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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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ver 1 2 3 4 5. c. That was a prophane Feast and had its End even in great Discontent ver 12 c. But this is an Holy Feast having not only good Chear but also good Company and good Discourse yea and the King himself present at the Table Cant. 1.12 And this Feast doth last longer than that of an hundred and Eighty Days yea and ends with Joy and Comfort yea 't is a Feast without any End it lasts for ever to wit unto all Ages and Generations this Calf lasts long N. B. There be formal Provisions now indeed in some places among formal Professors and Worshippers of God in forms only that seems to be Food but are not really so they feed upon the Skin of this fatted Calf only But to all such as Worship God in Spirit and Truth John 4.23 24. The flesh of this fatted Calf is Meat indeed and his Blood is Drink indeed John 6.55 Those do dwell in Christ and Christ in them ver 56. Here is mutual Complacency on the one part Christ Rejoycing in the Habitable parts of his Earth Prov. 8.31 And Delighting in his People Isa 62. ver 4. And on the other part his People Delighting themselves in the Lord Ps 37.4 Zech. 9.9 as they are round about God Ps 76.11 And a People near to him Ps 148.14 Revel 4.4 and both Eat and Drink in his Presence Luke 14.15 Say with Peter 't is good being here for us Matth. 17.4 He spake nothing of Building a Tabernacle for himself as he did for his Master and for Moses and Elias no he could have been content to lie out of Doors so he might but partake of the grace and glory of Christ Oh then let us Account God lets down a whole sheetfull of Dainties to us in his Gospel Ordinances as he did for this same Peter Acts 10.13 That Sheet was taken up into Heaven again ver 16. But only that it might be let down again to us Daily Therefore the Father saith here Let us Eat and be Merry ver 23. Luke 15. Fourthly The Cooks for Dressing this Feast upon the fatted Calf are Gospel Preachers and Pastors Ministers are compared to most necessary Matters as to Bread Salt Light Water Physick c. As here in this Parable to Cooks 't is the Cursed Jews that were as Servants to the Secret Will of the Father in killing this fatted Calf so Godly Ministers are indeed Servants to the Revealed Will of him in Cooking and Dressing this fatted Calf that True Penitents may feed and feast upon him Ministers must not be as Cooks in this Sense as sometimes they Dress Meat for others and do not partake of any part of it themselves but they must Preach Jesus Christ Acts 5.42 and 17.3 From their own Experiences of that savour and sweetness they themselves have found in him saying What our Eyes have seen what our Ears have heard and what our Hands have handled do we declare unto you 1 John 1.2 3. Those are the Cooks that make the most Savoury Meat for the Souls of their Hearers saying to them as Jacob did Gen. 27.19 Arise and eat of my Venison that your Souls may bless me This is the way to raise up Seed to our Elder Brother the neglect whereof may cause God to spit in our Faces Deut. 25.9 Yet must we know there is Cura officii the Care of Duty and Cura Eventus the Care of Success Now the Office or Duty may be faithfully performed yet not prove successful as Isa 49 4. My Work is with God though I have laboured in vain c. Such Ministers as God makes Fathers of Spiritual Children cannot but be careful Cooks to nourish up with the best Food those they have begotten by the Gospel otherwise they would be worse than Infidels 1 Tim. 5.8 Yea Soul starvers and God will Require their Blood at careless Watchmens Hands Ezek. 3.18 19. As Laban made Jacob Answer for all lost Gen. 31.39 Fifthly The Guests invited to this Feast are such as this Son was who came to himself Luke 15.17 Who Repented of his sin and returned to his Father ver 18 19. whom his Father Kissed ver 20. and to whom his Father gave a Robe for his Back a Ring for his Hand and Shooes for his Feet we may not come to this Feast to Jesus with Old Shoes as the Gibeonites did to Joshua Jos 9.5 We cannot persevere and hold out to the end if our shoes be patched with our own Righteousness Christ is our All c. These Christ calls Friends c. Cant. 5.1 and John 15.14 15. Abraham is called three times the Friend of God 2 Chron. 