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A11649 Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, the booke of the Psalmes, and the Song of Songs, or, Canticles VVherein the Hebrevv vvords and sentences, are compared with, and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions, and other records and monuments of the Hebrewes: but chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures, Moses his words, lawes and ordinances, the sacrifices, and other legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of Israel, are explained. With an advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew text, and allegation of the Rabbines in these annotations. As also tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the annotations upon each severall booke. By Henry Ainsworth.; Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, and the booke of the Psalmes Ainsworth, Henry, 1571-1622? 1627 (1627) STC 219; ESTC S106799 2,398,875 1,194

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or inherit the land a figure of the kingdome of Gods grace and glory which the righteous shall possesse by inheritance Esay 60. 21. and 65. 9. Vers. 9. and honey which signified the great fertility of that land and figured out spirituall graces and comforts as is noted on Exod. 3. 8. Vers. 10. thou sowedst and so all the inhabitants as the Greeke translateth they s●w In Egypt from whence Israel came they had no raine but by the over-flowing of the river Nilus the land was watered and by the labour of the husbandman beckes were derived to moysten the ground And that there they had no raine is testified both by the Prophets Zach. 14. 18. and by humane histories Pomp. Mela li. 1. Herodotus in Euterpe Nec pluvio supplicat herba Iovi Tibul. lib. 1. Eleg. 8. with thy foot that is with thy diligent labour signified sometime by the hand Psal. 128. 2. sometime by the foot as Gen. 30. 30. This condition of the land of Egypt the house of bondage figured the estate of men naturally corrupted which they labour to releeve by their own works and with the muddy waters which are from beneath proceeding from earthly wisedome and carnall understanding 1 Cor. 1. 20 31. and 2. 4. 5. Ezek. 34. 19. Ier. 2. 13. Verse 11. mountaines c. hereby is meant the commodious healthfull and pleasant situation of the land farre exceeding Egypt Wherefore sometime the whole land is signified under the name of a mountaine Exod. 15. 17. And because it was hills and vallies it could not be watered with the over-flowing of any river as Egypt which was a plaine but must otherwise bee moystened with the raine of heaven or else remaine barren and fruitlesse the raine this as it is most kinde causeth the earth to be fruitfull in nature so it figured heavenly graces the doctrine of Gods word spirit wherewith the soules of men are made fruitfull in good works Esay 45. 8. Mica 5. 7. See the notes on Gen. 27. 28. Deut. 32. 2. The want of raine is on the contrary a signe of curse Zach. 14. 17 18. Rev. 11. 6. Vers. 12. careth for Hebr. seeketh that is carefully seeth unto it and as the Greeke translateth visiteth According to this phrase Sion is called a citie sought that is cared for or regarded and not forsaken Esay 62. 12. And of Gods gracious providence towards the land of Israel David singeth how the Lord visited the land and plenteously moystened it very much enriched it softned it with showers blessed the bud of it crowned the yeere of his goodnesse and his pathes the clouds dropped fatnesse Psal. 65. 10 11 12. the eyes this also signifieth Gods care and providence for good as in the like speeches Ier. 40. 4. Ezra 5. 5. Psal. 34. 16. Though Gods providence be towards all peoples and hee giveth to all life and breath and all things Acts 17. 25. doing good giving us raine from heaven and fruitfull seasons Acts 14. 17. causing it to raine on the earth where no man is on the wildernesse wherein there is no man Iob 38. 26. yet other peoples have not the word and promise of God whereon to depend as Israel had whereby they might live not by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord Deut. 8. 3. Vers. 13. if hearkening yee shall hearken that is if yee shall diligently hearken and obey This passage of Scripture following the Iewes read daily in their families as is noted on Deut. 6. 4. Vers. 14. the first raine c. or the early raine Twise in a yeere there fell store of raine in Israel in the beginning of the yeere about September or October and halfe a yeere after which was in Abib or March which ecclesiastically began the yeere unto Israel as is noted on Exod 12. 2. whereupon it is called the latter raine in the first moneth Io●l 2. 23. The first raine fell after the ●owing of their corne that it might take rooting in the earth the latter raine was a little before harvest that the eare might be full Of these the Scriptures sundry times speake but so as that they depended upon God to whom Israel should obey and of whom they should aske raine in the time of the latter raine Zach. 10. 1. and then hee would come unto them with his blessings as the raine as the latter and former raine unto the earth Hosea 6. 3. So for the fruits the husbandman waited and had long patience untill hee received the early raine and the latter raine I am 5. 7. Which raine as it figured heavenly blessings in Christ Deut. 32. 2. Psal. 72. 6. so they led Israel to the feare of God but when they revolted from him they said not in their heart Let us now feare the Lord our God that giveth raine both the former and the latter raine in his season Ier. 5. 24. If these raines were seasonable and moderate the land was fruitfull as Moses in the next words sheweth if they failed then the drought as ●ire devoured the pastures if they fell immoderately the graines rotted under their clods Ioel 1. 19 17. new oyle These three were for the use of man and the grasse after mentioned for beasts as David also sheweth in Psal. 104. 13 14 15. By these earthly promises God drew his people to obedience but David had more gladnesse in his heart in the light of the Lords countenance than when corne and wine increased Psal. 4. 6 7. Vers. 16. deceived or inticed and drawen away by riches pleasures or false perswasions of which Iob saith If my heart hath beene secretly inticed or deceived Iob 31. 27. other gods that is Idols falsly reputed Gods so the Chaldee translateth Idols or Errours of the peoples Vers. 17. shut-up the heavens this phrase is used both for restraining the naturall raine for mens sins 1 Kings 8. 35. and the spirituall raine of Gods word and blessings Revel 11. 6. perish quickly or speedily suddenly The wicked heathens God suffered with much patience and would not have them destroyed suddenly Deut. 7. 22. but his owne people are threatned for their sinnes to perish suddenly for judgement must beginne at the house of God 1 Pet. 4. 17. he warneth his Church to repent c. or else he will come unto her quickly Revel 2. 5. Vers. 18. phylacteries or frontlets written in parchments and tyed to the forehead as the former were to the hand or arme of these see the annotations on Exod. 13. 9. 16. and Deut. 6. 4 8. Vers. 19. teach them your children cause your children Hebr. your sonnes to Iearne them this explaineth the former precept Thou shalt whet them on thy children Deut. 6. 7. Abraham the father of the faithfull is commended for this that he would command his children and his honshold after him to keepe the way of the LORD Gen. 18. 19. and Solomons parents taught him the Law Prov. 4. 3 4. and 31.
of thy salvation and firmly sustain me with a free spirit I wil teach trespassers thy wayes and sinners shall convert unto thee Deliver me from blouds O God the God of my salvation my tongue shall shout thy justice Lord thou shalt open my lips and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise For thou delightest not sacrifice else would I give it burnt offering thou wilt not contentedly accept The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a heart broken and contrite O God thou wilt not despise Doe well in thy good pleasure unto Sion build thou the wals of Ierusalem Then shalt thou delightfully accept the sacrifices of justice the burnt offering and the whole oblation then shall they offer up bullocks upon thine Altar Annotations HE had gone in to wit into the chamber as Iudg. 15. 1. that is had lien with as the phrase importeth Gen. 6. 4. and is expressed 2 Sam. 11. 4. Bathsheba the daughter of Eliam 2 Sam. 11. 3. called also Bathshua daughter of Ammiel 1 Chron. 3. 5. She was wife to Captaine Urijah the Hittite and whiles her husband was at the leager of Rabbah David lay with her and she being with child he first sought to cover his fault by sending for Vrijah home that he might be esteemed the father which not succeeding he sent him backe with privie letters to Ioab the Generall for to procure his death Which being done David married his wife Bathshebah so thinking to cloake his sinne But God was displeased and sent Nathan to reprove David whereupon he repented and made this Psalme for an example unto and comfort of sinners See the historie at large 2 Sam. 11. and 12. Vers. 4. much wash mee or multiply wash mee that is thorowly wash me againe and againe He applieth the washings used in the Law Lev. 11. 25. 32. Exod. 19. 10. Num. 19. 19. to the spirituall washing from sinne in the bloud of Christ Rev. 7. 14. 1 Ioh. 1. 7. So after in verse 9. and Ier. 4. 14. The Hebrew Hereb or Harbeh multiply is used for much as 2 King 10. 18. where it is opposed to little And that which in one place is written harboh multiply in another is la-rob and rabbah much as 1 King 10. 10. with 2 Chron. 9. 9. 2 Sam. 8. 8. with 1 Chron. 18. 8. Vers. 5. I know or acknowledge So Isa. 59. 12. Ier. 3. 13. Vers. 6. Against thee or Vnto thee onely This is either because he concealed his sinne from men but could not from God 2 Sam. 12. 12. or that onely God could remit the punishment of his sin Isa. 43. 25. So Psal. 41. 5. I have sinned and so am deprived of the glory of God as Rom. 3. 23. that which is evill c. which displeaseth thee This hath reference to 2 Sam. 11. 9. and 11. 27. that thou maiest be just that is thou hast suffered me to fall into sinne that thou maiest be just or justified in whatsoever thou hast spoken for the salvation of thy servant or punishment of my sinne 2 Sam. 12. 10. For the injustice of man commendeth the justice of God Rom. 3. 4 5. or it may have reference to the former words I know and acknowledge my sinne that thou maist be just when thou speakest or in thy speaking that is in thy words as Rom. 3. 4. so after in thy judging maist be pure or cleare sincere unreproveable and consequently maist win the victorin in judgement whereupon the Apostle according to the Greeke version saith maist overcome Rom. 3. 4. The Hebrew Zacah also in the Syriak tongue is used for overcomming Vers. 7. in iniquitie the perversenesse or vitiosity of nature commonly called originall by the Apostle inhabiting sinne Rom. 7. 17. whereby all men are carnall sold under sinne Ioh. 3. 6. Rom. 7. 14. The Chaldee calleth it the sinne of evill concupiscence This David maketh the fountaine of all his actuall sinnes painfully brought forth borne with sorrow The Hebrew signifieth the painfull travell of child-birth Isa. 26. 17 18. and 51. 2. Psal. 29. 9. conceived or was warme in heat as Gen. 30. 38. 39 41. Vers. 8. the inward parts or the covered parts the heart roots where wisdome is seated of God Iob 38. 36. named in Hebrew of covering plaistering or pargetting the secret or the closed place which being referred to the person meaneth the heart which God reneweth Ezek. 36. 26. and wherein he writeth his lawes Heb. 8. 10. And thus the Chaldee expoundeth it the close place of the heart which the Apostle calleth the hid man of the heart 1 Pet. 3. 4. or if it be referred to the thing it meaneth the secrets of wisedome Iob 11. 6. the wisedome of God in a mysterie the hid wisdome manifested by the Gospell 1 Cor. 2. 7. And thus the Greeke applieth it saying the unmanifest and hid things of wisdome thou hast manifested to me hast made or wilt make me know thus he riseth by faith out of his sin being taught wisdome of God Vers. 9. Thou wilt purge me from sinne or prayer-wise Purge thou me from sinne or make me sinlesse expiate or purifie my sinne Prayers are often made in this manner as with assurance that they shall be performed See the note on Psal. 17. 8. Eizop or hyssop of the Hebrew Ezob and Greek hyssopos an herbe or tree growing out of the wall 1 King 4. 33. appointed in the law for to sprinkle and cleanse with Exod. 12. 22. Num. 19. 6. 18. Lev. 14. 4. 6. 49. Heb. 9. 19. and the sprinkling with it was the last part of the purification of the uncleane here used to signifie the ful cleansing from sinne by the bloud of Christ Heb. 9. 13 14. whether it were that herb which we now call eizop or no is uncertaine The Childee paraphraseth Thou wilt sprinkle me like a Priest which sprinkleth the uncleane with the purifying waters with hyssop with the asbes of a heifer and I shall be cleane wash me another legall rite for purifying the uncleane Lev. 14. 8. and 15. 5. 8. 13. 22. figuring our sanctification Heb. 10. 22. Tit. 3. 5. Isa. 4. 4. Vers. 10. to heare joy the joyfull tidings of the forgivenesse of my sins bones that thou hast crushed or brayed nothing hereby the greatnesse of his griefe and affliction Iob 2. 2. 5. and 30. 17. and 33. 19. 21. Psal. 38. 4. Vers. 11. Hide thy face that is regard not my finhes to visit them on me See the contrary Psal. 90. 5. and 109. 14 15. Ier. 16. 17. Vers. 12. firme spirit a spirit ready prepared stedfast and certaine The like is applied to the heart Psal. 11 2. 7. and 57. 8. Vers. 13. from thy face or from thy presence This was an effect of Gods utmost anger against sinners 2 Kings 24. 20. Ier. 7. 15. and 52. 3. Gen. 4. 16. thy spirit of holinesse thy holy Ghost which the Chaldee expoundeth thy holy spirit of Prophesie Vers. 14. the joy of thy salvation the joy
The Restauration GOD promiseth that Christ the Womans seed shall bruise the Serpents head The man calleth his wife Eve God layeth chastisements on them both clotheth them and drives them out of Paradise Chap. 3 The government of the old World ADAM begetting two sonnes Kain the first borne is wicked Abel faithfull Kain killeth Abel and is cursed yet liveth and increaseth in the world Seth is given in Abels sted and of Seth Enos Chap. 4 SETH progateth the faithfull seed Enoch prophesieth and God taketh him away that he dieth not Chap. 5 Seths seed and Kains are mixed so Giants are bred and sinne increased God repenteth that he made man threatneth to drown the world but Noe findes grace Chap. 6 NOE and his house with some of all creatures are saved in the Arke which God bade him make the world is all drowned Ch. 7 The government of the world aset the Flood NOE with his familie come out of the Arke are blessed to fill the world againe Chap. 〈◊〉 GOD promiseth to drowne the world no more Sinne reviveth in Cham Noes son whose posteritie is cursed the blesse continueth to Sem and Iaphet Chap. 〈◊〉 Noes three sonnes Sem Cham and Iaphet doe multiply on the earth Chap. 〈◊〉 Their posterity are scattered by confusion of tongues at Babel Sem propagateth the faithfull seede which in Terah falleth 〈◊〉 God but is called to repentance Chap. 〈◊〉 ABRAM is called from Idolatry and commeth a pilgrim into the land of Canaan Chap. 〈◊〉 Abram parted from Lot is promised the land of Canaan and a plenteous seed Chap. 〈◊〉 He fighteth for Lot o●ercommeth foure Kings and is blessed of Melchisedek Chap. 〈◊〉 He being childlesse is promised an heire justified by faith and comforted by a vision and covenant of God Chap. 〈◊〉 He hath a son after the flesh Ismael of Agar his bondwoman Chap. 1● He hath a new name Abraham the covenant of circumcision and promise of Isask Sarai is named Sarah Chap. 1● Abraham enterraineth Angels hath the promise renewed and Sodoms destruction revealed for whom he maketh intercession Chap. 1● Sodom is burned Lot delivered begetteth of his daughters Moab and Ammon Chap. 19 Abrahams wife taken by Abimelec is restored unto him Chap. 20 ISAAK the promised seed is borne Agar and Ismael are cast out of Abrahams house Ab melec covenanteth with Abraham Chap. 21 Isaak is offred for a sacrifice by his father but saved from death by God Abraham is blessed and heareth of his kindreds increase Chap. 22 Abraham purchaseth in Canaan a burying place for Sarah Chap. 23 He provideth a wife for Isaak who marieth Rebekah Chap. 24 Abraham dyeth Isaak begetteth Esau and Iakob who strive in the wombe Iakob buyeth the birthright of Esau surnamed Edom. Chap 25 Isaaks wife taken by Abimelec is restored he covenanteth with Abimelec Chap 26 IAKOB by subtilty getteth the blessing from Esau and is threatned Chap. 27 Iakob fleeing from Esau is comforred by a vision of a Ladder at Bethel Chap. 28 He sorveth for a wife is beguiled marieth two and hath foure sonnes Chap. 29 He is increased with moe children is wronged by Laban but waxeth rich Chap. 30 He fleeth secretly is pursued by Laban but God delivereth him Chap. 31 He is met of Angells afraid of Esau wrastleth with God and is named Israel Chap. 32 Iakob and Esau meet and are friends Iakob put chaseth ground at Sechem Chap. 33 Iakobs daughter Dina is defiled his sonnes slay the Sech mites for it Chap. 34 Iakob burieth Deborah the Nurse Rachel his wife and Isaak his father Chap. 35 Esau dwelleth in Seir hath many Dukes and Kings of his posteitie Chap. 36 IOSEPH Iakobs sonne is hated for his dreames and sold by his brethen into Egypt Iakob mourneth for him and will not be comforted Chap. 37 Iudah Iakobs son begetteth of his daughter in law Pharez and Zarah Chap. 38 Ioseph in Egypt is tempted to adultery falsly accused and imprisoned Chap. 39 Ioseph in prison expoundeth the dreames of Pharaohs officers but is forgotten Chap. 40 Ioseph expoundeth Pharaohs dreames and is made ruler over all Egypt Chap. 41 Iakob sendeth his sons for corne into Egypt Ioseph handleth them roughly Chap. 42 Iakob constrainedly sendeth his sons againe and Ioseph feasteth them Chap. 43 Ioseph challengeth Benjamin for his cup Iudah supplicateth for his brother Chap. 44 Ioseph makes himselfe knowne to his brethren and sendeth for his Father Chap. 45 Iakob by Gods advice goeth with his houshold into Egypt in all seventy soules Ioseph meeteth them in Goshen and instructeth them what to say to Pharah Chap. 46 Ioseph nourisheth his father and brethren in time of famine bringeth the Egyptians into bondage and sweareth to bury his father in Canaan Chap. 47 Iosephs two sons are blessed and adopted of Iakob on his death bed Chap. 48 Iakob blesseth his twelve sons prophesieth of Christ and dyeth in Egypt Chap. 49 Ioseph burieth his father in Canaan and returneth forgiveth his brethren prophesieth of their departure from thence giveth charge concerning his bones and dyeth Chap. 50 The number of the Sections or Lectures in Genesis are twelve the Chapters fiftie the verses 1534. The midst is at Gen. 27. 40. Search the Scriptures Iohn 5. 39. To the Law and to the Testimonie Esay 8. 20. Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15. 4. THE FIRST BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED GENESIS CHAPTER I. 1 The Heavens and the Earth are created and the Light in the first day 6. In the second the firmament is spred and the waters divided 9. In the third the earth is made dry land and fruitfull the waters are gathered to be seas 14. The Sunne Moone and Stars are created for Lights the fourth day 20. Fish and Fowles are brought forth and blessed in the fifth 24. In the sixth Beasts are made out of the Earth 26. Man is created in the image of God 28. he is blessed and hath dominion of the world 29 Food is appointed for Man and beast 31. Gods workes are all good IN THE BEGINNING GOD created the Heavens and the earth And the earth was empty and voide and darkenesse was upon the face of the deepe and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters And God sayd Let there bee light and there was light And God saw the light that it was good and God separated betweene the light and the darkenesse And God called the light Day and the darknesse he called Night and the evening was and the morning was the first day And God said Let there be an Out-spred firmament in the midst of the waters and let it separate betweene waters and waters And God made the Outspred-firmament and separated betweene the waters which were under the outspred-firmament and the waters which were above the outspred-firmament and it was so And God called the outspred-firmament Heavens and the evening was and
