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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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Ceremonious and External Rites of the Nazarites Vow He only yielded thereto as yet indifferent Nor is it any other than Ridiculous for the Romanists to make this the Ground of their Religious Vows and for their shaven Crowns which is now so bald a Ceremony in France that some be ashamed of the Mark. CHAP. XIX Paul at Ephesus NOW come we to Paul's sixth and last Station before his return to Jerusalem in his Journey to which City he did visit many places as he returned thither as the sequel will show which was at Ephesus Acts 19.1 The Metropolis of the Lesser Asia where he made a long stay about the space of three years verse 10. and verse 22. in Asia that is in Ephesus he stayed still after the former two years which commendeth Paul's great diligence for the planting of the Gospel 'T is expresly said by the space of three years Acts 20.31 Here was that admirable door which he saith was opened for him 1 Cor. 16.9 and here it was that the famous Church which he wrote his Epistles to afterwards was gathered and likewise John wrote another to it from the mouth of Christ Rev. 2.1 2 c. and here Paul fought with Beasts after the manner of men 1 Cor. 15.32 N.B. Paul's Station at Ephesus presents to our prospect two principal parts First What he did there And secondly What he suffered there As to the first namely his Doings these may be considered either in a private or in a publick respect His Private actings there were twofold 1. His examining the believers he found in that place about the gifts of the Holy Ghost c. ver 2 3 4 with 5 6 and 7. 2. His determining with himself to return unto Jerusalem verse 21. giving notice of this his purpose to the Neighbouring Churches verse 22. by Timothy c. N.B. Then his Publick Actings there were twofold 1. His Preaching the Gospel And 2. His working Miracles there 1. He preached which is expressed in the Circumstances 1. Of place this is twofold 1. In the Jews Synagogue verse 8. Then 2. In the School of Tyrannus a Teacher of the Law Reading Law-Lectures there verse 9. And 2. Of time which was about the space of two years verse 10. And 2. His working-miracles this is amplified and Illustrated by a distribution of the whole into parts verse 11.12 that the power of Christ might be more clearly manifested in him N.B. Then Paul's sufferings for such good doings in this place are next specified and reducible to two heads 1. What opposition the Jewish Jugglers made against Paul's Ministry and Miracles verse 13. but the Devil in the possessed prevailed against the Devil in them v. 14 15 16. and when it was observed how God over-shot the Devil in his own bow this produced the wonderful effects 1. Of Confession of Sins Verse 17 18. And 2. Of Amendment of Manners and Reformation of life verse 19. in burning their books which taught Magick Astrology and charming of love c. Then 2. What from the Silver-Smiths of the City who made Shrines for Diana whose Captain in that uproar against Paul was Demetrius verse 24. who by a Starched Oration stirred up all the Rabble into Sedition and to the apprehending of Paul's Parteners and puting the whole City in to a Confusion verse 25 26 27 28 29. with 32 34. yet was all this Stir hushed by the wisdom of the Town-Clark which was indeavoured by Paul himself but was hindered by his Friends verse 30 31. at last effectually v. 35 to the end Those many heads of Resolves afford many famous Remarks The first Remark is 'T is a Transcendent Mercy of God to any Church of Christ that in the absence of one powerful Preacher they are well provided with another N.B. This was God's mercy to the Church of Corinth that when Paul had planted a famous Church there and was called away by the Spirit of God to go into Ephesus he left behind him such an able instrument as Apollos was to water his new plantation Acts 19.1 The Ability of Apollos whom some think to be the same with Apelles Rom. 16.10 is expressed Acts 18.24 where he is described 1. By his Name and Nation he was an Alexandrian-Jew by his Eloquence he was a Rational Prudent and Learned man and by his profound knowledge in the Sacred Scriptures he was a mighty Scripture-man both apt to teach the truth and able to maintain it 2. He is described by his Teachers Aquila and Priscilla who in private discourse contributed much to Apollos's further and fuller Instruction for tho' he was a man fervent in Spirit Improving to the utmost all those aforesaid Qualifications and taught diligently the things of the Lord in the Jews Synagogue yet knew he only the baptism of John who Baptized with water only but could not Baptize with the Holy Ghost Matth 3.11 N.B. Or the Doctrine of John who was a Preacher of Repentance and of Faith in Christ the Lamb of God he pointed at whose Baptism and Belief was the same with the Apostles afterwards for he baptized them and their Master too only after Christ's Ascension they received extraordinary Gifts Acts 2.4 and knew many truths more fully which had not been Revealed in the baptist's times N.B. And herein those two Tent-makers instructed Apollos not that they turned publick preachers for Paul saith 'T is not lawful for a woman to Teach that is Publickly 1 Tim. 2. v. 11 12. but Aquila and Priscilla having had so much Converse with Paul they were the more able in private conference to inform Apollos better than yet he knew with that knowledge they had learned from the Apostle N.B. And tho' Apollos was very skilful in the words of Scripture to expound them and had an excellent Elocution wherewith to express well his Exposition yet was he not puffed up herewith but condescends to be Catechized by these tent-makers an humble man can be content to learn from the meanest even a little Child shall lead him Isa 11.6 now he who had taught diligently according to the best skill he had attained before became far more accomplished to convince the Jews that the Messiah who was sent from God was the Saviour of the World and this he did both in Corinth which was in Achaia supplying Paul's absense and in Ephesus also Acts 18.25 26 27 28. Confuting gain-sayers and Confirming such as believed through grace The second Remark is The foundation of this Church at Ephesus was laid and those twelve members ver 7. were admitted into Church-Order by examination Paul asks them have ye received the Holy Ghost Acts 19.1 2. This Question was de primor diis Ecclesiae concerning its first Constitution for as yet these Disciples were not come up into any Ecclesiastick form or Discipline So that the Apostle asks them how they were grounded c. that it might appear they were Divinely called to become the foundation of that Church They Answer we
lowest in Hell yea and every Soul whom he draweth thither by his Temptation shall be as a milstone hang'd about his Neck to hold him down lowest in the bottomless Lake 1. Oh how are Earthly men whose footstool is Heaven and whose Throne is the Earth minding onely Earthly things the Devils meat And 2. Oh pray for the accomplishment of that promise that the old Serpent may not for ever hurt the Herbs of Grace those Green Grass the Saints but that he may be reduced to his old Diet of Dust Isa 65.25 which Gospel promise plainly importeth that this literal curse upon the bodily Serpent did imply further and fuller mysteries so Mic. 7.17 Deut. 32.24 That the Devil may be remanded to his first Damnation 3. ☞ Oh that we may not have dirty hearts nor lead dirty lives So we are given as Diet to the Devil If we be Holy ones God will lay his charge upon Satan not to hurt us especially if green and growing in holiness Rev. 9.4 Never was David more tender of having his Son Absolom hurt 2 Sam. 18.5 than God is of such Servants who grow in Grace and Godliness The fourth part of the Devils Doom is I will put enmity c. Though Satan be more darkly doomed in the three former parts on the Serpent yet more clearly in this fourth Some indeed do say that God would not expresly Doom the Devil in the Serpent for two reasons 1. Lest Adam and Eve knowing that there was some Spirit in the Serpent they might have faln into more grievous mistakes 2. Lest the Jews now weak might think there was another power besides God that was able to oppose the counsels of God Yet the Divine Doom in this fourth part of it is properly and without a figure declared and denounced against the Devil himself as well as against the Serpent Vaeibah Ashith I will put enmity c. Here begins the book of the Lords Wars Numb 21.14 which compendiously containeth the continued combat betwixt the Church of God and the God of this World as the Devil is call'd 2 Cor. 4.4 Here the Lords hand is upon his Throne as Exod. 17.16 and he hath solemnly sworn that he will wage war not with Amalek only but with all the Seed of the Serpent those Serpents and Generation of Vipers Mat. 3.7 and 23.33 and children of the Devil Joh. 8.44 1. Joh. 3.10 c. from Generation to Generation Though there be an irreconcileable antipathy betwixt all the brood of Serpents and the whole Race of Mankind according to the literal sense yet the severest and sharpest Hostility lyes betwixt the Godly seed of the Woman and the wicked seed of the spiritual Serpent Satan according to the mystical sense who when discerned in his proper colours as a Devil is abhorred of all Mankind in General like as he hateth all Mankind without Exception and therefore this crafty Devil always studiously hides his hatred to man under some specious pretences of good-will to mankind as he did here to Eve by which prevalent impostures he holdeth the greatest part of the World to lye in wickedness as his Vassals 1 John 5.19 and so comes to be called the God of this World 2 Cor. 4.4 And though this War and Acts of Hostility had their beginning here yet there should never be an ending thereof until Christ the promised seed of the Woman conquer the Devil and cast him into the lake of sire and brimstone So that the issue of this long-lasting War shall certainly be ruine to the Devil but victory to the Elect in Christ This is the undoubted scope of the first Gospel that was Preached here in Paradise unto faln Man being both comminatory to the Tempter and consolatory to the Tempted that as by the former the Devil might be cast down into despair so by the latter our first Parents might be raised up into some hope of mercy seeing this Gospel is wholly prophetical foretelling the future and wonderful Catastrophe and Issue of both those mutual implacable Hostilities wherein two pairs or couples of Enemies are expresly considerable The first couple of Enemies in this enmity are Satan and the Woman Hebrew Benekah Uben Haishah Here the Lord speaks to Satan whom the Serpent did personate passing from the thing signifying to the thing signified as Daniel passeth from the great Tree to the great King signified by the Tree Dan. 4.13 and as both Paul and Peter passeth from the Stone to Christ signified by the Stone Rom. 9.33 and 1 Pet. 2.6 c. So God here passeth from the Serpent to Satan signified by the Serpent as Signum pro Siguato the Sign for the matter signified saying I will put enmity 'twixt thee O Satan and this Woman as the Hebrew word Haishah importeth God as it were pointing to her with his finger 'twixt thee the Seducer and her the Seduced by thy Seducements Therefore by this woman cannot be meant the Virgin Mary as the Popish Monks have dotingly dreamed for this enmity began long before the blessed Virgin was born into the World and that Monkish Dream is notoriously derogatory to the honour of Christ while it transfers the Glory of that Victory over the Serpent from the Son to the Mother from our Redeemer to Mary who her self call'd her Son my Saviour Luke 1.47 especially as those Doting Dreamers read the following clause Hi for Hu the Feminine for the Masculine She for He as if Mary the Mother had broke the Serpents Head and not Christ the Son This is the Sandy Foundation of many Popish Fopperies And though God here putteth enmity 'twixt Satan and the Woman yet this implyeth not that the Man should continue in any Amity with Satan but God opposes the Woman as the weaker Vessel to Satan because the Woman was first deceived by Satan and by this weak Vessel God would put Satan to shame and because the Woman being first in the transgression was the first that needed Comfort yea and Counsel too never any more to hold any friendly familiarity with Satan but to look upon him as a deadly Enemy This very law did most graciously open a door of hope for Repentance and Salvation to our first Parents The law of this lasting enmity came from God as a Judge to Satan but as a Friend Father and Physician to them for to flee from Satan as an Enemy is to flee from Sin and Death and to return to God and Life And without all doubt our first Parents were both mindful and observant of maintaining an enmity according to this Divine law against the Devil all the many years that they lived after for Adam lived 930. years after this The second pair or couple of Adversaries in this Enmity is the two Seeds the Seed of the Serpent and the Seed of the Woman the sense whereof is this 1. By the Seed of the Serpent is not only meant those Venemous Creatures that have enmity with Mankind according to the literal sense
him 1 Cor. 4.3 And hereupon he durst not think either better or worse of himself for the flatterings or slanderings of men Mans day as the Apostle calls it or Judgment is like the Sun which makes the day making uncertain Shadows longer in the Morning but shorter at Noon yet man may not think himself taller or shorter by his Shadow and though Paul had his due praise in all the Churches of Christ yet durst he not be puffed up by their praise no more than dejected by the others dispraise for he knew himself a chosen Vessel yet but an Earthen Vessel that had some Cracks and Flaws in it hence he appeals to the Infallible Tryer to wit God 1 Cor. 4.4.7 2 Cor. 10.18 Well knowing a man may be Man-proof who is not God-proof Thus Peter also did Joh. 21.15.16 17. So then 2. God who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heart-knower Acts 1.24 is the truest Tryer of man who tryed Abraham here Satan can make his Conjecture and man may give his guess yet both be fallible 't is the Royalty of the great God to be only Infallible for he knoweth our thoughts 1 Cor. 3.20 And seeth them while afar off Psal 139.2 Mat. 9.4 He knows what is in man John 2.25 Deus intimior intimo nostro God is more inward with us than we are with our selves as the Gardiner knows what flowers he shall have at the Spring because all the Roots in his Garden are well known of him so God knowing our hearts knows also all the creatures of our hearts Heb. 4.12 13. Every artificer knoweth his own work within as well as without and thence knoweth what his work will do how much more the chief Architect God 2. The Patient or Tryed is twofold also 1. Mens Persons 2. Mens Works both good and bad The third part of the Earth must be Tryed in the Fire as Metals are and pass through it if good Zech. 13.9 Yea all the World at the last day 2 Pet. 3.7.10.12 2 Thes 1.7 8 9. Then shall the persons as well as the works of wicked men be burned but for good men some of their works which are not according to the Pattern in the Mount shall be burnt but their persons shall be saved yet so as by Fire 1 Cor. 3.14 15. Like those persons which escape in a manner naked out of the Fire when the City was burnt saving only some Cash or Jewels but losing all their lumber Thus many prayers which were but the cries of the creature and not the breathings of Gods Spirit and many duties performed only in the form without the power may be lost in that day as no better than so much lumber but before this last day we may not think it strange that we meet with Tryals yea Fiery Tryals in our day as 1 Pet. 4.12 We must not be amazed when brought into a maze as if some new thing had hapned to us for 't is no untrodden path we have many Presidents the great Friends and Favourites of Heaven have passed before us through the Fire Psal 66 12. Isa 31.9 Mal. 3.2 Lam. 1.13 1 Pet. 1.7 And in the ten Persecutions and ever since to the Marian days and we have many Prophecies that we shall be tryed by Fire 1 Cor. 3. ●3 c. I will bring saith God the third part through the Fire Zech. 13.9 Few they were but not faultless They must therefore pass through the Fire that there they may be purged and leave their dreggs and dross behind them what Fire is to Gold the File to Iron the Fan to Wheat the Sope to Cloaths and Salt to Flesh that is Tribulation when sanctified to a gracious Soul yet this is our comfort he goeth with them into the Fire as Dan. 3.28 and plucks them out as Brands out of the Fire Zech. 3.3 He carries them through Fire and Water Isa 43.2 and Psal 66.12 This is all the hurt he doth them 't is not to ruine but to refine them to hide pride from them Job 33.19 c. God hereby divides the sin which he hateth from the Son which he loveth for by this the iniquity of Jacob is purged and this is all the Fruit the taking away of their sin which they may very well spare and never hurt themselves Isa 27.9 That when God hath tryed them they may come out as Gold Job 23.10 Upon this account Gods people fall into many Temptations Jam. 1.2 They fall they go not gradually into them Step by Step but are precipitated hurryed headlong and plunged into them not into one of them or a few of them but into manifold Temptations Alas what may befal us or what Tryals yea what Fiery Tryals we may fall into we know not God may prove us yet to do us good at the latter end Deut. 8.16 The good Lord make us Faithful to Death Rev. 2.10 3. The means whereby God Tryeth Man are fourfold 1 By Prosperity which oft proves too strong Wine for Weak Brains Prov. 1.32 Destroying fools Such as God suffers to prosper in their sin an heavy Judgment this is call'd Gods laying a stumbling block before them Ezek. 3.20 And because the wicked have not changes therefore they fear not God Psal 55.19 Thus God proved Israel by prosperity Deut. 8.2 And when Jesurun waxed fat he kicked against God Deut. 32.15 As Pliny saith of the young Asses Colt pullus lacte materno saturatus matrem suis Regratulatur calcibus When filled with its Dams Milk gives her a kick with his heels to let her know he is but an Ass in his unkind regratulations Alas the most fatted Cattel are but most fitted for the Shambles whereas good men learn with Paul to abound and to be in want Phil. 4.11 And 't was David's great honour that the prosperity of a Court life while he was a courtier in quelling Sauls Phrenzy by his exquisite Musick did not put his mouth out of tast for his retired simplicity he could go from the Court to his Sheepfold until Goliah came to defie the God of Israel 'T is a good heart that frames to all conditions See more of this in my Hearts Treachery or Mirror Chap. 7. 2. By Adversity behold I will melt them and try them Jer. 9.7 'T is a Metaphor taken from Metalists God will cast them into the fiery crucibles of affliction he is the Master Founder and will melt away their dross c. Their Dilecta Delicta or Darling sins if they be not Reprobate Silver Jer. 6.30 Impurgeable Inexpiable and Incorrigible then all 's consumed and nothing remaineth Deus est sapiens nummularius nummum fictum non recipiet saith Bernard God is too wise a money-changer and will not be put off with counterfeit Coin that Metal which will not abide the Fire is Refuse and Reprobate as fire tryeth the Truth of Metals so do Battels the courage of Souldiers Suitable to this is the saying of Paul to Timothy Thou therefore endure hardness as
