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A91908 An exposition on the whole booke of Solomons song, commonly called the canticles. Wherein the text is explained and usefull observations raised thereupon. / By John Robotham, preacher of the gospel. Robotham, John, fl. 1654. 1651 (1651) Wing R1730; Thomason E639_1; ESTC R206657 461,322 801

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all powder or above all dust that is dust or powder of spices of the Merchant The word translated Merchant signifies such a one as selleth all sorts of sweet smelling things Our Grossers here among us but especially our Apothecaries have their shopps stuffed with such savours and are most often in the compounding of such things for smell and therefore the word would not be ill turned Apothecarie or Ointment maker Such were the Priests under the Law which made the ointment of Spices 1 Chron. 9. 30. Now if wee take the words thus above all powder c. then the meaning is that those sweet and heavenly graces wherewith Christ doth perfume his Saints are farre more comfortable and refreshing then all the sweet powders or spices of the Merchant or Apothecarie Now from this qualification of the Churches Observe First That the Saints in their approaches to God directly ascend by the golden Censer of our high Priest Jesus unto God the Father The Appearance of the Spouse in her approach to Christ was like unto Pillars of smoake which had resemblance with the cloud of incense which erected it selfe in the staight forme of a plame-tree as it ascended from the Altar The Jewes were of opinion that the smoake of the incense would not decline by any wind or blast but ascend directly toward heaven so the sacrifice of the godly will ascend directly to God by Jesus Christ Secondly Observe The Sacrifices of the Saints have a sweet acceptation with the Lord. Perfumed with myrrhe and fankincense c. Thus Noths sacrifice smelled of sweet rest and it is said of the Gentils They shall come up with acceptance on his Altar and he will glorifie the house of his glorie Isa 60. 7. And again he saith Their burnt offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine Altar Isa 56. 6. The Apostle telleth us in Rom. 8. 26 27. That the Spiait helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered and he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the minde of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God So that God cannot but accept the prayer which by the Spirit of his Sonn is sent into our hearts Gal. 4. 6. of such heavenly odour is such prayer Thirdly Observe That the heavenly perfume of the Spirit of grace is farre above and excelleth all sweet spices Above all the powders of the Merchant All the most delightfull things in the world such as are the sweet spices of the ointment maker are not so odoriferous as the Spirituall graces of the Saints nor as Christ in whom are all the treasures of God Col. 1. 19. And as in respect of whom all things in the world are to be accounted but as losse and dung Phil. 3. 8. VERS 7. Behold his bed that is Solomons threescore valiant men are about it of the valiant of Israel THe Church entereth into a commendation of Christs glorie and safety and she doth not only compare it with Solomans but preferring it farre before it and that by many degrees as it will further appeare in the following words The Spouse amplifieth the excellencie of the bed of Christ and his Church by comparing it with Solomons First shee commendeth it for the safety and security thereof in this verse and vers 8. Secondly shee commendeth his Charriot and rich furniture of the same vers 9 10. Lastly She entereth into a commendation of Christs person not only to set forth the glorie of her Husband but also that thereby she might stirre up her affections the more towards him that was of such great state and magnificence In this 7. verse Christ is introduced under the name of Solomon his type circum-guarded on his bed wherein wee may Observe First The bed he coucheth on Secondly The guard placed about it The posture of this guard and the end of their watching is conteined in the verse following Behold his bed which is Solomons Some read the words thus Behold the Bed which is above or better then that which is Solomons Solomon being derived of shalam doth signifie a man that is peaceable yea compleat for peace and herein was a type of Christ who was the Prince of peace Isa 9. 6. And is called our peace Ephes 2. through faith in him wee have peace with God the Father Solomon as in his name so in his Kingly Office wisedome and royaltie was a figure of the Messiah By the Bed wee may understand the hearts of the Saints for there Christ doth use to rest and repose himselfe as in a bed he is said to lie all night betwixt the breasts of the Spouse Cant. 1 13. And Christ dwels in the heart by faith Ephes 3. 7. there he takes up his habitation and lodging as in the Temple and Tabernacle of old which were types of the spirituall Temple of Christ The shadow is taken from the bed and bride-Chamber of King Solomon who was a figure of him that was to come even our Prince of peace who doth rest in his Saints as in a bed and makes his Saints like wise rest in him Hence Observe That Christ and his Church doe mutually rest and repose one in another Behold his bed c. A Bed is for rest and sleep now Christ doth inhabite in the Saints as in 2 Cor. 6. I will dwell in them and walke in them He will dwell in the soule by his Spirit and the soule doth rest and repose in the beloved Now the Guard about this bed is described Threescore valiant men are about it of the valiant of Israel This guard is described 1. By the number the number is three score which is twice so many as David had for his ordinary guard as appears 2 Sam. 23. 13. 22. and this argues the double safety of all those with whom Christ resteth 2. This guard is described by the quallifications of those that watch and this is done two wayes First From accidents Internall Secondly Externall The internall is the fortitude of the Guarders expressed in the words strong and valiant which in the Originall is all one word The word in the Hebrew signifies prevailing strong 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praevaluit invaluit insomuch as Gebber is sometimes turned a man as the Latines terme him vir of virago The Greeks often turne it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vir and sometimes by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homo man or mighty one Psal 18. 26. Man is called Gebber by the Hebrews because of his strength and valour and superiority as in 2 Sam. 22. 26. man is called Gibbor that is a strong Champion and a mighty man Psal 19. 6. So Nimrod was called Gibbor Genes 10. 8. that is mighty on the Earth Now further these are declared to be the valiant of Israel Israel signifies a prevailer with the strong God it was
like Israel of old an empty Vine Hos 10. 1. neither doth she beare Wild grapes even grapes of gall and bitter clusters as in Isa 5. 2. but she is filled with the fruits of righteousnesse as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 1. 11. And is fruitfull in every good worke Col. 1. 10. And hath her fruit unto holinesse and the end everlasting life Rom. 6. 22. The Spouse doth abound in fruitfulnesse and her fruit doth exceed in the excellencie thereof Secondly Observe That the fruits of the Spirit in the Saints are very pleasing and acceptable unto Christ They are called his pleasant fruits as being those he takes much delight in Christ cannot but delight in the graces of his owne Spirit with which and for which he is to be honoured The holie actions of the Saints are called fruits Joh. 15. now fruits doe not only signifie an issuing from the root but also pleasure and delight The acceptation of those fruits and the communication of farther grace is signified by mutuall supping together Revel 3. 20. Now wee must know that the fruits springing from our natures that relish of the old man are not thus pleasing to Christ but the fruits that proceed from the Spirit or new man such as these are acceptable being perfumed with sweet odour spoken of Rev. 8. 3. Christ besprinkles our persons prayers and praises with his owne blood and so makes them acceptable to God Heb. 9. 13. Thirdly Observe That the Spouse doth ascribe all her good things to be Christs His pleasant fruits saith the Church all these graces are his the garden is his the fruit is his yea and all the pleasantnesse and preciousnesse of the fruit his so that as David said Of thine owne Lord I give thee c. so doth the Spouse ascribe whatever is good in her to be from Christ The Apostle ascribes his spirituall life to Christ Gal. 2. 20. I live saith he yet not I but Christ lives in me least it might seem too high for the Apostle to say I live he doth as it were correct himselfe by saying yet it is Christ liveth in me Now upon the Churches request for Christ to come into his garden follows his gracious answer unto the Churches desire being ready to fulfill the desire of them that feare him in the next Verse saying VERS 17. I am come into my garden my Sister my Spouse I have gathered my myrrhe with my Spice I have eaten my honey-combe with my honey I have drunke my wine with my milke eate O friends drinke yea drinke abundantly O beloved THe effect of the Churches prayer was that Christ would accept from her the fruits of service praise and thanksgiving In this place he makes answer wherein wee may Observe First Christs condescending to his Churches request he is present in his garden and perfometh those Offices shee prayed for I am come into my garden Secondly A sweet compellation given to the Church My Sister my Spouse Thirdly Christ declareth the workes he doth being come into his garden receiveth the fruits with acceptation to himselfe I have gathered my myrrhe with my Spices I eate my honey-comb with my honey I dranke my wine with my milke Then Fourthly He inviteth others to the participation of this divine and magnificent banquet in saying Eate O friends drinke yea drinke abundantly O beloved I am come into my garden c. I am come or I have come but the Hebrews often use the time passed for the time present what is meant by garden you have already heard in verse 12. and 16. Now here is the gracious answer of Christ that his Church can no sooner pray for his presence but he saith I am come into my garden Now God is said to come into his garden when he manifests his presence there so the Lord is said to come downe to deliver his people out of Aegypt that is by the manifesting of power and wisedome in their deliverie Exod. 3. 7 8. and so the Lord is said to come downe to see the Tower of Babel Gen. 11. 5. that is he came in a manifestation of his judgement upon it So here when he saith I am come into my garden it is his manifesting of himselfe in grace and acceptation to make sweet discoveries of himself in the communication of all good things in keeping of a heavenly banquet of divine dainties wherein he expresses his own delight and the comfort and blessing of the Spouse Now in that these words are in answer to the prayer of the Church in the former verse Observe That God answers the desires of his owne Spirit in his Saints God doth sometimes heare and answer the naturall desires of men that pray or crie to him as creatures as the Ninivites and the Children and Beasts of that Citie for out of his mercie and goodnesse he makes his Sun to shine upon the just and unjust How much more will he answer the voice of his owne spirit when it shal prepare the heart to pray as it is in Psa 10. 17. Thou hast heard the desire of the humble thou wilt prepare their hearts thou wilt make thine care to heare So in Rom. 8. 26. The spirit helpeth our infirmities for wee know not what to pray for as we ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh intercession for us with groanings that cannot be uttered that is wee of our selves know not what to aske but the spirit reveales to us the will of God by its sweet manifestation of God which cannot so well be uttered by the flesh and the Spirit maketh intercession according to the will of God or according to God as the Greeke hath it and so asking According to his will he heareth us 1 Joh. 5. 14. Againe In that Christ is thus ready to come into his garden in a larger manifestation of love and grace then before and that upon the Churches invitation Hence observe Secondly That Christ doth more and more manifest himselfe to be present with his people upon their desires after him The Lord hath been alwayes present with his people in some appearance or other the Arke Tabernacle and Temple were all signes of his presence but his glorious presence in the flesh of Christ did exceed all the former shadows and after Christs departure he is present by the returns of his spirit and this presence hath with it life light comfort strength and all Thus the Lord doth reveale himselfe from grace to grace from glorie to glorie Lastly In that he saith I am come into my garden he declares how much delight he takes to appeare in his Saints and make his Tabernacle with men Hence observe Thirdly That Christ taketh pleasure in manifesting of himselfe in his Saints A man taketh much delight and pleasure in walking in his garden so doth Christ in making out of his presence in his garden of the Church wee have many scriptures tending this way as it is witten The Lord loveth the gates of Zion above all the
Christ Thus much for the cause the effect follows Therefore doe the Virgins love thee Whence observe Thirdly That the sweetnesse of Christ causeth love in his Saints The Originall of our love is Christs communicating of goodnes to us there is nothing in the streams but what comes from the Fountaine he is the Fountaine of love and sweetnesse who by his streams flowing into our hearts causeth in us to abound a Divine love towards him the fire of his love kindles the flame of our love to him againe our Ointment is from Christs Ointment the head being Anointed the Oile ran downe to the Skirts as it was said of Aaron Love is the inclining of the will to something that is excellent and agreeable to it selfe now the nature of the will is Elicita not Coacta inclined and drawne forth not compelled and constrained The will is absolute and free no violence can be offered to it therefore nothing but the sweetnesse and efficacy of Christs grace can be a Load-stone attractive to draw out incline the will Againe the object of the will is something that is good Bonum est objectum voluntatis sayth the Moralist whither it be Bonum reale a substantiall good or Bonum apparens a seeming good yet both are the object of the Will Hence it is that the transcendent excellency beauty love goodnesse and thato verflowing Fountain of grace and sweetnesse apprehended by the Saints to be in Christ these make him to be the best object these also incline the Will attract the heart and draw the souls of Beleivers unto him Againe observe that the object of the will must be a thing suitable Bonum sibi conveniens a good agreable to it selfe Now such a proportionable good as this is found to be in Christ which is respondent or answerable to all our desires or Capacities he is suitable in all his Offices and communications in his blood for pardon in his grace to adorne us in his love for lost sinners in his fullnesse for empty and poore souls Now when the Saints can take a spirituall view of Christ and observe all the dimensions of his love and sweetnesse they apprehend him to be Summum bonum the chiefest good farr beyond all worldly things though of never so exquisite and delicate an extraction and therefore desire most of all to have the possession of him according to that in Psal 73. 25. Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none upon Earth that I desire besides thee saith David Fourthly in that the Church changeth her Speech from the whole to the parts for shee doth not say I but the Virgins love thee Observe That as the whole Church so every Member of Christ hath the sence and feeling of Christs love and graces by the powring forth of his name John 1. 10. Of his fullnesse wee have all received and grace for grace Every Member hath received a measure and proportion from Christs fullnesse The Apostle speaking of the Gift of Continency saith Every man hath his proper gift of God 1 Cor. 7. 7. And so he speaketh concerning spirituall gifts and saith There are diversities of Gifts but the same Spirit and there are diversities of operations but it is the same God which worketh all in all but the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withall for to one is given by the same Spirit the word of wisdome c. 1 Cor. 12. 4 6 7 8. And so the whole Chapter goes on and tells us that the Church is the mystical body of Christ and though the body be but one yet the Members are many and that the same Spirit divideth to every Member as it pleaseth himselfe As in the naturall body there is not any one member but receives an influence from the head So it is in the Mysticall body of Christ And againe the Apostle saith in Ephes 4. 7. But unto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ Christ doth measure out proportionable gifts and graces for every Saint therefore as the whole Church is the Spouse of Christ so is every particular Member and all the priviledges and graces belonging to the whole Church belong to every Beleiver Fifthly Observe Such as are true lovers of Christ are onely those that are holy and pure By Virgins here are not understood those that are single or un-married but it signifieth the chastity and spirituall purity of those that truely love Christ These are chast in their lives holy in their thoughts sanctified in their actions These are not defiled with the World as to give themselves up to uncleane lusts of the flesh nor to commit spirituall whoredome against God the Saints studdy to possesse their Vessells in Sanctification and honour their bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost they labour to be like unto their head and Spouse holy as he is holy pure as he is pure These are they which are not defiled with women for they are Virgins Revel 14. 4. That is that are not polluted with spirituall Fornication as the Apostle calls it 2 Cor. 12. 2. These follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth They will not follow Antichrist for their head and guide but they follow Christ though it be with the hazzard and losse of all their worldly enjoyments their love ro Christ is pure and chast like unto Virgins whose affections will not easily be drawn unto any besides their Beloved VERS 4. Draw me we will run after thee the King hath brought me into his Chambers we will be glad and rejoyce in thee we will remember thy love more then wine the upright love thee IN these words we have a second request of the Spouse unto Christ that he would not onely call her outwardly by the voice of the Gospell but forasmuch as the word Preached profiteth not if it be not mixt with faith in them that heare it Heb. 4. 2. that he would open her heart Acts 16. 14. and enlighten her by his Spirit that he would give unto her his Spirit of wisdome and revelation that the eyes of her understanding might be opened that shee might know what is the hope of her calling Ephes 1. 17. In these words there are two things considerable 1. The Prayer of the Church 2. The Reason of it First The Churches Prayer in these words Draw me c. Secondly The Reasons are drawne from the effects or fruits thereof which are two The first in these words We will run after thee The second is set downe in these words The King hath brought me into his Chambers From which effects we have the Churches protestation of ingagement declared by a three-fold respect which shee bears to Christ First shee doth exalt and rejoyce in him We will be glad and rejoyce in thee Secondly her mind or senses are set at work We will remember thy love more then wine Thirdly her engagement of affection The upright love thee
love is gone joy and light is gone O! how dejected how disconsolate is the soule then It is a perfect hyeroglyphick or resemblance of A wounded spirit as Solomon cals it when the soule is full of perplexities and feares and can see no comfort then it must returne to Christ as to its strong hold there is my stay there is my comfort there I shall finde reliefe and refreshment or else no where Or else Secondly Wee may take the cause of the Churches sicknesse the object to wit the sight of Christs loves displayed by his banner and by tasting of his banquet even all the varietie of his sweet graces now because her minde which is the eye of the soule could not sustaine the glittering shine of his love no more then Job could shut up the Sea with doores Job 38. 8. or Agur close up the winds in his fist Prov. 30. 4. hereupon she is as one in a Syncope or fit of swooning being overcome with the bright and glorious beams of his love as it was said of the Queene of Sheba according to Historians who had no Spirit left in her because she was astonished at Solomons glorie riches wisedom and the like So here the Church having both sights and tasts of Christ love and sweetnesse is as it were overcome with it Hence Observe That the fulnesse of Christs love to his Saints doth as it were transport and overcome them The Church had been in the house of wine banquetting with Christ and under the displaying of the banner of his love upon which she cryeth out I am sick of love I am overwhelmed and overcome with his sweetnesse hereupon her heart was so much ravished with love that she is love-sick and ready to swoon therewith Or Thirdly Wee may take her sicknesse to be her exceeding love towards Christ that her heart is so ravished with love towards him that she is sick Love hath a strong appetition of peculiarity or private interest in the thing beloved Here is a marveilous passion of love in the Church towards Christ Now according to this interpretation the similitude is drawn from hence when a Virgine is betrothed and through the vehemencie of her love towards her Spouse is sick and swooneth a greater or a more vehement love cannot be Hence Observe That the Saints love to Christ is vehement and strong Here the Church is so taken and ravished with love towards Christ that she is love-sick and ready to swoone and with a patheticall exclamation crie th out as one that is ready to depart and dye she desireth to be refreshed with the sweet water of life distributed unto her in flagons and the sweet smelling Aples fetch out of Christs treasury and both held and applyed to her that by that meanes she might be as it were recovered of her sicknesse The faithfull soule tasting the sweetnes of those Aples of that heavenly wine hath such a desire of Christ as that she cannot be any meanes be satisfied without the enjoyment of him Here then is a sicknesse but not to death but unto life and satisfaction Christ himselfe pronounceth such Blessed that doe hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for saith he they shall be filled Matth. 5. 6. The sweetnesse of these Apples which she tasted and of that precious wine brought her into this passion yet her appetite and desire of them is not any thing at all diminished but she desireth to be more refreshed and comforted with those flagons of wine and to have applyed unto her self those sweet apples of Christ When Christ doth first lead a soule into his Wine-Cellar and doth refresh it at the heavenly banquet of heavenly delights and comforts he doth not distribute out a full measure of his spirit and grace but as it were some tasts or small drops of them which the Apostle cals The first fruits of the Spirit Rom. 8. 23. And The earnest of the Spirit Ephes 1. Now by these drops the Saints are so taken and ravished with the wonderfull sweetnesse there is in those heavenly things that they are insatiable in their desire after a more plentifull measure of them Thus for the Churches request with the reason thereof Now followeth the fruit or effect of her request Vers 6. His left hand is under my head and his right hand doth imbrace me In the last Verse we had the Churches disease described here we have the remedy Shee called out to the Ministers of Christ to help her in the former verse but it appears here that it is onely Christ that can apply cure Indeed they be instruments and no more for Paul may plant and Apollo may water but it is God that can give increase 1 Cor. 3. 6. It is Christ himselfe that is able to support his Church by his divine power Hence it is the Church addeth to her former Speech saying His left hand is under my head and his right hand doth imbrace me So that though shee had called unto others for help yet here she confesseth that all the efficacie is from Christ himselfe declaring that he doth stay her up with both his hands In these words observe The Churches declaration of Christs exceeding loue towards her and this love of Christ appeareth in one generall act of favour namely his sweet embracing her which embracements must needs argue love and favour In Christs embracements of his Church wee have two particulars First in his left hand conveighed under her head Secondly in his right hand amiably embracing her His left hand c. Some understand it prayer-wise Let it be under my head and then the Church prayeth unto Christ for supply of strength and sustentation and that he would comfort her heart by his word and Spirit as a loving Husband doth his wife in her sorrow and sicknesse for so the Apostle tels us That Christ nourisheth his Church Ephes 5. 29. Seeing these things are spirituall what may be meant by the left and right hand for the resolution of this mystery wee cannot bring in that of Christs right and left hand spoken of in Matth. 25. because the left hand is turned to the wicked but both hands here doe uphold the Church Some understand by the left hand of Christ his man-hood and by his right hand his God-head But I understand it here of whole Christ embracing of her with both hands as it were both his God head and man-hood his life death resurrection and ascension even all that is Christs is imployed for the good and comfort of his people The forme of speech may also seeme to allude to their feasts when they lay on the ground so that if any fainted they put one hand under them to lift them up and gave them some comfortable potion with the other In like manner Christ doth not leave his Church in her sorrow and sicknesse but imbraceth her with his owne hands in the manifestation of all love and mercy and keepeth her safe from evill Now if wee
Every one whereof is twinned or paired that is like as sheep going from the washing by couples whereby is plainly set forth the equall correspondence of upper and lower teeth each one orderly answering the other as cut and sized by couples This may denote the unity and fellowship of believers that feed on the spirituall food of Jesus Christ The Saints are fed and nourished together by the heavenly Manna even as Sheep goe up in couples from the washing The fourth and last commendation of these teeth followeth And none is barren among them None is barren or as the word Shacculah importeth none amongst them aborts that is brings forth before the time or none is bereaved or robbed of the young by miscarrying or the like That which is barren is that which beareth not as appears in Isaiah 64. 1. Sing O barren thou that bearest not c. but here the word signifieth either miscarrying in the birth or losse of that which is brought forth by robberie death or the like so this denoteth the stedfastnesse of every tooth in his place after it is brought forth as if it were said there is no tooth wanting in their order and place but even and stedfast as sheep yeilding twins and never miscarrying so hath the Church her teeth Some understand these teeth the pastours and teachers of the Church because they were such as did Cut and divide the word of truth aright unto the people as the Apostle saith but I rather understand it of the Churches judging discerning and applying the word of God to the comfort and nourishing of her owne soul feeding by faith upon the promises of God The spirituall food of the soule is Christ and therefore is called The bread of life that came downe from heaven Joh. 6. And the word is called the food of our soules the Apostle willeth us As new borne babes to desire the sincere milke of the word 1 Pet. 2. 2. And Paul telleth the Corinths That they were carnall even babes in Christ and that he gave them milke to drinke and not strong meate 1 Cor. 3. Now by the teeth of the Church is meant that esteeme discerning and applying of the word of God that she hath for her owne comfort and nourishment Hence Observe That the Saints doe comfortably feed on Christ and his word as on the heavenly food of their soules It is said in Psal 22. 26. The meeke shall eate and be satisfied and in Psal 132. 15. the meeke and needy shall have enough And Luke 1. 53. God filleth the hungrie with good things that is they shall be satisfied and filled with the good things of the Gospel And thus wisedome inviteth the simple To eate of her bread and drinke of her wine Prov. 9. 5. Thus Jesus tels the Jews that he was the bread of life Joh. 6. now it is upon Christ and on the sweet promises that the soule is nourished and it is the believer only can feed upon this spirituall food judging and discerning it aright So much for the commendation of the Churches teeth It followeth VERS 3. Thy teeth are like a thred of scarlet and thy speech is comely thy Temples are like a piece of pomegranate within thy locks UNto the three former now other two particulars of praise doe follow in this third verse viz. the lips and the Temples Touching the first he saith Thy lips are like a thred of scarlet and thy speech is comely The instruments of speech and the chiefest grace of the countenance are the lips and therefore the speech is commended by the instruments thereof which are the lips Thy lips are like a thred of Scarlet c. Here are two things commended in the lips First They are small in as much as they are resembled by a thred or line Secondly They be red of colour and therefore he mentioneth Scarlet a red colour of a double die Now if a Virgine be never so beautifull if her speech be rude and unpleasant it disgraceth all therefore he addeth Thy speech is comely Comely gracious and to be desired The Hebrew Nava signifieth comely beatifull amiable and to be desired 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cupivit concupivit affectavit in Niph 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Desiderabilis per metalepsin pulcher decorus conveniens fuit The Greeke translateth it goodly faire beautifull This comelinesse of the Spouse is in her sight countenance and speech Now by the lips of the Church are commended her prayers and praises her doctrines and thanksgivings which are all uttered with her lips The Spouse uttereth these not with swelling words of vanitie or taught by humane wisedome but by the Spirit of the Lord which poureth grace and utterance into the soule Now in that the Church is commended for her speech and that from the beauty of her lips Hence Observe That the spirituall prayers and praises of the Church are gracious and comely Hence it is that the very lips that are but the instruments of her speech are commended for their beautie The speech of man declareth what is in the heart for Christ saith Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh And a good man out of the good treasnre of his heart bringeth forth good things and an evill man out of the evill treasure of his heart bringeth forth evill things By nature there is nothing in mans heart but that which is corrupt and abhominable and so in all men as the the Apostle saith The poyson of Aspes is under their lips Rom. 3. But by the operation of the holy Spirit the hearts of the Saints are filled with faith and love and then the speech is gracious Such speech as proceedeth from a heart spiritualized winneth love and likeing It was said of Christ that he was fairer then the Children of Adam Grace was powred out of his lips Psal 45. And the Apostle prayeth that a doore of utterance may be opened unto him Let a man be never so learned if the doore of utterance be shut up his speech shall profit little It was falsly objected against Paul as a reproach unto him that he was rude in speaking 2 Cor. 11. 6. The truth is he willingly avoided that painted kinde of eloquence which carnall men and such as have itching eares doe commonly delight in but he wanted no kinde of utterance which was fit for the preaching of the Gospell to wit the plaine evidence and demonstration of the Spirit So much for the praise of the Churches speech set forth by the beauty of her lips The next particular followeth Thy Temples are like a piece of pomgranate within thy locks He describeth another part of the countenance or face viz. the temples of the head speaking also of them according to the custome then used women suffering their haire to hang about their temples because it 's said within thy locks By Temples are meant each of the temples of the head and hereby may be meant the cheekes also which are
allaying all unnaturall heats and bringeth the soule into a good frame and temper 5. The wind is of a cleansing nature it purgeth the aire and the water and keepeth them from infections So the spirit of God purgeth the heart from dead works to serve the living God in newnesse of life 6. The wind hath a cherishing and a fructifying force with it so the Spirit quickneth and cherisheth the soule it makes the heart that was as a barren wildernesse to become a fruitfull Garden For these respects and the like the sweet gale of the spirit is compared to wind Hence it is that the Spouse desireth that the winds may Blow upon his Garden Hence Observe Fourthly That the Spouse alway stands in need of the blowings of the Spirit The Spouse hath no power to any thing naturally but is very dead and dull and therefore stands in need alwayes to be quickned by the blowing of the spirit All the beginnings of the worke of God in us growth and ending is from meer grace and nothing else but grace Therefore we must acknowledge all the actings of Christs spirit in us and though Solomon Observes it will be hindrance to observe the winds Eccles 7. 4. yet here it will be our wisedome to observe the gales of the Spirit and to be acted by it Lastly Observe That the Spouse is the Garden of Christ. The Prophet Isaiah sheweth That the Vineyard of the Lord of Epists is the house of Israel and the men of Judah are his pleasant plants Isa 5. 7. God doth plant it visite protect and water it yea he takes pleasure in his Spouse as in his pleasant Garden But I shall not stand on this point because it was largely treated on in Verse 12. of this Chapter But I shall proceed to the reason or ground of this request which is as followeth That the spices thereof may flow out By Spices here are meant all manner of graces and by flowing out shee meaneth continuall abode and increase in the same and that shee may be more and more fruitfull that her fruits may ripen and be abundant for by the gracious gifts of the spirit breathing upon the Spouse her soule is refreshed and comforted and all her graces doe increase so that we see to what end shee desires the wind of the spirit to blow that the spices thereof may flow out for those good things in her would else lye dead and bound up unlesse the spirit let them out Hence Observe First As it is the Spirit that must first quicken us so it is the spirit that draws forth that life and grace that we have It is the spirit that must first kindle the fire of the Spirit life and glory in our souls and then increase the flame thereof First the wind of the spirit blows then the spices of grace flow out Secondly Note That the goodnesse of the Saints must be an overflowing goodnesse The graces of the Saints must abound not onely in themselves but flow out to others as it was said of John he was a burning and a shining light The Spirit of God in his people is like the box of Ointment that Mary powred out which perfumes all the whole house with its savour A Christian never thinks he hath received enough of the spirit unlesse it makes him to abound in himselfe and flow out to others unlesse it be alwayes making new discoveries of God and Christ to the soule and new revelations of the bosome of the Father whereby the soule is refresht and the fragrancy of all his graces drawne out to his owne comfort and the good of others As the Sun draws forth the fragrancy and sweetnesse that is in the flowers of the Earth when it shines upon them and as the wind doth convey those sweet smells unto us so doth the spirit draw forth the savour of grace and convey the smell thereof to our owne souls and to others whereby we come to have the benefite thereof Thus far of the first part of her prayer desiring the North and South wind to awake and blow upon his Garden that the Spices thereof may flow out In the next place we have the Spouses invitation of Christ to come into his Garden with the end thereof in these words Let my Beloued come into his Garden and eate his pleasant fruits Let my beloved come c. In these words the Spouse desireth Christs presence meaning that shee would have him come and dwell in her even as he had promised in the sixth Verse of this Chapter Thus shee invites Christ to come into her as into his House or Temple calling him Beloved because the streame of her affections run towards him Christ was no question in his Church before but she desireth a farther manifestation of his presence glory and life in her Hence Observe That where there is the least appearance of Christ in the soule of any there is further desire of Christs presence and glory to be manifested The Spouse never thinks shee is neer enough her Beloved untill shee come to the full enjoyment of him They alwayes waite for a farther revelation of the Lord from Heaven and cry Come Lord Jesus come quickly Revel 22. 17. That is come manifest thy selfe more and more in the revelation of thy selfe and glory It is from the Spirit that we desire a greater measure of the Spirit and it is from some discovery of Christ in us that we desire a more perfect revelation of him Now followeth the end and Reason wherefore the Spouse desireth Christ to come into his Garden which is To eate his pleasant fruits The end of the Churches prayer is that Christ might receive honour and glorie by that spirit of grace given out by him unto her shee would have Christ come in and accept his owne graces which she calleth pleasant fruits or fruits of his precious things The word translated pleasant is of the pluarall number and may be rendered sweetnesses and may note unto us two things First The plenitude and fulnesse of grace in the Saints they are full of sweet things to wit the graces of the Spirit Secondly It doth denote and set out the excellency of grace it doth farre exceed in excellencie all the glorious things in the world Now is it not fit that Christ should eate the fruit of his owne Vine have comfort of his owne garden tast of his own fruits The greatest delight that Christ hath in the world is in the garden of his Church therefore that he might take a full delight therein he makes it fruitfull stored with precious fruits as growing from Plants set by his own hand relished of his own spirit and so fitted for his tast Hence Observe That the Saints are made fruitfull by the breathings in of Christs spirit upon them When the winde of the Spirit blows upon the garden of the soule the graces of the Spirit as sweet spices flow out in abundance So that now the Spouse is not