Iehovah said unto her multiplying I will multiply thy seed and it shall not bee numbred for multitude And the Angell of Iehovah said unto her Behold thou art-withchilde and shalt beare a sonne and thou shalt call his name Ismael because Iehovah hath heard thy affliction And hee will be a man like a wild asse his hand will be against all and the hand of all against him and he shall dwell before the faces of all his brethren And she called the name of Iehovah that spake unto her Thou the God that seest me for she said haue I also here seene after him that seeth me Therefore the well was called Beer-lachai-roï behold it is betweene Kadesh and Bered And Hagar bare unto Abram a son and Abram called the name of his son which Hagar bare Ismael And Abram was fourescore yeeres and sixe yeeres old when Hagar bare Ismael to Abram Annotations H 〈…〉 or bond-maid seruant opposed to a free woman Ier. 34. 10 11. Gal. 4. 22. The Holy Ghost translateth it in Greek sometime Doulee a woman seruant Act. 2. 18. sometime Paidiskee a bondmaid Gal. 4. 22. This bond woman was of Egypt or Mizraim of the posteritie of Cham Gen. 10. 6. which Egypt is after called the house of seruants Exod. 10. 2. for holding Abrams seed in bondage Hagar in Greeke Agar by interpretation a Fugitive or repulsed stranger in the Arabian tongue And the Apostle saith that this Agar allegorically is mount Sinai in Arabia and is in bondage with her childre Ga. 4. 24. 25. where he maketh her a figure of the old Testament or covenant of the Law given on mount Sinai and of the earthly Ierusalem as Sarai the freewoman figured the Ierusalem which is above and the new Testament or covenant of the Gospell in Christ. Hagars posterity are called Hagarens or Hagarites in 1 Chro. 5. 10. where the Greeke translateth them Pariokous strangers Vers. 2. restrained the Greeke interpreteth closed me up according to that phrase of closing up the wombe Gen. 20. 18. contrary to which is the opening of the wombe Gen. 30. 22. God had promised a seed unto Abram Gen. 15. 4. but not expresly as yet unto Sarai wherefore doubting whether she should be the mother she motioneth another course which was not according to God for it violated the law of mariage Gen. 2. 24. but after the flesh Gal. 4. 23. goe in that is accompany with see Gen. 6. 4. it may be or peraduenture a speech not of faith but of uncertaine hope and likelihood after the flesh but Sarai her selfe had afterward a son by promise Gal. 4. 23. and the word of promise was In this same time will I come and Sarah shall have a son Rom. 9. 9. wherefore shee had a son by Agar but hee was no heyre Gen. 21. 10. so the Church hath had children by the Law but they were not heires of the Kingdome of God for the Law is not of faith neither are the heires or inheritance otherwise then by promise of grace in Christ Gal. 3. 12 14 18 22 29. bee builded that is shall have a son So the Greeke explaineth it and Moses in Deut. 25. 9. And in Hebrew ben a sonne is named of banah he builded So Rachel and Leah are said to build the house of Israel by bearing children Ruth 4. 11. and God promised a seed to David under the similitude of building him an house 2 Sam. 7. 11 12 27. Sarai reckoneth her maids children as her owne so by the Law bond servants children were their masters Exod. 21. 4. Rachel likewise counted her maids children as given to her selfe Gen. 30. 3 6 8. And among the heathens Plutarch sheweth how Stratonice the wife of King Deiotarus being barren gave secretly her mayd Electra unto her husband by whom shee had an heyre to the Crowne Vers. 3. end of ten yeres that is after hee had dwelt there ten yeres So Abram was now 85. yeres old and Sarai 75. Gen. 12. 4. and 17. 17. In the yeere of the world 2093. a wife to weet a secondary and not a full wife but a concubine Gen. 25. 6. So Ketura called a wife Gen. 25. 1. was but a concubine 1 Chron. 1. 32. what they differ is noted on Gen. 22. 23. despised or lightly set by the Greeke saith dishonoured This pride of Agar figured the like affection in the heart of those that put confidence in the works of the Law as was in the Pharisee Luk. 18. 10. 11. Rom. 10. 3. And it greatly disquieted Sarai for it is one of the foure things which the earth cannot beare that an handmaid should be heire to her mistresse Prou. 30. 21 23. Vers. 5. my wrong or my injurie which I suffer is upon thee that is thou art the cause of it So the Greeke expounds it I am injured of thee and the Chaldee I have a plea against thee as if Abraham faulted in suffring such misdemeanor Or my wrong be upon thee that is either right thou my wrong or beare the punishment thereof from God Thus it accordeth with the words following and so Thargum Ierusalemy explaineth it my judgment and my abuse are delivered into thy hand judge or will judge if thou looke not to redresse it But the Greeke translates it prayer-wise the Lord judge The speech argueth her great passion as the like in Exod. 5. 21. Iudg. 11. 27. 1 Sam. 24. 13 16. Vers. 6. is in or be in thy hand that is in thy own power to correct her good that is pleasing as the Greeke translateth use her as pleaseth thee So in Gen. 45. 16. and often on the contrary evill in thy eyes is displeasing Gen. 28. 8. afflicted to humble her and abate her pride This seemeth to be by rough handling or stripes for a seruant will not be corrected by words Prov. 29. 19. shee fled as impatient of correction whereby she added sinne unto sinne for she should not have left her place Eccles. 10. 4. nor bereaved Abram of his child in her body therefore the Angell sendeth her home againe vers 9. But hereby the difference betweene the two mothers the Law and the Gospel was also figured Vers. 7. Angel so named of the Greeke Aggelos in Hebrew Maleac by interpretation a Messenger or Legate one sent and imployed in any worke whether of God or men And those sent of God were sometimes men as Haggai is called the Lords Angel or Messenger Hag. 1. 13. and Iohn the Baptist Mal. 3. 1. Mat. 11. 10. and generally the Lords Priests under the law Mal. 2. 7. and ministers under the gospel Rev. 1. 20. But in speciall Angels are those heauenly spirits and fierie flames that are wise 2 Sam. 14. 20. and excell in strength Psal. 103. 20. which are all ministring spirits sent forth in ministerie for them who shall bee heires of saluation Heb. 1. 7. 14. And here this Angel was sent for the good of Abrams family The Hebrew Doctors opinion of Angels is that
these two signifieth in Ezek. 3. 6. The Greek translateth of a smal voice of a slow tongue the Chaldee of a heavy speech and of a deep tongue This as other things in Moses may have reference to the effect of the Law which he administred as on the contrary the Psalmist prophesying of Christ had his tongue the penne of a speedy writer Psal. 45. 2. and the Spirit which is received not by the works of Moses law but by the hearing of faith in Christ Gal. 3. 2. causeth prophesie and other words of wisdome and knowledge Act. 2. 18. 1. Gor. 12. 8. 10. causeth the lips of those that are asleepe to speake Song 7. 9. By the Hebrew cannons no Priest that stammered lisped or was of an heavy mouth or tongue might lift up his hands to blesse the people Maimony in Misneh treat of Prayer chap. 15. S 〈…〉 Soe the notes on Num. 6. 23. Vers. 11 hath made or as the Greek translateth hath given Heb put the mouth to 〈◊〉 open eyed or open cared for the Hebrew word signifieth both these Esa. 42. 7. 20. and may have reference here to both The Greeke tranflateth the seeing Compare Psal. 146. 8 Esa. 61. 1. and 33. 5. 6. Vers. 12. I will be The Chaldee expounds it my word shall be the Greeke I will open thy mouth will t●aoh by my spirit as Christ in like manner promiseth his Apostles Matth. 10. 19. 20. Mark 13. 11. Luke 12. 11. 12. Vers. 13. by the hand thou shouldest that is by his hand or ministery whom thou shouldest send as being fitterthand or by the hand of any other whom thou wilt send The Chaldee and That gum Ierusalemy translate by the hand of him whom it is meet to send and the Greeke 〈◊〉 choose an● then able man whom thou wilt send Moses 〈◊〉 greatnesse of the worke would with draw his shoulder through infirmity God hereby 〈…〉 wing the imperfection of Moses administration and impossibility of the law to bring men to perfection when Moses could not bring Israel into the promised land 〈◊〉 3. 24. 25. 27. 28. Romans 8. 3. Hebrewes 7. 19. The hand of one is usually put for his ministerie as Moses now was s●m of God by the hand of the Angel which appeared to him in the bush 〈◊〉 7. 35. See Exodus 9. 35. Psal. 97 2● Hag. 1. 1. Mal. 1. 1. Vers. 24. speaking speake that is speake well and eloquently Thus God distributeth his gifts by measure diversly to one is given by the spirit the word of wisedome to 〈…〉 ther the word of knowledge to another kindes of tongues to another the interpretation of tongues c. 1 Cor. 12. 8. 10. So among the Apostles 2 Cor. 11. 6. and 10. 10. Mar. 3. 17. Of this Aaron see after in Exod. 6. 20. 26. Vers. 15. the words which I have spoken to thee as the Greeke saith my words God signifying hereby that the Priests which came of Aaron should receive their doctrine from the Law which was given by Moses as Ezek. 44. 24. Mal. 4. 4 Levit. 6. 8. 9. I will be the Chaldee faith my word shall be the Greeke I will open thy mouth as vers 12. Verse 16. hee shall bee or it shall bee that hee shall be the word is doubled for more vehemency and assurance a mouth that is a spokes-man or as the Chaldee saith an interpreter In Exod 7. 1. he is callled his Prophet a God the Chaldee saith Rab that is a Master and the Ierusalemy Thargum addeth an inquirer of Doctrine from before the Lord. The Greeke translateth in things pertaining to God which very phrase Paul useth in Hebrewes 5. 1. The Hebrew Elohim God is after attributed to Iudges and Magistrates Exod. 22. 8. 9. Psal. 82. 6. and the reason is rendred by Christ because the word of God is given to them Ioh. 10. 34. 35. Here Moses though the yonger brother Exodus 7. 7. is preferred before Aaron his elder so God oftentimes disposed see Gene● 25. 23. and 48. 19. Vers. 17. this rod which was turned into a serpent as the Greeke addeth for explanation In verse 20. it is called the rod of God it was before Moses shepherds staffe Vers. 18. Iether called after Iethro in Greeke Iethor see Exod. 3. 1. in peace or with peace the Greeke translateth with health or welfare Vers. 19. thy saule that is thy life as Genesis 19. 17. So the Chaldee well explaineth it that sought to ●ill thee Though sometime to seeke the soule is taken in the good part as none seeketh for my soule Psal. 142. 5. that is careth for me or for my life yet usually it signifieth seeking to kill one and is sometime explained seeking the soule to take it away as 〈◊〉 Kings 19. 10. This phrase is often used So Matth. 2. 20. Vers. 20. sonnes two Gershom and Eliezer Exodus 18. 3 4. an asse the Greeke translateth 〈◊〉 as moe then one and often the Hebrew putteth the singular for many See Genesis 3. 2. This may argue Moses poore estate as Christs Zichar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●od of God that is which God had appo 〈…〉 him to worke miracles with as verse 3. 17. So the Chaldee explaineth it the rod whereby miracles should be done from before the Lord. So in Exod. 17. 9. Vers. 21. have put or shall p 〈…〉 t in thy hand that is give thee power to doe What wonders signifie see on Exodus 7. 3 make strong or make 〈◊〉 fast 〈◊〉 and hard that hee shall not re●ut or yeeld therefore i● Exodus 7. 3. God useth another word I will den and so the Greeke translateth this here As before God 〈◊〉 Pharaohs heart to hate his people Psalme 105. 25. so now hee is said to make-strong and to harden his heart and of King Sichon the Lord hardened his spirit and made his heart strong or obstinate Deuteronomie 2. 30. and hardned the hearts of the other Canaanites Ioshua 11. 20. and made fatte and hardened the hearts of the Israelites Esay 6. 10. Iohn 12. 40. and gave them the spirit of slumber Romans 11. 8. As hardnesse is sinne so Pharaoh hardened his owne heart Exodus 9. 34. and so all wicked men Psalme 95. 8. but as it is a judgement and punishment for sinne GOD hardneth using hereunto sundry meanes sometime withdrawing his outward word and workes Psalme 147. 19. 20. Matthew 11. 21. 23. sometime the inward working of his spirit Genesis 6. 3. and sending outward meanes to deceive them 1 Kings 22. 20. 23. or strong delusions to blinde their mindes 2 Thes. 2. 10. 11. Romans 11. 8. 10. or making his word which they abuse to be the favour of death unto them 2 Corinthians 2. 15. 16. 1 Pet. 2. 8. or giving them over to a reprobate minde Romans 1. 28. or to Satan to be blinded and deluded unto destruction 2 Corinthians 4. 4. 1 Kings 22. 22 2 Thessal 2. 9. 12. So God is said to determine and to doe those things but justly
