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

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resting on their own Revelations of a pretended Spirit The Prophets and Apostles making but one Foundation he that stands besides the one must stand besides the other also because both be but one and we must Build upon both or we can Build upon neither It may be said that Antin●mians truely so called deal with the Prophets as Papists do with the Protestants who condemn that in Calvin c. which they commend in Augustine c. so these seem to receive truth from an Apostle yet dare reject the same truth from a Prophet what is this but to regard Names more than Things in them both which indeed 〈◊〉 no better than to disregard the Writings of both the Old and the New The ninth Argument If the Doctrine of the Law and of the Prophets must abide for ever then none may presume to despise them c. but the foregoing is true therefore the following is so This is plainly proved Mat. 5.17 18. all the Scriptures of the Old Testament are comprehended under these two Names the Law and the Prophets Mat. 7.12 the Prophets being all the Interpreters of Moses Law and certainly none can abrogate that Law but Christ who is our Law-giver Isa 33.22 yet Christ saith expresly he came not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to dissolve or loose the Law but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to accomplish it and so to establish it in the hand of a Mediator better and greater than Moses Gal. 3.19 as that Heaven and Earth should sooner pass away than one Jot or one Tittle should pass from the Law This was a needful Doctrine in Christs Time because the Pharisees would then have made void some part of the Law with their Traditions Mat. 15.3 4. Mark 7.13 Mat. 23.4 How much more needful is this Doctrine in our own Time when Antinomians now would make all the whole Law vo●d and not obligatory to any Believer The Blessed Apostle Paul who was a pure Gospel Preacher and a most strenuous asserter of Free-Grace saw in his Day an Emergent Necessity of affirming this great Truth saying We establish the Law Rom. 3.31 which yet some men cry down calling Repentance a Legal Grace Humiliation a back-door to Heaven and grieving that they have grieved so much for their sins c. undoubtedly the Moral Law is in the hand of a Mediator as an Everlasting Rule of Righteousness to the end of the World yea and the Ceremonial Law is rightly called an Ordinance of Eternity Exod. 12.14 as it stands firm for ever in the things those Ceremonies did signifie let us not then think to build some New fine yet false Golden Bridge to Heaven Promising Pardon and Paradise to Sinners as Sinners and freeing Men from Doubting while in the Bonds of Iniquity This is a fair easy step and like the finding out of the new North VVest passage to the Indies which hath brought shipwrack upon all its undertakers The Law must be our School-Master to bring unto Christ Gal. 3.24 't is to us what Paul's Sister 's Son was to him Act. 23.16 17 18. to shew us our Danger and to send us to the chief Captain of our Salvation Heb. 2.10 who came not to destroy but to fulfil the Law The tenth Argument 'T was the practice of Christ and all his Apostles to make use of the Scriptures of the Old Testament This is obvious in all parts of the New Testament to every ones eye and observation Neither can we stop the Mouth of any gain-saying Jew but by Testimonies drawn from the Old Testament as Paul did Act. 9.12 c. which the Jews do acknowledge and not from the New which he acknowledgeth not for principles must be granted by both parties contra negantes principia non est disputandum Besides it might further be urged that many great Truths taken for granted by all sober Minds have yet no grounds of a Divine story but what is drawn out of the Old Testament as that it is lawful for Magistrates to punish Sabbath-breakers that it is unlawful for a Man to Marry his Sister c. or that the People may upon Emergency ordain without Officers according to Numb 8.10 These and many other Truths have no other proof but from the Old Testament all which do declare that it 's Divine Authority continueth still under the New and that rules may be drawn from it in all matters which are not Ceremonial or Judicial but of a Moral and Common and so of a continuing equity Whatever is unrepeal'd stands still in full force and vertue 't is a sufficient proof in such cases though out of the Old Testament to justifie many practices under the New they are both useful for Rules and therefore Christ calls him a good Scribe or Teacher of the Church who brings forth the precious treasure of Truth out of the treasury of both the Old and New Testament Mat. 13.52 ☞ It follows hence We must take heed of all Novel Notions which hold no Harmony with the Antient Truths We should contend for the Doctrine of Faith which was once that is of old delivered to the Saints Jude ver 8. 'T is one of the Sins of our Times and that none of the least Sins to despise Antient Truths The Lord complains how the False Prophets had led his people from the Antient paths Jer. 18.13 14 15 16. which he calleth a leaving the Snow of Lebanon whereby the thirsty Traveller used oft to be cooled and comforted and therefore in no wise to be left This Sin God calls not only a forsaking but also a forgetting of God and of all things in the World God cannot abide to be forgotten this he calls a very horrible thing and filthiness in a Virgin which is most abominable in as much as they had forsaken the Antient paths Heb. paths of Antiquity or of Eternity such paths as were chalked out by the Law of Moses and walked in by the Patriarchs and Prophets God tells them plainly their Sin was no less than a Land-desolating Sin Should not we then shun untrodden paths as dangerous and beware of new Lights that never bring new Hearts and avoid such new Notions as rather indulge than mortifie old Corruptions We should have an holy Jealousie or a Jealous Eye upon that which is Novelty No Man saith Christ having drunk old Wine straightway desireth new for he saith the old is better Luke 5.39 importing that the Rule of Gods Word is Antient and Eternal but the Dreams and Dotages of the Pharisees were New Upstart Mushroom Earth-sprung yea Hell-sprung Opinions and the Old Heaven-born Institutions of God must needs be far better than whatever Novel Inventions of Men obtruded on the Church either by Jewish or Popish Pharisees God therefore calls us to enquire after the old way which is the only way to give right Rest to our Souls Jer. 6.16 and even in Gospel times the Apostle John commends to us that which was from the beginning 1 John 2.7 and
made God himself become a Debtor to him for his Works of Supererogation and as if he now insulted over our Saviour being but a Trivial Teacher who could not call him out to a Lecture beyond the Law c. Though he lack'd not a loud lye in proclaiming himself to be without sin which never any Patriarch or Prophet did yet lacked he the quieting of his own Conscience which all his conceited Righteousness could not becalm for this Yonkster notwithstanding all his supposed Merits still cannot be quiet but must rise up run and ask 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What lack I yet Therefore Christ at last cuts this Coxcomb quite with a personal and particular precept such as was that to Abraham for killing his Son Go sell all and give to the poor then come take up my Cross and follow me This Tryal made him troubled turn his back of Christ who might have his Heaven to himself for him he had a Months-mind to Heaven and cheapens it but was not willing to go up to the Price of it that thorough Sale of all choaked him he liked no such Terms so being Wodded and Weaged to the World Renounces Christ rather than it and so do all Worldings that do Trust in their Wealth they are the Camels and Cables that cannot pass through the Needles Eye Mar. 10.24 CHAP. XXVIII Tidings of Lazarus Sickness CHRIST all this time had been beyond Jordan working Miracles and wording Oracles now Lazarus whom be loved falleth sick his two Sisters Mary and Martha send a Messenger to him while be was beyond Jordan to intreat his presence with their Sick Brother and to return to Bethany where he had lately been before Luke 10.38 39 40. Upon this Invitation he prepareth for his Journey over Jordan into Judea again and yet stayed two Days in the place where the Messenger found him John 11.3.6 And where he delivered the Parable of the Labourers in the Vineyard which is Recorded only in Matth. 20.1 to 17. And not in any other Evangelist the Scope whereof was to Illustrate Christs last words Many that are first shall be last c. Matth. 19.30 and to prevent Peter c. from being puffed up with a preconceit of their promised great Reward ver 28 29. Christ herein cautions them that such as place Confidence in the Merits of their Works as forsaking all c. and call for their Wages before they had well entered into their Work as Peter c. What shall we have c. ver 27. May be placed in the lowest place by the Lord who giveth Eternal life out of free grace not of Debt or Merit For the purport of the Parable holds that such Labourers as had been longest Labouring in the Vineyard and therefore had the highest Estimation of their own Labours yet were last taken notice of least Esteemed yea Rebuked as Adversaries to free grace and daring to Expostulate with God about Justice Whereas those last labourers were first paid because they trusted not in the Merit or Worth of their own Works but in the free grace and goodness of God when the other as Murmuring Merit-mongers are turned off with this Taunt Tolle quod tuum est vade take thy penny and be packing Christ Gods Steward and the Judge of all doth Distribute his Wages for his Work with a most singular Demonstration both of his Justice so that none shall receive less than was promised and of his Mercy so that all shall receive more than they Merited for although this penny be not absolutely Eternal Life it is that Gratuitous penny given to the last Labourers for it is called the Free gift of God Rom. 6.23 Eph. 2.7 8. and many more shewing Salvation is not due by Debt or is Gods pay for our pains as here Reward or Wages for Work but is altogether from free grace What ever the penny signified it was something that gave content to the Contractors for undertaking Vineyard work it was that for which each of them followed Christ whether it were for Meat perishing or for Meat induring John 6.27 Indeed all the Antient Fathers except Basil take this penny to signifie Eternal Salvation because 1. Denarius ex Decem was of the value of Ten usual pieces of Money to shew Eternal Life is worth Ten Temporal Lives 2. The round Figure in the Roman penny signified Eternity which hath no End 3. The Stamp and Sculpture upon it was the Kings Image noting our being made like God then 4. The Silver piece had a Lustre and Splendour upon it to denote the glory of our Bodies then as before of our Souls Yet Basil Interprets it some Reward of this Life and this one Mans Interpretation agreeing well with the Scripture of Truth and with the Analogy of Faith may have more weight than all the other whose Sense makes all workers in the Visible Church to be Saved or none are so but the Elect only or all shall be saved and that by the Merit of their Works and all shall be equal in the Wage of Eternal Life and so none shall be first or last contrary to Scripture The Scope of this Parable is only to be pressed as also of other Parables lest Blood in stead of Milk be squeezed out of them c. After this Parable Christ begins his last Journey to Jerusalem to the Eating of his last Paschal Lamb or Passover but especially to the offering up of himself the Lamb of God for taking away the sins of the World At his first setting forward from Jordan to Judea he acquaints his Disciples apart of his approaching passion at Jerusalem as he had done before Matth. 16.21 and again Matth. 17.22 c. For they must be the Witnesses both of his Omnisciency in foreknowing it and of his voluntary laying down his Life in venturing thither where he knew his Death was designed Matth. 20.17 c. Mark 10.32 c. Luke 18.31 c. 'T is said expresly He went before them Mar. 10.32 As most willing to walk that way which went to his suffering work this Amazed the Disciples to behold him walking like a Couragious and Undaunted Captain before them rather desiring than fearing Death This fortitude they more than Admired in their Amasement at their Magnanimous Master and themselves being pusillanimous were Affrighted at his bold Adventure upon his unavoidable Danger therefore desire they him to stay beyond Jordan where he was then safe rather than Expose himself to his Implacable Adversaries in Judea again saying as soon as they could overtake him in their Trembling pursuit after him they said John 11.7 8. Where this same last Journey to Jerusalem is Recorded also Master The Jews lately sought to stone thee and wilt thou go thither again This was their Preposterous Advice from their own Timorous Carnality which naturally startles at and declines the Cross And indeed N. B. Note well 'T is no more than Duty to Decline it when it lies not betwixt us and
c. that none of the Dainties might drop out N.B. This Vessel or Domestick Utensil as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies together with the Sheet here mentioned in the Vision do bear a proportion with the use of both a Table and a Table cloth spread over it at Meal-time among us nor was Peter here mocked with God's Invitation of him to an Empty Table but behold the things contained in the thing containing it was a fully furnished Table top full of so many blessings till there was no room to receive more as Mal. 3.10 N.B. Behold the Furniture of this full Table whereon or wherein were all manner of four-footed Beasts and wild Beasts of the Earth and creeping things and Fowls of the Air. Verse 12. Here was all sorts of Flesh Fish and Fowl of wild Cattel and tame of wild Fowl and tame Here was Venison as well as Shamble-meat and the Hebrew word for creeping things comprehends Fishes also among the Hebrews In a word here was whatever heart could wish or need require Here was not only for necessity to satisfie Peter's hungry Appetite but here was for variety and redundancy of delight c. No small Gifts can come from the hand of the great God from whom all good and great things drop N.B. And that which was more all these sorts are offered to hungry Peter freely without any distinction of clean and unclean whereas the Levitical Law prohibited many sorts to the Jews Levit. 11. 2. What was represented to his Ear there was a Bath koll or Voice from God to Peter wherein is considerable First What words this Voice uttered and secondly How often The words spoken were 1. A Divine Commission to this Jew Peter for feeding freely upon what he saw without any exception whether clean or formerly unclean verse 13. Peter's Jewish Principles made him startle at such a new and so large a Commission looking upon this command as unlawful and impious verse 14. This Scruple is the more strange because Peter was now very hungry and hunger breaks as we say through Stone-walls and why not through the Partition-wall of the Levitical Law betwixt Jew and Gentile but it was Peter's present ignorance not knowing the Moral of this Divine Commission which was that he might now indifferently converse with Gentiles as well as Jews and Preach even to them the Word of Life Hereupon the Voice spake 2. A Divine Correction verse 15. What God hath cleansed that call not thou common or unclean Whereby Peter's mistake was rectified looking upon the clean Beasts to signifie the Jews and the unclean the Gentiles now must he know that God had cleansed Cornelius a Gentile from his Gentilism c. Secondly The Enquiry is how oft this was done namely the Dialogue betwixt God and Peter to satisfie his Jewish Doubt 'T is answered it was done thrice verse 16. and chap. 11.10 No fewer times than thrice must Peter's doubt be disputed that God might more abundantly manifest that great Mystery of the Calling of the Gentiles which had been so long hid in former Ages So much difficulty was found in fixing and confirming Peter's mind to a firm belief of this great Truth that the Gentiles should be converted and received into the bosom of the Church N.B. After this full confirmation of Peter's Faith by a threefold Repetition of this Doubt-resolving discourse this Visional Vessel was received up again into Heaven Which teacheth us 1. That a Soul fed and filled with Divine Dainties doth easily forget bodily hunger as Moses in his forty days fast being feasted in his Soul with God's company in the Mount For we read no more of Peter's sharp hunger after this delicate Dinner Such as taste of the Living Waters shall never thirst again John 4.14 He that is refreshed with the chiefest and choicest Banquet cannot hunger or have his lips to water after mean and homely provision 2. It teacheth That the Doctrine of the Conversion of the Gentiles came first from Heaven unto which again its proper tendency is to wit in bringing believing Gentiles into Glory 3. That the Church both of Believing Jews and Gentiles hath her original from Heaven and thither at the last she shall be taken up again in despite of the Devil Revel 21.2 c. The sixth and last Considerable in this Vision is the Events and Effects of it upon Peter verse 17.19 While Peter was recollecting himself out of his Rapture and seriously meditating upon what he had seen and heard behold the two honest Servants and the Devout Souldier which Cornelius had sent verse 7. knocked at the door of Peter's Lodging N.B. This was their modesty seldom seen in Souldiers who too usually break in without leave c. These modest men knew well that the Jews would not easily converse with them who were Gentiles so would not offend them in entring without their license verse 18 Then Peter for doing away all his Doubts had an extraordinary Revelation from God's Spirit saying Dispute no more but betake thy self to the Journey immediately with those men that seek thee behold I have sent them verse 20. Hereupon Peter being not yet fully satisfied makes the more exact Enquiry of the Messengers who gave a just not a flattering Character of their Master to him for preventing all prejudice in him Then he goes verse 21 22 23. N. B. Hence learn 1. Servants must give their Masters their due honour 2. Such as meditate on God's Word shall be farther instructed by the Spirit 3. When God's command is plain we must not dispute but dispatch c. CHAP. XI Of the Call and Conversion of the Gentiles THIS Chapter contains an Account how that great promise of persuading Japhet to dwell in the Tents of Shem Gen. 9.27 had the beginning of its Accomplishment That is the Gentiles who sprang from Japhet in all Europe a great part of Asia and probably in America also God would persuade to dwell in Shem's Tents wherein God dwelleth and so to be Reunited to his Brother Shem of whom the Jews sprang both in Affection and in Religion N.B. Though for a long time they were at an irrecoucilable distance from them but now must be made of the same Church with them in whose posterity the Church was first and longest settled in Old Testament Times during which Term the Jews accounted the Gentiles a Generation of wicked incorrigible desperate sinners so that the sinners of the Gentiles Gal. 2.15 were the worst sort of sinners and the Jews looked upon them as the most execrable persons in the World such as the Apostle describeth to be strangers from the Covenant hopeless godless c. Ephes 2.12 and therefore shall hop headless and be all according to the Jewish Opinion swept away by the Devil But now in the New Testament Times even these very Gentiles so despised by the Jews must be brought into the bosom of the Church by imbracing the Gospel and shall be persuaded
in all places where they are scattered is much to be admired As here for Paul God took care of him for his preservation both by Sea and Land He improved it accordingly not in Idleness but like a true Labourer in the Lord's Vineyard He honours God and God honours him according to what God said to Eli 1 Sam. 2.30 N.B. No doubt but the Apostle was more grieved when those Barbarians thought him a God than when they thought him a Murderer tho' their ignorant minds through the corruption of Nature hurried them from one Extreme into another in both those Mistakes because hereby God was Robbed of his Honour while it was ascribed to a Mortal Man which yet the Papists do practise therefore when Paul visits Publius's Father he shews how he could do nothing of himself but begs of God who kills and makes alive 1 Sam. 2.6 for his Father's Recovery which God graciously granted at Paul's prayer c. N.B. That Publius might be well Repaid for his Labour of love to Paul and his Companions in not suffering them to lye in private Inns where all Accommodations are costly especially to so vast a Company who had all lost their All c. but making Provision for them all upon free cost in his own publick Palace N.B. Such and so eminent Hospitality in this Heathen to the Distressed is rarely to be found among Christians tho' as great as he yet scarce so good as he therefore God granted Paul's prayer for his Father who was sick of a Fever Paul lays his hands upon the sick and heals him God rarely refuseth to Reward those that Relieve men especially his Saints in ●●isery even in this World besides that Reversion of Reward which he reserveth for them in the World to come Moreover God by this means recommended the Ministry of Paul both to the very Souldiers who would have kill'd him in the Shipwrack and to Publius himself the Publick Governour of the Island yea and to Publius's People also The ninth Remark is Where God giveth his Gospel to any Place or People he commonly magnifieth it for its better acceptance where it is given in mercy 'T is a wonder how both Prince and People here were prepared to receive the Gospel from Paul's mouth If the two former Miracles be not enough for that end because they were more private yet out of the superabundant Grace of God they shall have more publick Miracles upon Publius's People as well as upon his Old Father The miraculous cure of whom so suddenly so safely so sweetly citò tutò jucundè yet so perfectly only with Prayer and Imposition of hands Fame soon spread it abroad far and near especially it being wrought upon their Governour 's Father Whereupon the Impotent Folk of the Island all men naturally being careful for saving the Body tho' careless for saving the Soul resort by sholes to this wonderful Healer and were healed verse 9. even at their Governour 's house By this time we may easily guess what a fair opportunity this Apostle had whom Christ had made a Fisher of Men to spread the Net of the Gospel over such a multitude of Fishes great and small who all offer'd themselves freely to co●●● into it N.B. As I cannot but imagine how the poor Sea-men and Souldiers did so●●●e themselves in the midst of their warm Provisions through Publius's Hospitality saying one to another 'T is good being here far better we are now in the Governour 's house than when we lay floating and were forced by Shipwrack to swim for saving our lives in the Tempestuous Sea c. So likewise how those persons who had Diseases and were healed here did bless the Lord for their very Diseases which had been made such blessed occasions of bringing them to the saying knowledge of God in Christ whom Paul Preached to them that their Souls might be healed as well as their B●●●● How did they cry out with God-blessing hearts one to another Oh what astonishing mercy hath our former misery handed in to us Alas had we not perished or been nigh perishing in our Bodies temporally for any thing we know we might all have perished both in our Souls and Bodies eternally Thus the most wise God made all things work together for good Rom. 8.28 That Paul should suffer Shipwrack that he should be cast upon this Island where God had a great work for him to do or he had never come thither That a venemous Viper should fasten upon Paul's hand That the Governour 's Father should be sick and so many of the Inhabitants c. All these had an happy concurrence to open an Effectual Doer for the Conversion of many for they could not but be convinced universally that Paul must be a Minister of God because none could do such Miracles as he did unless God were with him and indeed God so far magnified Paul's Ministry with his presence in it while he laid himself forth labouring in the Lord's Vineyard during only those three Winter Months of his staying there that he planted a Church of Christ in that Island which became famous for its stedfastness in the Truth The soundness of the foundation-stones of that Church appeared insomuch as those new Converts loaded Paul's Ship with necessaries for their Voyage at their parting which was a real fruit of their effectual Faith verse 10. tho' they saw not Paul shake off his own Chain as he had done the Viper by his gift of Miracles for Paul was not the Author but only the Minister of those Miracles acting where when how and on whom the Spirit of God would have it done and Miracles were not wrought so much for the ease of the Ministers themselves as for the confirming their Ministry to others Sometimes God saved them miraculously as Acts 5.19 and 12.7 and sometimes God left them in Bonds when it would most advance the Gospel Phil. 1.12 The tenth Remark is A clear Call from God doth carry up God's Servants cleverly and chearfully through all Dangers and Difficulties as it did Paul here who had an extraordinary Revelation of his Witness-bearing at Rome Acts 23.11 And tho' as he saith He was in perils often in his Voyage and Journey thither Paul must put forth to Sea again as if he had not got enough of it in his late Shipwrack and that in an Alexandrian Bottom which had wintered in that Isle according to the Custom of laying up their Ships at the depth of Winter Acts 27.12 which was now going to make a Trading Voyage and for better success whose sign was Castor and Pollux verse 11 12. N.B. Such was the Superstition of those ignorant Painims that they conceited these Twins to be Sons of Jove born of Leda and that these two Deities had the command of Tempests and the care of Mariners and therefore they putting themselves under their Patronage could not but expect an happy Voyage Yea Sea-men still say that if these two Stars called Castor