AN EXPOSITION On the whole booke of Solomons SONG Commonly called the CANTICLES Wherein the Text is explained and usefull Observations raised thereupon By John Robotham preacher of the Gospel PSAL. 45. 13. The Kings daughter is all glorious within her cloathing is of wrought gold EPHES. 5. 32. This is a great mysterie but I speake concerning Christ and the Church London Printed by Matthew Simmons in Aldersgate-street next doore to the guilded-Lyon 1651. To the HONORABLE COLONEL DOWNES Esquire A Member of the Honourable House of Parliament Justice of the Peace and Deputy Lievetenant of the County of Sussex Much Honoured Sir THe experience that I have of your candour and ingenuitie emboldens me here to prefix your name not from any worth in the worke performed on my part but in respect of the subject mattter of this book which is a declaration of that mutuall intercourse and vicissitude of divine love passing betweene Christ and the Church his Spouse set forth by a most sweet and comfortable by a most excellent and ravishing Allegorie of a Marriage-Song Marriage being the most joyfull passage of all our life and a Song being the highest expression of joy by this amiable resemblance is the souls spiritual conjunction with Christ most lively delineated Oh! the superemin nt excellency of divine love t is the glorie of God the joy of his heart t is the fulnesse of Christ his Crowne and dignitie t is the worke of the Spirit in all its operations t is the Song of Angels and their continual delight t is the sourse and spring of true happinesse to all Saints the Sanctuary and support of their dejected soules This opens the Fathers bosome draws forth the affections of Christ and melts mens hearts into each others the sweet sense whereof is the breath of our nostrils and the life of our union with him Noble Sir I have but three words to speake The first is of you the second to you the third for you That of you is to testifie that as the Lord hath called you to high and honourable imployment so he hath raised your Spirit suitable to the worke in hand wherein you stood as a Rock immoveable in the middest of stormes and tempests having like Obed-Edom owned the Arke when few would owne it ventring all that was dear unto you accounting godlinesse the greatest gaine when others have reckoned it their losse esteeming that your honour that others have deemed their shame Though it be granted that Truth needs no Patron veritas stat in aperto campo being better able to support honour and advance us then we can that yet thrice happy and blessed are they that owne it therefore the more you engage for Truth the more will truth dignifie and advance you Whatsoever you expend for Christ in Christ you shall find it againe and shall receive your owne with the greatest advantage The Philosophers expression of good is Bonum est-sui communicatum Good is communicative the more good therefore you shall expend the more shall you discover a principle of goodnesse to dwell in your heart flowing from the fountaine of fulnesse distilling from Christ And that you have engaged me with many undeserved favours I should be ingratefull either to deny or forget them though I cannot make you a retaliation Nihil dat quod non habet yet that you may know kindnesses are ner forgotten in a thank full breast give me leave to present this as witnesse and testimony of my gratitude to you-wards being confident you will receive it as I present it with the spirit of love That to you is that you would fix your affections upon and let the whole streame of them runne unto that only delectable and love deserving Object Christ who is the glorie of all delights and abstract of all praises It s the nature of true joy to delight it selfe in some solid good and there is no good can be compared cum summo bono with that only chiefe and eternall good that is treasured up in Christ When wee suffer the creatures to steale away our affections we not only lose the right use of them but thereby bereave our selves of true comfort in God render our selves dishonourable in the eyes of good men and unprofitable to our selves for though the creatures may serve us yet they cannot love us t is only Christ that can make sweet returnes of love for our love In which gracious manifestations of Christ our hearts are made a Spring of living waters a garden of spirituall delight the musick of heavenly joyes the treasure of divine comforts and by the impressions of that heavenly love and the sweet glimmerings and flashes of light life and glorie in Christ our soules are abundantly refreshed and satisfied as with marrow and fatnesse Then Sir this will be your Crowne and glory this is that will heighten your spirit ennoble your minde enlarge your heart and make you most acceptable to God precious in the fight of men and exquisitely carry you through your weighty imployments It is said of Solomon that excellent Sonne of wisdome that his heart was as large as the Sea viz. in judgement and understanding so shall your judgement wisedome and understanding be enlarged according to the largenesse of Christs love living in you The Jewes were to offer those creatures in sacrifice unto God which the Nations worshipped for their God so though other men fall downe and doe hommage to the creatures yet let it be in your heart to sacrifice them all unto the Creator Surely man is never more straightned then when he is bound and pent up in the narrow compasse and scantinesse of earthly things for let his heart stoop never so low the World fals beneath it and let him advance the world to the greatest height his heart is still above it But in relation to Christ cujus contrarium verum est the matter is farre otherwise for when mans desires and affections soar never so high as an Eagle still Christ is above them fils them answers them yea he doth exceedingly heighten enlarge and abundantly satisfie them Sir I shall conclude with a word for you expressing the desires of my spirit on your behalfe that the Lord would be pleased to fill your precious soule with the exceeding riches of his love grace and favour and cause his glorie to shine upon you so as to transforme you into the image of his glorie that the sweet kisses of Christs lips may be more precious to you then fragrant wine and his name then the richest oyniment that the senses of your soule may be more refreshed with his redolent sweetnesse and filled more with his redundant fulnesse then withall the most delightfull things in the world yea that Christ would please to lodge all night betwixt your Breasts continually dwelling in your heart and affections and that he would come into your soule as into his garden to eate his pleasant fruits his honey with his honey-comb and
that all or the most passages of this song will very well agree to the spirituall state of the Church in every age of the world Thirdly The difficulty and hardnesse of this song which ariseth from these grounds First The sodain change of the number tense and person as now speaking singularly then plurally now in the present time then in the time to come Secondly In that there are severall persons speaking now the Bride then the Bridegroome and sometimes the friends of them both viz. the daughters of Jerusalem Thirdly In respect of all those parabolicall and enigmaticall phrases and dark speeches wherein is contained very divine and heavenly matter The Jewes had this song in such reverence and high esteem that none of them would read or study it untill they were thirty years of age Now forasmuch as this song excells all other in the Scripture in that it celebrateth the mysteries of Christ and his Church and the conjunction between them more amply and excellently then any other Observe That this song of Solomon is a most excellent portion of canonicall Scripture It were horrid blasphemy to prefer this song above all the songs in Scripture if it were not given by divine inspiration as well as they First The title of this Book is as a crown of glory set upon the head of it and is as ancient and of as great authority as the book it self Now if this song were not canonicall we should make all the songs in Scripture in comparison 〈◊〉 come behind a humane love-song Secondly If we consider the 〈…〉 ●ne and heavenly matter contained in this song it takes the best things in the course of nature and applies them to a most divine use but of this wee have spoken already Thirdly If we consider that speech in Chap. 7. 4. Thy nose is like to the tower of Lebanon Now the tower of Lebanon was not built untill a long time after Solomon had married with Pharaoh's Daughter beside how odious and unseemly would the comparison have been if it had been made in respect of Solomons wife Fourthly The description of the Bride and the Bridegroom are so transcendent and excellent that they cannot be applyed to any but to Christ and his Church And although none of the ten proper names in Hebrew be once named in this song yet this Book is full of such names as doe most of all suit with the argument thereof as King Welbeloved Brother Shepheard the chiefe of ten thousand c. That most excellent shining glory dignity and Majesty which is here put upon the Bridegroom can belong to none beside Christ And as for the Bride shee is described by such rare beauty and glory which cannot agree with Pharaoh's daughter for how is shee compared with all that dwell under Solomons Curtain and how is she found black parched with the sunne and afflicted by her Brethren Fifthly It is manifest that Christ and his Apostles made use of this Book by applying the phrases and borrowing of matter and frame of speech from it as in Chap. 1. 2. Draw me c. Suitable to that are the words of Christ in Joh. 6. 44. None can come to me unlesse the father draw him Again in vers 9. Behold him through the casement looking through the grates c. Agreeable is this to that of the Apostle in 2 Cor. 3. 18. We behold the glory of the Lord as through a glasse or casement See also the title which Christ giveth his Church in Chap. 5. 2. calling her undefiled agreeable to the Apostle who would present the Church to Christ as a chast and pure Virgin These places with many other which might be brought do clearly demonstrate what a sympathy and agreement there is between this song and the new Testament and with the matter and manner of phrase alledged there by Christ and his Apostles Sixthly There would be open contradictions found to be in this song if it were applyed to any other then Christ and his Church for how can it be said of Pharaoh's daughter that shee is the only child of her mother Chap. 5. 6. when in the last Chapter that she had a little sister Now concerning the heavenly Jerusalem shee is called the mother of us all and the Church is but one in Christ but in respect of those severall congregations that the Church is divided into she may be said to have many sisters and thus according to the right interpretation we see a harmonious agreement in this seeming contradiction I might bring many more arguments to prove this song to be an excellent part of canonicall Scripture but I forbear forasmuch as the severall passages of it will agree to the experience of the best Christians wherefore it will be worth our time and paines to read study and meditate in this most excellent portion of holy writ and when we come to understand this song clearly wee shall be forced to confesse that there is not such choise and heavenly matter neither the like sweetness and comfort in any song as in this song of songs Thirdly we have the Author of this Song which is Solomons Solomon was the greatest son of wisedome among men whose understanding was as large as the Sea 1 King 4. 29 30. And whose affections were as large as his understanding hee is made the holy Ghost's instrument for the composing of this excellent song of songs A man of the deepest apprehension is made use of in the highest matters to wit the intercourse of love betwixt the Lord Christ and his Spouse Solomon was a type of Christ First In that he had his name of peace which is called in Hebrew Shelomoh but after the Greek Solomon peaceable for he was a man of peace and rest and God said of him Solomon shall be his name and I will give him Salom peace and quietnesse unto Israel in his dayes 1 Chron. 22. 9. Which promise was made good as wee read in 1 King 4. 24. Hee had peace on all sides round about him Now Christ is our Prince of peace Isa 9 6. and is called by the Apostle our peace Ephes 2. 14. That is he is the author and cause of all our peace he is the cement the only tie and ground of all that peace and union between God and us and also between the Jewes and Gentiles bringing them into fellowship and communion one with another 2. Solomon surpassed all the Kings of the earth in riches and wisdome 2 Chr. 9. 22. And all the earth sought the face of Solomon to heare his wisdome which God had put in his heart 1 King 10. 24. He was the wisest of all Kings as we see in 1 King 3. 12. There was none like him before him neither after him shall any arise like unto him He was also the wisest Prophet whose heart was lifted up higher then the sun and who had received a large measure of the spirit of Prophesie from the Lord but yet behold Jesus
Christ a greater then Solomon Matth. 12. 42. For in him are the treasures of wisdome Col. 2. 3. That is Christ had in him the perfection of all wisdome and knowledg and the Apostle calleth him in 1 Cor. 1. 24. The wisdome of God Christ is essentiall wisedome and understanding Counsell is mine and sound wisdome saith he I am understanding Prov. 8. 14. This song therefore is commended unto us by the holy Ghost in the highest degree of excellency in respect of the Author who was such an eminent type of Christ both in peace and wisdome Observe from hence that Solomon is a canonized Saint else he had not been the Pen-man of Canonicall Scripture and so to have been a Scribe of the holy Ghost The Apostle Peter speaks thus of all the holy Prophets and Pen-men of holy writ in his 2 Epist Chap. 1. vers 20 21. First know this that no prophesie in the Scripture is of any private interpretation● For prophesie came not in old time by the will of man that holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost Now Solomon being one of those holy men of God he must need be a deare and beloved Saint of God 2. Hee was a most excellent type and figure of the Messiah's in love peace wisdome and glory and Christ himselfe is called Solomon in Chap. 3. 11. It would be therefore more then absurd rashnesse to conclude him a reprobate 3. The promise which God makes to David that if Solomon sinned hee should be chastised but that God would never take away his mercy cleane from him as he did from Saul 2 Sam. 7. 14 15. This cannot be meant of succession in the Kingdome for it would have been no comfort to have enjoyed the Kingdom for a while and afterwards to perish for ever therefore it must be taken for a promise of an estate of life 4. God speaks well of Solomon after his death making an honorable mention of his name joyns him with his Father David the Lord commending Rehoboam his people for their first 3. years government 2 Chr. 11. 17. Three years long they walked saith the Lord in the way of David and Solomon Now God never made any such honourable mention of a reprobate after his death in all the Scripture 5. Consider that name of love and favour which God gave unto him Jedidiah beloved of God 6. Solomon himself is said to have loved the Lord 1 King 3. 3. which thing being true else it would not have been recorded in Scripture he could never fall finally from God 7. It is said in Luk. 13. 28. that Abraham Isaac and Jacob and the Prophets of which number Solomon is one are in the Kingdom of God Yet the false Prophets are excepted as Balaam by whom God spake sometimes in a compulsitory way but the Lord used no such instruments to be Pen-men of the holy Ghost 8. And lastly his owne 3. Bookes evince his repentance and reconciliation with God For this glorious light of Israel for a season was clouded and overshadowed by Idolatry for it is said Solomon worshipped strange gods Now upon these words the Romanists conclude that Solomon died a reprobate but Mr. Broughton is of another opinion concerning these words I have oftentimes mused saith hee what should be the meaning of these words And Solomon worshipped strange gods For saith he I could Brought generall view of the Scriptures p. 154. never thinke that he could esteem the idolls of the heathen for gods considering he had such wonderfull knowledge but surely this is the meaning that by allowing his Concubines to worship them and in that it was done by his Commandement it was as his act and this I hold till I be better instructed If he had come to so open a folly as to worship them as God this his sinne must needs have been of very high nature if not the sinne against the holy Ghost which is unpardonable But however it must be confessed that Solomon fell grievously by giving the reins to his lusts yet as it was said already his 3. last Books will declare what the frame and temper of his spirit was in his old age 1. The book of the Proverbs wherein by allegories taken from the most excellent of the creatures and also from those of the lowest ranke and esteem he sheweth the wisdome of God in the government of the world from whence hee perswades men to seek after the wisdom of God admonishes the people to beware of strange women and labours to settle them in the grounds of Religion 2. His Booke called the Preacher which book was made in his old age and after his recovery out of sin he beginneth Vanity of vanities all is but vanity saith the Preacher He preached worldly vanity from selfe-experience admonishing others to beware by his evill In which Book he sheweth in generall the transitory estate of all things in the world For saith he consider the Sun it riseth and setteth and returneth again to his place The winde goeth toward the South and turneth about into the North it whirleth about continually and it returns again according to his circuits All the rivers run into the Sea yet the sea is not full unto the place from whence the rivers come thither they return again So by this he sheweth that there is no felicity in any thing under the sun but all is vanity He goes on and tries wisdome and knowledg but saith he in much wisdome is much griefe and he that encreaseth knowledge encreaseth sorrow He went yet further and tryed all pleasant things for saith he I made great works I built houses set Gardens and Orchards and I planted trees in them of all kind of fruits I made mee pooles of water c. In a word I was full and much encreased I wanted nothing that my heart could desire but when I began to consider what felicity these things could bring unto mee I beheld nothing but vanity and vexation of spirit and that there was no profit under the Sun 3. This most divine song penned as was hinted before in his old age his affections and his mind is taken up in contemplating and celebrating those sweet mysteries of Christ and his Church and of that intercourse of love passing between them his heart is now lifted up higher then all the things under the Sun reckoning of them nothing but vanity and vexation of spirit Now by what hath been said wee may conclude Solomon a glorious Saint of God and therefore should be stirred up to the study and meditation of this Book the more for Solomons sake the Pen-man thereof CHAP. 1. VERS 2 3. Let him kisse mee with the kisses of his mouth for thy love is better then wine Because of the savour of thy good ointments thy name is as ointment poured forth therefore doe the Virgins love thee IN this Chapter observe two parts 1. The earnest desire of the Church to be effectually
Here the Church rendereth a reason of that her most earnest desire which shee hath to be joyned with Christ and enjoy a more full and neer communion with him Thy loves c. By loves she meaneth favour and acceptance and she speaketh in the plurall number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. To declare the plentifulnesse of Christs love and withall that great comfort and joy she received by the aboundance thereof 2. In that she had not Christs love only but also the fruits thereof namely her love to Christ Christs love to her being as the cause her love to Christ as the effect her love to Christ a reflection of his love wherewith he loved her first according to that in 1 John 4. 19. Wee love him because he first loved us better then wine or good more then wine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est bonus utilis jucundus suavis pulcher laetus commodus aptus idoneus beatus fuit The word good is of a large extent and is used for that which is fair sweet pleasing profitable or commodious causing joy and comfort The same word is used in Gen. 24. 16. where it is said the Damsell was faire to looke upon That is shee was of a good countenance And we have the same word in Esther 1. 10. where it is said the Kings heart was merry with wine So that by good the Church meaneth profitable sweet pleasant comfortable and full of salvation for it is the love of election of adoption justification of righteousnesse and sanctification and therefore a very sweet and comfortable love Better then wine Wine is one of the most precious comfortable and delightfull creatures that is in the world It is here put synechdochically as one pleasant species or kind for all the rest and because Wine is the principall thing in Feasts and Banquets it is here put for all dainty pleasant sweet comfortable meats and drinks used in the banquets of the great ones of the world The Verse being thus opened let us draw some Observations from it Obser 1. That such as have the least tast of Christ's love are impatient and restlesse in their desires after the nearest fellowship and communion with him Hence it is that the Spouse here breaketh forth into such a speech with an exclamation being full as it were of divine passions and of enflamed love saying let him kisse mee c. This was grounded upon some tasts of Christs love for Christ had not spoken as yet to the Spouse but shee on a sudden as it were without any word from Christ utters this vehement exclamation of hers and that without any other ground then that his love is better then wine See this in the Apostle he counted all things but dung 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dogs-meat that he might win or gain Christ that is that he might get more neerer communion with him and that hee might be satisfied with a larger portion of his fulnesse and yet the Apostle goes higher then this and desires to be dissolved and to be with Christ that so hee might enjoy the highest communion of all The Church here desires Christs manifestation in the flesh that shee might enjoy him in a Gospel-dispensation and have sweeter discoveries of his favour so in like manner the Church of the New Testament who did enjoy all the priviledges of the Gospel yet she goes higher in her affections and desires Christs last comming that so she might enjoy him in that heavenly everlasting communion which the Saints shall enjoy hereafter 2. Observe that Christ hath given more sweet and comfortable pledges of love and reconciliation to his people under the Gospel then he did under the Law Hence it is that Christ telleth his Disciples and saith Blessed are the eyes that see that yee see For I tell you many Prophets and Kings have desired to see those things which yee see and have not seen them and to hear those things which yee heare and have not heard them Luk. 10. 24. To this purpose is that of the Apostle in Heb. 12. 18 19 20. For you are not come unto the mount not to be touched and that burned with fire Nor unto blacknesse and darknesse and tempest and the sound of a Trumpet the voyce of words c. By the mount is mount Sinai whereon the law was given and by all those expressions of darknes and tempest and fire wee are given to understand the slavish servile and fearfull condition of them who were under the law and how farre short their condition came of the excellency of our condition who are under the Gospel And hee saith further Vers 22. But yee are come un o mount Sion and unto the City of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem and to innumerable company of Angls to the generall Assembly and Church of the first-born which are written in heaven c. By mount-Sion he meaneth the Church under the Gospel whereof mount-Sion was a type Psal 14. 7. And the Doctrine of the Gospel was to goe out of Sion Isa 2. 3. And by all the other expressions he sheweth the happy condition of them who are under the Gospel It is the same argument for substance that the Apostle uses in Rom. 6. 14. For sinne shall not have dominion over you for yee are not under the law but under grace That is now having such manifestations of grace under the Gospel sin shall not take such advantages against you as to keep you under or to enthrall you as it did those under the Law Againe Christ hath powred out a greater measure of his spirit on his people now in the times of the Gospel then before The Saints of old have had the same spirit for substance but not for measure the spirit was given out unto them by small drops but in the times of the Gospel it was powred out in showers and abundance Tit. 3. 6. The word translated abundantly signifies Riches which notes not only the pretiousnesse but the plenty and superabundancy thereof And it is said when hee meaning Christ ascended up on high and led captivity captive he did withall give gifts unto men Ephes 4. 8. In these words the Apostle alludeth to an old custome of the Jewes who in dayes of great joy and solempnity did use to send gifts and presents one to another as we read in Neh. 8. 10. 12. The people did eate and drinke and send portions This the people did in token of their joy after their redemption from captivity So when Christ ascended up on high as in the day of his Majesty and Inauguration in his Kingly seat and Chariot of triumph he sent plentifull portions and gifts of his holy spirit into the hearts of his people Now in that Christ powrs out more abundantly of his spirit in the days of the Gospel then before the spirit of evidence and demonstration the spirit of revelation and knowledg as it is called in 1 Cor. 2. Herein Christ
it selfe but onely wee know and understand it according to the dispensations thereof Now the acts or the effects of Gods love in Christ are various and many viz. 1. His electing love whereby he hath predestinated a certain number of men that the glorious grace of God might be manifested in them see Ephes 1. 4 5 6. The Apostle saith God hath chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the world that wee should be holy and without blame before him in love who hath predestinated us to be adopted through Jesus Christ unto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will To the praise of the glory of his grace whereby hee hath made us accepted in the beloved Here we see the first act of Gods love in choosing of his before the foundation of the world and that saith the Apostle according to his purpose Ephes 1. 11. 2. His redeeming love whereby he hath brought his from the bondage of sinne into glorious liberty and freedome Our redemption was a full testimony of his love as appears by these Scriptures following Gal. 4. 4. For when the fulnesse of time was come God sent forth his sonne made of a woman made under the law that wee might receive the adoption of sonnes So in Act. 20. 28. The Church of God which he hath purchased with his own hlood And in 1 Tim. 2. 6. The man Christ who gave himselfe a price of our redemption This was a plain demonstration of Gods love in Christ for saith the Apostle God shewed his love to us in that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us 3. Gods love of calling now there is a double calling an inward and an outward the outward is a bare propounding of the Gospel but the inward call is a spirituall enlightning whereby the soule is enlightned by the spirit of wisdome and revelation to know the hope of his calling Ephes 1. 17. And that whereby the soule is made able to apprehend him of whom it is apprehended Phil. 3. 12. This is that grace begotten in the will of man that being the proper subject of this grace by which meanes the whole man is converted unto God 4. We have Gods justifying love whereby hee doth free and discharge his people from sinne and death and accounts them righteous in Christ 5. His adopting love whereby he accepts the faithfull unto the dignity of sonnes John 1. 12. As many as received him to them he gave power to be made the sonnes of God to those that believe in his name Now Christ is the band of this union for by him we come to be made heirs of God Co-heirs with Christ Rom. 8. 17. This excellent dignity is procured for us by Christ as a Redeemer Gal. 4. 5 6. God sent his sonne c. to redeeme them that were under the law that we might receive the adoption of sonnes And because yee are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his sonne into your hearts crying abba Father Observe here that the spirit of adoption is called the spirit of the sonne because the holy Ghost sealeth up our adoption in Christ so that through Christ it is made sure unto us 6. His sanctifying love whereby he doth free Believers from the filthinesse and pollution of sinne and restore in them again the image of God which consisteth of righteousnesse and holinesse Eph. 4. 24. 7. And lastly his glorifying love whereby he lifts up his people unto that state of life and glory and gives them an immortall inheritance where all comfort peace and joy shall abound and where they shall have the communion of the chiefest good viz. the love of God shining forth immediately upon their hearts Now though the loue of God in Christ be one intire single and internall act yet after the manner of our conceiving it is set forth by diverse externall acts or effects And wee must know that all these effects flow from that originall love of God these are but new acts proceeding from that eternall love of God which was in his own breast from eternity 6. Observe That the sence and feeling of Christs love is more excellent and efficacious unto Believers then all the most pleasant and delightfull things in the world The Church doth preferre it beyond all comparison of worldly things saying Thy loves are better then wine Now what is more pleasing and delightfull to the tast then fragrant wine yet Christ's love is the same and far sweeter to the hearts of Believers Wine is exceeding usefull and comfortable to man but Christ exceeds in his usefulnesse to the soule so that look of what use or vertue wine is to man of the same use and vertue is Christ to his people The properties or vertues of wine are such as these 1. Wine delighteth the heart of man Psal 104. 15. And in Eccles 10. 19. Wine maketh merry That is it doth refresh comfort and make glad the heart of man so Christ gives his people comfort and refreshment in the midst of feares and dangers Hee is that Shilo which brings tranquility and peace unto his Saints he refreshes them with living waters even with the sweet communion of his spirit and with the abundance of his graces 2. Wine causeth to forget affliction and misery Prov. 31. 6 7. In like manner the love of Christ causeth us to forget those things that are behind Phil. 3. 13. And the Apostle saith of himselfe that he doth now rejoyce in his sufferings Col. 1. 24. The sweetnesse and the joy that he found in Christs love did swallow up all the bitternesse and sorrow of his afflictions 3. Wine was used in the legal sacrifices and service of God Numb 15. 5. Thus was Christ's love manifested by a sacrifice in himselfe by which we draw abundance of comfort to our selves 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation aboundeth by Christ This consolation is much more then was in all legall sacrifices which could never make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience Heb. 9. 1. 4. Wine enflames and overcommeth therefore saith the Apostle be not drunke with wine Ephes 5. 18. But saith he be filled with the spirit that is let the comforts and graces of Christ's spirit fill and overcome your hearts 5. Wine is put for all delicate comfortable or costly things in the world which the greatest sort of men doe use in their Feasts Isa 25. 6. The Lord promiseth to make a feast of fat things a feast of wines on the lees He alludeth to the practice of great Kings of the earth and delicate persons which follow their pleasures and have their sweet wines c. But yet they find not so much delight and comfort in their Feasts as the Saints do in the love of Jesus Christ Hence it is that the Church cryeth out with desire to enjoy her beloved rendring this reason that his love is better then wine that is better then
