After this manner ye shall make ready for every day seven daies the bread of the Fire offering of a savour of rest unto Iehovah it shall be made ready beside the continuall Burnt-offering and his Drinke-offering And in the seventh day yee shall have a convocation of holinesse yee shall not doe any servile worke And in the day of the First-fruits when ye offer a new Meat-offering unto Iehovah after your weekes ye shall have a convocation of holinesse ye shall not doe any servile worke And yee shall offer a Burnt-offering for a savour of rest unto Iehovah two bullocks younglings of the herd one ramme seven hee-lambes of the first yeare And their Meat-offering fine flower mingled with oile three tenth parts for one bullocke two tenth parts for one ramme A severall tenth part for one lambe throughout the seven lambes One goat-buck of the goats to make atonement for you Yee shall make them ready beside the continuall Burnt-offering and his Meat-offering perfect shall they be unto you and their Drinke-offerings Annotations COmmand the sonnes of Israel After that God had numbred the people and appointed them their inheritance he now repeateth and explaineth former lawes concerning his service which they should doe unto him in that their inheritance daily weekely monethly and at their solemne Feasts as they fell every yeare for he therefore would give unto them the lands of the heathens and they should inherit the labour of the peoples that they might observe his statutes and keepe his lawes Psal. 105. 44 45. And because they had omitted the solemnizing of these feasts now 38. yeares from the keeping of the Passeover in the wildernesse in the second yeare Num. 9. untill the Circumcision and Passeover at Gilgal Ios. 5. by reason of their travels wherein the Sanctuary Altar and holy things were folden up and removed from place to place and the generation which had beene before mustered was dead Numb 26. 64 65. therefore lest the ordinances formerly given should be forgotten or neglected and the people continue to doe as now they did every man whatsoever was right in his own eyes Deut. 12. 8. the Lord causeth the law of sacrificing to be againe commanded Which sacrifices being all figures of Christ and our service of God by him as hath beene shewed in the booke of Leviticus teach us to serve the Lord under the Gospel of his Sonne in spirit and truth for thereof were these legall feasts a figure Esay 66. 23. Zach. 14. 16 19. 1 Cor. 5. 7 8. Coloss. 2. 16 17. Heb. 13. 15. Mine oblation that is mine oblations in Greek my gifts Hebr. my Korban which is an offering or gift by which men drew nigh unto God through faith in Christ. See the notes on Levit. 1. 2. my bread for my Fire-offerings the Chaldee expoundeth it the bread ordained for my oblations Vnder the name of bread all food is implied and the flesh it selfe or fat of the sacrifices as is noted on Levit. 3. 11. the savour of my rest the savour or odour of sacrifices which may quiet or pacifie my spirit and anger and make you and your service pleasing and acceptable to me The Greeke translateth it for a savour of sweet smell the Chaldee to be accepted with favour See Lev. 1. 9. in his appointed time every one in the time appointed therefore of God the Greeke saith in my feasts for the same word which signifieth an appointed time is also used for a solemne feast appointed of God Levit. 23. 2. Hereby God limiteth every sacrifice his proper day and time which if it were let slip that oblation might not be offered in another day or time This is further manifested in vers 10. where he saith The Burnt-offering of the Sabbath in his Sabbath which the Hebrewes expound thus and not the Burnt-offering of one Sabbath in another Sabbath Maimony tom 3. in Tamidin chap. 1. s. 7. And it is a common proverbe among them Gnabar Zeman gnabar korban If the time be past the oblation is past and it is prophesied of Antiochus the wicked that he should thinke to change the times and the lawes Dan. 7. 25. And Ieroboam king of Israel who kept the feast of the seventh moneth in the eighth moneth is taxed for it in the Scripture which calleth it the moneth which he had devised of his owne heart 1 King 12. 32 33. Vers. 3. the Fire-offering the sacrifices to be burned with fire unto the Lord which Fire signified both the worke of Gods Spirit and the fiery trials and afflictions through which Christ and his children should be consecrated unto God Matth. 3. 11. Hebr. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 4. 12 13 14. of the first yeare Hebr. sonne of the yeare so after often in this and the next chapter of which phrase see the Annotations on Exod. 12. 5. perfect that is perfect lambes without blemish or corruption what this meant is shewed on Lev. 1. 3. and 22. 21. day by day or for a day that is daily a continuall Burnt-offering Hebr. a Burnt-offering of continuation which should be offered without intermission See the notes on Exod. 29. 42. and Levit 1. Vers. 4. make ready or doe that is kill sprinkle the bloud cut in peeces burne on the Altar and all other rites pertaining to sacrificing shewed in Levit. 1. betweene the two evenings that is in the after-noone of which phrase see the Annotations on Exod. 12. 6. God setteth no houres for the morning or evening sacrifices because they might occasionally be changed By the Hebrew Canons the ordinary time of killing the morning sacrifice was before Sun-rising after that the face of all the East was inlightned that is betweene day-breaking and Sun-rising The time of killing the evening sacrifice though it might be all the after-noone yet they used not to kill it till halfe an houre after two of the clocke and this they did by reason of the sacrifices of particular persons or of the congregation because it was unlawfull to offer any oblation at all before the continuall Burnt-offering of the morning neither killed they any oblation after the continuall evening sacrifice save the oblation of the Passeover only for it was unpossible for all Israel to offer their Passeovers in two houres So they killed not the Passeover but after the daily evening sacrifice Maimony in Tamidin chap. 1. sect 3 4. By this daily sacrifice morning and evening was signified the reconciliation of the Church unto God by faith in Christ notwithstanding their continuall infirmities which they fell into night and day as one end of the Burnt-offering was to make atonement for sinnes Iob 1. 5. and that being reconciled they should both shew their thankfulnesse for it unto God and expect from him a blessing upon them their labours and their rest Wherefore at such times speciall favours were shewed of God unto his people as in the morning when the Meat-offering