silence upon hearing of the Rape of his Daughter was far better than his Son's Self-vindication notwithstanding their fair pretences afore-mentioned and he did far better in holding his peace thereat than they did both in their malapert pertinacy and petulancy towards their grave Father the Patriarch in thus justifying their cursed Cruelty to his face Gen. 34.31 as well as in their bold and bloody Butchery upon these poor Barbarians According to Solomon's saying He that ruleth his own spirit is better and doth better than he that taketh and ransacketh a City Prov. 16.32 By the Faln Estate the spirit in us lusteth to Envy and to Revenge Jam. 4.1 5. Unruly Anger is outragious and never thinks what becomes a man for the present nor fore-thinks what will come following for the future hereafter as may well be exemplifi'd in those two bloody Brethren How much better was Valentinian the Emperor who said upon his death-bed That among all the Victories one only did most comfort him and being asked what it was He answered I have overcome my worst Enemy my own naughty heart The same might good Jacob say here in his Silence under this Suffering and in his Patience under God's Providence which both hush'd and dismiss'd mutinous Thoughts in his Soul as the Town-Clerk did the many-headed multitude in Ephesus Acts 19.35 36 c. Whereas on the contrary his Sons rush on into Rash and Revengeful Outrages never endeavouring to becalm the Raging Waves of their own turbulent and boiling spirits Cedamus leve sit quod bene fertur onus The afflicted person that sitteth alone and is silent Lam. 3.28 makes his burden more bearable The second Considerable in this plotted and projected Revenge is the fair opportunity for it both given on Shechem's side and taken on Simeon and Levi's side 1. That which was given by Shechem was his offering to make Defloured Dinah some Amends as they phrase it by his Marrying her 'T is said v. 3. Shechem's Soul clave unto Dinah Hebr. Dabak was glued to her wherein as bad as he was yet was better to her than Amnon was to Tamar or many other Debauchees of our day in several respects For 1. He after Defiling Dinah still loved her exceedingly even with Soul-love and desired still to take her into his bosom but Amnon who had a better Father and Instructor than Hamor the Heathen was first forced Tamar then turns her yea kicks her out of doors for 't is expresly said He hated her exceedingly 2 Sam. 13.14 15 c. his lust promising more to 〈◊〉 in the expectation and ambition than he found in the fruition by a just hand of God 2. Shechem correcteth his base-born Love or rather Lust by seeking to make her his lawful Wife whom he had before unlawfully prostituted as his Harlot whereas Tamar modestly proposed a Match and Marriage to Amnon though it was impracticable by the Law Levit. 18.6 9 11. rather than Harlotry to allay the rage of his Lust for the present and to escape this brunt of his violence Howbeit he would not hearken to her voice 2 Sam. 13.12 13 14. neither in this nor in other grave counsel Tamar gave him His Lust cryed louder and did out-cry all her pious perswasions and the Devil making him stark deaf to all he pursued his wicked purpose and after it his raging Lust was turned into the Fury of Folly and Amnon's desperate madness in thrusting Tamar out of doors after he had satisfied his Lust upon her publickly proclaimed his own sin and exposed his Innocent Sister to open shame not taking the least care after committing for concealing his sin or for qualifying her sorrow 3. Shechem after he had Defloured Dinah spake kindly to her v. 3. or as the Hebrew hath it spake to her heart which the Greek translateth according to her mind and the Chaldee paraphraseth He spake comfort to her heart for he finding the Damosel disconsolate and sadly dejected for the injury he had done her and declaring her great dolour of heart by floods of tears flowing from her Eyes he laboured to counter-comfort her by promising to make her a Princess in marrying her and to endow her with a Prince-like Port and Portion According to the old Rule in that case provided Dotet Ducat If a man humble a Virgin his Mulct must be both to give her a Dowry and withal to take her in Marriage Nevertheless this is no satisfaction to the great God whatever it may be accounted to the poor wronged Woman for Marriage which is God's Ordinance must not be entred into through the Devil 's Portal 'T is a wicked praeposterous practice to make Women Mothers with shame before they first be made Wives with credit But however quite contrary to this comforting course of Shechem to Dinah was that of Amnon's to Tamar whom he most notoriously discomforted by turning his Love or Lust into the contrary extream of Hatred by belching out of his black mouth his Arise and be gone and by posting her out of his presence so rudely and ragingly before any part of her sublime sorrow could be digested 2 Sam. ● 3.15 16 17 18 19. or her Innocency and Honour could be secured by secrecy Her Deflouring flowed from his brutish Lust bewitch'd with the Bait of her Beauty but his kicking her out of doors under her aforesaid circumstances must come from barbarous Cruelty 4. This Example of Shechem may serve also to condemn the prophane practice of those Debauchees of our day whose hearts and lives are so loose that they like not to come into any Bonds or under any Yokes no not into the Bond or Yoke of Marriage though it be both a Sweet Honourable and an Holy Bond or Yoke 1. 'T is a Sweet Yoke Conjugium licet Jugum dulce tamen est Jugum Wedlock though a Yoke yet is a most sweet Yoke Marriage quasi Merry-Age when rightly mann'd and manag'd 't is the merryest part of mortals life hence Marriage day is call'd The day of the rejoycing of man's heart Cant. 3.11 because man then finds again his lost Rib which is matter of great Joy 2. 'T is an Honourable Yoke Heb. 13.4 Honourable to all to Gentle and Simple to Clergy and Laity so called 3. 'T is Holy as it is call'd the Covenant of God Prov. 2.17 and of Divine Institution for Humane Good even in the State of Innocency Gen. 2.18 c. But we have got such dissolute and profligate persons that Abhor Marriage as they prophanely profess both with their words and deeds calling this Sweet Honourable and Holy Bond a Cursed Confinement disliking honest and peculiar Enclosures These worst sort of Levellers break down all Hedges lay all in common and like yea love more to live upon the Commons May they but have common Whores they matter not for proper Wives contrary to Exod. 22.16 17. which forbids Enticing and Deut. 22.28 29. which forbids Enforcing a Maid and many other Scriptures Yea and
Bethel Gen. 35.1 was only until he had perform'd his Vow 2. It may not be doubted but that this Holy Man having such high Communion with God departed from Bethel by the Command of God he who called him thither must call him thence also 3. But Suppose the time of Jacob's removal from Bethel after his Vow was paid God left to his own Prudence yet it may not be imagined that so Pious and Prudent a Patriarch would wilfully expose both himself to the loss or his Dear Wife and his Rachel to the loss of h●r Dear Life The Hebrews do indeed affirm That Rachel being wearied with her Journey was brought to her Travel before the Time If so then there would have been some appearance of Immaturity and Imperfection in Benjamin when Born whereof the Scripture is silent 'T is more probable that Jacob might be ignorant that Rachel was so very nigh her Time otherwise he had not removed for Travelling Women will make but bad Travellers But even to the most prudent Persons many things may happen beyond their Expectation And however this be taken it must be granted Jacob had cause enough to be jealous that he was mistaken in so bold an Adventure his Ignorance of Rachel's so near approaching Travel could not relieve him against his Jealousie that himself was at least the causa sine quâ non if not the Principal yet the Instrumental or Accidental Cause or Occasion of his Dear Wives Miscarriage He could not look upon his so hasty removal of her when so unfit for it without Remorse and Regret especially considering how First Rachels Travel came upon her when she was but a Field-breadth from Bethlehem-Ephratah that fruitful House of Bread as the word signifies where she might have had better Help and more Accommodations This was a sad Circumstance to fall short of such a City only Kibrath haerets Gen. 35. and 48.7 which the Septuagint translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hippodromum an Horse-Race the Chaldee Stadium Pagnin Milliare a Mile Borcardus a fleet-shot and Rab Kimchi a morning-walk to come within a little way as our Reading is of Bethlehem the very place wherein Christ the Son of God was born Mat. 2.1 that Bread which came down from Heaven John 6.33 was born in that City Baith-lechem which signifies the House of Bread and not Reach it with his lovely Rachel This made the Disaster much sadder Oh how happy might Jacob think himself if his Benjamin might be born there where his Shilo whom he foresaw by his Spirit of Prophecy Gen. 49.10 should be born and his Rachel live too to rejoice in the mercy which he might think might have come to pass had she been so happy and he with her therein to have held out to this City call'd also Ephratah for its fruitfulness of all sorts of fruit and food where she might have been corroborated with all good Cordials and Comforts and thereby carried through her Travel Which is the second thing to be considered that must needs pinch Jacob's spirit Rachel's Travel was hard and so hard that 't is twice told in Scripture Gen. 35.16 17. she had hard Travel and if her Travelling on foot that same day of her Travel made her Travel harder as probably enough it did being a Journey of twelve miles betwixt Bethel and Bethlehem this also is another Aggravation and could not but grieve Jacob's Soul for a long time after yet before I say Jacob could possibly have digested his sorrows for the death of his dear Yokefellow who had been a faithful Fellow-sufferer with him in all his hard service in Syria and in all his sore Travels and Sufferings in his Return homeward to Canaan hitherto before he had sung out his sad Song of being exceeding loth to lose her did this fourth Cross of his Eldest Sons Incest befal him Jacob falls far short of David's priviledge and mercy whose two Wives are expresly said to go up with him out of all his Wandrings and Banishments unto Hebron 2 Sam. 2.2 God then thought it a most meet mercy for David and for his two Wives Abigail and Ahinoam to be partakers together of Prosperity as they had been before at burnt Ziklag c. 2 Sam. 30.5 18. Partners together in Adversity And David did judge it but just likewise to hand his two Wives along with him to Hebron that as they had been comforts to him in his misery they might also be Conforts with him in his mercy and communicate together so far as their share should reach with his Dignity and Glory In which they were indeed true Types of Christ and his Church when she for a while hath suffered with him she shall then Reign with him for evermore 2 Tim. 2.12 Luke 22.28 29. The Lord Jesus will likewise in a short time remove his Spouse the Church from the Land of her Banishment and Bitterness even from the Ashes of her forlorn Ziklag to the Hebron of her peace and eternal happiness where she shall have Fellowship as Hebron signifies with glorified Saints and glorious Angels for ever Her Redeemer hath taken order for this already John 17.24 that where he is there she may be also and is only gone before as her Harbinger to prepare the best Rooms for her more honourable Reception John 14.2 3. not reckoning himself right and compleat until this be done and that his Church be with him Eph. 1.23 But alas though this was David's Priviledge which praefigured the Promises to hand both his Wives to Hebron yet Jacob must not be so happy in his going to the self same City even to Hebron Gen. 35.27 but one of and the best beloved of his Wives must lay her bones by the way his dear Rachel must fall short of Mamre that is Hebron where Isaac l●ved and where Abraham and Sarah Isaac and Rebekah and her Sister Leah lay buried Gen. 49.31 Rachel must not be joyned with them in burial which phrase importeth a Judgment Isa 14 20. Such sad circumstances as are all these aforesaid must most probably seize upon her Husbands heart yea and sit long upon his spirit before time alone could wear them off notwithstanding all these Aggravations fore-mentioned Jacob was not got above two miles farther of his Journy towards his Father in Hebron to wit one mile from Rachel's Sepulchre which lay about that distance North from Bethlehem and another mile from thence to the Tower of Edar which lies about the same distance towards the South from Bethlehem 〈◊〉 the Travels of the Patriarchs tell us ere Reuben his Eldest and so should have been his wisest Son climbs up into his Fathers Bed and lyes carnally with Bilhah his Fathers Wife This was an ugly fault in so godly it Family So it sometimes falls out through the malice of Satan who designs thereby to put the greater disparagement upon Profession and upon the pious practice of the good ways of God Satan never tempted Saul to such heinous actions
were silent not endeavouring to qualify his Soul-afflicting Questions Oh what shall I do And whither shall I go yet when they inform'd him afterward how they had not slain him but sold him he was then satisfied and concurr'd with them to cheat Jacob with Joseph's Bloody Coat Gen. 37.31 32 33 for it seemeth they were all in the conspiracy Reuben with the rest to conceal their craft and cruelty in the Sale of their Brother They dip Joseph's parti colour'd Coat in the Blood of a Kid and send it to the good Old Man by the Hands of their Servants who were Innocent as well as Ignorant of the cruel crime and durst not carry it themselves to him lest their discomposed countenances should bewray and betray their own guilty Consciences Heu quàm difficile est crimen non prodere vultu Their plot and project succeeds as they had propos'd it The credulous Father believes their lye cryes Some evil Beast hath Devoured him which was a truth in this sense that those evil Beasts his bad Sons had made him away Jacob's credulity is apparent herein seeing he doth not more strictly examine both his Servants and his Sons about the time and the place when and where they found this Rent and Bloody Garment The place should have been viewed where Joseph was pretended to be worried for there some scraps of him might be seen undevoured seeing 't is not likely that any Beast could devour him all The Neighbouring Inhabitants might have been asked whether evil Beasts Haunted that place such as that courteous Passenger who set wandring Joseph into his right way Gen. 37.15 yea and the Blood upon the Coat might have been under a strict scrutiny whether it were Man's or Beasts Blood But alas the good old perplexed Patriarch was under such a perturbation of Mind and such a consternation of Spirit that he was not permitted to think of any such things he accuseth the Evil Beast that was Innocent and acquits his Beastly Sons whom he knew hated Joseph of all suspicion or Fratricide or Murder thus those Hypocrites cover one Sin with another and involve themselves into the guilt of many Sins while they go about to hide one To the palliation of one lye arc required ten Thus they deluded Jacob but the great Jehovah could not be deceived by them And so far as Reuben was a joint conspirator with the rest in so wickedly imposing upon a credulous Parent almost to the breaking of his Heart and that for so many years till God at last brought it to light he is justly to be blamed Though his fervency for delivering Joseph as above deserves to be commended yet his inconstancy in good must be condemned for Truth in the beginning Zeal all the way and Persverance to the end are the three Ingredients whereof a right good man is compounded and compleated Section the Third Having first viewed Joseph's Sellers in the second place his Buyers come to the next consideration Those Buyers of Joseph pass under a double name 1. They are call'd Ishmaelites Gen. 37.25 27 28. and Gen. 39.1 And 2. They are call'd Midianites Gen. 37.28 and 36. These two were a distinct People descended from a distinct Original yet both the Off-spring of Abraham the Ishmaelites sprang from Ishmael his Son by Hagar Gen. 16.15 and the Midianites from Midian Abraham's Son also by Keturah