First VOLUME from ADAM to MOSES Containing about Two thousand four hundred thirty three years CHAP. I. The History and Mystery of the Worlds Creation THE Creation was Gods first Emanation flowing forth or going out of himself giving the first Being and beginning to Time Place Persons and Things till then God was as it were Deus contractus containing all in himself now Deus expansus explicatus spreading his hand which had hitherto been as contracted to create the World not because he was now weary with doing nothing as Atheists say but he did it when it pleased him to manifest his own Wisdom Mercy Power and Glory as Augustine saith Nec cessando torpuit nec operando laboravit August cont Advers leg lib. 1. cap. 2. God who is the most pure Act is neither idle in Resting nor weary in working Hereupon 't is said what God did or how he employed himself before the Creation is a Sea over which no Ship hath ever Sailed is a Mine into which no Spade hath ever delved an Abyss into which no Bucket hath ever dived our fight is too tender and slender to behold this Sun 'T is Humane folly to say there was a World before Adam then he is falsely called the first man frequently in the Scripture of Truth this is to be wise above what is written but 't is Divine Faith to say that this World was created 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Affabrè factum neatly made up by the word of God Heb. 11.3 and then Time Place c. had their beginning Gen. 1.1 If so there could be none before it As we know not what God did before neither what he will do after the world Augustine smartly answers this sawcy Question That God was making an Hell for such over-curious Busie-bodies the Philosopher reading this first of Genesis was heard to say Egregiè dicis Domine Moses sed quomodo probas Excellently said Sir Moses but how will you prove what you say Augustine answers Credo non probo I believe it I need not prove it Theologia non est Argumentativa Alsted Divinity doth not use to prove her Principles the Mysteries whereof are better understood by Believing than believed by understanding 't is the nature of Faith to believe God upon his bare word and that against Sense in things Invisible and against Reason in things Incredible Sense corrects Imagination Reason corrects Sense but Faith corrects both Aufer Argumenta ubi ●●ie quaeritur c. saith Ambrose Away with Arguments 't is enough I believe though I cannot prove every Principle and Fundamental of Faith as this of the Creation The word Creation according to the Criticks comes from the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to effect or perfect and 't is taken in a double sense 1. Proper and literal so 't is a making something out of nothing Gen. 1.1 2. Common and Mystical so 't is a making something out of that which is worse than nothing Eph. 2.10 All Creatures were made at first without praeexisting Matter but when we come to be made New Creatures though there be a praeexisting yet there is a strongly Resisting Matter which is far worse and no less requires the All-creating power As the former is call'd Creatio transiens so this is Creatio continuans we can bring nothing to this glorious work except Opposition Yea when we are once created in Christ we can indeed do something to uncreate our selves were it not that Creating power comes to renew our decayed grace and Spiritual Witherings Psal 51.10 Creation here treated upon is taken in the proper sense and is the External Efficiency Act or Operation of God whereby be made the world in the beginning of time out of nothing very good and for his own glory There is a concurrency of four Causes in this as in other act considerable 1. A quâ the Cause Efficient 2. Ex quâ the Matter 3. Per quam the Form And 4. Propter quam the End Yea all those seven circumstances contained in one Verse Quis Quid Vbi Quibus Auxiliis Cur Quomodo Quando concur here in this Divine Action of the Creation Bereshith Bara Elohim Eth Hashamajim veeth haerets In the beginning God Created the Heavens and the Earth Gen. 1.1 Sundry Enquiries are here to be answered The first Enquiry is Who is the Efficient cause of the Creation Answ 'T is God the Creator call'd also Lord the Governour The External Efficiency or operation of the Divine Being is twofold 1. Creation 2. Providence in respect of the first he is called God the Creator and of the second Lord thè Governour Those two are called Relative Attributes as they do clearly hold forth a Relation betwixt the Maker and the Matter made And those two Titles God and Lord are first conjoyned in Gen. 2.4 As soon as the Universal Creation had attained to an Absolute perfection then stood it in need only of a continued Sustentation as Lord signifies a Sustainer 't is now added to the Name God which had been used singly about thirty three times before now he is first called Lord God that as his Work was perfect so his Name might be perfect also Thus likewise the Prophet couples those two Names together for the Churches comfort Isa 40.28 saying the same God-Creatour is still Lord-Governour or Sustainer who will not cast off the care of his Church as one toiled or tired for he Governs now as he did Create without either Toil or Travel and not subject to weariness as Man is The Hebrew Text is Elohim Bara Dii Creavit as being of the Plural number which holds out the Mystery of the blessed Trinity called by Elihu Eloah Gnoshai God my Makers Job 35.10 and by David the Makers of Israel Psal 149.1 and Soloman saith Remember thy Greators Eccles 12.1 This word Elohim signifies Almighties or Almighty powers yet is this Noun plural joined with Bara a Verb singular because God is but One Deut. 6.4 although in power Infinite There be three which bear witness in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Spirit and these three are one 1 Joh. 5.7 yet all three are called Creators 1. the Father is so Eph. 3.9 c. 2. the Word or Son is so Heb. 1.8 10. Col. 1.16 c. and the Spirit is so Gen. 1.2 Psal 33.6 104.30 Job 26.13 33.4 The Psalmist saith By the word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the Host of them by the Breath or Spirit of his mouth that is God the Father by the Son through the Spirit Created all things 1 Cor. 8.6 Prov. 8.24 27 28. Joh. 1.3 10. Heb. 1.1 2. Revel 3.14 Isa 40.12 13. c. All which do declare that Three in One and One in Three wrought in the Creation of the world as afterwards they did in the formation of Man Gen. 1.26 and in making Borders of Gold with studs of Silver for the Church Cant. 1.11 Rab. Solomon Interprets we there I
and my Judgment-Hall which consisted at least of Three So by we is meant in the Hebrew succinct Speech God Three in One and One in Three Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa All the Three Persons are undivided all concur in External Actions Hermes that antient Aegyptian who flourished before Pharaoh did acknowledge something of this Great Truth from whence he had his Name of Trismegistus for owning the Three great ones And the Heathen Sages after him had some blind Notions hereof as appeareth by Plutarch who reporteth that in Thebe a Town of Aegypt they worshipped a God whom they acknowledged to be Immortal and painted him in the likeness of a man blowing an Egg out of his mouth to signifie that he made the round World by his Word and Breath of his Mouth But Christian Faith reacheth farther than Heathens Reason for by Faith we understand that the World was made by the Word of God Heb. 11.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by Christ who is the Essential Word and the flowings forth as the word signifies or lettings out of Divine Wisd●● Power and Goodness for God was as it were contracted and contained all within himself from all Eternity but now in the Creation he becomes Deus expansus explicatus letting out himself to the Creature Thus Christ is called the Manifestation of God and the Declarer of the Father Joh. 1.18 John Baptist is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a voice but Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word by which the world was made As Verbum est animi Index the Speech discovers the Spirit so Christ unbosoms the Father and the Creation is nothing else but the Creator unfolding himself and dispersing his Divine Essence into several Veins and Channels of the Creature Mundus Vniversus nihil aliud est quàm Deus Explicatus the world is onely God expressed the Invisible is clearly seen as in a Mirrour or on a Theater in things that are visible Rom. 1.19 20. as the Sun is beheld in the waters so is God in his works either by way of Negation Causality or Eminence per species Creaturea The second Enquiry is What is the Material Cause out of which all things were Created Answ God made something out of nothing and out of that something all things Nothing here is not taken privatively as 1 Cor. 8.4 an Idol is nothing to wit privatively as having nothing of a Divine Essence in it yet positively it is something that is Wood or Stone c. Nor 2. is it taken Comparatively as Isa 40.17 All the world is nothing to wit in comparison of the Great God But 3. 't is taken negatively and simply God having no praeexisting matter to work upon as the word Bara created signifies being a word in its proper sense proper and peculiar to God himself so should not be parasitically Attributed to the mightiest of men as too oft it is in Creating Earls Marquesses Dukes unless the Creators and the Created were both holy as God is and Man was There was nothing from Eternity besides God neither is God the Matter or any part of the Creature therefore the world was made out of nothing This puts the difference betwixt Creation and Generation this latter is a production of something out of something but the former of something out of nothing There be three principal Operators Art Nature and God That worker which needeth the fewest helps is the most perfect worker 1. Art needs many helps 2. Nature needs but few But 3. God needeth none at all God is the first Cause and the World was the first effect 'T is a Rule or Maxime Inter primam Causam primum effectum nil intervenit Nothing can come between the first Cause and the first effect therefore in the Creation there could neither be any praeexisting Matter nor any Coassisting Instruments God himself was both the Father and Mother of all Created Beings God was the Father of the World begetting it by his Word and both bringing it out and bringing it up in six days by the overshadowings of the Spirit Gen. 1.2 All this arises from the Efficiency of God who is a most pure Act and is Omnipotency it self is there any thing too hard for the Lord Gen. 18.14 Job knew that God could do every thing Job 42.2 All things but Lying Dying and denying himself are possible with God Matth. 19.26 his counsel shall stand and he will do all his pleasure Isa 46.10 What God pleaseth to do without all peradventure he is able to do as he is Omnipotent yet may we not argue from his power to his will but from his will to his power Though God be Omniscient Omnipresent and Omnipotent yet is he not Omnivolent he can do more than he will do he can do whatsoever he pleaseth yet he is not pleased to do whatsoever he can God by his Absolute power is able to do all things that are possible though he never do them he can by this unlimited power make a World and unmake it again in a moment he can of stones raise up Children to Abraham Matth. 3.9 c. but by his actual and ordinate power he doth that onely which he willeth to do whatsoever he willeth that he doth both in Heaven and Earth Psal 115.3 135.6 This power God hath limited by his own will wisdom and having freely limited himself according to his own Decree of Secret will and according to his word or revealed will he changeth not because he is unchangeable Jam. 1.17 Some things God can and will not as Matth. 3.9 26.53 Rom. 9.18 c. And some things God neither will nor can to wit such as contradict his Essence and import Impotency 't is safer to say such things cannot be done than that God cannot do them but whatsoever he willeth that he without impediment effecteth as he did the Creation of the world out of nothing Why therefore should it be thought a thing incredible either that God should raise the dead to life Act. 26.8 or that God should make world of nothing 'T is a received rule Quicquid est in Deo est Deus whatsoever is in God is God and so is that Esse posse operari non distinguuntur in Deo Gods Ess●nce Omnipotency and Efficiency are not to be distinguished in God save only as to our capacity Divine Essence being Almighty and a most pure act doth necessarily infer a Divine Efficiency which made the world of nothing the word of signifying not any Matter but only Order Creation was in Matter but not of Matter not of Matter praeexisting before but of Matter coexisting in the act of Creation The first Matter God made out of nothing was that Rudis indigestáque Moles called the confused Chaos a rude Draught and an undigested lump at the first as the Matter of all things that were afterwards to be Created This first Matter was all things in power yet nothing in act this
by Authority taken from thence It seems this great Doctor of the Gentiles was not of the same opinion with those Jesuits who say that the Epistles of the Apostles were intended only for the use of those Persons and Churches to whom they were first written how much more all the Books of the Prophets in the Old Testament must be antiquated and not concern us as some Jesuited Enthusiasts say in our Day prefering their own Phantastick Revelations above the Rule of Scripture though both Testaments were writ by Divine Inspiration We must rather be of Godly Josiah's Mind who saith concerning Moses many hundred years before him that Moses wrote for us 2 Kin. 22.13 the Book of the Law which Moses wrote with his own hand v. 8. and 2 Chron. 34.14 and ordered to be laid up in the sides of the Ark Deut. 31.26 this Book good Josiah reckoned did speak to them in his Day and feared that great Wrath was kindled against them because they had not hitherto hearkened to do all that was written as he saith concerning us Reckoning aright that General Directions Recorded in Gods Word do Infallibly concern all Ages as 1 Cor. 10.6 11. or likewise of Blessed Stephens Mind who speaking of such as live in the Days of the New Testament saith that Moses recieved the lively Oracles of God to give them unto us Act. 7.38 Moses did indeed deliver those Oracles to the Fathers of the old Testament but they receiv'd them to give them unto us under the New and thus the writings of all the other Prophets after Moses were written for us and for our Learning for Paul's learning and for the learning of that famous Church of Rome the fame of whose Faith was publish'd through the World Rom. 1.8 how much more for our Learning who come far short of their high Attainments and cannot pretend to a greater Perfection The fifth Argument If the Old Testament was disannulled by the Death of Christ then the Church was without a Canon or Rule from that time for many years until the N. Testament was written but this is to suppose what may not be supposed For those Scriptures in which Timothy had been trained up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a Child and wherein Paul exhorts him to continue they being profitable to teach reprove c. 2 Tim. 3.15 16. must be the Scriptures of the Old Testament seeing at the time of Timothy's Childhood none of the New Testament was written for Timothy was taken into Paul's Fellowship before any either Gospel or Epistle was published some of the Epistles were writ before any of the Gospels as that of the first to the Thessalonians yet this was writ after Timothy had joined himself to Paul for Paul's Preaching to the Thessalonians must be before his writing to them as appeareth by many passages in that Epistle yet Timothy was taken into Paul's company before Paul Preached there for the former was done Acts 16.1 2 3. but the latter not till afterward Acts 17.1 c. So that the first New Testament Scripture not being writ when Timothy was grown up and received into Paul's Society see Lightfoots Harmony and Chronology for this It necessarily follows that those Scriptures wherein Timothy was trained up from his Childhood were the Scriptures of the Old Testament yet Paul's Testimony of those very Scriptures was that they were Divinely Inspired and profitable to teach Truth to convince Errour to reprove Vice to instruct in Righteousness and to make wise unto Salvation v. 15 16. The consequence then is evident from hence that the Old Testament could not be look'd upon or supposed by the Church as an obsolete and cancell'd Bond or that the Church was then without a Canon The sixth Argument If the Scriptures of the Old Testament were given by Divine Inspiration 2 Tim. 3.16 And if the holy men of God the Prophets wrote them as they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 and their Writings were therefore called The Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 then without all controversie there must be the same holy and heavenly Truth or Divine Doctrine found in them as is in the Scriptures of the New Testament There being but one Spirit as there is but one God one Faith breathing in both Testaments Eph. 4.4 'T was this one Spirit which inspired the Pen-men of them both who is the Spirit of Truth John 14.17 leading both the Prophets and the Apostles into one and the same Truth John 16.13 14 15. Therefore the Books of both should be received with the same Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 and neither of them ought to be refused NB. 1. To reject the Old Testament is to reject the Holy Spirit that speaks in it 2. 'T is not only rejecting but resisting the Holy Ghost as Stephen charges the Stiff-necked Jews for rejecting the words of the Prophets which they had spoke to them by the Spirit Act. 7.51 Let none now commit the same sin 3. It can come from no other than from the Inspiration of the Devil to reject the Old Testament which was writ by the Inspiration of God contrary products must proceed from contrary principles The seventh Argument If the Old Testament Scriptures be profitable for such blessed uses as are afore-mentioned then they who cast them away as unprofitable are not only Enemies to the Churches Profit and Edification and are Friends to Errour Vice and sinful Folly all which three the Apostle declareth are disappointed by those Scriptures convincing Errour reproving Vice and making wise to Salvation but are also Blasphemers against God and his holy Spirit that did dictate and indite them There be blasphemous deeds as well as blasphemous words Ezek. 20.27 Now to blaspheme any part of the holy Scriptures either by word or deed is Blasphemy in an high degree and at least borders near upon that unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost Matth. 12.31 32. That Opinion of rejecting any part of the holy Canon of the Scriptures which is undoubtedly very hateful to God as well as hurtful to men can never be a good Opinion 'T is not Heaven but Hell-born The eighth Argument If the Prophets as well as the Apostles be the Doctrinal Foundation of the Church as Christ is the Personal thereof 1 Cor. 3.11 then the Books of the Prophets Moses c. may not be rejected But the Antecedent is clear from Eph. 2.19 20. speaking of a Gospel-Church Therefore the Consequent must be clear also Mark well Paul puts no difference betwixt the Doctrines of the Prophets and that of the Apostles he makes them not two but one only Foundation therefore we cannot be true Christians nor indeed a true Church as the Ephesians were and that of Ephesus was unless we be Built upon both such as remove themselves from the Foundation of the Prophets may ere long make as little matter of Building upon the Apostles not regarding any written Word at all but rather
meekness of Wisdom Jam. 3.13 It must he a wife meekness Wisdom must be both its cause and its quality It must be such as is only opposite to an heady and furious fierceness which knows no due bounds not to a well-grounded and well-guided Zeal and Fervency of Spirit Rom. 12.11 The Spirit appeared not only in the form of a Dove Mat. 3.16 but also in Cloven Tongues of Fire Acts 2.3 4. There is a blessed consistency of the Spirit of Power and of Love 2 Tim. 1.7 Nazianzen gives a good Rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let meekness be mixed with wariness then is it wise meekness or meekness of VVisdom We must neither be Foxes for subtilness nor yet Asses for silliness couching under every Burden without complaint Meekness many times brings on Injuries God requires not we should be as the silly Sheep that suffers the Crow to stand upon her Back and to pull off Wooll from her side Paul wishes us wise to that which is good as well as simple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without Horns not Horned Beasts to push others to evil Rom. 16.19 A Second Objection or Doubt cloth arise to be answered As 1. Whether Rebekahs Device and Advice for circumventing Blind Isaac be excusable 1. Answ Negatively If this act he weighed in the Ballance of the Sanctuary the sacred Rule so far as her project was promoted by any transport of Carnal Affections and Private Respect to her beloved Jacob together with a particular prejudice or grudge against Esau 't is not Excusable For 1. She Sins against her Husband Isaac whom being blind she deludes laying a stumbling block before the Blind which the Laws calls a Cursed Act and Curseth the Actor Deur 27.18 2. She Sins against her Son Esau whom she designs to deceive of his Fathers Blessing which seemed to be his due as he was their first Born 3. She Sins against her Son Jacob whom she should have taught better things than to lye many ly●● and thereby to deceive his own Father which moreover might have brought upon him his Fathers Curse as he feared and which must unavoidably expose him to his Brothers Implacable Hatred 4. She Sins against her self and ag●●●st her own Soul Numb 16.38 in imprecating with a weak and Womanly precipitancy the Curse her Son feared upon her self v. 12 13. desiring his danger of the doubtful Issue of that deceit might be upon her 5. She Sins against God lastly in carrying on his Holy Counsel by Unholy Contrivances as Lying and Deceit not willing to wait till God make good his own Oracle but doing evil that good might come thereby contrary to the Apostles Rule Rom. 3.8 2. Answ Positively This fact of Rebekah may be excused though it seem a sinful project as in those live respects aforesaid yet in truth it might all flow from a strong Faith in her working wisely not so much to deceive her Husband as to correct his Errour in his acting contrary to Gods Oracle going about to give the Patriarchal Blessing to the wrong object Though all the Actions of Holy Men and Women cannot be excused but are set down in Scripture for Caution not for Imitation Yet in doubtful cases wherein probable reasons may be rendred Charity bids us chuse the better part and not to condemn without cause For clearing this point two things are considerable First The Matter of the fact to wit the translating of the Blessing upon Jacob herein Rebekahs Faith might manifestly operate upon solid grounds As 1. Upon the Divine Oracle The Elder shall serve the Younger 2. Upon that wonder at the Birth that Jacob took hold of Esau's Heel 3. Upon the sale of the Birth-right 4. Upon Esau's Profaneness and Departure from the Covenant in wicked Marriages The Second is The Manner of her translating the Blessing from Esau to Jacob seemeth most dubious as to the Quo Warranto in divers circumstances yea 't is the common opinion of the Antient Fathers that Rebekah did all by a Divine Instinct and Warranty from Heaven which notwithstanding makes not God the Author of fraud and lying For 1. There is a good craft as well as a bad the bad is when one thing is acted and another feigned for the hurt of him whom the design is to deceive this was not Rebekah's deceit but it was a good and an honest craft to reduce her Husband from a gross mistake such projects and politick practices are so far from being condemned that they are sometimes commended as in the Faithful Physitian who beguiles his fond Patient in order to his cure giving him some effectual remedies which if he knew them he would not take them So in the tender Mother who oft is constrained to cheat the froward child to bring it either to eat or sleep None condemn Pauls for using craft 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an high point of Heavenly Wisdom Dan. 12.3 to gain the Souls of the Corinthians 2 Cor. 12.16 nor Christ for seeming as if he would go further than Emmaus to stir up the Disciples desires for his abode with them Luke 24.18 29. As to the five Articles wherewith Rebekah is Arraigned in the first Branch they all may be thus answered in order 1. She did not lay a stumbling block before the Blind but rather remov'd one out of his way by directing Isaac into a right way of obeying and accomplishing Gods Oracle 2. 'T was no Injury to Esau for she design'd not to bereave him of any thing that was properly his due the Blessing belong'd not to him but goes with the Birth right 3. Neither did she corrupt her Son with pernicious counsel but rather corrects her Husband with pious prudence her honest advice and device did no damage to Isaac which he never complain'd of after to her but confirms it as profitable counsel to them both neither did it incur the danger of a Curse which Jacob feared as the event did demonstrate nor that deadly hatred of Esau against Jacob for this happen'd by accident from his malice 4. It was not Female rashness but certainty of Faith that made her Prophecy a good Issue saying Only obey and upon me be thy Curse thou vainly fears though as to second causes the counsel seem'd doubtful but she surely saw a good event from Gods Oracle which she believed 5. Neither did She act against God herein but according to God and his will declared to her in his Oracle besides other Providences to be spoke of in the last remark concurring to demonstrate the mind of God to her and therefore she was not to wait till God by some miracle should confer the Blessing on Jacob but upon this emergency uses those means an honest Wile to effect it it follows then she did not do evil to procure good and if she gave good counsel Jacob sin'd not to take it but more of this afterwards The Fifth Remark or remarkable means of Jacob's obtaining the Blessing was the over-ruling Providence of God