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
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
were occasioned by the captivity of Babylon and calamities then upon the Iewes have little shew of reason For ●beside that Kimchi himselfe sometimes alleageth both readings with out condemning of either and sheweth the meaning of both as is to be seene in his Commentaries on Esay 9. 3. Ios. 19. ●3 Esay 61. 1 c. and Arias translateth now the line and then the margine and sometimes ●oteth both what are 70 yeeres to corrupt all Copies When as a Copie written on Parch 〈…〉 as was their manner will endure many 70. yeeres intire Ieremy with some Iewes re●amed a while in the land Ezekiel Daniel and many godly men were in Babylon may wee suppose that none of them would keepe the Scriptures pure Ezra the learned Priest and Scribe came with the people out of Babylon they also had Prophets Haggai Zecharie and Malachie by whom these errours if they had beene such might have beene corrected and a 〈◊〉 Bible preserved for the Churches use Yea even the Bookes which Ezra Danie● Zacha 〈…〉 c. wrote have divers readings as hath Moses and the former Prophets 5. Our Saviour blameth the Priests Scribes and Pharisees for corrupting the Law by wrong 〈…〉 pretation Mat. 5. 15. 23. if they had violated and falsified the writing of the Scrip 〈…〉 would he have spared them Or would not he by himselfe or by his Apostles have pro 〈…〉 a perfect canon of the Word to be left unto his Church But wee finde no blame laid ●●on them for marring the Text yea Christ and his Apostles send all to reade the Scrip 〈…〉 Luk. 16. 29. Iob. 5. 39. 2 Pet. 1. 19. and our Saviour confirmeth the Law unto every jot ●●d little Ma● 5. 18. all which things doe perswade that the holy Text was not then corrup 〈…〉 d and they that most labour to discredit it cannot shew how it should be corrupted since there being besides the Apostles many thousands of the Iewes and Churches of the Iewes that came to the Christian faith Act. 21. 20. Iam. 1. 1. and so could bring uncorrupted copies of the Scriptures with them unto the Christian Gentiles 6 The divers readings fore-spoken of are such as savour not of humane superstition but to men of understanding doe shew Gods wisdome as the residue of the Scripture and good reasons have beene rendred by many as well Christian as Iewish Expositors of both line and margine being in stead of briefe Commentaries one to another and if we cannot doe the like of all yet ought we not to condemne that we know not but in humility to seeke for further light 7. The holy Ghost in many places approueth the Keties or readings in the margine as where one Prophet writeth Tamor 1 King 9. 18. in Greeke Thamor and noteth in the margine to reade it Tadmor another Prophet after confirmeth it writing onely Tadmor 2 Chron. 8. 4. and there the Greeke also hath Thedmor Ieish in Gen. 36. 5. 14. is noted in the margine to be read Ieush and so the line writeth his name in Gen. 36. 18. and in 1 Chron. 1. 35. When one writeth Ish chai a lively man as Vatablus noteth and interpreteth it but warneth in the margine to reade Ish chajil a valiant man 2 Sam. 23. 20. another Prophet writeth this marginall text onely Ish chajil 1 Chron. 11. 22. When in speech of the first person there is a sudden change to the third as in 2 Sam. 22. 33 34. his way and his feet that this should not seeme strange the Hebrew margine there readeth it my way and my feet and this is confirmed by the Hebrew line in Psal. 18. 33 34. Neither may wee say that the former place is corrupted seeing the Scripture useth such change of person other where as in Deut. 5. 10. Iob 18. 4. Mit. 1. 2. Psal. 59. 10. and 65. 7. Dan. 9. 4. So Duke Aljah in 1 Chron. 1. 51. is there in the margine to to be read Alvah and so Moses wrote his name in Gen. 36. 40. Hezrai in the Hebrew margine 2 Sam. 23. 35. is by the letters in the line Hezro and in 1 Chron. 11. 37. only Hezro Zaanaim in Iudg. 4. 11. is read in the Hebrew margine Zaanannim and so the name is written in Ios. 19. 33. In 2 Sam. 23. 13. whereby the letters in the line Shalishim the Captaines of the thirty went downe the margine and vowels reade it Sheloshah three of the thirty and so it is after written Sheloshah three in 1 Chron. 11. 15. So he shall take 2 King 20. 18. is by the vowels and margine read they shall take and approved in Esay 39. 7. Hee had not the name 1 Chron. 11. 20. is read in the Hebrew margine He had the name and so it is written affirmatively in 2 Sam. 23. 18. In 1 Chron. 11. 11. where the Hebrew letters in the line say Chiefe of the thirty and so it is translated in the Greeke Bible and in our first English and the Geneva verlion after it and in the old Latine and the Spanish translations and by Pagnine there by the vowels and by the Keri in the margine it is read Chiefe of the Captaines for confirmation of this another Prophet writeth it Chiefe of the Captaines or the Chiefe Captaine 2 Sam. 23. 8. and sundry other examples might bee shewed The new Testament approveth also the marginall readings for whereas Gnanijim that is Poore or afflicted in Prov. 3. 34. is to bee read in the margine Gnanavim that is Lowly or Humble the Holy Ghost translateth according to the margine in Iam. 4. 6. and in 1 Pet. 5. 5. giveth grace to the Humble Where Chas 〈…〉 is written in the line with † jod a signe of the plurall number Psal. 16. 10. so that in Bibles unvowelled it may be taken for Chadsideca thine Holy ones which in sundry other examples may also be observed as in Psal. 145. 6. Eccles. 5. 1. Iudg. 13. 17. 1 Sam. 24. 5. and 26. 8. D 〈…〉 3. 12 18. Ezra 10. 12. Esay 26. 20. Ezek. 9. 5. there in the margine that signe of the plur 〈…〉 number jod is noted to be redundant and accordingly it is interpreted by the Spirit of God in Act. 2. 27. and 13. 35. ton Hosion son thine Holy one 8. As the Iewish nation a few late men excepted approve of those readings in the margine and yet hold the word in the line uncorrupted so among Christians of all languages they have beene reverenced Translatours from the Hebrew have at their discretion taken sometimes the one sometimes the other without condemning that which they omit Out 〈◊〉 English version translateth the margine commonly yet often noteth the other someti 〈…〉 the line and noteth also that which is in the margine as is to be seene in 1 King 22. 48. Ios. 〈◊〉 12. 15. 53. 2. King 20 4. 23. 33. 2 Sam. 14. 20. Psal. 100. 3 Pro. 17. 27. Ier. 2. 20. Dan. 9. 〈◊〉 Esay 9. 3. and