Gen. 25.2 yet are these two names promiscuously used and as it were confounded together here as they are also in Jud. 8.22 24 26. because the Midianites lived in the Country of the Ishmaelites and exercis'd the Trade of Merchants among them so that they became a mixed people for a great part of them in their Habitations hereupon the Chaldee calls them Arabians a third name to the two former of Gnarab which signifies to be mixed because they were a mixed people Those Ishmaelites and Midianites were so intermingled each with other both in their Habitation and in their Conversation as to mutual commerce intercourse of Trade that they are oft taken for one the same People as here Gen. 37. the two Names signifie the same persons comparing v. 28. with v. 36. and Gen. 39.1 where 't is said Joseph's Brethren sold him to the Ishmaelites and the Midianites sold him unto Potiphar and Potiphar bought him of the Ishmaelites However here is a sweet providence of God for good to Afflicted Joseph to be perspicuously seen in many circumstances as famous footsteps thereof The first famous Circumstance is No sooner had those conspirators cast Joseph into the Pit where they design'd to famish him till he died by Famine which in it self is a more cruel Death than if he had died by their Swords Lam. 4.6 9. praestat semel mori quàm semper moribundum esse 't is better to be suddenly dispatch'd and soon put out of their pain than to pine away by Inches Lev. 26.39 and to be Tormented a long time with fear and sense of dying by Famine a far worse Weapon than the Sword Thus they Lodg poor Joseph stript of his two Garments which were to keep him warm both his Long Coat that reach'd down to his Ankles call'd Tunica Talaris and his parti-coloured Coat call'd Polymita as Lyra and Menochius say so Joseph lay naked to be Starved in the Pit there to starve him with cold as well as with Hunger and when they had laid him there they leave him in this disconsolate condition then they sat down to Eat v. 24 25. wherein was a most Marvelous Providence this did not fall out by any cast of uncertain chance out of Fortunes Office but 't was ordered thus by the over-ruling hand of God as the casting of Joseph into the Pit by the prevailing influence of Reuben who was one of the Conspirators Company to save him from being immediately Murder'd was a Miracle of Mercy NB. Rather than that Gods Innocent Joseph's should not be Delivered God will when no other can be had raise up a Redeemer and a deliverer for them out of the very company of the Conspirators themselves as He hath lately done in this late Damnable Popish Plot drawing forth some of themselves to discover it so their sitting down to Eat was no less a Miracle of Mercy for had they presently gone away and not sat down Joseph had in all probability perish'd in the Pit and never have been sold into Egypt so Jacob and those very Conspirators must have died by Famine the Death they doom'd Joseph to had he not been there to relieve them Gen. 45.5 and 50.20 Act. 7.11 12 13. How may step aside a little and with Moses Exod. 3.3 stand to behold Gods work of Wonder 1. In Gods governing Reuben's the Elder Brothers advice so as to get Joseph cast into the Pit Whether it were his entire Love to his Brother or it was nothing but his own Self-love designing hereby to reconcile himself to his effended Father that moved him most to make this
Unanimity all the Confederate King 's of Canaan could Combine under the great King Jabin against Israel whereas many of Israel stood Neuters and could not Combine against the Common Enemy and their Multitude is there likewise intimated which gives a lustre to their Vnanimity though many for they were so vastly numerous as to fill all the Champion Countrey betwixt the Waters of Megiddo and the River Kishon yea and lastly they could all be Voluntiers while many Israelites were cursed Neuters and for their Magnanimity too they could serve Sisera freely without pay they took no gain of Money such love they had to their Cause or rather such Malice against Israel whose Spoil they hoped for their Pay 2. Of Israel's Auxiliaries both the Stars above ver 20. having the upper ground of the Enemy and Kishon below ver 21. swept them away as a Besome doth Dust and Dirt out of a Room Seventhly The Epiphonema Conclusion or Epilogue is partly pleasant in a Poetical Sarcasm or Scoff at Sisera's Mother who was sure of her Son's Success c. ver 28 29 30. Such was her Pride and Carnal Confidence upon sensual grounds having no respect to the Power and Providence of God and 't is partly serious in praying that God would Dung his Vineyard with the dead Carcasses of his Enemies ver 31. Psal 83.10 and that Israel might be as the Rising Sun So the Land had rest Forty Years under Deborah from Ehud's Death Judges CHAP. VI. THE History of Gideon is held forth in the Sixth Seventh and Eighth Chapters of Judges The Sixth Chapter is a Narrative of Gideon's Eminent Call to undertake the Expedition against the Midianites into whose hands the Lord had now sold Israel The Remarks hereupon are First Israel's new Apostacy brings new Plagues and Punishments upon them This was the bad Fruit of their Forty Years Peace procured by Deborah a Sedentary Life is most subject to contract many Distempers and standing Waters soon putrifie by a constant Stagnation Solomon saith Ease slayeth the Foolish Prov. 1.32 N. B. 'T is an old Adage Anglica g●ns est optinra slens pessima Ridens The English are best in Adversity and worst in Prosperity as it was with Israel often 'T is hard yet happy not to grow worse by times of Liberty Omnes licentra deteriores If the Sea were not tossed with Tides and Tempests whereby it is made to Vomit up much Mire and Dirt Isa 57.20 it would soon become a stinking Pool and poison the very Air we breathe in Israel doth evit again in the time of their Ease ver 1. and this Apostacy of theirs was Idolatry for which they are reproved ver 10. Therefore God pours them from Vessel to Vessel from the oppression of the Canaanites to this of the Midianites to purge them from their Lees that they might not as Moab have a filthy taste in them Jerem 48.11 The Second Remark is The Midianites must be now the next Rod of God's Anger wherewith to chastize Israel for their present Apostacy The Church is God's Husbandry 1 Cor. 3.9 and he employs his Plowers to Plow upon her Back and here to make Furrows of Seven Years length Psal 129.3 that he might meet with a better Crop than the Weeds of Idolatry The Midianites are those Plowers who Plowed until God by Gideon cut their Plow-Traces or Cords and then they could Plow no more Psal 129.4 but this was not done before Israel had been greatly plowed and plundered and thereby brought to Repentance ver 2 3 4 5 6 7. N. B. 'T is a wonder that those Midianites who had been so universally cut off by Moses for vexing Israel c Numb 25.17 and 31. ver 8. should now in about two hundred Years time become so prodigiously numerous as to come up like Grashoppers for Multitude to devour the whole Corn of Canaan the Judgment threatned in Joel 2.3 that as they had in Moses's time over-witted Israel with their Wiles so now they will over power them with their numberless Army harassing and laying waste all that stood in their way insomuch that the poor Israelites were driven by them into sundry lurking Holes The Third Remark i● Israel was Reproved by a Prophet ver 8. as well as corrected by the Midianites Nocumenta Documenta We may well wonder that those Children of the Free Woman should be made to serve a most woful Apprentiship of Seven Years under Midean as if they had been the Children of the Bond Woman only Gal. 4.30 31. yet because they sinned still more they shall suffer still more the Lord sold them into the Hands of those Malicious Midianites in whose Breasts old Rancour and Revenge had laid long boiling who dealt more morosely and cruelly with them than any Tyrants they had felt before All this was to reduce them to Repentance The merciless Midianites make them to cry with their Addresses to God now are they become Docible God sends a bitter Message by a Prophet to them to tell them they were justly plagued for God had threatned They should Sow but another would Reap Deut. 28.51 as John 4.37 but they had nor fear'd it till now they felt it He upbraids them with breach of Covenant Psal 78.34 to 37. aggravating it with their forgetting all the former Favours of God and of their Sordid Ingratitude and Disobedience to him ver 7 8 9 10. Enquiry Who was this Prophet that the Lord sent here Answer 1. Not an Angel as Lyra delitiously fancieth for then he would not be called a Man-Prophet Ish Nabi as the Hebrew hath it nor are Angels in Scripture call'd Prophets though Prophets sometimes be call'd Angels Mal. 3.1 c. Answer 2. Some say it was Phinehas because he is mentioned after in Judg. 20.28 but how that was before this hath been demonstrated above but this cannot be for then he must be about two hundred Years old c. Answer 3. That he was a Man-Prophet is enough for us to know seeing the Holy Spirit thought it not necessary to reveal his Name as is not unusual in other Histories of Scripture 't is said only A Man of God came to Eli 1 Sam. 2.27 so to Jeroboam 1 Kings 13.1 and a Prophet to Ahab 1 Kings 20.13 and again ver 22.28 not named who they were to teach us where the Sacred Scripture hath not an Holy Mouth to speak we may not have an Vnholy Tongue to ask c. The Fourth Remark is The Blessed Messiah appeareth unto Gideon threshing Wheat to hide it from the Midianites ver 11 12. When Israel was kindly humbled by the Prophet's Reproof and cryed mightily to God for Mercy and Deliverance then comes the Messiah in the form of a Man and like a Travelling Man with his Staff in his hand ver 21. and as weary with his Travel upon some long Journey therefore he reposeth himself here under the Oak of Ophrah to rest him ver 11. N. B. That this was no created
that Night v. 25. 2. Samuel calls him up early to the House top again to Impart more of God's Mind to him and so dismisses him v. 26. Yet 3. Goes part of his way for Honours sake but the Servant is sent before v. 26. for yet more private Discourse in so weighty a matter Samuel could not prepare Saul well enough by two former Secret Conferences he must have this third also N. B. This secrecy Samuel used lest Israel should think some Collusion in the case and suspect that he who before had deny'd them a King was now about to impose one on them but this suspicion was prevented when Saul was chosen by Lot which was immediately ordered by God What Samuel said and did to Saul at this Conference is declared in the next Chapter 1 Sam. CHAP. X. IN Chapter the Tenth follows the Election Vnction and Inauguration of Saul to the Kingdom which is twofold 1. Private 2. Publick Remarks upon the private Unction first The First Remark is Samuel after this Third private Conference with Saul as above Anointed him King by Divine Direction ver 1. Samuel takes a Vial of Oyl and poured it upon Saul's Head N. B. Note here 1. It was not an Horn of Oyl as when David and his Posterity were Anointed but a Vial or Glass to signifie say some the short continuance of Saul's Kingdom 2. His Head was Anointed to shew his Superiority over his Subjects 3. With Oyl which will ever work it self up to the top of other Liquors to set forth the pouring forth the Gifts of God's Spirit upon him to enable him for the Administration of his Regal Office 4. Oyl being of a soft and smooth Nature was a Symbol of Clemency and Candid Lenity which he ought to exercise towards his Subjects in the discharge of his Duty N. B. Then Samuel kissed him in token both of his Affection and of his Subjection to him not grudging to resign the Office of Supream Magistracy to Saul which he had held in his hands for many Years and now not disenabled to manage it himself but only dispossess'd of it by the meer Humours of the Mobile N. B. And some suppose that Saul seemed in Modesty to refuse Samuel's Anointing him till Samuel pacified and perswaded him saying 'T is the Lord that Anointeth thee to be Captain over his Inheritance as the Baptist said to Christ Suffer it to be so now c. Matth. 3.14 15. telling Saul that he was but God's Minister and that Saul must govern God's People according to God's Will whose they were and not according to his own Will The Second Remark is The Three Oracles or significant Signs whereby Samuel confirmed Saul's Faith concerning the truth of his Call to the Kingdom when he saw those several Circumstances all casual and contingent Matters which none but the true Jehovah could foresee and none but his true Prophet could foretel came to pass v. 2 3 4 5. to v. 14. The first Sign was the Tidings he should take from the Mouth of two Men at Rachel's Sepulchre immediately saith he after thy departure from me That thy Father's Asses are found again v. 2. N. B. 1. Samuel sends Saul newly Anointed to Rachel's Sepulchre to mind him of his Mortality and to keep him humble that he might not be too much transported with this new Honour which he was now entring upon The second Sign was The kind Courtesie of three Strangers to him meeting him in the Plain of Tabor c. v. 3 4. They will saith he present thee with two Loaves by way of Homage to thee as their King being stirred up hereto by a strange Motion of God's Spirit who knows thy Bread is spent chap. 9.7 N. B. 2. Samuel had sent him away unfurnish'd with needful Food for his Journey partly because he would not seem to curry favour with this new King by such Bribes of Bread and partly because he foresaw those strangers would furnish him with enough The third and most certain Sign to assure him of his call from God to Kingly Office was the Inspiration of God's Spirit upon him in the end of his Journey v. 5 6. c. 9 10 11 c. N. B. Note well First The Accomplishment of the two former Signs are not expresly related but certainly supposed for 't is affirmed in the General that all those Signs came to pass that day v. 9. and the reason why no more is mentioned of them may well be because they were only two transient Acts which passed between some few Persons meeting together and passing by one another but the accomplishment of this third Oracle is largely insisted upon and related in a more solemn manner because it was a more permanent Sign and of greater Importance being more pertinent to Saul's Person and his present private Condition The Second Note Here is Stupenda Dei Dignatio most marvelous Divine Condescension that God should thus vouchsafe to give Men Signs for fortifying their Faith from future Events this the Lord hath usually done as Exod. 3.12 2 Kings 19.29 Isa 7.13 14. Thus the Lord stooped so low to Saul as to assure him of his extraordinary Call to be a King by many Signs which he saw fulfilled but more especially in this Third Sign Note Thirdly This Third Sign was a complication of many Signs As 1. His meeting with the Prophets 2. His own Prophecying 3. His being turned into another Man And 4. According as some give the sense Thou shalt go down before me to Gilgal where thou shalt tarry for me Seven Days c. v. 8. How a Company of Prophets both Tutors and Pupils met him we are told in v. 10. as likewise how the Spirit of Prophecy came upon him and caused him to Prophecy among them so that he could speak of Divine and Spiritual Matters both above his Natural Abilities and his Civil Education and hereby he became another Man as Samuel had foretold v. 6. he now appeared not like a Rude Rustick fitted only to feed his Fathers Asses but like a Learned Prophet yea and a Spirit of Government came upon him also to fit him for the Calling of a King He was changed into another Man but not into a New or Spiritual Man N. B. God gave him another Heart v. 9. yet not a new Heart 't was only a Civil but not a Sanctifying Change God gave him not that free and Noble Spirit that David pray'd for Psal 51.12 but only common Gifts of a Princely Port Prudence Courage and Conduct c. had it been Saving Grace wrought in him by the Spirit of Holiness that fearful Defection into Outragious Wickedness had not appeared in him afterwards However it was such a Change from a Rustick to a Ruler as made all his Spectators marvel v. 11 12. Insomuch that it became a Vulgar Proverb Is Saul also among the Prophets when they saw any Rude Man raised up and ranked among Men of Eminency far above his Birth