destitute of the saving knowledg of God and of Christ according to the saying of David Psal 14. 3. There is not a man that understandeth c. And of the Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man perceives not the things of the spirit of God because they are spiritually discerned That is they are to be taken and understood in a spirituall and heavenly sense to which the carnall man's reason cannot reach unlesse hee be enlightned by the holy spirit And again in 1 Cor. 12. 3. No man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost That is no man can say Jesus is the Lord who hath bought and redeemed him but by the instinct of the holy Ghost 2. In conversion we are meerly passive in respect of the grace which commeth from without a man and preventeth him because there is no power in man to prepare himselfe to grace or to receive grace being offered unto him or to will any thing that is good for we are dead in sin Now the dead man is only passive in respect of his quickning Eph. 2. 5. Even when we were dead in sinnes hath hee quickned us together with Christ That is he is dead in sin who hath not the life of grace in him so that by the quickning power and operation of the spirit is begotten in the will of man a spirituall principle of grace for the will is the most proper and prime subject of this grace because the conversion of the will is an effectuall principle of the conversion of the whole man but notwithstanding the understanding doth also concur not to the conversion but in the conversion because mans conversion is not wrought without his consent so that the holy Ghost worketh and of unwilling he makes us willing not as free Agent but only in respect of obedience and subjection 2 Cor. 4. 6. Because God who hath said that light should shine out of darkenesse he it is who shined in our hearts And again the Apostle saith Phil. 2. 13. It is Certum est nos velle cum volumus sed ille fecit ut velimus qui operatur in nobis velle Aug. lib. Arbitrio cap. 2. God who worketh in us both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure Where the will is not understood of the substance of the will but of a new quality Agreeable hereunto is that of a Father It is certaine that wee will when we will but hee causeth us to will who worketh in us to will But we must note also that the will is active in conversion and it followeth the holy spirit who draweth it for the holy Ghost doth so bend and incline our wills that he causeth us to will good perfectly so there is Act us elicitus an act of the will drawn forth whereby it doth close with Christ which indeed is an act of faith But this act of the will doth not onely depend upon a principle or habit of grace ingenerated but also upon the secret operation of the holy spirit according to that in John 6. 44. No man can come unto me unlesse the Father draw him And though this act of the will be drawn out freely yet unavoydably and efficaciously John 6. 37. Whatsoever my Father giveth mee shall come unto mee Now in all the actings of the will in conversion it is but as an instrument of the holy Ghost it is first acted by the spirit and then it acts according to the actings of the spirit upon it 3. The Saints are insufficient of themselves after conversion to follow Christ Without me saith Christ yee can doe nothing John 15. 5. That is you can do nothing that 's good or acceptable Thus the Apostle testifieth of his spirituall life I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Gal. 2. 20. And again the Apostle saith By the grace of God I am that I am and the grace in mee was not in vain but I laboured more abundantly then they all yet not I. It is not I that have taken such pains though he did it in much travail and wearinesse YET NOT I. Neither was it the grace of Christ that was in me but the grace of Christ which was with me 1 Cor. 15. 10. That is I was thus inabled for the work of the Gospel not by any power that was in me but it was by the flowings in and the actings of the Spirit of grace upon my soule Obserue 2. From the effect of the Churches prayer We will run after thee That the Saints when drawn by Christ have a will to follow Christ This the Apostle testifieth of himselfe Rom. 7. 18. To will is present with me but how to perform that which is good I know not This will appeare if we observe the nature of the will it is elicita not coacta inclined and drawn forth not compelled and constrained will should be no wil if it were so for the will is absolute and free no coactive force can be used against it unlesse it be such as is pleasing and delightfull to it The old saving is ducimus volentem and trahimus nolentem we lead him that is willing and draw him that is unwilling but when Christ is said to draw us he useth no compulsion ot coaction but it 's done by the sweetnesse and efficacy of grace and by the secret operation and working of the spirit convincing the judgement perswading the affections inclining the heart and swaying the will There is in the bringing of the soule to Christ Trahere and Venire the Father is said to draw us John 6. 44. And here Christ is said to draw us now this notes to us the efficacy of grace and that Almighty power by which wee are drawn unto Christ Hence it is that the Apostle saith God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined into our hearts c. 2 Cor. 4. 6. Now Gods word by which he commanded light to shine out of darkness is a very operative word Let there be light saith God and there was light Gen. 1. 3. Such an Almighty operative and powerfull word goes out from Christ to draw a soule to himselfe And thus his grace works so sweetly upon our hearts whereby wee come freely and cheerfully and therefore we are said to come unto Christ Now the will being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 drawn to Christ it is made to will good freely really and compleatly The office of the will is either 1. To choose 2. To refuse 3. To suspend 1. The regenerate will doth will all good and nothing but good for good is it's proper object therefore it can properly choose nothing but good therefore saith the Apostle If then I doe that which I would not I consent unto the law that it is good Rom. 7. 16. 2. It refuses all evill and nothing but evill the regenerate will cannot properly choose any evil because it is not it's proper object it may fall into evil but still
there is a secret dislike of it so saith the Apostle For that which I doe I allow not for what I would doe that I doe not but what I hate that I doe Rom. 7. 15. 3. The will suspends it's actings in dubious things when it knows not whither a thing be good or evill it suspendeth and when it knows not whether such a thing be truth or errour it will suspend it 's either choosing or refusing of it it will not venture in the dark like unto the unregenerate will but suspendeth it's actings because whatsoever is not of faith is sin Quest Whether the regenerate will may not choose that which is evill and be unwilling to that which is good Answ 1. The regenerate will cannot will any evill fully and compleatly So saith the Apostle what I doe I would not But there may be a kind of veleity or willingnesse to evill but not a compleat will even as corrupt nature may have a kind of veleity to that which is good as a corrupt regenerate man may have some kind of willingnesse to do a good action but hee never wills the good of the action his will to good is therefore incompleat and so it is with the regenerate will in respect of evill it never wils evill as it is evill it goes not out with full purpose and consent 2. The holy will cannot properly refuse anything that is good because it is it 's proper object but the will that 's good may be so much depressed and kept under by temptation or by desertion and such like distempers that it cannot draw it selfe up to the height of it's actings so that there is not that agility strength and vigour as there is when it acts more strongly but however it wil 's good truly and it goes forward still though not with that vigour and eagernesse as if otherwise it would Put though the will of the regenerate be set free unto good yet wee must so understand it that the regenerate will cannot doe good of himselfe Hence it is the Church desireth that Christ would draw her continually without whose help shee is not able to runne after him Where grace over-swayes the heart there is a readiness to obey and constantly to follow Christ but so as it always proceedeth from Gods spirit leading and drawing forth of the will even as a Mother by leading her child causeth it to goe which otherwise could not so the Lord draws forth leads and directs our affections according to the actings and good pleasure of his owne spirit our wills are but instruments for the holy Ghost and can doe nothing without the breathings in of his spirit upon them This the Apostle testifies of himselfe I am able to do all things through Christ that strengtheneth me Phil. 4. 13. And again he saith He that hath begun his good worke in you he will also finish it untill the day of Jesus Christ Phil. 1. 6. We cannot work that which is good with grace received unlesse there be the continuall flowings in of Christ's Spirit to carry forth the soul in it's workings So that free grace is in the beginning middest and end of all our workings Herein we are made happy without any merit that wee should be unto the praise and glory of the riches of his free grace 3. Observe The life of a Christian is as the running of a race 1. The whole life of a Christian is here termed a running and by the Apostle called a race 1 Cor. 9. 24. And again saith hee I have finished my course 2 Tim. 4. 7. 2. In respect of the readinesse of the minds and affections of the Saints they are said to delight in the law of the Lord Psalm 1. 2. The word Chephets is voluptas prompta voluntas a delightfull and ready will as one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Voluit optavit desideravit delectatus bene affectus fuit placuit complacuit that taketh abundance of joy delight in that which he doth it is to embrace with love and good will yea with a pleasurable love and an affectionate will and desire unto a thing Hence the Lord promiseth to call the Church Chephtsabah that is my pleasure in her Isa 42. 4. And so David saith of the Saints Cheptsiham that is my pleasure in them Psal 16. 3. And so Eis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. in Psal 111. 2. The workes of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure therein This denotes to us the election of the will the readinesse of the affections and the complacency and delight of the heart of a Christian in walking with Christ the wayes of Christ yeeld nothing but pleasure and delight to a gracious heart 3. In respect of speedy performance of actions Satans industrious compassing the earth caused Job to send speedily for his children to sacrifice unto the Lord Job 1. 5. And it is said Abraham rose up early in the morning and sadled his asse c. when he was to offer up his son a Sacrifice And David saith I will runne the way of thy commandements Psal 119. 32. And in vers 60. I made hast and delayed not to keepe thy commandements or I distracted not my selfe to wit with the cares profits pleasures of this life Agreeable hereunto is that of Paul when he was called by God to preach the Gospel among the Heathen he saith I conferred or I consulted not with flesh and blo●d Gal. 1. 16. That is I did not consult with carnall reason or with fleshly arguments but was obedient to the heavenly revelation or vision 4. The Saints run in respect of perseverance hence saitht the Apostle So runne that yee may obtain 1 Cor. 9. 24. Which implyeth there be some that run which do not obtain but the Saints do renew or change their strength Isa 40. 31. That is when they are weak and feeble they shal have a new supply of spiritual strength from Christ the fountain of strength whereby they shall runne or persevere to the end and not be weary The Apostles hearty perswasion and confidence is That he who hath begun a good worke in the Philipians will perfect it untill the day of Jesus Christ Phil. 1. 6. And to this purpose saith the Apostle 1 Pet. 1. 23. You are renewed not of mortall seed but of immortall by the word of God which abideth for ever And 1 Joh. 3 9. He that is born of God sinneth not because the seed of God remaineth in him nor can be sinne because he is born of God That is he that hath the immortall seed of God's word and spirit within him cannot notwithstanding his infirmities finally faile or give over his hope but shall persist and persevere in faith and holinesse 5. The Saints run in respect of their strength having received a new principle of life from Christ by which they are enabled for all things They that want upon the Lord renew change or double their
and Nations and Languages should serve him Dan. 7. 14. The Heathen are his Inheritance and the ends of the Earth his possession Psal 2. 8. And the Apostle speaking of the Preachers of the Gospell saith Their sound went into all the Earth and their words to the end of the World Rom. 10. 18. Secondly in respect of all sorts and conditions of men this is elegantly set forth by the Prophet Isa 41. 19. Where God promiseth To plant in the Wildernesse the Cedar the Shittath Tree the Myrtle the Oile-Tree the Fir-Tree the Pine and the Box-Tree together This is also sweetly represented unto Peter by a Sheet knit at fowre corners wherein were all manner of fowr-footed beasts of the Earth and wild beasts and creeping things and Fowles of the Aire Acts 10. 12. By this we are taught that not onely the Gentiles as well as the Jewes were to be received into Christ's Kingdome but also that in every Nation as himselfe afterwards Expounds it he that feareth God and worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him Vers 35. Thirdly Christ is King universall in respect of all ages and times of the World God is my King of old saith the Church Psal 74. 12. It is meant of Christ because it is said of him in the following words Hee worketh Salvation in the midst of the Earth It is Christ that worketh Salvation in the midst of the Earth and he is called a King eternall immortall 1 Tim. 1. 17. Thirdly Christ rules alone he hath no colleague or partner he carries the Government upon his owne Shoulders as we read Isa 9. 6. He alone hath received power from on high in Governing of his Church Fourthly Christ is an everlasting King He receives a Kingdome that cannot be shaken The God of Heaven saith the Prophet shall set up a Kingdome which shall never be destroyed neieher shall it be left to other people but it shall stand for ever Dan. 2. 44. Fifthly and lastly Christ is matchlesse and eminent above all other Kings in all royall vertues and endowments First he is wise and sapient and therefore called Counsellour onely wise the wonderfull numberer which sealeth up the sum full of wisdome Secondly a most magnificent and warlike King hence Christ is called A man of War the Lord of Hosts the Captaine of our Salvation he overcomes all his Enemies and his foes are made his foot-stoole Thirdly Christ is a most just and righteous King he reigns in righteousnesse his Scepter is a Scepter of rectitude and uprightnesse He is called the Lord our righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. Secondly Observe That Christ sweetly draws and perswades his people to a neer communion with himselfe The King hath brought me c. Christ doth win the hearts of his people by love and goodnesse This is manifested Chap. 2. Vers 4. where it is said He brought me into the Banqueting House and his banner over me was love A flag or ensigne is a warlike signe whereby Souldiers are drawne from place to place So here Christ sets up a Banner of love and goodnesse whereby he draws his people after him when he displayes his Banner then all the Armies in Heaven and Earth follow him It was by love we were redeemed for Christ loved his Church saith the Apostle and gave himselfe for it Ephes 5. 25. By love we are sanctified and cleansed as we have it in Revel 1. 5. Christ hath loved us and hath washed us in his blood He hath washed us both from the guilt and pollution of sin and all from love It is also by the same love wherewithall Christ doth win and draw his people after him Thirdly Observe Christ revealeth to his Saints the secret and hidden Mysteries of the Gospell Christ leads his people into his privy Chambers and displayeth the secrets of God to them that feare him Psal 25. 14. Consider first Chambers are the places in which the Bridegroome and the Bride use to rejoyce together Joel 2. 16. So Christ as the Bridegroome rejoyceth over the Bride and doth communicate spirituall comforts unto her Such as eye hath not seene nor eare heard neither hath it entered into the heart of man the things that God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God and thus we have the mind of Christ 1 Cor. 2. 9 10 16. This is that the Apostle doth earnestly desire that the Church of the Collossians might have their hearts comforted being knit together in love and unto all riches of the fulnesse of understanding to the acknowledgment of the Mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Collos 2. 2 3. When Christ revealeth such Mysteries unto his Saints he may be said then to lead them into his Chambers Secondly touching these Chambers or inner rooms they import a sight of rich Treasures or pretious Jewells Kings have the greatest treasures upon Earth and they keep their richest Ornaments and pretious things in their Chambers Now Christ is the richest of all Kings and he like a Kingly Bridegroome leadeth his Spouse into his Chambers and sheweth her all his riches and glory which he hath laid up for her in the Heavens Christ is rich in love rich in mercy rich in grace rich in wisdome and rich in knowledge yea as rich as God himselfe now Christ spreadeth these his riches before his Saints that they may see how rich they be in him But we must know Christ leads his people into his Chambers by degrees he led his Church into his Chambers in the time of the Law and shewed her the riches and glory of his Kingdome but this he hath done more fully under the Gospell since his manifestation in the flesh since the rising of the sun of righteousnesse and the shining of that morning Starre and most fully it shall be done at the consummation of the Marriage of Christ and his Spouse Here the Spouse hath some glimmerings of these riches but then shee shall have them in perfect sight here shee injoys them by vertue of a promise but then shee shall have the full fruition of them Lastly Observe The Saints are most safe and secure in Jesus Christ Chambers are places of great security therefore the Lord saith Come my people enter into thy Chambers and shut thy doors about thee hide thy selfe for a very little moment untill the indignation be over past Isa 26. 20. And thus Christ comforteth his Disciples against the Persecution of men These things I have spoken unto you that in me ye might have peace in the World yee shall have Tribulation but be of good cheer I have overcome the World John 16. 33. Thus David susteineth his faith by the power and protection of God For in the time of trouble saith he he shall hide me in his pavilion in the secret of his Tabernacle shall he
from Beasts and a beast in the shape of a man is the worst of all Our affections are very pleasant delightful to us this object is as pleasant as our affections there is no object in the world but there is a wil inclinable to close with it now what better object can our wil affections have then Christ 4. Observe The affections of the Saints are more ingaged to ●hrist consecrated to his love then unto the greatest delights in the World More then wine Wine is put by a Synechdoche for all pleasant and delightful things in the World yet saith the Church we will remember thy loves more then worldly minded men do remember Wine yea more then we our selves doe remember our worldy injoyments A Saint may love the Creature according to that Character God hath stamped upon it but still he setteth Christ on the top of his affections witnesse David in Psa 73. 25. Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none in Earth that I desire besides thee When we let our affections run out upon the Creature we doe but lose them and they become unprofitable unto us but when they are set upon Christ we lose them not he makes them Heavenly and gracious and gives them to us againe whatsoever we expend on Christ in Christ we shall find it again The upright love thee Hence Observe That the Saints are perfect and upright in a Gospell account A man is that in Gospell account which he sincerely desires to be a beleiver aims at perfection and therefore he is called a perfect man his desires carry the denomination of the thing desired Now that part in man that hath the predominancy and is most active that part carrieth the denomination of the whole now uprightnesse and righteousnesse holinesse and sincerity these carry the greatest sway in the hearts of the Saints they being sanctified in every part in soule and body and Spirit hence they are called holy righteous pure undefiled and clean having their Conscience clean by the blood of sprinkling and the like Secondly Observe That holy and righteous men are onely fit to praise and make mention of the love of Christ All the righteousnesse of the will of the mind of the affections will praise and celebrate Christs love but as for unrighteousnes it is enmity against Christ and unfit to mention or to praise his love And therefore the exhortation is to the righteous Ps 33. 1. Rejoice in the Lord O ye righteous for praise is comely for the upright The word translated comely denoteth a fair and comely grace for which a thing is to be liked or desir'd The Apostle expresseth it in Greek by fair and beautifull Rom. 10. 15. How beautifull are the feet of those that preach the Gospel c. That is how desireable are the feet of those that preach the Gospel For the beauty of a thing makes it to be desired now the praises of Christs love are most desireable and glorious in the Saints none but they are fit to record and make mention of Christs loves Lastly Observe The Saints by remembring and making mention of Christs loves are the more confirmed and increased in love towards him The Church had declared before that those chast and pure virgins loved Christ but here she doth mention it again to declare that now the Spouse had been in the Bed-chamber of the King and had a sight of those heavenly treasures which are reserved for her whereupon shee rejoyceth with exceeding great joy and doth also record and rehearse all his loves and by this means all the upright are enflamed more more with love to Christ As fire is encreased by adding of fuell unto it so is our love to Christ upon fresh and new manifestations of his great love toward us VERS 5 6. I am blacke but comely O yee daughters of Jerusalem as the Tents of Kedar as the curtains of Solomon Looke not upon me because I am blacke because the Sunne hath looked upon me my mothers children were angry with me they made me the keeper of the vineyards but mine owne vineyard have I not kept IN the precedent verses we had the Churches first speech unto Christ professing her faith and love now we have an Apostrophee or her aversion or turning of Speech from her Beloved unto the Daughters of Jerusalem to prevent those scandals and offences which might arise in respect of the Churches afflictions and infirmities which she was subject unto in this life It falleth out sometimes that some do love them that do not love them again and so the objection might be thus Thou art enflamed with a vehement and passionate love but is it not towards one that careth not for thee and one that doth farre excell thee For thou hast set him forth to be a glorious and great King so gracious and loving so sweet and pleasant so faire and beautifull so rich and compleat as that nothing under heaven is any way comparable unto him Now how is it possible that thou shouldst be a Spouse to such a glorious Bridegroom how should he love or delight in thee thou art but a black hued Virgin therefore canst not be fit to match to such a beautiful sweet King as is Messiah Now she answereth all this fully and that first by a double adjunct of colour or hue one contrary to the other 1. By confession I am black 2. By refutation but comely Both which are illustrated by two comparisons 1. To shew her blacknesse As the tents of Kedar 2. To shew her fairnesse As the curtains or the hangings of Solomon vers 5. Now she proceedeth unto a more full answer because none should take offence at her blacknesse as to impaire her dignity or worth or more lightly to regard or esteem of her and this she doth 1. By admonition to the daughters of Jerusalem not to despise or disdain her in these words Looke not upon me because I am black 2. Shee rendereth a reason of her admonition and that is drawn from the cause of her blacknesse and the cause is three-fold 1. From the supream cause The sunne hath looked upon me 2. From the instrumentall cause my mothers children were angry with me c. 3. From the impulsive cause which was internal wholly in her selfe that is though they made her the keeper of the Vinyards yet she kept not well her own Vineyard I am blacke but comely The Hebrew word here translated blacke signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Denigrari Nigresceie nigrnm esse In pih diluculo manè sedulò studiosè quaerete a nomine blacknesse or darknesse and therefore the Hebrew word Mishchar is taken from the same roote which signifies the morning or the day-dawning because of the blackness or darknesse thereof 1. By blacknesse or darknesse we may understand affliction or tribulation so the Prophet calleth tribulation night because the solitarinesse and fear thereof is like the darknesse Isa 26.
as poore yet making many rich as having nothing yet possessing althings They were not so indeed but reputed to be such or they were like unto those that were so indeed but they had but the shaddow of afflictions Hence it is saith the Apostle that we faint not though the outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day 2 Cor. 4. 16. We have new supplies of strength every day And saith the Apostle our afflictions are but light but our glory we expect is weighty our afflictions are but momentary but our glory is eternall that our glory far exceedeth our afflictions Because the Sun hath looked upon me The Church gives a reason of her blacknesse to the end the Daughters of Jerusalem might not be offended with her and that because shee was under the scorching Sun of Persecution Hence Observe The afflictions of the Saints are many times causes of offence to weake Christians As for such as are meant in the Parable of the stony ground they are wholly offended when the Sun of Persecution ariseth on them mat 13. 21. but not onely such but the Saints themselves by reason of weaknesse are much cast downe All of you saith Christ to his Disciples shall be offended because of me this night for it is written saith he I will smite the Shepheard and the Sheep of the flock shall be scattered abroad Mat. 26. 31. By reason of their weaknesse their hearts fail'd them and they left Christ But this proocedeth from the distemper of their spirits and from the flesh for they ought rather to doe as the Apostle saith of himselfe and the rest of the Saints Being justified by faith we rejoyce in tribulation knowing that tribulation bringeth experience experience patience patience hope and hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shead abroad in our hearts Rom. 5. 3. So that we being justified and freed from sin and from the evill of affliction it should make afflictions and tribulation so wellcome unto us as that we should not be troubled or moved at them Secondly Observe That it is incident to the most godly in the World to have tribulation and affliction in the flesh So saith the Apostle All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution 2 Tim. 3. 12. And therefore it is that Christ asked his Disciples whither they could be Baptized with his Baptis●ne and withall tells them that they should drink of his Cup and be baptised with his baptisme Mat. 20. 22 23. That is you shall indure afflictions like to mine and such as shall be my entertainment in the World the same shall be yours And againe he saith if we will be his Disciples we must take up our crosse and follow him Mat. 16. 24. there are many that seeing the crosse will step out of the way but saith Christ my Disciples must not goe out of my way to shun the crosse but rather take it up and follow me who have endured the crosse and despised the shame Heb. 12. 2. for the afflictions which we suffer in this life are not worthy of the glory which shall be revealed Rom. 8. 18. Satan desired to sift Peter as wheat Luke 22. 31. Now wheat is one of the purest sorts of graine and therefore requireth the most sifting So the Saints and the purest of them doe many times endure the greatest siftings and trialls Now although God doth dispense outward things alike to all and causeth the sun to shine and the raine to fall upon the good and upon the bad yet he hath different ends and worketh severall effects by thus his dealing He afflicts the Saints to purge and purifie them but he afflicts the wicked to destroy them As Gold is purged by the fire so by fire is stubble consumed as Wheat is cleansed by sifting so chaffe is scattered abroad as the Sun causeth a dirty Channell to stinke so it causeth the sweet flowers to give a fragrant smell Hence it is that Job saith When he hath tried me I shall come forth like Gold Job 23. 10. God doth chastise his people saith Augustine that we should not bee over-greedy of these things which in this world are August de civit dei lib. 1. cap. 9. Vt nec bona cupidius appelantur quoe mali quoque habere cernuntur nec mala turpiter evitentur quibus boni plevumque affi●iuntur common to the wicked neither with basenesse and reproach shun those evills which wee see for the most part happen to the godly My mothers children were angry with mee Such as were neerly related to her and did professe themselves of the same faith and had been ●one one society with her Hence observe 1. The greatest enemies of the Church are such as are the neerest in relation unto her Where there is the greatest sympathy when divided turns to the greatest antipathy Hereof David complaineth I am become saith he a stranger unto my brethren and an alien unto my mothers sonnes Psal 69. 9. Such was the enmity of Cain towards Abel of Esau towards Jacob of Absolom towards David and as in naturall relations so it is in civill relations and in some sort in spiritual relations for they that professe themselves of the Church are great enemies unto them that are faithfull in their own Society Secondly Observe That the greatest pretenders to religion holinesse prove many times the greatest enemies to the same Many will pretend godlinesse and yet are haters of that godlinesse which they do pretend The Prophet describeth such as these in Isa 48. 1 2. Such saith he are called by the name of Israel and are come forth out of the waters of Judah which swear by the name of the Lord and make mention of the God of Israel but not in truth nor in righteousnesse For they call themselves of the holy Citie c. Here we have a people as formall as possible can be they are called by the name of Israel they glory and rest in legall shadows and they did swear by God professing to serve him by making mention of his name they loved to be named by the holy City of Jerusalem but all this was not in righteousnesse but they used all these things falsly and to deceive Such were the false Prophets and false Brethren of the Jewish Church such were the Scribes and Pharisees in Christa●ne None pretended more holinesse and strictnesse in respect of outward formes then the Pharisees did Josephus saith they used a very austere and strictkind of life did not adict themselvs to any delicacy Josephus Antiq. lib. 10. cap. 2. but diligently follow that which their reason induceth them unto they honour their Elders neither dare they reply or reproach them for their admonitions Beside the Scripture sheweth how strict they were in legall observances I was as touching the law saith Paul a Pharisee concerning zeale persecuting the Church and touching the righteousnesse of the law blamelesse Phil. 3. 5
Nice therefore we cannot rely on synodicall determinations but then whether shall we goe I answer positively we must goe to the Scriptures which the Apostle calleth a sure word And the holy Scriptures can only make us wise unto salvation it is that which will make the man of God perfect 2 Tim. 3. 5. 16. The Apostle referring to the voyce heard upon the mount when Christ was transfigured in glory cals it a more sure word of prophesie to the which saith he yee will doe well to take heed c. 2 Pet. 1. 19. The Scripture of the Olde Testament shined in those dark times and it was a perfect rule even in the dayes of Moses Deut. 12. 32. The Scripture is a perfect rule of faith and of good manners Christ himselfe giving authority to the Old Testament and John the Apostle doth approve give witnesse to the New Testament sealing up the divine authority thereof Revel 22. 18 19. The cause of mistake in any is the ignorance of the Scriptures this Christ telleth the Jewes Yee erre saith he not knowing the Scripture Mat. 22. 29. Hence he counselleth them to search the Scriptures Joh. 5. 39. He alludeth to those that digg deep into the earth for those precious things that lie hidden in the profundity thereof for such a profound search it is that the Apostle doth so highly commend the noble Bereans But now here ariseth another question namely how we shall understand the Scriptures for one interprets them this way and another that way how then shall we come to the right understanding of them I answer first negatively secondly affirmatively 1. Negatively thus no man can by wit learning or any humane art understand the Scriptures because they contain heavenly and divine mysteries in them I grant that a man by humane learning may understand the literall sense of the Scriptures but he understands not that spirituall hidden mystery therein contained he may read the Scripture and not understand see and not perceive as Christ saith Matth. 13. And the Apostle declareth the same thing in 1 Cor. 1. 18. For saith he the preaching of the Crosse is to them that perish foolishnesse That is it seemeth to them a very ridiculous and empty thing The Apostle confirms this by a citation out of the Prophet Isa Chap. 29. vers 14. I will destroy the wisdome of the wise and bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent vers 19. That is I will infatuate their wisdome and their understanding shall perish Now then saith he where is the wise where is the Scribe where is the disputer of this world That is how are all your wise men and great Philosophers that spend much time in searching out the secrets of nature but yet are ignorant of the hidden mystery of Christ The divine writings of God will not stoop to the spirit of a naturall man Hence the Apostle saith The natural man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him 1 Cor. 2. 14. He sheweth that a man that hath no farther light of understanding then that of nature cannot with his carnall reason reach the heavenly mysteries of the word which must be understood in a divine and spirituall sense But 2. The Scriptures are a sufficient rule when wee come to make use of them with the inward anointings of the spirit of Christ upon our hearts And hence the Apostle doth comfort the Saints against seducers saying But yee have an unction from the holy one and yee know all things 1 Joh. 2. 20. That is you are not in danger of being seduced or drawn aside from Christ because the spirit of God that anointed Christ a Priest King hath also anointed you to be a spirituall Priest Rev. 1. 6. So that ye may be able to guide and defend your selves against false teachers this anointing you have received from the holy one even from Christ in whom is a spring of spirituall graces to be communicated unto us by which means ye know all things needful to be known to preserve you from being seduced or led from Jesus Christ And in vers 27. he saith But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and yee need not that any man should teach you but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things and is truth and is no lie Although in particular things wee may teach and edifie one another yet none can teach the mind and the affections to stick fast to the truth of Christ but the Spirit which is to lead and guide us into all truth Now the Spirit of Christ is the best Interpreter of the Scripture the same spirit that first indited the Scriptures must teach us to understand them when wee have the spirit of the Prophets and Apostles who were pen-men of the Scriptures then and not before shall wee understand the Scriptures It is the Spirit of God that must teach us and lead us into all truth Hence the Apostle calleth the Gospel the Administration of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. 8. And this spirit is called the law of the spirit Rom. 8. 2. And the spirit of adoption and freedome vers 15. the spirit of discerning for it searcheth all things yea the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2. 10. The spirit of faith 1 Cor. 4. 13. The spirit of wisdome and revelation Ephes 1. 17. Now wee must bring the Spirit of the Scriptures to understand the Scriptures the Spirit of God to understand the word of God For wisdome will be justified of her children none of the wicked shall have understanding but the wise shall understand Dan. 12. 10. And feed thy Kids above the Shepheards tent By Kids you heard was meant young Christians that were tender and wanted to be cherished Hence Observe 1. That the Lord doth tender and take care for young Christians If the Lord exhorts us not to offend our weak brethren he wil not himself offend them Hence it is the Lord useth such mild expressions in Scriputre as a Father Mother Nurse and the like As a father pittieth his child so the Lord pitties his people Psal 103. Can a mother forget her child c. The Lord pitties us and beares with our weaknesse even as a tender mother doth her childs and hee provideth for us sutable to our weaknesse milk for babes as well as strong meate for strong men Secondly Observe That those that are strong should strengthen and feed those that are weake Feed my Kids my young and tender Christians wee must feed instruct all those committed to our charge Thus Abraham taught his houshold and Joshuah served the Lord with his house so did Cornelius Thus we are to feed refresh edifie and build up one another but especially the weak and tender Christian 3. This feeding is enlarged from the place where they were to feed that is either beside or above the Shepheards tents both interpretations hold forth the goodnesse of the pasture