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
by Gittith here may be meant either such instruments as were used by the posteritie of Obed-Edom the Gittite or that these Psalmes were made upon occasion of transporting Gods arke from the house of that Obed-Edom the history whereof is in 2 Sā 6. 6. 10. 11 12 c. or that these Psalmes were to be sung for praise of God at the Vintage when grapes were pressed And according to this the Greeke translateth it the wine-presses Or it may be the name of some musicall instrument and so the Chaldee Paraphrast translateth it To sing upon the harpe that came from Gath. Vers. 2. our Lord or our sustainers See the note on Psal. 2. 4 wondrous excellent or wondrous ample illustrious and magnificent The originall word signifieth ample or large and excellent withall cleare and splendent in glory The Greek turneth it wonderfull the Chaldee high and landable So in v. 10. name this word is often used for renowne or glory Gen. 6 4 Eccle. 7. 3. Phil. 2. 9. as on the contrary vile persons are called men without name Iob 30 8. Gods name is also used for his kingdome and Gospell Mat. 19. 29. compared with Luk. 18. 29. Mar. 10. 29. And this Psalme treateth of the spreading of Christs Kingdome and Gospell as after is manifested hast given that is put or set as I have given Isa. 42. 1. is by the Evangelist in Greeke I will put Mat. 12. 18. and in the Hebrew text as he hath given thee over them for king 2 Chr. 9. 8. for which is written in 1 Kings 10 9. he hath set or put It may also import a setting sure or stablishing as thou hast given thy people 1 Chr. 17. 22. that is thou hast stablished thy people 2 Sam. 7. 24. Here also is a grammatical change in the Hebrew to give for thou hast given glorious majestie venerable or praise-worthy glory The word Hodh is generall for any laudable grace or vertue for which one is celebrated reverenced and commended above or over or upon the heavens This phrase is used of God Num. 27. 20. where he willeth Moses to give of his glorious majestie upon Iosua and may have use in the mysticall applying of this Psalm to Christs kingdom as Mat. 21. 26. teacheth us heaven being also often used in Scripture for the Church of Christ Isa. 65. 17. and 66. 22. Rev. 21. 1. Vers. 3. hast founded that is firmely decreed appointed and consequently fitted and perfected as the Greeke katertiso which the Apostle useth signifieth Mat. 21. 16. So in Esth. 1. 8. the king had founded that is decreed appointed See also before Psal. 2. 2. strength that is strong praise for so this word seemeth often to be used as Ps. 29. 1. and 96. 7. and 118. 14. therefore the Greeke which the Apostle followeth Mat. 21. 16. translateth it praise This word strength or firmnesse may be taken for kingdome firmly strengthened as in this place so in Ps. 110. 2. and 86. 16. and 89. 11. to make cease that is put to silence or doe away abolish and destroy So after in Psal. 119. 119. and 89. 45. and 46. 10. selfe-avenger or him that avengeth himselfe the proud and mighty which will not suffer his honour or gaine to be diminished So Ps. 44. 17. This was fu●filled when children crying Hosanna to welcome Christ the chiefe Priests and Scribes disdained sought to destroy him but he stopped their mouthes by alleaging this Scripture Mat. 21. 15 16. Mark 11. 18. Gods people are taught though they suffer wrong not to avenge themselves but to give place unto wrath Rom. 12. 19. Vers. 5. what is sorry man to wit thus thinke I with my selfe what is man c. Here man is called Aenosh the name of Adams nephew Gen. 4. 26. which signifieth dolefull sorry sorrowfull wretched and sick incurably And this name is given to all men to put them in mind of their misery and mortality as Ps. 9. 21. let the heathens know that they be Aenosh son of Adam or of earthly man As before men are called Aenosh for their dolefull estate by sin so are they called Adam and sons of Adam that is earthly to put them in mind of their originall and end which were made of Adamah the earth even of the dust and to dust shall again return Gen. 27. and 3. ●9 Adam was the name both of man and woman Gen. 5. 2. and is also the name of all their children Ps. 22. 7. and 36. 7. and 39. 6. and in many other places See the note on Psal. 49 3. visitest him that is hast care of providest for and lookest to him The originall word thus largely signifieth and is used indifferently for visiting with favour as Ps. 65. 10. or with displeasure as Psal. 59. 6. Here it is meant for good for Gods providence is singular towards man and his visitation preserveth our spirit Iob 10. 12. Compare also herewith Psal. 144. 3. Iob 7. 17 18. Vers. 6. For thou madest him lesser or And thou madest him lack or Though thou madest him to want a little of the Gods a little The originall word signifieth either a little while Psal. 37. 10. or a little deale Ps. 37. ●6 1 Sam. 14. 29. The Greeke brachuti which the Apostle useth also signifieth both Act. 5. 34. Ioh. 6. 7. howbeit by his applying this to Christ he seemeth to meane a little or short time Heb. 2. 7. 9. than the Gods or than God but by Gods here is meant the Angels as the Apostle expoundeth it according both to the Greeke version Chaldee paraphrase And those heavenly spirits are for their office and service called Angels that is messengers but for their honorable dignity they are called Gods here in Ps 97. 7. the sons of God Iob 1. 6. 38. 7. The Princes of the earth are named Gods Psal. 82. 6. how much more may the Angels be called so that are Chiefe Princes Dan. 10. 13. and crownedst him This may be understood of man as he was first made in Gods image and Lord of the world Gen. 1. 26. but since the transgression it is peculiar to Christ and to Christian men that have their dignity restored by Christ. Vnto him the Apostle applieth this Psalme thus We see Iesus crowned with glory and honour which was a little made lesser than the Angels through the suffering of death that by the grace of God he might taste death for all Hebr. 2. 9. Glory seemeth to respect inward vertues as wisdome holinesse c. and Honour for his outward good estate in ruling over the creatures as vers 7 8 9. comely honour The Hebrew hadar denoteth all honourable comelinesse honest grave adorned decencie Vers. 7. all didst thou set in the first creation God gave man rule over fishes fowles beasts and all that moveth on the earth Gen. 1. 26. but after for his sake and sinne the earth was cursed and he enjoyed it with sorrow Gen. 3. 17. But the Son