their chief Leader and Reformer 4. Lavater adds God withdrew from Elijah which caused Elijah that he withdrew from his Work and God did so to teach him his own Nothingness in himself and that all his late wonderful Works were wrought by no Power of his own but by a Power borrow'd from God And Gregory doubts not to say That Elijah began to be tickled with some high Conceits of himself for the great Acts which he had done therefore was he suffer'd thus to fear and to fall beneath himself for his humiliation lest he should be exalted above measure as Paul 2 Cor. 12.7 Elias ille fulminator ad mulierculae scilicet Jezebelis minas nunc trepidat factus est seipso Imbecillior This thundring Prophet now trembles at Jezebel's Threats and becomes unlike himself in weakness and cowardice c. The like we find in Peter likewise who was frighted from his Duty into Sin of a gross nature and that only by a weak silly Wench Matth. 26.71 72. N. B. Learn hence our daily dependency upon divine Influence for every new day-duty If left to our selves we are as weak as water c. The Places that Elijah fled to were Three first to Beersheba ver 3. Remarks upon it are first This City was the utmost Confine of the Ten Tribes where Jeroboam had set up one of his Calves as the other at Dan bordering upon Judah had Elijah's Errand been hither to pull down Calf-Worship here in the name of the Lord he had then acted like himself but he came as a Renegado not as a Reformer Remark the Second What this Reformado did here we are not told save only the leaving his Servant there 1. He thought not himself safe there from the Fury of Jezebel yet his Boy the supposed Son of the Sareptan Widow might be over-look'd 2. A kind Master will not expose his Servant to the Hardships of a Desart as he would himself 3. Lest the Man should discover the Master but 4. That he might more freely converse with God all alone The second Place Elijah fled to was the Wilderness ver 4. Whereon Remarks are First The best of Men when left of God are but changeable Mortals as Elijah here quantùm mutatus ab illo how is he changed from what he was before Oh how bold and couragious had Elijah been in telling Ahab to his Teeth I am not but thou art the Troubler of Israel in carrying the Contest all alone against all apostatizing Idolatrous Israel and in slaughtering with his own single Sword four hundred and fifty Prophets of Baal c. but now behold He is so timerous and dastardly that he flees from place to place at the frowns of a weak and wicked Woman He dare not tarry at Beersheba no nor take that Boy with him whom he had rais'd from Death to Life as some say lest his own Life should be betrayed into the hands of Jezebel thereby N.B. He durst not stay in Judah though good Jehosaphat reigned there because he was allied to Ahab and being a Man of a facile Temper Elijah fear'd Ahab might easily circumvent him and so seize his Person Hereupon He flees from thence a days Journey into the Wilderness even into that very Wilderness wherein Israel had wandred forty Years and lays himself down weary and hungry under a Juniper-tree which Serpents naturally avoid saith Pliny and therefore he might Promise to himself a safe and secure sleeping under it's shadow Remark the Second Here he earnestly desired to die that He might be freed from his fears c. which was the fruit of his Frailty as was done by Jonah afterwards Jon. 4.3 for if he really and deliberately desired it and not in a Pang of Passion only it was but his returning to Jezebel and she would readily grant his Request N.B. But Peter Martyr qualifies this passionate Petition saying 1. He feared should he fall into the clutches of Jezebel and her Priests they might have put him to some cruel kind of Death for his slaying so many of Baal's Prophets 2. It was look'd upon as exceeding ignoble to die by the Hands of a Woman Judg. 9.54.3 He desired rather to die by the most noble hands of God's immediate stroke which he look'd on as a more honourable kind of Death And thus had Jacob faln in his Conflict with the Messiah Gen. 32.24 he would have this Honour to fall by noble hands 4. But especially He desir'd thus to die from his Zeal for God's Glory lest Jezebel and her Chimney-Chaplain's should Triumph over his Death by their hands and say now Baal prevails over Jehovah and Baal's Prophets prove too strong for this Prophet of the Lord. Besides 5. He was now a very old Man elder than most of his Predecessors who had lost their lives by Jezebel and other Persecutors and seeing as he said it is enough I can do no more service for God Israel is resolvedly relaps'd into Idolatry And I can no longer expect any Joy of my miserable and mortal Life therefore he press'd this Petition Remark the Third But God's Thoughts were not like Elijah's Isa 55.8 for God had not only more Work for him in this World as the anointing of Hazael John and Elisha c. ver 15 16 17 c. but also God determined to deliver him both from Jezebel and from Death it self which devoureth all Men He should have a greater Honour conferr'd upon him than all his fore-fathers that he mentioned namely be bodily translated into Heaven which he never thought of Remark the Fourth However Elijah's dolour and toilsome Travel lull'd him asleep under the sweet and secure shade of his Juniper-tree ver 5. so while he earnestly calls for Death sleep which is the Image of Death Mortis imago sopor comes to him uncalled N.B. The Angel of God waits on him there as one of God's ministring Spirits to an Heir of Salvation in this wild Wilderness Heb. 1.14 and thinks himself happy in this Office of providing the Prophet's Breakfast which he brings him piping hot as out of an Oven ver 6. not Dainties but Necessaries yet surely most excellently cooked by such a Coelestial Cook this was Angels Food indeed of an Angelical Dress Peter Martyr marks here the marvelous Care and Providence of God towards this Prophet God had provided for him before by a Raven Chap. 17.6 and by the Widow of Sareptah ver 15. and now here by an Angel nor was this all N.B. But afterwards in Mount Horeb God himself fed him with the sight of God's Face and with the hearing of his Word for we find not that Elijah did eat any thing at that time for forty Days and Nights together The Ravens and the Sareptan Widow provided for the Prophet while he was waking saith Dr. Hall but this Angel did so while he was sleeping Needs must Elijah Eat Drink and Sleep with much Comfort while he saw such an Attendant Guardian and Purverour The first time
that he might be a Witness of his Translation for the good of the Church in all Ages 4. God suggested to him that at their parting he should have a double Portion given him Therefore Elisha must be pardon'd for disobeying his Master Remark the Fifth Elijah passeth from Jericho to Jordan which He smote with his Mantle and Divided it as Joshua had done before and passed over it with Elisha fifty Sons of the Prophets looking on ver 7 8. This was Elijah's eleventh Miracle wrought by very improbable means not by the Ark of God as Josh 3.17 but by his Mantle only having a Divine Power accompanying the means N.B. That there might be a meet Parallel betwixt the two great Prophets who were to meet the Messias upon Mount Tabor Moses and Elias Matth. 17.3 4. What Moses had done to the Red Sea by his Rod an unlikely Instrument Exod. 14.16 21. That Elijah doth to Jordan with his Mantle here and Moses's Body was hid as Elijah's Body was translated Remark the Sixth Elijah drawing nigh to tread upon his last ground offers a munificent Boon to his faithful Servant who asks a double Portion ver 9. Mark 1. A Pious Master cannot but be kind-hearted so far as he can to such a Servant as he hath found faithful to him before his Departure from him Thus the best of Masters our blessed Messias was kind-hearted to his Disciples saying to them before his Departure from them Ask what ye will and ye shall receive it that your Joy may be full Joh. 16.24 Mark 2. Elijah bids not Elisha Ask what he would c. as having Power in Himself to gratifie his Request but as God's Instrument only and this he did by a Divine Instinct knowing what he craved of God for him would be done c. Mark 3. Elijah saith not Ask of we after I be gone but before I go saith Peter Martyr to teach us Invocation of Saints departed is no Duty of God's commanding We may have Communion here but no Commerce hereafter with them Mark 4. Elisha asks a double Portion which is variously sensed N. B. As 1. Vatablus saith He ask'd only two parts of Elijah's three for 't is not probable he could be so confident as to expect any excelling of his Master 2. Peter Martyr saith it was not his Pride but his Zeal for ability to bring back Israel from Idolatry which Elijah had not done therefore he asks a more powerful Spirit and Christ promis'd greater Works to be done by his Apostles than by himself Joh. 14.12 3. Erpennius saith Elijah wrought eight Miracles only but Elisha sixteen so doubled them 4. Junius and Grotius say He alludes to the double Portion of the first Born Deut. 21.17 above all their Brethren so Elisha being to succeed Elijah was to be the Head of all the Prophets He desired double to what the rest of the Prophets had 5. Piscator c. say his desire to excel even his Master in spiritual Gifts was no Sin but warranted by God's Word 1 Cor. 12.31 and 14.12 and the same is 1 King 1.37 where God said Amen to Benaiah's Prayer making Solomon's Reign to represent the Church Triumphant as David's did only the Church Militant 6. Osiander c. say that Elisha was more frequently conversant among Men than Elijah had been who mostly led an absconded Life and he taught the People more and lived with greater Pomp in King's Courts so needed more double Grace Mark 5. Elijah answers thou hast asked a singular Gift not single of Prophecie but of Miracles too yet seeing thou hast not ask'd Riches and Honours c. for thy self but spiritual Blessings for God's Glory and the Churches good God will give thee them provided thou see me when I am taken up N.B. This was the Sign by Divine Direction to make Elisha watch and pray the more earnestly Hereby his Request was justified for had it been unlawful the Prophet would have reproved him as Christ did his Disciples in the like Case Luke 9.46 47. Mark 10 36 37 38. Had Elisha been negligent in beholding his hopes had been dash'd and he had lost his begg'd Boon N.B. Such have need to be doubly Diligent and Vigilant that desire double Grace c. Elisha gains it by being an Eye-witness of Elijah's glorious Rapture as the Men of Galilee were of Christ's Ascension Acts 1.10 11. and gain'd the Spirit after it Acts 2.2 3 4. The second Part is the Concomitants upon which Remark the First When Elijah had long and happily fought the Wars of his God and accomplish'd his warfare with many glorious Victories then his God sent him a Chariot of Triumph to fetch him home from Earth to Heaven ver 11. then comes a bright Cloud formed in the fashion of a Chariot and manag'd by the Holy Angels those Seraphims or fiery Spirits fetch up this Seraphical Doctor who was of a fiery Spirit also so there was a suitableness Psal 68 17. and 104.4 N.B. This fiery Chariot was the Means or Instrument of Elijah's Translation yet was it not really a Chariot of Fire saith Lavater for then it would have burnt up the Prophet and would have been rather a torture to him than a Rapture of him But it was the Angels saith Grotius that appeared in the splendid form and similitude of a fiery Chariot only and in a Whirlwind also both which Fire and a Whirlwind had affrighted Elijah in the Rock of Horeb 1 Kings 19.11 12. here was again Terrour and Violence N.B. None ever saith Dr. Hall enter'd into Glory with ease this most favourable change had some equivalency in it to a natural Dissolution Oh that we could cry come Death come Fire come Whirlwind all worthily welcome that carries us to Heaven Remark the Second upon the Concomitants is The Time when the Place where and the Posture and Practice Elijah was in when this Chariot of Heaven came to fetch him to Heaven 't is expresly said as he was walking and talking we are not told what these two were talking on Peter Martyr saith it was about anointing the two Kings Sanctius saith it was about Modelling the Colleges of the Prophets and Mr. Mayer's Opinion is as probable as either of the other saying N.B. That Elijah foreseeing the wickedness of Jehoram wrote a Letter and now committed it to Elisha that he might deliver it to that wicked King when he saw that time 2 Chron. 21.12 but more of that when we come to it However this must be taken for granted that this was Divine Discourse betwixt those two great Divine Prophets for this is certain that Elijah had committed to Elisha the anointing of Hazael to be King of Syria 1 Kings 19.16 17. which was not done till after Elijah's Departure and undoubtedly Elijah was instructing Elisha about all those future Matters of Moment N.B. What a God-pleasing Ordinance Holy Conference and Godly Discourse is in our Walkings and Talkings Without all doubt Elijah knew well
warm our Hearts unless the God of Ordinances be in and with them It was Christ's presence with the two Disciples discoursing in their way to Emmaus that made them say Did not our Hearts burn within us while he talked with us in the way Luke 24.32 so we may say if so in the way of his Ordinances c. Remark the Second upon the Consequents is The Sons of the Prophets saw the River remove its streams in obedience to Elijah's Mantle though it had chang'd it's Master and was now in Elisha's Hands yet Elijah's Spirit remain'd behind him with Elisha Hereupon they meet him ver 15. and tho' these Men had been train'd up in the Schools of the Prophets and Elisha among Carts and Ploughs yet do they give him due Veneration as one now endowed with Elijah's Spirit and whom God had made a Father of the Prophets Yet these Young Prophets are as full of Zeal for Elijah as they are of Reverence to Elisha ver 16 17 18. Mark 1. Their Incredulity in not believing that Elijah was now translated into Heaven but thinking that some Angel had taken him up and carried him to some obscure place on Earth according to 1 Kings 18.12 so still ought to retain his Dignity over the Prophets yet would they be so obsequious to their new Master as not to send their fifty Sons of strength to seek their old Master without Elisha's leave but he said send not c. Mark 2. Their Importunity they were so urgent with him for Leave and Liberty that Elisha was ashamed to seem inexorable therefore he saith Send seeing you are so set upon it though I am assured you are sure to lose your labour as indeed they did after they had wearied themselves with three days search N. B. The uncounselable are commonly unsuccessful in their enterprises and are best satisfied when wearied with their own ways nothing will teach them wit but disappointment Remark the Third is The Miracles that Elisha wrought by his double Spirit and all as Answers to his ardent Ejaculation Where is the Lord God of Elijah The same God cloath'd Elisha with Elijah's Spirit as well as with his Mantle whereof he had many ensuing Experiments There be three Miracles that Elisha wrought mentioned in this Chapter His first Miracle was the Dividing of Jordan described 1. By its Organ the Mantle of Elijah ver 13. 2. By its Author Manner and Matter ver 14. 3. By its Witnesses and Spectators the Sons of the Prophets ver 15. as above which when they saw they came to congratulate the Gift of God bestowed upon him and to own him as their Master for like Miracles argued the like Spirit in him And indeed Elisha wanted not the Evidences of a Double Spirit to that of Elijah which he desired seeing his Miracles that are mentioned in Scripture-Record were about twenty For besides the three here ver 14 22 and 24. there be many more Recorded whereof take this Epitome chap. 3.20 chap. 4.6 17 36 41 44. chap. 5.14 27. chap. 6.6 10 13 17 18 20. chap. 7.6 18. and chap. 13.21 in all seventeen more so that almost 't is a Duplication of Elijah's Miracles Remark the Fourth Elisha's second Miracle was his healing the bad Waters of Jericho here ver 19 20 21 22. wherein Mark 1. The Citizens petition to Elisha ver 10. So wise was this cursed City grown by their College of Prophets as to make improvement of this Master-Prophet while they had him 't were well if all People were so wise In their Address they say My Lord acknowledging his Authority over their Society in whose name the Speaker spoke The Situation of this City is pleasant but the Waters are naught and thereby the Ground is barren N.B. The same may be said of all such Places tho' never so pleasant as want those Waters of Life Gospel-Ordinances purely and powerfully Administred in them such should seek Redress as those do here But this evil here had not been original when Israel came first hither 'T is more probable that it was God's Curse inflicted for Hiel's Presumption in Rebuilding that City 1 Kings 16.34 A fruitful Land God turns into barrenness for Mens sin Psal 107.34 Deut. 28.24 Mark 2. The means of healing ver 20. Elisha calls for a new Cruse that no suspicion might be of working the Miracle by vertue of any thing that had been in it before and that no Legal Pollution might hinder its miraculous operation he bids Put Salt therein a most improper and improbable Remedy for Salt naturally makes Waters brackish and Land barren See Judg. 9.45 N.B. God oft works by contraries that his power might the more appear working without or against means Mark 3. The miraculous Effect of this seeming ridiculous means both for the quality and the quantity of Salt and the place where that small part was put The Fountain or Spring quickly works forth any thing put into it Elisha by Divine Direction pours the Salt in and heals them ver 21 22. N.B. He pours not the Salt into the Stream or Channel but into the Spring or Fountain So when God casts the Salt of Grace into our hearts those Fountains of Affections and Actions if but one small Cruse-full thereof we are immediately healed not so much as a thought can pass betwixt the Receipt and the Remedy Matth. 8.3 and 20.34 Mark 1.31 42. Luke 8.44 47 55 c. Remark the Fifth Is Elisha's cursing the scoffing Children described in all its Circumstances ver 23 24 25. wherein Mark 1. Elisha's going from Healed Jericho N.B. God's Prophets leave their blessing behind them to visit the Sons of the Prophets at Bethel also and to comfort them saith P. Martyr for their Loss of Elijah and to settle Orders where there was a strange composition of Jeroboam's Calves and a College of Prophets Mark 2. The Children that came forth to meet and mock Elisha were doubtless such whose Parents had nuzzled them up in Idolatry and Calf-worship with which Bethel abounded 1 Kings 12.28 29. Hos 4.15 and 5.8 and from whom they had learnt to contemn God's Prophets who seated themselves there to bear witness against their False-worship and to reclaim the People from it Mark 3. Those mis-taught Brats belch forth Gnalah Kereach with the greatest petulancy Go up thou bald-pate not only scornfully deriding him for affirming Elijah was gone up to Heaven but also prophanely scoffing him for his not going up with his Master for the Hebrew word Gnalah is used in both places ver 11. and ver 23. that they might not any more be troubled with him who opposed their Idolatry as Elijah had done and having no worse to upbraid him with they twit him with his natural Distemper his Baldness and repeat it twice to aggravate his grief the more Mark 4. Elisha curseth them for cursing him ver 24. not out of any private Revenge but by his Spirit of Prayer and Prophecy having a commission from God
