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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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sort of Persecutors he violently broke open many Doors of the Houses where those Christians had their private Meetings and there he spared none of either Sex but haled both Men and women by the Hair of their Heads as if they had been taken Captives in the heat of War and cast them into Prison and still which was worse than all this he compelled them to blaspheme Acts 26.11 that is not only to renounce their Religion but also to curse their Crucified Christ therefore confesseth that he had been not only a Persecutor but one who had been notoriously Injurious 1 Tim. 1.13 Phil. 3.6 The Remarks hereupon are 1. That there is a blind Zeal misguided by an Ignis Fatuus a Will-with-Wisp or rather by a false Fire from Hell His Zeal was only exercised in persecuting the Church Phil. 3.6 that could not conform to the Pharisaical Traditions N.B. Zeal is good when it acts in a good matter Gal. 4.18 but this of Saul's was not so Gal. 1.13 He saith the same of his own Zeal as of that of the Jews that it was a Zeal without knowledge Rom. 10.2 3. though a warm yet a blind Zeal They knew not that Christ was the End and Accomplishment of the Law and that his Righteousness not that of the Law was only acceptable to God If Zeal be not qualified with knowledge all will be on fire as the primum-mobile with its swift Revolution would be were it not cooled by the counter-motion of the lower Spheres Blind Zeal is as wild-fire in the hand of a Fool 't is like the Devil in the Demoniack which casts him sometimes into the Fire and sometimes into the Water Mark 9.22 Ignorance is a great Breeder and mostly great-bellied which Aristotle himself makes the Mother of mis-rule and mischief The dark corners of the Earth saith the Psalmist are top-full of cruelty Psal 74.20 The Soul that is without knowledge is not good and he that without knowledge basteth with his feet sinneth saith Solomon Prov. 19.2 The faster he goeth the farther he wandereth out of the Right way Mettle in a blind Horse is dangerous Yet this mad Zealot lived a blameless life otherwise Phil. 3.6 The second Remark is This black Character is designedly given here and elsewhere of this peevish Zealot as a foil to give the more lustre to the Riches of the Grace and Mercy of God towards him in changing such a bloody worrying Wolf into such a gentle and useful Lamb and of such an unparallel'd Persecutor to make such an eminent and wonderful Pastor N.B. All this is Recorded of him that none might despair of Saving-Mercy who can but find hearts given them to repent of their sins and to be converted c. The third Remark is the prospect of that black Hue which this young Persecutor had put upon him by being dip'd in the Devil 's Dye-Fat N.B. Satan before his Fall did think none but after his Fall would have none better than himself therefore makes he Saul here as bad as himself both in Malice and Sin These two Evils whether in Devils or in Men are equally Aged and be as equally Evil both have the same Name and Nature as if there were no sin but Malice All Evil is envious The good that a bad man will not imitate he cannot but envy He that grieves not because himself is evil usually Irks that another is good As Sin separates 'twixt God and Man so it sows Enmity 'twixt the Devil and Man yet can it combine wicked men to become Sworn-Brethren in Iniquity not only in being but also in doing Evil. N.B. This Confederacy is not Union or Concord but the worst sort of Conspiracy as was that of Herod's and Pilate's against Christ When Thieves shake hands 't is done for malice and mischief against the truly honest Man Judas both consents to and consults with the Priests for killing Christ Saul consents only which is always the first step to sin with the Stoners of Stephen Acts 8.1 and 22.20 N.B. To behold Evil and not to dislike it is to consent to it By-standers may be Accessories making the offence of others their own by their consent He that forbids not Evil furthers it Particpat Nutans non obstans non manifestans Either Saul's degree was above the Office of an Executioner or his Age was under it Yet if he may not be a Partner in the Murder he will be a Witness yea a Witness of the Witnesses who laid down their cloaths at his feet Acts 7.58 N.B. No Age is innocent