he very Happy in having a Paul by him who restor'd him to life again v. 10. Christ hath many Rooms as this Ladder hath many Rounds some lower for Children some middle for Young Men and some higher for Fathers in Grace and Godliness Now the higher that you climb the more dangerous and deadly is your Fall if you be not exceeding wary and watchful in your steps you may not take up one foot until you know where to set down the other the steps are narrow Matth. 7.14 though the Ladder be large as before and soon mist for want of due Caution and Circumspection This David felt when he complained my feet had almost slipt Psal 73.2 and fear'd when he pray'd Uphold my Goings in thy Paths that my footsteps slip not Psal 17.5 If once you slip there is no stop or stay in the way you slide down it may be headlong to the very bottom and if not slain by a backward fall as heavy Eli was 1 Sam. 4.18 yet surviving you have all your climbing work to begin anew according to the Nazarites Law Numb 6.12 but the Days that were before shall be lost because his Separation is defiled so your foul Fall defiles all your former Devotions and you must therefore begin the World and your work afresh Repent and do your first works c. Rev 2.5 Sixthly See then that you make daily Progress upon this Ladder a man may be in daily motion that steps up some few steps and then steps down again and so keep continually ascending and descending without any proficiency non proficere est deficere Grow in Grace from the lower to the higher Form and Degree your Knowledge must grow from a dram to a pound yea to a Talent thereof Poor Ezra and Nehemiah coming out of Captivity could give but Drams of Gold to Temple-work Ezr. 2.69 Nehem. 7.70 71. but Rich David was able to give not only Pounds but whole Talents towards it 1 Chron. 29.4 The man heal'd of his blindness by Christ at the first saw but men as trees walking but the second touch from Christ made him see all clearly Mark 8.24 25. so your Faith most grow from a grain of Mustard-seed to become a great Tree wherein Divine Thoughts and Desires may as Birds of the Air lodge in the branches thereof Matth. 13.31 32. so your Zeal must grow from smoaking Flax to a burning Torch and so all other Graces should grow Monstri est semper Infantem esse the Child that grows not is expos'd as a Prodigy 't is a shame the Holy Child Jesus should lye always in Swaddling Clouts you must be growing up in him till you touch Heaven with your head and heart Compare time with time for this c. See that you be active and abounding in God's Work seeing 't is not in vain in the Lord 1 Cor. 15.58 Some say the eight Beatitudes Christ proclaims in his Sermon on the Mount Matth. 5.1 2 3 to the 12. are the sundry steps of this Ladder whereof Poverty of Spirit is the lowest v. 3. and Purity of Heart is the sixth v. 8. 't is no easie labour to attain unto this step but if you be yet but on the lowest Christ pronounces you blessed and more blessed are you still if you reach higher The Fourth Remarkable Inference is Though climbing be hard work and against the bent or tendency of Nature Omne grave deorsum all heavy things press downward yet this hard work hath high Helps and Encouragements As 1. Here is an entire Ladder the Mediation of Christ wherein never a step is broken that is an useless Ladder which wanteth several steps and what insignificant things are steps when sever'd from the Ladder so are all our Gifts and Duties out of Christ and his Mediation which gives Life and Vertue to all 2. As every step must be on him so Righteousness and Peace Mercy and Truth are met in him Psal 85.10 11. and in his Mediation as the two Sides of the Ladder do kiss each other Christ is both our Righteousness Jer. 23.6 and our Peace Eph. 2.14 Truth springs out of the Earth or Heart of Man and Mercy looks down from God out of Heaven These are the objects and sure Hand-Holds for our Faith in our climbing up 3. Christ himself is gone up before us into Heaven Job 3.13 Act. 1.11 1 Pet. 2.21 c. he being God-Man needed no Ladder yet that where he is we may be also Joh. 17.24 he hath left his Mediation as a Ladder for us Having open'd Heaven and Paradise to us which the first Adam by his Fall shut against us Gen. 3.24 we may therefore follow the Captain of our Salvation Hebr. 2.10 with comfort and courage and we must follow him fast and close having the Help of a Ladder which he had not yet is become one to us his Resurrection Ascension and Sitting down are the foot length and top of this Ladder for his footsteps drop fatness Psal 65.11 for us to gather up for out refreshing in the way if we pursue him close Our 4th Encouragement is Angels attend Heirs of Salvation Heb. 1.14 to secure us from falling Psal 91.11 they are as our Nurses into whose keeping our Heavenly Father committeth us and chargeth them to look well to us his Children while we live on Earth as Citizens Children are committed to Country Nurses and to bring us safe Home to the City and to our Father's House when we die as they did the Soul of Lazarus Luk. 16.22 our Protection by Angels though manag'd by an invisible hand is our Privilege purchased by Christ oh Bless God for it Our 5th Encouragement is God is leaning as some read this Gen. 28.13 at the top of the Ladder crying Come up hither Rev. 11.12 and humbling himself to take hold of our hand with his and to draw us up to himself He hath an Hand and an Heart to help us that Child climbs the Style safely and cheerfully who is in his Father's hand c. The Fifth Remarkable Inference is Even Rich mens Children may meet with much Hardship as Jacob did here His Father Isaac had a vast Estate descended on him from his Grandfather Abraham who was a Prince among the Hittites even a mighty Prince among them Gen. 23.6 and whom God had blessed greatly with a very great Estate Gen. 24.35 and all this Prince-like Wealth was given by him unto Isaac v. 36. yea and Jacob's Mother Rebekab had brought up this Son whom she loved Gen. 25.28 with much tenderness no doubt and indulgency yet is Jacob banish'd from Home forced to foot it five hundred Miles having neither Horse nor Chariot to carry him this long Journey and in the way of this wearying Walk was constrain'd to lye out of Doors having no better Accommodation than the cold Ground for his Bed an hard Stone for his Bolster and the open Firmament for his Canopy over him Little do the best and wealthiest of Men know what
greater Nation and mightier than they Numb 14.12 But Moses prudently refuseth this mighty though private and personal preferment because he plainly saw God would be a great loser in his Glory by that Bargain had stiff-necked Israel been destroyed to make way for it 'T is an excellent Note of an Eminent Divine As God was highly displeas'd with Balaam for going though he bade him go so assuredly the Lord would not have taken it so kindly of Moses if he had taken him at the offer he made him in a time of holy Heat against his unholy People And 't is worthy of our serious observation how grievously Jacob was gravell'd his Faith was enough faulty even in this his last and best Argument wherein he bringeth forth his strongest Reason his Shed-Anchor to hold fast his floating Ship his wavering Soul he fills his Mouth with it and rouzes up himself to take better hold of God in his wrestling with him yet here was his failure in thinking that God's Glory would be quite lost if he and his two Bands had been destroy'd by Esau whereas he should have thought with himself that though they all had been slain yet God remaineth true Let God be true though every Man be a lyar Rom. 3.4 Thus Jacob's Grandfather Abraham had better thoughts in a case of as great despondency as to himself and his Wife Gen. 17.17 not daring to be found either Doubting or Deriding the Promise of God concerning his Seed promised when they were in their own thoughts after the manner of Nature writ down Childless having spent all their youth in the Conjugal Yoke without any Children yet now receiving God's Promise of an offspring even in both their old Age He stagger'd not at it as Jacob doth here but against Hope believed in Hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he never thought upon hit own Dead Body he cared not for that at all but gave Glory to God acknowledging him of Almighty Power to overcome all natural Difficulties and to perform whatever he had promised though never so contrary to the course of Nature and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was being carried on with full Sail as the word signifies fully perswaded so goes gallantly on in the way of believing and laughed from an Admiration of God's Favour not from any distrust of his Power as his Wife Sarah after did Gen. 18.12 His Hope therefore is said to bear him up against Hope that is his Hope-Spiritual placed in God All-sufficient over-powered his Hope-Natural which herein was at a loss as being unable to argue above apparent Causes in Nature's Course but his other and better Hope did Dictate to him better things Rom. 4.18 19 20 21. that God was able out of very S●ones to raise up Children unto Abraham Matth. 3.9 as well and better as to bring forth Adam and a whole world of Creatures out of Nothing Such a Plerophory or full perswasion was not indeed in Jacob nor in the best of us O●r highest and holiest Expostulations with God though of never so good intentions favour somewhat of Creature-Frailty and weakness of Faith some Gravel goes along with our purest Water as 't was with Jacob here who yet gave a brisk Testimony of a brave Faith in his Appealing to the Promise when run off from all other Refuges in this Time of Temptation Oh that we could cast Anchor there also in the like case Heb. 6.17 18 19. then would God deliver us from our Esau's as he did Jacob from his Lastly This may comfort us That God hath a look of love upon his Servants as upon Jacob here both in their goings out and in their comings in he marketh all their paths Psal 56.8 whether they be at home with their Father or abroad among Strangers they are ever under God's Eye and overshadowed with his wing Psal 57.1 God was with him at Bethel and Syria c. Now come I to Jacob's fourth Wrestling First With Laban already conquered Secondly With Esau but a Conquering for his Conquest over him comes not in compleated until his two last were accomplished Thirdly With God spiritually in the Duty of Prayer as before And Fourthly With Christ corporally as one man wrestles with another putting forth their utmost Strength and Skill to give the Foil and the Fall each to other So does the Son of God the second Person in the Holy Trinity as is made most manifest afterwards and this Holy Patriarch Jacob make a Tryal of Skill and strive with their strength one against another which of the two should win the Prize This fourth Wrestling or Duel 'twixt these two holdeth forth most stupendous and astonishing History so wonderful as it plainly transcendeth worldly Capacities and seems altogether Incredible to Humane Reason For 1. What can be more marvellous than this that God should take upon him the form of a Man and representing an Antagonist or Adversary should wrestle a Fall with Man yea with an Holy Man yet higher and with such an Holy Man to whom he had promis'd his protection in all places whither he went Gen. 28.15 his dealing well with him Gen. 32.9 and his assuredly doing him good v. 12. Oh wonderful was this to defend Jacob to deal well with him and surely to do him good for God to Come forth as an Enemy to him to fight him in a Duel and so put him upon defending himself as well as he could to fence off the Almighty blows or Thrusts of such a Divine Dueller and to secure his standing against those omnipotent Heavings and Listings of such a Divine Wrestler whose mighty Arms can give the Foil and Fall to the mightiest Monarch upon Earth Psal 76.12 yea can heave lift off and remove the massiest Mountain in the World out of its place Turning it upside down Job 9.5 6. and 28.9 Judg. 5.5 Psal 68.8 Nahum 1.5 Hab. 3.6.10 Psal 114. 7. overturning them by prodigious Earthquakes How easily then even with a wet finger as we say could God by his Omnipotency have overturned Jacob who was nothing so mighty in Bulk as a Mountain nor so strongly founded at the Root And 2. What can be more incredible than this that the Immortal God should be overcome by a mortal Man that the borrowing Power should be too hard for the lending Power that the Creature should be too strong for the Creatour and that this worm Jacob so call'd Isa 41.14 should be able to out-wrestle his own Maker yea the Grand-Maker of the great World yet all these both Admirable and Incredible things are most true and sacred Truths truly Recorded in the Scripture of Truth Dan. 10.21 And by Faith we understand not only the great Truth of the Creation in all its particular Circumstances how all things were made out of Nothing Heb. 11.3 but also that this stupendious Story is true in all its parts aforesaid This must be believed by an historical Faith as all other Truths revealed in the Word are 'T is the Nature
of Faith to believe God what he hath written in the Canonical Scripture upon his bare Word And that against Sense in things Invisible and against Reason in things Incredible Sense corrects Imagination or Fancy and as Reason corrects the Senses so Faith corrects them both Aufer Argumenta ubi fides quaeritur Verba Philosophorum excludit simplex Veritas Piscatorum saith Ambrose where Faith is required there Arguments of Vain Philosophy Col. 2.8 are to be abandoned and the naked Truth simply Recorded by the Apostles who were Fishermen and the Prophets who were some of them Herdsmen is highly to be preferred above and doth plainly thrust out of Doors all the idle Speculations both of Heathenish Philosophers and Aery Schoolmen call'd a company of Dunghil Divines in Matters of Faith God hath said it therefore I must believe it and I believe it is enough though I cannot prove the Principles of the Proposition or the Fundamentals of Faith And indeed among all the famous Histories of the Old Testament concerning the Holy Patriarchs there is none more Eminent than this which like an Orient and Transparent Gem among all the Heroick Exploits of Jacob gives forth the greatest Splendour There is no such high Remark related by Moses either of Abraham or of Isaac Though God appeared eight times to Jacob's Grandfather Abraham speaking to him every time As 1. Gen. 12.1 in Ur. 2. v. 7. In Shechem 3. In Bethel Gen. 13.14 4. After the Conquest of the Kings Gen. 15.1 5. At the Covenant of Circumcision Gen. 17.1 6. At Mamre before Sodom's Destruction Gen. 18.1 7. At the Ejection of Ishmael Gen. 21.12 8. At the Oblation of Isaac Gen. 22.3.11.16 c. And concerning his Father Isaac we read of God's appearing at the most but three times to him As 1. At the giving out of the Oracle to Rebekah concerning two Nations Gen. 25.23 2. At the Famine in the Land Gen. 26.1 2. 3. At Beershebah vers 23 24. But concerning this Patriarch Jacob we read that God appear'd to him seven times which is a Number of Perfection and much more remarkably than either to his Father or Grandfather As 1. At Bethel where he had his Vision of the Ladder Gen. 28.13 2. In Padan Aram commanding his Return to Canaan Gen. 31.3.11 3. In the way to Mahanaim Gen. 32.1 2. 4. Upon the Bank of the River Jabbok here where God wrestled with him 5. After the Destruction of the Shechemites Gen. 35.1 6. After the Death of his Nurse Deborah vers 9. And 7. at Beersheba in his going down to Egypt Gen. 46.2 As learned Pareus excellently observeth But among all those admirable appearances of God to Man there is none comparable to this wherein God and Man wrestled a Fall together The History whereof hath a greater lustre and splendour upon it than all the other aforesaid It doth outshine them all as the Sun all the lesser Stars Let us therefore say of this Vision as Moses said of the Vision of his burning Bush Exod. 3.2 3. We will turn aside and behold this great wonder yea let us not only see it but hear it also and hearken to those Divine Instructions and Comforts which are contained in it and flow naturally from it This Monomachia Jacobi cum Deo ipso or Jacob's fighting a Duel hand to hand and wrestling a Fall with God himself is a most stupendous and astonishing Story as before and cannot be overmuch no nor enough admired Our Lord saith what went ye out by such Multitudes into the Wilderness to see something of nothing some worthless pithless poiseless thing a reed shaken with the wind Matth. 11.7 But behold Here 's a far greater wonder than John the Baptist though a burning and a shining light Job 5.35 could possibly be He indeed was but as an inconsiderable Reed easily broken at last by the bloody hands of Herod and Herodias as well as easily blown to and fro by the popular breath or wind of the mobile Multitude who cry'd him up one day and cry'd him down another though he was in himself no such light and vain person bending like a Reed this way and that way but was a firm witness of Christ and a faithful constant Servant of God both in his Life and Doctrine to the last moment But here you are call'd upon to come forth and Behold one of the greatest wonders in the Wilderness of this World such a Tryal of Skill wherein God shaketh Man and Man shaketh God in wrestling work This Famous History holdeth forth these following most remarkable Parts and Particulars 1. The Combat or Conflict it self 2. The two Combatants or Conflicters each with other 3. Jacob's Valour 4 His Victory 5. His luxation or lameness caught with his Conquest 6. His Constancy in continuing the Combat notwithstanding his lamed Leg. 7. His having the Honour of Knighthood put upon him in the Imposition of a new Name 8. His Blessing he obtain'd by his Valour and Victory First Of the First The Combat it self 1. In the General 't is one of the most famous Combats Recorded in Scripture we read indeed in that Divine Record of sundry Eminent Conflicts carried on after the manner of a Duel As First Of that Combat betwixt little David and great Goliah 1 Sam. 17.40 c. but in that the Match was only made betwixt Man and Man there was only one Mortal against another though the one was a great Gyant and the other was but in comparison of his Antagonist a little Dwarf Secondly We read also in Divine Writ of a sore Contest betwixt Michael and Lucifer about the Body of Moses Jude vers 9. the former was an Arch-Angel so called and the latter the Arch-Devil This Dispute was daringly carried on indeed yet was it only betwixt two Creatures as some sense it the Good Angel and the Evil one But this Conflict here is not betwixt Man and Man as the first was nor betwixt one Creature and another as the second was but it was a Combat carried on betwixt God and Man a mortal Man was assaulted by the Immortal God in this so it far exceeded the former instance and as it was manag'd betwixt a mere Creature and the great Creator so it much surpasseth the latter instance also Indeed we read of a Third Duel Matth. 4.1 to 10. wherein the Son of God and the Prince of Hell were hand to hand ingaged each against the other where the strong man and the stronger man so called Luk. 11.21 22. enter'd the lists together and encountred each other in three desperate and deadly Passes It must be acknowledg'd That these two Combatants were the sublimest Champions that ever acted as Opposites and then was the most famous Battel fought that ever was acted on the Stage of the World For in that Contest we may behold the very Abstract of Power and Policy the very quintessence of strength and subtilty grappling together on both sides There was the Force
did hear of Reuben's Incest Gen. 35.22 and Jacob heard of if to which the Greek Version addeth and it appeared evil in his sight this necessarily presupposeth a knowledge of it as likewise do Jacob's words to Simeon and Levi Gen. 34.30 Ye have made me to stink c. that he must therefore know of their Cruelties But we have no such Intimation of Jacob's knowing this notwithstanding all these five Reasons aforesaid The other Opinion That Jacob could not be altogether ignorant of the Transactions 'twixt Joseph and his Brethren in that horrid Conspiracy seems to me not so much improbable upon these Grounds 1. Jacob was a Prophet and he who knew things to come so far off as were about two Thousands of Years even to the coming of Shiloh Gen. 49.10 by his Spirit of Prophecy could not well but be able by that same Spirit to look back and behold that thing which was done comparatively but the other Day as the Prophet Elisha said to his Servant Went not my heart with thee c. 2 King 5.26 that is knowest thou not how I have an extraordinary Spirit whereby I know all thou doest in my Absence though thou seek to conceal it from me the same might Jacob say to his Sons that in Spirit he had discerned all they had done to Joseph 'T is true It may be objected here that the Prophets did not know all things at all times as 2 Sam. 7.3 and 1 Sam. 16.6 c. Yea Elisha himself saith The Lord hath hid this same thing from me 2 King 4.27 And again He knew not where the Hatchets Head was sunk 2 King 6.6 Answ It is readily granted that God might also hide this matter of Joseph's Mischief from his Father for Thirteen years together notwithstanding that Jewish Fable how Serah Asser's Daughter Gen. 46.17 so Jacob's Niece or Grandchild told Jacob her Grandfather that her Uncle Joseph was alive for which good office say the Hebrews she was translated alive into Paradise otherwise Jacob had not mourned for Joseph when his Sons did deceive him with the blood of a Kid in stead of Joseph's Blood as he had deceived his Father with the flesh and skin of a Kid in stead of the flesh of Venison and his own Skin Gen. 37.32 c. 27.16 and Thirteen Years after this had Jacob still known of this he would not have swooned at the Tidings of Joseph's Life Gen. 45.26 't was a long time for Jacob to be mourning for Joseph as if Dead which his unnatural Sons imposed upon their too credulous Father first they cause his woe and then came to comfort him Gen. 37.35 Miserable Comforters 2. Considering how Joseph nourished his Father and his Family seventeen years before his Fathers Death as his Father had nourish'd him seventeen years before his Sale Gen. 37.2 for Jacob was 130 years old when he had his happy meeting with Joseph Gen. 47.9 and living with him seventeen years after he was 147 years old when he died v. 28. now it can scarce be probable that though Jacob were kept in the dark the first Thirteen years about this Matter that it should be still concealed the next Seventeen years too which was the sweetest part of Jacob's Life seeing the Selling Sons repented and the Sold Son advanced as after Besides 3. 'T is probable also Jacob had a jealousie that his Sons had told him a Lie when they shew'd him Joseph's Coat as though some Beast had devoured him Gen. 37.32 and 't was but rational that he must suspect the truth of their Story herein seeing he could not be Ignorant both of their Envy against him for his Gifts and Goodness and of their Hatred to him Gen. 37.4 11. so that they could not speak peaceably to him The hated will be harmed by the haters when opportunity serveth Therefore Jacob was justly jealous that they consulted his Ruine which admits of a double Demonstration 1. This Jealousie of Jacob concerning his Sons is supposed to be one Reason why he was so loth to let Benjamin go with them to Egypt seeing his sending Joseph to them upon a Visit had such a sad Success Compare Gen. 37.13 18. with 42.36 38. He was afraid v. 4. lest mischief should befall him Judicious Pareus personates here distressed Jacob as speaking thus I have now none left of my dear Rachel but Benjamin I shrewdly suspect that ye have bereaved me both of Joseph and Simeon both whom I fear ye have Slain Suppose Simeon be alive and in Hold as ye say for a Spy yet hath he been a naughty Son in making me stink among all my Neighbours by his bloody Butchery upon Shechem Gen. 34.30 I will not therefore exchange my only Hopeful Son Benjamin for him besides the Journey is dangerous and ye are wicked who perhaps have kill'd Joseph who was sent to you your selves and now ye pretend that Simeon is Imprison'd by the Prince of Egypt whom possibly in some rude squabble ye have kill'd also and now ye design to take off Benjamin also as I never saw Joseph more after I sent him to you so shall I never see Benjamin more should I send him with you Let who will go and release Simeon my dear Benjamin I will not venture All this doth Evidence that Jacob was not altogether Ignorant but had at least a presumptive knowledge of their Treachery to him about Joseph which he makes more plain by saying Gen. 43.14 If I be Robbed of my Children I am Robbed As if he had spoke thus If by your Importunity as ye have Robbed me of both Joseph and Simeon so ye Rob me of my Benjamin also the will of the Lord be done Esth 4.16 Act. 21.14 But the second Evidence is Jacob look'd upon his ten Sons as a company of Liars in telling him that Tale that Joseph was Dead and therefore when they came to acquaint him with a Truth that Joseph was alive 't is expresly said that he believed them not Gen. 45.26 This is the just Reward upon all Liars that they shall not be believed when they tell the Truth They had crack'd their Credits with their Father in imposing upon his Credulity that some evil Beast had devoured Joseph and now he knows not how to give credit to them in a matter of truth which he can hardly believe partly upon this account and partly because he feared the News was too good to be true For Tarda solet Magnis Rebus adesse Fides Men especially Men in Misery very hardly have a Faith for an unexpected Mercy more especially if very Great The Fourth Ground of its probability that Jacob was not altogether ignorant of Joseph's Sale drawn from the sense that some put upon Joseph's Title or Epithete Jacob gives him in his Last Will and Testament slyling him one separate from his Brethren Gen. 49.26 that is Joseph was a Nazar in this that he did separate as the Hebr. signifies himself from the evil Manners of his