and tell their sonnes And they might put their constant hope in God and not forget the acts of God and might keepe his commandements And not be as their fathers a generation perverse and rebellious a generation that prepared not aright their heart and whose spirit was not faithfull with God The sonnes of Aephrajim armed shooting with bow turned backe in the day of battell They kept not the covenant of God and in his Law they refused to walke And forgate his actions and his marvellous workes which he had shewed them Before their fathers he had done a miracle in the land of Aegypt the field of Tsoan He cleft the sea and made them passe thorow and made the waters to stand as an heape And led them with a cloud by day and all the night with a light of fire He clave the Rocks in the wildernesse and gave drinke as out of the great deepes And brought forth streames out of the rock made waters descend like rivers And they added yet to sin against him to provoke bitterly the most high in the dry desart And tempted God in their hart asking meat for their soule And they spake against God they said Can God furnish a table in the wildernesse Loe hee smote the Rocke and waters gushed out and streames over-flowed can he also give bread or can he prepare flesh for his people Therefore Iehovah heard and was exceeding angry and fire was kindled against Iakob and also anger came up against Israel Because they beleeved not in God and trusted not in his salvation Though he had commanded the skies from above and opened the doores of heavens And rained upon them Manna to eat and the wheat of heavens hee gave to them Man did eat the bread of the mighties hee sent them meat to satietie Hee made an East wind to passe forth in the heavens and brought on a South wind by his strength And rained flesh upon them as dust and fethered fowle as the sand of the seas And made it fall in the midst of his campe round about his dwelling places And they did eat and were filled vehemently and their desire he brought unto them They were not estranged from their desire their meat was yet in their mouth When the anger of God came up against them and slew of the fat of them and smote downe the choise young men of Israel For all this they sinned yet and beleeved not for his marvellous workes And hee consumed their daies in vanitie and their yeares in hastie terrour When he slew them then they sought him and returned and sought God early And remembred that God was their Rocke and the most high God their redeemer But they flatteringly allured him with their mouth and with their tongue they lyed to him For their heart was not firmely prepared with him neither were they faithfull in his covenant And he being compassionate mercifully covered iniquitie and corrupted not but multiplied to turne away his anger and did not stirre up all his wrathfull heat For he remembred that they were flesh a wind that goeth and shall not returne How oft did they bitterly provoke him in the wildernesse grieve him in the desart For they returned and tempted God and limited the holy one of Israel They remembred not his hand nor the day in which hee had redeemed them from the distresser When hee put his signes in Aegypt and his wonders in the field of Tsoan And turned their rivers into bloud and their streames that they could not drinke He sent among them a mixed swarme which did eat them and the frog which corrupted them And he gave their fruit to the caterpiller and their labour to the locust Hee killed their vine with haile and their wild fig-trees with the blasting hailestone And he shut up their cattell to the haile and their flocks of cattell to the lightnings Hee sent among them the burning of his anger exceeding wrath and indignation and distresse by the sending of the messengers of evills Hee weighed out a path to his anger he withheld not their soule from death and their wilde beast hee shut up to the pestilence And smote all the first-borne in Aegypt the beginning of strengths in the tents of Cham. And hee made his people passe forth as sheepe and led them on as a flocke in the wildernesse And led them in confident safety and they dreaded not and the sea covered their enemies And he brought them to the border of his holinesse this mountaine which his right hand purchased And he cast out the heathens from their faces and made them fall in the line of possession made the tribes of Israel to dwell in their tents And they tempted bitterly provoked the most high God and kept not his testimonies But turned backe and unfaithfully transgressed like their fathers they were turned like a warping bow And provoked him to anger by their high places and by their graven idols they stirred him to jealousie God heard was exceeding wroth vehemently abhorred Israel And hee forsooke the dwelling place of Shilo the tent he had placed for a dwelling among earthly men And gave his strength into captivity his beauteous glory into the hand of the distresser And shut up his people to the sword was exceeding wroth with his inheritance The fire did eat their choice yong men their virgins were not praised Their Priests fell by the sword and their widowes wept not And the Lord awaked as one out of sleepe as a mighty one shouting after wine And smote his distressers behinde he gave them eternal reproach And he refused the tent of Ioseph chose not the tribe of Aephrajim But he chose the tribe of Iudah the mount Sion which he loved And builded his sanctuary like high places like the earth which hee founded for ever And he chose David his servant and tooke him from the folds of sheepe From after the ewes with young brought he him to feed Iakob his people and Israel his possession And he fed them according to the perfection of his heart and by the discretions of his hands led he them Annotations MY Law or doctrine for of it the Law hath the name in Hebrew see Psal. 19. 8. Christ speaketh in this Psalme to his people as the next verse sheweth So Isa. ●1 4. Vers. 2. in a parable that is in or with parables as the holy Ghost expoundeth it Mat. 13. 34 35. All these things spake Jesus to the multitude in parables c. that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Prophet saying I will open my mouth in parables c. Here the narration and applying of ancient histories are called Parables because all these things came unto our fathers as types and were written to admonish us 1 Cor. 10. 11. What a Parable meaneth see Psal. 49. 5. will utter or well out as from a spring or fountaine hid things so the holy Ghost expoundeth it in Greeke Mat.