Childhood and Youth are vanity Eccles 11.9 10. This Young Man though not rejoycing in the vain pleasures of his Youth yet was villanous and violent in a malicious persecution of the Gospel of Truth So villany as well as vanity was found in this Youth who might be too young to have Might enough for casting a Stone at a Martyr's head with his hand yet was there no want of Malice in his heart though there was not Might in his hand to hold the cloaths of those that could more mischievously cast them So Saul stoned Stephen with his heart while his hands held the cloaths of those that did it and probably prompted them on therein So Saul stoned Stephen by the many hands of the mad Multitude as if his own hands alone were not enough to stone him N.B. Now being once flesh'd in Stephen's Blood Saul becomes a second Nimrod a mighty Hunter not satiated with devouring one silly Lamb whose flesh still sticks in this Wolf's Teeth becomes now bolder to seize upon the whole Flock Stephen's Blood had only made his mouth to water after a deeper Draught and a fuller Carouse of the Saint's Blood as one who could not sit down satisfied with destroying one single Saint without dissolving the whole Communion of Saints Having thus far spoke 1. To the Efficient Cause or Instrument of this Fourth Persecution I come 2. To speak of the sad and deplorable Effects thereof which is expressed in those words They were all scattered abroad throughout the Regions of Judaea and Samaria excepting the Apostles Acts 8.1 There be various Opinions about the All that were scattered hereby The first Opinion is that this All here is to be taken largely for the Multitude of Believers who were the Constituting Members of the first Gospel-Church at least so many of them as could not commodiously Abscond and had conveniency to fave themselves by flight This was allowed or rather commanded by Christ Matth. 10.23 Therefore they are too Rigid that discommend it The second Opinion taketh this All more strictly for all the Teachers of the Church those extraordinary Gifted Deacons and others who Preached the Word a work only proper for Ministers Acts 8.4 one of which number was Philip who Preached at Samaria verse 5 c. which very Imploy is ever most obnoxious to Persecution N.B. This sense is the more probable For 1. Luke's scope is to write an History of the one
while all living or wherein to Bury them when any of them Died until it came to his Dear Sarah's case oh then why should any of the Children of Abraham be discouraged that they have no more than a Burying-place upon Earth when Father Abraham the Heir of the World had no more a great Worldling who laid Houses to Houses and Land to Land by multiplyed Purchases was gravely rebuked by a good man who measured out his Grave before him and told him those few Inches of Earth he must be reduced to at the last we should with Father Abraham mind our Mortality most and other things less The first Doom God Denounced was Thou-shalt surely Die and the first Doubt the Devil suggested was Thoushalt not surely Die there yet remains something of the Spawn of that old Serpent in us to forget our Mortality and to hope yet to live a little longer and so to doubt of that whereof there is the greatest certainty putting the evil day of Death far from us whereas we should neither be fond of Life not fearful of Death but learn to Die daily making Death familiar to us at Bed and Board 'T is very observable how our first Parents cloth'd themselves with Fig-Leaves but God misliking that gave them Garments of Skins a memorial of Mortality hence some say that Christ Cursed the Fig-Tree which bore only Leaves to cover Mans Sin but commended John Baptist who did wear Skins to mind him that he was a poor Mortal The 3. Inference remarkable is If to this of Abrahams purchasing a Burying-place we compare the Jews purchasing with the Price of Christs Blood that Potters Field to Bury Strangers in Mat. 27.7 This will Teach two things 1. That the Jews began to be Dispriviledg'd and Disinherited of their own Land by Crucifying the Emmanuel and Lord of the Land Isa 8.8 Hos 9.3 for hereby Strangers or Gentiles got Footing in it and Possession of it as the Evangelist saith purchas'd by Christs Blood 2. If we be Strangers as we are Gentiles to the Jews Sin in Crucifying the Lord of Life then 't is not so much a Burying-place but a Living and Reigning-place is also purchas'd for us