we use to say at his owne cost he first sends a spirit of faith a spirit of love a spirit of holinesse a spirit of humility and then comes and makes a feast of such provisions as himselfe sends Now what ever may be said in the praise and commendations of a plentifull Feast the same and much more may be said in the high commendations of this Feast that Christ makes for his Saints 1. In Feasts there are the chiefest provisions of meat and drink c. So in Christ we have the chiefest food in all the World My flesh is meat indeed and my bloud is drinke indeed saith Christ John 6. 55. That is his flesh is that spirituall Manna that came downe from Heaven with which our souls are fed to eternall life The Crucified flesh of Christ by which divine justice was satisfied is the onely meat to refresh our souls what greater rarity is there in all the World for the soul to feed on then the graces of Christs spirit flowing out abundantly upon our hearts 2. A Feast hath all sorts of provisions So Christ is variety of food unto the souls of his people All the promises are yea and in him amen 2 Cor. 1. 20. There are promises suitable to every condition and relation of his people there is most pretious and pure blood to wash away their guilt there is strength to support them in weaknesse there is a Garment of righteousnesse to cover the shame of their nakednesse a Spirit of truth to lead and guide them into all truth sweet mercies and consolations to comfort them in all their droopings Gold and Pearles and pretious stones to enrich them In a word there is a plenitude and fullnesse of all grace to feed and fill their empty and destitute souls And thus we have the Apostle in 1 Cor. 1. 30. least we should not be too much cast downe with our owne folly saith Christ is made unto us of God wisdome and for our uncleannesse and corruption he is made unto us holinesse and sanctification and for our misery and bondage he is made unto us redemption The Spirit of the Lord anointed Christ and did solemnly designe him to be home unto every Saints condition and to be made as the Apostle saith of himselfe all things to all men Hee was anointed to preach glad tidings to the meeke to bind up the broken hearts to proclaime liberty to captives to appoint beauty for ashes joy for mourning and garments of festivity and praise for sad and heavy spirits Isa 61. 1 2 3. So that Christ hath in him sufficiency relative and suitable to all the conditions of the Saints they may feed on him with all sorts and varieties of good things 3. In Feasts there is great plenty of Meats and Drinks and such like provisions so that none use to goe away hungry from a Feast So there is abundance of satisfaction in Christ yea in him is a redundancy and an overflowing of all good things when Christ giveth his people good things he gives them in abundance As for our redemption the Apostle saith we have it according to the riches of his grace Ephes 1. 7. That is we have a full and bountifull redemption by him And the glory that Christ gives to his people is cal'd riches of glory Ephes 3. 16. And Christ is said to give us all things richly to injoy 1 Tim. 6. 17. And to powre his Spirit richly into our hearts Titus 3. 6. If Christ gives of his Spirit he gives abundance of it if he gives us peace he gives it in abundance yea he fills the soule with good things 4. A Feast is intended for joy and rejoycing So Christ doth rejoyce and make glad the hearts of his people he feeds them with inward tranquillity and joy in the holy Ghost shedding abroad his owne love in their souls It is true that the world feeds the Saints with the bread of affliction but Christ gives them to drinke the wine of consolation In the world saith Christ to his Disciples yee shall have tribulation but be of good cheere I have overcome the world John 16. 33. Hence it is that the Apostle exhorteth Believers to rejoyce in Phil. 4. 4. Rejoyce alwayes in the Lord saith he Forasmuch as you have the true cause of joy you may take it upon good grounds and therefore I say againe rejoyce Christ doth make a feast of triumph and rejoycing with every soule that is brought home unto him an instance whereof we have in the Prodigall Son Luke 15. 24. The Father of the Prodigall brought his fatted Calfe and kill'd it to eat make merry with his Friends O what greater joy and rejoycing can there be then that sweet harmony betweene the soule and God reconciled unto it through Jesus Christ The soule that was dead is now alive and that was lost is now found and sweetly entertained by the Father what peace and joy is like that which flows from the Spirit of Jesus Christ 5. At a Feast there is a meeting of many friends together So here is a good company at Christs Table it is surrounded by Christ and all his faithfull Servants The Father himselfe is present at this Feast for saith the Apostle Our fellowship is with the Father and with the Son Jesus Christ 1 John 1. 3. The Saints being united to Christ by faith have fellowship with him and by him they are united to the Father whereby they have communion with him also The Angells are likewise at this feast rejoycing with the Saints 6. The Master of a Feast doth use to welcome and cheare up his Guests It was the custome of the Jewes to welcome their Guests by powring out precious Oiles upon their heads as appeareth in Luke 7. 46. John 12. 3. Hence it is that David alluding to the Jewish custome saith Thou preparest my Table and thou anointest my head with Oile Psal 23. 5. Thus Christ as the Master of this heavenly Feast cheereth up his Guests by powring forth the Oile of grace and of gladnesse upon the heads of his people and by filling of their hearts with joy and gladnesse Thus we find Christ welcomming of his Church in Song 5. 1. saying Eat O my friends drinke yee drinke abundantly O Beloved Thus Christ feasteth with his people and conveyeth all the dainties of salvation unto them and thus his people come to injoy Christ and all his comforts and graces here they have a Feast of grace and at last shall come to a Feast of glory My Spikenard sendeth forth the smell thereof Here we have the effect of this communion My Spikenard sendeth forth the smell thereof Christ hath his communion with his Church and his Church hath her odour from that communion Spiknard is a very pleasant fruit Some of the Rabbins thinke that Nardus was like to Saffron It seems there was diverse sorts of it One sort is called Nardus celtica which the French-men call Lawand and we in
25. for as the propitiatorie covered the Arke and the Law in the Arke which was The hand-wrighting of ordinances against us Col. 2. 14. from the presence of God so Christ covereth our sinnes and putteth himselfe betweene us and the indignation of his Father The Apostle saith As many as are of the workes of the Law are under the curse for it is written cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the Law to doe them Gal. 3. 10. So that there is no help but to fly to him for succour Moses was a type of Christ where it is said that Moses his chosen Servant stood before him in the gapp to turne away his wrathfull indignation that he may not destroy his people Psal 106. 23. So Christ the Mediator of the new Testament must come betweene God and us that the may not behold us but in him The Saints finde that in him only is a full sufficiencie to refresh them and to quench and coole all the heat of their sinnes and of Gods wrath farre otherwise it is with Idolaters and such as worshipp false Gods when they have done all they can they are not satisfied they finde no ease nor no way to take away the sting of conscience They multiply their sorrowes as David speakes Psal 16. They doe punish and afflict themselves many wayes seeking all meanes to make some satisfaction for their sinnes to coole the burning heat of their guilty conscience but when they have wearied themselves they can finde no ease or rest for that is only to be found under the shadow of this Apple-tree where the Church here taketh her delight and is set downe so that the Churches prayer is the same with that of David Psal 91. 4. that she might dwell under his protection and abide under the shadow of his wings that he would cover her with his feathers his faithfulnesse and truth being applyed to her by faith it may become hers and so be unto her a shield and buckler Lastly In that she doth not only delight under his shadow but addeth his fruit is sweet unto my palate or tast Observe That the Saints are sweetly and fully satisfied with all good things in Christ All the faithfull feed upon Christ and are nourished with all heavenly food even with all the fruits of his mediatour-ship And what is wanting in him Who is made unto us of God wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 1. 30. It pleased the father that in Christ should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1. 19. from whom wee receive all spirituall blessings in heavenly places The water of the Rock and the Manna in the Wildernesse were the signes that Christ should spiritually feed and refresh his people Now from the redundancy and overflowing fulnesse of all good things in Christ the Saints have there sufficiencie and fulnesse Of his fulnesse wee receive grace for grace Joh. 1. 16. that is graces answerable to every communicable grace of Christ that as face answers face in water so we may be made answerable to our head now then let us eate of these apples in faith digest them by meditation and we shall find in them more sweetnesse than the Israelites did in their Manna tast and see how good the Lord is as it is in Psal 34. 8. every fruit of Christ's mediation is an Apple of life and every leafe of this Tree serveth to heale the Nations withall Revel 23. 2. Now the Church being fully satisfied with all good things from Christ which she doth here declare not only by this allegorie of an Apple-tree but also by a banquet for she addeth in the next verse saying Vers 4. He brought me into the Banquetting house and his Banner over me was love The great Kings and noble Princes of the world doe use to entertaine one another in sumptuous and royall banquetring houses in which they doe use to set before them all the dainty things which can be gotten for money So here the most high and glorious King of Kings bringeth his beloved Spouse into the banquetting house which doth excell all the banquetting houses of earthly Kings In this verse wee have a narration of the plentifull provision Christ makes for his Church wherein are uttered two glorious favours and manifestations of Christs love unto her First By his conveying her into the Banquetting-house or by a speciall adjunct termed The house of Wine Secondly By his spreading his banner over her termed from the effect dilection Or love He hath brought me c. By this forme of speech she declareth her owne inabilitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Venit unde in High 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Venire fecit adduxit introduxit to come unto this heavenly banquet that Christ had provided for her and doth withall declare the sweetnesse and efficacie of Christ's grace working by the secret operation of his spirit inclining her heart and swaying of her will and so maketh her partaker of all his heavenly treasure Hence Observe That wee cannot partake of the heavenly treasures which are in Christ but through the operation of his owne spirit He to wit Christ brought me c. No man saith he commeth unto me except the Father that sent me draw him Joh. 6. And the Apostle doth fully shew that al the grace we receive from Christ is from the powerfull working of his Spirit 1 Cor. 2. It is Christ that doth comfortably and sweetly introduce his beloved Spouse into the house of spirituall delicates The Church nameth the place into which Messias brought her To the banquetting house In the originall it is Beith haijn domum vini the house of wine it must needs be meant of the wine-celler the place where wine is kept or the banquetting house where wine is drunk for Cellers are called the Treasuries or store-houses of wine in Chron. 27. 27. now because a wine-Cellar is a low vault under the ground dark and cold it may rather be taken for the banqeutting-house alluding to Kings of the earth who use to entertaine one another in sumptuous and royall banquetting houses Now wine is very comfortable to the nature of man it slacketh his thirst it cheareth his heart Psal 104. 15. it causeth him to forget his sorrow and miserie Prov. 31. 6. 7. it comforteth the sick by cherishing and augmenting the vitall spirits it is also said to be delightfull to God because it was offered up in sacrifice as I observed in Chap. 1. vers 1. by a Synechdoche it is put for all fragrant sweet and comfortable things in the world Now by this the Church signifies an increase of grace from Christ the shadow of Christ was a comfort unto her but to be fed under that shadow with delectable fruit that caused greater comfort but now to be brought into a banquetting house and to be refreshed with fragrant wine this must needs be exceeding and farre more comfortable unto
is wrought in our hearts by the displaying of the banner of Christ's love over us All that we can doe is nothing if there be not this principle of love hence saith the Apostle The love of Christ constraineth us 2 Cor. 5. 14. And we read of the woman in the Gospell which washed the feet of the Lord with tears and wiped them with the hairs of her head from whence proceeded all this Was it not because shee loved much And why did shee love much Because saith Christ Many sins were forgiven her Shee had felt the banner of his love spread over her in forgiving her many sins and this did draw her to love him exceedingly The Apostle doth reckon up all the fruits of Christs spreading of his love abroad in the hearts of the Saints saying We rejoyce in tribulations being justified by saith knowing that tribulation bringeth patience patience experience experience hope hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given to us Rom. 5. 3 4 5. When the soul comes to the assurance of faith by the displaying of Christs banner of love in the Gospell then neither tribulation nor anguish persecution or famine nakednesse or perill of sword shall be able to separate them from the love of Christ but they shall be more then Conquerours through him that loves them as the Apostle saith Hence learn what is the chiefe duty of the Ministers of the Gospell namely to spread before men the Banner of Christ's love yea to publish and lay open the riches of his love to mankind in offering himselfe to be a ransome for the sins of the world to draw men out of carnall misery unto a most happy spirituall and blessed condition Then extoll and lift up the Ensigne of Christ's love and display the banner thereof that men may be gathered in unto it The Ministers of the Gospell should spend their whole force this way that men may be drawne to Christ who will seek after that which he knows not of And who would not seeke after some precious Jewell O then tell people where this Jewell this pearle this treasure is that they may seeke after it Display the Ensigne of Christ's goodnesse mercy grace and love that people may be provoked to praise Christ and yeild obedience unto him So far concerning the narration of Christ's favours now followeth the Churches request Vers 5. Stay me with flagons comfort me with apples for I am sick of love Here we have a wonderfull effect of those former things which shee spake of she compared Christ unto an Apple tree under whose shadow she tooke delight and sat downe and his fruit was pleasant unto her pallate He brought her into the house of wine by the displaying over her the banner of love Hence it is her heart is so much taken and ravished with love towards him againe that shee is love-sick and ready to swoon therewith and cryeth out to have them stay her up with Flagons and to comfort her with Apples In the words we have First a request of the Church and this is two-fold shee saith 1. Stay me with flagons 2. Comfort me with apples Secondly we have the Churches reason of her earnest request in these words For I am sick of love The thing shee so much requesteth is spirituall sustentation and strength compared with flagons of wine and the savour of Apples So that looke how comfortable wine is to the heart and the savour of pleasant apples to the sense such and much more is the sense and sweetnesse of Christs graces to his Church Stay me with flagons c. Stay or sustaine strengthen prop or uphold ye me The similitude is drawne from hence when a Virgin is betrothed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inniaeas fuit imposuit fulcivit sustentavit and through the vehemency of her love towards her beloved is sick and swooneth So here the Church having tasted the sweetnesse of those Apples and of that heavenly wine hath such a desire of Christ that makes her breake forth into this patheticall exclamation or suddaine outcry Stay me with flagons c. But unto whom doth shee cry out for these flagons and for these sweet Apples She seemeth not to direct her words unto Christ for she speaketh in the Plurall number and not unto one single person saying Stay or uphold ye me Most thinke that shee speaketh unto the Ministers of Christ and other Christians that they might uphold and stay her applying the comfortable doctrines of the promises of the Gospell unto her heart and conscience because of her owne infirmities and the want of the feeling of Christs love and graces For spiritually we are sustained and strengthned by words and promises of Christ these comfort the heart these quicken the spirit these strengthen the weake faith as the Apostle James saith Be yee patient strengthen your hearts for the comming of the Lord draweth nigh Jam. 5. 8. And saith Paul I long to see you that I may impart unto you some spirituall gift to the end you might be established or strengthned Rom. 1. 11. Now then the Church calleth unto those into whose hands Christ hath committed these treasures to deliver unto her towit those faithfull Servants the Apostles and Prophets and all holy teachers for by the ministry of these the Lord hath delivered unto his Church all those heavenly mysteries of Salvation and so the Apostle speaks That which I have received of the Lord saith he I also have delivered unto you 1 Cor. 11. 23. And thus the Apostles were said to Confirme or establish the souls of the Disciples Acts 14. 21 22. Now the Church doth direct her Speech unto them not as unto the Authors but as unto the ministers of those things for shee knoweth that they be wholly and altogether in Christ They are but as Stewards and dispensors of the mysteries of God 1 Cor. 4. 1. Hence Observe That Christians in distresse desire to be comforted of others Many times when we are not able to apply the promises of comfort unto our selves yet others may so apply them that we may be comforted The Church addeth With flagons By Flagons no doubt she meaneth by the figure Metonimie the thing containing for the thing contained to wit the Wine in those Flagons which must needs be meant of the wine of consolation and of grace and favour So the cup is put for the wine therein Luk. 22. 20. Now by Flagons is meant of the distribution of all good things in the Banquet of this Gospell of Christ When David had brought the Arke of God unto his place and had Offered Burnt-offrings and Peace-offrings and blessed the people He dealt to every one of Israel both man and woman to every one a loafe of bread and a good piece of flesh and a Flagon 1 Chron. 16. 1 2 3. Meaning a Flagon of wine And there is mentioned in Hos 3. 1. Flagons of
take the words for a narration then the comfort of Christs goodnesse and mercy is set forth in the refreshing his people by his word and spirit But if wee take them prayer-wise Let him embrace me c. then they hold forth the faith and thankfulnesse of the Church because shee seeth Christ present administring comfort to her even in a fainting condition Hence Observe First That it is in Christs power alone to support and comfort his Church by the ministry of his Spirit It is not in Paul that planteth nor in Apollo that waters but in Christ that giveth the increase 1 Cor. 3. 6. therefore though she had called to others for help yet here she acknowledgeth all the efficacie to be from Christ he doth stay her up with both his hands when she is ready to faint Secondly note That it is a marveilous comfortable thing unto the Church to see Christ presentewith her by his spirituall power and grace His left hand is under my head as a Pillow for me to be refreshed on when by reason of sinne the whole heart is faint and the head is sick then Christ doth comfort the poore afflicted consciences in the forgivenesse of sinnes by the applying his owne righteousnesse and the consolations of the spirit So that the Saints can say with David when my flesh and heart faileth God is the Rocke of my heart for ever VERS 7 8 9. I charge you O ye Daughters of Jerusalem by the Roes and by the Hindes of the Field that yee stirre not up nor awak my love till he please The voice of my beloved behold he commeth leaping upon the mountains skipping upon the hils My beloved is like a Roe or a young Hart behold he standeth behind our wall he looketh forth at the Window shewing himselfe through the Lattesse IN the former part of this Chapter wee have seene how Christ calling himselfe a Rose and a Lilie giveth us to understand that in him is the Fountaine of all grace and the fulnesse and perfection of all sweet and heavenly treasures Also that from his sweetnesse and beautie his Church is made so sweet and com●ly that she excelleth all other Daughters as farre as the pure white Lilie doth the Thornes Then she setteth forth the praise of her well beloved by a like comparison namely that as the Apple-tree excelleth the trees of the forrest so doth he excell the Sonnes And further she declareth that by the comfortable shadow and fruit of this tree she being led into the house of wine she is made partaker of all heavenly blessings in him and by the feeling of his love she is sick of love towards him calling for a further supply of grace and is embraced comforted and supported by Christ All which is contained in the first six verses of this Chapter Now to proceed In these three Verses we have First A strict charge given that this peace she enjoyed may not be interrupted verse 7. Secondly A Declaration of Messiahs comming together with the discovery thereof verses 8 9. First Wee have a vehement charge given to all the Members of the Church I charge you O ye Daughters of Jerusalem c. Secondly The manner of the charge By the Roes and Hindes of thee Feild Thirdly The matter of the charge That yee stirre not nor awake my love Fourthly The duration or continuance of the charge untill be please Here ariseth some difficultie to finde out whether it be Christ or his Church that giveth this charge by some of our English translations it seemes to be Christ because it is read That you awake not my love untill she please for if it were the Church she should say That you awake not my love untill be please But it is not very easily discussed by the Hebrew text for the word Ahabhah love is feminine and if the Church call Christ her love the construction is with a verbe of the feminine gender Some doe expound this charge to be Christs which he should give unto the false Brethren and false Churches such as were degenerate Assemblies of Idolaters that they doe not molest that sweet peace and rest of the Church which she had obtained in him But I rather take it to be the charge of the Church not to her false Sisters but unto her companions that they doe not by any miscarriage or rude behaviour of theirs cause Christ to withdraw himselfe or to hide or ecclipse his love The reasons of this interpretation are First The originall will indifferently beare either Secondly She had authority to command as shee doth in verse 15. saying Take us the Foxes c. Thirdly The words preceding and following after are the words of the Church Fourthly She doth apply the words unto the Daughters of Jerusalem her fellow friends unto whom shee often speaketh as in Chap. 1. vers 5. Let us now descend downe unto the words in particular I charge you c. The Hebrew word here translated I charge signifieth to sweare or to adjure or earnestly to charge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septem Inde Niphal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●uravit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cum puncto sinistie satiatus saturatus fuit c. It hath also the signification of seven which is a mysticall number Gen. 2. 3. and some give the reason of it to be this because an oath is confirmed by seven that is by many witnesses The word also signifieth to satisfie because he to whom we sweare must be contented An adjuration is neere of kinde to a curse and sometimes one is put for an other as appears in Gen. 24. 8. Josh 6. 26. Hence it sheweth the weightinesse of this speech Hence Observe That the Saints are very serious in the things of Christ Here the Church layes such a weighty and strict charge on the Daughters of Jerusalem True good gracious and heavenly impressions upon the heart will be very strong and vehement in expressions as here the Churches are saying I charge you c. Now followeth the parties thus charged O ye Daughters of Jerusalem By these Daughters no question she meaneth such as wished well to the Church and had somewhat to do therein such as were the severall Members of her But though these Members are expressed by the daughters of Jerusalem yet so as there by is comprehended all the faithful wheresoever dispersed Hence it is said that the Law shall go forth of Zion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem to other Nations and people as the Prophet speakes Isa 2. 3. Wee had occasion to speake of the Daughters of Jerusalem already in Chap. 1. 5. yet give me leave to add one thing which I omitted there namely to observe that the Church is called by the name of Jerusalem or the holy Citie The Church may well be called Jerusalem and that from such resemblances as these First Jerusalem was the chiefe metropolitan Cittie of the Jewes So the Church hath the greatest advantage or precedencie
out of the North but with God is terrible Majesty Job 37. 22. The meaning of it is this that though the creature may be pleasing and flexible enough and there may be faire quarter betweene man and man yet not so with God if he be once provoked with him is terrible and dreadfull majesty and thus it is said of Christ in the forenamed place Exod. 23. 21. Beware of him and obey his voyce provoke him not for he will not pardon your transgressions for my name is in him When we sin against God we have a Mediator to goe unto but when we sin against Christ we have no Mediator unto him therefore it is a dangerous thing to sin against Christ for then indeed we sin against a Mediator Lastly if we take this limitation to the beloveds good pleasure for his comming in the flesh when she might injoy a greater manifestation of his presence then Observe That the Saints are patiently to wait for those good things that are promised them in Christ Here the Daughters were adjured not to provoke Christ by unbeliefe or impatience or murmuring but patiently to wait for Christs appearance Suitable unto this is that of the Apostle when he tells the Hebrews that after they had done the will of God they had need of patience that they might receive the promise Heb. 10. 36. That is they were patiently without grudging or murmuring to wait for the good things promised them The Saints that lived before Christs comming in the flesh were to wait with patience for the day of his appearance and so now the Saints since his comming in the flesh must also wait for his last comming in glory as we have it in the Apostle James Be patient therefore Brethren 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the comming of the Lord James 5. 7. The word Translated Patient signifies to be long patient or to suffer with long patience so that the Saints are exhorted to wait with patience and long-suffering untill they receive the Crowne of glory which is laid up for them Thus far of the Charge given to the Daughters of Jerusalem not to provoke or stir up Christ by sin or to be impatient of his comming Now followeth a declaration of Messiah's comming together with the discovery thereof VERS 8. The voyce of my Beloved Behold he commeth leaping upon the Mountaines skipping upon the Hills VERS 9. My Beloved is like a Roe or young Hart c. The Church still continueth speaking either declaring her owne sense or the actions of her Beloved all tending to expresse the mutuall affections one towards another and in respect of Christs neare approaching either in the discoveries of his grace or his comming in the flesh the Spouse breaketh out and rejoyceth to heare the Bridegrooms voyce and declaring this joy of hers unto her friends she saith It is the voyce of my Beloved c. In the words we have uttered 1. The Churches sense and feeling of Messiah's approaching in the gracious discovery of himselfe This sense and feeling of Messiah's approaching is laid downe 1. From the knowledge shee hath of his voyce 2. From the knowledge of his pace The voyce is made excellent by the subject when shee saith It is the voyce of my Beloved The Pace is made excellent 1. From the word of attention Behold 2. From the speedinesse thereof by saying He commeth leaping over the Mountaines and Hills Afterwards by comparing him in that respect to the Roe or young heart in Vers 9. The voyce of my beloved By the voyce here is meant the word of Christs grace and the Preaching of the Gospell which the Church knoweth to be Christs voyce and therefore receiveth it with joy now in that shee doth acknowledge his voyce notwithstanding her former distempers Hence Observe That the Saints doe and may discerne the voyce of Christ yea and that in a weake and distempered condition This is testified by Christ when he saith Every one that is of truth heareth my voyce John 18. 37. And againe he saith My Sheep heare my voyce John 10. 3. And they know not the voyce of Strangers Vers 4. It is said of the Jewish Rulers that dwelt in Jerusalem that they knew not the voyce of the Prophets Acts 12. 27. That is they slighted their doctrines and hearkned not unto them Hence it is said to day if yee will heare his voyce Heb. 3. 7. Now the Sheep of Christ they can discerne Christs voyce they can as Job saith tast words by the eare Job 12. 11. They have a spirituall tast a discerning relish in their ears because they have the Spirit of God and therefore relish what is suitable and agreeable to the Spirit But now the great Question is How we shall know the Voyce of Christ from the voyce of strangers How shall we understand the word and know the truth from error light from darknesse c For answer hereunto consider 1. That the Voyce of Christ hath a supernaturall power and majesty in it which carries its owne evidence with it How doe we know light to be light but by that evidence of light that it hath in it selfe How doe we know fire to be fire but by that evidence of heat that it hath in it selfe So the word and voyce of Christ carries such a majesty and power with it to cast downe to raise up to kill and make a live that it carries its owne evidence in it selfe Hence it is that the Apostle saith that the word of prophecy doth judge and convince the unbeleiver and it makes manifest the secrets of the heart 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. That is the unbeleivers false perswasions of God and his lusts and desires shall be discovered and convinced by the word And againe he saith For the weapons of our warfare meaning the spirituall applying of the word to the resisting of their enemies are not carnall such as naturall men have recourse unto and d●e great things by As namely riches friends honour eloquence favour of Princes and the like but mighty through God or to God for the accomplishing of his will moving the heart and convincing the Conscience by the Spirit and punishing those that withstand the Gospell by the pulling downe of strong holds casting downe imaginations or the reasonings of the soul and every high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. No adverse power being able to stand before the power of Christs voyce or to withstand it 2. The Saints have the spirit of Christ to lead them into all truth John 14. 16. That is not simply and absolutely but into all truth necessary for them to know whereby they may judge and discerne of the voyce of Christ So that the Saints have a faculty to discerne of such food as is agreeable unto them and also to reject that which is not fit nourishment and to let it goe As