23. came into Egypt being sent for by Pharaoh and incouraged thereto by God him-selfe Gen. 45. 17 20. and 46. 3 4. of Cham the father of Mizraim or Egypt see Psal. 78. 51. Vers. 24. increased made them fructifie that the land was soone full of them Exod. 1. 7 9. Vers. 25. to deale craftily or conspire guile fully for their destruction as Gen. 37. 18. Pharaoh and his people fretting at Israels prosperity thought to worke wisely with them when they plotted their ruine Exod. 1. 9 10 12 c. Vers. 26. had chosen to be Moses his mouth to the people and Prophet to Pharaoh Exod. 4. 12 14 16. and 7. 1 2 c. Vers. 27. words of his signes the signes which he spake and commanded together with the doctrine and use of them for letting of Israel goe See Exod. 7. 1 2 3 c. Or words of signes as words of song Psal. 137. 3. are signes and songs So Psal. 145. 5. Vers. 28. darknesse the ninth plague of Egypt where was black darknesse in all the land for three dayes that no man saw another nor rose from the place where he was Exod. 10. 22 23. turned not rebellious or they disobeyed not see Psal. 5. 11. that is his words or word were not disobeyed or changed but effected as God had spoken see a like phrase noted on Psal. 49. 15. Or they may be referred to Moses and Aaron who performed the things commanded them though with danger to them Vers. 29. to bloud the first of the ten plagues Exod. 7. See Psal. 78. 44. Vers. 30. frogs the second plague Exod. 8. 3 6. Psal. 78. 45. Kings Pharaoh and his Princes so Esa. 19. 2. Vers. 31. swarme of flyes or beasts see Psal. 78. 45. This was the fourth plague Exod. 8. 24. lice the third plague All the dust of the land was lice and went upon man and beast Exod. 8. 17. Vers. 32. showers of raine in stead whereof they had haile the seventh plague Exod. 9. See Psal. 78. 47. of flames that is sorely flaming and blasting never was the like there seene Exod. 9. 24. Vers. 33. tree for trees so after verse 34. 40. and often See Psal. 34. 8. Vers. 34. grashopper or locust the eight plague Exod. 10. see Psal. 78. 46. Vers. 36. the first-borne the tenth plague whereof see Psal. 78. 51. Vers. 37. feeble ready to fall through weaknes there being an armie of six hundred thousand men Exod. 12. 37. and 13. 18. A like promise is made to the Church Esa. 33. 24. Vers. 38. dread of them that is of death for their sakes so that they forced them out and gave them treasures Exod. 12. 33 35. See the like speech Esth. 8. 17. and. 9. 2. Vers. 39. a fire that they might travell night and day towards the promised land Exod. 13. 21. Psa. 78. 14. Vers. 40. quaile that is quailes which for their lust he gave them Numb 11. Compare Psal. 78. 27 28. bread Manna whereof see Psal. 78. 24 25. and Exod. 16. Vers. 41. the Rocke at Rephidim Exod. 17. and at Kadesh Numb 20. a river so that the people and their beasts dranke Numb 20. 11. and for this the wilde beasts Dragons Ostriches honoured God Esa. 43. 20. this mercy is applied to other times Isa. 48. 21. Vers. 44. heathens the seven nations whereof see Psal. 78. 55. Vers. 45. keepe his lawes The end of all Gods mercies was that he might be glorified in his peoples obedience see Exod. 19. 4 5 6. Deut. 4. 1 40. and 6. 21 24 25. PSAL. CVI. The Psalmist exhorteth to praise God 4 He prayeth for pardon of sinne as God did with the fathers 7 The storie of the peoples rebellion and Gods mercies 47 He concludeth with prayer and praise HAlelu-jah Confesse ye to Iehovah for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Who can expresse the powers of Iehovah can cause to heare all his praise O blessed are they that keepe judgement is he that doth justice in all time Remember me Iehovah with the favourable acceptation of thy people visit me with thy salvation To see the good of thy chosen to rejoyce with the joy of thy nation to glory with thy inheritance We have sinned with our fathers we have done crookedly we have done wickedly Our fathers in Egypt did not prudently minde thy marvellous workes they remembred not the multitude of thy mercies but turned rebellious at the sea at the red sea Yet he saved them for his Name sake to make knowne his power And he rebuked the red sea and it was dried up and he led them in the deeps as in the wildernesse And he saved them from the hand of the hater and redeemed them from the hand of the enemie And the waters covered their distressers one of them was not left And they beleeved in his words they sang his praise They made haste they forgat his workes they waited not for his counsell But lusted with lust in the wildernesse and tempted God in the desart And he gave to them their request and sent leannesse into their soule And they envied at Moses in the campe at Aharon the holy one of Iehovah The earth opened and swallowed up Dathan and covered over the congregation of Abiram And a fire burned in their congregation a flame burnt up the wicked They made a calfe in Horeb and bowed themselves to a molten Idoll And turned their glory into the forme of an Oxe that eateth grasse They forgat God their Saviour that did great things in Egypt Marvellous workes in the land of Cham fearefull things by the red sea And he said to abolish them had not Moses his chosen stood in the breach before him to turne his wrathfull heat from destroying them And they contemptuously refused the land of desire they beleeved not his Word But murmured in their tents they heard not the voice of Iehovah And he lifted up his hand to them to fell them in the wildernesse And to fell their seed among the heathens and to fanne them in the lands And they were joyned to Baal-pehor and did eat the sacrifices of the dead And moved indignation by their actions and the plague brake in upon them And Phineas stood and executed judgement and the plague was restrained And it was counted to him for justice to generation and generation for ever And they caused servent wrath at the waters of Meribah and evill was to Moses for their sake For they bitterly provoked his spirit and he pronounced it with his lips They abolished not the peoples which Iehovah had said unto them But mixed themselves among the heathens and learned their works And served their Idols they were to them for a snare And they sacrified their sonnes and their daughters to Devils And shed innocent bloud the bloud of their sonnes and of their daughters whom they sacrificed to the Idols of Canaan and the land was impiously distained with blouds And they defiled themselves by their