below his Father saying My Father is greater than I. Joh. 14.28 tho' equal with him Phil. 2.6 but 2. below the Angels Jesus was made a little lower than Angels Heb. 2.9 And 3. below Men 't is said of him I am a Worm and no Man Psal 22.6 Yet lower 4. below Worms also for a live Worm as well as a live Dog is better than a dead Lion Eccles 9.4 Yet Christ step'd down into the state of Death and was buried and so was designed to be Meat for Worms had it been possible for that Holy one to see Corruption Psal 16.10 The Second Part of this History is the Account of Hezekiah's Sin after his Sickness and Recovery ver 12 13. Remark the First Is the Commission of his Sin wherein Mark 1. In what Matter he Sinned ver 12. namely in Entertaining the Embassadors of Babylon being taken and tickled with their Company and Courtship It seems this Baladan which signifies a Masterless Man or Lord was the first that raised up the Babylonian Monarchy upon the Ruin of the Assyrian who hitherto had been but a Vice-roy under it and knowing saith Lavater how Hezekiah was an highly-provok'd Adversary to the Assyrian Empire therefore sent he a Rich and Royal Present with Letters to Ingratiate himself and to oblige Hezekiah's Assistance in his present Project to wit of casting off the Assyrian Yoke which soon after this this Baladan did by Rebelling against Esar-Haddon now weakened by the late loss of so huge an Host and the said Fraction in the Royal Family in the Murder of Senacherib and the Banishment of the two Murdering Sons N. B. 'T was the Father's Blasphemy saith Grotius that quite blasted the Assyrian Monarchy Now did this Baladan bereave weak Esar-Haddon the Son both of his Kingdom and of his Life and Usurp'd the Throne in his stead Hence we read no more here of the King of Assyria but of Babylon only after this Mark 2. The Pretence was an Enquiry after this late Prodigy for the Babylonians worship the Sun for a God as well as the Persians and the Astrologers of Babylon above all other Nations must needs take notice of this miraculous Motion and hearing that the Sun their God had so highly honoured Hezekiah in taking so many Steps backward to become a Sign of his Recovery from Sickness therefore are those Embassadors sent to Honour him also with a Visit and a Present and to make more enquiry after this Wonder wrought in Heaven by the God of Israel 2 Chron. 32.31 and seeing it was done for Hezekiah's sake they thought him more than a Mortal Man Those Messengers saith Menochius were Men well skill'd in Coelestial Motions Mark 3. When God left Hezekiah to himself withdrawing the Assistance of his Holy Spirit from him and suffered Satan with his Temptations to draw forth this good King's Corruption he likewise had some over-weaning Reflections upon himself also thinking himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some great one Act. 8.9 above the rate of an ordinary Mortal Man therefore 't is said He rendred not again his Returns were not answerable to his Receipts but his heart was lifted up to wit with Pride Self-conceit and Ostentation 2 Chron. 32.25 So that he Acted like some petty-God within himself gratifying those Embassadors in what they came about yea proudly and foolishly shewed them the House of his precious things for now Gold-thirsty Babylon knew where to fetch a fat and a fit Booty He being puff'd up with the Honour they did him In this manner he sinned c. Remark the Second In this Second Part is his Correction for his Sin Mark 1. No sooner had he shewed them all his Wealth got by the spoil of Senacherib's Camp and by the many Gifts from all Nations to him as to the World's Wonder for the Sun 's running backward for his sake but God most graciously sends his Prophet to prick this Bladder of Pride that now lay putrifying in Hezekiah's Heart and to Humble him ver 14. Mark 2. How prudently the Prophet proceeds with him by such Interrogatories not for Information of himself but for Conviction of the King who Answers him These Men came from Babylon which is said to be distant 680 Miles from Jerusalem N. B. Whereby we may understand how far the Jews were carried Captive out of their own Country But what have they seen ver 15. after whence came they and what said they The King Answers fairly to the Prophet without mincing the Matter but telling the whole Truth Mark 3. The Prophet replies in the Name of the Lord to make the King mind the Message more ver 16. telling him that he had 1. made a foul Forfeiture of all his fair Treasures by his Pride which God abhors and by his Ostentation in shewing them and by his Ingratitude taking that Honour to himself which he should have wholly given to God and by his Ambitious Abuse of God's Gifts having his Heart strangely lifted up with those Heavy Metals not as good Jehosaphat's was lifted up for God and Godliness in a zealous Reformation 2 Chron. 17.6 but 't is in a way of Self-Admiration for that not only Nations near to him had brought him Rich Presents 2 Chron. 32.23 but also that the King of Babylon so far Remote had now made a League with him whereby he thought his Mountain so strong he could not be moved as Psalm 30.6 Mark 4. Not doth Isaiah only denounce this sad-Judgment that his Palace shall be plundred of all those precious Treasures ver 17. but adds also 2. That his Children and Grand-Children should likewise be carried into Captivity ver 18. where their Bodies shall be subject to Slavery and their Souls to Idolatry in an Heathen Country which must needs be very grievous to so good a King especially for so seemingly a light offence N.B. But by this we learn what an High Provocation to God is our Privy-pride Creature-confidence c. Remark the Third Is his humble Submission to this severe Sentence ver 19. Mark 1. 'T is said Notwithstanding Hezekiah humbled himself for the Pride of his Heart when left of God c. 2 Chron. 32.26 31. now God comes again and blesseth the Preaching of the Prophet so to him as to give him a sight and sense of his Sin Insomuch that as Vatablus saith God made him a gainer by his Sin for as his Pride had puff'd him up with his glorious Victory over Senacherib with his miraculous recovery from sickness and with his prodigious Wealth so now see how his Heart was humbled and became as lowly as it had been lofty Mark 2. True Humiliation is a blessed Means to prevent God's Indignation He kisseth the Rod saying Good is the Word of God 't is no more than Justice my Sins deserve no less I bless God that it is no worse for here is Mercy mixed with Justice that this Wrath shall not come in my Days 2 Chron. 32.26 but I shall have Peace
those that are Substantially Moral as before in this Case alas this Levite was too Circumstantial in main Substantials and he was too Substantial in mere circumstantials 2. He is one that can rest in any Form of Prayer not finding it too narrow for his own narrow Heart though various Dispensations of God be upon him which calls him to vary his Petitions to God in Prayer alas this Pinioning the Wings of the Dove the Spirit of God Mat. 3.16 can never prove a Salve broad enough for every Sore 3. He is one that thinks it not enough to live in Duty as all ought to do but he must live of and upon Duty never looking to find a living Christ in dead Duties without him alas this is to live in Golgotha that place of Skulls Matth. 27.33 and to have a Dwelling among the Tombs with the Demoniack Mar. 5.3.4 He is one that sits down and rises up constantly with a cold frame of Heart in Religious Duties his Heart never burns within him nay it is not so much as watm at any time because Christ talks not with him in the way of his Duty as Luke 24.32 he is a stranger to that Spirit of Burning Isa 4.4 Alas he is like Noah's unclean Creatures that went into the Ark unclean and came cut again unclean The word of God hath no Sanctifying Work upon his Heart according to Christs Prayer John 17.17.5 He is one that Serves God for Self-Ends only he rather serves himself of God as Zech. 7.5 6. and follows our Lord more for his Loaves than for any love to himself John 6.26 he cannot say with Nazianzen Jesus Diligitur propter Jesum I love Jesus for Jesus sake c. 6. He is one that Serves God slightly rendring to him labia vitulorum non vitulos labiorum the Lips of their calves only and not the Calves of their Lips Hos 14.2 he Sacrifices flesh only Hos 8.13 he serves not God with his Spirit Rom. 1.9 he gives only the dry Hony-Comb not as the Spouse did filled with the Hony Cant. 5.1 he considers not how such are Cursed that doth the Work of the Lord negligently or deceitfully Jerem. 48.10 Thus he doth but cut off a Dogs Neck c. Isa 66.3.7 He is one that will stint and limit himself both in his Knowledge and in his Practice he dare not be too precise but saith with Jeroboam it is too much to go up to Jerusalem 1 Kin. 12.28 he may not be Righteous or Religious over-much Eccles 7.16 So while he is now so Luke-warm in Religion he soon becomes stone-cold in Irreligion so as the Candle he goes out in a stink 2 Pet. 2.20 Enquiry the Third Why is this Formal Holiness so Defective and Insufficient Answer the 1st Reason is This kind of Holiness flows from a failing Fountain and stands upon a Sandy Foundation namely a common Conviction without a special Conversion Some indeed do under the Preaching of the Gospel hear a noise of Christ but they hear not the Voice of Christ as those with Paul saw the Light but heard not Christ Act. 9.7 and 22.9 Some may be Enlightned and tast of the good Word of God Hebr 6.4 5. as Cooks tast of their Masters Sawces but lets none go down to nourish them and some may receive the Knowledge of the Truth Hebr. 10.26 so far as to reform the Life outwardly but not so far as to renew the Life Inwardly Eph. 4.23 this bare Tast in the Palate reacheth not to Nourish and Strengthen any Spiritual Life in the Hidden Man of the Heart 1 Pet. 3.4 Therefore in a little time it dwindles into nothing The 2d Reason is God is a Spirit and will be Worshipped in Spirit as opposed to Formality and in Truth as opposed to Hypocrisie the Father seeks out such Spiritual Worshippers John 4.23 24. God loveth best what is most like himself like loves like saith the Proverb but seeing a Formal Profession hath so little likeness to God God hath as little love for it therefore as it cannot please God so nor can it save Man c. we must serve God with our Spirits Rom. 1.9 The 3d Reason is This Formal Holiness is at the best but Body Obedience there is nothing of the Soul in it so 't is but a Dead Carcase and therefore an Abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 whereas we ought to offer up unto God a living Sacrifice Rom. 12.1 The Prophet professeth that the Lord will not accept of the Fruit of the Body for the Sin of the Soul c. Mic. 6 ver 6 7. Nay the Travel of Mans Soul though never so Sollicitous in serving God can save him no more than the labour of his Body It cost more to Redeem and Ransom lost Man Ps 49.7 8. God must behold the Travel of Christs Soul before his Justice can be satisfied Isa 53.11 and Christ is the Master of Requests also Hebr. 7.25 and 9.24 none of our Prayers can come with acceptance upon Gods Altar untill perfumed with the Odours of his Merit Revel 5.8 and 8.3 N.B. Note well Alas a Formalist may cry too late something like Martha c. Oh thou power of Godliness hadst thou been here my Soul had not dyed c. God may Damn Men for the very failures of their Duty Rom. 3.23 and Luke 17.10 we stand in as much need of the Grace of God to Pardon our Duties as we do of the Blood of Christ to Pardon our sins Duties are but Insignificant Cyphers without Christ the Numerical Figure yet Duty 's must be done by the Redeemed for the very end of our Redemption is that we may serve our Redeemer without fear in Holiness and Righteousness all the Days of our Life Luke 1.74 75. and being bought with a price therefore must we glorisie God both with our Bodies and with our Spirits for they are Gods 1 Cor. 6.20 both Christ and Duty are Beautiful in their proper places Christ must sit upon the Throne and Duty 's as his Train must fill the Temple Isa 6.1 we may not so Eye Duty 's as to wrong Christ nor so look upon Christ as altogether to thrust out Duties Duties are good Evidences but they are bad Saviours Paul is said to suffer the loss of his Duties but how non quoad Substantiam sed quoad Qualitatem officium Justificandi not as to their substance but only as to their Quality and Means of Justifying him Phil. 3.8 9. That is he did not depend upon them for his Justification as he had done before though the Formal professor doth rest in Opere operato in Duty done yet may not we rest from doing Duty for we are not yet come to our Rest Deut. 12.9 but we must be Obedient both in Word and Deed Rom. 15.18 The Apples of Gods Comfort Cant. 2.5 grow not on the Root Christ but on the Branches to wit Duties The last part of this Parable begins with a famous But ver 33 34
of the Spirit is with him Mal. 2.15 Rev. 3.1 c. The 5th Cause of Christ's Ascension was to send the Comforter to wit the Holy Ghost John 16.7 I will send him unto you This promise our Lord oft repeateth that his Disconsolate Disciples might once be relieved by it Our Saviour sweetly proceeds in his Swan-like Song before he died John 14.1 Saying Let not your hearts be troubled c. Christ was their comforter while he lived with them Therefore when they heard of his departure from them then sorrow filled their hearts Jo. 16.6 So that they became both uncounsellable and uncomfortable Hereupon he makes his last Sermon takes much pains to convince them of the Expediency of his Departure that if he did not go away the Comforter would not come v. 7. And he had told and taught them before that he could not be so unkind to them as not to tell them the truth were it not so I would have told you John 14.2 It consists not with Christ's Candour to feed his Disciples with the false hopes of an Vtopian felicity as the Devil deals with his Drudges whom he deludes by bringing them into a Fools Paradice and as Mohomet doth with his Musulmans to whom he promises all sensual pleasures when they die in his cause c. No our Lord is no such impostor but tells them truly that he would pray to the Father and the Father would give them another Comforter instead of him their Comforter while he conversed with them and was now departing from them who shall abide with the Disciples for ever John 14.16 The Devil is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Accuser Rev. 12.10 for his accusing the Saints to God as he did Job Chap. 1.9 10. c. the Holy Spirit in direct opposition to the Devil's name is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Pleader Advocate or Comforter whose Office is to bring in promises into believers hearts effectually applying them Eph. 1.13 14. to help our infirmities in prayer making Intercession for us Rom. 8.26 27. To discover to us our graces and evidences for Heaven 1 Cor. 2.12 Rom. 8.28 Whereby we know that we are predestinated unto Glory verse 29.30 31 c. So that such as do refuse to read over their evidences and to rest upon them do no better in that refusal than help Satan the Accuser taking his part against themselves and pleading the Devil's cause against the Holy Ghost their Comforter Yea in a word the Office of the Spirit is to be Christ's Vicar general with whom Christ leaves us by whom he abides with us as he promiseth Matth. 28.20 To the end of the World For he dwelleth in all the Saints John 14.17 which we may never wonder at enough for next to that Divine condescension of Christ's the Son of God's dwelleth in our fain humane nature is this wonderful vouchasafement that the Holy Spirit should not being the Third person in the Holy Trinity disdain to dwell in such dark and dirty Dog-holes as our unholy Hearts and defiled Souls 'T is undoubtedly an Inestimable Favour which is promised Joel 2.28 That God will pour out his Spirit upon all flesh What is so vile as flesh Hosea 8.13 'T is there a name of Contempt And what is so precious as Spirit 'T is the Quintessence and Excellency of the best things Extracted from the courser unrefined Sediments The precious graces God gives us are call'd the Spirit Gal. 5.17 and the Fruits of the Spirit verse 22. And when God gives us his Spirit Luke 11.13 He is said to give us all good things in that one gift Matth. 7.11 Hence Christ tells the Disciples he would not leave them Orphans or Darklings John 14.18 But they should have the supplies of his Spirit as Phil. 1.29 phraseth it to be their best teacher of truth teaching nothing but what is consonant to the Holy Scriptures John 14.26 which distinguisheth him from the Spirit of Errour This comforter Christ sendeth as he saith John 15.26 From the Father for Christ hath satisfied the Father's wrath and now the Father and the Son as reconciled join both together in sending the Spirit as the fruit of both their loves and as an earnest which is a part of the total Sum the Spirit is the best guide to godliness John 16.13 and the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness righteousness and truth Eph. 5.9 Note Though Christ promised to send the Spirit which was performed ten days after his Ascension at Pentecost c. to his Disconsolate Disciples yet may we not think that they had not the Holy Ghost before he Ascended for they could not have the smallest measure of Grace but it must be by the Spirit of Grace No man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Spirit 1 Cor. 12.3 that is with a fiducial assent of the heart none can acknowledge Christ to be Lord the only Lord to be worshipped but by the Revelations and suggestions of the Spirit and this these Disciples had oft done before Beside 't is said Christ breathed upon them saying Receive ye the Holy Ghost John 20.22 whereby they might know that they received of the same Spirit that was in Christ to fit them for the Ministry without which who can be sufficient 2 Cor. 2.16 Seeing 't is a work that will Burden the Back of an Angel and make him tremble saith Chrysostom Yet the full measure of Grace and the great gift of the Holy Ghost was not given till Pentecost when Christ the King of Kings was installed in his Kingdom Acts 2.2 c. These were reserved till that time as 't is said The Holy Ghost was not yet given for Christ was not yet glorified John 7.39 Though before this they had received some Love-tokens from Christ before his departure to live upon as the Dear Wife from the Loving Husband till the grand promised portion of the Father came for which they were to tarry at Jerusalem ten days Luke 24.49 Learn we hence 1. If the Holy Spirit be so good a gift of God yea all good things be contained therein then we should ask this gift of God above all as Elijah before his Ascension bids Elisha ask what he would He answer That thy Spirit may be doubled upon me 2 Kings 2.9 And it was done accordingly so Christ bids us ask what we will John 16.24 We must answer Lord let thy Spirit be doubled upon me that I may receive double Grace to that I now have c. 2. Then we should prepare an honourable Room in our hearts for entertaining such an honourable guest in as the Holy Spirit is Res Delicata est Spiritus Dei so some read Psal 143.10 the Spirit is a cleanly and delicate thing and loves to live in a clean house or heart c. As the Shunamitish Woman said to her Husband Let us make a little Chamber for the man of God when he comes to us c. 2 Kings