reed Secondly A Vine is very fruitfull it brings forth abundance of grapes as appeares Psal 128. 3. and Ezek. 32. 12. So the Saints are made exceeding fruitfull by the flowings out of the Spirit of Christ upon their hearts Thirdly The Vines and their fruit come to nothing except they be underproped and lift up from the earth so it is with the Saints both they and their fruits come to nothing unlesse Christ underprop them by his power spirit and grace but being underpropped by the flagons of Christ and by the distributions of his grace they become very fruitfull The Spring thus described First figured by flowers and Birds singing Secondly From the budding and sprouting forth of the fig-tree and the Vine wherein is set forh the gracious and pleasant voice of Christ in the Gospell with all the effects and fruits thereof upon the Saints Now it remaineth that wee speake of the exhortation subjoyned Arise my love my faire one and come away This exhortation is the same that wee had in the tenth verse aforegoing and therefore the lesse may be said of it now only two things we may note from the iteration of this exhortation First It notes the backwardnesse of our natures and the untowardnesse of our hearts for yeilding unto Christ and therefore the Lord doth graciously call his people againe and againe to come up to a more full enjoyment of himselfe Secondly It notes his exceeding great love and rich mercie that doth call us to arise from the evill wherein we lay captivated by sinne and from the winter blast of the Law even from the curse and bondage thereof and also he calleth us into the glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God so that in all our troubles and tentations wee may come to him and finde rest where wee may sweetly enjoy our selves in him all which is represented to us by the flourishing and joyfull time of the Spring which Christ useth as a motive to perswade us to come unto him VERS 14 15. O my Dove that art in the clefts of the Rock in the secret places of the stairs let me see thy countenance let me heare thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely Take us the Foxes the little Foxes that spoile the Vines for our Vines have tender grapes THe Church continueth here in her repetition of Christs speech unto her which speech begun verse 10. In which wee may Observe First An exhortation Secondly A reason thereof The exhortation is given forth unto us First In a description of the Church Secondly In the thing exhorted unto The discription lieth First In a sweet and friendly compellation given by Christ unto his Church My Dove Secondly In a description of her dwelling place First In saying Thou art in the holes of the Rock Secondly In adding In the secret of the stairs The thing exhorted unto is the Churches manifestation of her selfe First In saying Shew me thy face Secondly In adding Cause me to heare thy voyce The reason of this exhortation is drawne from the Churches excellent qualification and this is laid down in a twofold assertion First he saith For thy voice is sweet Secondly he concludeth And thy face is comely As for the next exhortation in the 15. verse you shall have the resolution in its due place Now to the exhortation and the parts thereof My Dove c. Christ here calleth the Church a Dove a title sometimes attributed unto Christ himselfe the Holy-ghost sometimes appeared on Christ in the shape of a Dove to discover unto us thus much that Christ should have the propertie and disposition of a Dove as meeknesse and gentlenesse for indeed he became man for that end to be a mercifull Saviour I will not quench the smoaking stax nor breake the bruised reed saith he Matth. 12. 20. So that the mercifulnesse of Christs nature and the mercifulnesse of his Office is set forth by the resemblance of a Dove Now as Christ had the Spirit in likenesse of a Dove so all that are Christs to wit the Spouse of Christ have the disposition of Christ that spirit that framed Christ to be meeke and gentle like a Dove doth also frame the Church into the same likenesse and disposition hence he saith My Dove c. Observe hence That as Christs so is the Churches temper and disposition framed after the likenesse of a Dove Now wee must know that there is some good in all the creatures there is a beame of Gods majesty and an image of vertue even in the inferiour creatures wherefore the Scripture sends us to such creatures for many excellencies that are to be found in them Now the Church may well be compared to a Dove and that for such properties as these First The Dove is a mournfull creature and therefore Hezekiah saith I did mourne like a Dove Isa 38. 14. And the Jewes are said to mourne like Doves Isa 59. and it is said of those that should repent that they should mourne like Doves Ezek. 7. 16. This was Davids condition in Psal 120. 5. Woe is me that I sojourne in Mesech that I dwell in the Tents of Kedar The State of the Saints is like Doves who mourne to God in their desertions afflictions and tentations who heares the bemonings of his owne spirit in them Secondly A Dove is an innocent harmelesse creature simple without guile hence the advice of Christ is to his Disciples Be innocent as Doves Matth. 10. Now there is a simplicity that is sinfull when there is no mixture of wisedome in it for it is said in Hos 7. 11. Ephraim is like a silly Dove without heart they call to Aegypt they goe to Assyria that is when they did rely more upon friends and outward helps then upon God But there is also a pure holie simplicity and so God is said to be simple because there is nothing in him contrary to himselfe or to his owne nature In this respect the Church may be said to be like the Dove in respect of a good and holie simplicitie when there is no no mixture of fraud no duplicity in in the soule A double hearted man is unconstant and unstable in all his wayes saith the Apostle Jam. 1. 8. Thirdly The Dove is weake and impotent not being able to help her selfe against the Birds of prey it hath nothing but flight So the Saints are unable to defend themselves but only they can flye to God as to their mountaine and flye to Christ as to their Arke and strength for they have no other refuge then God nor any hiding place besides Christ Fourthly The Dove is a very weake creature Hence it is said of Ephraim that He shall tremble as the Dove out of the Land of Assyria Hos 11. 11. So the Saints are called The meeke of the earth Zeph. 2. 1 2 And wee are exhorted by the Apostle As the Elect of God to put on the bowels of meeknesse and compassion c. Colos
in Christ we have a manifestation of God whereof we have a figure in Moses Exod. 33. The Lord proclaimed his mercy his patience his goodnesse his truth and justice before him these are his back-parts and more then these he could not see and therefore it is said that the Lord covered Moses with his hand while he passed by But where was Moses when he had this Vision and appearance of God He was in the clift of the rocke Now verily that Rock was a shadow of Christ we see the glory goodnesse and face of God through him Per speculum as it were in a glasse Christ is the lively image of God 2 Cor. 4. 4. The brightnesse of his glory and the expresse Character of his person Heb. 1. 3. There is no excellency in the Father but it is in the Son and by the Sonne we come to injoy it so saith the Apostle God who hath commanded light to shine out of darknesse hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 4. 6. Both this expression and that in the Hebrews before mentioned where Christ is called the brightnesse of God● glory are a metaphor taken from the beams of the Sunne as the Sun is manifested by his owne brightnesse viz. by his Beams for we cannot see the Sun in Rota in his Charriot or circumvolution but by his Beames so the inaccessible light of the Fathers glory is revealed Tanquam per radios ac splendorem as it were by beams and brightnesse shining most clearly in Christ and the Fountaine and root of that brightnesse is in Christ's God-head but darted upon us through the Man-hood according to the testimony John 1. 18. No man hath seene God at any time the onely begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him The bosome is the place and seat of secrets now it is Christ onely that opens the bosome declares the secrets and reveales the glory and brightnesse of Gods face unto us In a word all our happinesse safety and glory lies in Christ if we be in the Rock we sit in heavenly places with Christ Ephes 1. 3. And we are in Christ Ephes 1. 1. 1 Cor. 3. 1. And our life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3. 3. And by him we have accesse to the Father as it were by steps and stairs So much for the description of the Church in respect of her mansion or dwelling place Now followeth the thing shee is exhorted unto with the Exhortation annexed Let me see thy countenance let me heare thy voyce for sweet is thy voyce and thy countenance is comely Christ having awaked his Love he now exhorteth her to a more neer fellowship and communion with himselfe and that first by saying Let me see thy Countenance c. Let me see or cause me to see thy aspect thy visage thy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vidit invisit praevidit aspexit prospexit Inde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Visio visus aspectus species forme and fashion that is stir up thy faith and hold up thy face shew me thy Countenance boldly with joy and comfort looke upon me as it were with open face and see my glory contemplate upon my excellency and goodnesse and in this manner doth Messiah call the Church to a neer and sweet communion with himselfe Hence Observe That the Saints with faith and boldnesse have accesse unto the Father through Christ their Mediator Hence it is that the Spouse being in the Rock by which is meant Christ as was shewed before is bid to come and unveile her face and to take a view of the glory of God in Christ And this is that which the Apostle declares saying But we with open face beholding as in a glasse the glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 18. This expression is taken from an allegory of the covering wherewith Moses veiled his face when he appeared before the Lord Exod. 34. 33. And by that beholding of God had his face lightned and shining with beams So have the Saints a free accesse unto God by Christ which is not as a darke vaile but a pure resplendent glasse wherein the glorious countenance of God is seene by us and we are thereby renewed and as it were glorified in our minds according to the same Image of God in holinesse and righteousnesse And againe the Apostle tells us We have a High-Priest which is entered into Heaven even Jesus the Sonne of God Therefore saith he let us hold fast our profession c. And let us goe boldly to the Throne of grace that we may receive mercy and find grace Christus est sacerdos sacrificium deus cui templum in quo reconciliamur to helpe in the time of need Heb. 4. 14 16. For Christ is as one saith the Priest the Sacrifice the God and the Temple the Priest by whom the Sacrifice through whom the God to whom and the Temple in whom we are reconciled Thus for the first branch of the exhortation The second followeth in adding these words Let me heare thy voyce Let me heare or cause me to heare thy voyce towit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the voyce of his owne spirit speaking in the Spouse by prayers praises and thanksgivings Christ calleth for the voice of the Spouse like to the joyous sweet mourning note of the Dove in the absence of her Mate Hence Observe That Christ is so affected with the sweet Dove-like voyce of his Church as that he entreats his Church to cause him to heare it He calls for the voyce of preaching his glorious works the joy and gladnesse from his Church and he calls for the voyce of prayer Psal 50. 15. Call on me in the day of trouble c. Though Christ should seeme sometime to neglect his people as not to heare them yet he would not have them to cease to call upon him but would have them pray continually like the poore Widow in the Gospell that importuned the judge because when he seems not to hear his Spouse he looks on her with the greatest delectation So far the second branch of the exhortation The reason of the one and the other followeth For sweet is thy voyce and thy Countenance is comely Thy voyce is sweet or pleasing delightfull that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Miscuit commiscuit per metaphorum jucundus dulcis 〈◊〉 acceptable and welcome being uttered by faith it must needs delight because it is sweet melodious and piercing and no marvaile seing it is the voyce of his owne Spirit and therefore cannot be but very sweet and delightsome Hence Observe That the voyce of Christs owne spirit in his Saints is very sweet and pleasant unto him Would Christ so call and earnestly seeke for the voyce of his Spouse if it were not a sweet
reveales his love to us such a fire must needs kindle and melt our affections without which our hearts will be key-cold and frozen 4. It must be the same spirit that tells our souls that Christ loves us that must make us give up our affections to Christ The spirit of Christ doth sweetly display before the soule the rich free and liberall love of Christ and also with the discovery of his love causes the soul to love him againe The next thing to be enquired into is 1. How Christ comes to be ours 2. How we come to be Christ's Christ becomes ours by such means as these 1. Christ is ours by the free donation and gift of the Father as appears Joh. 3. 16. God so loved the World that he gave his onely begotten Sonne c. 2. Christ freely gave himselfe unto us so that Christ is ours by his owne consent he hath as it were passed over himselfe unto us The Apostle saith Christ loved me and gave himselfe for me Gal. 2. 20. As the Father freely gave his Sonne unto us so Christ freely and spontaneously gave his consent to be ours 3. Christ hath passed himselfe over unto his Church by Marriage although we had nothing to bring to him but poverty and misery yet he tooke upon him our nature to discharge all that he might marry us and so passe over himselfe unto us as a husband passeth over himselfe unto his wife Hence it is that the Lord saith I am married unto you and I will take you one of a City and two of a Family and I will bring you to Zion Jeremiah Chap. 3. Verse 14. 4. And lastly Christ is ours by communicating o his owne Spirit to us for the Spirit is given for thaf end to shew us all things that are given us of God whereof Christ is the chiefe this is that the Apostle tells us when he saith No man knoweth the things of God but the Spirit of God Now saith he we have not the Spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are freely given us of God and thus we have the mind of Christ 1 Corinth 2. 11. 12. 16. Having declared how Christ is ours and that he is ours in the first place before we can be his It followeth that we speak of the reflexion on the other hand and shew how we become Christs The Saints are Christs these fowre wayes 1. Christ hath propriety in us by the donation of the Father God hath made him both Lord and Christ Act. 2. 36. And hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be head over all things to the Church Ephes 1. 22. And now saith Christ behold I and the Children whom thou hast given me Heb. 2. Thine they were and thou gavest them to me John 17. 6. For as in respect of Gods justice we were bought by Christ in our redemption so in regard of his love we were given unto Christ in our Election that he might Redeeme us 2. We are Christs by Choyse I have chosen you out of the World saith Christ John 15. 19. And the Saints are said to be chosen in Christ Ephes 1. 4. And they are called chosen and faithfull Revel 17. 14. 3. The Saints are Christs by Purchase we were in the hand of our Enemies and could not free our selves from the bondage of the Law therefore Christ redeemed us from under the Law Gal. 4. 6. And the Apostle saith we were bought with a price 1 Cor. 6. 20. He was our surety and stood in our stead and was set forth to declare the righteousnesse of God Rom. 3. 26. So then we are Christs by right of redemption 4. And lastly We are Christs by combination and Covenant I entred into Covenant with thee and thou becamest mine Ezek. 16. 8. That is I did make a solemn Covenant or stipulation with thee that I would take thee to be my people Thus much for the mutuall union and communion and for that mutuall interest and propriety betweene Christ and his Church Now it followeth that the Church commendeth Christs feeding He feedeth among the Lilies After the Church had extolled Christ for his love shee praiseth his feeding affirming that to be among Lilies These words are diversly Interpreted because the Hebrew word may be taken either actively or passively If it be taken passively it may be meant of Christs feeding himselfe Or we may take it actively of Christs feeding Viz. his Flock among Lilies Or we may take it for Christs feeding of himselfe and his Church he feeds his Church among Lilies and delights himselfe to be there the one follows the other but especially it is meant of the Church those that are his Saints he feeds them among the Lilies Lilies are such kind of flowers as require a great deale of nourishment and they flourish and prosper best in Valleys and low ground where the soile is most fat and therefore when shee saith He feeds among Lilies the meaning is he feeds his Church and people in sweet pleasant soft and well-smelling pasture he plentifully and pleasantly intreateth those that are his for Lilies we know are faire sweet soft and pleasant and therefore the Church saith that her beloved seedeth his flock among the Lilies which is to let us understand that he feedeth her with most excellent things And it is most sure that there is nothing under Heaven that can be esteemed as a full shadow and resemblance of the Heavenly Manna wherewith Christ feedeth the souls of his Hence Observe That Christ feeds his Church and people fully sweetly and comfortably He feeds among Lilies Agreeable to this is that in Psal 23. 1 2. c. The Lord is my Shepheard saith David or my feeder my Pastor and what is the use he maketh of it I shall not want How is this made good why saith he He maketh me to lye downe in green pastures or in the budding grasse That is in pleasant pastures where greene and tender Herbs doe spring he makes me to lye downe and refresh my self And he addeth He leadeth me beside the still waters or he gently leadeth me unto the waters of rest That is he doth comfortably guide me with sustaining my infirmity he nourisheth me by the refreshing waters of his Spirit The like place we have Isa 40. 11. He shall feed his flock like a Shepheard he shall gather the Lambs with his Armes and carry them in his bosome and shall gently lead those that are with young So Christ leads his people as it were among Lilies and feeds them plentifully with sweet and pleasant things and in his bosome he carries them softly and tenderly that such as are weake may not be wronged Another place suitable to this purpose is Ezek. 34. 14. I will feed them in good pastures upon the high mountaines of Israel there shall their fold be there shall they lye in a good fold in a fat pasture will
Christus ecclesia unum intilligantur esse per fidem naturall body as the Apostle sheweth Ephes 5. 30. so that thereby the faithfull become members of his body mysticall As a Father saith as a man and a woman are one by nature so Christ and his Church must be understood to be one through faith Now Christ is said to dwell in the heart by faith Ephes 3. 17. Now the Spouse doth as well retaine Christ as take hold of him I would not let him goe or leave him Herein the Church declares her resolution to retain her beloved as Jacob when he wrestled with the Angell Genes 32. 26. I will not let thee goe except thou blesse me The Spouse having now obtained her beloved was loath to part with him againe upon any termes whatsoever Hence Observe That the soule that hath once got Christ will surely keepe Christ The Spouse was not onely diligent in seeking her beloved but shee had also a prudentiall care to keep Christ when found I would not let him goe saith the Church shee came by him hardly therefore shee will not part with him lightly shee obtained him with much hazzard and danger much losse and suffering and therefore shee will not part with him for the greatest advantage in the world Shee knows nothing in this great and wide universe though never so lovely or desirable can be equivalent to such a Jewell shee knows that with him is the well-spring of life and all blessing and therefore shee cannot be induced or perswaded upon any termes to part with him Many of Christs followers forsooke him and went no more with him but will yee also forsake me saith he to his Apostles Peter answers for himselfe and the rest Lord whither shall we goe thou hast the words of eternall life John 6. 68. As if he should have said Lord if we leave thee we leave our life and our comfort we forsake our owne mercy it was motive enough to stay by him and to keep close to him to consider that eternall life and consequently the very quintessence of all happinesse was with him The Merchant that found a treasure of great price went and hid it and joyfully sould all that he had to purchase it and therefore he will not part with it for any good The Merchant man is an Embleme or figure of a Beleiver who when he hath found Christ will not forgoe him by any means no but will say of him Whom have I in Heaven but thee And on Earth there is none that I desire in comparison of thee Christ is the strength of his heart and his portion for ever Psal 73. 25 26. It is the voyce of the Church The Lord is my portion saith the soule not onely her tongue without but even her soule and her Spirit within speaks it with unconceiveable joy and delight shee was in deep affliction when shee spake it Lam. 3. 24. yet the apprehension of such a portion as the Lord was solace and refreshing enough to her And David is in thesame mood too The Lord is my portion and mine inheritance saith he The lines are fallen to me in pleasant places yea I have a goodly heritage Psal 16. 5 6. He alludes to the manner of dividing the Land of Canaan to the Children of Israel which was done by line Now unspeakable happy are all those that have such an heritage can we thinke they will part with it No verily they will not so dote on any thing in the world as to leave heaven for earth infinite and eternall joyes for a short blaze or a little flash of myrth they will not part with such an inheritance as Christ is rich fat alwayes fruitfull and never decaying An inheritance where there is no dirt no winter or withering no dying or decaying of fruits but ever green ever flourishing ever bearing infinitly profitable and delightfull to the Possessors of it Naboth would not part with the heritage of his Fathers no more will the Saints part with theirs Thus for the Churches taking hold of and keeping her beloved Now follows her drawing of him into her Mothers mansion Vntill I had brought him into my Mothers house and into the Chamber of her that conceived me These words declare how effectually the Church did lay hold upon Christ that so shee retained him to dwell with her for ever The expression which the Church useth here My Mothers house c. signifies a chief City or solemne place of assembly But now it may be demanded What Mother hath the Church And who is shee that conceived her Is there any Spouse of Christ but one I answer there is but one mysticall body of Christ and one Spouse but always that part of the Church on Earth is called the Daughter of the Church of former times and Christians doe beget Christians and the new Church came forth of the old Church Or the whole Church is the Mother of each part as in the usuall phrase of Hebrew speech Now of old the Temple and Sanctuary might be the Chamber of her that conceived that is the place where they of the former Church did meet So now Jerusalem that is above is called the Mother of us all Gal. 3. which was figured by Sarah the free woman and signifieth the Covenant of grace Gal. 4. 24. Now the house and Chamber wherein we are conceived by the Gospel of the Covenant of grace is outwardly the Church but inwardly the heart where faith dwelleth Rom. 10. 10. Now into this house the Church saith shee will lead her beloved we may take it eyther 1. For her leading of him into the Church and displaying of Christs goodnesse manifested to her soul to others Or 2. For her leading Christ down into her own soul enlarging her owne affections by dilating upon the copious theme of his divine love delighting in a close and neer communion with him From the first of these Interpretations Observe That he Saints having received consolation from Christ doe labour to make others partakers of the same comfort Here the Spouse having found her beloved manifesting his love and favour to her saith I will bring him into my Mothers house towit into the Church and assembly of Saints to spread all his goodnesse discovered unto me Shee bringeth her beloved home that so he may not onely dwell with her but also be a solace to her Mothers Children shee doth labour to communicate the comfort of Gods Spirit unto others that so they may rejoyce with her Thus Philip who finding Nathanael did with much joy manifest the finding of Christ John 1. 45. Thus was the Woman of Samaria who having found the Messiah could not but cast her Pitchar aside and goe into the City to reveale that comfort to others John 4. 28 29. Nor can there be any soule that finds the sweet discoveries of Christs love but there is likewise a strong desire to acquaint others with their souls comfort It is an easier thing to carry
the forme of her appearance which is said to be like Pillars of smoake Secondly In respect of her odoriferous ointment and perfume in these words Perfumed with myrrhe and Frankincense with all powders of the Marchant Who is this c. Some understand this of the Churches admiring of her selfe as if she should say who is this to wit beside my selfe that doth thus ascend and that she doth as it were correct her selfe in respect of her former speech speaking thus what should I cause him to remaine with me nay rather I should strive to enter into his Pallace who hath all things most faire and well furnished and exceeding sweet and well smelling yea whose very Bed and Bed-Chamber is much more glorious then all Solomons royalty which she afterwards commendeth Or we may take it for Christs admiring his owne graces in his Spouse as if he skonld say who is this but my Spouse that seekes me with such eagernesse and is so impatient of my absence and so revived at my presence and that holds me so fast as not to let me goe This is usuall with Christ to bestow his owne graces and stampe his owne image upon us and then to admire his image and graces in us Againe Others take it to be meant of a new Company or state of a Church rising up in the world and so admired of the old Church The description of the Church followeth That commeth out of the Wildernesse c. Commeth or ascendeth as it is said of Jerusalem They went up to Jerusalem and of Aegypt they went downe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ascendit to Aegypt Gen. 42. 2. So that the Spouse ascendeth upward The way of wisedome is on high to the wise that he may depart from Hell beneath Prov. 15. 24. Grace glorie and comfort come from above and draw our minds upward and our desires to be above so as to sit together with Christ in heavenly places as the Apostle saith and to have our conversation in heaven From the Wildernesse The Wildernesse of the Land of Aegypt was a figure of the world as appeares in Ezek. 20. 35 36. And I will bring you into the Wildernesse of the people and there will I plead with you face to face like as I pleaded with your fathers in the wildernesse of the Land of Aegypt c. That is as if the Lord had said I will drive you into the most solitary and savage places of the world for a fulnesse of miserie Now this world may aptly be compared to a Wilnesse because as it is commonly full of hurtfull and noysome things so is the world Also we may apply it to the corrupt nature of man and his miserable estate thereby In a Wildernesset here is not illing no sowing no planting no dressing but all lyeth wast barren and desolate Even so it is with all man-kinde by nature there is nothing but barrennesse Hence Observe First That the World is like a Wildernesse God planteth tilleth and dresseth his Church for she is as the Apostle saith Gods husbandrie 1 Cor. 2. she is made fruitfull to the Lord but the whole world beside out of which she ascendeth doth remaine as a most desolate and barren Wildernesse there groweth in it not any good thing nothing that hath sweetnesse or savour with it but all noysome and unsavourie weeds grow there A Wildernesse is cloathed with no beauty at al it is no place of habitation but only for wild beasts Secondly Observe That it is a hard thing to leave the world with its vanities and to lift up our mindes and affection unto heaven So here the Church is taken up into admiration for her leaving of the world and ascending upward who is this that commeth out of the Wildernesse c. that can forsake the world and lusts to ascend up unto me as if Christ had said so when Christ came riding unto Jerusalem all the Citie was moved saying who is this Matth. 21. 10. The people admired him So the Spouse is here as it were admired that she can forsak al her carnal lusts and corruptions and wordly all in joyments and ascend up to Jesus Christ Now followeth her qualifications and first in respect of her appearance which is said to be Like Pillars of smoke The Pillars of smoake here mentioned may be taken from the fierie pillar of the night and the cloudy pillar of the day by which the Israelites were conducted through the Wildernesse from Aegypt to Canaan And in that it is said Pillars of smoake meaning that the Saints ascend up directly and upright like pillars of smoake and so are called by comparison Againe as smoake is darke and hindreth the cleare sight of any thing as the cloudy pillar was darke to the Aegyptians Exod. 14. 20. so is the glorie and beauty of the Spouse to the carnall eye and she is very obscure to the world because of her afflictions in this life which were resembled unto Abraham by a smoaking Oven Gen. 15. 17. Or lastly by Pillars of smoake may be meant the sanctitie and holinesse of the Spouse and then the expression is taken from the sacrifice under the Law of which the earthly matter was turned into ashes and the other part ascended up in a flame of fire as appears Levit. 1. 16. 4. 12. 6 10. So the Spirituall sacrifice of the Spouse ascendeth up to God on the Altar Christ by the flaming fire of the Spirit resolving the earthly matter to ashes remaining beneath and the other to smoake ascending up to God Thus the Spouse ascends like Pillars of smoake her qualification in respect of odour and perfume followeth Perfumed with myrrhe and frankincense withall the powders of the Marchant Perfumed or becensed with myrrhe to wit perfumed with the sweet graces of the Spirit and made a sweet odour by Christ unto God The Spouses appearance is sweetly set down under precious aromatick odours wherewith she is perfumed but indeed she receiveth this from her divine head who is the fountaine of all spirituall odours as appeares in Psal 45. 8. Now these odours are no other then the sweet graces of Christs Spirit communicated with his Members wherewith Christ as by the reflection of his owne Spirit is infinitly delighted And frankincense Myrrhe was one of the first ingredients that was used in the holy oyle and frankincense in sweet perfume Exod. 30. 23 34. which perfume prefigured the mediation of Christ the Angell that offered much incense with the prayers of the Saints that is he mixeth the precious odours of his merits with the sacrifices of the Saints making their prayers and praises finde acceptance with God as Acts 10. 4. 31. And thus is the Church also made through the intercession of Christ to be sweet and savourie as it is said in Psal 45. All her garments are Myrrhe Aloes and Cassia The Saints then are very redolent and savourie through Christ It is added With all powders of the Merchant With
is most true that God hath advanced Christ and set the crowne of glorie and dominion upon him Psal 8. Heb. 2. 9. but yet withall his Mother doth also after a sort set the Crowne of glorie upon his head Seeing the Spouse is the fullnesse of him that filleth all in all Ephes 1. 2. and the Church is said sometimes to be the Mother of Christ Rev 12. As for the Crowne it is a signe of victorie and dominion Psal 21. And when Christ fighteth with his enemies He hath on his head many crownes or diadems Revel 19. 11. 12. So when Christ ruleth over the Saints they by their submission doe put a Crowne upon his head acknowledging his power Hence Observe First That Christ is invested with a Crowne of soveraignty and power He is crowned with glorie and honour Psal 8. 5. The Father hath exalted him and put all things under his feet Heb. 2. and hath given all things into his hands John 3. 35. Secondly Observe That Christ is crowned with honour and dignitie by his Church As the Father hath honoured his Sonne by setting a Crowne upon his head and putting a Scepter into his hand so the Saints by submitting unto his Law and authority doe honour him also acknowledging all his dignitie that the Father hath put upon him Thus it is said of the Church of the Gentiles that they should be a Crowne in the hand of the Lord and a royall diadem in the hand of God Isa 62. 3. The Apostle calleth such as he had gained by the preaching of the Gospell his Crowne and glorie Phil. 4. 1. How much more may Christ himselfe account his Church which he hath purchased by his owne blood his crowne and glorie This Crowne is also made excellent from the circumstance of time In the day of his espousals c. This must needs be meant of the time when Christ was espoused to his Church even the day of the Covenant made betwixt Christ and his people Ezek. 16. 8. And the Lord saith unto Jerusalem I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth the love of thine espousals when thou wentest after me in the Wildernesse Jer. 22. Hence Observe That the Saints are espoused unto Christ This is that which the Apostle tels the Corinthians when he saith For I have espoused you unto one Husband that I might present you as a chast Virgin to Christ 2 Cor. 11. 2. And the Lord saith I will betroth thee unto me c. Hos 2. 19. that is I will establish my Covenant of grace with thee to forgive thy sins and to take no notice of thy unworthinesse Now followeth the second circumstance of time And in the day of the gladnesse of his heart These words plainly intimate that Christ did not only marrie himselfe unto his Spouse but also that he did it freely with a gladsome spirit Hence Observe That the espousing of the Saints unto Christ is matter of great joy unto him Thus it is said in the Prophet As the Bridegroome rejoyceth over the Bride so shall thy God rejoyce over thee Isa 62. 5. So that looke with what kind imbracings and what great affection a bridegroome receiveth his Bride with the same and greater doth Christ receive his people So much for the third Chapter CANTICLES Chap. IIII. VERS 1 2 3 4 5. Behold thou art faire my love behold thou art faire thou hast Doves eyes within thy locks thy haire is as a flock of Goats that appeare from Mount Gilead Thy teeth are like a flock of sheep that are even shorn which come up from the washing whereof every one bare twins and none is barren among them Thy lips are like a thred of scarlet and thy speech is comely thy temples are like a peece of pomgranate within thy locks Thy neck is like the Tower of David builded for an armory whereon there hang a thousand bucklers all sheilds of mighty men Thy two breasts are like two young Roes that are twins which feed among the Lilies TO the end that the Church might well know and feele that her love towards Christ and her seeking after him was not lost as also she did not commend him in vaine all which things were largely handled in the former Chapter it pleaseth Jesus Christ the bridegroome and head of his Spouse in this Chapter to commend the excellency of his Church as in sundrie speciall parts of the same and also delareth his singular love to her againe and doth as it were assure her of the same This Chapter may be divided in two parts The First is a singular comendation that Christ giveth to the Church which beginneth at the first verse and so holdeth on to the 14. wherein also there are three parts First An excellent and singular description handled allegorically of the parts and Members of the Church he putting downe seven in number this is contained in the five first verses of the Chapter Secondly Christ professeth his great wonderfull love towards the Church making large promises and also descrbing notable wayes unto her vers 6 7 8 9. Thirdly Christ againe returneth to commend his Spouse with all those excellent graces that were so sweet delightfull and pleasurable in her from verse 10. to verse 14. The second part of the Chapter contains an excellent speech of the Church with Christs answer to the same verse 15 16 17. In the Churches speech there is First A commendation of her head Christ uers 15. Secondly A desire of all good things to flow downe from her head Christ unto her selfe acknowledging all her enjoyments to be from him vers 16. In Christs answer there is contained a promise of his most gracious acceptation of such fruits as his Spouse should yeild unto him VERS 1. Behold thou art faire my love behold thou art faire c. HEre beginneth Christs commendations of his Church and first he commendeth her beauty in generall in the words Behold thou art faire my love c. And afterwards he entereth into a particular commendation of her severall parts and members And 1. Of her Eyes vers 1. 2. Of her Haire vers 1. 3. Of her Teeth vers 2. 4. Of her Lips vers 3. 5. Of her Temples vers 3 6. Of her Necke vers 4. 7. Of her Breasts ver 5. Thus Christ enumerates and reckons up all the parts of the Church which sheweth what a pleasant harmony and specious consent of parts shee hath whereby shee is exceeding beautifull But first of the praise in generall Behold thou art faire my Love thou art faire When the Scripture doth prefix this word Behold to any sentence it noteth for the most part a thing to be wondered at as was noted in Chap. 1. 15. Faire or beautifull not onely in colour but in comely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Puliher elegans venustus decorus fuit proportion and elegancy such as draweth love and liking This is meant of the graces of the spirit and that spirituall beauty wherewith God