thus wast thou decked with gold and silver Ezek. 16. 11. 12. 13. The spirituall signification according to either similitude is one and the same as after shall bee shewed rowes in Hebr. Torim which being of the singular Tor signifieth a disposition row or orderly course of things and hath affinity with Torah which hath the name of the Law in Hebrew and the one is put as an examplanation of the other as David said Is this the Law of man ô Lord God 2 Samuel 7. 19. which another Prophet relateth thus thou hast regarded me according to the order disposition or estate of a man of high degree ô Lord God 1 Chron. 17. 17. And indeed the Law of God is his ordinance or orderly disposition of his precepts the rules and canons of our life The same word Tor is also used for a Turtle-dove and Torim are Turtles as in the law of sacrifices Lev. 12. which some therefore take here to be jewels or ornaments that had the figures of Turtle doves And so the Greeke version here translateth How beautifull are thy cheekes as of a turtle dove But in the verse following where the same word is againe used the Greeke translateth We will make for thee similitudes of gold chaine 's in Heb. Charuzim a word not found but in this one place translated in Gr. collars or chaines and is interpreted by the Hebrew Doctors chaines or jewels hanged on a string like chaines to put about the necke These rowes and chaines signifie the Lawes and ordinances of God wherewith he adorneth the face and necke of his Church that in her profession practice and obedience she may bee comely and gracious in the sight of God and his people and being guided by them may vanquish her enemies Thus Solomon elsewhere saith there is gold and a multitude of rubies but the lips of knowledge are a precious jewel Proverb 20. 15. And againe My sonne heare the instruction of thy father and forsake not the law of thy mother for they shall be an ornament of grace unto thine head and chains about thy necke Proverb 1. 8. 9. They meane also the gracious effects which the Law and doctrine of God worketh in his people of humility reverence and other vertues as on the contrary pride and other like vices are said to compasse evill men about as a chaine and violence to cover them as a garment Psalme 73. 6. Likewise holy persons that teach instruct reprove and such as receive doctrine and reproofe Proverb 25. 12. and reproofes themselves are pearles Matth. 7. Thus also the Hebrewes understood this Scripture as the Chaldee paraphrase here saith When the Israelites went forth into the Wildernesse the Lord said unto Moses How fayre is this people that the words of the Law should bee given unto them that they may be as bridles in their jawes that they depart not out of the good way as an horse goeth not aside that hath a bridle in his jawes and how faire is their necke to beare the yoake of my precepts that they may bee upon them as a yoake on thenecke of a bullocke that ploweth in the field and feedeth both it selfe and the master thereof Vers. 11. We will make for thee A promise of encrease of graces to the Church by We is understood the mystery of the Trinity as in Genesis 1. 26. Let us make man So in Rev. 1. 4. 5. Grace and peace is wished from the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost and in 1 Corinth 12. 4. 5. 6. the diversities of gifts are noted to be of the Spirit the diversities of ministeries whereby those gifts are administred to be of the Lord Christ and the diversities of operations effected by the gifts and ministeries to bee of God the Father The Hebrewes also as Sol. larchi here interpret it I and my judgement hall by which phrase the Trinity of old was implyed though now the faithlesse deny the same for a judgement hall in Israel consisted of three at the least which in their close manner of speech they applyed unto GOD but their posterity understood it not Christ here teacheth his Church that every grace and good gift is from GOD as also the increase thereof Iames 1. 17. Ephes. 3. 16. that the spirituall ornaments are of his making who worketh in us both to will and to doe of his good pleasure Phil. 2. 13. Also that to him that hath shall be given and he shall have more abundance Matth. 13. 12. As in our bodies wee come naked into this world without clothes or ornaments so is the estate of our soules by nature naked and bare Ezek. 16. 4. 7. till Christ of his grace by his Spirit clotheth and adorneth us Revelation 3. 18. rowes of gold he spake before of rowes simply now he addeth of gold either to signifie more excellent ordinances and graces under the Gospell then under the Law as hee promiseth For brasse I will bring gold and for ●ron I will bring silver c. Esay 60. 17. that should proceed from faith and love and not from feare as when shee was under the bridle of the Law for wee should not bee like horse and mule whose jaw must bee bound with bit and bridle Psalme 32. 9. and yeeld obedience by constraint or it meaneth a new supply of graces so that we are changed into the image of God from glory to glory even as by the spirit of the Lord 2 Corinth 3. 18. These promises may respect both the rules ordinances gifts and graces bestowed on his people Proverbes 20. 15. and the persons themselves that are furnished with those graces as the precious sonnes of Zion are said to bee comparable to fine gold Lament 4. 1. speckes of silver in Greeke markes of silver which word markes Stigmata Paul useth in Galatians 6. 17. speaking of the markes of the Lord Iesus by suffering for his Gospell Here it meaneth variety of graces in the communion of the Saints for their mutuall helpe comfort and delight as is opened in Proverb 25. 11. 12. A word fitly spoken is like Apples of gold with pictures of silver As an eare-ring of gold and an ornament of fine gold so is a wise reprover upon an obedient eare Where we are taught that both instructions and reproofes are the ornaments of the Saints when they are prudently uttered and obediently received Neither of which can bee without the speciall grace of God who both maketh these ornaments for us and maketh us fit to receive and put them on for The hearing eare and the seeing eye the Lord hath made even both of them Proverbs 20. 12. The Chaldee paraphrast expoundeth this verse of the Law which God gave unto Israel on the two tables by the hand of Moses But though the ordinances of the Law were likened to gold and silver wherewith the Church then was decked as God telleth them in Ezekiel 16. 13. and the law of his mouth was better to his people then thousands of gold and