publick Character for Zeal and Godliness far better than his Name-sake the Hypocrite Acts 5. as appears Acts 22.12 and one of the Seventy as some say sent out by our Saviour Luke 10.1 However he had an extraordinary warrant and call from Christ for this whole Transaction towards Saul c. N.B. This grand Transaction concerning both Ananias and Saul hath so many famous Remarkable Passages in it as will amount to a distinct discourse in the sequel Section Having dispatched Saul's Miraculous Vocation I now come to his Marvelous Ordination to the Apostolical Ministry which he boldly began to officiate in first at Damascus then at Jerusalem c. Saul's Ordination is described to be done 1. By what Organ or Instrument 2. In what Manner And 3. The Event thereof 1st The Ordaining Organ or Minister was Ananias whom whosoever he was Presbyter Deacon or One of the Seventy Disciples or only a private Christian it matters not Christ gave an extraordinary Commission to become his Embassador upon so eminent an Errand and who at first did timorously startle at his Embassage knowing both Saul's past pestilent Persecutions at Jerusalem and his present Power from the High Priest to do the like at Damascus until the Lord answered his Objections and then he obeyed Acts 9.10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17. after which the Manner and Event follow The Remarks upon the Organ of Ordination are these First Learn hence the necessity and usefulness of a standing Ministry here Christ converts Saul but his Minister must instruct him It was the Church in the Wilderness's choice Let Moses speak to us but let not the Lord himself speak to us lest we die Exod. 20.19 and it was no less Job's wish also Job 33 6 7. for Elihu tells him Behold I am according to thy wish c. my terrour shall not make thee afraid And verse 23. He reckons it as a great privilege If there be a Messenger with a Man an Interpreter one of a thousand to shew unto Man c. 'T is therefore a singular mercy to have the mind of God made known to us by Men like our selves As the Lord ordained the Office of the Ministry so he hath establish'd that Office with efficacy and adorned that efficacy with his own use to convey the Water of Life by those Conduit-Pipes at second hand which shall not be communicated immediately from himself to us The Second Remark is Such as be prompt to Christ's Service may upon appearing difficulties hang back till they ●e helped over those stumbling-blocks by the helping hand of Christ Thus it was with Ananias whom the Lord call'd on in a Vision he answered Behold I am here Lord Acts 9. v. 10. to shew his readiness to run any Errand the Lord would send him and to do what he commandeth him But understanding what it was he then consulting with flesh and blood is affrighted and would be excused as Moses desired Exod. 3.11 c. and 4.1 10 13. This was both their Infirmities fear diverted them from their duty yet the Lord most graciously removes the Remora's and stumbling-blocks out of both their ways of obedience Thus the spirit prevails against the flesh in us and its Objections The Best of Men are but Men at the best and have their unnecessary fears as Ananias had here who thought he had much reason for his Reluctancy N.B. Oh whither may not a Servant of God dare to go while he goes in God's hand that conducts him along as the Child though timorous yet boldly walks even through the darkest Entry because he walks in his Father's hand Thus Abraham went out not knowing whither he went Heb. 11.8 yet was he content to be a follower of God blindfold because he knew with whom he went So Ananias here so soon as convinced that his heavenly Father's presence could preponderate all perils he presently subscribes to the Divine Precept and obeys Oh how ready is the Lord to remove the scruples out of the minds of his Saints The Third Remark is Christ knows both where and what we all are and do as here he tells Ananias for his better satisfaction both 1. Where Saul was both in what Street and in what House verse 11. His Redeemed are so dear to him that he loves that Street wherein they lodge the better for them yea the very Air they breath in he loves the better for their breathings there as well as the very Ground they tread upon as is imported Psal 87.5 6. He loves the very Gates where they are born and dwell verse 2. above all other places and the Walls of their Dwelling-places though but Mud-walls or Wooden are continually before him Isa 49.16 as if he loved to look alway upon them how should then Holiness to the Lord as Zech. 14.20 be alway writ in fair legible Characters upon the Walls of our Houses 2. What Saul was calling him a chosen Vessel verse 15. First a Vessel to shew that Believers are rather Patients than Agents in the work of Conversion and in matters of Holiliness therefore Saul here is not compared to any Active Engine that moves it self and sets it self upon work but to a Passive Instrument such as Dishes and Vessels are that may bear Meat Treasure c. by the help of the bearer's hand 2 Cor. 4.7 Secondly Yet a chosen Vessel Christ the great Housholder hath all forts of Utensils or Vessels in his great House the Visible Church some for higher and nobler Imploys others for lower and meaner Services This Saul was predestinated to be a Vessel of Honour Rom. 9.21 2 Tim. 2.19 20 21. whom God had chosen to bear the Divine Treasure of the Gospel in both to Jews and Gentiles though he was but an Earthen Vessel or as the word signifies a poor Oyster-shell 2 Cor. 4.7 He was chosen of God to Preach the Gospel Gal. 1.15 as likewise to suffer for Christ's sake 1 Thes 3.3 and Acts 9.16 Thus the Potter hath power over his Clay Rom. 9.21 c. and so is a most free Agent without any obligation from his lumps of Clay he calls whom he will Mark 3.13 He hath mercy on this Saul yet hardens Pharaoh c. 3. What Saul did Behold he prayeth verse 11. It appeareth by verse 17. that Christ revealed unto Ananias not only what Saul was doing to wit that he was praying and humbling himself greatly before the Lord as that matchless Sinner Manasseh had done for his defying God for his murdering Men and for his worshipping Devils 2 Chron. 33.11 12. in those Solemn Duties of Fasting and Prayer but also the very subject matter of that which he prayed for to wit for the inlightning both of his Soul and Body that he might lead a new and a better life for the future in which great Humiliation he spent all his three days of bodily Blindness inflicted upon him to make him sensible the more of his Soul-Blindness Hereupon Ananias having all this made known
baptized Peter's Question was without Question Can any man forbid Water c Acts 10.47 He argueth from the thing signified to the sign and his Question in effect is a vehement Assertion and a most cogent Argument as it is improved by him afterwards Acts 11.17 importing that such as God hath granted Inward Baptism unto no Man no Minister must deny the Outward N. B. As he that hath a right to and a propriety in an Inheritance cannot without manifest injury and injustice be denied the Writings and Seals thereunto appertaining Because these Gentiles had the Grace signified and promised in Baptism and so had got the Inward part therefore to deny them the Outward part could not but be a very injurious Act Hereupon they were baptized in the Name of the Lord Acts 10.48 which was not a differing practice from Christ's precept In the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost Matth. 28.19 for under that title the Lord is meant not only Christ the Anointed but also the Father who Anointed him and the Spirit by whom he was Anointed So the same phrase Acts 2.38 and 19.2 5. Rom. 6.3 and Gal. 3.27 is understood N. B. Thus also the Sacrament of Baptism seals up Adoption in Infants born of believing Parents and pronounced holy 1 Cor. 7.14 having thereby the Inward Grace they have a right to the Outward Sign as it doth Seal up Faith in those of Riper years c. The twelfth Remark is The Call and Conversion of the Gentiles became a dreadful stumbling-block to the Jews yea to the Believers as well as Unbelievers We read how They of the Circumcision who believed were astonished c. Acts 10.45 Those were the six Brethren who accompanied Peter from Joppa to Caesarea Acts 11.12 N. B. Peter acted prudently in taking so many men of the Jews with him to bear a full Testimony by so many mouths concerning the Grace of God given to the Gentiles foreseeing what an offence it would prove to the Jews But these six Companions of Peter were only amazed at this and well they might beholding the Holy Ghost bestowed upon the Gentiles this first time in the like manner as it was at its bestowing upon the Jewish Nation Acts 2.4 namely by immediate Infusion Whereas at all other times where any mention is made of giving the Gifts of the Spirit we find a mention also of Imposition of Hands used in order to obtain that extraordinary grace this made those six men astonished not yet understanding the mystery of the Call of the Gentiles but thinking that Christ and his Grace had only been promised to the Jews But the very Apostles and Brethren in Judaea only hearing of these things but not seeing them were down-right offended at Peter when he returned the second time to Jerusalem and plainly quarrelled with him for going to the Gentiles and eating with them Acts 11.1 2 3 c. Now comes in that great Point to be disputed Whether Peter did well in admitting the Gentiles into Gospel-Communion without Circumcision This is justified by two Topicks The first is the Argument pressed in Peter's Apology to those who took him to Task for his Baptizing Cornelius c. And the second is drawn from the commendable and successful Edification of the Gentile-Church at Antioch As to the first it consists of two parts the Offence of the one party and the Defence of the other First The Offence was too captiously taken but not really given so it was Scandalum acceptum not datum This conversing with the Gentiles or Heathens was look'd upon as a piacular and detestable crime among the Jews as not only contrary to the Tradition of their Elders and Precepts of their wise men but also to those Scripture allusions Let him be to thee as on Heathen Matth. 18.17 and not to keep company or to eat with Idolaters 1 Cor. 5.10 11. therefore the Apostles Brethren and Jews of the Circumcision charge Peter home for violation of their Law N. B. We may well wonder here that those Believers who had not only one God to their Father but also one Church to their Mother yea were born of the same Spirit and were fed by the same Milk of the Word of God should yet quarrel upon this occasion because the Gentiles were not only informed of the Truth but also reformed from their Errours yea and plainly transformed into the same Image of the Word which they had through grace now received as if the Jews designed to make a Monopoly of a whole Jesus to themselves from the Gentiles We may wonder the more at this contention N. B. Because we find no such quarrel at Peter and John for their going down to Samaria though the Samaritans were odious enough to the Jewish Nation c. This only may be said to qualifie that Journey beside their Commission from Christ Acts 1.8 because the Samaritans were neither uncircumcised nor Idolaters both which they knew the Heathens or Gentiles were and therefore more detestable to them N. B. There was indeed a partition-wall betwixt Jew and Gentile of God's own erecting that the former might not have any familiar converse especially in Marriages with the latter and the ●abbi's made this wall larger than God had made it making it unlawful to eat with or enter into the house of a Gentile hence arose this Objection of theirs against Peter's practice Acts 11.3 Whereas the Law of God forbad not all commerce with the Gentiles much less that whereby they might be gained to God but that only which might corrupt the Jews and withdraw them from God And Peter himself who is now cavilled at professeth his conscientious observation of that Law of God Acts 10.28 to Cornelius c. and to God himself verse 14. Yea and of the very Traditions of the Elders also over and above the Law of God John 4.9 and 18.28 c. till God convinced him by a Vision Acts 10.15 c. First These Believing Jews who contended with Peter here were all zealous of the Law Acts 21.20 21. in Paul's case there as now in Peter's here and still were so weak as to be too much addicted to Jewish Ceremonies insomuch that they thought Circumcision simply necessary to Salvation Acts 15.1 5. and would have the Believing Gentiles also circumcised until they were better instructed as there by the Decrees of the Church Acts 15.29 So here by the Relation of Peter as here followeth for their farther and fuller satisfaction Nor did those Zealots of the Legal Rites object against Peter saying Why hast thou Baptized the Gentiles or why didst thou Preach to them For this would have been an injurious affront to Christ and contrary to his express command Mat. 28 19 Acts 1.8 c. Secondly The Defence Peter maketh to their offence objected from ver 4. to v. 18. Acts 11. wherein Peter not pretending any preheminence over the Church as his pretended Successors do at this day willingly submitteth himself and
met with and indured from both the unbelieving Jews and the Miscreant Gentiles God over-ruled it so as to make their piety a most exceeding renowned pattern even to those who were in Christ long before them Those Converts received then the word in much affliction and therefore Paul saith that the Gospel sounded out like a Trumpet and resounded like an Eccho from those Thessalonians as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies 1 Thess 1.6 7 8. The fourth Remark is 'T is the Devil's old and new method to lay the most grievous crimes to the charge of Christians Thus he did here by his tools charging the Servants of Christ that they had turned the world upside down verse 6. accusing them of Innovation and Sedition Thus Elias was accounted of old the troubler of Israel And in the primitive times of the Gospel whatever calamity came upon Kingdoms the Christians were blamed for it and their enemies used to impeach them of whatever crime was odious and abominable yea they were went to cloath them with uggly Beasts Skins to cast them unto Lions to be devoured or if not so that any wicked man might hunt them with Doggs and so devour them This was not done only by the Heathen Tyrants but also by the Modern Antichristian Persecutors whose thirst could never be quenched but by the blood of the Saints and therefore they put Sambenitos or Pictures of Devils upon them and represented them in the most deformed forms that none should stick at their Execution Luther was call'd the Trumpet of Rebellion whereas 't is not the Gospel but Mens Corruptions that breed disturbance N.B. This Truth may be Illustrated and Exemplified by a Familiar Similitude 'T is not the Sea of it self but 't is the foulness of Passenger's Stomachs that makes them Sea-sick The fifth Remark is Behold how marvelously the Lord delivers his Servants out of the hands of their bloody Persecutors Tho' they laid Treason as well as Sedition to their charge which they knew was a Capital Crime and would cost them their lives for Proclaiming CHRIST a KING contrary to the Decrees of Caesar as v. 7. Yet could not the Devil catch his prey while he was as he loves to do here fishing in troubled Waters for the Lord hid the Apostles as he did Jeremy and Baruch Jer. 36.26 out of their murderous hands having farther work for them And tho' Jason and his Friends were dragged away before the Court and charged there as Abettors of Treason c. N.B. Yet God so over-ruled those Rulers that they fearing more the unanswerableness of this uproar to the Roman power under which they then lived than any other evil effect from the preaching of the Gospel they only took security of him for his own or for the Apostles Appearance when Required whereby they appeased the people and discharged their prisoners whose Recognisance was never called for afterwards This brings us to Paul's third Station namely at Berea to which City he and Silas were sent privily by night when no more work could at that time be done at Thessalonica for which they had Christ's Warrant When they persecute you in one City flee to another Thus they did flee to Berea not far from Thessalonica The Sacred Narrative of this Station consists of two general heads First The high commendation of the Apostles Auditory met with in this place for exceeding those of Thessalonica in Candor Generosity Prudence and Promptitude both to hear and receive the word of God verse 11 and 12. And secondly The hard usage and opposition the Apostles met with here also This hath a double description the first is How it was raised and by whom verse 13. Berea not being far from Thessalonica the tidings of the Apostles courteous reception here stirred up the Rude Rabble there to bring persecution from Thessalonica to Berea And secondly How it was quelled and by whom namely by the pious policy of the Brethren in Berea verse 14. Conveying Paul who was most maligned away privily to Athens but leaving Silas and Timotheus there still being less obnoxious to edifie the new founded Church there Tho' their stay was not long there for Paul sent his Command to them that they should follow him speedily to Athens ver 15. to assist him in that great work there The Remarks upon Paul's third Station in Europe are these The first Remark is To be docible and well disposed toward the Gospel of Christ is the best sort of Gentility and Nobleness Those Berean Jews were said to be more noble upon this account than were those obstinate perverse and prejudiced Jews at Thessalonica N. B. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 11. signifieth better Gentlemen or as we read it more Noble because all learned men among the Jews were call'd Sons of Nobles Thus the Bereans were better learned of the two which is the more manifest insomuch as it is the character given them that they were daily searchers of the writings of the Prophets they patiently heard what Paul preached they pondered it in their minds and when they had upon comparing it with the Scriptures found it consonant thereunto they received it into their hearts not so much as the word of man but as the word of God as Paul tells them 1 Thess 2.13 This made them better Gentlemen then their Country-men he speaks of there verse 14 15. who Kill'd Christ and his Prophets persecued Paul pleased not God and were rather Ishmalites than Israelites in their being contrary to all men But those Berean Jews were better bred and of a better descent not by civil humane dignity but by spiritual Divine dignation N.B. Assuredly the best and truest Nobility is that of Christianity wherein God himself is the top of the Kin and Religion the Root Isa 43.4 Such as are precious in God's sight are truly honourable the Nobles of the Tekoites were blemished in their blood Neh. 3.5 having but the shadow and shape of honour The second Remark is The Bereans diligence in improving their Talent before Conversion and God adding his blessing to his own given Talent well improved is a blessed pattern and president for us N.B. There are certain abilities God hath given us for external Actions which we may perform without special grace and would we but imploy and improve them to the best advantage for our Souls good we may say our Orthodox Casuists expect the effectual work of the Spirit of Grace to Sanctifie both them and us Thus we may behold in those Noble Bereans how they brought their bodies to the Assembly took the Heads of Paul's Sermon Reverently and Impartially Repeated the Notes they had taken Religiously nor was this all they would not Jurare in verb. Magistri Pin their Faith upon Paul's Sleeve to take all he preached upon Trust as an infallible Oracle but examin'd all his Assertions by the holy Scriptures which they knew were the only infallible Rule because they came from God 2
Apostate for it he confessed it but saying he was only fal'n off from the Devil c. nor may we keep Company with the Incorrigible See Ephes 5.7 11.2 Thess 3.14 2 Cor. 6.14 15 16 c. Tit. 3.10 c. The fifth Remark is Paul's Apostle-ship and Ministry was confirmed by his working Miracles at Ephesus verse 11 12. N.B. Those Miracles he wrought there were not common and ordinary or such as might happen by chance but special or singular such as had been wrought by Peter Acts 5.12 15. and such as our Saviour had foretold and promised John 14.12 Insomuch that even Handkerchiefs or Aprons having but touched Paul's body and being brought unto the Diseased became by a Miracle the most Soveraign means both to cure diseases and to cast out Devils N.B. which were greater Works than Christ did for the matter tho' not for the manner of them because Paul did not these things in his own name but in Christ's nor did he preach up himself the Churche's Bridegroom or Husband but her Servant for Jesus's sake N.B. God was pleased to put a power into those improbable unlikely and in themselves Contemptible means to work miracles for two Reasons 1. That the power of Christ whom Paul preached might the more evidently be manifested therein And 2. That such as were absent tho' never had seen Paul nor heard him preach might yet have an high and honourable estimation of and veneration for Christ and his Gospel These Miracles did magnifie much Paul's Ministry N.B. Nor doth this make any thing for palliating the Superstitious use of Popish Relicts so much reverenced tho cheats by the Papists The sixth Remark is The Devil would gladly be God's APE ver 13.14 N.B. The Jewish Jugglers there would by all means imitate the Apostles in casting out Devils designing thereby if they could have done it by their Charms effectually to have persuaded the people that all the Apostles miracles were but Magical Exorcisms Yet those Exorcists pretended to charm in the Name of the Lord Jesus as if there had been in the bare Words and Syllables which they propounded a power of Miracles N.B. Tho' there be certainly none in them yet the true God being willing to be known and owned rather than that the names of the false Gods should be called upon hath sometimes put forth his power in such Superstitious Invocations Matth. 12 27. Tho' now to those Vagrants like our Gipsies Vagabonds God would not give this honour because he was now manifesting the Majesty and Glory of the Messiah so would not concur with any that came not in his Authority as well as name yet whatever had been formerly done by calling on the God of Abraham as Josephus Relateth strange Storys thereby 't is abominable impiety because God's Word warrants no such practice nor gives one promise to act faith on in so doing The seventh Remark is The Devil by Divine permission hath power over those that prophane the name of Christ taking it in Vain against the 3d. Commandment tho' they be descended from never so honourable predecessors and themselves never so much pretenders to a Veneration for the name of Jesus c. Mention is made here for a clear manifestation of this truth That there are Seven Sons of Sceva one that had been high Priest or of the chief of those 24. Courses of Priests divided by David 1 Chron. 24.4 who became Vagabounds wandring up and down to conjure out evil Spirits in the name of the God of Abraham as Josephus saith in his Eighth Book c. merely to pick a livelihood out of that Trade as our Jugglers do but turned their Tone here when they saw how the Apostle wrought miracles in the Name of Jesus they likewise adjured evil Spirits by Jesus whom Paul preached verse 13 14. N.B. This should teach all Parents especially Ministers to use their utmost indeavours that their Children be well educated That great High Priest Pope Paul the third thought it sufficient to say of his Dissolute and Bloody Son Farnesius haec vitta me non commonstratore didicit he never learnt those Debauchees of his Father What these Seven Sons learnt of their Priestly Father the Scripture is silent yet are they called here certain Vagabond Jews and Exorcists or Conjurers who thought to work as mighty miracles as Paul did but the Devil proved too hard for them Saying Jesus I know for he had destroyed the Devil's works Heb. chap. 2. v. 14. and Paul I know for he had felt his fingers in that Messenger of Satan 2 Cor. chap. 12. v. 7. and yet had thrown the Devil out of his Trenches 2 Cor. 10.4 but who are ye tho' they to wit Jesus and Paul have a Commission to cast me out yet I know ye have no power to cast me out too N.B. Here the old Lyar spake truth confessing that he was under God's Command signified to him by the least of God's Ministers v. 15. The possessed by the power of the Devil who hath not lost his natural tho' he hath his moral and Spiritual power Rushes upon those Exorcists Masters all the seven tears their Cloaths wounds their bodies and had not God here limited the Devil had unavoidably destroyed them all However that he did thus much mischief to those who were his own Vassals may well be wondered at because the Devil usually and willingly Co-operateth with Conjurers and Witches called Begnalath of the Mistress of a Devil 1 Sam. 28.7 suffering himself to be commanded by them out of others bodies that they might confederate with him in their Souls but here God over-ruled all and defeated the Devil in his wicked practices making all serve the farther advancement of the Gospel which Paul preached The eigth Remark is This Execution of Divine Vengeance wrought wonderfully for the Conviction and Conversion both of Jews and Greeks Acts 19. ver 17. insomuch that many believed and came and confessed their sinful Deeds verse 18 19. N.B. When these Sinners saw that God undertook the patronage of this preacher of the Gospel making the Devil his Executioner upon the Sons of Sceva for prophaning the name of Christ this did not only strike them all with terrour but also they believing that God's power was above the Devil 's thereby became sensible of their danger in being led still Captive by the Devil at his will and would keep his Council no longer but laid ope their spiritual mutual Sores of former Diabolical Delusions by a publick and ingenuous Confession that the Balm of the Gospel might be the more effectually powred into them N.B. As the fear of God's Judgments moved them to Confess their sins not privately in the ears of a Priest as Papists do but publickly in the hearing of all which was some ease and cooling to their Consciences like giving Vent to a Vessel ready to break and cooling the blood by breathing a Vein and their Confession by the Mouth was made unto Salvation Rom.
because we are taught or at least learn but imperfectly Thus those good men being ignorant of that special command Paul had to go this Journey to Jerusalem Acts 19.21 and 20.22 c. they did according to what they knew out of mere Commiseration and true Charity diswade Paul from that Journey But it may be Objected N.B. These good men knowing that the Spirit by which they spake of Paul 's sufferings at that City was infallible and could not Err or be mistaken How come they to diswade him from going to Jerusalem N.B. This Objection hath a double Answer First It was with him as it had been with Elisha in another case saying The Lord hath hid it from me and hath not told me 2 Kin. 4.17 He knew not all things at all times So here the Lord and his Spirit had not told these prophecying Disciples far short of that Eminent Prophet who had a double portion of the Spirit of Elija upon him whereby he wrought a double number to his Master's miracles How Paul went bound in the Spirit to Jerusalem but thinking it to be his own Voluntary choice and understanding by Divine Revelation how much this Enterprize would indanger him they out of their own private Spirit of compassion and humane affection toward him but not from any special command of the Spirit of God desired him not to venture himself thither The 2d Answer is Those men might probably think also that this prediction of Paul's sufferings there was only conditional in case he ventured to Jerusalem in like manner David was told that the men of Keilah would deliver him up to Saul 1 Sam. 23. v. 11 12. to wit in case he had been so fool-hardy as to betrust himself among and with them Thus it is apparent that the Spirit of truth never crosseth or contradicteth himself in any of his Revelations The fourth Remark is Believers come under a double denomination here They are called Disciples verse 4 and Brethren verse 7. N.B. This Reason may be rendred for it Believers in Ptolemais were gathered to-together into Church-Order and had Church-Meetings so are call'd Brethren but not so at Tyre where they lived under no Church-power c. So are call'd Disciples only NB. Where the number of Believers are dispersed and not yet Collected into Church Fellowish with Order and Officers there they are called Disciples or Schollars of Christ only as Beza observeth but when they joyn themselves into Church-Union and Communion then are they honoured with that highest Title of brethren as both in verse 7. and 17. Then the Staff of Bands and the Staff of Beauty Zech. 11. verse 7. are both together Where the bands of the Communion of Saints are found there is far more beauty of holiness than where Christians live in a scattered condition one from another The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or being of Christianity may be there in the former where the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or well-being of it cannot be found as in the latter N.B. The Flowers of the Garden may be indeed flowers yea and Fragrant flowers too in themselves while they grow in the several beds or pots at distance one from another but they become much more fragrant and odoriferous when they are gathered together and bound up in a Nose-gay and so presented according to this Apostle's own phrase 2 Cor. 11.2 as an incorrupted Virgin to Christ that the smell of her Graces may refresh his eye and ravish his heart Cant. 4.9 10. The fifth Remark is Those Primitive-Gospel-times God most highly honoured with the powrings out of his spirit upon all Flesh N.B. For under the Law God gave out of his spirit but in lesser measures and comparatively by drops only But under the Gospel and the first fruits thereof our blessed Messiah powred out his spirit not here a little and there a little as before but now more largly and plentifully as it were whole pales full at once yea even to an overflow were the fillings of the Spirit at that time they were filled therewith over and over again Acts 2.4 and 4 31. And this was done upon all sorts of Mortals as well on Gentiles as Jews N.B. Contrary to their proud conceit that God gave himself to no people out of the Land of Israel yea and that without distinction of Sex or Rank as he had promised that Sons and Daughters yea Servants and Hand-maids should have the Spirit and Prophecy Joel 2.28 and in part fulfilled Acts 2.17 18. N.B. More particularly upon the Female Sex as upon Anna the Prophetess Luke 2.36 and upon those four Daughters of Philip here Acts 21.8 9. whereby God shewed the inlargement of his loving-kindness which he reserved for the first Gospel-times Here both the Father and his four Daughters are honourably Recorded in their high Advancement For 1. The Father was but a Deacon Acts 6.5 who preaching so successfully at Samaria Acts 8 and discharging his Deacon-ship so well that he purchased to himself this higher degree according to the Apostle's own Rule 1 Tim. 3.13 of being an Evangelist which was an Office placed next to Apostles and above Pastors and Teachers Eph. 4.11 and who were not confined to any place and people as the ordinary Officers are but to preach the Gospel every where as Timothy was exhorted to do 2 Tim. Ch. 4. v. 5. N.B. This Philip was honoured to be the Apostle's Host at Cesarea Acts 21.8 2 His four Daughters are Recorded to be Virgins to wit by their Fathers and their own voluntary consent as 1 Corinth 7.37 not as the Popish Votary-Nuns it is not said that they continued in that state but that they were also prophetesses in foretelling things to come not publick preachers contrary to 1 Corinth 14.34 and 1 Tim. 2.12 c. The sixth Remark is The Sufferings of the Saints and Servants of God are not fortuitous as comming by chance or casualty nor are they only from the power of persecutors but they are all fore known ordained and ordered by the most wise God N.B. Thus was it with Paul in his persecutions they Sprang not out of the Dust Job 5 6. but were determined by a Divine decree as his Lords and Masters were Acts 2.23 and 4.28 against whom Pilate could not have prevailed unless power had been given him from above John 19.11 Thus all the sufferings of Christ's Servants are the matter of God's prescience council and providence as well as purpose from all eternity Eph. 3.11 As Paul's sufferings were fore-ordained by God so they were foretold both by and from God N.B. Thus the Lord said at Paul's first Call and Conversion I will shew him how greatly he must suffer for my name's sake Acts 9.16 even as great things as ever he himself caused others to suffer both by the malice of the Jews his own Country-men and by the fury of Gentiles Whereof we have a Catalogue from himself 2 Cor. 11. verse 23. and this was made known