that boweth downe or that sacrificeth and such like So hee speaketh of him that hath a Familiar spirit and not of the Wizard who is in the same estate Lev. 20. 6. Of these forementioned some are to dye by the hand of the magistrate some are to be beaten but not put to death as elsewhere is observed defile my Sanctuary that is the Tabernacle Exod. 25. 8. or Temple which was defiled when God was sacrificed unto other where or by other wayes then he commanded Levit. 17. 4. 5. or when they sacrificed to idols and yet would come into the Sanctuarie to serve God also whereas the Temple of God hath no agreement with Idols 2 Cor. 6. 16. And thus the Prophet reproveth them for that they burned incense to Baal and walked after other gods and yet came and stood before him in the house whereupon his name was called Ier. 7. 9. 10. and to prophane that is as the Greek explaineth it and that he might prophane Of prophaning Gods name see Levit. 18. 21. Vers. 4. the people of the land which the Chaldee expoundeth the people of the house of Israel and so the Greeke saith the homeborne of the land hiding shall hide that is shall any waies hide the Greeke explaineth it with winking shall winke at that is neglect or not regard no punish That word Paul useth in Act. 17. 30. the times of this ignorance God wincked at Vers. 5. my face the Chaldee expoundeth it mine anger and so face often signifieth Psal. 21. 10. and 34. 17. Lam. 4. 16. See the notes on Gen. 32. 20. his familie in Greeke his kinred and so the word familie signifieth in Gen. 24. 38. the Chaldee translateth it his helpers that is such as tooke part with him as the next words doe declare that goe a whoring after him that is commit idolatrie as the Chaldec explaineth it that erre so in verse 6. the Greeke translateth all that consent unto him This judgment God executed upon the Iewes for this idolatrie and their other sins as he signified by his Prophet that he would give their city Ierusalem into the hand of the Chaldeans who should set fire upon it and burne it with the houses upon whose roofes they had burnt incense unto Baal c. Because they their Kings their Princes their Priests and their Prophets and the men of Iudah and the inhabitants of Ierusalem had set their abhominations in the house which was called by his Name to defile it and built the high places of Baal to cause their sonnes and their daughters to passe through the fire unto Molech c. therefore it should be delivered into the hand of the King of Babylon by the sword and by the famine and by the pestilence Ier. 32. 28. 29. 32. 34. 35. 36. Vers. 6. the soule that is as the Chaldee expoundeth the man that turneth unto or looketh after in Greeke followeth meaning that consulteth with them as Deut. 18. 11. familiar spirits Targum Ionathan expoundeth it them that aske of familiar spirits Of these and the wizards following whom the Greeke calleth Inchanters see the annotations on Leviticus 19. 31. and Deuteronomie 18. 11. set my face Hebr. give my face in Chaldee give mine anger against that man and destroy him This judgment was executed upon K. Saul who dyed for asking counsell of one that had a familiar spirit 1 Chron. 10. 13. 1 Sam. 28. Vers. 7. And This may bee a reason of the former Therefore ye shall sanctifie your selves by abstaining from all evill and doing good be holy or be saints for I am Iehovah to weet that sanctifieth you as vers 8. or for I am holy as the Greeke addeth and as Moses wrote before in Lev. 19. 2. Vers. 9. For every man or any man Hebr. man man meaning any whosoever as vers 2. And this is inferred upon the former precept be holy For otherwise judgements abide you curseth or revileth speaketh evill as the Greeke translateth which the holy Ghost approveth in Acts 23. 5. See the notes on Exodus 21. 17. or Hebrew and which the Greeke translateth or and so in Matthew 15. 4. For death was his due if he cursed either of them and they are distinguished to make him guilty for the one without the oth●r as Chazkuni here explaineth it and as Iarchi addeth though it be after his parents death Whose curseth his father or his mother his Lamp shall be p●tout in obscure darkenesse Prov. 20. 20. his bloods shall be upon him that is his death shall be upon his owne head for he hath caused it by his sinne So the Greeke translateth he shall be guilty and the Chaldee he is guilty or worthy to be killed so after often in this chapter The manner of his death was stoning as is noted upon Exod. 21. 10. and as Moses after sheweth for the rebellious sonne Deut. 21. 21. And it is observed as a generall 〈◊〉 by the Hebrew doctors Every place where it is 〈◊〉 in the Law they shall be put to death THEIR BLOODS VPON THEM it is meant by stoning Maimony Issureibiah c. 1. s. 6 and Sol. Iarchi on Lev. 20. 9. Vers. 10. that committeth adultery the Greek addeth in the second place or that commits-adul 〈…〉 ry with his neighbours wife It is expouuded in Deut. 22. 22. a woman maried to an husband dye the death the manner of their death is not set downe either here or in Deuter. 22. 22. unlesse by that which is before and after for other unlawfull copulations we say it is meant stoning to death as the man that lyeth with a beast vers 15. is to bee stoned because the wom●n for like beastlinesse is to be stoned verse 16. The Pharisees which brought unto Christ a woman taken in adulterie said Moses commanded that such should be stoned Ioh. 8. 4. 5. but whether that were this very case is to bee considered Also to lye with a bettothed woman the punishment was stoning as for humbling his neighbours wife Deut. 22. 24. Howbeit the latter Pharisees say the adulterers death was Strangling Maimony in Sanhedrin chap. 15. sect 13. And in another place he openeth this and the other like ●●wes more fully thus Who so presumptuously committeth any of all the unlawfull copulations spoken of in the l●w is guilty of cutting off Levit. 18. 29. and if they doe it ignorantly they are bound to bring the Sin-offring appointed And there be some of the Nakednesses that is the unlawfull copulations which deserve death by the Iudges more then the cutting-off which is meet for them all Of those which are to be put to death by the Iudges some are to dye by stoning and some by burning and some by strangling And these are they that are put to death by stoning He that lyeth with his mother or with his fathers wife or with his sonnes wife which is called his daughter-in-law he that lyeth with mankinde or with a beast and the woman that lyeth downe to a beast
she is defiled for upon testimony 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●he were taken with the manner she was not to drinke but to dye by the Magistrate Levit. 20. 10. Io● 8. 4 5. And whereas hee speaketh here singularly of a witnesse the Hebrews observe that 〈◊〉 there be but one witnesse against her who saith she 〈◊〉 〈…〉 d she is not to drinke Sol. Iarchi on Num. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unlawfull they say for her husband to com 〈…〉 with her for ever and doth not drinke but is put away without a dowry If two witnesses come together and one say she is defiled another say shee is not d●filed or if one say she is defiled and afterward two other come and say she is not defiled then shee drinketh Maim in Sotah c. 1. sect 14. 17. Vers. 14. the spirit of jealousie 〈…〉 sse upon him or passe over him the Greeke saith come upon him that he be affected with a j●alous mind as the wind is said to passe over the grasse when it is smitten or blasted with the wind Psal. 103. 15 16. which in Esai 40. 7. is said to blow ●pen it And the spirit of jealousie meaneth a jealous motion or affection of the minde wherewith it is caried as the Scriptures elsewhere speake of the spirit of wisdome the spirit of counsell the spirit of knowledge Esai 11. 2. Eph s. 1. 17. the spirit of fornications H●s 4. 12 the spirit of feare 2. Tim. 1. 7. the spirit of mecknesse Gal. 6. 1. the spirit of 〈…〉 ber Rom. 11. 8. And in 1 Cor. 14. 12. spirits are put for the gifts and motions of the spirit 〈◊〉 or after the Greeke Zealousie a zealous affection which is sometime used in the good part sometime in the evill as Zeale also is sometimes good Ioh. 2. 17. 2. Cor. 7. 11. sometime evill Gal. 5 20. called bitter zeale Iam. 3. 14. So the Hebrewes have one word Kinah for zeale jealousie 〈◊〉 and ●mulation as Phineas was zealous for the Lord Num. 25. 11. Elias was jealous for him 1. King 19. 10. Iosuah ●●vied for Moses sake Num. 11. 29. And jealousie is an affection hard or cruell as the grav● the co●les thereof are co●les of fire Song 8. 6. it is the rage of a man therefore he will not spare in the day of vengeance Prov. 6. 34. This affection is said after the manner of men to be in God himself ●xod 20. 5. Paul was jealous for the Corinthians fearing le●t they should be corrupted 2. Cor. 11 2 3. upon him the husband who onely had the power to bring his wife to this triall Wherefore the Hebrewes write that if a man bee out of the countrey or in prison or the like and his wife have an evill report for lightnesse c. the Magistrates are to call her and say unto her bee not in secret with such a man If witnesses afterward come that shee was with him in secret so long as that shee might be defiled the Magistrates are to forbid her her husbands company ever after and rend her b●l of dowry And when her husband comes home or out of the prison he gives her a bill of divorce but hee cannot cause her to drinks because himselfe was not jealous of her Maimony in Sotah chap. 1. sect 11. Vers. 15. his wife unto the Priest who was in his office a figure of Christ by whō God will judge the secrets of men Rom. 2. 16. the order of this action is said to be this The husband commeth to the Magistrates of his citie where hee dwelleth and saith unto them This my wife I am jealous of her for such a man and she hath been in secret with him and these are witnesses and loe she saith that shee is cleare and is willing to drinke for triall of the thing Then the Magistrates shall heare the words of the witnesses and they appoint two to be with the man to keepe him that he companie not with her before shee have dr 〈…〉 ke for she is unlawfull for him untill shee have drunke And they send him to Ierusalem for they cause not the suspected woman to drinke but in the great councell of seventy Elders in the Sanctuarie When they are come to Ierusalem the great Councell set her among them and they terrifie her and make her sore affraid that she should not drinke c. If she say I am defiled or I will not drinke she is put from her husband without a dowry But if shee stand in her cause that shee is cleare they bring her to the East gate of the Court-yard which is over against the most holy place c. If shee be arrayed in white garments they put upon her blacke or if she hath faire blacke clothes they put upon her clothes that are not faire and take off all ornaments of silver and gold that are on her And they gather a great company of women unto her for all the women there present are bound to see her as it is said in Ezek. 23. 48. That all women may bee taught not to doe after your lewdnesse And every man that will come and see may come and see And shee standeth among them without scarfe or veile onely in her clothes and her coyfe that is on her head as a woman within her house c. and afterward the Priest adjureth her in the language that she knoweth and understandeth Maimony in Sotah chap. 3. sect 1 2. c. of barley it might be of no other graine nor any other quantity than the tenth of an Ephah neither more nor lesse see the annotations on Levit. 2. 1. The Prophet Hoseah in a mystery bought an Adultresse for fifteene peeces of silver and an homer and an halfe of barley Hos. 3. 1 2. The Hebrews here note Meale not floure barley not wheat she hath done the act of a beast and her oblation is the meat of a beast Sol. Iarchi on Num. 5. not put Hebr. nor give frankincense oile figured grace which was wanting in her actions frankincense gave a sweet savour which her workes did not before God therefore both must be wanting as in all meat offrings that were for sinne See the notes on Levit. 5. 11. and 2. 2. The Hebrewes make these two distinct precepts so that he which transgresseth and putteth oile and frankincense is beaten for the oile in particular and for the frankincense in particular Maim in Sotah chap. 3. sect 13. a meat-offring of jealousies Hebr. a Minchah whereof see Levit. 2. 1. in Greeke a sacrifice of jealousie From this word the Hebrews say If a man be jealous of his wife for many men and she hath beene in secret with every one of them he is to bring but one Meat-offring for them all when hee causeth her to drinke for it is said It is A MEAT OFFRING OF IEALOVSIES one Meat-offring for many jealousies Maim in Sotah chap. 4. sect 16. making memoriall or causing iniquity to be remembred And this is the reason why it might
Priest but through the veile that is his flesh he is entred into heauen it selfe now to appeare unto the face of God for us Heb. 8. 2. 4. and 10. 2. 20. and 9. 24. Thus shall ye blesse The Priest blessed standing as it is written to stand before Iehovah to minister unto him and to blesse in his name Deut. 10. 8. And it was with lifting up of hands as it is said And Aaron lift up his hand towards the people and blessed them Levit 9. 22. which gesture our Lord Christ also used when he blessed his disciples Lu. 24. 50. The Hebrew Doctors understand the word Thus to imply both matter and manner wherof they haue sundry traditions as Thus shal ye blesse standing Thus with lifting vp of hands Thus in the holy tongue that is Hebrew Thus with your faces against the peoples faces Thus with an high voyce Thus by Gods expressed name Iehovah if ye blesse in the Sanctuarie It is not lawfull for the Priests in any place to adde any blessing unto these three verses as to say like Deu. 1. 11. The Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many moe as ye are or any the like Maimony in treat of Prayer chap. 14. sect 11. 12. The manner they also say was thus The Priests went up to the banke or stage after that the Priests had finished the daily morning service and lifted up their hands on high above their heads and their fingers spred abroad except the high Priest who might not lift his hands higher than the Plate whereof see Exod. 28. 36. and one pronounced the blessing word by word till the three verses were ended And the people answered not after every verse but they made it in the Sanctuary one blessing and when they had finished all the people answered Blessed be the Lord God the God of Israel for ever and ever And he pronounced Gods name as it is written with I●●h but in the citie or countrey they pronounced it Adonai Lord for they mention not the name as it is written save in the Sanctuary onely And after Simeon the just was dead the Priests left off blessing by Gods proper name Iehovah even in the Sanctuary to the end that no man which was not honest and of good esteeme might learne it The Priests blessing is not pronounced in any place but in the holy Hebrew tongue as it is said THVS SHAL YE BLESSE c. The lifting up of hands is by ten Priests of the number A Synagogue which is all of Priests they all lift up hands and the women and children answer Amen If there remaine ten Priests moe than they which are gone up the banke the ten answer Amen A Congregation wherein there is no Priest but a Minister onely he lifteth not up his hands but when he is come to conclude with peace he he saith Our God and the God of our fathers ble 〈…〉 us with the threefold blessing in the Law written by Moses thy servant which was pronounced out of the mouth of Aaron and his sonnes the Priests with thy Saints as it is said THE LORD BLESSE THEE AND KEEP ETHEE c. A Priest that hath lift up his hands in one Synagogue and goeth to another Synagogue and findeth the Congregation at prayer and they are not come to the Priests blessing he lifteth up his hands for them and blesseth them though it be oft times in a day Maim treat of prayer chap. 14. sect 9 10 11. and chap. 15. sect 9 10 11. By these their traditions it appeareth that the not pronouncing of Gods name Iehovah as it is written was a device of their owne first restrayning it to the Sanctuary and blessing onely at last omitting it in the Sanctuarie also lest it should be by the unworthy polluted as they supposed Yea so farre went they in this their precisenesse as they say that their first wise men taught not this name to their disciples or sons which were of honest conversation but once in seven yeeres Maim ibidem c. 14. sect 10. And this it seemeth they did because the nations corrupted the name calling him Iao Iave Iabe Ievo Iovis and sundry other wayes as in humane writers is yet to be seen and applyed those names sometime to false Gods Of the meaning of this name Iehovah see the Annotations on Gen. 2. 4. and Exod. 6. 3. and of blessing see Gen. 14. 19. 20. Vers. 24. Iehovah blesse thee The name Iehovah thrice repeated in this blessing is a mysterie of the Trinitie in the Godhead the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost into whose name we are baptised Mat. 28. 19. which Iehovah is one and his name one Deut. 6. 4. Zach. 14. 9. So the Apostle beginneth wishing Grace and Peace from him which Is and which Was and which Is to come that is Iehovah God the Father and from the seven Spirits which are before his throne that is the Holy Spirit whose graces are seven that is manifold and plentifull but though there be diversities of gracious gifts yet it is the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 4. and from Iesus Christ Revel 1. 4 5. And another Apostle concludeth The grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Spirit 〈◊〉 with you all Amen 2 Cor. 13. 14. Which as all other blessings are derived from this set downe by Moses who sheweth the grace of God the Father in blessing that is giving all good things both for this life and that which is to come as it is written Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things in Christ c. Ephes. 1. 3. This blessing God offered the Iewes when he sent his Sonne Iesus to blesse them in turning away every one of them from his iniquitie Act. 3. 26. The Hebrew Doctors as R. Menachem Rakanat on th●● place have also noted how this name of God Iehovah is thrice mentioned and every time with 〈◊〉 different accent in the Hebrew implying a mysterie which cannot better be applyed than to the three distinct persons of the holy Trinitie 〈◊〉 thee in grace and good estate and safe from evill as it is said Iehovah will keepe thee from all evill hee will keepe thy soule Psal. 121. 7. And for good it is spoken in 1 Chron. 29. 18. So our Saviour prayeth Holy Father keepe through thine owne name those whom thou hast giuen me that they may be one as we are and keepe them from the evill Iohn 17. 11. 15. Ver. 25. his face to shine upon thee or his countenance to shine to be lightsome unto thee For face the Chaldee putteth Shecinah the Divine Maiestie whereby Christ seemeth to be meant as is noted on Exod. 34. 9. Gods face sometime signifieth his anger as Levit. 20. 6. Psal. 21. 10. and. 34. 17. sometime his favour Psal. 21. 7. But the light or shining of his face