14. which may also be meant here seeing after her haire is likened to purple and these were colours worne of Princes and great personages and so meet for this Princes daughter verse 1. and for the attire of her head on which she weareth the hope of salvation through the blood of Christ which these colours also prefigured for an helmet 1 Thes. 5. 8. hayre The originall word dallath is no where used for hayre but in this one place as the Greek also interpreteth it properly it signifieth slendernesse or tenuitie and so meaneth small and slender hayre Some take it for a small lace or head band wherewith the attire of the head was tyed This her hayre-like purple denoteth her cogitations and purposes to bee holy heavenly and as dyed in the blood of Christ. The Chaldee paraphrase applyeth the head here spoken of to the King the chiefe Governour in Israel and the slender hayre to the poore of the people which should bee clad in purple as was Daniel Mordecai c. See the notes on Song 4. 1. where the Spouses hayre was likened to a flocke of goats that description differing from this seemeth to imply a variety of estate for Gods people are not alwaies of like condition in this world though ever glorious in his eyes the King is bound in the galleries By the King in this Song is meant Solomon that is Christ. Re●atim which the Greeke here likewise translateth galleries is in Genesis 30. 38. 41. and Exod. 2. 16. gutters wherein waters runne for the flocke to drinke unto which some thinke this place hath reference but in Song 1. 17. rahitim are galleries that runne along the house sides and so it seemeth to meane here To bee bound in the galleries is to have a fixed habitation in the house of his Church where the King is retained and as it were tyed with the bands of love towards his Spouse so excellent in all her parts that now is fulfilled that which is elsewhere said unto her The King will covet thy beauty Psalme 45. 12. and that which is spoken of the lewd woman her hands are as bands Eccles. 7. 26. may have use here of the chast woman that her graces are such as doe not onely delight the King but hold him fast bound unto her in the bands of spirituall wedlocke no more to leave her but to abide with her for ever For so he hath promised I will betroth thee unto mee for ever Hosea 2. 19. the Lord delighteth in thee and thy land shall be maried Esay 62. 4. my servant David shall be their Prince for ever and I will set my Sanctuary in the midst of them for ever more and the name of the City from that day shall bee The Lord is there Ezek. 37. 25. 26. and 48. 35. The throne of God and of the Lambe shall be in it and his servants shall serve him and they shall reigne for ever and ever Rev. 22. 3. 5. Vers. 6. and how pleasant This admiration of her beauty and pleasantnesse in all her parts cariage and administration sheweth the reason of the former speech why the King was bound in the galleries for that he was delighted and as it were ravished with her heavenly graces as before in Son 4. 9. 10. And as shee admired Christ for his fairenesse and pleasantnesse so now she is magnified for the like see the notes on Song 1. 15. 16. O love that is ô thou that art dearely loved thus they call her to signifie Christs great affection towards her for it is another and more forceable word then was used before in Song 1. 9. 15. and 2. 2. and 4. 1. 7. and 5. 2. and 6. 4. that betokening loving society and outward friendship this signifying inward charity and loving affection which is strong and servent Song 8. 6. 7. for delights or delicacies or with pleasures meaning full delight all manner pleasure so that all that love her may rejoyce with her and delight themselves in the brightnesse of her glory as Esay 66. 10. 11. Vers. 7. thy stature or thy height in Greeke thy greatnesse a palme-tree or a date tree called in Hebrew Thamar in Greeke Phoenix it is of tall and upright stature alwayes greene and flourishing bearing pleasant fruit Wherefore the just mans state is likened to this tree Psalme 92. 13. and figures of Palme trees signifying heavenly graces were made in the Temple 1 King 6. 29. and 7. 36. and foretold to bee also in the spirituall Temple under the Gospell Ezek. 41. 18. 19. and palm-branches caried in the hand or on the head were signes of victorie wherefore the Saints that by faith overcome the world appeared with palme-branches in their hands Rev. 7. 9. And the palme-tree is said to bee of such a nature that it will not bow downward or grow crooked though heavy weights be laid upon it but groweth still upright So this stature of the Spouse likened to a palme-tree sheweth her spirituall growth in the faith notwithstanding all her tribulations tending alwaies upward towards heaven till shee attaine unto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ as Eph. 4. 13. For God hath now broken the slaves of her yoke and made her goe upright Lev. 26. 13. So the Kingdome of Israel whiles it flourished is likened to a tree whose stature was exalted among the thicke branches c. Ezek. 19. 11. clusters to wit of the Vine as in v. 8. signifying hereby that her breasts were not onely fashioned as in Ezek. 16. 7. but full of milke to nourish her children and of the wine of heavenly consolations which they that love her may suck and be satisfied as Esay 66. 11. So that now the state of the Church is not as when complaint was made there is no cluster to eate Mic. 7. 1. but as when new win● was found in the cluster and he said Destroy it not for a blessing is in it Esay 65. 8. Vers. 8. I will goe-up to or I will climb-up on the palme-tree meaning to gather the fruit thereof This purpose and promise if it bee spoken in the person of Christ implyeth his acceptation of the fruits of the Spirit in his Spouse as is noted on Son 5. 1. But it seemeth by that which followeth to be the speech of her friends aforesaid speaking collectively as one person to note their unity and joint co 〈…〉 to communicate with her graces as in Esay 66. 15. 11. For things of this sort are spoken both of God and of his people Esay 62. 5. the boughes thereof or the branches of it the Hebrew Sansinnim is no where used but in this place the Greeke translateth it the heightes thereof meaning the branches which are on high and which beare the fruit For the Palme-tree though it be very tall hath no boughes growing out by the sides of the bodie as other trees but on the very top the leaves which are long like swords spread abroad pleasant to behold