The Second Objection But was not this Action of Rahab's both a Treacherous and a Treasonable Action against her King and Country Was she not a betrayer of Canaan herein Answer It may not be said so for she being the first Fruits of the cursed Canaanites and according to the signification of her Name Rahab one enlarged from the Pagan Religion had undoubtedly a particular Revelation from God that the Land of Canaan and so her Town Jericho were proscribed by the great Creator and given to the Israelites Josh 2.9 10 11 c. This did absolve her from all Laws of her King and Country and laid a New Law upon her to Incorporate her self into the Common-wealth of Israel and to promote their welfare saith Calvin upon that Scripture 'T is true Abulensis saith that Rahab had not Sinned if she had betrayed the Spies into the Sergeants Hands but this is directly against the express Testimony of the above-quoted Scriptures that makes her hiding them from their Hands a noble Act of Faith Much better saith Masius in saying Rahab First Understood neither that the Life of the Spies would be the Destruction nor their Death the Salvation of her Country And secondly when she knew that her Country was proscribed by God and given to the Israelites she neither ought nor could either oppose a just cause or patronize the unjust c. There can no Bond be obliging against the declared will of God It would have alterd the case had her action been subservient only to her own advantage and not also to Gods will The fourth Head of Discourse is the intelligence those Spies received of Rahab concerning the Universal consternation both of Jericho and of all the Region round about vers 8 9 10 11. Wherein Rahab declareth the cause of her deserting the cause of her King and like a good House-wife not only cover'd the Spies with the Green Stalks of Flax which she had to dry in the Sun upon the flat Roof of her House but also Span a fair Thread out of it and did Weave for her self a beautiful Webb as may be said of both her Temporal Preservation and Propagation and of her Eternal Life and Salvation also Hereupon both the Apostles James and Paul as above take notice of her faith in God and obedience to him but make no mention of her Falshood and Lies or Equivocations to Men. Her good intentions preponderated the evil of some circumstances in her Actions The First Remark is It was a generous Act of Rahabs Faith to venture her own Life thus for saving the Lives of the Spies concealed by her but much more to furnish them with means to escape and with intelligence to carry back unto Joshua that the Town and Country was his own Yet most of all in taking an Oath of these Spies for her own security and her Relations as if Jericho had been now in their Hands But of that afterwards notwithstanding the strength and security of the City The second Remark is no sooner had Rahab secured her own House from the Kings Searchers by Infatuating and Dismissing them into a fond pursuit but then she declareth the grounds of her Heroick Faith to Joshua's Searchers saying I know c. grounding her confidence upon two special Miracles that the God of Israel had wrought for Israel namely 1. the drying up the Red-Sea and 2. their Conquest of the two Kings Og and Sihon and of both their Kingdoms concluding the same omnipotent Arm would dry up Jordan a small River much more and enable Israel to conquer the Kings and Kingdoms of Canaan And by this token she assured them hereof because a general Consternation was come upon her City c. Whereas God had given Joshua and his company great courage becoming Conquerors The Third Remark The Apostle James joyneth the Faith of Abraham which carried him through his ten Tryals with this Faith of Rahab which carried her only through this one Trial and the exercise whereof was only in Civil entertainment yet for Religious ends both together Jam. 2.23 25. to shew that the weakest as well as strongest Faith must evidence its truth and Life by its works and not only so but also to incourage those that be in the lowest form of Faith may find favour with God as well as those of the highest form provided there be any evidences of a living Faith as in Rahab Few can climb so high as Abraham the Father of the faithful and the Pattern of Believers as Christ takes notice of the Green Figs Can. 2.13 so even of Buds and Blossoms Can. 7.12 and will bless the Buds Isa 44 3. according to the Old Translation Tho' faith be as small as a grain of Mustard-seed The Filth Head of Discourse is the Oath or Covenant made by the Spies to Rahab at her Demand for saving her Life and the Lives of her Relations vers 12 13 14 16 18 19 20. The Remarks upon it are 1. Oaths are an Antient way of ending Strife Heb. 7.16 and this poor penitent Pagan thought her self secure by this means vers 12. No doubt this was a great exercise of her small faith to be thus confiding in a Covenant with those Spies as if they had the power of Life and Death at this time in their Hands who themselves were as yet in a desperate case and could not secure their own Lives In all this she far exceeded the Faith of all Israel who now staggerd at Gods promise and more at the performance of it tho' they had seen all his Wonders and she had only heard the Reports of them Nor doth she mention one word for saving her self in this Sacred Swearing because the Law of equity obliged them to preserve their Preserver All her care was carried forth for her carnal Relations lest they should perish in an unconverted State The Second Remark is the Token of their inviolably keeping this Covenant she demanded of them vers 13 21. was the Red Cord by which she let them down for their escape Josh 6.23 25. This was the outward means of her and her Friends Salvation Red is a saving colour As Isralel's Doors were Red with the Blood of the Paschal Lamb that the destroying Angel might pass over their Houses Exod. 12.7 13. c. So Rahabs Window must have the Scarlet Line tied to it Josh 2.21 The Door is of use to let in Passengers and the use of the Window is to let in light into the House The Soul of Man hath its Door namely the Ear to let in Doctrines and its Window namely the Eye to let in knowledg therefore both of them do need to be made Red with the Scarlet-Blood of the Lamb of God whose Fleece also affordeth the Right Red Line which is effectual for our Salvation The Third Remark is The strict and punctual Terms of those two parties in this Reciprocal Covenant having conditions on both Hands First Rahab's part was to bind the Scarlet Thread
quos Deus vult destrui priùs dementat Tho' it be the common Dictate of the Light of Nature that Nations in danger of Invasion do carefully secure their Coasts and guard their Frontiers yet those Canaanites in neglecting this here seem deprived of their reasons probably their present security might be because they look'd on it as Impossible for Israel to pass over Jordan when it overflow'd its Banks but certainly they were struck with such a Terror by this Miracle that they durst not come forth but immured themselves in the High wall'd-City CHAP. IV. JOsh The Fourth gives an Account of those Monuments appointed for an everlasting memorial of Israels miraculous passage over Jordan those Monuments are twofold first the Principal described 1. The Author God vers 1. 2. The instruments who and how many vers 2 4 8. 3. The Materials twelve Stones taken out of the midst of Jordan vers 3. 5. 4. The place of Standing both in Gilgal vers 3.5 20. and in the midst of Jordan vers 9. 5. The end why as a memorial of that wonderful Work to their Posterity vers 6 7 21 22 23. and that the Canaanites might learn to acknowledg the omnipotency and Israelites the fear of God vers 24. Secondly the less Principal described likewise as 1. the manner and order of Israel's marching through Jordan 1. the Gadites Reubenites and Half-tribe of Manasseh vers 12 13. 2. All the People universally making much hast either from fear of danger or from desire of the promised Land vers 10. and 3. The Priests with the Ark vers 15 16 17 18. 2ly The time when this was done vers 19. 3ly The event hereof namely the magnifying of Joshua's Authority vers 14. 4ly The return of the Waters of Jordan into their course as they naturally ran vers 18. lastly The pitching of Israel's Tents in Gilgal a place so called by Anticipation vers 19. and 5.9 The special Remarks upon the premisses are these The First Remark is This is an Ancient and laudable Practice to erect lasting Monuments for propogating and perpetuating some signal mercy and singular deliverance that the Glory of a wonder-working God may be Eternalized and the Truth of his wondrous works may be testified to all succeeding Generations Here a Pillar of twelve huge Stones must be reared up by Gods own Command vers 1.9 with chap 3.12 And therefore it was void of all vain Superstition as it was not Super Statutum or the command of Joshua only Agreeable unto this Divine Pattern hath this great City well erected a stately structure of Stone the Monumental Pillar that the loving kindness of God in the late dreadful conflagration may be kept in everlasting remembrance The Second Remark is Tho' it be the Devils design to have Gods great Works of wonder soon obliterated Eaten Bread is soon forgotten yet 't is God's will to have them remembred and better remembred Therefore one Monument of this great mercy must be in Gilgal the place of Israel's Circumcision relating to the twelve Patrinrks in the Old Test and another in Jordan the place of Christ's Baptism relating to the twelve Apostles of the New tho' that in Jordan was a memorial to the two Tribes and half on the other side of Jordan which being built up of the most Massy Stones in the midst of the River might be seen at low Water by them for these Stones are not said to he carried on Mens Shoulders as those erected at Gilgal were but that Joshua rolled them together by the help of many Hands Or Jordans Waters being so famous for their clearness this Pillar was perspicuous to them that passed by in Boats or if as some say It was set nigh the Bank this made it more obvious to the Eye That at Gilgal was a memoir for the other 10. Tribes all must have their memento's that this Miracle of mercy might not be Moth-eaten c. The Third Remark is Parents ought cerefully to Catechize and instruct their Children vers 6 7. They were to teach their Children the use and end of thhis Monument as before of the Passover Exod. 12.26 and 13.14 Psal 34.11 and 48.13 and 102.18 Tender Plants must oft be Watered Eph. 6.4 Children must be Nurtured as well as Nourished the former is as necessary as the latter and much more seeing the Soul is a more noble nature than the Body If Parents Mind only the Bodies of their young What do they more than the very brute Beasts for theirs The Blessings upon Posterity is entail'd to Piety in the second Commandment Therefore the meaning of all Sacred Monuments should be made known by Parents to Children True Religion is the exercise of illuminated Minds 't is not an ignorant or blind Devotion as among the Papists who have a Mass of Mystical Ceremonies whereof neither Children nor their Patients no nor many of their Priests can render any reason nor indeed is any reason for many of them pretended by their Chief-Priests save such only as is ridiculous But this Sign so called of Divine Institution was expresly for the fortifying of Faith for the feeding of Hope and for the nourishing of Joy both for Parents and Children when informed by calling to remembrance so transcendent a Miracle whereby they all in after-times might be stirred up to Thankfulness Strengthened in their daily dependancy upon this wonder-working God Hereupon Parents cannot perform a more profitable Office to their Children nor leave them a better and more lasting Legacy and Inheritance than to train them up in the crue knowledg of the good Ways Works and Word of God c. The Fourth Remark is behold how the servent Zeal of Joshua appeared here who being transported with Admiration of this Miracle of Mercy doth again and again Record the Circumstances of it the Waters of Jordan were cut off and again the Waters of Jordan were cut off vers 7. That they might make the more impression upon the Minds of their posterity Wheting or Sharpening as the Hebrew Deut. 6.7 signifies As if he had been whetting a Knife before Dinner by drawing it oft over the Whetstone or as if he had been sharpening a Stake before it be driven into the Ground Thus Joshua repeats and Inculcates the same great truth with a Mind much fired upon it not only to shew that he could scarce satisfy himself with a sufficient admiring of this great mercy but also that the Blessed Truths of God the Principles of Religion must be Inculcated and Repeated or taught diligently to our Children for die deeper impression on their Minds See again vers 22 23. The Fifth Remark is The Heroick Faith and Fortitude of those Holy Priests who like good guides not only were the first that to the Hazard of their Lives entred into the River and patiently continued long in the midst of Jordo● until fix Hundred Thousand Men c. could march over but they were the last also that passed out of the River
Jaw-bone from breaking and to impower Samson that with it he was made able to Murder a Thousand Men. N. B. Nor must we ascribe too much to the strength of the Jaw-bone it self or to the strength of Samson himself for though this Jaw-bone was moist and fresh of some Ass lately dead so not so easily broken as those that have laid long and dryed towards a Putrefaction and though Samson had likewise most unparallell'd strength reckoned the strongest Man that ever was in the World yet must we look higher above both and conclude That this matchless Exploit was the accomplishment of God's Gracious Promise which we find twice recorded one of you shall chase a Thousand Deut. 32.30 and Josh 23.10 which Scriptures must be fulfilled Mark 14.49 c. The last part is the Consequents of this Victory which be Three The First is Samson's Song of Thanksgiving for it ver 16. singing With the Jaw-bone of an Ass I have laid heaps upon heaps where there is such an Elegancy in the Original Chamor Chamorathaim as our Translation cannot reach for the same word Chamor signifies both an Ass and an Heap N. B. Though Josephus wrongs Samson here saying this Song was a vain Vaunt of his own Strength and Atchievements for which pride God punish'd him afterward with such a Throat-thratling Thirst as made him ready to perish yet the Scripture of Truth owns it as a Song of his Faith and he is celebrated for it Hebr. 11.32 and no doubt but Samson look'd higher than the bare lifting up of the Jaw-bone as he named that place Ramath lehi ver 17. which so signifies for a Monument and Memorial of this Matchless Mercy N. B. Had he ascribed his Victory to so despicable a Tool it was not the lifting of it up but the falling of it down with force that did the feat and so there would have been a Solecism an absurd Impropriety in his naming the place thus Beside it was not the dead Instrument a Jaw-bone that could lay heaps upon heaps of it self but it was the living and lively Arm of a strong Champion striking with it that did the Deed. yet no marks of his own Might doth he make in the name of the place therefore Samson must have an Eye herein to the Almighty Power of God who had given him his Assistance to Atchieve these things The Second Consequent of his Conquest was Samson's excessive Thirst which God quench'd by a Miracle ver 18 19. None can justly wonder that Samson was now Thirsty considering how he had toil'd and turmoil'd himself in Vanquishing such an Host and Mawling a Thousand Men the over-heating of his Body might well in a Natural way cause him to be thirsty But beside this Natural Thirst God might likewise send one Preternatural for Supernatural ends As N. B. First To keep him humble hiding Pride from him Job 33.17 that he should not ascribe the Glory of this great Victory to himself and to his own Prowess which haughty Man is apt to do in Autotheism as bad as Atheism and Polutheism and so Sacrifice to his own Nes Habak 1.16 and with Ajax Adore no God but his own Weapon And Secondly It was to make him pray and this he did here for no sooner had he complained I am sore a Thirst but immediately 't is said He called on the Lord ascribing Kingdom Power and Glory unto God alone and urging this Argument in his Prayer That it would not consist with or conduce to God's Honour to begin a great Work and not to finish it contrary to the Promise when I begin I will make an end 1 Sam. 3.12 N. B. And in his Prayer he tells God Thy Servant hath got this Thirst in thy Service believing that as he had granted him the greater Mercy namely Victory over his Enemies he would not deny him the lesser Mercy to wit the quenching of his Thirst c saying Seeing I have kept within the compass of my calling whereunto my God hath called me I cannot but hope he will Relieve and Refresh me Such a savoury frame of Spirit is apparent in Samson's Praye● here as is enough to answer Josephus's Notion and that of Ambrose following his Footsteps in his Tenth Epistle that Samson was puffed up with Pride and Vain glory in his Song N. B. Sure I am the contrary is apparent in his Prayer wherein he ascribes all the Glory of his Victory to the Lord of Hosts and not to his Jaw-bone of an Ass and he gives a clear Testification therein that he was more tender of Gods Honour than he was of his own in telling the Lord that it would much redound to his Dishonour should he after such a Glorious Appearance with him in this Marvelous Conquest yet suffer him to fall into the hands of the Philistines by his Fainting through Thirst N. B. But that which puts it beyond all Controversie is God's Acceptance of his Address and his Answer of Peace to his present Prayer ver 19. The Lord there works a Miracle to gratifie his Servant and to quench his Thirst God clave the hollow place that was in the Jaw-bone and turned it into a Spring of Water whereof Samson drank and his Natural Spirits were Revived N. B. The same God that did cleave the Rock in the Wilderness and as it were set it a broach to give Israel drink out of it did the like here for his Servant Samson The Miracle was the same though the Subject was differing there he clave the Bock and here the Jaw-bone yet out of both God's Omnipotency fetched not fire but mater For an impotent and weak Man can fetch fire out of a Flint or Bone with forcible strokes upon them but 't is only the Power and Prerogative of the Almighty God to wring Water out of them N. B. And hereupon sensible Samson to testifie his Thankfulness to his God sets another Mark of Remembrance upon this Miracle of Mercy also naming it Enhakkorth that is The Well of him that called or cryed looking upon it as a signal Answer to his servent Prayer in the time of his Extremity Psal 50.15 and this Fountain is said to remain there unto this Day from whence ariseth the Opinion of some N. B. That the Spring of Water was in the ground under it and not in the Jaw-bone it self which every Traveller that saw it might carry away with him as a rich Prize in those hot Countries where they had so much need to drink of the Brook in the way of their Travel 1 Kings 17.4 Psal 110.7 This indeed makes it improbable that the Jaw-bone should continue there so long but the contrary to this Opinion is not incredible upon those Considerations N. B. First Though Passengers might be forward enough to carry a Fountain along with them in that hot Climate yet might they generally have such an Awe upon them as to forbear the removing so great a Monument of God's great power and Miraculous Mercy Secondly
he had many Beasts in his own belly N. B. All these Victories are ascribed to David v. 22. learn we to do so unto Christ for all our Victories both Croporal and Spiritual These all made way for Solomon's peaceable Reign Sam. CHAP. XXII THIS Chapter is David's Doxology to the Lord for his manifold Deliverances given him both from the hands of Saul and his house and from the hands of all his other Enemies both Domestick and Foreign Now this whole Chapter being wholly Eucharistical and not at all Historical and the self same in substance with the Eighteenth Psalm which may be read either at the end of 2 Sam. 4. when David was delivered from the trouble of Saul's House as the Title of that Psalm intimates or at the end of 2 Sam. 22. here where the Lord had again delivered David from his Foreign Foes Tirinus hath this odd notion that David first drew a rude draught of this Psalm which we have here recorded in this Chap. 22. but afterwards when at more leisure he perfectly polish'd it and gave it to the Priests which is Psalm Eighteenth yet only with some few variations This Song of Thanksgiving some Learned Men do better and more solidly suppose that David composed in the last year of his Reign when he enjoyed a setled secure and sublime peace not indulging himself in his old Age with ease and idleness as too many Kings and Conquerours do in the like Condition but he devoted himself to glorifie God the giver of all his Victories in Religious Exercises such as this was wherein he names Saul as his fiercest and most dangerous Persecutor and whose Persecution was of longest continuance Now seeing there is no History in this Chapter whereof to give the Mystery and Meaning I omit it as I have done others and pass on to the 23d Chapter 2 Sam. CHAP. XXIII WHerein we have the Swan-like Song of David a little before his death and in which we have likewise but little History save only a Catalogue of David's Worthies from v. 8. to the end and therefore a few Remarks upon the Song and the Catalogue will dispatch it also And first upon the Song from v. 1 to the 8th The First Remark is This Song is said to be the last words of David v. 1. not as the last he spoke while living for he spake often after this to Joab to Araunah to Solomon c. after this but it was the last he set down as Pen-man of Holy-Writ and by Divine Inspiration This Song is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much in a little wherein he doth in few words but full of matter First Acknowledge God's Kindness Secondly Confess his own Sins Thirdly Profess his Faith Fourthly Comforts himself in the Covenant and Fifthly Denounces destruction to all Unbelievers Remark the Second Junius judgeth he spake these words after he had given his Commands to Solomon 1 King 2. and after his prayers for him in Psal 72. when he was near his death and Peter Martyr addeth that this Prophetick Song comes properly in after his thanksgiving for all his former Victories Chap. 22. and now he foretels here what great things God would give him hereafter for which he gives thanks also even for the Covenant wherein he confided for his posterity which must be understood of the promise of Christ David's Son and surest Comfort Remark the Third Whenever this Song was sang by David 't is properly placed here for all his Enemies had spat and spent all their venom and he was delivered from them all both domestick and foreign We hear not of any one that stir'd either hand or tongue against him until himself became an enemy to himself when Satan provok'd him to number the People as in Chap. 24. The Second Part is the Catalogue of David's Worthies The Remarks are First This Catalogue is reckon'd in 1 Chron. 11. as well as here Chap. 23.8 c. but with this difference there 't is set down in the beginning of David's Reign here at the ending of it This is a seeming Contradiction yet both are done so upon solid grounds for the former designeth to declare who were the Worthies that help'd David to his first settlement in his Kingdom but the latter gives an account of those that stuck close to him all the time of his Reign and help'd him all along to keep him in his settlement and fast in the Saddle Remark the Second In both the Books of Samuel and the Chronicles there is reckon'd a double Triumverate the first three were men of the greatest gallantry the second three tho' they were exceeding valorous yet not matching the first in fortitude or Magnanimous Atchievements N. B. There be diversities of Gifts yet from the same spirit all must not excell in degree and dignity if all were the head where would be the other parts of the body much less did the other Thirty Heroes Colonels and Commanders come up to the first three Remark the Third Among all those 36 Worthies Joab is not once named in the Catalogue some suppose he is not mentioned because of his barbarous Butcheries of Abner and Amasa as well as for his killing Absalom contrary to the King's Command But others are of Opinion that Joab being the Lord Chief General needed not to be named because his Valour and high Generalship had been notified before at the storming of the strong fort of Sion and he must necessarily be reckon'd one of the number to make up the forementioned number of 36 to the full number of Thirty seven as is the express number v. 39. Remark the Fourth David's refusing to drink the waters of Bethlehem c. v. 15 16 17. looking upon it as too dear a draught for him but religiously pouring it forth before the Lord. N. B. 'T is a good president for Princes not to buy their pleasures with the hazarding the lives of their Subjects and for Masters not to keep their Servants from Ordinances without necessity c. Remark the Fifth The Valour of those Worthies was oft laid forth in defence of the Harvest to keep a Field of Barley and of Lentiles 1 Chron. 11.13 v. 11 12. here and if they contended thus for Provender c. should not we be Valiant for the Truth Jer. 9.3 and contend for the Faith once delivered to the Saints Jude v. 3. Remark the Last on Chap. 23. is In all this long Catalogue of David's 37 Worthies none of David's Brethren are found amongst them tho' some of them were of such a Prince-like port and of so personable a presence that even the Prophet Samuel himself was deceived in them by looking too much at their outward appearance height of stature and a goodly Countenance he judged that Eliab David's Eldest Brother was indeed the Man appointed to be the Lord 's Anointed 1 Sam. 16.6 7. whereas neither he nor any of his other six brave Brethren proved so much as to be any of the number