by the Price of Christs Blood not only a Burying-place for our Bodies as a safe Receptacle and Dormitory until the Resurrection upon Earth the Panegyrick or Congregation-House as before the Lord keepeth all the Bones of his Saints Psal 34.20 but also a Reigning-place for our Souls in Heaven to wit those Glorious Thrones Promised to such as follow Christ in the Regeneration Mat. 19.28 and those Mansions of Glory which Christ both Purchaseth and Prepareth Joh. 14.2 3. not only for the Soul until the Resurrection but also for the Body after even for ever Thus far of Abrahams Divine Call in all its parts when whence whither and why now followeth his Obedience of Faith to Gods Call 't is expresly said he obeyed and went out not knowing whither Heb. 11.8 as if he had follow'd God blindfold putting his hand into Gods hand and resigning up himself to his God and his Will to Gods Will well knowing with whom he went though he knew not whither be went So that Abrahams Obedience is Eminently Exemplar to all the Sons and Daughters of Abraham we must all walk in his stops or we shall never Lodge in his Bosom as before All his Children must write after his Copy of Obedience which in its transcendency hath a threefold excellency It was an Obedience so transcendent as to be 1. Without Hesitation 2. Without Reservation 3. Without Limitation Of these in order 1. It was Obedience without Hesitation he used no disputation in the case he falls not upon arguing with God in any Carnal reasonings against his Call and Command saying I cannot apprehend any urgent occasion why I should forsake my own Native Countrey and may not I justly suspect it no better than a piece of sublime folly to go I know not whither and to leave a certainty for an uncertainty Is not one Bird in the Hand as saith the Proverb better than two in the Bush He doth not alledge Lord first satisfie my Scruples and convince my Judgment that 't is my Duty and then will I follow and obey thee No he doth not dispute but dispatch he doth not say as those Recusants in the Gospel said Suffer we first to go and bury my Father Mat. 8.21 Or I have bought a piece of Ground and I must needs go to prove it c. Luke 14.18 19 20. Neither did Abraham dare to do as better Men than those aforesaid even as Moses Exod. 3 1● and 4.10 11 12 13. or as Jeremy Jer. 1.6 who both do bring in their carnal Reasonings strongly to confute God and his Call No such thing is Recorded of Abraham had he with Theudas thought himself some body Acts 5.36 He would have rais'd some chatting Discourse or Dialogue with God but he plainly becomes a No body before him lyes down at his Foot Isa 41.2 and by the strength of his Faith dashes down all the scummy Bubbles of carnal Reasonings which unbelief would have Boiled up He falls down before the Majesty of that Great Divine Truth Who art thou Oh Man that darest reply against God or word it with him Rom. 9.20 21. If a private Subject may not say to his Prince What dost thou Eccles 8.4 Much less may poor Man say so to the Great God that King of Kings and Lord of Lords 1 Tim. 6.15 Balaam took it ill that his Ass should reply upon her Master Numb 22.29 But we must be content to be dumb Asses as the Apostles phrase is 2. Pet. 2.16 and speechless Fools in respect of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 4.10 'T is not a good Angel but the evil one that opens our Mouths to make replies upon such a Soveraign Master our Lord is wiser for us than we can be for our selves our fleshly wisdom is enmity against God Rom. 8.7 That is the forbidden Fruit which must be vomited up by Repentance it being Earthly Sensual and Devilish Jam. 3.15 It is remarkable how God spoke in the silly Ass but 't was the Devil that spoke in the subtile Serpent and how Christ rode upon an Ass into Jerusalem but Satan convey'd himself by a Serpent into Paradise we must all die to our own wisdom and live in Gods as Aaron's Rod swallow'd up those of the Magicians Exod. 7.12 so ought Gods Wisdom to swallow up ours A poor nothing bewilder'd Creature is most suitable and acceptable to an All-sufficient Christ who is Wisdom in the Abstract we must resign our All to him who is our All in All Col. 3.11 without Hesitation 2. As Abraham's Obedience was without Hesitation or any contrary Disputes against Gods Call so it was without Reservation he resigns up himself to the command of God not by halves but wholly without any Ifs or And 's as we say The Popish Lying Doctrine of