him to stand before Eleazar the Priest and before all the congregation and charge thou him before their eyes And thou shalt give of thine honour upon him that all the congregation of the sonnes of Israel may heare And hee shall stand before Eleazar the Priest and he shall aske counsell for him by the judgement of Vrim before Iehovah at his mouth shall they goe out at his mouth shall they come in hee and all the sonnes of Israel with him and all the congregation And Moses did as Iehovah commanded him and he tooke Ioshua and caused him to stand before Eleazar the Priest and before all the congregation And he laid his hands upon him and charged him as Iehovah spake by the hand of Moses Annotations THen came Hebr. And they came neere or approached to wit unto Moses c. v. 2. Targum Ionathan saith they came to the place of judgement Zelophehad or Zelophchad in Greeke Salpaad son of Opher son of Galaad c. See Nū 26. 33. of the families or with among the families of Manasseh as comming before when all the other families came to be mustered ch 26. but the Greeke translateth of the familie of Manasses of Ioseph what needeth he to be named here Sol. Iarchi answereth because Ioseph loved the land as it is said in Gen. 50. 25. and ye shall carry up my bones from hence and his daughters loved the land as it is said in Num. 27. 4 Give unto us a possession c. Machlah or Mahlah Nognah Choglah c. in Greeke Maala Noua Aigla c. the Scripture nameth them foure times here and in ch 26. 33. and 36. 11. Ios. 17. 3. The order of their names is altered in Num. 36. 11. Machlah Tirzah and Hoglah c. whereupon Iarchi here saith they were all of like esteeme one as another therefore the order of them is changed Vers. 3. of Korah who was a rebell Num. 16. Zelophehad was not among other Rebels whereby he and his posteritie might be deprived of his inheritance in his sinne in or for his owne sinne as other men died in the wildernesse and he had not beene a meane to draw other men into sinne as did Korah and other rebellious persons Vers. 4. Why should the name of our father bee done away or be diminished that is let not his name be done away as the Greeke translateth Let not our fathers name be blotted out see the notes on Exod. 32. 11. It was esteemed as a curse to have their fathers name abolished as it is written In the generation following let his name be b●●ted out Psal. 109. 13. Give unto us a possession These daughters as they honoured their father deceased in seeking to have his name continued so they shewed faith in God beleeving that the land should bee given them for inheritance which the men of Israel before beleeved not and therefore could not come into it but it was promised to their children Num. 14. And though these were women no warriers not mustered among the armie Num. 26. yet beleeved they the promise to belong unto them as the inheritance was given to Abraham by promise not by the Law Gal. 3. 18. Wherfore in claiming right in the holy land they figuratively claimed inheritance in the kingdome of heaven which shall be given to them which worke not but beleeve in him which justifieth the ungodly Rom. 4. 5 6. c. So these five virgins may be considered as the five wise virgins which tooke oyle in their vessels with their l●m●es that they might be readie to goe in with the bridegroome to the marriage Matth. 25. 1. 10. and they are our examples that we should seeke comfort and assurance in the wildernesse of this world where we are weake and Orphans of our in heritance with those that are sanctified by faith in Christ to claime this portiō in the land of the living without respecting either our works or weaknesse by vertue of the covenant of grace confirmed by Christ in whom there is neither Iew nor Gentile bond nor free male nor female but all are one and whosoever are Christs are Abrahams seed and heires according to the promise Gal. 3. 28 29. Their names also seeme to be not without mysterie for Zelophehad by interpretation signifieth The shadow of feare or of dread his first daughter Machlah Infirmitie the second Noghnah Wandring the third Choglah Turning about for joy or Da●●ing the fourth Milcah a Queene the fift Tirzah Wel-pleasing or Acceptable By these names we may observe the degrees of our reviving by grace in Christ for wee all are borne as of the shadow of feare being brought forth in sinne and for feare of death were all our life time subject to bondage Hebr. 2. 15. This begetteth Infirmitie or Sicknesse griefe of heart for our estate after which Wandring abroad for helpe and comfort we find it in Christ by whom our sorrow is turned into joy He communicateth to us of his royaltie making us Kings and Priests unto God his Father Rev. 1. 6. and shall be presented unto him glorious and without blemish Ephes. 5. 27. So the Church is beautifull as Tirzah Song 6. 3. Vers. 5. brought their cause or brought neere their judgement that is their cause to be judged of as in difficult cases he used to doe Foure principally are observed of which this was one see the Annotations on Num. 15. 34. Vers. 7. speake right speake that which is just and meet to be done so God approveth their desire and request of faith and sheweth himselfe to bee the father of the fatherlesse Psal. 68. 5. And of them Sol. Iarchi here observeth that their eyes saw that which Moses eyes saw not giving then shalt give them that is thou shalt surely give them without faile This commandement was fulfilled in Ios. 17. 4. Here the word them as Chazkuni also noteth is of the male or masculine gender though he speaketh of females which may bee either in respect of their faith and confidence such as might beseeme men or of Gods gift especially of his grace in Christ hereby figured which he giveth without difference of male and female Gal. 3. 28. The Hebrewes in Talmud Bab. in Baba hathra ch 8. have recorded that The daughters of Zelophehad had three portions for inheritance their fathers portion because he was one of them that came out of Egypt and his portion with his brethren in the goods of Hepher his father and because he was the first-borne he had two portions Which Rambam in his Annotations on that place explaineth thus All that came out of Egypt were to have part in the land and if the father and his sonne both came out each of them had a portion alike And Zelophehad and Hepher were both of them that came out of Egypt so Zelophehad was to have had his part and to have had by inheritance of Hepher two parts because he was the first-borne c. Vers. 8. If