own present wants but begs my last bit of me c. here 's not a word of such carnal Reasonings She doth not dispute but dispatch c. Hence Lavater Grotius Peter Martyr c. Admire the Strength of her Faith Mark 10. The kindness of this Widow in Baking the first Cake for Elijah was well requited with a Prophet's Reward Mat. 10.41 42. she afforded one Meal for him and He many to her and hers ver 15 16. neither the Meal in the Barrel nor the Oil in the Cruise was made less by daily use for three Years together which was the time of Elijah's absconding from Ahab in this place as He had hid himself for six Months in a Cave at Cherith as above N.B. This multiplying of Meal c. was Elijah's Third Miracle which Grotius compareth to those two Miracles of the blessed Messias in multiplying a few Loaves c. Mat. 14.19 and 15.36 Remark the Third is The History of Elijah's raising this Widow's dead Son to Life which was his Fourth Miracle c. This is described by many Circumstances of Time Place Means and Manner from ver 17 to ver 22. and the Event or Effect of this Miracle namely a farther Confirmation of this new Gentile-Proselytess's Faith v. 23 24. Mark 1. The time when this 4th Miracle was wrought some say was about two years after Elijah was entertain'd and maintain'd as well as absconded by this compassionate Widow Long had she lived under the mercy of this multiplying Miracle Now lest she should forget her self and be Exalted above measure her mercy must be mixed with misery and sickness is sent to kill her Son out-right which Famine only threatned to do an heavy cross now allays her high comfort Mark 2. Her passionate expostulation with the Prophet v. 18. in her extream perplexity she rashly imputes the death of her Son to the presence of the Prophet as if her Son could not have died if Elijah had not been her Guest Thus apt are we to mistake the grounds of our afflictions and to cast them upon wrong Causes Erpennius saith she was conscious to her self that she had not conversed with this most Holy Man so holily and reverently as she ought to have done in the midst of her passion saith Peter Martyr she retaineth her penitency acknowledging her sin was the Mother of her misery and feared the Man of God had complain'd to God of some miscarriage in her Mark 3. The place where this Miracle of raising her Son to life was wrought to wit upon the Prophet's Bed this Holy Prophet answers not passion with passion tho' he was of a fiery temper but calmly takes the dead Son out of its Mother's bosom and lays it upon his own Bed v. 19. that there he might in private pray the more fervently to procure his life again that as he had shut up Heaven from giving Rain so now must he open Heaven to return the Soul of her Son And indeed every word he poured out in Prayer v. 20. was a word of weight and wonder Peter Martyr observes every word is an Argument from the Topicks or Persons 1. From God whose Office it is to be kind to Widows and who is Lord of Life and Death so canst restore from Death to Life 2. From himself I am thy Prophet and thou art my God this will redound to my disgrace if unredress'd what will the World say But God bless me from entertaining God's Prophets if this be the effect thereof 3. From the Widow shall my God and my self requite her kindness with such an act of unkindness she is a Widow so a most passionate Lover of her Son and cannot subsist without her Son's support Let not this affliction of the loss of her Son be added to the affliction of her Widow-hood Mark 4. Elijah observed that old Rule Ora Labora Pray and Labour thus he did by stretching himself three times upon the dead Child v. 21. as if saith Lavater he would have hatch'd him alive as the Hen doth her Eggs but rather it was that his sense of the Carcasses coldness might heat his own heart the more into most fervent Prayer which at the third time prevailed Mark 5. As the means of the Miracle was Invocation and Incubation so the manner of it was by the Soul 's returning to the Body v. 22. which shews he was really dead by such a separation and that the Soul shall return to the Body at the Resurrection This is the First Instance we read of any that was raised from the Dead and this was Elijah's Fourth Miracle Mark 6. The Effect of all v. 23 24. teaching 1. The Immortality of the Soul 2. Effectual fervent Prayer avails much Jam. 5.16 3. To receive a Prophet is not in vain Mat. 10 41 42. 4. Her Faith by the Meal and Oyl which stagger'd at her Son's death was now confirmed by his reviving and 5. This evidences the truth Heb. 11.35 that Women received their dead raised to life again lastly Jerom thinks this Dead Son raised to life was Jonah the Prophet but others do think otherwise saith Peter Martyr however this truth appears that Miracles confirm Faith Heb. 2.4 and that those who work them in truth are sent of God Joh. 3.2 and 9.17.30.33 c. 1 Kings CHAP. XVIII THIS Chapter relateth Elijah's Embassage to King Ahab upon the account of procuring rain after such a long dreadful drought and dearth This Embassage consists of two parts First The Injunction and Secondly the Execution of it then follows the Event thereof Remarks first upon the Injunction as First The Time when ver 1. namely after Israel had laid gasping under a parching Drought and a destructive Famine for Three Years and Six Months James 5.17 in which time no doubt but many a Curse was belched forth by Baal's Worshippers at Elijah for his shutting up Heaven so long from Rain whereas he only had declared it as God's Judgment for their Idolatry 'T was God's Hand who only made use of Elijah's Tongue only to say what God would do chap. 17.1 Thus Embassadors suffer for the sake of their Master that sends them upon Displeasing Embassages They should have railed at their own Sins Remark the Second When Elijah had absconded so long at Cherith's Cave and Sarepta's Widow's God calls him forth from his Hiding-place and bids him Go shew thy self to Ahab with this Message 1. Acquaint him with the Cause of the Famine 2. Advise him to remove the Cause procuring it And 3. Promise him Rain upon his Reformation No Rain must fall saith Dr. Hall till Elijah be seen of Ahab he had carried away the Clouds with him and so must bring them again should Rain have faln in his absence and before his appearance then had it not been according to his word ch 17.1 God herein took care to maintain the Honour and Authority of his Prophet Remark the Third Is Elijah's undaunted Courage in venturing at God's command thus
of two parts 1. Jonah's New and Second Embassage from God to Nineveh And 2. The Effects of his Embassage First His Embassage Remark the First God casts not Jonah away as a broken Vessel saith Calvin or as unsavoury Salt for his late Sin but receives him upon his Return by Repentance and now being penitent God looks on him as innocent and restores him to his former Office and sends him the second time to Nineveh ver 1 2. which was the Head City of the Gentiles to signifie saith Mercerus that the Gentiles should be called and to shame the Israelites who had so many Prophets yet repented not whereas those poor Pagans did really repent and reform having but one Prophet to Preach to them N.B. This may confute that Natural Novatianism in timorous Consciences who doubt of pardon for Apostasie See Jer. 3.22 Hos 14.4 1 Tim. 1.13 c. Remark the Second Jonah's Obedience to God's second Call ver 3 4. who had been disobedient to God's first Call as before but now saith Calvin he had learnt a better Lesson in God's School of Affliction He went not home first to bid his Friends farewell as Luke 9.61 nor did he go another way to Tarshish as before The burnt Child dreads the fire he had enough of being a Runagate a Rebel c. He had learnt obedience by the things he had suffered Heb. 5.8 Now he immediately riseth up and goes whither God sent him at God's Call and Command He goes to Nineveh tho' there he was but a mean Man a meer Stranger unknown and for any thing he knew unregarded especially with such an unpleasing Errand as might have cost him his Life from some fierce and furious fellows in the City yet feareth he nothing now but Disobedience well knowing saith Calvin his God who called him could easily deliver him from being devoured by Land as well as by Sea The spirit of fear was gone and the spirit of power and courage was come 2 Tim. c. 1. v. 7. Remark the Third Jonah walks boldly one day's Journey saith Grotius into Nineveh which was Gedolah Leelohim Hebr. an exceeding great City or a City of God for its greatness according to the Hebrew expression as High Hills are call'd Hills of God Psa 36.6 Mighty Mountains so lofty Cedars be call'd often the Cedars of God c. Jonah walked his first day's Journey in this great City not like a Traveller with speedy dispatch but like a Preacher with due pauses crying Boanerges-like Yet forty days and Nineveh shall be destroyed as Sodom was saith Mercerus because She and her Sisters Gomorrah Admah Zeboim and Zoar could not afford ten righteous Persons in them all Gen. 18.32 'T is well supposed saith Kimchi that Jonah added rebus sic stantibus If ye remain in your sins like Sodom If ye repent not as Luke 13.3 5. Rev. 2.5 And Jeremy lays down that Rule Jer. 18.8 Conditions and Exceptions are to be understood tho' no more be express'd than is here for to run up and down the City crying only these few words was to act the part of a Mad-man more than of a grave Prophet of the Lord God threatens saith Ambrose that he may not strike as appeared by the Event here says D. Dieu c. The second Part is the fruit and effect of Jonah's Preaching there This is twofold First Respecting Men the Citizens And secondly Respecting God Remark the First upon the Men the Ninevites were converted ver 5 6 7 8 9. Behold the mighty power of God's holy Word from the mouth of one only Preacher who had not another to second him Christ sent out his ten Disciples by two and two to Preach c. Luke 10.1 Here the Weapons of one single Jonah's Warfare were mighty through God for pulling down the strong Holds of the Devil 2 Cor. 10.4 Tho' these Ninevites were a People rich great prosperous proud princely being the most Capital City of the greatest Empire then in the World and prophane above measure so that Satan sate in his Throne there as Rev. 2.13 swaying his Sceptre over them as his Slaves c. yet at the Preaching of this Jonah behold the Devil falls down like Lightning from his Heaven of those mens hearts Luke 10.18 The sounding of this single Ram's Horn made the Walls of Wickedness in Nineveh fall flat to the ground as Jericho's did Josh 6.13 20. Remark the Second The first Grace that did demonstrate the Truth of their Conversion was Faith the Foundation of all other Graces 2 Pet. 1.5 They believed God ver 5. and his Threatnings Preached to them by Jonah being conscious to themselves saith Grotius of many grievous Crimes 'T is a wonder they did believe a Stranger so soon but Mercerus affirmeth that they were moved by the Miracle of Jonah's Deliverance c. which he related to them at large and the fame thereof had spread abroad Luke 11.30 so was an awakening Sign to them But the Rabbins report farther that the Mariners also who had been Eye-Witnesses of the Miracle went to Nineveh and confirmed his Relation of what had befaln him at Sea and so by consequence confirmed his doleful Doctrine and Sentence against Nineveh N.B. Credat Judeus Apella says Horace Let the circumcised Jew believe it we may not be wise above what is written However Jonah was the True Arion whom the Poets feign to have been a Minstrel cast into the Sea by the Mariners and saved by a Dolphin c. This Pagan King 's hearing of Jonah's marvelous Deliverance ver 6. induced him to believe his Sermon But above all saith Mercerus Divine Inspiration within moved Nineveh to believe Remark the Third The fruits of their Faith were Repentance from Sin and Reformation of Life c. ver 7 8 9. all testified by external exercises of Fasting and Sackcloth c. by the Decree of the King and his Nobles who all unanimously consented to so pious and penitent a practice and all the People universally submitted to the Decree which extended to the very Beasts also for increasing their Humiliation by the Lowings and Bellowings of those Brute Creatures to humble their hearts more heavily Thus Houses at Funerals are hang'd round with Black with us to make Men mourn the more and when Great Men be buried their Horses do follow the Hearse clothed in Black as seeming to mourn for their Masters saith Tarnovius out of Chrysostom Beasts be made to mourn here in Sackcloth saith Calvin that the Men by this Spectacle might be made Mourners and moved thereby to a deeper Dolour and to behold therein as in a Looking-Glass what themselves deserved as Cattel were kill'd under the Law that Men might therein see a lively representation of their own just Damnation so Beasts were drowned in the Deluge with Men as they were first made for Man so they suffer with Man c. Remark the Fourth Those penitent Ninevites joyn Invocation of God to their Humiliation before him
And such an Upright Conscience as this need neither be ashamed to Live nor affraid to Die And he wept with a great weeping This Message of Death made him mourn as a Dove and chatter like a Crane Isa 38.14 for it was Mar-mar Hebr. mere bitterness to him ver 17. 't was bitter Bitterness to this good Man tho' Christ his Vndertaker had taken away the Gall or Sting from it N. B. No wonder if such a wicked Man as Saul was did quite swoon away at the tidings of Death and fall to the ground in his full length as he did 1 Sam. 28.20 but why should a Servant of God be either fond of Life or afraid of Death seeing he may better say than Agag Surely the bitterness of Death is past 1 Sam. 15.32 and seeing Death to him is but as his Father's Horse to fetch him home on Horse-back or rather upon Angels backs to his Father's House Or as Joseph's Chariot with its rattling Wheels to carry us unto our Joseph or Jesus as Gen. 45.27 28. Mark 4. Oh the prevalent Power of Prayers soaked with Tears Before the Prophet could reach the Outward Court Hezekiah's Prayers c. had reached Heaven and fetched down an Answer of Peace also Isaiah is immediately sent back with both a Countermand and with Comfort also ver 4 5. Say to him The God of David doth not forget his Promise to the House of David therefore will he both lengthen thy Life ver 6. and give thee a Son as Successor N. B. God's Answer to this good Man's Prayers was not more Speedy than Bountiful In Law seven Years is reckon'd for a Man's Life but behold more than twice Seven are granted to him ver 6. even Fifteen Years which is more than two Lives in Law Indeed God hath determined by his secret and certain Decree the set-time of every Man's Life Job 7.1 N. B. but no where do we read that God revealed this secret set-time so expresly especially so long before the time of Death to any Man save to Hezekiah only For should we know it we should grow less watchful and more secure than we ought to be Yea this good King himself did not Render c. 2 Chron. 32.25 N. B. Here 's a very great Grant by a Gracious Prayer-hearing God to a very faulty Prayer-making Man his Prayer here had many Flaws in it as those Distrustful I Said's Isa 38.10 11. do intimate All words of Despondency in his desperate Sickness yea and tho' the Lord foresaw his Returns to God would not Answer his Receits from God Mark 5. External Means must be used and added to those Internal of Praying and Weeping Ora labora a bunch of Figs must be applyed ver 7. which is an high commendation of the Vse of Medicines and teacheth that the Patient must Pray but withal make Vse of Means otherwise he tempts God rather than trusts God Christ even in his Miracles did oft make Vse of Means as Mark 7.33 John 9.6 but now when God gives us Means we may not expect Miracles but pray that God's Blessing may make them effectual N. B. Tho' this Cataplasm of Figs was from its softning vertue a Salve fit enough for a Carbuncle-Sore yet could it never have cured him so soon so suddenly without a Miracle Christ's Cures are proved to be Miraculous by this Circumstance of being immediately accomplished Mark 1.31 and 2.12 c. Thus likewise Hezekiah's Recovery was demonstrated to be Miraculous because he was promis'd to be Able to go up into the Temple the third Day there to give Publick Thanks for his perfect Recovery ver 5. Remark the Fifth The Sign that he asked and God ganted that he should Recover so soon and give Thanks so suddenly ver 8 9 10 11. Mark 1. He did not Ask a Sign because he doubted of the Truth of God's Promise but because he felt the weakness of his own Faith therefore desires a Sign for its confirmation Mark 2. Oh the wonderful and stupendous Condescension in the Great God thus low to stoop for gratifying the frailty of a Mortal Man God bids him take his choice whether the Shadow should go backward or forward Ten Degrees He chuseth the latter as a work of more Difficulty tho' it was no light thing as he call'd it for the Sun to Run forward faster than usual in its causing the Shadow seeing 't is constant in its course and never Runs more swiftly at one time than at another The Rabbins say that Hezekiah was a Student in the Mathematicks if so how suitable was this Sign to him How doth the Lord's Highness condescend to Man's Meanness and Answers him in his own way Mark 3. The Choice being referred to Hezekiah he prudently chose what was most Difficult and would most confirm his Faith Then at the Prophet's Prayer God caused the Shadow upon Ahaz's Dyal by a Retrograde running of the Sun it self to go backward Ten Degrees or half Hours so that the Twelve a Clock Sun return'd to his place at Seven in the Morning ver 11. This Question is much canvas'd among Learned Men whether it was the Body of the Sun that ran Retrograde or it was only the Shadow of it upon that famous Dial of Ahaz Visible to Hezekiah in his Bed-Chamber and seen of all sorts that resorted thither N. B. But 't is certainly a mistake in those that imagine the Miracle was only in the Shadow as if the Sun had gone it's course but the Shadow went Backward otherwise than the Sun did for the Fathers commonly concurr in the contrary Sentiment Cogent Arguments that prove it are 1st 'T is expresly said that the Sun it self returned back Ten Degrees Isa 38.8 And Menochius adds to this Canonical Proof that of Apocryphal Ecclesiast 48.26 2dly The Embassadors of Babylon came to Hezekiah to enquire of the Wonder Now had the Retrograde Motion been only in the Shadow upon this Dial in Jerusalem how could that have been observ'd in Babylon which they better saw in the Sun it self 3dly If we compare this Miracle with that in Joshua's Time Josh 10.13 It was not only the Shadow but the Sun it self that stood stills 4thly Maresius adds The Shadow upon the Dial could not have gone back unless the Sun that caus'd it had gone back also This is more probable than Sanctius's Proofs to make it possible N. B. 1st By this Miracle of the Sun 's Retrograde Motion Hezekiah had his Faith confirmed that his Sentence of Death was run Retrograde also The Sun in the Firmament saith Dr. Lightfoot knows not the time of its going down Ps 104.19 that Hezekiah might know his Time of Dying to whom alone was made known the term of his Life N. B. 2dly The Ancients Allegorize this Text saying Sick Hezekiah signifies all Mankind as sick of Sin But this is an infallible Sign of Recovery that the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 for our sakes is gone back Ten Degrees 1. not only
the various flowing forth of Free-Grace N.B. Note well As all God's People have not the like measure of true faith so nor are the greatest Schollars ever the most shining Saints seeing the Centurion a Roman Souldier had a stronger Faith than Jairus who was a Learned Jew c. The Fifth Remark is Where Christ finds Faith though weak so true He both Accepts and Answers it as here our Lord tender'd this Ruler's weakness of Faith in his thus laying laws and limits upon him prescribing him what he must do as above Christ takes no advantage at this presumption but He arose and followed him in a kind condescension though interrupted in the way The Sixth Remark is Christ reserves his Holy Hand for a dead lift commonly as here The Ruler falls at Christ's Feet told him his Daughter was Sick c. Mark 5.22 23. Luke 8.41 42. Though Matthew mentions only his saying My Daughter is now dead minding for brevities sake the main thing of the relation intended which was the Raising her up from death to Life not regarding the other Circumstances but the other two Evangelists relate how the Father came before his Daughter was dead though left in a dying posture and while Christ was hindred from hastning to heal the dying Daughter by healing the Hemorroisse or Woman with a bloody Issue aforesaid in his way thither she dies outright whereof the Ruler had notice and was forbid to trouble the Master further Mark 5.35 Luke 8.49 Christ did not here foreslow his Time as the Ruler might imagine but waited to be Gracious in the best season Isa 30.18 It was of greater Power and Glory to raise the Dead than to heal the Sick to limit him to time is to set the Sun by our Dial. Julius Caesar said it was sauciness in his Souldiers to prescribe to him we must leave our Lord to his own hour which is not yet come John 2.4 till all our Wine be spent and a death on all our Helps The Seventh Remark is Such as be deriders of Christ's Truth shall not be dignified to behold his Power and his Miracle of Mercy When Christ came to the House the Minstrels after the Jewish Manner Jer. 9.17 18. 48.36 37. were making the Mournful Tones and Doleful Ditties signifying that she was really and truly Dead when Christ did but tell them Though she be Dead to you yet she is but Asleep to me then they changed their Note and laughed him to scorn for which he turn'd them all out of doors as he did the Money-Merchants out of the Temple not suffering them to see the Miracle so will Christ deal with the Mad World who daily deride the Truth which they Hear and Jear when they sould Fear and Follow The Eight Remark is Still a sweet Saviour picks no quarrels pleads no excuses either from that Heathenish Custom of Minstrel Mourners crept in among the Jews and now disordering Jairus's Family or from the small Measure of the Ruler's Faith who still prescribes him to lay his Hands on her though dead though Christ could have recovered her to Life without coming down to the House or laying on of his Hands yet did he not deny the Ruler's desire but took his dead Daughter by the hand to awaken her as it were out of her sleep doing all just as Jairus desired who now shall dare to despise a day of small things Zech. 4.10 The Ninth Remark is Christ's Voice makes the dead live here He plays not the part of a muttering Exorcist who mumbles over his Conjuring words with a slow voice which no body can hear but Christ speaks out Audibly Talitha Kumi signifying in the Syriack language which then was best known to the Jews Damosel Arise Mark 5.41 and straightway she Arose and Walked ver 42. In the presence of her Father and Mother and of Peter James and John who were the only Witnesses of the Miracle N. B. Note well Thus when Christ saith Kumi Arise to any Soul that is Dead in Sin taking them by the hand as here or rather by the Heart then the dead hear his voice Job 5.25 When he speaks with a strong hand Isa 8.11 Then they stand up and live Eph. 5.14 Isa 55.3 The Tenth Remark is Christ shuts up this Miracle with a double charge 1. The scoffing Citizens of Capernaum against which Christ had denounced a direful wo for no better improving their many means of Grace Mat. 11.23 must not have the Damosels Parents to Preach the Vertues of Christ to them for that City had forfeited foully all such priviledges as to the Generality of them 2. He charged that Meat should be given to the revived ver 43. not so much because she now needed it but both to shew that she was really recovered and that spiritual Life as well as natural must by a Divine Appointment be sustained with daily food N. B. Note well Oh that all Parents could learn from those Gospel Examples to go to Christ for their Children A Ruler before came from Capernaum to Cana for cure of his Sons Fever John 4.46 to 53. and this Ruler also came to Christ for reviving his Dead Daughter c. Alas we see our own Souls and the Souls of our Children labouring under the cold fit of Unbelief and under the hot-fit of Self-love yet sit we still at home yea though we have more dead Persons in our Families than was in Egypt at the Destruction of their first born and look not for a Saviour CHAP. XX. THE next couple of Coincident Miracles are Christ's curing two Blind-men and a Possessed Dumb-Man Mat. 9.27 to 35. Concerning the first take these Remarks First As Jesus departed from Jairus's House and returned to his own home ver 27 28. The two Blind Men follow him and come up to him These two could the better agree to go together because their cases were alike Misery makes Unity they that cannot concur in a time of Liberty may be reconciled in a time of Bondage We must agree both to follow and to overtake Christ now The Second Remark is They cry as they follow'd Christ Thou Son of David have mercy on us intimating that seeing he also was a Man and had the Bowels of a Man they begg'd his Humane compassion towards them How much more boldly may we beg of Christ our near Kinsman who is not ashamed to call us Brethren Heb. 2.11 The Third Remark is They did not beg of Christ their Eye-sight in particular but His Mercy in General which included all good things both to their Souls and to their Bodies in it He knew their Minds in their begging of Mercy few such blind Beggars now without knowledge they generally are and more blind in Mind than in Body yea too many are loose and lawless vagrants not knowing nor acknowledging Christ to be the true Messiah and such as are neither of any Church nor Common-wealth these made Mercy their best plea not merit c.