place or private corner which had been a little more tolerable but it must be upon an open Theatre a publick Stage upon a Mountain in the sight and view of the World 11. This perplexed Patriarch as he might not consult with his own reason which certainly would have put him to a stand so he must not consult with his own Wife though she had an equal interest in Isaac who might haply have hung about his neck and hindered him as Zipporah did Moses to the hazarding of his life Exod. 4.24 25. 12. But the greatest conflict of all was that the Messiah was promised to come of Isaac and so the Salvation of the World did seem to perish in Isaac's perishing Notwithstanding all these aforesaid twelve difficulties the Actor Abraham acts his part of obedience with all 1. Alacrity 2. Constancy 3. Prudence and 4. Confidence All which four shew the Excellency of Abrahams Obedience of Faith as before the Difficulty of it in the next place is the third Enquiry How all these were in this Act. Ans 1. With all Alacrity and readiness to obey he rose up early Gen. 12.3 Making no delatory work about it Thus David did saying I made haste and delayed not Psal 119.60 We read of Balaam how he made the like haste to do evil he rose up early Numb 22.21 And shall not we do so for doing good Our Lord Christ rose up early to pray for us Mark 1.35 And shall not we do so for our selves Holy David made it his resolve saying I my self will awake right early Psal 108.2 We should do so every day Especially the Sabbat-day as Joshuah and Israel did Josh 6.12 15. If we would have the Walls of cursed Jericho to fall before us as v. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T is not meet for a man that either gives or takes good Counsel to sleep the whole night or too much saith Homer Sanctificat Sanat Ditat quoque Surgere Manè To rise betimes maketh men Holy Healthy and Wealthy Abraham here rose up early to be gone about his work The Sun ariseth and then man goeth forth to his labour Psal 104.12 23. Abraham here stays not to consult with his beloved Sarah lest her affections should have hindred the operations of his Faith nor with his own corrupt reason or natural affections that Old Beldam which is both the Mother and Nurse of all our Disorders and Extravagancies for he was renewed in the Spirit of his mind Eph. 4.23 Cassianus tells us of a young man receiving Letters from his Parents to disswade him from Chistianity cast them into the Fire not daring to tempt himself with reading them so should we do with all those carnal reasonings suggested by our own corrupt hearts or carnal relations to us otherwise we shall never Rest nor Feast in Abrahams Bosom 2. The Constancy and Continuance of this his ready Obedience 't is a wonder how his heart was kept in such an obediential frame for three days together all the time of his Travelling from Beershebah to Mount Moriah which some derive from Marah bitter 't was no other to Abraham in this bitter Tryal while he went all this long-way until on the third day he saw the Hill afar off Gen. 22.4 He could not but in his mind see his Dear Son as it were bleeding upon the Altar all along as he Journeyed thither and so he dwelt with his thoughts upon an Expectation of so heart-breaking an evil all this three days Journey which seemeth worse than the evil it self praestat semel mori quàm semper metuere 't is better to die at once than to be so long a dying a speedy Execution doth mitigate misery whereas delay aggravates it How he paused and pondered all the while upon this Bloody and Barbarous yet Commanded Enterprize We know not yet surely his Faith did so over-rule all his unruly affections as to extricate this blessed Patriarch out of his present perplexities and in all his Ploddings of Mind and Misgiving of heart kept him all along Tight Steady and Constant to continue his resolves in obeying Gods Command to the End Thus we should not ponder the Cross too much then 't will prove too heavy we must not chew the Physical Pill at all 't will tast too bitter we may not plodd too much upon the harshness of Divine Commands then they will appear hard sayings Joh. 6.50 Whereas none of them are indeed grievous 1 Joh. 5.3 As we ought to swallow our purging Pills whole so we should not plodd with our minds below but ply the Throne of Grace above for a good Use a good End and Issue of all our