it Thy love is fixed in the Table of mine heart The Hebrew is but one word and used onely in this place and signifieth a most ravishing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In pihil Incordiastime rapuisti animum meum vel traxisti animummeum and delightfull drawing of the heart by love I cannot expresse it neerer the Originall word then to say Thou hast unhearted me that is in effect thus Thou hast wounded or taken away my heart from me thou hast even ravished and overcome me with thy love Christ speaketh here to his Spouse as a man overcome with love for it doth exceedingly set forth the passion of love when the Bridegroome shall tell his Bride that shee hath gotten away his heart Hereby appeareth the super-abounding love of Christ towards his Spouse in that there be not any words sufficient fully to expresse the same Hence Observe That Christs heart and affections are exceedingly taken with his people Hence it is said that the Lord will rejoyce over his people as the Bridegroome rejoyceth over the Bride Isa 62. 5. Like unto this is that where the Lord saith in Zeph. 3. 17. The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty he will save he will rejoyce over thee with joy he will rest in his love he will joy over thee with singing That is he will rest well-pleased and much delighted in his love and he will rejoyce over his Spouse with the highest pitch of joy yea he will rejoyce with singing which is the highest expression of joy and delight So then the heart of Christ being thus taken is meant his exceeding love whereby he rejoyceth over his people according as it is said in Isa 43. 4. Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast been honourable and I have loved thee c. Thus Christ hath declared how neer and deare his Spouse is unto him by the simpathy of like mind and affection which is betweene him and his Church Now it followeth that he shews how neerly they are related one to the other by the band and consanguinity and conjugall amity My Sister my Spouse My Sister so Christ calleth his Church out of that respect and love he bears unto her We are told in Heb. 2. 11. That both he that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one for which cause he is not ashamed to call them brethren This tearme needs no explanation but let us observe hence That Christ stands neerly related to his people as a Brother c. This relation of brotherhood betweene Christ and his people is two-fold 1. By the right of nature as the Apostle saith Forasmuch as the Children were partakers of flesh and blood he also likewise tooke part with them that he might destroy through death him that had the power of death which is the Devill for he in no sort tooke on him the nature of Angells but he tooke the seed of Abraham wherefore it became him in all things to be made like his Brethren Heb. 2. 14. 16. So that Christ tooke our nature and was cloathed with our flesh to be made like unto us his brethren and in the same flesh The second right is of adoption for it is said when the fulnesse of time came God sent his sonne made of a woman and made under the Law that he might redeeme them that were under the Law that wee might receive the adoption of Sonnes Gal. 4. 45. And againe the Apostle saith As many as are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God Ro. 8. 14. whence the Apostle reasons thus If wee be Children we are also heires annexed with Christ Rom. 8. 17. So that the Saints lay claime to the riches and treasures of glorie by right of adoption and brother-hood with Christ Thus much for the band of consanguinitie That of conjugall amitie followeth My Spouse Christ calleth his Church Spouse named in Hebrew Callath of the perfection of her attire and ornaments as was intimated in verse 7. of this Chap. The Spouse is one that is alreadie maried unto her husband so that this title of Spouse shews how the Church is to Christ The Spouse is most deare to her husband saith Solomon for she is the crowne of his head Prov. 12. Hence Observe That the Church is the Spouse of Christ Hence it is that she is called the bride the Lambs wife who is prepared as a bride adorned for her husband Revel 21. 2. 9. And the Lord saith I have married thee to my selfe in righteousnesse judgement mercie and compassion Hos 2. 19. Wee are not to take the words in a carnall sense but that God hath framed words to our capacitie only for what termes could be more effectuall to expresse his love then the names of Sister and Spouse The last thing in this verse wherewith Christ was so much taken in his affections with his Spouse is by the commendable things which he saw in her which made him so to fix and ground his affection First The comelinesse of her person Secondly The ornaments wherewith she is decked With one of thine eyes and the chaine of thy neck With one of thine eyes or one looke from thine eyes The eyes of the Spouse were commended in verse 1. where they were likned to Doves eyes for being simple chast pure by this is meant the chast eye of faith whereby the Saints looke up to Christ Hence Observe That Christ is much taken with the least looke of faith from his Saints For Christs beholding of the faith of the Spouse it maketh such deep impressions in him of her idea and forme of beautie that his affection is so rooted in her heart that it cannot be removed nor concealed It is added And the chaine of thy neck The chaine of the neck is an ornament added to naturall beautie and doth often signifie Gods Laws and Ordinances as appeares Pro. 10. 9. and also signifies the graces of the Spirit and fruits of faith as was opened at large in chap. 1. 10. So he meaneth by the chaine of the neck the ornaments of the Spirit and of grace which is the Law of Christ in the inner man Hence Observe That it is Christs owne graces in the soule that he is so much affected with in his Saints God cannot delight in any thing besides himselfe and therefore it is the manifestation of himselfe in his Saints that draweth such high expressions of love and delight in him towards them Therefore he indueth his Church with gifts of his owne spirit to make her seeme beautifull where he saith I have cloathed thee with broidered worke shod thee with badgers skins girded thee with fine linnen covered thee with silke decked thee with ornaments put bracelets on thy hands and a chaine upon thy necke Ezek. 6. 10. By these outward ornaments are meant the inward graces of the Spirit which proceed Si ergo dona dei sint bona merita non deus coronat merita tua tanquam
shall be like a Tree planted by the water side which shall bring forth his fruit in due season Psal 1. 3. All the Frees in Christs Vineyard are planted by God as Christ faith Every plant which my Father hath not planted shall be rooted up Mat. 15. 13. 6. All plants in a Garden are not of one kind neither doe they bring forth the same fruits but diverse according to their kind So in the Church the whole body is but one but it hath many members all of the same body which is one now all these members have severall operations and functions and the members must have the same care one of another as the Apostle treateth on at large in 1 Cor. 12. Againe as Jerusalem is builded as a City compact within it selfe So the Spouse is not onely compared to a Garden but A Garden inclosed The Hebrew word signifies locked or barred that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clausit observavit pessulum obdidit close shut up safe free from danger and the like The word is used for bolting of a doore 2 Sam. 13. 17 18. Hence Note That the Church is an inclosed Garden And it is an inclosure for three causes 1. For distinction from other grounds 2. For defence and safety 3. Propriety for the owners owne use 1. The Church as a Garden is inclosed for distinction-sake because it is separated from all other people as a Garden is separated from the wildernesse or common field As the light was separated from the darknesse in the Creation of the world as the Jewes were separated from the Gentiles by the partition-wall and the most holy place from the Sanctuary by the veile of the Temple So the Lord hath separated and chosen his people from among all Nations Kindreds and Tongues forasmuch as this foundation remaineth sure the Lord knows who are his 2 Tim. 2. 19. And as the Prophet saith The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous and the way of the wicked shall perish Psal 1. 6. 2. This Garden is inclosed also for defence God hedgeth it on every side that the wild Boare may doe it no hurt For walls doors locks and bars are means of defence and safety thus Jerusalem was fortified with locks and Bars Nehem. 3. 3. 13. And when such fences are wanting all things lye to the spoile as in Isa 5. 5. Psal 80. 12. Thus the Lord maketh his Church as a Towne walled about for defence against the enemies that it cannot be conquered as Jerusalem was compassed about with hills They that trust in the Lord shall be as Mount Sion which cannot be moved but standeth for ever the hills compasse Jerusalem round about so is the Lord round about his people from henceforth for evermore Psal 125. 1 2. It is built upon a rock that the gates of Hell shall not prevaile against it Mat. 16. 18. And God hath promised to be a wall of fire round about Jerusalem Zech. 2. 5. And strengthneth the bars of her gates Psal 147. 13. He keeps his Vineyard night and day ●ast any should hurt it Isa 27. 3. 3. This inclosure of the Church doth intimate the owners propriety because it belongeth onely to him he hath it for his owne use Here is noted the chastity of the Spouse she goeth not a whoring after other Gods she is not like the Harlot which sitteth at the doore and calleth to her the commers by and saith stollen water is sweet Prov. 9. 17. But the Spouse of Christ is carefull to keep her selfe and all her plants and fruits holy chast pure unto her beloved onely shee openeth the gates that the righteous Nation may enter in which keepeth the truth Isa 26. 2. But shee labours to withstand the invasion of the uncleane and abhominable that it enter not in Revel 21. 27. The Apostle was jealous over the Corinthians with a godly jealousie and hath prepared them for one Husband to present them as a pure Virgine to Christ 2 Cor. 11. 2. The Spouse saith I am my beloveds and my beloved is mine Song 2. 16. So much for the first comparison wherein the Spouse was compared to a Garden inclosed It followeth My Sister my Spouse These words were expounded verse 9. of this Chapter therefore I will not stand here on repetition but proceed to the second comparison which is expressed in these words A spring shut up a fountaine sealed Here we see are joyned together a Garden full of sweet plants and a spring and fountaine of living waters If the plants in a Garden be not watered all will wither and be fruitlesse By this comparison is inferred that the Spouse is not dry and barren but a fruitfull Garden it is never without water and therefore cal'd A spring a fountaine A spring hath its name in Hebrew Gal of the root Galal which signifies the rolling and waving of the waters Springs and fountaines are never dry but send forth streams of water continually So that this signifieth the abundance of waters that the Church is supplyed with it is as a Spring able to water all parts of the Garden Hence Observe That the garden of Christs Church is plentifully watered by his spirit and grace and so made fruitfull This garden is therefore well watered there is a spring of living waters which alwayes doe flow wherewith every herb and pretious plant is watered Thus Christ himselfe testifieth saying He that believeth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water John 7. 38. And when the Lord promiseth a full supply of his Spirit he saith I will powre water upon the dry ground and floods upon him that is thirsty Isa 44. 3. This water fructifieth the barrennesse molifieth the hardnesse and cooleth the hot distempers and moistneth the drinesse of the hearts of the Saints and so makes them fruitfull Trees of righteousnesse to Gods praise Water is comfortable to a thirsty land so is the supply of the Spirit to a thirsty soule hence saith David My soule gaspeth after thee as a thirsty land Psal 143. 6. A River in Paradise was called Euphrares of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it maketh glad so doth the overflowings of the Spirit of Christ into the soule refresh it and make it glad and lightsome It is said that the joy of the Captives returning from Babylon was like the waters of the South Psal 126. 4. Intimating that the South parts of the world thirsted after water in a dry Summer Such is the joy of the dry and thirsty soule when God causes his spirit to returne upon it and refresh it with heavenly supplies It is promised the Lord will satisfie thy soule in droughts and make fat thy Bones and thou shalt be like a watered garden and like a spring of water whose waters faile not Isa 58. 11. Thus the Spouse is a spring and a fountaine not because shee is the fountaine of grace but because Christs being in it it is the
Water of life must needs be such as doth cheere and refresh the spirits This living water flowing from Christ doth give life and preserve life in all those that drinke it And it is said to be cleare as Crystall Rev. 22. 1. that is transparent and exceeding all Fountaines in cleernesse most pleasant to the eye as shewing all that is therein to the very bottome and most pleasant to the tast as free from mud and filth Now we shall proceed to the other part of the Spouses speech which is expressed in the next verse wherein she maketh earnest prayer saying VERS 16. Awake O North wind and come thou South blow upon my Garden that the spices thereof may flow out Let my beloved come into his Garden and eat his pleasant fruit IN these words the Spouse intreateth graces from her head and husband Christ to make her fruitfull withall It is a notable turning of her speech to the winds and quarters of the world attributing sence unto things without life which is also common to Poets and lovers especially in their Love-songs There be two parts of this prayer 1. Shee craveth the inspiration and gracious gifts of the spirit by turning her speech to the winds to blow upon his Garden in these words Arise O North wind c. Shee giveth a reason of her desire That the spices thereof may flow out 2. Shee intreateth Christs presence inviting him to come into his Garden speaking thus Let my beloved come into his Garden together also with the end thereof To eat his pleasant fruits Awake O North wind and come thou South c. Awake or arise or raise up thy selfe thou North wind He meaneth the North quarter because it is cold and moist as being far removed from the Sun 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vigilavit evigilavit transitive excitavit vel suscitavit and this is spoken as having regard to the day-time and hot Country of the Land of Judea And come thou South This quarter is hot and dry and both these winds are joyned together So that though the North and South winds be of contrary qualities as cold and hot moist and dry yet are they both fitting for her estate which sometime needeth sharp reproofe like the nipping North wind and sometime sweet and gentle consolation like unto the South wind sweet and cherishing Now under these quarters and by such an equall mixture of the winds no doubt but is meant such means whereby Christ doth refresh the Garden of his Church to cleanse the aire of it and make it more fruitfull and withall by the contrary course of winds purgeth the aire and giveth sometimes cleare and sometimes dropping seasons as may serve most for the benefite of the Garden Now that she may have the full benefite of these winds shee addeth And blow upon my Garden Blow that is even as it were by blasts or blowing from sundry quarters worke that which thou seest to be good and profitable for me Blow upon my Garden that is cause the wind to blow upon me It is the Lord that bringeth forth the winds out of his treasure Psal 135. 7. and speaketh unto them to blow Hereby is signified the quickning efficacy of the spirit of Christ as it is in Ezek. 37. 9. the Prophet was willed to Prophecy to the Wind and say thereunto Come from the fowre winds O wind and blow upon these slaine that they may live And ag●ine the efficacy of the spirit of God is resembled by the wind in John 3. 8. So on the contrary the restraining of Gods spirit let out by the Gospell is signified by fowre Angells holding the fowre winds of the Earth That the wind should not blow on the Earth nor on the Sea nor on any Tree Revel 7. 1. Now it is something darke in that the Church calleth it My Garden The Spouse doth not call it her Garden as having any thing of her selfe for whatsoever Ornaments Flowers Plants c. shee hath shee hath them from Christ but by reason of the nigh conjunction which is betweene Christ and his Church she being flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone Ephes 5. 30. yea and the titles of the one and the other being indifferently attributed to the one and the other as where the Church is called by the name of Christ 1 Cor. 12. 12. Now from the first part of the Churches prayer Observe First from the comparison fetcht from the wind attributing sense to things without life in generall note That Christ hath the command of all creatures He calls for the winds out of his treasures when he pleases and restraineth them againe at his will This drew the Disciples in admiration to say What manner of man is this that even the winds and the Seas obey him Mat. 8. 27. Secondly we see here that Christ speaks to contrary winds both in respect of their quality and quarters from whence they blow Hence Note That Christ can bring good things to his Church by contrary meanes A cold nipping North wind and a pleasant cherishing South wind may both be suitable for the Garden of Christ The Spouse may sometimes stand in need of purging and sometimes of cherishing from whence it is the spirit of God carries it selfe suitable to both conditions and the Saints may be sure that all the winds blow them good Thus we have the Apostle testifying That all things worke together for good to us that love God Rom. 8. 28. And that all things are ours Paul Apollo Cephas things present and to come life death c. 1 Cor. 3. 21. Thirdly Observe That the Spouse desires the heavenly breathing of Christs spirit to come upon her It is not the North wind and the South wind which blow upon the Trees and that are felt of our bodies that are meant here which blow upon these heavenly plants but it is an heavenly breathing which she here requireth even the inspiration of the spirit God which is called the spirit of Sanctification the spirit of adoption c. Now this Spirit of God may well be resembled to wind and that in such respects as these 1. The nature of the wind is to blow where it listeth John 3. 8. So the Spirit of the Lord blows freely and opens the heart powring in abundance of grace it doth awaken and draw forth all the affections to Christ 2. The wind is of a prevailing force it beats downe all before it so the Spirit is mighty in operation it brings downe high Mountaines and hills that be exalted against Christ and layes them levell no man can prevaile against the spirit of God 3. A man receives his breath and life naturally from the aire a man cannot live without wind no more can a regenerate man live without the spirit of God for by the breathings of the spirit the soule of a Christian lives 4. The wind is of a cooling nature so the spirit doth coole the hot distempers in the soule
there is not only abundance but a redundancy and overflowing of all good things Christ is able yea is willing to doe for us farre more abundantly then wee are able to thinke or speake Ephes 3. 20. Christ doth not bestow some small measure of grace life peace c. on his people but he gives it in abundance It followeth O friends O beloved Christ out of the abundance of his affections doth multiply new titles for his Spouse calling her friend and beloved They that doe his commandements are his friends Joh. 15. 14. Abraham is called the friend of God Isa 41. 8. friendship is the sweetnesse and strength of love therefore he addeth O beloved so plentifull and kind hearted is the Lord that he cannot keep his joy within himselfe but stirreth up his friends and companions to eat and drinke and rejoyce with him Those good things that neither eye hath seene nor eare heard that are above our reach to conceive of are for those that love him 1 Cor. 2. 9. Now in that Christ doth invite his Spouse to this heavenly banquet by new Titles of love and friendship Hence Observe That there is sweet love and friendship between Chaist and his Saints All kinds of love and friendship meet in Christ towards his Spouse and so againe in the Spouse towards him here is the friendship of all relations in the world as of husband brother friend c. here is a free opening his bosome to the Saints and they againe opening of their hearts to him Here 's mutuall delight in one anothers good and happinesse Christ is much delighted in all the good and hapinesse of the Spouse and she is as much delighted in the happinesse and glorie of Christ So much for the fourth Chapter CANTICLES CHAP. V. VERS 1 2 3 4 5 6. I sleep but my heart waketh it is the voyce of my Beloved that knocketh saying open to me my Sister my Love my Dove my Vndefiled for my head is filled with dew and 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 Door and my bowells were moved for him I rose up to open to my Beloved and my hands dropped with Myrrhe and my fingers with sweet smelling Myrrhe upon the handles of the lock I opened to my Beloved but my Beloved had withdrawne himselfe and was gone My soule failed when he spake I sought him but I could not find him I called him but he gave me no answer The Watchmen that goe about the City found me they smote me they wounded me the keepers of the walls tooke away the Veile from me WEE had in the former Chapter almost nothing but the praises and commendations which Christ giveth to his Church so highly and with so many speeches doth he magnifie and extoll her beauty and her glory and excellency Here in this Chapter we have another manner of song even an accusing and a bewailing Song for here shee accuseth her self and bewaileth her owne unkindnesse and undutifullnesse which she shewed to her most kind and loving Spouse reporting also the great affliction and calamity that came upon her by that meanes And after all this we have the meanes whereby shee recovers her selfe againe In this Chapter observe two things First a complaint of the Spouse which she maketh accusing her selfe for some negligences towards her beloved and this is contained in the six first Verses Wherein also there are two especiall matters delivered unto us First an open acknowledgment of her offence committed Vers 1 2 3 4. Secondly a recitall of the miseries that fell upon her by meanes of her neglect Vers 5 6. The second thing set forth unto us in this Chapter is a familiar parly had betweene the Spouse and such as were her friends and acquaintance who demanding some questions of her the Church instructeth them concerning the state dwelling and mutuall fellowship that is betwixt her and Christ This matter beginneth at Vers 7. and reacheth to the end of the Chapter The questions with the answers thereto concerne two things 1. There is something demanded about Christ himselfe in Vers 8. whereunto there is a large answer beginning at the 9. Vers and holdeth to the 15. wherein the Spouse doth set forth her beloved by many elegant expressions the issue whereof was that the daughters of Jerusalem became likewise enamour'd with him and therefore question the place of his abode the question being contained in Vers 16. and the answer in the two last verses the occasion both of the one and of the other was that vehement charge that the Spouse giveth her friends in the seaventh verse both concerning Christ himselfe and the place where they should find him The first thing that offers it selfe to our consideration is the Churches complaint accusing of her selfe saying I sleep but my heart waketh c. Here is a description of the Churches temptation which is worldly drowsinesse and security wherein to the godly sometimes fall She had enjoyed a comfortable intercourse with Christ but now she falleth into a deep temptation from the strength and prevalency of corruption Hence Observe in the generall That the Spouse is not alwayes in one and the same temper It was not long agoe that the Spouse was in a sweet lovely gracious temper and now on the suddaine shee falls into a fit of drousinesse and security Thus it was with Abraham somtimes strong in faith and somtimes fearfull as when he denyed his wife David was somtimes full of confidence and boldnesse triumphing in the Lord saying Whom shall I feare And somtimes againe I shall one day fall by the hand of Saul So Peter somtimes confident and againe somtimes overcome with feare But to come to the words in particular I sleep but my heart waketh The words containe 1. A Confession I sleep 2. An acknowledgement But my heart waketh These words declare a two-fold condition of the Spouse The one is a sleepy drowsie estate which proceedeth from the flesh and unregenerate part the other a waking or watchfull condition which proceedeth from the spirit of Christ within her I sleep or I sleeping as it is in the Originall these are the words of the Spouse declaring what befell her in the night season while she slept The sleep of the body is a deading and benuming of the outward sences insomuch that it is the very image of death and it is dangerous because when man sleepeth his enemy watcheth as in the parable of the seed When the husbandman slept the envious man sowed Tares Matth. 13. 25. Now we must consider here three things especially 1. What this sleep is 2. Whence it proceedeth 3. What the effects thereof be 1. We cannot understand this of a bodily or naturall sleep for the Spouse is considered according to her heavenly and spirituall birth and therefore must
needs be meant of a spirituall slumber even a drousinesse in the heart and minde touching Heavenly things 2. As naturall sleep proceedeth from wearinesse and want of spirits or from sloathfullnesse and want of exercise so spirituall sleep ariseth from want of exercise in spirituall things and from a spirituall wearinesse that comes from the too much expence of the strength of the soule upon matters of the world So that spirituall slumber is from the fleshly part and the remnants of the old man remaining in the godly The flesh saith the Apostle lusteth against the spirit and the spirit is against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so that yee cannot doe the things that yee would Gal. 5. 17. When the flesh doth much prevaile then there is a damping of the spirituall graces even as it were a slumber that falleth upon the mind 3. The effects of sleep is deadnesse and darknesse men when they sleep love to be in the darke there is also a cessation of joy and delight of all activity and the like so in a Christians spirituall sleep faith hath not its full and lively operation love sheweth not her zeale and heate the joy and activity of the soule is much decayed c. Now though sleep be often meant in Scripture in a good sence for the repose and rest that the Saints have in God Psal 3. 5. Psal 4. 8. yet here and in many other places it signifieth neglect of holinesse and spirituall security and drowsinesse as in Isa 56. 10. Rom. 13. 11. 1 Thess 5. 6 7. This sleep proceedeth from affliction or wearinesse as in Luke 22. 45. Isa 5. 27. The Spouse having eaten and dranke largely of Christs dainties begins to be negligent being pressed thereunto by the remnants of the flesh she gave place to this carnall ease and drousinesse Hence Observe First That the Spouse of Christ is ingenuous to lay open her owne defects We have large examples of this in David and Paul with many other eminent persons in Scripture Herein the Saints yield unto God his chiefe prerogatives as the honour of his power and authority over us his wisedome in knowing our secrets and his mercy in sparing of us and the like Secondly Observe That the Spouse of Christ may sometimes fall into a spirituall languor Sometimes weaknesse and drowsinesse may overtake the most eminent Saints as Solomon David Peter and the rest The flesh that is alwayes opposed to the spirit may somtimes for a season prevaile as to sleepinesse and distemper And this the Apostle testifieth in Rom. 7. 14. when he saith The Law is spirituall but I am carnall sold under sin That is the Law requires a heavenly life and disposition But I am carnall in part or in regard of the remainders of flesh that are in me so that the godly themselves in respect of some weaknesse that is yet remaining in them may be called carnall sold under sin not willingly but as one that is yet detained though his ransome be paid But we must note here that the Spouse was not in such a dead sleep as that she was without any life or stirring at all though there be flesh opposing the spirit yet there is spirit opposing the flesh and therefore she doth not onely confesse her defect but also acknowledge her life and excellency by adding But my heart waketh My heart waketh or watcheth that is is lively and active still meaning thereby that howsoever she was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vigilavit excitatus fuit overtaken in the outward man or corruption of flesh and of the members thereof yet she could not but in her heart and spirituall affections thinke upon her head and Spouse The heart is taken for the whole soule for the understanding will men ory and affections so it includeth all the powers of the soule The Apostle calleth it the inward man the spirit or regenerate man opposed to the flesh or outward man Rom. 2. 28 29. This flesh and spirit lusteth oue against another even in the Saints as the Apostle saith Gal. 5. 17. And when the spirit is willing the flesh is weake Mat. 26. 41. So then in that the Spouse saith My heart waketh it signified that though she had given her selfe to fleshly case and security yet her heart and spirit was otherwise disposed The heart is the last part which liveth and moveth in the body and in it life and sence first beginneth and therefore it is the most principal part it is like Primum mobile inter sphaeras the first spheare celestiall which is moved and by it others are moved It is like the Sunne among the Planets which by its lustre giveth light unto the rest it is like the Center from which the lines are first defixed and derived from it to the circumference all the lines being deducted are of equall distance But here by the heart is not understood the substance but the quality of the heart where David saith Create in me a new heart Psal 51. 10. We must not understand it of the substance for that is still the same but the quality of the heart with its integrity But now the Church maketh a difference between her selfe and her heart as if her selfe and her heart were not the same where she saith I sleep she speaketh in the person of her outward man of the flesh not of the spirit but where she speaketh of her heart she speaketh of her inward man there was readinesse of spirit Hence Observe First That there is an antithesis or contrariety betweene the flesh and the spirit in the Saints The Saints have a fleshly backwardnesse but there is still a readinesse of spirit but the outward man which is flesh perisheth but the inward man that is spirit is renewed day by day So the Apostle comparing himselfe with himselfe is not himselfe where he saith I am carnall sold under sin for in me that is in my flesh there dwelleth no good but I allow not that which I doe I find a law in my members rebelling against the law of my mind There the flesh sleepeth But to will is present with me and I delight in the Law of God there is the inward man or the spirit waking Secondly Observe That the Saints cannot fall from grace Though they sleep yet their heart is awake The work of the new birth or Spirit can never be quite put out or extinguished The Saints may many times fall into great security but yet the heart waketh there remaineth somewhat within the sleep is not deadly The Prophet Isaiah speaking of the Church and Saints of God saith It shall be as a Tree as an Oake whose substance is in them when they cast their leaves Isa 6. 13. This is also testified by the Apostle John where he saith Whosoever is borne of God sinneth not for his seed remaineth in him neither can he sin because he is borne of God 1 John 3. 9. So that
here is still life in the root The seed remains in them from whence it is that when the Spouse sleepeth her heart waketh and from hence it is that shee cannot lose the worke of God in her that she is borne of God who is immortall and unchangeable And it is written Every branch that beareth fruit he purgeth that it may beare more fruit John 15. No fruitfull branch shall be cut off Thirdly Observe That the Saints should as well acknowledge that which is good as that which is evill in their spirits It is common with some Christians to be ever complaining of that evill they see in themselves but very seldome acknowledge any of that good they have received whereas we ought to acknowledge all the good we have received to the praise of the giver Fourthly Observe That a Christian is what he is in spirit A believer is not to value himself acording to what he is in the outward man or in the flesh but as he is in the inward man or spirit So the Church values her selfe by the disposition and temper of her spirit My heart waketh thus hath the Spouse in few words set forth her estate according to flesh and spirit and now she setteth forth in the next place the great care and love of Christ who seeketh to awake and to raise her out of this dangerous sleep in these words It is the voyce of my beloved that knocketh saying open to me my Sister my Love my Dove my Vndefiled for my head is filled with dew and my locks with the drops of the night In the former part of the verse we heard of the Churches security of the flesh where she saith I sleep and yet she was not in such a dead sleep but her heart awoke her delight in Christ was not utterly lost It was like the sleep of the wise Virgins which slumbred as well as the foolish virgins yet had their Lamps trimmed and Oyle in them which the foolish had not Now Christ commeth to her to awake her by knocking shee notwithstanding her drousinesse was sensible of all his sweet words and allurements whereby he pressed her to open unto him saying Open to me my Sister my love my Dove my undefiled which is set forth by the sufferings of Christ in waiting for her returne For my head is filled with dew and my locks with the drops of the night All which aggravates her negligence and his patience in waiting for admission into her heart by his spirit In the words observe two things 1. The Churches discerning of Christs voyce 2. Christs carriage towards his Church First the Churches discerning of Christs voyce set downe in these words It is the voyce of my beloved Secondly we have Christs carriage towards his Church which is amplified 1. By a friendly compellation My Love my Dove my undefiled 2. By his action He knocks c. 3. By his suffering unworthy things for her sake For my head is filled with dew and my locks with the drops of the night It is the voyce of my beloved that knocks c. Christ useth good meanes to awaken his Spouse and to raise her up from that carnall security she was in and therefore he calleth her by his voyce and he no sooner speaks but she heareth it saying It is the voyce of my beloved c. She speaks as if it were one that being waked out of sleep and slumber should say that it was such or such a one that called or spake Many being so well acquainted with men that they can certainly as it were discerne them by their words Hence Observe That the Saints may discerne Christs voyce even in a sleepy condition Here the Spouse though she was sleepy and drousie yet her heart was so far awake that she discerned Christs voyce Christs Sheep are said To heare Christs voyce John 10. And to tast words by the eare as it is said Job 12. 11. they have a spirituall tast and relish with them The voyce of Christ is spirit and life and hath in it a self-discovering property it carries along with it it s owne evidence it hath such majesty and power such evidence and life in it that the Spouse cannot but heare and discerne it even in a sleepy and slumbring temper Secondly Observe That no temptation that befalls the Spouse can separate her affections from Christ She acknowledges Christ to be her Beloved still there remained so much conjugall amity and friendship though she was untoward sleepy and drousie that with a Spouse-like affection she saith It is the voyce of my beloved So that take a Saint at the worst condition when he is a sleep he loves Christ and le ts out the streames of his affections towards him Thus much for the Churches taking notice of Christs voyce we come to Christs carriage towards her which is set forth first by his action He knocketh c. It is the voyce of my beloved that knocketh saying open 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pulsavit impetum fecit The Septuagi turns it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vrge● and by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pulso unto me c. That knocketh or that beateth the word in the Hebrew fignifies to knock or beat vehemently to be very earnest or provoking In generall it is taken for any knocking but here for knocking at the door This doth intimate Christs earnestnesse for an entrance to come in and awake his Spouse And thus Christ is said to knock at the doore of the Church of Laodicea Revel 3. 19 20. Christ hath severall kinds of knocking 's as that of his word his mercy his Spirit and somtimes his Rod Mic. 6. 9. yea all the meanes that Christ useth to draw us nearer to himselfe as his works spirit word and the conscience too these are the knocking 's of Christ at our hearts Now Christ doth not onely knock but he is most earnest for an enterance saying Open unto me Here the heart is compared to the gates or doors of a City for as in Cities the strength of the City is in the gates there was their seats of justice in those days and there was Munition stored up for war so that open the gates to an enemy and you give him all So when Christ hath the heart he hath the whole man The heart is the way of entrance of God into the soul or into the whole man and hence it is said The Lord opened the heart of Lydia Acts 16. 14. That was it at which Christ knocked When God bestoweth his blessings on us he is said to open doors unto us as in Psa 78. 23 24. in Isa 45. 1 2 3. The Apostle calleth the grace of ministry The doore of utterance Col. 4. 3. So when we yield unto Christ and his Spirit and accept of his grace and the like it is to open the doore unto him as in Revel 3. 20. Now the knocking 's of Christ shew how earnest he is of enterance into