The Fourth Remark is Christ may seem to sleep and slight those whom he hath a mind and a purpose to relieve as his Disciples in the Storm Mat. 8.23 c. and those Blind Men who followed him crying out from Jairus's house to his own house yet takes he no notice of them all along in the open street to increase their importunity no sooner was he come into the house but he then answers their Eager and Earnest cries Christ knows how to comment his Mercy to Mankind citò data citò vilescunt lightly come by lightly set by what is easily obtained is mostly but little esteemed The Fifth Remark is Foregoing faith found in man makes him more capable of receiving the following favour of God Christ asks them Do ye believe I am able to do this They said yea Lord. They believed Christ's Incarnation calling him the Son of David which was a blessed prop to their Faith upon him as their Lord and Saviour c. The Sixth Remark is The Prayer of Faith hath a mighty prevalency with the Almighty God Thus Christ both graced and gratified the Syrophenician Woman whom before He had both reproached and repulsed by granting her request and giving her as it were the Key of his Treasury bidding her go into it and take what Mercy she liked most Mat. 15.28 There is no doubt saith a Grace Divine but Justifying faith is not beneath that which is Miraculous in the Sphere of its own activity and where it hath warrant from God's Word All things are possible to him that believeth Mark 9.23 Christ will do any thing for them The Seventh Remark is Though Christ was not tied to Means yet did he use Means in his Touching their Eyes with his hand then according to their Faith which was not vain it was done unto them their Eyes were opened by Christ's Touch which he could have Wrought by a Word of his Mouth to teach us not to Tempt God in neglect of means c. The Eighth Remark is All things are not to be made known at all Times nor to all Persons our Lord in his state of Humiliation was not Ambitious of Vain-glory. Therefore did he straitly charge them to silence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he terribly threatned them from telling it abroad partly to teach both his Ministers and his Members not to be all for Fame and Name whereby to dazle the Eyes of others with admiration not valuing hidden Treasures The Heathen Poet saith Scire Tuum nihil est nisi te scire hoc sciat Alter And again Digito monstrari Dicier hic est to be pointed at for a brave man c. And partly because Capernaum was now fallen under a general unbelief and untowardness Mat. 11.23 so had rendred it self incapable tho' not of Christ's Presence yet of knowing his Miracles The Ninth Remark is Obedience to a general Command may be the sin of Disobedience as it crosses and contradicts a particular Command The general command was that they should declare the Glory of God 1 Chron. 16.24 Psal 96.3 and Isa 66.19 and these two Blind Men receiving now their sight could not but look upon their silence as the most sublime Ingratitude Ingratum si dixeris omnia the worst and the whole of sin should they conceal the greatness of his Grace towards them therefore they divulge it though against his will Some foolishly say Christ for bad them to stir them up the more what is this but to speak wickedly for God c. Job 13.7 making him who was Truth it self to dissemble As their divulging it was a doing against an express particular command it was certainly their sin though done from a pious intention for though a bad Aim may make a good Action bad as in Jehu's case yet a good Aim will not make a bad Action good as in Vzzah's Concerning the second Miracle here of Healing the possessed Dumb man we have these few Remarks 1. The end of one good Action should be the beginning of another No sooner were those blird men gone out of the house from Christ but immediately they brought in a man possessed with a Dumb Devil whom also Christ healed He was never weary with well-doing 't is pity we all are so soon so N. B. Note well Christ's Ministers should learn from their Master not to expect Rest till they come to Heaven the right Resting-place Rev. 14.13 No affronts or hard usages from his Adversaries did dishearten him from doing good though Dogs bark and leap at the Moon yet continues she her course So did he and so should we notwithstanding contradiction of sinners Heb. 12.3 in Villages as well as Cities The 2d Remark There be many gagg'd by a Dumb Devil at this day as this poor man was at that time Satan still puts his Stilling Gag into the mouths of men and women that they can neither pour out their prayers to God nor publish his praises nor profess his Truth to others They cannot utter themselves for others edification● The Spirit of Faith is not an in-dweller in the heart only but sits also upon the door of the lips 2 Cor. 4.13 I believed therefore have I spoken Psal 116.10 to wit in prayer confession and communication The Spirit of Faith observes no dumb or silent Meetings as some do in our day and as the Carthusian Monks did of old whose Orders were only to speak together once a week but true Christians have otherwise learned Christ Eph. 4.20 who teacheth them 't is a shameful neglect of duty when they speak not often one to another Mal. 3.16 that their Meetings together might be for the better and not for the worse 1 Cor. 11.17 Exhorting one another c. Heb. 10.25 The 3d Remark is 'T is better to be Dumb than to speak prophanely This man with his Dumb Devil was in a better case than those Proud Pharisees whose mouths the Devil had not gagg'd but made an open Sepulchre to belch out stinking and black Blaspheaus against our Lord's Miracles as if wrought by Magick Mat. 9.34 and 10.25 and 12.24 The vile person will speak villany Isa 32.6 as well as vanity Psal 12.2 and not only proudly Psal 17.10 grievous and mischievous things Psal 31.18 and 38.12 but wickedness it self Job 27.4 because the Devil tips his tongue but gags not his mouth whereas even a foul when he holdeth his peace is accounted wise Prov. 17.28 Job 13.5 and in an evil day the prudent keep silent Amos 5.13 not conniving at man's sin but acquiescing in God's Providence The 4th Remark is Such as are possessed with Dumb Devils must come to Christ to be dispossess'd thereof as this man here They must sit down at Christ's feet Mat. 15.30 where all his Saints do sit Deut. 33.3 then shall the Dumb speak Mat. 15.31 and they shall speak not the Language of Ashdod but the Language of Canaan Neh. 13.24 Christ will turn to them a pure Lip and Language that they
despised his very Miracles now as nothing though clear demonstrations of his Deity because of his present Sufferings Mark Their Fifth Taunt or Mocking is If he be the King of Israel let him now come down from the Cross and we will believe him And say you so Sir yea but when Sir will you do it suppose Christ should exert his Almighty power for his own deliverance which he could do if he would might this gratifying your curiosity have made you to Believe Nay certainly you would not do so but rather have said that he had delivered himself by the Devil's help It was a more mighty evidence of his Divine power to raise himself from the Dead Acts 2.24 Rom. 1.4 than had been his coming down from the Cross for the power of the Grave is stronger than that of the Cross Hos 13 14. yet could it not possibly hold him but by his Resurrection he was declared with Power to be the Son of God yet when this was done you Sir Priests would not believe nor would you do so now should he come down c. Mark The Sixth Satanical Sarcalm or Sacerdotal Scoff was He trusted in God let him deliver him if he will have him This wickedly imptoved Shaft shot here at the Lord Jesus was borrowed out of Holy David's Quiver Psal 22.6 7 8. what was there done to David the Type was much more done to Christ the Antitype of whom David was both Father and Figure The Title of that Psalm is Aijleth-Shahar the Morning Stag such an one was David hunted upon the Mountains by the Devil's Blood-hounds And so was Christ David's Son upon the Cross here Behold the Man even he who was more than a mere Man even 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-Man N. B. Note well Oh what a wonderful Divine condescension and care over us is there that the Lord of Angels those highest of created Beings should stood so low as to become a Worm the lowest of Creatures yea that the Creator Christ should become a Creature and the most contemptible Creature even a Worm to be trampled upon and troden under foot that he might raise us up when fallen under the forbidden Fruit-Tree Cant. 8.5 and thereby made worse than sinless Worms and place us into an equality with Angels Mat. 22.30 As they shoot out the Lip and shake the Head at and Derided David there saying He trusted in God that he would deliver him let him deliver him seeing he delighted in him All which was Prophecied and more fully Accomplished in this Mystical David here who Trusted in or rolled himself up on God Hebr. and who delighted in God and God in him Mat. 3.17 17.5 and not only would have delivered him above all according to his Promise call upon me in time of trouble and I will deliver thee Psal 50.15 If God will do this for his Servants in General how much more for his own only best beloved on in special had it now been consentaneous to the Counsel of his own Wisdom N. B. Note well but did also indeed deliver him when he had paid the Decreed Ransom at his Resurrection which was a greater Deliverance than that from the Cross could have been notwithstanding all that you Sir Priests did to Secure him c. Mark The Seventh Sacerdotal Scoff was For he said I am the Son of God this gall'd those wicked ones most of all for the Doctrine of the Godhead of Christ is the very Rock and Foundation whereupon all Believers are builded therefore the Devil and Reprobate ones do Rage against it Those Wicked Wretches do offer to believe this great Truth indeed but it is upon condition they may have such proofs as themselves prescribed to wit of coming down from the Cross c. N. B. Note well But such as will not believe upon such ground of Faith as God had given shall not have such grounds as they require All his matchless Miracles such as never any Man did John 9.32 were now nothing to them if the would not gratifie their present demands and except he would save himself at their Directions they will look upon his saving others to be no better than a Cheat N. B. Note well Whereas the truth was his not saving himself was the appointed expedient for his saving of others nor will they look upon his Faith in God no better than a fancy of Man if this prosperity lasted not so long as his Life and if God did not now deliver him from Death as if his trust were vain if he were suffered to die upon the Cross Not knowing that the Way to the Crown was by the Cross Mark The Last of those Mookings was from the Malefactors that were Crucified with him Mat. 27.44 They cast the same in his Teeth and Mark 15.32 They also Reviled him both these Evangelists do intimate that at the first both these Thieves were Mockers of Christ and therein they were more to blame than the People because they were Fellow Sufferers with him and so should have had some more commiseration of him from the sense of their own Misery N. B. Note well But this reviling is fixed upon one of the Thieves only Luke 23.39 who railed on him saying Save thy self and us from this Death inflicted upon us by the Roman Power if thou be the King of the Jews or the Son of God 'T is probable this was the Speech of the bad Thief and the good Thief being silent a while seemed to give consent by his silence to his Fellows Railing but when he heard Christ's Prayer for his Enemies notwithstanding their outrage against him especially seeing that three hours Darkness a Miracle and of those seven Miracles wherewith our Lord honoured the Ignominy of his own Death both these in Conjunction with his own present Affliction which God was pleased so far to sanctifie to him as to make his Heart mallable and tender c. did cause him to break out into that brave Confession worthy to be Written in Letters of Gold Luke 23.40 41 42 43. N. B. Note well Or the Speech They Railed on him might be Synecdochical the Plural for the Singular it being usual in Scripture to speak Plurally in instancing of something done by one of that sort So this is said to be done by both which was by one only N. B. Note well The Thief that Railed had an hard Impenitent Heart and his Misery upon the Cross c. took no more Impression upon him than doth the Smiths Hammer upon cold Iron No torment will tame a Reprobate neither Ministry nor Misery nor Miracle nor Mercy will mollifie him here but when at the very Mouth of Hell and just stepping over the Threshold thereof he dares blaspheme God and Mock him who is the Saviour of Mankind and that without the least Provocation offered to him on Christ's part he was justly condemned for Robbery yet had a Scoff to cast at Innocent Jesus who was unjustly Crucified N. B.
our Dear Jesus the one was Damned and the other Saved to shew that God will have Mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth Rom. 9.15 18. The 3d Note of observation is The Repentance and Faith of this Dying Malefactor the truth of the former and the strength and greatness of the latter may be in this manner plainly demonstrated First That he was truly Penitent is made Apparent thus 1st By his rebuking the Raillery of his Fellow-Thief saying Dost thou not fear God seeing thou art in the same Condemnation Luke 23.40 This speech clearly discovers that this Malefactor had the Fear of God upon his Heart which the other Thief wanted for which this Penitent reproved him intimating hereby that the Fear of God is the beginning of Wisdom Psal 111.10 Prov. 9.10 't is not only the Beginning but 't is also the Middle and the Ending of Wisdom A Man never begins to be Wise till he begin to fear God which is the best Wisdom and without which Rein to restrain and retain them within compass all Impenitent ones run riotously into all Extravagancies and Exorbitant Courses Thus Abraham told Abimelech Surely the Fear of God is not in this place therefore they will not stick at committing any Sin Gen. 20.11 Whereas Joseph tells his Brethren I dare not wrong you because I fear God Gen. 42.18 The same saith Nehemiah to the People Nehem. 5.15 but because the Cursed Amalekites feared not God they met Israel with Fire and Sword when they should have met them with Bread and Water Deut. 25.17 18 19. Exod. 17.8 and the Apostle saith Where the Fear of God is not before Mens Eyes Rom. 3.18 there the Throat is an open Sepulchre belching out stinking blasphemies as this Impenitent Thief did against Christ and breathing forth the Poison of Asps and bitter Cursings ver 13 14. and their Feet are swist to shed blood c. ver 15 16. Thus was it the fear of God that caused Job to commiserate those that were in misery and perishing Job 31.19 20. which because this Penitent Thief saw his Fellow-Thief did not therefore he reproved him in love to his Soul that was now almost ready to depart out of his Body by Death and just upon going to be judged by the Great God so he most seasonably exhorted him that he should not die in his Sin c. The 2d Demonstration of the Truth of this Thief 's Repentance is by his Ingenuous Confession and from his free and full acknowledgment of his own wickedness Assuredly the sense of his own sin lay with much weight upon his Spirit otherwise he would never have so taken shame to himself and so publickly before so many People as then were present have owned his own just condemnation saying just as the Church of God saith I will bear the Indignation of God because I have sinned against him Mic. 7.9 This was his hour of God's finding him when he had wearied himself all along in his ways of Wickedness Jer. 2.24 This was the time of God's love to his Soul when he had been wallowing all his life long in the polluted blood of his own Iniquity Ezek 16.8 even then was God's Promise to his Church made good to him there remembring his own Wicked Ways and Diabolical doings while he hanged in the midst of his misery and loathing himself for them Ezek. 20.43 44. even then on the Cross did he thus know the Lord c. Judging himself as receiving but his just reward his sinning he was sensible was the cause of his suffering Luke 23.41 that he might not be judged of God nor condemned with the World 1 Cor. 11.31 32 The 3d Demonstration of his true Penitency is taken from his Apology for and Vindication of the Innocency of our Saviour saying This Man though a Fellow-Sufferer with us hath done nothing Amiss Luke 23.41 who can but wonder that this poor wretch and miserable dying Malefactor should thus boldly and publickly proclaim the unjust condemnation of Jesus and speak thus confidently and conscientiously for Christ when all the Chief-Priests and so many of the People were Impudently making their Mocks at him as above and so blasphemously speaking against him N. B. Note well Some say that the other Thief Mocked Christ designedly to please the Priests that they for this meritorious fact might Interceed with Pilate for saving his Life and for taking him down from the Cross before he was dead minding himself and his own Body his bodily good only But so was it not with this good Thief he was more concerned for the Glory of Christ's Innocency which he vindicated than he was for his own bodily deliverance not much unlike Moses that Man of God and the Meekest Man upon Earth who was a Lamb in his own cause and concerns when himself was Affronted he carried meekly not speaking one Angry Word Numb 12.1 2 3 c. but was no less than a Lion in God's cause Exod. 32.19 where this meekest of Men was transported into such an high pang of Passion as to break all the Ten Commandments in one Act He was hotly Angry and brake the two Tables in pieces c. When he saw God's Glory so notoriously dishonoured by the Peoples Calf-Worship and their Gross Idolatry Thus this Thief bad not one word to say for his own Justification Yet will justifie Just Jesus to the last breath in his Body c. The Second Branch of this third Note of Observation is To demonstrate the strength and greatness of his Faith together with the Truth of his Repentance this is done thus The 1st farther Demonstration hereof is by this Penitent Thief 's Prayer for Mercy upon his Soul Luke 23.42 Lord Remember me c. This must be the Prayer of Faith and Repentance The other Thief was all for his Body and nothing for his Soul 'T is thought by some N. B. Note well That another reason of his Railing so against Christ was because he who had saved so many other Bodies from Diseases and Death yet would not save his sinful Body from the Tortures of the Cross oh how oft is God murmured at by a Wicked World because he doth not gratifie their Bodies with such and such Accommodations but this Good Thief prays not Lord Remember my Body that is let these Spikes and Nails that fasten my Body to the Cross be drawn out that I may be delivered from Death not a Word of that Nature no now is he under such a neglect of his Body here as if he cared not what became of it so his Soul might but be saved Would to God it were our care when we die to do so c. The 2d Demonstration hereof is By not only his praying being now dispossessed of the Dumb Devil for now behold he prayed as Acts 9.11 but also by his praying so humbly asking only Remembrance Lord remember me for as he was sensible of his so great sins this great
swallowed Hook and all They did as they were Taught Matth. 28.11 12 13 14 15. Now follow the several Appearances of Christ himself which is the 6th and the most infallible Testimony of the Truth of Christ's Resurrection CHAP. XXXVII Of Christ 's Ten Appearances THE Sundry Appearances of Christ himself are reckoned by the Learned after a several sort Some late Learned Criticks and Chronologers do reduce them into the more narrow number of Seven that Sabbatical number the better to make them comport with all the seven Numbers aforesaid to wit Christ's seven last Words his seven last Wonders and the seven last Signs of his Triumph But the common computation hereof among the most Authentick Commentators both Antien● and Modern is that Py●hagorical Number of Ten which is the number of perfection as well as seven is so accounted and no doubt but our Lord gave the most perfect Number of his Personal Appearances betwixt his Resurrection and Ascension which interval and space of time consisted of four Tens and forty Days and wherein he appeared Ten several times accordingly to his Apostles c. for their further and fuller confirmation of the Truth of his Resurrection The First Appearance of Christ as all Solid Writers unanimously say was to Mary Magdalen this is positively affirmed by that Infallible Evangelist Mark Mark 16. ● which is also as infallibly confirmed by the Evangelist John Joh. 20.2.14.16 Indeed the Jesuit Maldonate hath the confidence to contradict both those Evangelists as if the Infallibility of the Church of Rome far exceeded the Infallibility of the word of God saying that Christ's first Appearance was to his Mother Mary the Blessed Virgin This he doth daringly affirm but cannot by any convincing Scriptures confirm acknowledging that no such thing is written in the word yet would he have it to be believed that it was so because as he Magisterially saith it was but meet and decent that our Lord in point of Duty should do so Here a Sawcy Jesuit undertakes to Instruct Holy Jesus who was the Wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1.24 an High point of Humane Manners obliging Christ to pay his Respect and Homage to this Mary in the first place and not to Mary Magdalen though Mark expresly assert it out of whom he had cast seven Devils Mark 16.9 This is the Impudency of the Babylonish Whore to obtrude upon the Church their unwritten Verieties as the Catholicks or rather Cacolicks call them equalling their feigning Traditions with the Authority of the Scripture of Truth among those Fops as do Jurare in verba Magistri and can believe the Dreams and Fancies of some Old Doting Fryar What is this but to make Man's Addle Brain the Basis and Foundation of Faith and not the word of God which in Truth they have turned into an idle Romance with the Trash and Trumpery of their unscriptural Traditions imposed as Articles of their Creed upon the too Childishly credulous who are given up to believe Lies 2 Thess 2.10.11 Amongst which this here is not one of their least Lies The Rhomist Jesuits are more Ingenious in this point though base and bad enough in others ingenuously confessing in their Second Annotation upon Mar. 16.1 that this Mary Magdalen had the Honour to see Jesus first after his Resurrection because say they she Merited it for bestowing so costly an Ointment upon him while he was alive John 12.3 and Mark 14.3 and sought to Anoint him with the like Ointment when he was Dead but not one word do we Read in any of the Evangelists of Christs appearing either first or at all to his Mother Mary We may indeed well wonder at this that he should not make his first Appearance if not to the Noblest or Holiest of Men yet to the Noblest or Holiest of Women such as were Royal Queens or Honourable Countesses or to such as were Eminent for Holiness if not for Honour as was undoubtedly his own Dear Mother the Holiest of Women-kind No it must not be to any-such for Honour or for Holiness but it must be to this Mary who had been a non-such for Ignominy and Iniquity God loves to walk in a way of his own and by himself This Honour done to her who had been so great a Sinner St. Mark Relateth this more at large than the other Evangelists do though in other Histori●● passages he bemostly more brief than the other three Nich. Gorran though of the Dominical Order yet gives more Scriptural Sentiments upon this point than Superstitious Maldonate doth from his blind Devotion to the Virgin Mary For this Learned Friar renders five Reasons why our Lord appeared first to Mary Magdalen in his comment upon Mar. 16.9 the first is because she loved more Ardently Luke 7.47 she had greatest love to Christ because he had forgiven her greatest Sins We read not that the Virgin Mary did wash Christ's Feet with her Tears as this great sinner did ver 44. for though she call Christ her Saviour so needed the forgiveness of some sins Luke 1.46 yet were her sins but little to this Mary's who had been but a light Huswife His Second Reason is that Christ might shew hereby he came into the World to save sinners not the Righteous though there be none such no not one but in conceit only Matth. 9.13 c. His third is that it might be declared how Publicans and Harlots do sooner enter into the Kingdom of Heaven than Proud Pharisees or Civil Justiciaries Matth. 21.31 which is a great shame to be left behind by such As 't is Storied of the Cadar so Christ kills the quick in conceit but quickens those that are Dead in sin His Fourth is that as a Woman was the first Minister of our Perdition our Great Grandmother Eve was the first that brought Death into the World so a Woman must be the first Messenger of our Salvation Mary Magdalen that Apostolorum Apostolissima as one calls her must be the first Preacher and Publisher of Christ's Resurrection John 20.16.18 His Fifth is 't was a Comment on that Scripture where sin abounded there grace hath abounded much more c. Rom. 5.20 and that to none of other sorts of sinners any Room for Desperation should be left To those five Reasons of Gorran other five Reasons may be added why Christ appeared first to Mary Magdalen As 1. Because though she had been formerly a very great sinner yet now through grace she was become as great a Repenter her Sorrowing now was suitable and proportionable to her sinning heretofore What was said of Manasseh that as he had sinned greatly in Defying God in Murdering Men and in Worshipping Devils so he Humbled himself greatly 2 Chron. 33.12 The same may be said of this Magdalen insomuch that some report of her how this prodigious Penitent did after Christ's Resurrection and Ascension Retire into Gallia Narbonensi● where she spent Thirty years in weeping for her former sins However 't is great question among