Tryals both in Tribulations and Temptations 3. Abrahams Prudence in leaving his Servants and the Ass at the Foot of the Hill v. 5. Shebu lachem Expectate hic Tarry ye here this he said fearing lest they being present at the top of the Hill might hinder him in his Obedience and Oblation And as he left them there so did he leave his natural affections and his carnal Ratiocinations contrary to Gods Command with them there that he might serve the Lord without distraction 1 Cor. 7.35 Oh that we could learn from Abraham to leave our Servants and the Ass to wit whatever may distract us at the foot of the Hill while we go up into the Mount to Worship God Even whatever is carnal that we may be Spiritual and so Worship God who is a Spirit in Spirit without Formality and in Truth without Hypocrisie for the Father seeketh such to Worship him Joh. 4.23 But alas our Carnal Affections though they be the fittest Companions for the Ass are not so much our Servants as our Masters and they will whether we will or no go up with us into the Mount we cannot with Moses and Joshuah put off those dirty Shoes of wandering thoughts and Earthly imaginations to come clean to the most Holy God with clean hearts before his Throne of Grace for they cleave as close to us as our Skin to our Flesh and we are not cleansed from that Blood Joel 3.21 Nor from the iniquity of Peor until this day Josh 22.17 No nor yet from all filthiness of Flesh and Spirit for the perfecting holiness in the Fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 And as we ought to leave the Servants and the Ass below So much less must we our selves stay with the Ass below this is to make our selves Spiritual Asses indeed while we should with our Father Abraham go up to God above 4. Abrahams Confidence herein 1. Speaking Prophetically we will both of us come again to God Gen. 21.5 And 2. God will provide himself a Lamb v. 8. As to the 1. Of these Some Popish Casuists say that Abraham here uttered an untruth or more plainly told a lye seeing he went with a purpose to do that to Isaac which would certainly hinder him from returning again This is wickedly said concerning the Father of those Children who will not
in Gods Providence In the Mount the Lord will provide a Ram to save his Isaac Gen. 22.14 Issues of Death belong to the Lord only Psal 68.20 He knows how to deliver his 1 Pet. 3.12 and 2 Pet. 2.9 'T was Peter's own Experience Acts 12.10 c. Our Times are in his Hands Psal 31.15 and none can take us out of Christs Hands John 10.28 We have had our places named Jehovah Jireth to perpetuate the Memory of Gods Mercy 4. Hence learn we to bear the loss of Children with patience and silence as Abraham here and Aaron Levit. 10.3 No Parent ever gave up a Son to God with so much patience and under such sad Circumstances as Abraham did unless it were God himself giving his Beloved Son to his Justice for Mans Redemption and when God thought not his Holy Child Jesus too good for us why should we think any Child of ours too good for God 5. God Accepted Abraham's Will for the Deed so he will do ours 2 Cor. 8.12 preferring the willingness of the Will before the worthiness of the Work Small Service may have great Acceptance if much will though not much weight be found therein CHAP. XI The History and Mystery of Isaac's Life THE most Famous Remarks that are Recorded in Scripture concerning the Patriarch Isaac besides those Intermingled in the History of Abraham his Father are these following to wit First Isaac's Weaning made the more Remarkable because attended with 1. Abraham's Feasting And 2. Ishmael's Mocking The former is the Principal and these two are the Accessories First Of the Principal to wit of Isaac's Weaning God gives us a distinct account how Isaac was Born and Named Gen. 21.2 3. Circumcised ver 4. Nursed up by Sarah with great Delight ver 6 7. and then vvhen grovvn up and fit for hard Meat he vvas weaned ver 8. Vajiggamal Hebr. Ablactatus but properly it signifies Retributus an exchanging of one thing for another and thus in vveaning there is a change from Milk to stronger Meat Hence may be inferred many excellent practical and profitable Observations As 1st Isaac was Conceived and brought forth after an extraordinary manner the Son of the Promise as Abraham his Father in the Supernatural Birth of Isaac did foresee the Supernatural Birth of Christ and rejoiced at it John 8.56 He did not Name