Levites in the middest of them as appeareth by verse 14. 21. but the eyes of all the people were vnto the cloud conducting them and to the Arke amongst them the journeying and resting whereof was sanctified by Moses prayer before that the people might either set forward or pitch their tents and therefore it is said to journey before them to search out or to espie which the Chaldee expoundeth to prepare the Greeke to consider it meaneth a diligent search and looking about for to know and finde out the estate of a place as Num. 13. 2. 17 18 19 20. So God is said to have searched out or espied the land of Canaan which he gave unto Israel Ezek. 20. 6. And that which is here spoken of the Arke Moses speaketh of God himselfe in Deut. 1. 33. that he went before them to search out a place for them to pitch their Tents in So Gods love and providence towards his Church in Christ is hereby signified Wherefore that which Moses said to Hobab Thou mayest be for eyes unto us verse 31. was not meant that hee should appoint them a place to pitch and rest in but that he being acquainted with the places in that Wildernesse might signifie the conditions commodities or discommodities of the places w ch God should designe them for to pitch their camps in a rest that is as in Esai 66. 1. a place of rest so the Chaldee expoundeth it a place of encamping or resting Thus rest is often used for a resting place Psal. 132. 8. Gen. 8. 9. 1 Chr. 28. 2. Mic. 2. 10. Zac. 9. 1. This outward rest which God prepared for his people figured the spirituall rest which we find for our soules by following Christ in faith Matth. 11. 29. Hebr. 4. 3. 10 11. Verse 34. the cloud of Iehovah which had conducted them from Egypt to mount Sinai Exod. 13. 21. 22. the same guided them still The Chaldee calleth it the cloud of the glory of the Lord. was over them or upon them the Chaldee understandeth went or journeyed over them the Greeke saith did over-shadow them and David teacheth that it was spred for a covering Psal. 105. 39. namely to shadow them from the heat of the Sunne and in Num. 14. 14. Moses saith it stood over them It signified unto them the glorious grace guidance and protection of God and figured the like unto the Church after in Christ who by his Word and Spirit guideth and protecteth all his people Esai 4. 5 6. For as God now led his people like a flocke in the Wildernesse Psal. 78. 52. So Christ the good Shepheard calleth his owne sheepe by name and leadeth them out goeth before them and the sheepe follow him for they know his voyce and goe in and out and finde pasture Ioh. 10. 3 4. 9. 11. See also the notes in Ex. 13. 21. by day that is in the day time and daily continually for by day it was a cloud and by night a fire and this continued till they came to the promised land Exod. 14. 20. 24. and 13. 22. Nehem. 9. 12. 19. Psal. 78. 14. Num. 14. 14. Verse 35. Rise up or Stand up it is opposed to sitting still and is meant here for the helpe and comfort of his people whom he conducted and for the destruction of his enemies as the words following manifest and thus David often useth it as in Psal. 3. 8. and 7. 7. and 10. 12. and 17. 13. and 4● 27. But specially in the 68 Psalme which is a prophesie of Christ his resurrection and ascension into heaven and which he beginneth with these words of Moses Let God rise up let his enemies be scattered c. which sheweth that the fulfilling of all these mysteries is by Christ and his rising from the dead for the justification and salvation of his Church Onkelos translateth it in Chaldee Bee thou reveiled O Lord and Ionathan paraphraseth Be thou reveiled now O Word of the Lord in the strength of thine anger thine enemies Ionathan in Chaldee saith the enemies of thy people and after those that hate them for the enemies and persecutors of the Church are the enemies of God himselfe Act. 9. 4. Matth. 25. 45. Zach. 2. 8. This David sheweth when saying vnto God thine enemies and thine haters he annexeth Against thy people they have craftily taken secret counsell c. Psal. 83. 3 4. scattered as broken asunder so the word signifieth Psal. 2. 9. The effect of Christs death and resurrection is the breaking and scattering of the conjoyned forces of his enemies Psal. 68. 2 3. 13. 15. and the contrary gathering together in one of the children of God that were scattered abroad Ioh. 11. 51 52 Esai 11. 10 12. Returne Iehovah unto the ten thousands that is as the Chaldee paraphraseth Returne LORD dwell with thy glory among the ten thousands thousands of Israel Or without supplying the word unto as the Greeke translateth it Returne Lord th● thousands the ten thousands in Israel that is cause them to returne unto their rest from their travels For the word Returne may meane either Gods action in himselfe returning to his people or his action in them returning reducing bringing them againe as in Deut. 30. 3. Psal. 14. 7. and 126. 1. In both senses rest and quietnesse is implied which Moses intreateth God to give unto his people and himselfe to remaine with them So R. Menachem here expoundeth it to meane quietneesse according to Esai 30. 15. In returning and rest shall ye be saved But the first interpretation seemeth most fitting that as when the cloud Arke and hoast remoued he prayed God to Rise up and goe with them against their enemies so when the Arke and people rested he prayeth God to returne and remaine among them for in his presence their chiefe joy and safety consisted as hee elsewhere sheweth Ex. 33. 14 15 16. And that there is often a want of such words necessary to be supplied the Scripture elsewhere sheweth as in 2 Sam. 4. 1. 〈◊〉 men were Sauls sonne that is were unto Sauls s 〈…〉 or hee had two men and such wants are many times supplied by other prophets as the pillars that were the house 2 King 25. 13. that is which wer● in the house Ierem. 52. 17. The Arke continu● the house 2 Sam. 6. 11. that is continued in the house 1 Chron. 13. 14. and sundry the like See Deut. 32. 43. CHAP. XI 1 The people complaining God punisheth them with fire which at Moses prayer is quenched 4 They lust for flesh and loath Manna 10 Moses grieved at their murmuring complaineth to God of his charge 16 God divideth his burden unto seventie Elders which should beare it with him 18 and promiseth to give the people flesh 24 The seventie Elders have the spirit of prophesie 31 God by a winde bringeth Quailes into the Campe which the people gathering and eating doe die of a plague at Kibr●th-hattaavah 35 The Campe removeth to Hazeroth ANd the people
in the Annotations on Gen. 18. 10. and 25. 31. what hath God wrought that is how wonderfull things God hath wrought for them The Greeke translateth it What God shall performe He teacheth that all the valiant acts of Israel should not be done by themselves but by God for them as it is shewed in Psal. 44. 1 2 c. Wherefore it is written Lord thou wilt ordaine peace for us for thou also hast wrought all our workes in us Esay 26. 12. And so the Apostle saith It is God which worketh in you both to will and to doe of his good pleasure Philip. 2. 13. and he which hath begun a good worke in you will performe it untill the day of Iesus Christ Phil. 1. 6. Vers. 24. as a couragious Lion Of these names of Lions see the Annotations on Gen. 49. 9. Of the Lions nature Solomon saith it is strongest among beasts and turneth not away for any Prov. 30. 30. Here the blessing which was specially given to the tribe of Iudah Gen. 49. is applied to all Israel which were in Christ the Lion of the tribe of Iudah Rev. 5. 5. for just men are bold as a Lion Prov. 28. 1. lift up himselfe a signe of stoutnesse courage and Majestie By this and the former rising up is meant the valiant onset which they should make upon their enemies the Canaanites whereof the booke of Iosua is a testimony and under them were figured the spirituall enemies of the salvation of Israel Satan sinne the world c. which the Church of Christ should resist and overcome by faith 1 Pet. 5. 9. and 2. 11. 1 Ioh. 5. 4. untill he cat the prey that is as the Chaldee and Targum Ionathan expound it untill he have killed his enemies Signifying hereby Israels constant fighting of the Lords battels not lying downe or giving themselves rest till they had gotten a full victory This was in part fulfilled in the conquest of Canaan at the end whereof the two tribes and an halfe returned with much riches cattell silver gold c. to divide the spoile of their enemies with their brethren Ios. 22. 3 4 8. And when David having fought the battels of the Lord sang unto his praise I have pursued mine enemies and destroyed them and turned not againe untill I had consumed them 2 Sam. 22. 38. But chiefly it is performed by the grace of God in Christ against the enemies of our soules whereof it is thus prophes●ed And the remnant of Iakob shall be among the nations in the middest of many peoples as a renting Lion among the beasts of the forrest as a young Lion among the flockes of sheepe who if he goe thorow both treadeth downe and teareth in pecces and none can deliver Thine hand shall be lifted up upon thine adversaries and all thine enemies shall be cut off Mic. 5. 8 9. And this spirituall warfare is not like the battels of the world with confused noise and garments rolled in bloud Esay 9. 5. but with the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God Ephes. 6. 17. in much patience in afflictions in necessities in distresses in stripes in imprisonments in tossings to and fro in labours in watchings in fastings by purenesse by knowledge by long-suffering by kindnesse by the holy Ghost by love unfeigned by the word of truth by the power of God by the armour of righteousnesse on the right hand and on the left c. 2 Cor. 6. 4. 7. For even Christ himselfe whē he was called the Lion of the tribe of Iuda appeared like a Lamb as it had been slaine Revel 5. 5 6. and his people for his sake are killed all the day long are counted as s●●epe for 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ghter and yet in all these things are more than 〈…〉 qutrours through him that loved them Rom. 8. 36 37. Vers. 25. Neither cursing curse him in Greeke Neither curse mee him with curses neither blessing blesse him that is neither curse Israel at all nor blesse him at all Here Balaks indignation against Balaam and sinne against God is increased rejecting his owne Prophet resisting the word of the Lord now the second time and when hee could doe no evill to Israel he would hinder them from good Vers. 27. per adventure it will be right in the eyes of God that is it will please God as the Chaldee expoundeth it and so the Greeke saith if it may please God This is Balaks third and last attempt against the Church of Christ in another place as Satan tempted Christ himselfe thrice in three severall places which not succeeding he then left him Matth. 4. 1 11. And whereas before the King supposed that Balaams seeing of the whole multitude was the let why hee did not curse them hee now perceiveth God to be the cause and therefore by sacrifices in a place idolatrous he seeketh to obtaine his favour Vers. 28. the top of Pe●r the name of a mountaine called in Greeke Phogor and in Chaldee the top of the high-place of Peor where the Moabites used to sacrifice unto their idoll called Baal peor Num. 25. 2. 3. 18. and there they had a temple called Beth-peor or the house of Peor Deut. 3. 29. and neare it was a citie called Beth-peor which the Israelites had taken from King Sihon and it was after given for a possession to the Reubenites Ios. 13. 15 20. In this idolatrous mountaine the King hoping to be heard of God maketh supplication with new altars and sacrifices so continuing the abuse of his religion bent against the wil of God and to the destruction of his people CHAP. XXIV 1 Balaam leaving inchantments prophesieth by the Spirit of God the happinesse of Israel 10 Balak in anger dismisseth him 14 but before his departure he prophesieth of the Starre of Iakob and the distruction of some nations ANd Balaam saw that it was good in the eyes of Iehovah to blesse Israel and he went not as at other times to meet with inchantments but he set his face toward the wildernesse And Balaam lifted up his eies and he saw Israel abiding in tents according to their tribes and the Spirit of God was upon him And he tooke up his parable and said Balaam the sonne of Beor assuredly saith and the man whose eye is open assuredly saith Hee assuredly saith which heard the oracles of God which saw the vision of the Almightie falling and having his eyes uncovered How goodly are thy tents O Iakob thy tabernacles O Israel As the valleyes are they spread forth as gardens by the river side as Lign-aloes-trees which Iehovah hath planted as Cedar trees beside the waters He shall poure waters out of his buckets and his seed shall be in many waters and his King shall be higher than Agag and his kingdom shal be exalted God brought him forth out of Aegypt hee hath as the strengths of an Vnicorne he shall ●at up the nations his distressers and shall breake their bones and pierce them thorow with
his arrowes He couched he lay downe as a renting Lion and as a couragious Lion who shall stirre him up Blessed be every one of them that blesse thee and cursed be every one of them that curse thee And Balaks anger was kindled against Balaam and he smote his hands together and Balak said unto Balaam I called thee to curse mine enemies and behold blessing thou hast blessed them these three times And now flee thou unto thy place I said honouring I will honour thee but loe Iehovah hath kept thee backe from honour And Balaam said unto Balak Spake I not also to thy messengers which thou sentest unto me saying If Balak would give me his housefull of silver and gold I cannot goe beyond the mouth of Iehovah to doe good or evill out of mine owne heart what Iehovah shall speake that will I speake And now behold I goe unto my people Come I will counsell thee what this people shall doe to thy people in the latter daies And hee tooke up his parable and said Balaam the sonne of Beor assuredly saith and the man whose eye is open assuredly saith Hee assuredly saith which heard the o 〈…〉 cles of God and knew the knowledge of the Most high which saw the vision of the Almightie falling and having his eyes uncovered I shall see him but not now I shall behold him but not nigh There shall proceed a starre out of Iakob and a scepter shall rise out of Israel and shall smite thorow the corners of Moab and shall unwall all the sons of Seth. And Edom shall be a possession and Seir shall be a possession for his enemies and Israel shall doe valiantnesse And hee shall have dominion out of Iakob and shall destroy him that remaineth out of the citie And he looked on Amalek and he tooke up his parable and said Amalek was the first of the nations but his latter end shall be that he perish for ever And he looked on the Kenite and tooke up his parable and said Strong is thy dwelling place and thou puttest thy nest in a rock Neverthelesse Kain shall be wasted untill Ashur shall carry thee away captive And hee tooke up his parable and said Alas who shall live when God doth this And ships shall come from the coast of Kitim and shall afflict Asshur and shal afflict Heber and he also shall perish for ever And Balaam rose up and went and returned to his place and Balak also went to his way Annotations HE went not as at other times or not at this time as the time before which the Greeke translateth according to his custome to meet with inchantments This sheweth that all his former altars and sacrifices and consultations with the Lord were by that wicked art of inchantment or observing of fortunes such as the Prophets and diviners of the nations used Deut. 18. 10. 14. Which thing he now left as seeing it not availeable for his purpose but that his evill heart was not changed appeareth by his going with the King to mount Peor to see if from thence he might curse Israel by his commanding of altars and sacrifices as before Numb 23. 27 30. and by his pestilent counsell which he gave the king after this for the destruction of Gods people Numb 31. 16. Rev. 2. 14. set his face toward the wildernesse where Israel lay encamping that he might as it were prevent God and suddenly utter a curse against his people The Chaldee paraphraseth he set his face towards the Calfe that Israel had made in the wildernesse Exod. 32. as if looking upon their sinnes hee thought for them he might have cursed Israel and so in Targum Ierusalemy it is explained He set his face toward the wildernesse and remembred concerning them the worke of the Calfe and would have cursed Israel Vers 2. abiding in tents or dwelling which the Greeke translateth camping or having their armie or l●●●er The order wherein God had placed the armies of Israel about his sanctuary Numb 2. they alwaies kept when they pitched in the wildernesse the sight whereof astonished the enemie so that he could not curse them as hee desired but blessed them the third time the Spirit of God was upon him that is as the Chaldee explaineth it the spirit of prophesie from before the Lord rested upon him and as Sol. Iarchi here noteth it came into his heart that he should not curse them The like phrase was before in Numb 11. vers 26. the Spirit rested upon them and they prophesied and againe in vers 29. would God that all the Lords people were prophets and that the Lord would put his Spirit upon them This was Gods powerfull worke changing Balaams heart when he intended evill as when Saul and his messengers went with an evill purpose to have taken David in Naioth the Spirit of God was upon them and they also prophesied 1 Sam. 19. 19 20 23. And when wicked men being thus over-ruled uttered divine oracles as now Balaam did they spake not of themselves as it is said of the holy Prophets For prophesie came not at any time by the will of man but holy men of God spake being moved or carried by the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 21. Vers. 3. he tooke up his parable that is prophesied see Numb 23. 7. assuredly saith or affirmeth averreth a word appropriate to the oracle of God which is a faithfull saying 1 Tim. 1. 15. See the Annotations on Gen. 22. 16. Here Balaam beginneth his third blessing with a solemne preface avouching the truth and constancie of it from God against whose will the more he strugleth the stronger he is resisted the man whose eye is open which the Chaldee expoundeth the man that is faire sighted that seeth well the Greeke translateth the true man hee seemeth hereby to signifie that he was a Prophet who in old time was called a Seer 1 Sam. 9. 9. Shethum the originall word used only here and in vers 15. is of contrary signification to Sethum that is closed or shut up howbeit some take it to be of the same meaning which may then be explained thus The man who had his eye shut but now open And eye is put for eyes understanding the eyes of his minde opened by the spirit of prophesie though some of the Hebrewes as Iarchi here observeth have from hence conjectured that Balaam was blinde of one eye Vers. 4. the oracles of God or the sayings of God as the Chaldee saith the word from before God but the Greeke translateth strong oracles because God in Hebrew El is so named of being strong or mightie vision of the Almightie or of the Alsufficient that is as the Greeke translateth of God falling understand into a trance or deep sleepe or falling on my face to the ground for even the holy men of God when they saw divine visions used to fall downe on their faces and into deep sleepes as dead men So a deepe sleepe or trance f●ll upon Abraham Gen. 15. 12.