be either Hector'd by threatnings or allured by Flatteries to lay down his ministry and desist from his preaching-work No doubt but his silence would have been his security both against the malice of the adverse Jews and against the power of the Idolatrous Pagans But a Necessity was laid upon him and a wo unto him if he preached not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 which himself denounced Fourthly This he did also with all confidence and with an undaunted Courage for his love to Christ was somewhat like Christ's love to him stronger than death Cant. 8.6 As Christ had dyed for him so was he ready to dye for Christ Acts 21.13 and he was the more confident because none were found so fool-hardy to attempt the making him timerous and diffident as followeth Fifthly no man forbidding him not because the Jews wanted malice or the Pagans power but because God who setteth bounds to the raging Sea Job 38.11 who suffered not a Dog to bark at Israel's coming so calmly out of inraged Aegypt Exod. 11. v. 7. and who shut the Mouths of the hungry Lions that they hurt not Daniel Dan. 6. v. 22. did deliver Paul both from Nero and from the Jews So that it was then even in Rome-Heathen as impossible to hinder the progress of the Gospel as to stop the Sun from shining or the Wind from blowing Yet such attempts are in Rome-Anti-christian at this day Wherein the contrary to all the afore-said may easily be exemplified Joseph did indeed provide a Granary or store-house of Corn in every City and Village against the famine that lay on the Land of Aegypt But popish Countries want such a Joseph Publick Statutes are made to forbid Christians of the Reformed Religion from having either publick or private places of meeting into worship God and no man incouraging contrary to this here where there 's no man forbiding The Supplement after the last of Acts 28. CHAP. XXIX A Scripture account of Paul while at Rome c. VVHERE Luke the Evangelist tho' guided by the good Spirit of God yet thought it his duty to desist from giving any farther account of the History of the Apostles Lives and Acts and more especially of the Apostle Paul's with whom he was a constant companion in Rome There must I begin this my Supplement N.B. Wherein because Ecclesiastical History having only an humane Testimony is found both various and uncertain about the lives and deaths of the Apostles therefore I shall not dare to confine my following Discourse unto what is Recorded by Nicephorus Eusebius and others from whose Conjectural Relations nothing can be positively and with undenyable evidence asserted N.B. Now that the Sequel and Supplement of this Apostolical History may be as Harmonious Homogeneal and Symbolizing with the former foregoing twenty eight Chapters as the matter may admit I have thought of this Expedient to bottom my Assertions still upon such Historical Hints as are found scattered here and there in the Sacred Scriptures namely in the Canonical Epistles of the Divinely Inspired Apostles themselves which they wrote upon several occasions as they were guided by the Holy Ghost to give an infallible Account N. B. Hitherto we have had lent us by the Lord a Divine Clew of Thread to lead us through this vast Labyrinth of writing the History of the Apostles Lives so far as Luke who wrote their Acts so called hath led us which Book of the Acts might as well be called The Wonders of the Apostles considering what Wonders it containeth not only such Wonders as were wrought by the Apostles but also for them to deliver preserve and incourage them in their prodigious Apostolical Work Insomuch as all the Attempts both of the Tempter himself the Red Dragon and of all his many and mighty Tools which he imployed for silencing the Apostles and for stopping the progress of Christianity which was every where spoken against Acts 28 22. were confoundingly disappointed N.B. We may well therefore call that History of the Apostles not only the Acts a name wherewith that holy Pen-man Luke the Apostles themselves modestly contented themselves but also the Wonder of Wonders wherein the Truth and Power of God did so wonderfully appear that the Gospel should be so irresistibly propagated by them when all men generally both Jews and Gentiles in all Places and of all Ranks both Princes and Peasants opposed it So that the Doctrine of Christianity which the Apostles taught had the multitude the Powers and Authority the Wisdom of the whole World yea and if all the seeming Sanctity that then was in the World to wit among the Jews all these every where were against it Christ was a Sign spoken against as was foretold of him Luke 2.34 in all places by all people N.B. Now what could rationally be expected in such a desperate case and concern which the Apostles undertook and entred upon but that every natural man would at the least suspect that which all the World so generally condemned Notwithstanding all this universal opposition yet did the Gospel prevail and run through the World like a Sun-beam yea and did so much so universally and so constantly flourish in despite of both Angry Men and of Inraged Devils that indeed this became by the mighty Power of God no less than a wonder of Wonders N.B. Now waving Ecclesiastical History let us still stick to the Sacred Scriptures so far as they give light to this Apostolical History Re-assuming the passages of Providence that attended Paul after his coming to Rome The first Remark farther concerning Paul is His writing several Epistles during his Imprisonment at Rome to several Churches and Persons Luke who accompany'd Paul to Rome as appeareth by his phrase We all along Acts 27. and more expresly in Acts 28. And when we came to Rome verse 16 c. gives no farther account of him but only of his lying a Prisoner there for two whole years and Preaching c. Acts 28.30 31. N.B. As it cannot be supposed that Paul spent all this two whole years time in his Preaching work for this would have wearied hoth himself and his Auditors but that there must be a due Interval betwixt one exercise and another not so much for his private Preparations in his Study because he had an extraordinary Apostolical gift c. So nor may it be imagined that such an Indefatigable Labourer in God's Vineyard could carelesly omit the Improvement of his Horae succisivae or spare hours in this two whole years time and therefore 't is no more than rational to affirm that during this his long Confinement he wrote sundry Epistles c. as above But beside the rationality hereof some Scripture-Light may confirm it Note As 1. His Epistle to the Galatians he wrote from Rome this is render'd the more probable 1. From the Postscript of that Epistle unto the Galatians written from Rome tho' this be no part of the Canonical Scripture for in other Postscripts to some
of them c. Whose Name was Boaz that is in the Hebrew strength or fortitude He was strong in the Lord and in the power of his Might Hence Observ 3. 'T is a brave attainment to be Rich in this World and to be Rich in Good Works too So Boaz was The Rich Man's Wealth is his strong City saith Solomon Prov. 18.11 Boaz did not make Gold but God his Confidence he did not fall down to Worship that Golden Idol but was Rich in Faith Jam. 2.5 and Rich to God Luke 12.21 Boaz which signifies strength made the Joy of the Lord his Strength Neh. 8.10 not his Riches though strong and mighty in them too well knowing that Man's Life consists not in them Luke 12 15. he can neither live upon them nor lengthen his Life by them a Man like a Ship may have enough to sink him but not enough to satisfie him V. 2. Ruth said to Naomi Let me go now into the Field to glean Hence Observ 1. God oft raises high Buildings upon weak Foundations Great things oft come from small Beginnings God put small thoughts into Ruth's Heart of gleaning in the Field And hence God order'd her great preferment to be the Great-Grandmother of God-Man the Saviour of the World Small thoughts in the Mind of Ahasuerus Esth 6.1 and of our Henry VIII brought forth mighty things Let me now go into the Field Hebr. Elekah na has hadah Si ' Jubes ut permitte me hoc facere Hence Observ 1. All Daughters ought to be Dutiful Daughters unto those Mothers whom God hath set over them they should ask their Counsel and obey their Commands as Ruth did here her Mother in Law Naomi The words of a Mother should be as a Law to both Sons and Daughters Prov. 1.8 as well as their Fathers Instructions and 't is very remarkable that in one place of Scripture to wit Levit. 19.3 God gives the Right hand to the Mother before the Father Fear every Man his Mother and his Father because their Birth is more costly to their Mother who always brings them forth with sorrow as Jabez's Mother did him and therefore call'd him Jabez a sorrowful Son 1 Chron. 4.9 Then it ever is to their Father and because their Mothers are generally more neglected than their Fathers as Rebecca by profane Esau in his saying The Days of my Mourning for my Father are at hand and then will I slay my Brother Jacob which imports he stood but in little awe of his good Mother in his not regarding her at all yea and Children by being so familiar with their Mothers do mostly contemn them If Ruth here could be so dutiful a Daughter to Naomi who was but her Mother in Law how much to be condemned are all those Children that are Undutiful to their own Mothers which bare them with Sorrow Let me go now Here 's not a word of Ruth's murmuring against the God of Israel in the midst of her Worldly Wants Hence Observ 2. That Poverty should not make any Person have low Thoughts of Piety Ruth doth not grudge at God for keeping his Servants no better as Argoland King of Saragossa did against the God of the Christians when he saw the many poor People that expected Alms from the Table of Charles the Great neither had she the less esteem of true Piety because of her own Worldly Poverty but she had learnt to be in want Phil 4.11 The Lord had made her willing to want what her wise Heavenly Father would have her to want she saw better things in God's Will than in her own Vnder God's Wings she was resolved to trust v. 12. who she well knew would turn her Water of Affliction into the Wine of Consolation when he pleased Into the Field to Glean 'T was an honest way to relieve her wants Hence Observ 3. All Honest Endeavours ought to be used for supplying of Wants but not by any wicked ways whatsoever Ruth here resolves not to return to Moab under her present Wants as ●srael did under their Wilderness Wants to return to Egypt neither doth she think of such wicked Ways of stealing to satisfie her Hunger or of setting her self to Sale in a common Stew for her Livelihood as too many Wanton Young Women do in our Day prostituting their Souls and Consciences as well as their Bodies to the Devil's Devotion and so fitting themselves two-fold more to become the Firebrands of Hell Neither yet doth Ruth resolve to take up the Begging Trade as too many Lusty Vagrants and Vagabonds do in our time but she rather resolves according to the Apostle's Advice to labour with her Hands Dum Vires Annique sinunt while she had Blood in her Veins and Marrow in her Bones that she might thereby administer to her own Wants and to the Wants of her dear and much honoured Mother Eph. 4.28 Poverty oft prompts Persons to Indirect and Unlawful Practices Prov. 30.9 and 6.30 yet an Honest Heart will rather Starve than Steal and rather die than do wickedly as Ruth here she durst not turn Stones into Bread at Satan's bidding and rather falls to labour with her Hands in this painful yet Honest Employment of Gleaning and so depend upon the good Providence of God therein After him in whose sight I shall find Grace Ruth would not Lease without leave and good liking Hence Observ 4. That even Lawful Liberty ought not to be used without Modesty and Humility in asking leave A good Heart enquireth after those three things 1. An Liceat 2. An Deceat 3. An Expediat Is it Lawful Decent and Expedient The Law of God made Gleaning Lawful to the Poor and Stranger Levit. 19.9 and 23.22 and Deut. 24.19 20. Ruth had both those Qualifications yet will she not make use of this benefit allowed her by the Law without the leave and liking of the Owner ver 7. not as some bold Houswives and Thieves do in our Day that say when God's Barn-door is ope in Harvest-time or any door they may fetch Wheat where they can c. Oh how God regarded and rewarded Ruth's Modesty and Humility and will do so others also Hence Observ 5. Such as find Grace and Favour in the Sight of God shall undoubtedly find no less in the sight of Man God will speak in the hearts of Men for all such as wait on him in the way of his Providence labouring with their hands Jerem. 15.11 Prov. 16.7 c. Go my Daughter Hence Observ 6. A meek Spirit gives forth mild Speeches Some Persons have quick and hot Spirits yea even good Persons as those two Brethren the Sons of Thunder alas how soon was their Choler up Luke 9.55 Naomi had undoubtedly that meek and quiet Spirit which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of great price in the sight of God 1 Pet. 3.3 4. 'T is of great value with God because 't is most like himself and his own Spirit that descended in the shape of a Dove 'T is
of such great reckoning with God that he promises Earth to the Meek as he doth Heaven to the Violent Matth. 5.5 and 11.12 Heaven is had by the Violent Earth is Inherited by the Meek one would think that Meek Men are most like to be Sworn out of their Patrimonies as honest Naboth was but the less that Meek Moses was moved at Miriam's Murmurings so much the more did God strike in for him Numb 12.1 c. That Naomi should be thus meek in her Misery was much for Misery is a morose thing of it self and unhinges the Spirit yet Sanctified Affliction contributes much to meeken even a Cholerick Mind David till he had mourned for his sin was mightily severe against the Ammonites 2 Sam. 12.31 Yet after this how meek was he to Shimei c Meekness is the fruit of Mourning Matth. 5.4.5 The Hebr. words that signifie to be Meek and to be in Misery grow both upon the same Root to wit Gnani and Gnana which are of so great Affinity that sometimes the Septuagint renders the one for the other as Psal 36 11 c. Oh how happy might many Families be with more Meekness in them How many are Troublers of their own Houses Prov. 15.27 Thou stout and I stout as saith the Proverb and hard with hard never makes good Wall a soft Answer turns away Wrath Prov. 15.1 Soft Rains doth best allay the most boisterous Winds and a Flint is most easily broken upon a Pillow 'T is easier to stir strife than to stint it God knows there be many such Trouble-Houses Troublers of their own Flesh Prov. 11.17 and Troublers of their own Houses ver 29. they and their Houses never live at Hearts ease and content but rather all in Passion and Contention all in haste and in an hurry as no doubt were in the Houses of Worldly Laban and Nabal which two Names are one if turn'd back in reading V. 3. And her Hap was Vaiiker Mikreah Hebr. Her hap happened 'T was hap or chance in respect of Ruth but it was the Work of Providence in respect of God Hence Observ 1. Those very things that are casual and contingent as to us are yet necessary and unavoidable as to God Ruth did not purposely intend to glean in Boaz's Field as being altogether ignorant what Field did belong to him but she went out with a Resolution to glean in any Man's Field that would give her leave to glean there In whose sight soever I shall find favour Yet was it ordered by the secret working of Divine Providence that she lights upon Boaz's Field rather than upon any other Mans and this was done to make way for her Marriage to the Master of this Field Thus we read Luke 10.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by chance there came by a Priest c. That chance was no other than God's Providence which over-rules all Matters even those that are merely casual and contingent to us The Greek work 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is related to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies the Lord and so the word may be read It was thus ordered by the Lord 'T is God's Providence that orders all things Man's way is not in himself Jerem. 10.23 and 't is said Pharaoh will go c. Exod. 7.15 'T is God's Providence not the Goddess Fortune that orders all even those things that fall out to us Ex improviso praeter prepositum unexpectedly and beyond our purpose The same hand of Providence that caused Saul's Javelin to miss David's Body 1 Sam. 18.11 and other times did also cause David's Sling-stone to hit Goliah's Forehead 1 Sam. 17.49 as also the Syrian Arrow which was drawn in a Bow at a venture to hit betwixt the very Joints of Ahab's Harness 1 Kings 22.34 The same Act which is casual and contingent to Men is yet necessary unto God 'T is remarkable when Nebuchadnezzar came into Syria to a place where two ways met he used his Heathenish Divination to know which way he should take whether against the Ammonites or against the Jews both which had Revolted from him God over-ruled the Matter so that he came against Jerusalem not against Rabbah this was above Man and from God Ezek. 21.21 c. How God may order the French King against us we know not Oh pray that God may not Hiss for them Isa 7.18 And she came and Gleaned 'T was a Mean yet an Honest Employ yet this humble Soul buckles to it though undoubtedly she had never been brought up with it her Mother Naomi who went out full ch 1.21 and so had Means sufficient to maintain her self and Family in a strange Countrey had not used Ruth to any such low Offices yet not she humbly owns it and acts in it and the Lord turn'd it to her great Advancement Hence Observ 2. Even Mean Employments humbly and honestly stoop'd unto do by the good Providence of God prove notable steps to very high Preferments God resists the proud whose Minds are above their Means but he giveth Grace to the Humble Jam. 4 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God sets himself in Battle Aray against all such as the Greek word signifies above all other sorts of Sinners the Proud are principal Invaders in their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or becoming Gods to themselves as Satan early insinuated Gen. 3.5 of the Divine Prerogative and are the chief Invaders or Plunderers of God's best Flowers of his Crown and Dignity Therefore we must pray to be preserved from that perilous Pinacle of Pride and Presumption God defieth such as Deifieth themselves he beholdeth the proud afar off Psal 138.6 he cannot abide the sight of them but such as humble themselves under the Mighty Hand of God as Ruth did here God will exalt them in due time 1 Pet. 5.6 The lower the Ebbe is the higher will the Tide be the lower that the Foundation is laid the higher will the Superstructure and Roof be over-lay'd A diligent person never liveth long in a low place Prov. 22.29 He shall stand before Kings c. But suppose such a Soul live low all his Life yet if his diligence proceed out of Conscience he shall stand before the King of Kings which is far better at his Death there Angel-like to behold the Face of God for ever When Saul was little in his own sight to seek the lost Asses 1 Sam. 15.17 God prefer'd him to a Kingdom and David from the Sheep-fold was brought to the Throne Thus the Lord looked upon the low Estate of his Hand-maid Mary Luke 1.48 upon Ruth here and so he will do upon others also V. 4. And behold Boaz came from Bethlehem The Adverb behold is a Note of Attention calling up our Minds to observe carefully this special passage of Providence Hence Observ 1. The Works of God's Providence are very Wonderful Works There is a behold put upon this passage Oh the wonderful Concurrence of these Occurrences Here Ruth is ordered by Providence into