his Son Isaac or Laughter only because of his Joy for him but also because of his Joy for Christ he rejoiced to see Christs Day of a Miraculous Conception and Birth he saw it and was glad he saw the Face of Christ in his Birth Life and Death c. all in the Figure of Isaac by the clear Eyes of his Faith which is the Evidence of things not seen Heb. 11.1 even things that were afar off yet with a long Arm of his Faith he hugg'd and embraced them as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11.13 doth signifie yea he had not only a Prophetical but also a Real Vision of Christ Gen. 18.1 2 3 17. in the Form of a Man as a prelude of his Incarnation and out of his Philanthropy Tit. 3.4 delighting to be in carne before he was ex carne as a Man among the Sons of Men Prov. 8.31 This made Abraham Rejoice and Dance a Gallyard as the word in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth John 8.56 So Sarah by the force of her Faith Conceived and brought forth Isaac her Son when she was past Age because she judged him faithful who had promised Heb. 11.11 that is she did nor think that God paid his people with words only as Sertorius is said to do his Soldiers or that he fools them off with fair promises as Ptolomee Sirnamed therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is said to do his Favourites Pollicitis Dives quilibet esse potest Great Mens fair words are like Dead Mens promis'd Shoes he may go bare foot that waits for them not so those at Good Men they will perform their promises though they tend to their loss Psal 15.4 They are Children that will not Lie Isa 63.8 but their Father is a God that cannot Lie Tit. 1.2 He is the God of Truth Isa 65.16 All his promises are yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1.20 in Christ Jesus that Faithful and True Witness Revel 3.14 Therefore God is Real and Royal in his promises and performances He will do what he hath said 2 Sam. 7.25 and perform with his Hand what he promiseth with his Mouth 1 King 8.15.1 Thes 5.24 All this Sarah his Mother believed though at first she faultered Gen. 18.11 12. The first Tidings hereof she apprehended more strange than true but better recollecting her Religious and Reverend Contemplations of the Almighty she afterwards believed what before she doubted or at least admired rather than believed and as soon as she believed soon after she Conceived though old by the force of her Faith and not by the Vigour of Nature therefore is she upon this very account Inrolled in the Catalogue of the most Eminent Believers Heb. 11.11 where the Apostle sheweth 1. That Saving Faith reaches both Sexes that the weaker Sex eminent in Faith is worthy of Imitation by Men the stronger and that a Woman is no such wonder in Heaven as that wanton witless Wit once said proving it by Revel 12.1 reading no further than those very words extend and stopping at that clause clothed with the Sun and so there is no God as Psal 14.1 if we stop there and go no further 2dly Observe The Apostle in his Epistle to the Hebrews doth shame those Hebrew Men he writes to with that Excellent and plainly Masculine Exercise of Faith in the Feminine Sex a Woman Heb. 11.11 where Sarah's Faith is propounded as a pattern both for their and our practice holding forth 1. The Advantage by it She received strength in a Twofold Respect both for Conceiving and for bringing forth though disadvantag'd by the time of it to wit in her Old Age. 2. The Ground and Foundation of it her Faith was founded upon this that she strongly believed the Promiser was faithful to perform his promises Hereupon she is made an Allegorical Mystery in all this her famous History even by the Apostle Paul himself by a special Inspiration of the Holy Ghost Gal. 4.21 to 27 and 30. shewing how Abraham's Family was a Figure of the Church in general 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 4.24 wherein be two Mothers a Bond-woman Hagar and a Free-woman Sarah two manners of Getting as well as Begetting Children 1. By Promise or by Faith 2. After the Flesh or by Nature Two kinds of Children Bondmen as Ishmael and Freemen as Isaac and the former persecuting the latter two Covenants that of Works and that of Grace or the Law and the Gospel the Old Testament and the New Mount Sinai to which Hagar fled twice Gen. 16. and chap. 21. it being in her way Home to Egypt and Mount Sion or Jerusalem the Mother of all Christians