the land because the divers kindes in the vineyard are weightie for if they be sowen within the land of Israel they are unlawfull to be used and seeing they are unlawfull for any use within the land they are unlawfull to be sowen without the land It is unlawfull to sow herbes or corne by a vines side or to plant a vine-tree by herbes or by corne and if a man doe so though he is not to be beaten yet both of them are defiled and not to be put to any use either the herbes or the corne or the vine but they burne them both as it is written LEST THE FVLL-RIPE FRVIT c. BE DEFILED though it be the straw of the corne or the wood of the vine-tree they are unlawfull for any use but they burne them neither may they heat an oven or a cauldron or boile any thing with them when they burne them These and sundry like observations they have hereabouts not altogether without probabilitie and herein the mixtures of the vineyard exceed the mixtures of the field which they thinke might be used and eaten though it was sinne to sow them as is noted on Levit. 19. 19. This Law with other such like was typicall and pertained to the rudiments of Moses Law whereby it seemeth unto mee God taught them the simple and sincere estate of his Church For in mysterie the vineyard of the Lord of hosts was the house of Israel and the men of Iudah the plant of his pleasures Esay 5. 7. and he planted them a noble vine wholly a right or true seed though they turned into degenerate branches of a strange vine unto him Ier. 2. 21. Now also the Church is a vineyard Christ himselfe the vine and we the branches Ioh. 15. 1. 5. and this vineyard God would not have sowen with divers kinds or mixed with the prophane and unbeleevers lest all be defiled 2 Cor. 6. 14 18. Matt. 3. 7 10. Rev. 21. 24 27. Vers. 10. with an oxe and an asse the oxe was a cleane beast the asse an uncleane the Hebrewes understand this law generally plowing for all worke and the oxe and the asse for all cleane and uncleane beasts together Whosoever doth worke with two kindes of cattell or beasts together and the one of them is of a cleane kinde and the other of an uncleane loe he is to be beaten in every place Deut 22. 10. Whether he plow or sow or draw a wagon or a stone with them together c. he is to be beaten And whether it be oxe and asse or any two kindes whereof one is uncleane and the other cleane either of cattell as a swire and a sheepe or of wilde beasts as a wilde oxe and an elephant or beasts with cattell as a dogge with a goat or the like for any of these he is by the Law to be beaten If a wagon be drawne with beasts of divers kindes he that sitteth on the wagon is to be beaten and if one sit on the wagon and another guide it they are both beaten yea though they be an hundred that guide it they are all beaten It is lawfull to doe worke with a man and a beast together for the Law saith WITH AN OXE AND AN ASSE it saith not with a man and an asse or with a man and an oxe A cleane beast that is become polluted or unfit for sacrifice though it bee but one body yet the Scripture maketh it as two bodies for that it was holy and was made as holy and as profane mixt together and this beast is fonnd as a cleane beast with an uncleane beast mixed in one as it is said in Lev. 27. 11. IF IT BE AN VNCLEANE BEAST OF WHICH THEY DOE NOT OFFER A SACRIFICE TO THE LORD wee have beene taught that this is not spoken but of beasts disabled for sacrifice Therefore he that ploweth with an oxe disabled for sacrifice is to be beaten as for mixed kindes but this prohibition is come by tradition Maimony in Kilajim chap. 9. sect 7. 11. This Law was also typicall and bindeth not us now according to the letter but figured out the Ministers in the Church as did the oxe that treadeth out the corne which might not be muzzeled Deut. 25. compared with 1 Cor. 9. 8. 9. 11. 1 Tim. 5. 17 4. 18. These in the Lords plow that is in the ministerie of his word Luk. 9. 62. must not be mixed of cleane and uncleane of the servants of Christ and of Antichrist 2 Cor. 6. 14 15. Vers. 11. linsie-wolfie in Hebrew Shagnatnez expounded in Greeke Kibdela which signifieth things adulterate or impurely mixed Moses explaineth it after saying wooll and flax together unto which onely the Hebrewes restraine it as is more largely noted on Lev. 19. 19. This Law was also figurative the garments of the Saints are principally Christ himselfe as it is written Put yee on the Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 13. 14. he hath given unto his church that she should be arayed in fine linnen cleane and bright which is the righteousnesse of the Saints Rev. 19. 8. that we may bee found in him not having our owne justice or righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousnesse of God by faith Phil. 3. 9. There are also other vertues and graces of the spirit wherewith the faithfull are adorned which are good workes 1 Tim. 2. 9 10. 1 Pet. 3. 3 4. but in the case of our justification before God these may not be mixed together for a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the Law Rom. 3. 28. Gal. 2. 16. And as by the letter of this Law in the Hebrewes account one threed of wooll in a linnen garment or one linnen threed in a woollen garment made it unlawfull as is noted on Lev. 19. 19. though linnen or woollen garments were worne severally so justification by faith in Christ and by our owne good workes are so opposite as that they cannot agree together in one man by any manner of mixture in the case o● justification before God but if it be by grace the● is it no more of workes otherwise grace is no more grace and if it be of workes then is it no more grace otherwise worke is no more worke Rom. 11. 6. Gal. 3. 10. wooll and flax that is woollen and linnen together which the Greeke translateth in the same the Chaldee wooll and flax joyned or mixt together Vers. 12. Fringes in Hebrew Gedilim which elsewhere is translated wreathes in 1 King 7. 17. and the wreathes spoken of in Exod. 28. 24. and the ropes or cords in Iudg. 16. 11 12. are by the Chaldee translated Gedilan and the Greeke here expoundeth it Strepta that is wreathes or cords for they were twisted threeds or thrumbs which hung upon their garments Moses called them before Tsitsith Num. 15. 38. of the lookes of haire like which they did hang. These are the same though called here by another name and
the Lords first-fruits Rev. 14. 4. and have received the first-fruits of his Spirit Rom. 8. 23. so wee then doe give the first-fruits unto him when in Christ the true Sanctuary wee acknowledge that wee and ours are his and have this grace not of our selves or for our owne merits but of his goodnesse and liberality 2 Cor. 3. 5. Ephes. 2. 8 9 10. Tit. 3. 3 4 5 6. set it downe or leave it for the Priests which did after eat it The first-fruits were given to the men of the charge the Priests that ministred and they divided them among them as the other holy things of the Sanctuary Maimony in B●ccurim ch 3. sect 1. It figured that wee should consecrate our selves and ours for ever unto the Lord Rom. 12. 1. and 6. 19. 22. Vers. 11. shalt rejoyce as they were bound to doe at all other feasts Deut. 16. 11 15. So that after this homage the people abode in the holy City all that night feasting and the next day they might depart and not before Hereupon the Hebrewes note seven things which they that brought first-fruits were bound unto the comming to the place and the vessell or basket the Profession to be made and the oblation or sacrifice and the Song and the Waving of it by the Priest and the tarrying all night When hee hath brought his first-fruits to the Sanctuary and made profession and offered his peace-offerings hee may not goe out of Ierusalem that day to returne to his owne place but must tarry there all night and returne on the morrow to his citie as it is written in Deut. 16. 7. and thou shalt turne in the morning and goe unto thy tents All the turnings which thou shalt turne out of the Sanctuary after thou art come thither shall not be but in the morning Maimony in Biccurim chap. 3. sect 14. in all the good or as the Greeke translateth for all the good things the chiefest whereof are the first-fruits of the spirit wherewith God sanctifieth his people as when Christ teacheth that Our Father which is in heaven will give good things to them that aske him Matth. 7. 11. another Evangelist expoundeth it he will give the holy Spirit to them that aske him Luke 11. 13. For this Spirit and graces of God which we have received we ought to rejoyce before him continually Psa. 100. Luk. 10. 20. Phil. 3. 1. 1 Pet. 1. 8. 1 Thess. 5. 16. Vers. 12. of thy revenue which the Greeke expoundeth of the fruits of thy land See the notes on Deut. 14. 22. the yeere of tithe that is the yeere when the second tithe was to be given to the poore which was the third and the sixt yeere of every seven yeeres whereof the Law was given before in Deut. 14. 28. The Greeke translateth the second tithe thou shalt give to the Levite c. Of this the Hebrewes say Wee are commanded to confesse before the LORD after that we have brought forth all the gifts which be of the seed of the land and this is called the Confession of the tithe And wee make not this Confession but after the yeere wherein we have separated the Tithes of the poore Deut. 26. 12. Maimony tom 3. in Maasar sheni or treat of the Second tithe chap. 11. sect 1 2. within thy gates that is as the Greeke and Chaldee expound it thy cities see Deut. 14. 28. 29. Vers. 13. Then Hebr. And thou shalt say The time is recorded by the Hebrewes to be at the Minchah the Oblation in the last good day of the Passeover of the fourth yeere and of the seventh as it is said WHEN THOV HAST MADE AN END OF TITHING at the Feast wherein all the tithes are ended And the Passeover of the fourth yeere commeth not but all the fruits of the third yeere are tithed whether they be the fruits of the trees or fruits of the land Maimony in Maaser sheni ch 11. s. 3. The reason hereof was the Passeover was kept in Abib or March Deu. 16. 1. and the first of Tisri that is September was tho beginning of the yeere for the tithes of corne seeds and herbs and the fifteenth of 〈◊〉 which wee call Ianuary was the beginning of the yeer for 〈◊〉 of the fruits of trees as Maimony sheweth in Maaser sheni c. 1. s. 2. so by March following the tithes of the third yeere which they had 〈◊〉 up wi●hin their gates Deut. 14. 28. might all be bestowed and the Passeover was the next feast th 〈…〉 〈…〉 ed when all men were bound to appeare 〈◊〉 the Lord Deut. 16. 16. say before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that by this solemne confession they might testifie their voluntary obedience to his lawes with a cleare conscience and so crave expect his further blessing The Hebrewes say This confession might be uttered in any language that a man spak and every one spake for himselfe and if many would confesse joyntly in one they might And it is commanded to be done in the Sanctuary BEFORE THE LORD and if they confessed in any place they were discharged Maim in Maaser sheni c. 11. s. 5 6. put away the holy thing in Chaldee the holy thing of the 〈…〉 he Hebr. the holinesse meaning things of holinesse as the Greek translateth I have purged the holy thing● out of my house so that this confession respected not the tithe of the poore onely but all other holy things which they were bound to give unto God or his Ministers or the poore And putting away signifieth the removing and utter taking away so that nothing remaineth So the Hebrewes say A man confesseth not untill there he not any of the gifts remaining with him as it is said I have put away the holy thing out of mine house And in the evening of the last good day of the Passeover was the putting away and on the morrow was the confession Thus he did if there remained with him any heave-offering of the Tithe hee gave it to the Priest if any of the first tithe hee gave it to the Levites if any of the poores tube hee gave it to the poore If there remained with him any of the fruits of the second tithe of confession or of that which was of the fourth yeeres plantation Levit 19. 24. or any money of their redemption loe he put them away and cast them into the Sea or burnt them If any first-fruits remained with him hee put them away in every place where by is meant that he burned and put away that which remained with him of the fruits which he could not eat all of them before the good day came c. Hee cannot confesse till hee have brought out all the gifts as it is said I HAVE PVT AWAY THE HOLY THING that is the second tithe and the fourth yeeres plantation called HOLY Lev. 19. 24. OVT OF my HOVSE that is the Cake Num. 15. 20. which is the Priests gift in the house I HAVE GIVEN IT TO THE LEVITE this is
confessed to be exceeding great Nat. Hist. l. 37. c. 1. And Claudius the Romane Emperour used to weare Emeralds and Sardonyches Plin. ibidem c. 6. so that the Latine Poets when they noted men for their statelinesse spake of their hands garnished with Sardonyches Martial l. 3. Iuvenal Sat. 6. and shew of what esteeme they were in saying gemma● princeps Sardonychus loculis quae custoditur eburnis Iuvenal Sat. 13. The reason alleaged from Rev. 7. 5 8. that the tribes are there reckoned up by the Holy Ghost with omission of Dan otherwise than they are reckoned in any place of the old Testament weakneth not but rather confirmeth that which I have said For as there is no new person put in stead of any tribe or new name given to any tribe but such as was given before in the old Testament so neither is it likely that in Rev. 21. any other new stone should be placed than such as agreeth with the description of Moses so that the Sardonyx should be looked for in Exo. 28. among the rest Againe the omission of Dan in Rev. 7. accordeth very well with the old Testament for though Iosephs sonnes Ephraim and Manasses made two tribes Genes 48. 5 6. Num. 1. 10 33 35. so that after a sort there were thirteene yet the Scripture usually nameth and reckoneth them but twelve that the name of the twelve tribes is famous also in the new Testament Luke 22. 30. Act. 26. 7. Iam. 1. 1. Rev. 21. 12. And when they are reckoned by the Prophets one commonly is omitted for either Ioseph is named in stead of his two sonnes as in Gen. 49. or if they two be mentioned Levi for his separation to the Lords service in the Tabernacle is omitted as in Num. 13. and often or if both hee and they be expressed some one of the other is let passe as Simeon is unnamed in the blessing of the tribes Deut. 33. Accordingly the Spirit of God in Rev. 7. naming Levi and Manasses and Ioseph for his sonne Ephraim was to omit the name of some other unlesse hee should have counted 13. tribes contrary to the course of the Scriptures and scope of the matter there in hand Why Dan is not named in Revel 7. or Simeon in Deut. 33. belongeth not to this question it sufficeth that there is no new practise in Rev. 7. differing from the Prophets neither need we looke for any innovation among the precious stones Rev. 21. Thus have I according to the measure of knowledge which God hath given me and as the extreme infirmity of my body would permit made answer to the chiefe matters objected especially such as concerne the Scriptures and may by them be decided Other things wherein I have shewed either mine owne or other mens judgement I will not contend about Let not any thing which I have written be accepted without triall or further than it agreeth with the truth The learned which have interpreted and opened the Scriptures have had their second thoughts and altered both their versions and Expositions in sundry 〈◊〉 as all men know but in part For things wherein I have missed I humbly crave pardon of God and of his people to such as have the spirit in them that lusteth after envie I wish a better minde to such as love the truth encrease of knowledge and grace and for ought that is good and profitable in my labours the praise therefore be unto him that is Authour of every good gift and worke the benefit thereof unto those that love his Name which be blessed for ever Amen ANNOTATIONS VPON THE BOOKE OF PSALMES WHEREIN THE HEBREW WORDS and sentences are compared with and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions but chiefly by conference with the Holy Scriptures BY HENRY AINSWORTH 2 SAM 23. 1 2. David the sonne of Iesse said And the man who was raised up on high the anointed of the God of Iakob and the sweet Psalmist of Israel said The Spirit of Iehovah spake by me and his word was in my tongue LVKE 24. 44. All things must be fulfilled which are written in the Law of Moses and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes LONDON Printed by John Haviland for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. A PREFACE CONCERNING DAVID his Life and Acts. DAVID the sonne of Iesse of the tribe of Iudah of the linage of Abraham in the a 1 Chron. 2. Matth. 1. 1. 17. fourteenth generation was borne in Bethlehem a towne in the tribe of Iudah in the land of Canaan about 2917 yeares after the creation of the world in the daies when Samuel the Prophet was Iudge of Israel He was the b 1 Chro. 2. 15. seventh and youngest of all Iesses sonnes of least esteeme among them and set to keepe his fathers c 1 Sam. 16. 11. sheepe In the three and twentieth yeere of his life he was by Samuel the Prophet privately in Bethlehem anointed d 1 Sam. 16. 13. King over Israel in the midst of his brethren and the Spirit of the Lord came upon him from that day forward He was e Vers. 12. ruddy of a beautifull countenance and goodly to looke to a f Vers. 18. cunning player on the Harpe a mightie valiant man of warre and prudent in speech and a comely person and the Lord was with him Who also gave him these testimonies and promises g Act. 13. 22. I have found David the sonne of Iesse a man after mine owne heart which shall fulfill 〈◊〉 my will h Psal. 89. 19. I have laid helpe on one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the people with whom i Vers. 21. my hand shall be established mine arme also shall strengthen him I will k Vers. 23 c. beat downe his foes before his face and plague them that hate him In my name shall his horne be exalted I will set his hand in the sea and his right hand in the rivers I will make him my first-borne higher than the Kings of the earth My mercy will I keepe for him for ever and my covenant shall stand fast with him his seed will I make to endure for ever and his throne as the daies of heaven c. After Davids anointing in Bethlehem he went againe and fed his l 1 Sam. 16. 19. fathers sheep but the Spirit of God wrought mightily in him He killed m 1 Sam. 17. Goliath the Philistian Giant from whose face n Vers. 24. all the men of Israel fled away for feare David overcame him in the name of the Lord of hosts with a sling and with a stone He was a cunning Musitian and o 1 Sam. 16. 23. playing on his Harpe with his hand he refreshed King Saul tho was vexed with an evill spirit from the Lord. He was imployed in warres against 〈◊〉 Philistians and p 1 Sam. 18. 5. whither soever Saul sent him