the Kill-Christs Yet 2dly They had but a weak Faith which was now shrew'dly shaken saying We trusted he had been our Deliverer c. Luke 24.21 But alas now we cannot tell now what to think or say concerning him We thought while he was Alive and appeared mighty in Deed and Word that the Church would be delivered by him but now that he is Dead and Buried our Hope and Comfort is Buried with him Thus they stumbled at the Cross c. as many of weak Faith daily do being but Swallow-Friends appearing in Summer only they also were startled at the time of his lying in the Tomb This say they is the third day a Day upon which their Jewish Rabbies had many eminent Remarks from these Texts Gen. 22.4 42.18 Exod. 19.16 Hos 6.2 Jon. 2.17 c. yet nothing of good that they yet knew of was come to them out of that great Critical Day but it might justly be retorted upon them what once one Spurinna replied to Caesar Venit Dies non Abijt that Lucky day is indeed come and as yet it hath not brought thee Victory but stay a while till that Day be gone 't is not still expired much may happen yet before the Night cometh Thus were these two Men too quick with Christ whereas indeed Christ was too quick for them being now Risen and Present when they thought him now in his Grave and whereas also they that believe ought not to make such hast Isa 28.16 not more hast than good speed Their hast here was such as because that Third Day had as they imagined still disappointed them made their hope hang the Wing extreamly and though they had heard rumour of Christ's rising that Morning by some tattling too credulous Women yet because they had not themselves seen him with their own Eyes as yet therefore they not only stumble at the Cross and startle at the Time c. but also they stagger at the Truth insomuch as they were ready to cast away their confidence Too many 〈◊〉 Thomas's there be that will not trust Christ any further nor any longer than they can see with their Eye sight and feel with their Pinger ends What is this but to bind our Faith which is the Evidence of things not seen c. Heb. 11. ● to the fallacy of our sense and feeling Whereas it is the nature of Faith to believe God upon his bare word and that against sense in things invisible and against Reason in things incredible Sense corrects ●●●gination or Phansy Reason corrects Sense but Faith corrects both Fansy and Sense and Reason also The Fifth Branch of this Mutual Discourse is Christ's Tenderness towards the ●e●ble Faith of these two Trave 〈◊〉 in corroborating their ●ainting Confidence 〈…〉 doth by two Mediums or Means 1. By reproving them for their slowness of heart to believe the Scriptures Luke 24. v. 25. Wherever Christ in his Spir●● is preseth with us in an Ordinance He will be convincing us of some in John 16.8 and make us cry out with me Lepers 2 Rings 7.9 We do not well to tarry here some 〈◊〉 will befall us c. If Christ Rebuke us not for tarrying and loitering in customary Acts of any known sin 't is a shrewd sign Christ hath nor yet Thrust himself into our company as He did here into theirs Particularly He reproves them ●●●ply for their slowness to believe the Scriptures Such is the corruption o● our Natures that we are more quick to believe any ●abu●ons Romance or false Report than the Gospel of Truth This we learnt from our first Parents at the Fall who believed the lying Devil before the God of Truth There is indeed an over hasty believing which is call'd Levity of heart Eccl●s 19. and no better than a precipitant presumption not the Faith of God's Elect Titus 1.1 which is attended with Repentance and Humiliation There is a Golden-Mean betwixt being over preposterous and over ●●●dy herein Christ's second Means was Then 2dly By instructing them into a right way of believing 〈◊〉 the necessity of his own Death from the Testimony of all the Prophets which he expounded to them opening their understandings in them as well as the Holy Scriptures to them before he entred into his glory ' This is the grand Statute of Heaven concerning Christians also that they must first bear the Cross and then wear the Crown Acts 14.22 2 Tim. 3.12 He founded their Faith on the Holy Scriptures Father than upon his Personal Appearance to their Eyes or his Conference to their Ears He might have presently made himself known to them and plainly told them I am the very Jesus who was dead but am alive again as he told John Rev. 1.8 but he drew them on by little and little and led them leizurely through all the Scripture Prophecies concerning himself till they drew nigh to the Town that they went unto This teacheth us that our Faith when founded upon the Holy Scriptures is more surely founded than by a Voice to the Ear or by an Apparition to the Eye for these may be slandered or suspected to be Impostures but this cannot be so hence 't is called the more sure Word of Prophecy 1 Pet. 2.19 20. The Authority of the Scriptures is greater than of an Angel's Voice Gal. 1.8 and equal to an Audible and Immediate Voice of God himself yea of plainer perspicuity and certainty to us for beside their being Inspired they are also both written and sealed The Sixth Branch is Christ's discovering himself to them Wherein we have these special Remarks 1. When they were got nigh to the Town Christ makes as if he would be gone verse 28. not that he had any purpose to depart from them but to prove them how they prized him and accounted of his company Therefore this ought not to be misimproved to palliate any kind of sinful dissimulation If Solomon might make as tho' he would do an Act that in its own nature was unlawful to stay an Innocent Child 1 Kings 3.24 sure I am our Saviour might do this which was but indifferent in it self whether to go or stay without being charged with the sin of Dissembling so we c. 2. When Christ makes to be gone the two Disciples would not let him go but one as it were gets hold on one Arm and the other on the other there they hang till they constrain him to continue with them verse 29. Yea all this they did though they had been sharply Rebuked by him and as yet knew him to be not other than a meer Stranger yet are they not still weary of such a sow●● Fellow Traverser's Company as we should have been and glad to shake off such sawcy Stranger Would to God we may not now be weary of the company of Christ and his Gospel in this day of sharp Rebukes for our former misimprovement of the Meons of Grace he is threatning to be gone to take away his Gospel and to remove
with Thomas here prescrib'd a kind of Law upon the Lord saying Co●e and lay thy bands upon my only Dying Daughter c. in thinking Christ could not otherwise core her unless he came to his house laid his hands on the Child c. This Ruler of the Synagogue could expect no help or healing much l●ss if his Daughter were dead could he hope for her life again Thus weak in Faith was this Learned Rabbi and far short of that Roman Souldier's the Centurion who believ'd Christ could cure his sick Servant without stirring a foot towards his house but barely by speaking the word of command Matth. 8.8 Our sweet Jesus takes no advantages against this Jairus to turn him off but tendring his Infirmity arose and followed him Matth. 9.18 19 c. Note Thus may we hope that Christ will condescend to our weakness where he finds truth in the inward parts any real desires and breathings that are right after Repentance c. Note But the doubt still lies how there could be any wounds in his glorified Body Answ Beside what is said before we must know that ordinarily there can be neither any wounds or any scars in a Body that is glorified For as that is not Death which is only the Death of one part of the Body but when it comes to be the Death of all parts and possesses the whole So that is not properly Glory which is only the Glory of one part and not of all A glorified Body is that which hath a Glory in all the parts c. This is confirmed by the Word of God 1 Cor. 15.49 Though the body be sown in weakness yet it is raised in power and honour But now the scars in Christ's Body were extraordinary and by special dispensation upon these supposed grounds 1. To confirm the doubting Disciples c. 2. To confound Enemies who shall be Thunder struck when they behold him whom they have pierced c. Zech. 12.10 Rev. 1.7 3. To comfort Friends in all Ages shewing our comfort lies nor in Christ's Miracles but in his Sufferings Therefore he bids us behold his wounds as oft as we eat the Lord's Supper 4. To instruct his Followers that as he abated of his Glory so must they of theirs for God's Glory and for the good of others Some go farther and add a 5th Reason of Christ's retaining his five wounds still even at the Right hand of God in Heaven for appeasing his Father's Wrath against his Redeemed for their dally sins he as it were reminds his Father by shewing his five wounds to him how he hath fully satisfied Divine Justice for all their Infirmities Note The Inferences from hence are 1. That the Lord of the Sabbath Matth 12.8 did here farther establish and sanctifie this New Christian Sabbath upon the first Day of the Week by making this his solemn sixth Appearance upon that same day and neither on the Seventh the Old Jewish Sabbath day nor on any other day of the we●● 〈◊〉 the foregoing first Day whereupon he made no fewer than five Appearances Note 2ly Though we cannot come up to the first Rate and Rank of Believers and become of the Number of the chief of David's Worthies c. 2 Sam. 23.23 c. yet may we but become of the Second Rate and Rank of Believers and be of the number of the Thirty of David's Worthies we need not doubt of acceptance with Christ whose Father and Figure was holy David Thus it was with Thomas here he faultered and foundered so as he was disenabled to come up with the first for sanctifying the first Christian Sabbath yet keeps he the second and was accepted Thus those persons that could not eat the Passover because they were defiled at the proper season in the first Month were allowed by Moses from the Lord to eat it in the second Month Numb 9.6 c. Nor did the Labourers come all into God's Vineyard to labour at one hour but at several hours some sooner and some later yet the last found equal acceptance with the first Matth. 20.6 7 8. We may come at the 11th hour and yet be welcome Note 3dly Christ over hears every word we speak though in never so private a place yea though it be but a secret whisper in the Ear of another Thus Christ over heard the very words that Thomas had spoke to his Fellow Disciples at a private Meeting on the week-day and now meeting with Thomas on the first Day he chargeth him with his own words verbatim John 20.27 Oh how should this consideration that Christ hears all our idle and wicked words we speak and it may be one against another and will relate them word for word at the last day bridle us He remembers our wicked words and works they are all before his face this we should consider in our hearts Hos 7.2 that we may stand in a●e and not sin Psal 4.4 For God records all in his Book Mal. 3.16 The last Remark concerning this Sixth Appearance is the marvelous consequences and effects thereof in converting and confirming wilful Thomas who hereupon cryed out My Lord and my God Verse 28. Now was this Unbeliever this obstinate opposer of that great fundamental Truth conquer'd and made to confess hot only that it was the very Jesus whom they used to call the Lord John 13.13 c. but also gives him the individuating and appropriating Compellation of My Lord whom I resolve now to obey and give up myself wholly to be Ruled by him in all things as the phrase imports And not only so but he adds My God acknowledging both that he had declared himself to be God by his Rising from the Dead Rom. 1.4 Note Here Christ is first call'd God in the Gospels which had it not been a Truth Christ would not have own'd the Title but have reproved him for ascribing to him that N●●●e which Christ did not and in this abrupt Sentence My Lord and my God There is a short confession of his Faith and a plain profession of his own Interest in Christ which Christ approveth of verse 29. Note 'T is true Faith that appropriates the Redeemer as if no body 's else but mine Gal. 2.20 He died for me saith Paul and he is mine saith Thomas here Were it not for this possessive Mine the Devil might say the Creed to as good purpose as we For he believes there is a God and a Christs but that which torments him is he cannot say My to any one Article of the Faith Note This concise speech imports a vehement Admiration both of Christ's Clemency and of his own stupidity as if he had said how f●d was my state I might have perish'd in my Infidelity hadst thou not condescended to my Infirmity and shew'd me mercy helping me to find the power of thy Deity in the wounds of thy Humanity Therefore shalt thou be my Lord and my God for ever Thus may we all say Lord I thank thee that
thou hast not suff●●d me to go on i● the broad way to H●ll to perish in my Ignorance as I might have done but se●ing them hast g●●n●●d me 〈…〉 for my 〈◊〉 Faith in thy Promises and poweb●●● all before the● in New●●●● of Life therefore shall thou be my Lord my God 〈…〉 1. Thus God suffereth some slips in his Saints as in Thomas here tha● in their Recovery themselves 〈…〉 might be more confirmed Thomas his do●bting more advanceth and advanta●eth our Faith than either Mary Magda●●● or the other Discipl● sooner believing did for while Thomas handled the wounds of Christ's flash he healed the wounds of Unbelief in us for his doubting put this great Truth o●● of doubt to us God would not permit evil to be unless he could extract good out of it Note 2. How soon ●an Christ change the most pertinacious Unbelief into the most precious and saving Faith as here Thomas only felt the Manhood yet believes the Godhead of Christ's now his Faith was the evidence of things not sean Heb. 11. ●● Now his Faith exe●●'d his Sense on which before he had so much depended Note 3. Christ owns his Sense for Faith verse ●0 his seeing for some say he durst not touch his Lord was his believing Now 't is enough for Faith to see Christ in the flesh by the Apostle's Eyes as Israel did Can●an by the Eyes of the Spi●● verse 29 30 31 CHAP. XL. Of Christ's Seventh Appearance THE Seventh Appearance of Christ after his Resurrection was to the Seven Apostles when they were fishing in the Sea of Tiberius which John only relateth chap. 21. verse 1. per totum where the Lord did more fully and in a peculiar manner restore Peter from his Fall in his Threefold Denial by a Threefold Confession of him c. This Sea of Tiberius is call'd the Sea of Galian also John 6.1 because Galilee is the Province adjacent to that Sea which is six Miles broad and sixteen Miles long The Apostles were now drawn out of Jerusalem and were drawing into Galilee according to the command of Christ Matth. 26.32 and the Admo●●●ion of the Angel Matth. 28.7 The Remarks of this Seventh Appearance are accordingly concerning the Time Place Persons Occasion and Manner of Christ's Manifestation c. to evidence that he was Risen indeed 1st The Time when 't was after that Appearance to the Eleven Disciples whereby Thomas was convinced of that great Truth and confirmed in the Faith of the Messiah which John relates in chap. 20.26 to the end And after these things saith the same Evangelist John 21.1 Christ appears again and confirms Peter more fully in this as he had done Thomas in that foregoing Appearance upon what day of the week this Appearance was is not expresly mentioned as before but some suppose it was upon the third first day for these Reasons 1. John calls this the Third time chap. 21. verse 14. which Grotius refers to the number of days for Christ's first five Appearantes were on the the first first day the very day of his Resurrection five several times to several persons then his Second Appearance was on that day seven night the very next first day to the Eleven c. Now follows this Appearance as to the day which John calls the Third Time as it relateth to the third first day or the Now Christian Sabbath and thus John's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or again verse 1. is explained by his verse 14. as Marks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or last Mark 16. v. 14. is explained both before and after The 2d Reason is Christ did not now as he had done before his Death so frequently and familiarly converse with his Disciples for it was incongruous that a person now Immortal should be always conversant with Mortal Men but only by Intervals though often to ●●●●tifie the Reality of his Resursurrection and the Interval was betwixt one first day and another upon which days only he manifested himself for the better founding of the new Gospel-Sabbath The 3d. Reason is Though this Immortal Body did in State abscond it self for forty days yet it is probable that he shewed himself every first day while he abode upon Earth Note If we grant this Appearance to be upon a week day then may it give incouragement to God's People in their upholding Holy Meeting occasionally upon weeks-days also seeing Christ may and undoubtedly doth manifest himself upon week days as well as upon Sabbath-day Meetings When and wheresoever two or three are gathered together in his Name he will be in the midst of them Matth. 18.20 especially if they love him he will manifest himself to them John 14.21 But upon whatever day this manifestation was made 't is expresly mentioned that it was in the Morning of that day John 〈◊〉 'T is probable our Lord waited until those seven Disciples would leave work being wearied with their succesless toiling all the night and hopeless of speeding better upon the day when noise round about doth affright away the Fisher from the Net However they learnt this Lesson which David taught That mourning lasts but till morning Psal 30.5 For though they were sad enough at their lost labour all night the L●●d all the while looking on and letting them labour in vain yet they sped better next morning through their Lord's presence and blessing Flebile principium melior for●una sequetur A good ending may follow a bad beginning The 2d Remark is the Place where it was This is apparent to be in Galilee whither the Apostles were now resorting as before to enjoy more of their Master's Appearance For though they had been priviledged with his presence once and again in Jerusalem which the Evangelist relateth in John 20.19 26. they still long for more and can be content to travel from the City so far as Galilee for such a beatifical Vision and how they began to be blest therewith the same John gives an account in chap. at While some have not warily enough observed the difference betwixt those Signs Christ shewed in Jerusalem to confirm the Faith of his Disciples and those he after shewed them in Galilee they have been of this Opinion that John 21. was not writ by John but added by another as the last Chapter of Deuteronomy was to the five Books of Moses because John seems to conclude his History in the end of his 20th Chapter Note Enquiry But why now will Christ again appear to them in Galilee seeing he had appeared twice already to confirm them in Jerusalem Answ Reason the first Because he had promised to go before them into Galilee by the Angel's mouth Mark 16.7 which going was Secondly An act of local motion intimating that all natural motions of a Body Christ retained still and doth retain them even in Glory as sitting standing going c. The Angel said to Mary Magdalen Lo he is not here c. Mark 16.6 and verse 7. He goes before you into
to acknowledge their own want by their ill success to prepare them the better for the following Miracle And though they might have known who he was that stood upon the Galilean Shore and call'd to them by that friendly compellation Children as his Disciples 1 John 2.13.18 yet they knew him not either because it was nor yet elear day or because of their distance from the Shore but especially because Christ would first be known by the Miracle and then by his Countenance Therefore bids he them to cast their Net on the light side of the Ship or Star board verse 6. Thus he directs them to a certain part lest they should imagine their full Draughts came by chance not by providence They might suppose this Stranger standing on the Shore might espy a confluence of Fishes which they on the Sea could not see This right side was next the Shore however they obey and find the fruit of Obedience their Net filled with 153 Fishes which some say is the number of all kinds of Sea-Fish so that they had caught one of all sorts Though this notion savour of nice curiosity for the Whale could neither come nigh the Shore nor on such a shallow Sea nor be contained in so small a Net with so many other Fishes c. Note Yet learn hence we may for Edification 1. That Christ may be present and not be known c. 2. That the Resurrection will set us free from tossings on the Sea of Affliction to stand with Christ here upon the firm Shore 3. Could we but fish more for Right hand Blessings as they here did on the right-side of the Ship we should catch more Matth. 6.33 All shall be added Prov. 3.16 4. 'T is good to obey God sooner or later success will come bind not him to a day wake him not till he please Cant. 2.7 Our distance and dependence bid us wait He will say us for all our pains and patience at the last c. 5. Former Experience may happily promote both present and future Obedience Christ had revealed the efficacy of his presence in●● Draught of Fish before Luke 5.5 6 7 18 unto Peter and now again to all these Seven This taught them not only that there is no catching any Fish till Christ come but also to venture one cast more at Christ's bidding being incouraged with the success at his command before The 6th grand Remark is the gracious consequences and effects of this Seventh Manifestation in the prodigious Draught of Fishes to the number of 153. The first Effect was John knew first that it was Jesus Here John is preferred before Peter in perspicacity and acuteness of understanding He had the quicker Spirit of Discerning He first knew and told It was the Lord John 21.7 John knew not our Saviour by sight of the Eye though Christ might clear this beloved Disciple's Eye-fight more than the rest so much as by the Voice of the Miracle in their now catching such a multitude of Fishes so very like that recorded Luke 5.5 6. None but the Lord of Sea and Land he thought could command so many Fishes to come to hand by his direction Note John signifies gracious this therefore teacheth us that none but gracious Souls can discern the Lord in his works Now he saw the cause why till then they could catch nothing was that he and they all might the better know him to be the Lord. Thus likewise but Lord will sooner or later let us see that he in very faithfulness doth afflict us Psal 119.75 John tells Peter particularly who had been the grossest Sinner so stood in need of the greatest comfort and therefore would most rejoyce at it Nor doth he tell Peter It as Jesus or our Lord but the Lord Indefinitely that is the Lord of the Sea and the Lord of Life and Death as he hath conquered Death and raised himself up to Life yea and now shews himself standing upon the Shore of Immortality for us to hasten to him and to own him as our Lord who hath been thus bountiful in this great Draught to us after our sad disappointments Note Hence learn we to ascribe our shecess not to our toiling but to God's Blessing Not my pains but thy pound saith the good man hath done it Luke 10.16 1 Cor. 15.10 The second Effect was Peter no sooner heard this but immediately he girds his under garment close to his Body that it might not hinder him from swimming casts himself over-board into the Sea and swims to his Saviour in his shirt we must suppose Peter had strip'd off his clothes before and been labouring hard all the night as good as naked in his shirt Now he doth again what he had done before saying If it be thou bid me come unto thee c. Matth. 14.28 where his fervency made him more forward than the rest and though there Christ condescended to confirm his sinking Faith by a miraculous sign yet had he it with a check verse 29 30 31. But here he stays for no call from Christ throws himself into the Waters leaves all his Fish behind him casts away all his care of Boats Net Fish and all that he might not only come to Jesus but also that he might come first and soonest to him for his first Blessing Note All the Apostles are busie in catching the Fish all wonder at the miraculous Draught only John discerned the Lord that sent so many Fishes yet was not so forward as Peter nor so hardy as he to swim to his Saviour Innocent John had not so much need of going to the Physician as Penitent Peter and such was his need he stays not for any Companion fears no Danger takes no Cock-boat but Faith was instead of all to him and he hastens to be first for a fuller Cure Note Such Efficacy there is in the Ordinance of Preaching for John had Preached to Peter while he was busie in handing the Net saying It is the Lord which teacheth us also that delays in coming to Christ are dangerous when the Soul is sick of sin as likewise that we must take heed of appearing before Christ naked lest our shame appear Rev. 16.15 Therefore did Peter here gird his covering about him to cover his nakedness when he came before the Lord and therefore doth our Lord counsel us to buy of him Raymen● Rev. 3.17 and to fix it fast to us with the Golden Girdle of Truth Ephes 6.14 and not wear it loose to cast off or on at pleasure Lastly It shews that Faith is the best Ship that carries us safe through a Sea of Misery as it had Israel through the Red S●● and Peter here safe to Christ The third Consequence or Effect of the Lord 's Appearing here was that all the other Six Apostles make what speed they can to Christ lest Peter should Monopoli●e their Saviour to himself all came but none so soon as Peter none of them were so hardy as to leap over-board
out of every Nation 1. Those led away captive by Salmanasser 1 Kings 17.6 and 18.11 these never returned into their own Countrey but occasionally as here and call'd Parthians Medes Elamites 2. By Nebuchadnezzar who are here call'd Mesopotamites And 3. By Ptolomy those were call'd Hellenists Beside these three were lesser Dispersions James 1.1 and almost in every City where the Apostles Preached among the Gentiles they found Jews there Now to many of these that were come to the Feast not only Peter but all the Eleven Preached For 1. 'T is said They stood up with him verse 14. 2. The Voice of a Stentor could not be heard by those Myriads out of which three thousand were Converts 3. These consult the other Apostles as well as Peter verse 37. 4. These continued not in Peter's only but 1. In the Apostle's Doctrine Preached 2. In their Fellowship for Communion and Conference 3. In Breaking Bread wherein Wine is synecdochically included And 4. In Prayers wherewith they besieged God who was saith a Father well pleased to have Heaven taken by force Matth. 11.12 Oh happy they that be so valiant and violent as to make a prey or a prize of the habitation of happy ones c. CHAP. III. The First Miracle HAving already declared the wonderful Constitution of the first Gospel-Church that ever was in the World in the next place follows the Discourse concerning the Fate and Fare which attended it wherein an intermixture of the Acts of some times all the Apostles and of sometimes some only as touching what they said what they did and what they suffered 't is summarily comprehended Note This Primitive Church being thus prodigiously planted Persecution presently was raised against it to root it up and ruine it Though God's Bridle had hitherto as before restrained the Devil's Instruments so that the very Pharisees and Chief Priests c. had seem'd to favour them as yet not daring to frown upon them But now the Grumbling of their Gizzards inwardly for fear of the loss of their Pharisaical Kingdom began to work up and break out outwardly Note Oh the depths of Divine wisdom in disposing of things thus that where-ever God hath a Church the Devil by God's unsearchable permission must have his Chappel and this cannot become a Chappel of Ease to the Devil's Chimney-Chaplains call'd Chemarim's Atrati or Black-Birds Zeph. 1.4 unless they find a free vent for their Spirit of Persecution which took its first Fire from Peter and John's healing of the Lame Beggar Acts 3.1 2 c. This was the first occasion of the first Persecution Hitherto all the Apostles had acted in conjunction with Peter 1. In their chusing Matthias by a Lot from the Lord to compleat their number of twelve Apostles 2. In their boldness of Preaching to the People when they had received the Holy Ghost 3. In providing for the Poor that received the Gospel for which the Jewish Synagogues out of which they had formerly been Relieved had now cast them out of their care whereof more afterwards As also 4. In their Joint Celebration of a Council and sending their Canons or Decrees to the several Churches c. But in this place here Peter and John only come into play by their going into the Temple at the Ninth Hour the hour of Prayer not to communicate with the Jews in their now Antiquated Worship but that they might have a larger Field for sowing their seed of the Gospel in which they could not miss of but meet with upon the Evening of this great Feast of Pentecost-day about three a Clock in the Afternoon which was the time of their Evening Sacrifice At their entring into the Gate not of the first Court of the Gentiles but of the second Court of the Jews they find the Lame man laid hoping for more Alms from his Countrey-men than from Strangers Note This same Cripple was born lame and was now forty years old therefore the harder to cure and when cured the more credible Witness against the Cavillers at his cure Acts 4.22 This man lay begging daily there and if he had begg'd in that place so many years it may well be wondered at that Christ himself had not cured him long ere this in his passing so frequently through this Porch seeing we do not find that our Lord ever refused any who came for cure To this it may be said that the Lord might reserve this Miracle for this very Time both for confirming the Truth of the Gospel and the Faith of the Apostles in Preaching it All Times and Seasons are in the Lord's hands who both justly forbears to send Salvation at one time and graciously vouchsafes it at another Note This now was the day of sending Salvation to the Cripple who asked Alms of these two Apostles God was better to him than his expectation and so he is to us daily giving us more than we can ask or think Eph. 3.20 Yea he presseth favours upon his Suitors as Naaman did upon Gehazi 2 Kings 5.23 Peter had no Gold to give him but he had Grace to wit a power from Christ wherewith to heal him which as he had freely received so he freely gave it to him when he first excited his expectation with Look on us that he might the more mind the means and the manner of his Cure and be the better prepared to give God the glory of it No sooner had Peter spoke In the Name of Jesus c. Rise up and walk but presently his Feet and his Ankle-bones received strength c. v. 4 5.6 7. Together with this word there went forth a power as Luke 5.17 then was fulfilled that Prophecy Isa 35.6 The Lame Man shall leap as an Hart The Lord raised up the Crooked Psal 146.8 as was this Cripple whose Inside and Soul was now healed as well as his Outside and Body for he went into the Temple with them not only to hang up his Crutches as it were there as Memorials of his Mercy but also to render Praises to the God of his Mercy He praised God not the Apostles Note Instruments must not rob the Author of his glory we may pay the Messenger but we must return Thanks principally to the sending Benefactor Yet this healed Cripple in an Extasie of Thankfulness to them held those his Healers till a great confluence of People came about them all astonished with the unexpected Miracle on this notoriously known Lame Beggar which when Peter saw he embraces this Golden Opportunity and Preacheth his second stinging Sermon to them whereby a great Increase was added again to the Church Not only this Cripple who had cause at last to bless God for his Lameness which brought him as divers Miseries do others to the knowledge of Christ and of Salvation through him a blind Eye hath help'd the healing of a blind Soul c. but also two thousand more believed as an addition to the three thousand Acts 2.41 at the least c. 'T