and knowledge Corrupt courses never want fleshly excuses Hence it is Paul saith I consulted not with flesh and blood that is he consulted not with the reasonings of the flesh and the carnall will but was obedient to the heavenly revelation Thus Peter consulted with the flesh when he counselled Christ saying Master pity thy selfe Now therefore we should arme our selves with resolution and say with Christ Get thee behind me Satan c. Mat. 16. 23. And with Paul when he saith We are no more debtors to the flesh c. Rom. 8. as if he had said we owe nothing to the flesh as to yield obedience and subjection unto it But we shall now see in the next Verse what becomes of all those excuses and backwardnesse of the Spouse whereby she delays and puts off Christ VERS 3 4. My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the door and my bowells were moved for him I rose to open to my beloved c. IN these and the 3. following Verses we have the issue of the Spouses negligence that Christ absented and withdrew himselfe There are three things set downe of what befell the Spouse 1. Christs withdrawing of himselfe he leaveth her for a time to her selfe and to her owne wayes but it is said My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the doore Christ did not wholly leave his Spouse though he did withdraw and therefore 2. We have Christs gracious dealing with her not wholly withdrawing himselfe but puts his finger into the hole of the doore and thereby leaves some sweetnesse behind him before his departure So that her hands dropped downe Myrrhe c. 3. The successe of Christs departure and withdrawing of himselfe Her bowells were moved in her which were hard before whereupon she opens to her beloved as now being willing to receive him but he is not at her call ready to be found he was gone and past not indeed but according to her sence and feeling and that onely for a time After this like one that falleth into a swoone she is void of inward comfort and sence of Christs presence where she saith My soule failed when he spake that is when I remembred the words which he did speake And lastly she cannot find her beloved she then enquires of the Watch-men of the City but she receiveth no comfort from them but they are like Jobs friends of whom it is said Cold comforters are you all Job 16. 2. for they wound her conscience and disgracefully use her where it is said They tooke away her Veile from her So in her present apprehension she passeth all meanes of recovery yet in the following verses she doth recover her selfe againe because Christ left her not wholly but leaves some of his sweetnesse behind him before he departed from her My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the doore The Spouse is no sooner fallen into this spirituall languor and drousinesse making excuses for her sloath and security but Christ comes to rouse her up and that first by withdrawing himselfe after a sort from her but yet he will first leave that behind him that shall both raise her up to seek after him and support her in her afflictions My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the doore c. My beloved put in or as it is in the Hebrew sent his hand or put it forth the putting forth of the hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Misit emi sit demisis im misit usually signifies the effecting of some work as in Gen. 3. 22. 12. 10. Hereby is noted that Christ had some enterprize on the Spouse he was not willing she should be at ease in her fleshly and carnall condition His hand that is his spirit by which he moved upon her by which he went to awake her For as the finger of God in Luke 11. 20. meaneth the Spirit of God so doth his Hand Hence it is said that when the Spirit of the Lord went out with the ministry of the Disciples The hand of the Lord was with them and a great number believed and turned to the Lord Acts 11. 19. So in that it is said Christ put in his hand it 's meant he did inwardly move upon her heart by the sweet and secret opperation of his glorious Spirit In at the hole or downe by the hole towit of the doore as it 's added in our Translation The similitude is taken from hence when a doore is locked yet there is a key-hole at which one may put in his hand or look in and so here when the hearts of the faithfull be after a sort locked up and Christ standeth at the doore of the heart and calleth and knocketh yet they doe not open unto him but make excuses he findeth some little entrance or hole as through the doore to put in his hand of spirit to touch the inward parts of the heart that so he might leave some print of his fingers before he did depart Hence Observe That Christ never leaves his Spouse so but that he leaves some prints of his spirit and grace behind him upon her soul Hence it is the soule doth so linger after him when he hath withdrawne himselfe and never rests untill it finds him againe There is never a finall desertion as we see here Christ puts his hand in at the doore he leaves some inward workings of his gracious spirit to quicken the soule to seek after him and also to support it in its affliction Christ stands at the doore and leaves Myrrhe behind him something in the heart that causeth a restlesse longing after Christ as appears by that which followeth this touch of his Spirit And my bowells were moved for him Some read the words thus My heart was affectioned toward him Master Ainsworth thus My bowells made a troubled noise or sounded within me Whereby is meant that all the inward affections and powers of the mind are moved with griefe and sorrow Now she is grieved and displeased with her selfe now she lamenteth her owne folly that she was so undutifull towards her beloved now her heart is againe wrapt with love of him now she will entertaine him Hereby is signified then all her disquietnesse and sorrow of heart for her beloved whom she had so neglected and put from her when he desired to come in Thus the Prophet declares his sorrow by saying My bowells my bowells I am pained at my very heart my heart maketh a noyse I cannot hold my peace Jer. 4. 19. And so God himselfe in pity of Ephraims calamity faith My bowels sounded or were troubled for him I will surely have mercy on him saith the Lord Jer. 31. 20. So here the Spouse by the sounding of her bowells sheweth the griefe and sorrow of her heart her mourning and languishing after her beloved Hence Observe First That the power of Christs Spirit makes a great change in those into whom it comes Behold here the power of the Spirit
what an alteration it makes in men how far it changeth them from that which they were before downe goeth the power of the flesh where it commeth An example of it you may see in the Apostles of Christ how weake and how fearfull were they at Christs sufferings but after the holy Ghost came downe upon them in the day of Pentecost of a company of weake and trembling Lambs they became so many mighty Lyons they feared not the whole world So it is with all Saints they be heavy and lumpish and dull when the flesh hath the stroke and beareth the sway every small impediment is a hinderance and ministreth some excuse to keep them back and the excuses seem also to be reasonable but when the touch of the holy Spirit commeth that Christ put in his hand at the hole of the doore then there is a quicknesse a life and moving then nothing can let but they will seeke Christ It is a wonderfull change and alteration that the Lord makes in man when he putteth downe the flesh and raigneth himselfe by the power of his Spirit We remaine dull slow fearfull weake and negligent because we rest in our owne power so much and in the power of the spirit so little Object But some will say Doth not Christ dwell alwayes in the hearts of his people How then is it said that Christ knocketh to have them open unto him and let him in and they make excuses to put him off Or how is it then that he toucheth them with his spirit now which they had before Answ We must note that there be degrees of the measure of the gifts of the Spirit The Apostles had the spirit before Christs ascension but not in that measure as afterward so also Christ dwelleth in all the Saints even in those that have the least sparke of true light but he knoketh to have them open the doors of their hearts wider and to receive him after a more full manner And thus we have the Psalmist saying Lift up your heads yee gates and be ye lift up yee everlasting dooes and the King of glory shall come in Psal 24. we must set our hearts wide open that Christ may come in and reigne over us and wholly sway us by the Scepter of his Spirit Secondly Observe That Christ never so deserts his Spouse but leaves something behind him which makes her sensible of his absence and restlesse in her desires after him Hence the Spouse is troubled in spirit sorrow and calamity presently fell upon her when she faith My bowells were moved for him That is my heart was affectioned towards him all my inward affections and powers of my mind were moved with griefe and sorrow I was restlesse in my spirit after him nothing in the world would content me but the injoyment of my beloved and communion with him whom once I enjoyed with unspeakable delight These and such like affections was the Spouse moved withall The Spouse is not only affected inwardly in her mind but she is also stirred up to seeke after her beloved as appears in the following verse VERS 4. I rose to open to my beloved and my hands dropped with Myrrhe and my fingers with sweet smelling Myrrhe upon the handles of the lock THe Spouse stayeth not in bare motions of the mind as many have some touch off but they vanish againe but she ariseth to open the doore unto her beloved it is not now grievous to her to put on her Coat and to put her feet into the dirt being quickned by the Spirit of Christ In this Verse we have First a gracious action of the Spouse she ariseth to open to her beloved Secondly the grace that followeth this action her fingers drop pure Myrrhe c. I rose up to open c. or I my selfe rose up She is no more negligent and sluggish but active and stirring to open to her beloved she acts now because she is acted by the Spirit of Christ Hence Observe That the Saints are very active for Christ when they act in the power of the Spirit It s like the Spouse had much stirring with flesh and blood before but she was never able to arise and open to her beloved till she moved in the strength of the Spirit of Christ Christ tells his Disciples The flesh is weake but the spirit is strong and willing Nothing but the power of the spirit can make us open our hearts wide for Christ the King of glory to come in In the next words she magnifieth the graces of her beloved saying And my hands dropped with Myrrhe and my fingers with sweet smelling Myrrhe upon the handles of the lock She could touch nothing with her hands nor lay her fingers upon nothing where he had put in his hand but all did drop with Myrrhe even with pure Myrrhe for her meaning is this that her beloved did but put in his hand and yet he had left even by his touch such abundance of sweet graces that wheresoever she toucheth her hands drop with the same My hands dropped Myrrhe or the Oyle of Myrrhe which distilleth out of the Myrrhe tree What Myrrhe is hath been shewed before in Chap. 1. 13. She meaneth that Christ left such a plentifull and pleasant smell behind him that even she comming after his departure had such abundance of it as if she had such store of Myrrhe as would have made her hands to drop And my fingers with sweet smelling Myrrhe or passing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Transivit myrrhe that is thin and pure myrrhe that is more fragrant and sweet by this passing or pure myrrhe is commended the excellency of Christs graces as that before the abundance of them This seemes to denote the sweet odour of her services that her longing and seeking after her beloved was acceptable with the Lord and of sweet smell in his nostrils for by her hands wee may understand her holy actions anointed with the oyle of myrrhe that is the spirit of Christ as the holy in the Sanctuarie was made of pure myrrhe which did presigure the same Exod. 30. 23. or wee may understand it of the grace of Christ which he left behinde him as a sweet odour to draw her to himselfe when he put in his hand at the hole of the doore which she is now sensible of Upon the handles of the lock that is those fleshly locks or barres which kept out Christ from entering which are now beaten downe by the power of the spirit and of those divine anointings of Christ her heart being anointed by Christ all those barres of opposition that the flesh with all its reason and wisedom are now beaten down and subdued so that Christ may freely enter and come in and take the whole command of all the affections of the soule and reigne as Lord and King this is the vertue and power of the Spirit Hence Observe First That the Spirit and its graces are very sweet and fragrant They are pleasant
and sweet and therefore compared here to myrrhe The graces and prayers of the Saints are said to be sweet as it is Revel 8. 4. Christ ming leth them with his owne sweet odours and so perfumes them before his Father The wicked are abhomination to the Lord because he abhorrs them their services and whatsoever in them is but the righteous man is his delight Prov. 15. 8. Christ will burne up sinne and consume all the drosse of his Saints and accept that which is sweet of his owne spirit in in them All the actions of the flesh are nothing but sinfull workes but the actions wrought by the hand of Christ the finger of God and power of Spirit these actions are sweet holy and gracious Secondly Observe That the sweetnesse of the Saints proceeds from Christs sweetnesse Christ first leaves myrrhe and the fingers of the Spouse drop myrrhe He was anointed with the Oyle of gladnesse above his fellows and out of the fulnesse of his divine annointings we receive grace for grace The head being anointed the oyle ranne downe to the skirts of Aarons garment wee have all from our head grace for his grace love for his love priviledge for his priviledge he is a sonne so are wee sonnes we are heires of heaven as he is heire of God all his dignities offices priviledges graces and preferrements are ours So that looke whatsoever grace or priviledge is in the head it descends downe to the Members who share with the head in every vertue so that all our graces are from his grace our life from his life our myrrhe from his myrrhe It followeth in the next verse VERS 5. I opened to my beloved but my beloved had withdrawne himselfe and was gone my soule failed when he spake I sought him but I could not finde him I called him but he gave me no answer HEre wee see the troubles and sorrows which befall the Spouse because of her former negligence and securitie Christ will not let her lye asleep on her bed of ease but will come to awaken her In the verse wee have First The action of the Spouse I opened to my beloved Secondly The discouragements of the Spouse and they are three First Christs leaving of her My beloved had withdrawne himselfe Secondly Her inward griefe and sorrow My soule failed c. Thirdly She had no answer notwithstanding all her seeking I sought him but he gave me no answer c. I opened or I my selfe opened to my beloved as before this noteth a further degree of grace in the Spouse that she did not only rise up but opened the doore giveth up the strength and power of heart and affections unto him willing that the everlasting King of glorie should come in and reigne there Hence Observe That gracious affections produce gracious actions Where there is the truth of affection it will discover it selfe in holy action after her affections were moved she presently openeth to her beloved The will minde and understanding guide the outward man therefore if these be touched and wrought upon it will quickly appeare in outward action as soone as her bowels were moved and that her fingers dropt myrrhe she shews the truth of her affection in opening unto and making after her beloved Thus much for the action of the Spouse her discouragements follow But my beloved had withdrawne himselfe Withdrawne or passed away to wit secretly and quietly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Transivit particularly also putting up the great injurie of refusall that shee had offered him passed by to wit the doores and so went away The doubling of the complaint for his departure sheweth her passion and griefe in that she thought he had been at the doore when she opened but now he was gone she could not enjoy his presence and favour as formerly she had to her unspeakeable comfort This is strange that he calleth and knocketh when she was asleep and lay in her bed and now when she is risen out of her bed and openeth the doore to let him in he withdraweth himselfe and will not be seene her unkinde dealing did deserve this Hence Observe That Christ doth sometimes withdraw himselfe from his Saints according to their sense and apprehension So God did withdraw from Christ when he cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me but yet at that time God was neere him and did uphold him by his power and so for the Saints such desertions as these proceed from love from him that doth withdraw himselfe he doth it of purpose for their good and that out of a singular love but seeing Christ doth alwayes dwell in the Saints how can it be said that he doth withdraw himselfe out of their sight especially when he hath made their hands to drop with myrrhe This is out of question that Christ is alwayes present in the souls of the faithfull and yet to their thinking and apprehension he seemeth to be absent He doth still support them by his power and spirit and yet they have not the lively and comfortable feeling of his presence which they desire and sometimes happily did enjoy Then the heart is troubled then they mourne then they seeke and call after him for shee saith My soule failed when he spake My soule went forth or it left me and was gone it failed and fainted within me I was as one without life even as one dead through feare and griefe The departure of the soule from the body is death she was now as it were in a swoone or halfe dead for the time Alas now shee is afraid that her unkinde dealing should cause him to forsake her Who is able to expresse the griefe and sorrow the godly soule hath when it seeketh to feele the consolation of Christ and he hideth his face True it is that the Spouse could not lament she could not open the doore seeking and calling after him unlesse he were present and did worke these things in her for all these things proceed from his grace but yet he doth seeme to be absent which makes her crye out my soule my strength my life my comfort is departed from me When he spake When he spake or while he was speaking or rather because of his Speech to me which I had neglected for however the Hebrew will beare both yet I thinke the latter most agreeable with the purpose of the Spouse which is to agravate her offence and also to shew the miseries that she fell into for so great neglect So the sence is My soule failed because of speech or for the words which he had used when he so lovingly called unto me as before in verse 2. saying Open unto me my sister my love my dove my undefiled for my head is full of dew c. Now when the Spirit had moved upon her heart and affections then she remembred the words of her beloved Hence Observe First That Christ's words makes after impressions in the hearts of the Saints though
the great Rabbies and Doctors of the world and no marvaile for God ordaineth strength out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings Psal 8. And he hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the things that are mighty and the base things of the world and things that are dispised hath God chosen yea and things which are not to bring to nought things that are That no flesh should glorie in his presence 1 Cor. 1. 27 28 29. No fleshly nor carnall man shall boast in Gods sight and therefore by his wisedome and power he will overturne the wisedome and power of flesh that his owne spirit wisedome power and righteousnesse might be exalted in his Saints Now followeth the thing it selfe given the charge If yee finde my beloved tell him that I am sick of love If yee finde my beloved which sheweth they had but little knowledge of Christ they had not the cleare manifestation of his love and favour they apprehended him but darkely being ignorant almost of him as appeares by their answer in the next verse Hence Observe That many Saints know but little of Christ Hence the Spouse saith here if ye finde him that is if you come to a more cleare knowledge and revelation of him many Christians know Christ after the flesh and after the letter but how few know him after the Spirit many know Christ as he is set forth in the historie of the Gospell to be crucified and risen but few know Christ found in them by the spirit It followeth Tell ye him that I am sick of love Tell ye him or as it is in the Hebrew What shall yee tell him interogatively which he speaketh shortly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Id est quid indicabilis ci as many times lovers doe and yet the interogation containeth more vehemency in it and serveth to beautifie the speech also It is an earnest and passionate kind of speech shewing her earnest affection after her beloved Would you know what you should tell him even that which followeth That I am sick of love She cannot conceale the heat and vehemencie of her love but even after the manner of lovers declareth the same who the more they be absent one of them from another the more their love increaseth and the more greatly doe they desire to be joyned together The truth is that the Spouse is so farre off from keeping closse her love towards her beloved that she doth not only reveale it to them but intreateth them rather freely to open it and declare the same especially to her beloved But what will yee tell him This demanding question sheweth that her love did so appeare that they must needs if they tell him any thing tell him That shee is sick of love The Greeke rendereth it wounded with love that is with languishing desires after him This is exceeding great love that she commeth to be love-sick as one ready to languish and faint away with love here 's a sicknesse but not unto death but unto life a sicknesse that still bringeth comfort and satisfaction with it a sicknesse that shall be cured with Christ the great Phisition Hence Observe First That true affections towards Christ will desire inenlargement from others The Spouse here desireth these daughters to tell Christ of her affection towards him to the end that Christ might more and more discover his love and favour unto her The Apostle desired that the Thessolonians would pray for him That he might be delivered from unreasonable men 1 Thess 3. 2. Secondly Observe That there is a distemper and unquietnesse in the affections of the Saints in the want of the full enjoyment of Christ There is no contentment without union and enjoyment and the more excellent the thing is that is loved the more contentment there is in communion with it and where it is hindred in the least degree or measure there is disquietnesse such as is the contentment in injoying such is the sorrow and sicknesse in parting The greatest happinesse of the Spouse was in the injoyment of her beloved and the greatest of her sorrow and sicknesse is in parting with him But now if the flesh had borne sway that would have reasoned after another way as thus I opened the doore and he withdrew himselfe and by that occasion I have suffered great calamitie therefore I have small cause to love him seeing he doth hide himselfe from me and cause me to be thus stricken and wounded why should I set my heart upon him The flesh I say would minister such kinde of reasons but the Saints are not led by the flesh and its wisdome but by the Spirit which teacheth them the more they suffer for Christ the more to love him This is a thing beyond the reach of humane reason the Spouse having fallen into so great affliction by seeking after her head Christ is thereupon sick of love The Saints rejoyce in tribulation and count it their honour to suffer for Christ and the more they suffer in his name he doth so strengthen them and worke in them by the Spirit that the more they love him Thus having heard what the Spouse saith to the daughters of Jerusalem let us now see what answer they doe make VERS 8. 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 charge us THe same words of well-beloved are repeated againe and againe to shew that the stronger is love But by the answer of the daughters of Jerusalem in which they seemed not yet to know Christ fully as is apparent by their answer for instead of giving satisfaction to her they reply with asking new questions saying What is thy beloved more then another beloved c. In this answer here are two parts First A sweet and loving compellation O thou fairest among women Secondly The question is doubled What is thy beloved more then another beloved And againe What is thy beloved c. that thou dost so charge us As if these Daughters had sayd there is some great matter in it there is some excellency superhumane that thou layest such a charge upon us that thou dost so enquire after him But first of the compellation O thou fairest among women The Spouse is the fairest among women in the judgement of Christ himselfe so he cals her O thou fairest among women Cant. 1. 8. And here the fellow-Members of the Church terme her so too faire and the fairest yea incomparable faire Hence Observe That the Spouse is surpassing faire and beautifull not only in the eyes of Christ but also in the judgement of her own members and that in the time of her greatest perplexities and sorrows Here the Spouse though persecuted and abused by wicked watchmen who beate her wounded her and tooke away her vaile from her is not withstanding discerned and acknowledged to be faire and glorious by such as are the faithfull of Jesus Christ Thus
into the depth of Gods secrets and counsells Hence Note That Christs eyes are pure cleare and comely His eyes are as a flame of fire Revel 1. 14. And as Lamps of fire Dan. 10. 6. That is his eyes are bright lightsome and piercing implying his omniscience whereby he is able to disperse all the darke clouds of sin and ignorance to cleare and enlighten all his Saints and he is able to pry into all the corners of mens hearts and discry the privie plots and contrivances of all his adversaries as in Jer. 16. 17. Prov. 15. 11. Job 34. 21 22. Heb. 4. 12. 13. And his eyes are not full of light but full of purity and cleannesse like Doves he is of more pure eyes then to behold iniquity Habuk. 1. 13. His eyes are also full of grace and mercy tendernesse and pity yea full of commiseration to all his Saints his eyes are alwayes upon them for good as in Deut. 11. 12. Psal 34. 15. The Spouse passeth from the commendations of his Eyes to his Cheeks VERS 12. His Cheeks are as a bed of spices as sweet flowers his Lips like Lillies dropping sweet smelling Myrrhe IN this Verse we have two parts commended 1. His Cheeks 2. His Lips His Cheeks are a bed of spices as sweet flowers Cheeks are the grace and beauty of the face they are here used to denote Christs presence and heavenly countenance which is sweet as spices and flowers The Cheeks are set forth by a double comparison 1. They are likened to a bed of Spice meaning a Garden bed wherein spice aromaticall is set The comedinesse of his Cheeks is set forth in the word Bed and the sweetnesse of them in the word Spice for beds set out Gardens and Spices we know smell well and are very fragrant She addeth And sweet flowers Sweet flowers or Growne plants so named of being growne great The word also may be Translated Towers which have their names of greatnesse If we should Expound the words then after the usuall signification we should say As the Towers of those which make sweet Ointments but we may more fitly take them to be growne Plants of those that deale with spices and sweet Ointments seing the proper signification of the word is of greatnesse By these Cheeks the comelinesse and grace of Christ is set forth Hence Observe That Christ is full of grace and comelinesse to all that behold him His Cheeks which is the grace of the face is for comelinesse like a Bed and for sweetnesse like Spice and Growne plants Christs comelinesse and gravity shines forth to all that behold him all his graces are sweet and his fight and countenance hath a transforming vertue it makes those that behold him to be like unto him while others behold his glory they are transformed into the same image of his glory from glory to glory by the spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 18. Thus much for the commendations of his Cheeks that of his Lips followeth His Lips are like Lillies dropping sweet smelling Myrrhe The Lillies are very glorious beautifull and faire to behold for that flower amongst others is of a goodly colour and faire to look upon This flower is commended in many places of this Song as whereunto the Spouse her selfe is compared in respect of her beauty Chap. 2. 2. And in the same Chapter vers 16. it 's attributed to Christ also See Chap. 4. 5. This flower is not onely beautifull but of a pleasant smell and of good and tall growth all which tendeth still to the expressing of the glory and beauty of Christ and to the sweet and pleasant smells that are to be found in him Now the Lillies are fragrant and sweet of themselves yet she addeth They drop pure Myrrhe Pure or passing Myrrhe such as will passe and is vendible among Merchants as in Vers 5. it 's meant the Ode of Myrrhe which is the sweetest of all Now the Lips here compared to Lillies and sweet Myrrhe we know are the instrument of speech and therefore this is to be referred unto the holy heavenly sweet and gracious doctrine of Christ Honey and Myrrhe that is grace love goodnesse and mercy did flow out of Christs mouth In this respect the Spouse said before that her lips did drop as the Honey-comb and now she saith that his lips doe drop pure Myrrhe Hence Observe That the gracious holy and heavenly doctrines that proceed from Christ are very sweet and savory The words which Christ spake when he was in the flesh are said to be gracious words Luke 4. 22. And in Psal 45. 3. Grace was powred out of his lips The sweetnesse of his words are here set out by the similitude of the pleasant Lillie and the sweet Oile of Myrrhe Such is the sweetnesse of the Gospell in the hearts of believers The word of God is full of sweetnesse and all manner of delight it rejoyceth the heart as the Prophet saith Psal 19. 6. spreading abroad the savour thereof even far and neer after the manner of the pleasant Lillies and most precious pure and sweet Myrrhe Christ saith That out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Now Christs heart being a treasure of good things the dropping of his lips must needs be sweet that utter and spread abroad those good things Christ speaks from the excellency of his Spirit and from hearty affections dyed in love his lips then must needs drop sweetnesse they must needs have a pleasant tast It followeth VERS 13. His Hands are as Gold Rings set with the Berrill his Belly is as bright Ivory overlaid with Saphires AS the Lips are the instruments of speech so are the hands for action Christ was not onely mighty in words but also in deeds before God and all the people Luke 24. 19. Therefore it is that Christs hands are likened to Gold rings or that his hands were adorned with Gold rings Now Rings were counted pretious in those dayes they were great Ornaments and deckings Isa 3. 21. Luke 15. 22. Neither doth she say simple rings but rings of Gold that is glorious and precious shining like gold And to expresse the glory of it more she addeth Set with the Berrill The Hebrew word Tharshish is a pretious stone spoken of Exod. 28. 20. It is something uncertaine what stone it was and therefore some render it by the word Chrisolite others turne it Berrill of the Sea The Chrisolite is reported of some to be a very rich precious stone that comes out of Ethiopia glistering as gold and that 't is of Sea-green colour The Berrill is reported to be another stone that groweth in India it selfe being as they suppose an Indian word and given by the people as a name to that stone Some write that this stone in former times was usually set in such Rings as Lovers did use to give one to another or in Marriage Rings because of the power that was thought to be in it to procure and continue love one