blessing of the Gospell that the meeke and needy shall eat and have enough Psal. 132. 15. God filleth the hungry with good things and sends away the rich empty Luke 1. 53. The meeke meaneth the regenerate who are mortified with Christ and their fierce nature made meeke and humble your heart shall live hee turneth his speech to the meeke and seekers of God who should eat of Christs flesh that was given for the life of the world and thereby live for ever Ioh. 6. 51. The living of the heart importeth also the chearing comfort and solace of the same Gen. 45. 27. the contrary whereof is in the dying of the heart 1 Sam. 25. 37. See also the like promise Psal. 69. 33. The Chaldee yeeldeth this sense The spirit of prophesie shall rest in the thoughts of their heart for ever Vers. 28. All the ends c. that is the dwellers in the utmost parts and ends of the world A prophesie of the calling of the Gentiles by the preaching of the Gospell Rom. 16. 26. Eph. 2. 1 2 c. remember the Chaldee addeth remember his miracles families of the heathens or kindreds of the nations whereof see Gen. 10. 5 18 20 31 32. Vers. 29. ruler among the heathens to reigne over them by his Word and Spirit and so to be God not of the Iewes only but also of the Gentiles Rom. 3. 29 30. Vers. 30. All the fat ones that is the rich and mightie personages fat with plentie Deut. 31. 20. For Kings and Queenes and men of authority and wealth are also called to the participati● of Christs grace in his Church Esay 60. 3 5 10. Rev. 21. 24. 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. Sometime fatnesse is used to note out Gods spirituall blessings Psal. 36. 9. and 63. 6. and 65. 12. and 92. 15. Prov. 28. 25. all that goe downe to the dust this is the poore base and wretched people which for their misery and affliction are said to goe downe and sit in the dust as Psal. 113. 7. Esay 47. 1. and 29. 4. Iob 30. 19. Lament 3. 29. but the Chaldee expounds it the house of the grave that quickeneth not or cannot quicken that is the poore wretched man that doth not or cannot as Psal. 77. 5. keepe alive his soule that cannot nourish him-selfe he shall eat So to keepe alive is to nourish Esa. 7. 21. Or he that revived that is cheered not nor refreshed his soule with comfort as before vers 27. or he that cannot keepe alive his soule that is not save it from wrath and eternall death by his owne workes he shall live by faith in Christ. So this phrase to keepe the soule alive is used Ezek. 18. 27. The Chaldee giveth this sense and he will not keepe alive the soule of the wicked Vers. 31. A seed The posterity of those godly forementioned for God chuseth the seed with the parents Deut. 10. 15. and 30. 6 19. Psal. 69. 37. and 102. 29. Esay 43. 5. and 44. 3. Or the seed of Christ the children which God giveth him as Esa. 53. 10. Hebr. 2. 13. Or a seed that is a small remnant as Rom. 9. 29. the Chaldee saith the seed of Abraham for a generation a race of Gods children as Psal. 73. 15. and 24. 6. or to generation that is for ever through all ages Vers. 32. They shall come The Chaldee explaineth it Their sonnes shall come his justice the justice of God which is by faith in Christ Psal. 71. 〈◊〉 16 24. Rom. 10. 3 4. people that shall be 〈◊〉 hereafter to come or a people borne that is regenarate Psal. 87. 4 5. Ioh. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 1. 33. So people created Psal. 102. 19. that he hath done hath performed or accomplished that justice and all things appertaining to it The Greeke referreth it to the people whom the Lord hath made the Chaldee to the marvellous workes which he hath done PSAL. XXIII David under the similitude of a Shepherd sheweth 〈◊〉 love and mercies to his people whereby their 〈…〉 is confirmed A Psalme of David IEhovah feedeth me I shall not lacke In folds of budding grasse he maketh me lie downe hee easily leadeth mee by the waters of rests He returneth my soule he leadeth me in the beaten paths of justice for his Name sake Yea though I should walk in the valley of the shade of death I will not feare evill for thou wilt be with me thy rod and thy staffe they shall comfort me Thou furnishest before me a table in presence of my distressers thou makest fat my head with oile my cup is abundant Doubtlesse good and mercy shall follow me all the daies of my life and I shall converse in the house of Iehovah to length of daies Annotations FEedeth me or is my Feeder my Pastor The word comprehendeth all duties of a good Herd as together feeding guiding governing and defending his flocke Therefore Kings also have this title and are said to feed their people Psal. 78. 71 72. 2 Sam. 5. 2. Hereupon it is attributed to God and to Christ feeding his Church as the Shepherd of their soules Psal. 80. 2. Ezek. 34. 12 14 15. Esay 40. 11. Ioh. 10. 11. 1 Pet. 2. 25. The Chaldee referreth this to a former worke saying The Lord fed his people in the wildernesse they lacked nothing Vers. 2. of budding grasse pleasant pastures and leas where greene and tender herbs doe spring he maketh me or will make me lie downe to wit for rest from heat This also is another dutie of a good Herder as I will feed my flocke and I will make them lie downe saith the Lord Ezek. 34. 15. and Shew me O thou whom my soule loveth where thou feedest where thou makest lie downe at noone Song 1. 6. easily leadeth or comfortably ●uideth mee it noteth a soft and gentle leading with sustaining of infirmitie as Gen. 33. 14. Esay 40. 11. Therefore the Greeke turneth it he nourisheth mee So Psal. 31. 4. by waters or unto waters of rests that is most quiet or calme waters and such as give rest and refreshing All these things Christ performeth to his flocke as it is written They shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sun light on them nor any heat for the Lambe which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them and shall lead them to the lively fountaines of waters Revel 7. 16 17. Vers. 3. returneth my soule or will returne or restore it and consequently give it rest See Psalm 19. 8. Vers. 4. shade of death that is darke and dreadfull shadow and in a manner the very state of death This speech denoteth imminent danger Jer. 2. 6. sore affliction Psal. 44. 20. and 107. 10. 14. feare and terrour Iob 24. 17. and dreadfull darknesse Iob 10. 21 22. whereto spiritually is opposed the light and comfort of the Gospell and grace of Christ Mat. 4. 16. Luke 1. 79. wilt be with me or art with me and this implieth his good safety
rock sides or in rockie places Hebr. in the hands of the rocke as Psal. 140. 6. and they shall heare or though they have heard Vers. 7. cutteth and cleaveth to wit wood or the ground with the plough of hell or the grave Compare Ezek. 37. 1 11 12. Iehovih or God see Psal. 68. 21. powre not out my soule to wit unto death as Esa. 53. 12. that is kill mee not or make not my soule bare that is leave it not destitute and helplesse Vers. 10. Let the wicked fall or They shall fall into his net that is every of them into his owne not or flue together namely with their fall or together with them that are with me or altogether wholly passe over and escape the Greeke saith alone I am untill I passe over See this word Psal. 33. 15. PSAL. CXLII David sheweth that in his troubles when his owne heart and all other helpe failed him all his comfort was in faith and praier unto God An instructing Psalme of David a praier when he was in the cave WIth my voice unto Iehovah did I cry with my voice unto Iehovah did I supplicate for grace I powred out before him my meditation my distresse I did shew before him When my spirit was overwhelmed within mee then thou knewest my path in the way that I walked they privily laid a snare for mee I did looke on the right hand and see no man acknowledged me refuge is perished from me no man seeketh for my soule I cried unto thee Jehovah I said thou art my hope for safety my portion in the land of the living Attend unto my shouting for I am brought very low deliver mee from my persecutors for they are stronger than I. Bring forth my soule out of the close prison to confesse thy name the just shall inviron me about for thou wilt bounteously reward unto me Annotations IN the cave fled thither from the persecution of Saul 1 Sam. 24. 4 c. Vers. 4. was overwhelmed or swowned fainted see Psal. 77. 4. then thou Hebr. and thou so And he saith Mark 14. 34. is expounded Then he saith Matth. 26. 38. Vers. 5. I did looke or Looke thou c. continuing his complaint to God But the Greeke turneth it I considered and the Hebrew Looke thou or To looke is often resolved by other definite persons see the notes on Ps. 22. 9. and 49. 15. and 65. 11. 77. 2. 103. 20. and see or and behold to wit on the left hand refuge or flight is perished frō me that is faileth me I have no place to flie unto and escape So Iob 11. 20. Amos 2. 14. seeketh that is careth for so Prov. 29. 10. usually to seeke the soule is in the ill part to destroy it see Ps. 35. 4. Vers. 7. brought low or weakned see Ps. 116. 6. Vers. 8. the prison the cave wherein I am shut up close inviron compasse as Psal. 22. 13. or expect as Iob 36. 2. and so the Greeke translateth the just shall wait for me untill thou reward me See Psa. 13. 6. The Chaldee saith for my sake the just shall make thee a crowne of praise because thou wilt render a good reward unto me PSAL. CXLIII David praieth for favour in judgement 3 Hee complaineth of his griefes 5 Hee strengtheneth his faith by meditation and praier 7 Hee praieth for grace 9 for deliverance 10 for sanctification 12 for destruction of his enemies A Psalme of David IEhovah heare my praier give eare to my supplications for grace in thy faithfulnesse answer me in thy justice And enter not into judgement with thy servant for before thee shall not any living be justified For the enemy persecuteth my soule smiteth downe my life to the earth maketh me sit in darknesses as the dead for ever And my spirit is overwhelmed in me in midst of me my heart is wondrously amazed I remember the daies of old I meditate on all thy worke I muse on the action of thy hands I spread out my hands unto thee my soule as a weary land thirsteth for thee Selah Make speed answer me Iehovah my spirit faileth hide not thy face from me for I shall be made like to them that goe downe the pit Cause me to heare thy mercy in the morning for in thee doe I trust cause me to know the way that I should walke for unto thee doe I lift up my soule Deliver me from mine enemies O Iehovah unto thee I flie for covert Learne me to doe thine acceptable will for thou art my God thy good spirit shall leade me in the land of righteousnesse For thy names sake Iehovah thou wilt quicken me in thy justice wilt bring forth my soule out of distresse And in thy mercy wilt suppresse mine enemies and destroy all them that afflict my soule for I am thy servant Annotations ANd enter not into judgement or but goe not to Law with me by the deeds whereof no flesh shal be justified in thy sight Rom. 3. 20. so Iob 22. 4. 14. 3. Esa. 3. 14. In Chaldee go not into the judgment hall namely to judge with severity not any or not all that is none living so Matth. 24. 22. not all that is no flesh 1 Ioh. 2. 21. every lie is not that is no lie is of the truth so 2 Pet. 1. 20. Ps. 76. 6. Vers. 3. my life or my company the Hebrew signifieth both Iob 33. 18. 22. Psal. 68. 11. darknesses or darke places so Psal. 88. 7 19. and 74. 20. for ever or of eternity of old meaning dead long since and for ever after the word respecteth time past and to come So Lam. 3. 6. Vers. 4. overwhelmed fainteth or is perplexed see Psal. 77. 4. wondrously amazed astonished or desolate Gr. troubled See this word Esa. 59. 16. and 63. 5. Dan. 8. 27. Psal. 40. 16. Vers. 5. of old or of antiquity so Psal. 77. 6. Vers. 6. spread out that is pray as the Chaldee saith spread out my hands in praier See Psal. 44. 21. weary that is drie and thirsty in Greeke waterlesse see Psal. 63. 2. Vers. 7. for I or lest I Hebr. and I which may be supplied thus left I perish and be made like c. See Psal. 28. 1. Vers. 8. in the morning speedily so Psal. 90. 14. Vers. 9. I flie for covert or I cover I hide my selfe flying unto thee or to thee I covertly flie secretly disclosing to thee that which I would hide from others so the Greeke I flie to thee The Chaldee expoundeth it I have made thy Word my redeemer V. 10. thy good spirit shall leade me so the Greeke translateth this and the rest as assured we may also reade it praier-wise let thy good spirit leade me or thy spirit is good let it leade me c. and so the rest Compare Neh. 9. 20. in the land or into the land of righteousnesse in a plaine or even ground see Psal. 26. 12. Esa. 26. 10. Annotations HAlelu-jah that is
here commendeth the graces of Christ which he had being full of the Holy Ghost for his God had anointed him with the oyle of gladnesse above his fellowes Heb. 1. 9. and of him it is said The Spirit of the Lord is upon mee because hee hath anointed mee to preach the Gospell c. Luke 4. 18. Esay 61. 1. And the odour of these graces is smelt when the Gospell preached is by sense or judgement perceived Phil. 1. 9. Luke 9. 45. Heb. 5. 14. thy name is an ointment powred-forth As Messias and Christ is by interpretation Anointed and he is called the Oile or Ointment in Esay 10. 27. so by his Name is meant his Law the doctrine of grace or Law of faith Rom. 3. 27. as it is written The Iles shall wait for his Law Esay 42. 4. which is expounded The Gentiles shall trust in his name Matth. 12. 21. and the preaching of that grace is called the bearing of Christs Name before the Gentilis Acts 9. 15. and as a good Name is better then a good ointment Eccles. 7. 1. so the name and doctrine of Christ excelleth all other that at the name of Iesus every knee should bow Phil. 2. 10. This name is as a precious ointment powred forth by the preaching of the Gospell and by the miracles confirming the same accomplished not onely by Christ himselfe a man approved of God among the Israelites by miracles wonders and signes which God did by him Act. 2. 22. so that there went out a fame of him through all the region round about and he taught in their synagogues being glorified of all Luke 4. 14. 15. but also by his Apostles who were to preach on the house tops that which they heard in the eare Matth. 10. 27. which also they performed Rom. 15. 19. and 16. 25. 26. and therein rejoyced and said Now thankes be unto God which alwayes causeth us to triumph in Christ and maketh manifest the savor of his knowledge by us in every place For we are unto God a sweet-savour in Christ in them that are saved and in them that perish to the one the savour of death unto death and to the other the savour of life unto life 2 Cor. 2. 2. 14. 15. 16. And as the boxe of ointment when it was broken and powred forth on Christs head the house was filled with the savour of it Marke 14. 3. Iohn 12. 3. so when his Name and Gospell is preached abroad it giveth the odour thereof into all Christian hearts so that by the preaching of faith they also receive the Spirit Gal. 3. 2. 5. and are anointed of God 2 Cor. 1. 21. and have an unction from the Holy-one and know all things 1 Iohn 2. 20. that whereas before they mourned for their sinnes and miseries they now are comforced and have the oile of joy given unto them Esay 61. 3. the Uirgins love thee These are the fellow friends of the Spouse Ps. 45. 15. By Uirgins are meant all such as are chosen and called of God and faithfull whether whole Churches as 2 Cor. 11. 2. or particular persons who with chaste and pure minds serve the Lord onely and worship him in spirit and truth and stand with Christ on the mount Sion having his Fathers name written in their foreheads of whom it is said These are they which were not defiled with women for they are virgins these are they which follow the Lambe whither soever he goeth these were bought from among men being the first fruits unto God and to the Lambe and in their mouth was found no guile for they are without fault before the throne of God Rev. 14. 1 4. 5. And these love the Lord for the odour of his good ointments which they perceive by his word and Spirit though they see him not 1 Pet. 1. 8. they love him because he first loved them 1 Iohn 4. 19. and hath shed abroad his love in their hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto them Rom. 5. 5. and this is love that they walke after his commandements and keepe them 2 Ioh. v. 6. Iohn 14. 15. Vers. 4. Draw me A second request of the Spouse unto Christ that he would not onely call her outwardly by the voice of his Gospell but forasmuch as the word preached profiteth not if it bee not mixed with faith in them that heare it Heb. 4. 2. and faith is not of our selves it is the gift of God Eph. 2. 8. who worketh in us both to will and to doe of his good pleasure Phil. 2. 13. that he would also open her heart Acts 16. 14. effectually worke in her by his Spirit and continue and increase his grace towards her For drawing implyeth power in him that draweth as Hee draweth the mighty with his power Iob 24. 22. and when it is unto good it argueth grace and good will as I drew them with cords of a man with bands of love Hos. 11. 4. and continuance of grace as O draw that is continue thy loving kindnesse to them that know thee Psal. 26. 10. and in them that are drawne it is a signe of infirmity as No man can come unto me except the Father which hath sent me draw him Iohn 6. 44. And this is a fruit and effect of Christs death as himselfe saith And I if I bee lifted up or taken away from the earth will draw all men unto mee Iohn 12. 32. This drawing is by being effectually taught of God as againe he saith It is written in the Prophets And they shall be all taught of God every man therefore that hath heard and hath learned of the Father commeth to me Iohn 6. 45. and is a signe of Gods everlasting love towards such as it was said unto Israel Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawne thee Ier. 31. 3. we will runne I and the Virgins fore-mentioned will runne after thee for they follow the Lambe whithersoever he goeth Rev. 14. 4. Christ is our Fore runner gone before us into heaven Heb. 6. 20. Our Christian conversation is called a running Gal. 2. 2. and 5. 7. and our life is likened to a course or race which is runne as Iohn fulfilled his course or race Acts 13. 25. and Paul saith I have finished my course 2 Tim. 4. 7. Running signifieth readinesse of affection and speedy performance in action Hag. 1. 9. 1 King 19. 19. 20. Psal. 147. 15. it argueth also strength in the runner Dan. 8. 6. all which are here implyed as an effect of Christs grace drawing her according to the Prophesie Behold thou shalt call a nation that thou knewest not and nations that knew not thee shall runne unto thee c. Esay 55. 5. And againe They that wait on the Lord shall renew strength c. they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not faint Esay 40. 31. Now the way which we are to runne is his commandements of which David saith I