season draws out Peter to pass through all quarters to visit the Saints that he might confirm them in the Faith and establish a Ministry among those Churches newly planted by the dispersed Disciples v. 32 Acts 9. Secondly The Place where was Lydda which was one of those places Peter passed unto to visit c. a famous City in former times not far from the Mediterranean Sea upon the West Bank of Jordan Oh wonder how Christ hath his Saints scattered and planted in Cities and Countreys c. Thirdly The Person healing was Peter this was not the first healing Miracle that Peter had wrought by the power of Christ for before this he had cured the Cripple that was born lame not lamed by any violent casualty Acts 3.2 7. and that had been lame forty years Acts 4.22 as above Besides we find Acts 5.15 how the shadow of Peter wrought wonders N.B. The like whereunto we read of Paul after Acts 19.12 not as if the shadow or garment or the body of these Apostles had any inherent vertue in them to heal Diseases and to cast out Devils but that the power of helping the Distressed was now so abundantly poured out at this Effusion of the Holy ●host upon them insomuch as these weakest and improbable means were made soveraign and effectual to work Miracles that the glory of those wondrous works might not be attributed to such contemptible things but to the blessed Messiah now gloriously exhibited N.B. Moreover such prodigious Products from such unlikely means did not only demonstrate that the power was of God but it was an accomplishing of Christ's Promise to them that they should do greater works than he had done John 14.12 by which Providence the Gospel was much more propagated To which may be added that Peter there was in conjunction with John in healing that begging Cripple but here he acts alone by himself Fourthly The Party healed was Aeneas who is described 1. By his Name supposed to be a Jew tho' living now at Lydda whom the Jews call'd Hillel but the Greek-Lyddians call'd him Aeneas 2. By his Disease a dead Palsie which had taken away the use of his Limbs so that he became a Clynick and lay Bed-rid 3. By the Antiquity of his Disease Acts 9.33 he had kept his Bed eight years All this is Recorded not only to declare the certainty of the History but especially the difficulty of the Cure and the excellency of the Miracle Omnipotenti Medico nullus insanabilis occurrit Morbus To such an Almighty Physician as Jehova is no Diseease is found incurable Exod. 15.26 Fifthly The Manner how this Cure was wrought is related verse 34. Acts 9. which contains 1. Peter's command in the Name of Christ wherein he promiseth Recovery to this Paralytick suitable to our Saviour's saying Mark 2.9 and John 5.8 in the like case to demonstrate the perfection of the Cure in being now able to make his Bed Peter acts not here by his own power but lets this lame man know whom he should acknowledge for his Benefactor himself being but the Instrument in Christ's hand And 2. The Paralytick's Cure thereby He immediately arose together with the Word there went forth a power Luke 5.17 As Peter was assured of this so the Paralytick did experience it for he felt the dolorous Distemper by the Resolution of his Nerves depart from him in an instant and that now he was inabled to arise and to cast up his Bed whereof he had now no such need as formerly for eight years All this did declare that the Cure was done by a Divine Power seeing Nature and Art acts in Time and by Degrees but he was cured immediately and that perfectly also insomuch as he was made able to make his Bed the best discovery thereof to all Sixthly The Effects hereof namely upon the many Spectators of this Miracle All that dwelt at Lydda and Saron saw it and turned to the Lord verse 35. Acts 9. The Hebrew is Sharon a place that had most fruitful Fields Isa 33.9 1 Chron. 27.29 but now it became Christ the Rose of Sharon indeed Cant. 2.1 For this Providence became an Ordinance to the Inhabitants of that City 1 Chron. 5.16 not far from Lydda for hitherto they had been erroneous in Fundamentals so had turned their backs of Christ but now were both Inlightened and Inlivened to embrace his Truth The second great Miracle Peter wrought in this his Journey from Jerusalem when he went thence into all quarters to visit the Saints and to confirm them in the Faith Acts 9.32 was his raising Dorcas from the Dead at Joppa which Miracle is described by six Circumstances The first is the Person upon whom this Miracle was wrought by Peter the personal Object whereof hath sundry Demonstrations As 1. By her Name which is twofold Tabitha so call'd among the Jews and Dorcas so call'd among the Greeks both names signifying a Doe or Roe-Buck and as she was espoused to Christ no other she was to him than as a loving Hind and pleasant Roe Prov. 5.19 2. By her Profession she is call'd a Disciple of Christ 3. By her Practice and Manners she was rich in good works which are the best Riches last longest and go farthest for they follow us into another World Rev. 14.13 She is commended for her Beneficency and for her Liberality Acts 9.36 And 4. By her Disease and Death verse 37. N.B. A dear Disciple may be diseased and die Mary and Martha send this word to Christ Behold he whom thou lovest is sick yea and dead too John 11.3 c. Christ's Love and Saint's Death as well as Diseases may well enough hold a consistency as here also in this dear Dorcas whom when dead they had washed not only to fit her for Burial but especially to shew their hope of the Resurrection which would change that vile Body like Christ's glorious Body Phil. 3.21 The second Circumstance is the double occasion 1. The Ficinity of the place Joppa a Port-Town and very beautiful call'd so from the Hebrew Japhah signifying fair or a fair Haven most memorable for Jonah's taking Shipping there when he would flee from God and decline his Message Jon. 1.3 expresly said to be nigh to Lydda verse 38. Acts 9. The second occasion was the Intercession of the Disciples who were sensible of the great loss they all had in the death of so good a Woman therefore sent they speedily for Peter not only to come and comfort those who were most concerned in the loss but also by the Direction of God's Spirit they were not without hope that this pious Woman might be zecovered by Peter and so remain farther profitable to the Church hereupon they request his haste in coming to them before her Burial which now they were preparing for this is an evidence of such an hope The third Circumstance is the moving Cause of this Miracle which was the doleful Lamentation made by Widows for the loss of this
good Woman who used to cloath them verse 39. There was no need here of hiring Mourning-Women Jer. 9.17 The fourth Circumstance is Peter's management of this mighty Miracle in raising the Dead which consists of Deeds and Words First Peter's Deeds as it might seem a strange Request in those People to send for Peter upon any such extraordinary account of giving life to the dead which was never done before since Christ's Departure so it might seem no less than presumption in Peter to undertake it But undoubtedly the same God who had appointed this Miracle to be wrought for the advancement of his own glory and the manifest confirmation of the Truth of the Gospel so wrought in the hearts both of the People and of Peter that both the one and the other did what they did out of a particular Faith But more particularly three things Peter did 1. He put all persons forth that would distract him with their immoderate mourning in his praying work as Elisha did 2 Kings 4.33 not only that he might pray without interruption but also to testifie that he might avoid all appearance of ostentation or seeking any vain glory This likely he had learned from his Lord Mark 5.40 2. He kneeled down which recommends to us that Reverential Posture in our praying to the great God as stoned Stephen did Acts 7.59 60. Though he was in a standing posture when he prayed for himself yet kneeled he down when he prayed for his Enemies This is the posture used in most earnest prayer Stephen was more assured of his own Salvation than of his Stoner's Conversion therefore did he more earnestly or at least as much intreat God for it 3. Peter prayed verse 40. to shew that his power of raising the Dead was only precarious and not his own originally He could do nothing of himself therefore betakes he himself to prayer that he might obtain an Ability from above to restore her to life Secondly The Words What Peter said He turning himself to the Body or Carcass and said Tabitha arise This he spake with a full assurance that his prayers were heard and would be actually answered and according to his effectual fervent prayer it was done for she opened her Eyes the evidence of Life restored and sat up seeing Peter The fifth Circumstance is the Witnesses the Saints that sent for him c. Peter helped her with his hand to rise up and he handed her to them perfectly recovered for all God's works as was this Cure are perfect Deut. 32.4 The sixth Circumstance is the Event which redounded more to the benefit of many Souls than to the single Body of this revived Woman for by this Means and Miracle which no man could work but who had God with him many believed in the Lord Acts. 9.41 42. This was the great end hereof more for the good of others was she raised than her own Now old Jonah was not so famous at Joppa as was this Bar-Jonah or Peter for Jonah was but raised out of the Whale's Belly but this Bar-Jonah became a Raiser out of the state of Death who when he had by this Miracle prepared the Ground tarryed many days there to sow the Seed of the Word into this prepared Soil instructing them in the Truth and confirming them in the Faith till Cornelius sent for him verse 43. Acts 9. The third mighty work which Peter did by the help of Christ was his carrying the Gospel over to the Gentiles beginning with Cornelius the Centurion whom with his whole Family he converted to the Christian Religion c. In this wonderful Conversion which was the principal first-fruits of the Gentiles though there were some few gleanings before three parts are mostly remarkable First The Object Secondly The Organ And thirdly The Idea of it in manner form and means First Of the Personal Object it was Cornelius who is described three ways Acts c. 10. His first Character is drawn from his Occupation and Quality he was a Souldier by Calling and of the highest Rank a Commission-Officer as a Centurion having an hundred Souldiers under his command and conduct verse 1. His second Character is taken from his Conversation wherein he is commended both for his Piety which he demonstrated not only by his charitable and plentiful Alms but also by his fervent and frequent Prayers verse 2. and for his Obedience in performing all that God commanded verse 7 8. His third Character is the description of that eminent and extraordinary Priviledge or Divine Vouchsafement wherewith God was pleased to dignifie this Gentile Souldier and Centurion in the first place namely with an Angelical Vision In this Vision of an holy Angel sent from Heaven as God's Embassador to him with the glad Tidings of Salvation to him and his Family and so to the Gentiles in general There be two particulars principally remarkable the first is what Cornelius saw v. 3. wherein is related both when and how he saw this Vision The second is what he heard in it to wit the words that this Angel spake to him which speech hath a twofold tendency 1. 'T is for incouraging the Anxious Soul of this Souldier who had long wanted relieving succour and support verse 4. And 2. 'T is for directing him what to do for his future and fuller settlement verse 5. This is the first part of this Divine Record concerning Cornelius The famous Remarks whereon are these that be genuinely deduced The first is a deduction from the manner of life this personal Object Cornelius led namely the life of a Souldier which is commonly the rudest sort of life yet was it not so in this man Teaching us that all Souldiers are not Rude but some may be Religious and truly so Souldiers indeed are so generally licentious rapacious and of so rude a deportment that a Poet hath scandalized the whole Tribe giving this black Character of them Nulla Fides pietasque Viris qui castra sequuntur No Faith nor Piety can be found in Souldiers that follow Camps 'T is sad when the Sword is seated in such mad-men's hands c. However this Cornelius confuteth that Poet's scandal 'T is true John Baptist look'd upon this sort of men as necessary to be caution'd with his Austere Document Do Violence to no Man c. Luke 3.14 The Austerity of this Preacher the Baptist doth not condemn that course of life to wit the Imploy of a Souldier but only Regulates their Behaviour therein letting them know that all violent shaking of peaceable People by the shoulders as the word signifies Luke 3.14 All insolent plundering to mend their short pay and to spend luxuriously upon themselves with such other extravagant exorbitancies which the Roman Souldiers used in their Garrisons over conquered Countreys and Cities must be left if indeed they would bring forth fruits fit for evidencing the Truth of their Repentance which they heard he Preached to them and so hardly pressed upon them Behold this Souldier who was
applied to Cornelius's case N.B. Which sheweth the mistake of those that so Tye up Grace and Salvation to the receiving of the Sacrament of Baptism as if none could fear God or be accepted of him and saved by him unless they be baptized The fourth Remark is True Peace with God is only purchased and procured and according to be Preached only by and through Jesus Christ v. 36. N.B. So. 1. Christ himself Preached in his own person for all quarters of the World Matth. 8.11 12. that he would draw all men unto him without distinction of Jew or Gentile Poor or Rich c. John 12.32 2. This Peace is Preached to be had by Christ or only through him by the very Angels themselves Luke 2.14 And 3. By all the Apostles and Ministers of the Gospel Ephes 2.13 14. Acts 4.12 And 't is all one whether they be Jews or Greeks bond or free male or female they are all one in him Gal. 3. v. 28. who is all and in all Col. 3.11 Insomuch as all other Peace not founded upon the Rock Christ is not pax sed stupor not a right but a false Peace no better than stupefaction The fifth Remark is The Lord of All was Anointed by his Father as the Jewish Kings Priests and Prophets usually were to all those three Offices hence was he called Messiah in the Old Testament and Christ in the New both which names do signifies Anointed Acts 10. v. 36 38. N.B. Hence may we comfortably conclude that seeing Christ is the Lord of the Church and Lord of the World as he is Lord of all he will not suffer his Church to be wronged by the World nor will he be hindered by Devils or wicked men though never so many never so mighty from carrying on his own cause and concerns of his own glory but will gather his Elect both Jews and Gentiles out of all the quarters of the World Rom. 3.30 and 10.12 c. He will be King of Kings and Lord of Lords Rev. 19.16 The sixth Remark is This mighty Mediator who had God with him in the fulness of the Godhead Col. 2.9 induing his Manhood with all might and mercy never exerted his might but in Miracles of Mercy He went about doing good but never any hurt for God was with him verse 38. He could as easily destroy those that would not believe on him as he did save those that willingly believed though often provoked thereunto Nay so far was our Lord from ruining any that when his Apostles asked his leave but to permit them by fire from Heaven to destroy the sawcy Samaritans yet would he not Luke 9.54 Though afterward he impowered Peter to strike Ananias and Sophira with death and also Paul to strike Elymas the Sorcerer with Blindness Acts 5. and 13 chapter N.B. Yet all the Miracles Christ himself wrought were Miracles of Mercy not of Judgments Healing all but harming or hurting none yea the worst sort of evils even such as were oppressed with the Devil Acts 10.38 to shew that he came as a Saviour and not as a Destroyer which is the Devil 's double name both in Hebrew and Greek Rev. 9.11 and that his Errand was to destroy the works of that destroying Devil Heb. 2.14 and 1 John 3.8 and to cast him out of the Souls of Men who were spiritually possessed by him O happy calamity that carries Man to seek a Saviour The seventh Remark is Oh how costly to Christ it was to save us from the Curse of the Law and from the damning power of Sin and Hell He therefore died a cursed Death was slain by the Jews and hanged on a Tree Acts 10. verse 39. Gal. 3.13 Deut. 21.23 that the blessing of Abraham hitherto mostly confined to the fleshly seed of that Patriarch the Jews might now come upon the Gentiles also Gal. 3.8 14. N.B. Therefore the Jews for being Kill-Christs might the less murmure at their Rejection and at the Gentile's Reception at this time who had not so rejected Christ as the Jews had done The eighth Remark is The Resurrection of Christ is the Fort-Royal of the Christian Religion's comfort c. Hereupon the Apostle Peter here Acts 10. v. 40. had no sooner mentioned Christ's Death but immediately he Preach'd his Resurrection also lest those Gentile-Auditors should have stumbled at his Cross and be discouraged to believe in a Dead Christ for that he was Raised from the Dead was a most unquestionable Truth though the Gentiles faith he might hear some rude Rumours hereof by a confused Report and common fame in the general Acts 10. v. 37. The word I say you know yet now let me tell you more particularly that this Truth hath been by all manner of ways proved for Christ hath been both seen and heard yea and felt too 1 John 1.1 after his Resurrection and we are and drank with him verse 41. whereby he was declared to be the Son of God Rom. 1.4 and by consequence a Conquerour of both Death and Hell for us c. And hereupon the Apostle Paul also puts a rather of comfort upon this Doctrine of Christ's Resurrection Rom. 8.34 c. The ninth Remark is God's Truth is never starved for want of Witnesses As the Apostles were Eye and Ear-witnesses of all that was done both by Christ and against him Acts c. 10. v. 39. before and at his Death as likewife after his Resurrection to whom he appeared alive and to above five hundred of the Brethren at once 1 Cor. 15.6 those Apostles were therefore commanded to Preach Christ not only alive but that he would Judge the quick and dead Acts 10. v. 41 42. So the Prophets all testified the same Truth which was included in that first Prophecy of the Seed of the Woman Gen. 3. v. 15. and so downward from that time Jer. 31.34 Mich. 7.18 Luke 24.27 Acts 10. v. 43. Yea all the Ceremonies in the Sacrifices testified this Truth The tenth Remark is God giveth Testimony to the Word of his Grace where it is sincerely and ardently Preached and Heard Acts 14.3 Here the Holy Ghost accompanied the sincere Preaching and attentive ardent Hearing the Word and these Gentile Auditors being such had the visible signs of Fiery Tongues such as the Apostles had Acts 2.3 falling on them while Peter was speaking Acts 10.44 By which Miracle God declared that the price of Man's Redemption by Christ was paid for and belonged to the Gentiles as well as to the Jews and that the Spirit with the graces of Illumination Regeneration and the gift of Tongues c. thus coming down upon these Gentile-Converts before Baptism did plainly shew N. B. That the Righteousness of God is not attained by any external Ordinance without the internal operation of his Spirit which here came on Cornelius c. being neither circumcised nor baptized Acts 10.35 The eleventh Remark is They who have the Grace signified by Baptism ought to have the Seal of that Grace in being
10.10 so they did farther Demonstrate the truth of their Faith and Repentance by their works James 2.24 26. for as an evidence of the detestation of their former faults and follies they make an open Bone-fire of all their wicked Books burning so many of them as at the lowest estimation of the learned amounted at the least to eight hundred pound N.B. The Ephesians were much addicted to the Black Art from thence the Antient Proverb calleth Necromancy Ephesian Learning and the Syriack expresseth those Curions Arts to be all Divinations by Judiciary Astrology such as Calculating Nativities telling of Fortunes and of things lost c. All which are curiositys not necessary for us to know and which are no better than Diabolical Arts or rather Divelish cheats Imposed upon Credulous Fools N.B. If any ask Why were not those Books sold for this fifty thousand pieces of Silver and the price of them brought unto the Apostles as Acts 4.36 37 c The Answer is Because it was looked upon like the price of a Whore which was abomination to the Lord and therefore it might not be offered up to him Deut. 23. v. 17. how much more abominable were these books which had the Devil as it were bound up in them as some write of Cornelius Agrippa that his Dog had a Devil tyed to his Collar and Parcelsus also If Erastus bely him not had a Devil as his familiar confined within the pummel of his Sword N.B. Not a stone of the Whore of Babylon must be taken wherewith to build Zion No it is devoted to the fire However this did declare those Quondam Conjurers to be now become true Converts that they thus willingly pluck out their right eye c. and will not retain any thing that might Decoy them back to the Devil So mightily grew God's word v. 20. Isa 55.11 and his Church hereby The ninth Remark is The Halcyon-days of peace and tranquillity are but of a short date to the Church and Children of God there is no Permanency thereof no long abiding N.B. This plainly appears from verse 23. and the same time there arose no small stir about that way namely the Doctrine of the Gospel which had even now so powerfully prevailed with a mighty and irresistible torrent over all oppositions both of Men and Devils the word had such a free course all obstructions and Remoras were removed out of its way that it was glorified of all 2 Thess 3.2 and it became such a succesful seed in this Soile of Ephesus that it had a mighty Increase ver 20. Casting down the Kingdom of Sin and Satan and causing those Conjurers not only to devote their Conjuring books and Scrpits of Curiosity to the fire but also their own Souls and bodies to the Service of Christ and his Gospel so they became renewed Monuments of the All-conquering Vertue and Victory of the Divine Truth N.B. Now when the Devil saw all these Gospel Magnifying effects and how himself had been over-power'd by the great God in helping to pull down his own strong holds when he was made to leap upon his own Vassal-Conjurers to tear their clothes and to wound their bodies so putting them to the flight which affrighted all his whole Colledge and Company of Diabolical Conjurers verse 16 17 18 19. and made them willing to part with their Dilecta Delicta their best beloved most gainful and long accustomed Sins So that many such sincere Converts were daily added to the Church verse 20. All this Inraged him much more so that he comes again with great wrath as Rev. 12.12 makes a fresh and furious assault and battery even then when all matters and concerns of the Church there did seem to be most quiet and best composed even then did the Devil in Demetrius the Silver-smith raise a dreadful Hubbub and persecution against Paul and his prevalent and powerful Doctrine So uncertain are the Servants of God and the Ministers of the Gospel to have any long continuing Tranquilliry here below N.B. Now it was as some suppose that Paul fought with Beasts at Ephesus 1 Cor. 15.32 after the manner of Men that is the Men of Ephesus those beastly Siver-Smiths fought with him after the manner of beasts or he fought with those beastly men there after the manner that men fight with beasts when exposed to the rage and fury of their hungry Appetites For this was common in the primitive persecutions to have Christians damnatos ad bestias cast to wild beasts And the usual Speech in Tertullian's time was Christianos ad Leones throw them to the Lions But those were Beasts in Mens shapes who possibly made him despair of life as he saith 2 Cor. 1.8 9. The tenth Remark is Gain-getting and maintaining of Mens liveli-hood are shrewd Temptations in Superstitious minds to use Impious means for the supporting their Superstition and Idolatry N.B. This is manifest in those opposers of Paul v. 24 25 26 c Paul tells us He was determined to tarry at Ephesus till Pentecost because he had a great Door opened in that great City yet had he many adversaries 1 Cor. 16.8.9 Acts 19.21 22. But before this determined time of his departure thence came the Devil raises up Demetrius and he his Fellow Silver-Smiths to raise up a fresh and fierce persecution against Paul as one that impair'd their profit and spoil'd their Trade of Making Silver-Shrines for Diana's Temple by his crying down the worship of Idols N.B. This Temple of Diana was one of the seven wondrous Structures of the whole world Those Silver-Smiths made Medals or Pourtraitures of it in Silver wherein their Idol Diana was expressed according to her Image mentioned verse 35. These Shrines the Superstitious people carry'd home to their houses and friends not only to demonstrate to them what a Pilgrimage they had performed but also by these small portable Temples to stir up the more their own devotions towards this Idol as the Papists do for the like end carry about their Agnus Dei's at this day N.B. Now that this Shrine-making was a mighty gainful Trade appeareth more than probable seeing that this wonderful Fabrick was an hundred years in building and at the charge of all Asia before it came to its full perfection And the Confluxe of all Asia did contribute to the building of it so hither was the conflux of all Asia's Superstition Therefore all the Cost of the whole Countrey of Asia must be Universally the Traffickers in this Trade of Shrines which must needs produce a most prodigious profit unto those Medal-Makers N.B. Demetrius did being sharp-sighted-enough in things wherein self was concerned Readily observe how horrid a detriment was like to accrew to himself and his Fellow-Crafts Men by the Gospel's destroying that Idolatry as daily it had done He calls all those Artificers together makes a pestilent Speech to them concerning the deadness of their Trade since Paul preached in that place and so blew them up into a