that glorious description which the Spouse made unto her of her beloved hath given her to understand what he is We see these Daughters are better instructed now they know what Christ is and therefore desire to know where he is that they may be joyned to him and enjoy his presence and communion now from this further degree of desires in the Daughters Observe That where there are the least desires after Christ in the soule those small desires are increased by Christ Here we see there was a growth of desire in the Daughters of Jerusalem they have ceased to aske what Christ is and enquire where Christ is where they may finde him where they may injoy his presence Christ will cherish the least desires or breathings in the soul after him He will not breake the bruised Reed though never so weake neither will he quench the smoaking flax but will rather encrease it into a flame untill he hath brought judgement unto victory That is untill the blindnesse and enmity of the carnall mind be wholly brought under There is nothing lesse then grace at the first the Kingdome of Heaven is compared to a graine of Mustard seed that is as well the work of grace in the soul as the word of grace in the Gospell is small and contemptible Here those breathings and desires in the Daughters after Christ at the first were like a graine of Mustard seed when they enquire what is thy beloved But now these sparks are turned into flames when she saith Whither is thy beloved gone Againe Whither is thy beloved gone O thou fairest among women From this appellation Observe That if we would be instruments of good to others we should shew forth our selves to be holy and gracious O thou fairest among women The Daughters had a good conceit of the Spouse and thought her to be gracious and holy and therefore her speech took the more with them The Daughters double the question Whither is thy beloved gone Whither is thy beloved turned aside As the Spouse before doubled her description This is my beloved and this is my friend Hence Observe That those that kindle others must be enflamed in their owne hearts Those that speak with experience and confidence doe often make impressions upon the hearers The Apostle John in the beginning of his Epistle to perswade others to imbrace his doctrine he affirmeth That which was from the beginning which we have heard which we have seene with our eyes which we have looked upon and our hands have handled of the word of life he delivered to them That which comes from the heart often goeth to the heart and that which comes from the affections many times reacheth the affections The Apostle Peter saith We followed not deceiveable fables when we preached unto you the power and comming of our Lord Jesus Christ but with our eyes we saw his majesty 1 Pet. 1. 16. O beloved It is an excellent thing to speake of the excellency of Christ from knowledge and experience and this many Christians can doe but the watchmen before-mentioned Chap. 3. 3. 5. 7. had no such knowledge or experience but in them the saying was fulfilled The Pastors are become bruitish and have not sought the Lord they shall not prosper Jer. 10. 21. Lastly in that she saith Whither is thy beloved turned aside that we may seeke him with thee Towit with thee his Spouse Hence Observe That the right way to seeke Christ and the onely way to find him is to seeke him with his Saints Here the Daughters enquire for Christ of the Spouse and to seek him with her for so it is said That we may seeke him with thee We doe not know how God hath appointed us though weake instruments yet as profitable means to further one another in the knowledge of Christ When the two Disciples went to Emaus they talking together of Christ it came to passe that as they communed together Jesus himselfe drew nigh and went with them Luke 24. 13. Though their eyes were holden for a time that they could not know him yet after further communication he lodged with them and sitting at the Table at length caused their eyes to be open and he manifested himselfe unto them And so it is in this place on a suddaine it is revealed to the Spouse where he is whom she seeketh Thus much for the question propounded by the Daughters of Jerusalem Now the resolution of the Spouse followeth in the next words VERS 17. My beloved is gone downe into his Garden to the bed of spices to feed in the Gardens and to gather Lillies THe question in the former verse was not slightly propounded by the Daughters neither was it a bare desire of satisfaction but from strong affections of seeking Christ So the Spouse here doth not returne any slight answer she is not wanting but directly answers to the question for there is no envy in spirituall things because all may share alike therefore she giveth a punctuall answer saying My beloved is gone into his Garden to the bed of Spices c. In the answer of the Spouse observe two things First a declaration whither Christ is gone where he is to be sought and found My beloved is gone into his Garden to the bed of spices Secondly the end of his going downe is also declared and that is To feed in the Gardens and to gather Lillies My beloved is gone downe into his Garden c. The Garden of Christ is his Church as in Chap. 4. 16. 5. 1. The Catholique Church is his Garden and the particular Churches are his Gardens and beds of spices where companies of believers grow in whose hearts are sowne the precious seed of the spirit which the Apostle John calls The seed of God So the Saints become as a bed of spices in the Garden comely and sweet smelling in whom Christs soul delights as in sweet spices Now the Spouse comes to know that Christ is in her he was there present all the time of her seeking but she perceived him not but now he was manifest to her Hence Observe That Christ is never absent from his Saints though they cannot sometimes discerne his presence Christ was with his Spouse when she fainted for want of his presence when she was sick of love and when she made such a diligent search and enquiry after him but she discerned him not all that while but now he manifesteth himselfe unto her so that now she hath a plaine discovery of him when she saith My beloved is gone into his Garden to the bed of spices c. Christ is neer his Spouse as well when she hath not as when she hath the manifestation of his presence God was never neerer Christ upholding him by his divine power then when he cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me So the Lord is neare yea in the middest of his people afflicting strengthning and supporting them when they have little or no sight or
Chariots that is yeilded me good and sure meanes to be carryed and borne up The peoples conversion unto Christ is called a bringing of them Vpon horses and Chariots for an offering unto the Lord Isa 66. 20. So that Christ is as Chariots to his people to help and sustaine them by his Spirit Chariots were used in warres Joshua 11. 4. and when God threatneth venegeance unto the wicked he saith he will come with his Chariots like a whrile-wind to render his anger c. And the Propets of old were called the horsemen and Chariots of Israel 2 King 2. 12. All which notes that they were for strength and support by these Christ is here said to carrie sustaine and succour his people Neither doth this only note the meanes of Christs comming to help his Spouse but in the following words the speed that he made The Chariots of Amminadab The Hebrew Amminadab signifieth my willing people or my princely and noble people that is As they that be my bounteous noble and free hearted people do the things that they doe cheerefully and therefore with the more expedition and speed then others so I came cheerefully and with a ready mind after I had once resolved upon the matter to see and comfort my Spouse Thus Christs people are said to be a willing people in the day of his power Psal 110. 3. that is they are sustained with a free or princely spirit The verse being opened let us observe hence First That Christ absenteth himselfe from his Spouse no longer then it shall be for her good For here he saith When I perceived not those things to wit the Vines to flourish c. My soule set me c. I was restlesse untill I came to visit my Spouse It is with Christ as it was with Joseph who though he refrained for a while from his Brethren yet he could not long conceale but he must disclose himself unto them so though Christ doth somtime seem to withdraw from his people for a while and that for their good yet he absents himself no longer then needs he must and after returnes with lager manifestations of his love and favour then before he shewed Secondly Observe When Christ comes to raise his people out of a low and darke condition he comes with power strength and speed My soule made me like the Chariots c. Chariots are for strength and speed Christ comes to comfort and support as with Chariots Thirdly Christs people are a bounteous noble willing and free hearted people These are they that follow the Lamb and serve the Lord freely and willingly and not of necessitie and constraint so it s said of Christs Subjects in Psal 110. 3. his people shal be willing in the day of his power then there needs no coaction or compulsion used to draw them to the obedience of Christ but they are drawne by the Scepter of his Spirit swaying their hearts by the sweet drawing of his Spirit and grace It followeth as before Christ had declared his purpose and resolution of his returning to the Church to comfort her and support her so now he sheweth what he spake when he came to her in the next verse VERS 10. Returne returne O Shulamite returne returne that wee may looke upon thee what will yee seem the Shulamite as it were the company of two Armies IN the former verse Christ declared his earnest affection and willingnesse to visit and comfort his people which thing is made more manifest here in this verse by the description he maketh of his recalling her and of the effects following Christs recalling of the Spouse is declared 1. By the manner 2. By the matter In the manner we may note First The earnest affections of Christ in that he doubleth his expression saying returne returne c. and this doubled twice to shew the earnestnesse and certainty of his desire Secondly By the Epithite Christ is pleased to give his Spouse calling her Shulamite which is from her peace and perfection As for the matter it is that the Spouse should returne to her former feeling and comfort in Christ and this is declared by the end to wit That we may look upon thee that Christ his friends may behold the beautie and glorie of the Spouse Lastly The effect of all is this that Christ and his friends doe admire her glorie which admiration is expressed by a question and an answer The Question is What shall wee see in the Shulamite The answer is as it were the company of two Armies Returne returne c. These are the words of Christ unto his Spouse who in seeking of him had as one would say gone beyond him And this calling of her back againe is expressed unto us under the similitude of an earthly man who as it were a farre off calleth and shouteth even as loud as he can by words and speech to bring back such as wander out of the right way hereby is signified the earnestnesse of Christ to call home his Spouse unto himselfe Hence Observe First That Christs voice is an effectuall meanes to convert us unto himselfe Christs voice speakes spirit and life to the hearers for his words are spirit and life And therefore Christ himselfe saith in Joh. 5. 25 28. That the houre was comming and then was when the dead shall heare the voice of the Sonne of God and they that heare shall live and they that are in the graves of sin ignorance earth and flesh shall heare his voice and come forth c. Secondly Observe When Christ calls any by his voice to returne unto him he cals earnestly and effectually When Christ commeth and calleth at the doores of our hearts he will take no deniall he will not be put off with any delayes or denials whatsoever but makes his voice to be heard and cals aloud untill we heare and returne unto him Here he doth as it were double and treble his speech by repeating the word returne foure times Now followeth the title he giveth the Spouse O. Shulamite Under this title he declareth the peace and perfection of the Spouse as Solomon which in Hebrew Shelomoh had his name of peace because he was a figure of Christ the Prince of peace and Jerusalem was also called Shalem or Salem Psal 76. 3. which signifieth peace Heb. 7. 2. So here the Spouse called upon to returne is named shulamite or Shulamitesse of her peace with God in Christ Now because this hath some reference to Jerusalem some doe apply this to the calling of the Jews as it 's foretold Rom. 11. 25. But wee may apply it to the new Jerusalem the generall assembly and Church of the first borne And then it notes the peace and perfections of the Spouse Hence observe That the Saints are perfect in peace and union with Christ Christ hath raised his Saints by the lively quickning voice of his spirit and hath made them sit together with himselfe in heavenly places Ephes 3. 6. And the
fire with love towards him even with a hot burning love this flame is the flame of God because it is kindled in the heart of a Saint by the Spirit These flames of God these divine and vehement flames being kindled by the Spirit cannot be quenched with earthly things as it is declared in the next verse VERS 7. Many waters cannot quench love neither can the flouds drowne it if a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned THe Spouse proceedeth in setting forth the earnestnesse of her affections towards Christ shewing that since her love was as a mighty and excellent fire within it could not be put out no not with many afflictions troubles and persecutions Many waters cannnot quench love c. By waters and floods is usually meant in Scripture of afflictions persecutions troubles and tentation which accompany the Saints and also of persecutors themselves who are often called waters and floods of water as appeares in Psal 69. 1. Also Rev. 17. 15. Psal 124. 4 5. And Matth. 7. 25. 27. Isa 8. 7 8. Dan. 9. 26. So here is signified that the Love of Christ wherewith the Saints are inflamed is such as cannot be quenched with any calamities or persecutions whatsoever Hene Observe That the love of the Saints towards Christ is an invincible love As it is written of Christ love that nothing can separate his people from it so here the Spouse affirmeth that her love towards him cannot be put out wee may observe the frame of the Spouses speech according to her former cocmparison when she said The coales thereof are coales and the fire of the flame of God for what fire is there but many waters will quench at least if floods of waters doe overflow it but this heavenly fire cannot be quenched the floods cannot put it out The Dragon doth cast a flood out of his mouth Revel 12. but all in vaine for his love cannot be quenched So the Apostle teacheth when he saith Who shall separate us from the love of Christ shall tribulation anguish persecution famine nakednesse perill the sword as it is written for thy sake are wee killed all the day long wee are counted as sheepe for the slaughter neverthelesse in all these things wee are more then conquerours through him that loved us Rom. 8. 35. There is one clause to come wherein she saith If a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would be utterly contemned If a man would give all his substance as silver gold all wealth and riches it could not purchase this love neither could the love of these winne the heart of the Spouse from Christ for she affirmeth here that if all treasures should be offered her to draw her love from Christ she would utterly contemne them So that if any man did thinke either to buy this love of her or to get it from her it were nothing it were but labour lost and therefore she addeth It would utterly be contemned or as it is in the Hebrew In contemning they would contemne it that is they would certainly contemne it or it would be altogether wholly contemned for this is the manner of the Hebrew tongue when they highly promise to double and when they highly dispraise to double the word also See chap. 1. vers 1. In summe she meaneth by this verse namely to declare that her love was so firme and fast to Christ that it could not be be rent or pulled from her to any other either by any force or by fraud nor by flatterie or faire promises Hence Observe That worldly riches cannot purchase divine love nor get it away from those that have it All the treasures and pleasures and credit which the substance of any mans house may procure shall be of no reckoning either to get or purchase the love of Christ or to withhold the Saints from loving him The Spouse doth so set her heart upon Christ that she desires to be neere him in his heart upon his arme yea she doth so desire him that she contemneth all other things in comparison of him for what is the glorie and the pompe the riches and honours and the pleasures of the world unto her more then vile drosse in comparison of Christ The nature of man is much addicted to love riches and the treasures of this world yet there is not any thing of such force to winne the heart from Christ but the Spouse here affirmeth that if all treasures should be offered her to draw her love from Christ she would utterly contemne them And as the Saints cannot be drawne off from the love of Christ by any worldly good so no earthly treasure can get on purchase this love for the gifts of the Spirit cannot be bought with money it being the free gift of God who bestows at his owne pleasure Act. 8. 18 19 20. And so it 's said of wisdome that it cannot be gotten for gold neither shall silver be weighed for its price Job 28. 15. Now a little to recapitulate How excellent is this divine love which carries such an excellent description and denomination with it As first That it s as strong as death which overcommeth all Secondly That it's jealousie which is love inflamed and therefore cruell as the grave the bed of darkenesse which is called Sheal because it allwayes craveth and is never satisfied but it devoureth all Thirdly It s hot as the fire which not only withstandeth but also burneth all things which stand against it Fourthly It s everlasting and victorious in all labours and sufferings that no troubles terrours nor persecutions can quench it though whole floods of water were cast upon it Fifthly It is so precious that no commodities or pleasures can answer or countervaile the value and estimation of it VERS 8 9 10 11 12 13 14. Wee have a little Sister and she hath no Breasts what shall wee do for our Sister in the day when she shall be spoken for If shee be a wall wee will build upon her a Pallace of silver and if she be a doore wee will inclose her with boards of Cedar I am a wall and my Breasts like Towers then was I in his eyes as one that found favour Solomon had a Vinyard at Baal-hamon and let out the Vineyard unto keepers every one for the fruit thereof was to bring a thousand pieces of silver My Vineyard which is mine is before me thou O Solomon must have a thousand and those that keep the fruit thereof two hundred Thou that dwellest in the gardens the companions hearken to thy voice cause me to heare it Make hast my beloved and be thou like to a Roe or to a young Hart upon the mountains of spices WEE are come to the conclusion and shutting up of this Song Here be three speciall things to be handled in the close of all As First Here is a motion a consultation or demand of the old Church of the Jewes
under a cloud of ignorance 392. Christ's approachings expell the ignorance upon the Saints 393 Impediment No impediment can hinder Christs approaching neere his Church 326 327. Neither the Saints seeking Christ 403. Invite Christ invites his people to partake of his good things 342. Joy Mans reconciliation with God is matter of great joy 7. Christs approaches to his people is matter of great joy 324. Christ revealing himselfe to his Saints causeth in them unspeakeable joy 76. Christ espousing himselfe to his Saints is matter of great joy 444. The Gospel fils mens hearts with joy 351. Injoy The Saints desire alway to injoy Christs goodnesse K. Kingdome the Kingdom of Christ illustrated in five particulars 66 67. 68 The Knowledge of Christ makes men seeke after him 620. L Lawes fy the observation of Christs laws the Saints are 1. Beautifull 181. 2. Victorious 182. Lilies Christ and Saints like lilies 268 Love The love of God in Christ is manifold 31 32 33. Chists love to Saints is 1. Drawing love 24. 2. Gospel love 25. 3. Pleasant 33 34. 4. Peculiar 171 172 173 339. 5. Everlasting 227. 935. 6. Increasing 288. 7. Overcomming 301. 8. Magnificent 635. The Churches love to Christ is 1. A memoriall love 77 78. 2. Increasing love 80. 3. Collective 126. 4. Ardent 127. 301. 5. Returned love 212. 6. Beautifull 489. 7. Invincible 745 746. 8. Of jealousie and fire kindled by the spirit of love 743 744. The love of a Saint is caused 1. By a principle of love 29 439. 2. By the sweetnesse of Christ graces 47 48. 3. By Christs love 291. 708. 4. By the manifest at ion of Christ to the soule 714. Lovely Christ is all lovelie 616. M Members The Spouse is glorious in her members 677. The Church doth nourish her owne members 416. Manifest Christ doth manifest himselfe to his people upon their desires 529. 2. With delight 530. 3. by degrees 333 334. Mutuall Christ and the Saints have mutuall interest with each other 1. In union foure wayes 379 380. 2. In communion foure ways 381. Mysteries Christ revealeth hidden mysteries by the Gospel to the Saints 69 70. N. Negligent To be negligent in the things of God is a great evill 120 O. Oyntment Christs name spirit and grace powred forth in the Gospel is compared to oyntment in five particulars 40 41 42 45 46. Ordinances Gospel Ordinances more glorious then those of the Law 190 191 192 193. P. Parentage The Saint are rich and glorious in their parentage 651. 675 Particular The Saints apply the benefits of Christ to themselves in particular 213. Patience Christ exerciseth abundance of patience towards his people 554. Persecute False Brethren persecute the Church with great indignation 115 116. Pretences the Spouse put off Christ with false pretences 556 557. Presence Christs presence with his people is 1. Powerfull 614. 712. 2. Comfortable 655 702. 3. Desireable 524. 4. Everlasting 563. 5. Not long vailed 625. 6. He is present when seemingly absent 571. Publish The Office of the Church is to publish Christ 768. Proprietie Saints have proprietie in Christ foure wayes 383 Christ hath proprietie in saints foure wayes 384 385. Pure Such only as love Christ are pure 49 50. Pruned The Church needs sometimes to be pruned 700. It is Christ alone can prune his Church 701. Principle Saints are drawne to Christ by a principle of love 29. 400 Professe Many professe Christ that know little of him 590. Q Qualified Christ is fitly qualified for the adminstration of his Church 601. R. Rose Christs excellency set forth by a rose in six particulars 259 260 261 262 263. Repose Christ doth repose himselfe with his Saints 428. Race The life of a Christian is the running of a race illustrated in six particulars 61 62 63. Raise Christians should not raise Christ untill he please 730. Christ doth raise up himself in his Saints 735. Refreshed Christ is refreshed in his Saints 721 Redemption The fruits of redemption are very delightfull to the Saints 219. Righteous Righteous men are only fit to mention Christs love 79. Related Christ stands related to his people 1. As a Brother 476. 2. As a Sister 477. Those neerest related to the Spouse persecute her 113. Saints are neerely related one to another 150. S. Saints are satisfied with all good things in Christ 284 285. Saints are satisfied in the armes of Christ 729. Christ doth satisfie his people with plenty 534. Saints Saints behold the excellency of Christ 442. Saints are serious in the things of Christ 309. There remaineth corruption in Saints 341. Saints make their approaches to God through Christ 365. The sacrifice of Saints is acceptable 425 Saints must looke to their guard 432. Saints are Christs Chariot 434. Saints should seeke Christ toge 〈…〉 622 623. Saints are neerely related one to another 750. Saints have flesh as well as Spirit 544. Sense Christ is not alwayes present with his people according to sense 400 568. secure The Saints are most secure in Christ 70 71. 429 430. Shadow Christ is a shadow of protection to his people 282. The Saints are much delighted with Chrsts shadow 282. 283. Shepheard Christ is a most compleat Shepheard 129 130. scriptures The Scriptures are a perfect rule of life 164 165. The Scriptures cannot be understood but by the spirit 166 167. Sinne. Sin darkens a Saints 91. The sense of sinne causeth soul-sicknesse 299 300. Spouse The Church is Christs Spouse 477. The Spouse is sometimes in a languor of Spirit 542. Christ preferreth his Spouse above all the world 649. Spirit The Spirit compared to wind in six things 521. Saints have the Spirit of Christ 1 To blow upon them 520. 2. To operate in them 286. 3. To put life into them 523. 4. To enlighten them 441. 5. To spiritualise them 545. 6. To give them divine impression upon their hearts 560. 7. To change their nature 561. 8. To make them active 561. The Spouse is not alwayes in one frame of Spirit 542. She hath flesh as well as Spirit 544. Solomon Solomon a glorious type 13. Solomon a glorious Saint 14 15. Sweet Christ is very sweeet 1. In his communications 288. 2. In his pastures and feeding 386. 3. In his Ministrie 215. 4. In his graces 203. 552. 5. In his dispensations 210 211. 6. In his Spirit 565. Sweetnesse Christs sweetnesse is 1. Sensible only to Saints 222 2. Displayed in the Gospel 49. 3. Of a drawing nature 68. 4. The cause of the sweetnesse in saints 566. The Spouse is sweetnesse 1. In her annointings 491. 2. In her perises and prayers 493. 3. She is a garden of sweetnesse 716. 511. 4. she doth entertaine Christ with all sweetnesse 716. Seeke Saints seeke Christ 1. Through all impediments 403. 2. Diligently 406. 3. Constantly 408 409. Sorrow Christ is brought forth in the Saints with much sorrow 736 737. T. Truth Saints discerne what is Truth 686. Truth is the Pillar of the Church 436. Teachers It is
to gather his myrrhe with his spices that by his divine influence your soule may be filled with all the aromaticall fruits of the Spirit And lastly that you would cast down your Crown and glory at the feet of Christ who will be the glory of your Crowne here and your Crowne of eternall glorie hereafter This is Sir the hearty desire of him who is Your Obliged Servant John Robotham AN EXPOSITION Of the Song of SOLOMON Called Canticles CHAP. 1. VERS 1. A song of songs which is Solomons THIS Song of Solomon is not unfitly compared and called after the most holy place of the Temple which he built for this song of songs or most excellent song resembleth the Holy of Holies or the most holy place The occasion of this Song was Solomon's marriage with Pharaoh's Daughter who was a stranger by birth from the Common-wealth of Israel yet shee became a Proselyte to the Jewish religion as you may see in Psal 45. 10. Hearken O daughter and consider and incline thine eare forget also thine own people thy Fathers house By daughter here is meant the Queen mentioned in vers 9. which did figure out the Church or the heavenly Jerusalem the Lambs wife Rev. 21. 9 10. So that herein Solomon was a type of Christ admitting the Gentiles into communion and fellowship with himselfe Now it was the manner of old at Espousalls and Nuptials to sing Epithalamia love-songs or songs of betrothings this is then without all controversie a song between a Bridegroom a Bride wherein divers persons are brought in uttering their parts in it but especially two which are Lovers betrothed each unto the other True it is that the Bridegroome and this Bride are not named by any proper names in all this song but it is most cleare and evident who they be by those excellent descriptions which are made of them For the Bridegroom is described to be a King of that transcendent and most excellent shining glory majesty which none hath attained unto but Jesus Christ the Son of the most high God and the Bride is described by such rare beauty and glory which farre surmounteth all the glory of the world and cannot belong to any but to the Bride the Lambs Wife mentioned Revel 19. 7. Again how ridiculous and absurd would it be for any to think that this song was penned by Solomon to expresse his owne affections to Pharaoh's daughter or hers to him in respect of those strange comparisons liking the Spouse to a company of horses in Pharaoh's Chariot her bed to Carmel her eyes to Fish-pooles her nose to the tower of Lebanon her teeth to a flocke of sheep and the like this song therefore ascendeth farre above all earthly respects of worldly marriage being a declaration of the blessed and sweet conjunction between Christ and his Church and of that contract and espousals made between them whilst the Church is here on earth It was the ancient manner that the parties intending marriage were betrothed and after some distance of time the marriage was solemnized Between the time of their betrothing and of their solemnizing the marriage tokens of love and favour did use to passe between them but when they are married the Wife is received into the nearest society of her Husband and becomes a partaker with him of all his riches and possessions his glory and dignities Thus it is with the Lord Jesus he hath betrothed himselfe to his Spouse here on earth and at last the marriage shall be solemnized Revel 19. 7. So that all those riches and dignities the Church now receives in the promise then shee shall have the fruition of them We may further take notice that it is not unusual in Scripture for Christ to be called the Bridegroom and the Church the Bride as in Isa 62. 5. As the Bridegroom rejoyceth over the Bride so shall thy God rejoyce over thee And again in Hos 2. 19. I will marry thee unto me for ever yea I will marry thee unto me in righteousnesse c. And also in 2 Cor. 11. 2. I have prepared you for one husband to present you as a pure virgin to Christ saith the Apostle Wee have it from Christs owne mouth in John 3. 29. Hee that hath the Bride is the Bridegroom but the friend of the Bridegroom which standeth and heareth him rejoyceth greatly because of the Bridegrooms voyce By these Scriptures it is plain that Christ useth this similitude of marriage to expresse his love to his Church In this song here be divers persons brought in uttering their parts sometime speaking and sometime spoken to and also the Bride makes mention sometimes of her mother and of her little sister It was the manner of old that the Bridegroom had young men to be his companions or friends such are Angels and Saints unto Christ such were the Prophets and Apostles John Baptist was termed of himselfe to be one of Christs friends Also the Bride had Virgins to be her companions these are called in this song the daughters of Jerusalem And touching the mother and sister of the Bride they are both meant the Church of Christ for it is the manner in the Hebrew tongue to call the whole the Mother and the parts thereof the Daughters and Sisters now there is but one universal Church and therefore called the Brides mother but the Church is never whole in the world at one time and in Solomons dayes consisting of the Jewes only the Church of the Gentiles which was not then in being is called her little sister Now the carriage of this song is such that it doth as well recite the most dismall and saddest passages of the Church as those that are good and comfortable yet lest any thing might darken this marriage song the saddest passages in it are made sweet by some amiable resemblance The Church sometimes most of all desires a neare communion with Christ at other times shee declines in her affection againe after this shee recovers Yet again she declines in her affections till at last Christ draws her nearer in affection to himselfe by discovering his own love to her Now in these intervails and changes which the Church went through she met with much trouble and affliction which is declared in this song together with the joy and comfort shee found in the enjoyment of her beloved Before wee come to open this song something must be said concerning the title which standeth as a glorious Eulogie or praise to the whole ensuing Book which is contained in the first Vers VERS I. The song of songs which is Solomons IN the Title observe 1. The matter or rather the form of the Book it is a song 2. The transcendency of it A song of songs 3. The Author of it which is Solomons The song of songs c. Songs and Psalms are for the most part arguments of joy and rejoycing in them that sing as in Jam. 5. 13. Is any merry let him sing Psalms So
they seeme to be lost at the first Christs words are that immortall seed that will never dye but live and grow and be effectuall This word will be effectuall through the Spirit Christ spake many things to his Disciples which they forgot but when the Spirit that comforter was come it brought those things to their remembrance againe John 14. 26. The seed that is sowne in the Saints perhaps will not grow up presently but it shall afterwards grow and revive againe as the Corne. Secondly Observe That Christ is so much withdrawne in the soules apprehension that it even failes because of his absence So it was with the Church in Lam. 3. 1. Thus it was often with David The soule that is spirituall will be in a swoone and deliquium upon Christs withdrawing if God looke with an angrie countenance upon the soule it causeth the Spirits to faile If any any one hath a friend on whom he had much dependance to see his countenance withdrawne and not to shew his face as before it will daunt and dismay such a one much more will the soule be dismayed when Christ shall withdraw his pleasant face It followeth I sought him but I could not finde him I called him but he gave me no answer Now the Spouse is in great perplexity and distresse of minde because of her former negligence in that she refused to open to her beloved when he knocked for entrance This is one of the greatest temptations that God seemeth not to heare the prayers of his people when he shutteth out their prayer as it is Lam. 3. 8. But the Spouse here receiveth like for like of Christ because she would not hearken she also calleth and hath no answer But this seems to contradict other Scriptures which promise that those that seeke shall finde It is true they that seeke shall finde but not presently but by degrees nay in some sort he is found before he is sought for he is in the soule to stirre up desires of seeking him he breathes in desires into us and answers us before we pray when he prepares the heart and heares the prayer as the Psalmist speaketh therefore it is a spirituall deceit when wee thinke Christ is not in us and we are neglected of him when he breathes in desires after him into our soules Hence Observe That when the soule earnestly breathes and seekes after Christ and seemeth not to finde him yet Christ is in that soule Christ did not enter so fully into his Spouse at once that she doth perceive it and yet in the end she findeth that he is come into his garden she findeth that her rising out of her sleep and from her bed her opening the doore seeking and calling after him was not in vaine Jonas in his greatest distresse when he sayd I am cast out of thy presence yet he saith notwithstanding I will looke toward thy holy Temple Jon. 2. And David in Psal 31. 22. I said in my hast I am cast out of thy sight yet notwithstanding thou heardest the voice of my prayer And afterwards he saith it was in his hast that he thought God had cast him off he was surprised on a sudden I said it is my infirmitie saith he in Psal 73. many seeke and because they find not even according to their desire at the first they faint and give over but wee must know that where there is any seeking or breathing after him Christ is there and will make himself manifest at the last And now to the last verse which I did reade VERS 6. The watchmen that went about the Citie found me they they smot me they wounded me the keepers of the wals tooke away my vale from me THere is contained in this verse the third calmity of the Church viz. that Christ her head being absent from her and shee labouring to seeke him falleth in to sundrie dangers and distresses yea all become noy some and hurtfull unto her even those that should have kept and preserved her from all violence and injuric they did abuse and beat her vea cruelly wound her and deale fraudulently with her as the particulars shew The injuries that the Spouse did here undergoe are two First She is beaten and wounded Secondly Her vaile is taken from her The instruments of her affliction are described to be First The watchmen of the Citie Secondly The keepers of the wall The Watchmen that went about the City found me c. These watchmen are said to be such as goe about the City which noteth their painfullnesse and diligence as of those that watch and ward in the City day and night meaning the officers of the Church as before was noted in Chap. 3. 3. where the selfe-same thing is put downe saving that there is no mention made of their abusing of her but onely of her demand who thereby could tell where he was that her soul loved Now we have the carriage of these watchmen They smote me they wounded me They smote me That is with reproaches and evill speeches for smiting is sometimes with the Tongue as in Jer. 18. 18. Come let us smite him with the tongue To smite is to hurt or afflict by any meanes whatsoever it 's said of Christ in respect of his sufferings that he was stricken smitten and afflicted of God Isa 53. 4. Now in that these watchmen smite the Spouse they appeare more cruell and enraged then before in Chap. 3. 3. neither doth the Church enquire of these watchmen after her beloved but they find her seeking of Christ out of their way and course and therefore they abuse her they discourage her they take her as an evill doer they deale injuriously with her She addeth They wounded me In that she speaketh thus without a particle to joyne them which manner of speech the Rhetoritians call Asyndeton she doth it both to shew her owne vehemeney and the quick dispatch that these evill Watchmen made in so ill intreating of her and therefore in that she addeth that word wounding after smiting she doth as it were by a gradation paint out their wickednesse and her owne misery because many may faint and be smitten and yet not be wounded for wounding is to draw blood a further degree of hurt then smiting as appears in 1 Kings 20. 37. where it is said a certaine man smote one of the Sons of the Prophets so that in smiting of him he wounded him So the husbandmen wounded the Lords servant By this wounding of the Spouse is then meant the highest degree of afflicting of her the worst dealing of the Watchmen with her It followeth The keepers of the wall tooke away my Vaile from me The keepers or the Watchmen of the walls to wit such as had a continuall standing allowed them both to descry the enemies and to repell them also if they can neither the running watch nor the standing watch favoured me but both sorts cruelly intreated me These Watchmen are meant the Ministers of the