of the Law were a midle wall of partition as Paul nameth them Ephes. 2. 14. behind which Christ standeth speaketh and sheweth himselfe though more obscurely But we may best apply it to our owne wall meaning of the heart as the Prophet speaketh of the walls of his heart Ier. 4. 19. which the Greek there translateth the senses of his heart and it agreeth with that saying Behold I stand at the doore and knocke c. Revel 3. 20. For the naturall senses and understanding of our hearts are as a wall to hinder us from Christ till they be pulled down reformed according to the knowledge of God And so it is prophesied of Christ that he should unwall or cast downe the walls of all the sonnes of Seth Num. 24. 17. that is as the Apostle openeth should by the preaching of the Gospell pull downe strong holds cast downe imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God and bring into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10. 4. 5. looking through or looking in at the windowes this word used onely here and in Psal. 33. 14. and Esay 14. 16. signifieth a looking narrowly and an intentive observation of that which is done or suffered by others So it noteth Christs providence and care of his Church and all her wayes to see how shee would accept of him and his word flourishing or blossoming that is shewing himselfe as a floure sweet pleasant amiable to teach that Christ commeth not unto his without profit and comfort to their soules For as hee is all gracious so hee profereth grace to his Church The Greeke translateth it looking in agreeable to the former word lattesses a word not elsewhere used in the Hebrew but the Chaldee useth it for windowes as in Ios. 2. 21. And as windowes and lattesses doe both serve to let in light into the house so according to the former interpretation they may here bee applyed to Christ through whom grace shined in his humane nature or to his ordinances through which the light of grace shineth unto us as by his Word Seales of the Covenant c. or to the hearts of his people into which he conveyeth heavenly light But his looking in to his Spouse through these betokeneth also his secret observation of her and all her doings for things which one doth secretly unespyed are said to be by looking out at the window as in Prov. 7. 6. c. Ge. 26. 8. And as for her she seeth him not plainly but as through windowes and lattesses for in this life wee know but in part and now we see through a glasse darkly 1 Cor. 13. 12. The Chaldee referreth this speech to Gods respect of his people when they kept the Passeover in Aegypt Exod. 12. which was a figure of Christ our Passeover sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5. 7. Vers. 10. answered or spake She telleth here the end and fruit of Christs swift comming to call her by his Word and Spirit from her present estate and place of affliction unto a better or from that slouth or security wherein shee lay to follow him in the faith and love of his Gospell for when we with open face behold as in a glasse the glory of the Lord we have also this grace added that we are changed into the same image from glory to glorie even as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 18. Rise up thou or Rise up for thy selfe and for thy good so after Come away for thy selfe Sitting or lying still fitteth not with a Christian in this life who is called to runne the way of Gods commandements Psal. 119. 32. and to follow the Lambe whithersoever he goeth Rev. 14. 4. By our owne default and negligence we want the comforts of Christ and his communion but this our sinne is reproved and made manifest by the light Wherefore he saith Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Ephes. 5. 13. 14. Hereunto Christ calleth us with words of love and kindnesse come thou away or goe thou or get thee away Such words God used to Abraham when he called him out of his Country Genesis 12. Vers. 11. Winter a time of cold hardnesse storme and tempest wherein flowers and fruits are consumed travell is difficult for then God casteth forth his yee like morsels who can stand before his cold Psal. 147. 17. Therefore Christ saith Pray that your flight be not in the winter Mat. 24. 20. raine is over or is changed that is past away and faire wether come in the place Raine in winter is an hindrance of travell or going abroad as appeareth also by Ezr. 19. 9. 13. These things may be applyed to outward troubles and grievances in this life by the malice of the world as when Israel was in the bondage of Aegypt and of Babylon and after were released likewise to the spirituall winter raine and rage of Antichrist after which the graces and fruits of the Gospell beganne to flourish againe May also signifie the afflictions of soule wherein feares and sorrowes are stirred up like tempests by the wrath of God caused by sinne discovered and stirred up by the Law Rom. 3. 20. and 4. 15. and 7. 5. 8. 23. 24. All which by Christs comming are done away Rom. 7. 25. For that man is an hiding place from the wind and a covert from the tempest Esay 32. 2. and through him we being justified by faith have peace with God Rom. 5. 1. and his Tabernacle is for a place of refuge and for a covert from storme and from raine Esay 4. 6. The same thing is elsewhere signified by the scorching heat of the summer Rev. 7. 16. 17. Vers. 12. The flowers or The flourishîng things the flowerings appeare A description of a pleasant and fruitfull Spring after a dolefull winter signifying Christs gracious and comfortable gifts for the delight and benefit of his Church after the removall of the former evils These flowers may bee understood both of the Saints themselves which now beganne to hold up their heads and of the graces of the spirit wherewith they are adorned for their mutuall comfort whiles the joyfull tidings of the Gospell are discovered unto the consciences of afflicted sinners to assure them of the favour of God Thus unto Pharaohs Butler in prison was signified his restoring to his former good estate by a dreame of vine branches that budded blossomed and brought forth grapes Gen. 40. 9. 10. 13. And when God promiseth grace to his people he saith Israel shall blossome and bud and fill the face of the world with fruit Esay 27. 6. and they of the citie shall flourish like grasse of the earth Psal. 72. 16. the earth which being naturally dry and barren and cursed for mans sinne Gen. 3. is by the blessing of God and by meanes of the raine and deaw of heaven made fruitfull and this is applyed unto our sinfull barren nature
of the Spirit which they that beleeve on him should receive Ioh. 7. 38. 39. streaming running flowing or streames from Lebanon It hath reference to the streames of Iordan which river began at the foot of mount Lebanon and ran along through the holy land watering the same This similitude is amplified in Ezek. 47. 6. 10. where waters issuing out of the Sanctuarie which was built of the Cedars of Lebanon ran along Galilee and to the plaine and into the sea c. and every living thing that moveth whithersoever the rivers come shall live c. and every thing shall live whither the river commeth So in Revel 22. 1. out of the throne of God and of the Lambe Christ a pure river of water of life proceedeth Vers. 16. Stirre-up or Raise up thy selfe thou North winde A fourth blessing upon the garden of Christs Church that it is blowne upon by the windes to refresh it to cleanse the aire of it and to make it more fruitfull And though the North and South windes be of contrary qualities as cold and hot moyst and dry yet are they both fitting for her estate which sometime needeth sharp reproof and sometime calme and gentle consolation But he mentioneth not the East winde because that is often used in signe of wrath to blast burne and destroy the fruits as Ezek. 17. 10. and 19. 12. Hos. 13. 15. Gen. 41. 6. blow upon my garden The garden being Christs as the words following manifest the Lord who bringeth forth the winde out of his treasuries Psal. 135. 7. speaketh unto it to blow signifying hereby the ministration of his word and spirit bestowed on his people for their further good that they have not onely the waters of holy Scripture but the lively graces also of Gods Spirit to quicken them So in Ezek. 37. 9. the Prophet was willed to prophesie unto the winde and say thereunto Come from the foure windes O winde and blow upon these slaine that they may live And the efficacie of the Spirit of God is resembled by the winde in Ioh. 3. 8. and doctrines are windes in Ephes 4. 14. and the restraint of Gods graces by wholesome doctrine is signfied by foure Angels holding the foure windes of the earth that the wind should not blow on the earth nor on the sea nor on any tree Rev. 7. 1. spices thereof may flow that is the fruits may ripen and be abundant for by the gracious gifts of the Spirit breathing upon the Church corruption is purged away the soules are refreshed quickened comforted and all graces doe increase 1 Cor. 2. come into his garden and eat The faithfull acknowledging both themselves and theirs to be Christs doe desire that hee would come and accept the fruits and graces of his owne Spirit with which and for which hee is to be honoured So the offrings unto God are called his bread Num. 28. 2. the good workes of Christians are called fruits Ioh. 15. his acceptation of those fruits and communication of further grace is signified by mutuall supping together Rev. 3. 20. and thus the Lord rejoyceth in his workes Psal. 104. 31. fruit of his precious things that is the fruit of his precious graces or his precious fruits so that now the Church is not like Israel of old an empty vine which brought forth fruit unto himselfe Hos. 10. 1. or bare wilde grapes even grapes of gall and bitter clusters Esa. 5. 2. Deut. 32. 32. but is filled with the fruits of righteousnesse Phil. 1. 11. and walketh worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing being fruitfull in every good worke Col. 1. 10. and hath her fruit unto holinesse and the end everlasting life Rom 6. 22. The Chaldee paraphrast applieth this to the service of God under the Law saying Let the beloved God come into the house of the Sanctuarie and accept with favour the oblations of his people CHAPTER V. IAm come to my garden my sister my spouse I have gathered my myrrh with my spice I have eaten my honey-combe with my honey I have drunke my wine with my milke eate O friends drink and drinke-abundantly O beloved I sleepe and my heart waketh it is the voice of my beloved that knocketh Open to mee my sister my love my dove my perfect-one for my head is filled with dew my locks with the drops of the night I have put-off my coat how shall I put it on I have washed my feet how shall I defile them My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the doore and my bowels made a troubled-noise for him I rose-up to open to my beloved and my hands dropped myrrh and my fingers passing myrrh upon the handles of the locke I opened to my beloved and my beloved had withdrawne himselfe was passed away my soule went-for●h because of his speech I sought him and I found him not I called him and hee answered me not The Watchmen that went about the citie found mee they smote mee they wounded mee the watchmen of the walles tooke my veile from on me I adjure you O daughters of Ierusalem if yee finde my beloved what shall ye tell him that I am sicke of love What is thy beloved more then another beloved O thou fairest among women What is thy beloved more then another beloved that thou dost so adjure us My beloved is white and ruddie having-the-banner above ten-thousand His head the fine-gold the solid-gold his lockes curled blacke as a Raven His eyes as doves by the streames of water washing in milke sitting in fulnesse His cheekes as a bed of spice flowers of sweet-odours his lippes Lilies dropping passing myrrh His hands rings of gold filled with the Chrysolite his bowels bright yvorie overlaid with Saphires His legges pillars of marble founded upon sockets of solid-gold his countenance as Lebanon choice as the Cedars His palate sweetnesse and hee is altogether desires This is my beloved and this is my friend O daughters of Ierusalem CHAPTER V. My sister O my Spouse I am entred Into my garden I have gathered My Myrrh together with my spices-sweet My honey-combe did with my honey eat I drunke my wine with my milke friends eate yee Drinke O beloved and drinke-plenteously I am asleepe and yet my heart waketh The voice of my Beloved that knocketh Open thou unto me my sister deere My love my dove my perfect-one sincere For my head is with dew replenished My locks with drops that from the night proceed I dofft my coat how shall it on againe I washt my feete how shall I them distaine Put in his hand by 'th hole did my beloved And for him were my bowels troublous-moved To open to my Loved I rose-up And my hands myrrh my fingers eke did drop Passing-sweet myrrh the locke handles upon Open I did to my beloved-one And my beloved had himselfe drawn-backe Was past my soule went-forth for that he spake I did him seeke and yet I found him not I called him yet I no answere-got The
Watchmen that did goe the city round Did finde me they did smite me did me wound The keepers that upon the walles did watch They from on me my veile away did catch O ye the daughters of Ierusalem I you adjuring charge if ye finde him That my Beloved is what shall yee say To him that I for love languish away What is thy Lief more then another Lief O thou that hast mong women beauty chiefe Thy Lief then other Liefs what is he more That thou adjuring chargest us so sore My welbeloved white and red appears Above ten-thousand he the banner bears His head is fine gold solid-gold-of-Fess His lockes are curl'd blacke as a Raven is His eyes as doves the streames of water by Washing in milke sitting in plenity His cheekes as bed of spice flowers sweetly-smelling His lips like Lilies passing myrrh distilling His hands gold rings fild with the Chrysolite His bowels yv'rie bright with Saphirs dight His legs like Marble pillars that have hold Firmly on sockets of fine-solid gold His sight as Lebanon choise as Ceders His palate sweets and he is all desires This is my welbeloved and this same My friend O daughters of Ierusalem Annotations IAm come or I have come but the time passed is often used for the present Here Christ answereth to the prayer of the Spouse being ready to fulfill the desire of them that feare him Psal. 145. 19 God is said to Come unto men when he manifesteth his presence by his workes either of mercy or judgement Exod. 3. 7. 8. Gen. 11. 5. 7. Here he commeth to the garden of his Church with grace acceptation com●ort and blessing to keepe a spirituall banq●et there as he promised In every place where I shall make the memoriall of my name I will come unto thee and I will blesse thee Exod. 20. 24. My sister spouse see the notes on chap. 1. 4. vers 8. 9. Myrrh with my spice that is with my other spices or aromaticall-fruits for myrrh was one of the chiefe spices used in composition of sweet ointments Exod. 30. 23. with such ointments they anointed them and their friends at feasts see the annotations on ch 1. 3. I have eaten or I doe eat for the words following shew this to bee spoken as at a banquet my honey-combo as the word and doctrine of Christ is likened to honey and the honey combe to wine and milke Psalme 19. 11. and 119. 103. Esa. 55. 1. 1 Pet. 2. 2. because it is sweet comfortable and wholesome to nourish the soule as these things doe the body so here the manifold fruits and graces which that word by the Spirit bringeth forth in Christians are likened also to such things whereof Christ is said to eat that is graciously to accept and delight in them On the contrary the evill fruits of sinners are likened to grapes of gall and their wine to the poyson of dragons Deuteronomie 32. 32. 33. eate O friends or O neighbours Christ speaketh as at a feast chearing up his friends as partakers with him of his graces and comforts aforesaid They that doe his commandements are his friends Ioh. 15. 14. as Abraham is called the friend of God Esa. 41. 8. Iam. 2. 23. and these desire and delight to be partakers of the fruits of the saints and rejoyce in their obedience Phil. 1. 9. 10. 11. and 41. 17. 18. ● Ioh. v. 4. 3 Ioh. v. 3. 4. The Angels also are made joyfull at the conversion sanctitie and salvation of sinners by Christ Luk. 15. 7. 10. and 2. 13. 14. The Chaldee expoundeth this of Gods acceptation of his churches service under the Law thus The holy and blessed God said to his people the house of Israel I am come to the house of my sanctuarie which thou buildest for me my sister O congregation of Israel which art likened to an honest spouse and have caused my divine presence to dwell in the midst of thee I accept thy incense of spices which thou madest for my name I have sent fire from heaven and it hath eaten the Burnt-offrings and sacrifice of Peace-offrings accepted with favour before me is the drinke-offring of red wine and of white wine which the Priests have poured out upon mine Altar Now come yee Priests that love my precepts eat that which is left of the oblations and delight your selves in the good that is prepared for you drinke abundantly O beloved or be drunken that is be plenteously-filled with loves By Beloved he meaneth his friends aforesaid or by loves for so the word may be interpreted hee meaneth the fruits of love which his Spouse had brought forth unto him which loves hee said were much better then wine c. 4. 10. In Esa. 25. 6. it is prophesied how the Lord of hosts would make in the mountaine of his church unto all people a feast of fat things a feast of wine on the Lees c. Vers. 2. I sleepe or I sleeping and my heart waking The Spouse of Christ here telleth of a new and greater trouble that befell her through her owne negligence and how shee got out thereof In chap. 3. she had a much like tentation but not so heavy as this for there shee slept not but upon her bed in the nights sought her beloved here she sleepeth her beloved seeketh her knocketh provoketh but shee maketh excuses for a while There the watchmen though they tell her notidings of her beloved yet they doe her no farther har 〈…〉 e here they smite wound and unveile her There she soone findeth him after shee was past the watchmen here she findeth him not so soone but languisheth with love and complaineth to her friends who upon report of his praises doe helpe to seeke him with her Sleepe is the rest or ceasing of the creature from use of the outward senses and from action It is caused by vapour in the head that arise from meat drinke c. which stop the passages of the spirits and binde the senses This sleepe as it is a refreshing is sometime used in a good sense for the repose and rest that the faithfull have in God Psalme 3. 5. and 4. 8. Prov. 3. 24. But more often it signifieth the neglect of holy duties and a sinfull kinde of life Esa. 56. 10. Rom. 13. 11. 1 Thes. 5. 6. 7. and this sleepe is caused sometimes through sorrow Luke 22. 45. sometime through wearinesse Esa. 5. 27. sometime through sloathfulnesse and then it causeth spirituall beggery Prov. 19. 15. and 20. 13. The Spouse here having eaten and drunke largely of the bl●ssings of Christ beginneth to remit her zeale and neglect the workes of faith and love wanting the presence of her beloved and being pressed with the remnants of the flesh so shee gave place to ca●●all case and security Occasioned further hereunto by the time the night and by the wether which was rainy that is by ignorance and errour prevailing and by the opposition and persecution of enemies and my heare ●aketh
and the fruit groweth not among the leaves but on the top of the branches as historians doe record Pliny l. 13. c. 5. So Christ if it be understood of him going up and taking hold of the boughes both signifieth it to be his owne possession and sheweth his care and love to looke unto it and to purge the branches that they may beare more fruit as the Father doth the fruitfull branches of the Vine Ioh. 15. 1. 2. and likewise to injoy and accept of the gracious fruits of his Spouse with whom he will now continue Or taking it as before for the speech of the faithfull Company it meaneth their purpose and indeavor to partake of the heavenly fruits which this Church bringeth forth be as clusters or shall be as clusters and thus it is an assurance or promise of blessing to her from the Lord filling her with the juice or grace that shee shall neither be barren nor unfruitfull in the knowledge of Christ 〈◊〉 Pet. 1. 8. but as is promised He will cause them that come of Iakob to take root Israel shall blossome and bud and fill the face of the world with fruit Esay 27. 6. But it may be taken also as a wish and let thy brests I pray thee be as clusters of the Vine that is have not thou a miscarrying womb and dry brests as Hos. 9. 14. but grow in grace and in knowledge be not an empty vine as Israel was of old Hos. 10. 1. Leave 〈◊〉 thy wine which cheereth God and man Iudg. 13. but be filled with the Spirit that we may sucke and be satisfied with the brests of thy consolations Esay 66. 11. the smell of thy nose 〈◊〉 apples her nose commended for the forme in vers 4. denoted her good cariage and courage for the truth The smell odour or sent the 〈◊〉 meaneth the good report and ●ame thereof 〈◊〉 broad which is comfortable as a sweet 〈◊〉 Or by the smell of her nose may be understood the breath comming out of her nostril that it should be sweet And so not onely her outward behaviour should be commendable but the hidden man of the heart uncorrupted that the breath or spirit proceeding from within be pure and God may manifest the smell or favour of his knowledge by her in every place 2 Cor. 2. 14. as the favour of life unto life and like the savour of apples which refresh those that languish and are sicke of the love of Christ as Song 〈◊〉 5. Vers. 9. thy palate or the roofe of thy mouth in Greeke thy throat The palate 〈◊〉 ones owne use is to 〈◊〉 and discerne 〈◊〉 in Iob 34. 3. the palate 〈◊〉 out for others it is the instrument of speech as in Prov. 8. 7. my palate shall speake truth This latter use seemeth here to be meant that her palate to weet her speech and doctrine should be like good wine to comfort and revive bitter and heavy hearts Prov. 31. 6. the good wine that is the best most excellent sweet and wholesome wine as the good oyle Psalm 133. 2. is the best sweetest and most precious oile The comfortable doctrines of the Gospell are likened to wine Esay 55. 1. 2. 3. Prov. 9. 2. 5. See the notes on Song 1. 2. that goeth to my beloved a commendation of the good wine from the effects that it is pleasing unto God and profitable unto men For by the Beloved usually in this Song is meant Christ by going to righteousnesses or according to righteousnesses that is going aright straightly or directly is signified the nature of pure wine manifesting the goodnesse by the moving and springing in the cup whereby it is discerned to bee the right and naturall wine and is pleasing to them that drinke it The like phrase Solomon used in Prov. 23. 31. Looke not on the wine when it is red when it giveth his colour in the cup when it goeth or walketh that is moveth it selfe in righteousnesses as there the nature of the most pure and generous wine is described whereby men are allured to drinke thereof so here the right wine the pure and wholesome doctrine out of the mouth of the Spouse is declared by the company of Beleevers to bee pleasing and right in the eyes of Christ their Beloved It may also intimate how the Spouse filled with the Spirit rather then with wine Ephes. 5. 18. her speeches should tend to lead all unto Christ and unto righteousnesses that is faith in him and righteous workes which he requireth us to walke in causing to speake that maketh to speake or giveth utterance to the lips of those that are a sleepe or speaking in the tips c. This is the other effect of the Spirit that as wine maketh men talkative Prov. 23. 29. so the Spirit maketh men to utter the mysteries of God as the disciples when some thought they were full of new wine prophesied and spake with other tongues the great workes of God as the Spirit gave them utterance Acts 2. 4. 11. 13. c. By sleepers here are meant sinners awaked and quickned by the word preached as it is said Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Ephes. 5. 14. And so it was promised Thy dead men shall live my dead bodies shall arise awake and fing ye that dwell in dust Esay 26. 19. And Fzekiel by prophesying raised to life the dead bones of the house of Israel Ezek. 37 which also the Chaldee paraphrast alledgeth in opening this place And not only dead men which are said to be asleepe Dan. 12. 2. but others also that live and through negligence or security fall asleepe as the Spouse acknowledgeth of her selfe in Song 5. 2. are inabled by this spirituall wine to speake for having drinke thereof they forget their poverty and remember their misery no more as Prov. 31. 6. 7. So God promising to restore comforts unto Israel and to his mourners saith that he createth the fruit of the lips peace peace c. Esay 57. 18. 19. Vers. 10. I am my Beloveds Here the Spouse as full of the wine of grace and consolation from the Lord testifieth her assurance by faith that shee is Christs and so an heire of salvation by promise Gal. 3. 19. See before in Song 2. 16. and 6. 3. his desire his desirous affection the Greeke interpreteth it his conversion or turning is towards me This manner of speech was used before when God chastning the woman for her sin said thy desire shall be unto thy husband Gen. 3. 16. but now this woman being renued by grace and espoused unto Christ as to an husband 2 Cor. 11. 2. rejoyceth that his desire is unto her And this appeareth by the whole scope of this Song and especially by those words in Chap. 2. 14. and 4. 9. 10. and 7. 5. So contrary each to other are our naturall sinfull state and our estate by grace in Christ. Verse 11. into the field or into the
14. and 108. 14. Vers. 9. In God we praised to wit his actions salvations c. See a like phrase in Psalm 56. 5. 11. and Psal. 71. 6. Or understand we praised our selves that is gloried triumphed And thus the Greeke In God we shall be praised the Chaldee saith In the word of our God Vers. 12. sheepe for meat or of meat that is to be eaten So after vers 23. sheepe of slaughter that is to be slaine fannest or dispersest strowest abroad as the fan that winnoweth Ier. 4. 11. and 51. 2. So after in Psal. 106. 27. Vers. 13. for no wealth that is for a vile price without gaine God is said to sell his people when he delivereth them into their enemies hands as out of his owne possession So Deut. 32. 30. Likewise in Esay 52. 3. the Lord saith yee have beene sold for nought and yee shall be redeemed without money increasest not or gainest not by the prices of them takest no other people in their stead or increasest that is hightenest not their price Vers. 15. a parable a by-word or proverbe This is often used for grave wise and princely sentences as Psalm 49. 5. here in the ill part for a by-word reproach and fable so Psal. 69. 12. Iob 17. 6. And thus is fulfilled that which was threatned Deut. 28. 37. 1 King 9. 7. Jer. 24. 9. nodding of the head that is a mockage Psal. 22. 8. 9. Vers. 17. taunter or blasphemer Num. 15. 30. Vers. 20. of Dragons or of whale fishes For the Hebrew word is common both for land and water-dragons or whales So Psal. 148. 7. And hereby is meant the place of desolation and affliction as the Greeke here translateth it See Mal. 1. 3. Isa. 34. 13. Ier. 9. 11. and 10. 22. Iob 30. 29. with the shade or in the shade see Psalm 23. 4. Vers. 2● spred out our hands or our palmes that is have prayed unto for in prayer they spred out the palmes of their hands as to receive a blessing from God 1 King 8. 22. Exod 9. 29. Psal. 143. 6. So the Chaldee explaineth it spred out our hands in prayer to the idols of other peoples Vers. 23. But for thee or For for thy sake that is so farre we be from following strange gods as that for thy sake we are killed daily And this also is a comfort in affliction See Rom. 8. 36. Vers. 24. Stirre up to wit thy selfe These things are spoken of God after the manner of men for properly he that keepeth Israel slumbreth not nor sleepeth Psal. 121. 4. Vers. 26. to the dust this noteth a base and abject state Psal. 113. 7. like this is the soule cleaving to the dust Psal. 119. 25. and putting the mouth in the dust Lam. 3. 29. Vers. 27. an helpfulnesse that is a full helpe The Hebrew hath a letter more than ordinary to increase the signification So Psal. 63. 8. and 94. 17. See the notes on Psal. 3. 3. PSAL. XLV The Majestie and grace of Christ and his kingdome 11 The dutie of the Church and the benefits thereof 14 The glorie of Christians To the master of the musicke upon Shoshannim to the sonnes of Korach an instructing Psalme a song of the wel-beloved virgins MIne heart hath boiled a good word I doe say my workes to the King my tongue the pen of a speedy writer Thou art much fairer than the sonnes of Adam grace is powred out in thy lips therefore God hath blessed thee for ever Gird thy sword upon the thigh O mighty one thy glorious majestie and thy comely honour And in thy comely honour prosper ride on word of truth and of meeknesse and of justice and thy right hand shall teach thee fearfull things Thy arrowes are sharp peoples shall fall under thee in the heart of the Kings enemies Thy throne O God is ever and perpetuall the scepter of thy kingdome is a scepter of righteousnesse Thou lovest justice and hatest wickednesse therefore God thy God hath anointed thee with oile of joyfuluesse above thy fellowes Myrrh and Aloes Cassia all thy garments out of the Ivorie palaces more than they that make thee joyfull Kings daughters are among thy precious ones set is the Queene at thy right hand in fine gold of Ophir Heare O daughter and see and bend thine care and forget thy people and thy fathers house And the King will covet thy beautie for hee is thy Lord and bow downe thy selfe to him And the daughter of Tyrus with oblation shall earnestly beseeke thy face even the rich of the people The Kings daughter is all glorious within her clothing is of purled workes of gold In embroideries shee shall be led along to the King virgins after her her fellow-friends brought in to thee They shall be led along with joyes and gladnesse they shall enter into the Kings palace In stead of thy fathers shall be thy sonnes thou shalt put them for princes in all the earth I will make memorie of thy name in every generation and generation therefore peoples shall confesse thee for ever and a●● Annotations SHoshannim that is Six-stringed instruments for so by comparison with other titles it seemeth here to be meant of musicall instruments as Shalishim be ●●●●e-stranged instruments 1 Sā 18. 6. Else-where it signifieth six-leaved flowers that is Lilies as Song 2. 6. w ch may also be minded here The Hebrew word is derived of S●●●● that is Six ●●ke title is in Psal. 69. 1. 80. 1. The Chaldee expoundeth it for them that sit in the Synedrion or Council of Moses which was spoken in prophesie by th● 〈◊〉 of Korah of the welbeloved virgins Kings daughters and other honourable damosels attending upon and comming with the Queene the friends of the bridegroome and bride verse 10. 15. who should sing this marriage-song in praise of them Therefore this Hymne setteth forth Christ in his glory and his Spouse the Church in her beautie For Christis the Bridegroome and Ierusalem the Bride Ioh. 3. 29. Rev. 21. 9 10. all true Christians are Virgins for their spirituall chastitie Rev. 14. 1 4. following and loving the Lambe for the sweet odour of his Name or Gospell Song 1. 2. and are beloved of him and have this new song of praise put into their mouthes Of him is this Psalme as the Apostle expoundeth it Heb. 1. 8. Vers. 2. hath boiled or frieth boileth as in a frying pan that is hath studied and prepared by servent meditation A similitude taken from the Mincah or meat-offering in the law which was dressed in the frying pan Levit. 7. 9. and there boiled in oile being made of fine flower unlevened mingled with oile Levit. 2. 5. and after was presented to the Lord by the Priest vers 8. c. Here the matter of this Psalme is as the Mincah or oblation which with the oile the grace of the spirit was boiled and prepared in the Prophets heart and now presented So the Psal. 141. is likewise compared to the
Mincah or oblation presented at evening Ps. 141. 2. This word is not elsewhere read in the scripture a good word an excellent sweet and pleasant matter A word is used often for a thing or matter Psal. 41. 9. here it is for the whole argument of this Psalme I doe say or I am saying that which feruently boyleth in me For of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh my works to the King or my poems of the King that is of Christ concerning him and dedicated to him is this Psalme or Dittie my tongue the pen understand it is as the pen or praier wise be it as the pen. The Chaldee addeth my tongue shall speake swiftly as the pen c. of a speedy writer or of a swift a ready Scribe So Esra was called not onely for writing but also for interpreting the law Ezr. 7. 6. Scribes were both Scriveners or Notaries 2 King 12. 10. and 22. 3. and expositors of the Law or Counsellers Mat. 23. 2. 1 Chron. 27. 32. Vers. 3. thou art much fairer The Hebrew word is of double forme to note out double that is very excellent beautie This fairenesse is not of body onely but of minde in wisdome holinesse c. as in Ezek. 28. 7. there is mentioned beautie of wisdome Here the Psalmist beginneth his speech to Christ and of his praises which the Chaldee paraphrast explaineth thus thy fairnesse O King Christ exceedeth the sonnes of men See the description of Christs spirituall beautie in Song 5. 10 16. grace is powred out in thy lips that is thou speakest gracious words abundantly Christs lips were like lillies dropping downe pure myrrh Song 5. 13. all that heard him speake wondred at the words of grace that proceeded out of his mouth Luk. 4. 22. The Chaldee expoundeth it The Spirit of prophesie is given into thy lips therefore to the end that thou shouldest powre out thy gracious words to men or because God hath blessed thee Vers. 4. Gird thy sword that is make ready to the fight Exod. 32. 27. 1 Sam. 25. 13. Song 3. 8. The spirituall sword is the word of God Eph. 6. 17. Therefore Christs sword properly commeth out of his mouth Rev. 1. 16. and with the breath of his lips shall hee slay the wicked Isa. 11. 4. upon the thigh understand thy thigh The Hebrew often omitteth words of this sort easie to be understood so the Greeke in the new Testament as mending the nets Mark 1. 19. or mending their nets Mat. 4. 21. to put away Mark 10. 4. for to put her away Mat. 19. 7. and many the like O mighty one or Champion Heb. Gibbor one of the titles of Christ Isa. 9. 6. The Chaldee paraphraseth as a mighty one to kill kings and rulers thy glorious Majestie this sheweth of what manner sword he speaketh called glory and comlinesse or magnificence because of the powerfull effects Of these words see Psal. 8. 2. 6. Vers. 5. prosper ride that is ride prosperously see the like phrase Psal. 51. 4. The Chaldee openeth it thus Thine honour is great therefore thou shalt prosper to ride upon the throne of the kingdome on word of truth which is the Gospell of our salvation Eph. 1. 13. the white Horse whereon Christ rideth Rev. 19. 11. or because of truth for the truths sake The Hebrew al debar is often used for because Psal. 79. 9. Gen. 43. 18. Deut 22. 24. and so the Greeke version hath it here of meeknesse so Christ came riding meeke Mat. 21. 5. and his word is both to be taught and to be received with meeknesse 2 Tim. 2. 25. Iam. 1. 21. and of justice or meeknesse of justice that is justice meekly administred but the Greeke supplieth the word and. shall teach thee or let it teach thee fearfull things In the Greeke it is thy right hand will guide thee maruellously Vers. 6. Thy arrowes that is thy words whereby thou convincest and beatest downe sinne and sinners So the rider on the white Horse hath a bow when he goeth to conquer Rev. 6. 2. Arrowes are words Psal. 64. 4. or judgements Deut. 32. 23. and the Chaldee here addeth Thine arrowes are drawne out to kill multitudes in the heart understand they peirce the heart of the kings enemies And this noteth the efficacie of these words or judgements as elsewhere he saith I will send all my plagues upon thy heart Exod. 9. 14. also their inward operation which is mighty dividing asunder the soule the spirit discerning the intents of the heart casting down imaginations bringing into captivitie every thought Heb. 4. 12. 2 Cor. 10 4. 5. Vers. 7. Thy throne O God The Chaldee addeth in heaven Here Christ our King is magnified as God above the Angels as the Apostle sheweth Heb. 1. 8. But unto the Son he saith thy throne O God is for ever c. Hereby also is meant the perpetuitie of Christs kingdome So 1 Chron. 22. 10. 2. Sam. 7. 16. a scepter of righteousnesse or a rod a mace of equitie plaine and righteous in administration hath anointed thee of this Hebrew Mashach hath anointed our Lord is called Mashiach or Messias and in Greeke Christ that is Anointed see Psal. 2. 2. oile of joy the holy Ghost which joyeth the heart Luk. 4. 18. 1 Thes. 1. 6. above thy fellowes that is above all Christians who are thy fellows consorts and partners in the anointing 1 Ioh. 2. 20 27. who are also made Kings and Priests Rev. 5. 10. and with whom thou hast taken part of flesh and bloud Heb. 2. 14. Or by fellowes may be meant all kings and potentates whom he excelleth Psal. 89. 28. Vers. 9. Myrrh named of the Hebrew word Mor and is the gumme or liquor of a tree in taste bitter in smell odoriferous therefore it was used in the precious ointment of the high priest and Tabernacle Exod. 30. 21. and in other sweet perfumes Est. 2. 12. Prov. 7. 17. See Song 4. 14. and 5. 1. 13. Aloes of the Hebrew name Ahaloth a sweet wood wherwith perfumes were also made Num. 21. 7. Song 4. 14. The Arabians call it tsandal Cassia or Cassies also of the Hebrew Ketsioth elsewhere it is not found in Scripture It seemeth to be the barks or skinnes of that sweet shrub Casia mentioned in Plinie lib. 12. cap. 20. all thy garments that is they be of them or smell of them or are anointed with them or as the Chaldee paraphraseth are perfected with them out of the Ivory palaces or palaces of Elephants tooth as the Chaldee here addeth the name of the Elephant meaning that either the King commeth out of them or the garments were taken out of such palaces or costers Kings palaces were sometime made of Ivorie or tooth 2 King 22. 39. more than they that make thee joyfull or than theirs that make thee glad that is thy garments are more odoriserous than the garments of thy fellowes forementioned verse 8. For though the Spouse or Church hath the savour