20.7 Isa 41.8 and Jam. 2.23 So are the Sons and Daughters of Abraham and the Beloved Disciple John leaned upon his Lords Bosom at the Supper John 13.23 25. and 21 20. Oh! That we could do so at the Lords Supper where a Sancta crapula a free and full feeding and feasting upon the fatted Calf is Holily expected We should come to an Ordinance as Leviathan to Jordan Job 40.23 as if we could drink it all up Christ commands his Friends to fall on Lustily and his Beloved to Drink abundantly Cant. 5.1 Till they be filled with the Spirit Eph. 5.18 Yea and Holily drunk with Loves John 2.10 Cant. 7.12 The Angel bad Elijah Eat two Meals together and feed heartily because his Journey was too great for him 1 Kin. 19.6 7. And he went in the Strength of that double Meal fourty Days ver 8. but our Journey is greater c. We must fetch hearty Draughts the Deeper the Sweeter and we must pray that our Spiritual Food may be turned in Succum Sanguinem into Juice and Blood that we may lift up our feet and go lustily as Jacob did after was refreshed with his Vision of the Ladder Gen. 28.12 29.1 Sixthly The Master of this Feast is the Father of the Family Thus God is the Father of the Families of Israel Jer. 31.1 9. and Mal. 2.10 In the Peace-offering under the Law all the Fat was the Lords as before the People must not in any wise eat it Levit. 3.16 17. So the lean part belongeth to them as before but Blessed be God that his Gospel hath amended the Peoples Commons in putting his fat part unto our lean part making us a Feast of fat things full of Marrow and a Feast of Wines on the Lees well Refined Isa 25.6 The Gospel lets down from Heaven a great Sheetfull of all manner of Dainties Flesh and Fowl Acts 10.11 12. This was done thrice to Peter and then the Vessel was received up again into Heaven ver 16. on purpose that it might be let down again where God hath any Hungry Children as Peter was ver 10. Met together to Worship him with their Spirits in the Gospel of his Son Rom. 1.9 God now in the Gospel is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as 't is said of Job who would not Eat his Morsell
Tumult against him Those carnal men whose gain was their God which they adored and their Godliness too soon took fire at this spark and speech began tumultuously to defend their wicked Trade Covetousness as it self is Idolatry Col. 3.5 so it upholds Idolatry as here under a pretence of piety where there is Utility Men think there is piety The Papists are sound in those points that touch not upon their profit as in the Doctrine of the Trinity c. The eleventh Remark is 'T is the Lot and Portion of Gospel-Preachers and professors to be loaded with Accusations by the Adversaries thereof set on by the Accuser of the Brethren Rev. 12.10 as here in order to get them condemned and executed for their Supposed Sacriledge and Blasphemy N.B. No better tendency had Demetrius's Invective Oration to his Fellow-artificers verse 26 27 28 c. To those he urgeth many Arguments As 1st That of Profit which Paul's preaching against our Gods made with hands hath already greatly damnified Our Patent and Monopoly for the Manufacture of making Silver Medals will soon be insignificant Our Trade will quickly be under disgrace and die This was the Achilles or most Cogent and Pungent of all his arguments hath not Paul's preaching Intrenched upon their profit in all probability he would not have been so much concerned as to have stirred out of Doors against it N.B. Thus Erasmus wittily told the Elector of Saxony that the principal Reasons why Luther was so much set against by the Romanists was Because he meddled with the Pope's Tripple Crown and the Monks fat Panches 2dly He added to his Argument of profit a pretence of piety Not only are we like to lose our Trade and Liveli-hood but our Religion also our Goddess Diana will be despised our Temple its worship will be lessened yea levelled by their light of the gospel this is madea great aggravation by those Idolatrous worshippers how much more by those who worship God in spirit truth seeing they have a more sure word for their foundation 3dly He inforces another leading motive from the Universality and common consent of worshippers as well as pretended Antiquity hereby he easily heated the Rabble's blood and heaved them into an hideous outrage as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verse 28. signifies so that never Examining the truth of the case cause they put it to popularity and to a Tumultuous uproar and outcrys crying for two hours together N.B. which was more painful than to hear a Sermon so long yet most hearers think that too long to hear verse 28 and 34. great is Diana of the Ephesians to shew their abhorrency of Paul's preaching down their Grand Idol which they were resolved to perpetuate in her splendour and glory against the Gospel and in this Hurly-burly and confusion of the whole City wherein the greater part as in all popular Tumults knew not wherefore they were come together ver 32. and 't is well if it be better among the multitude of common hearers in Publick Church-assemblies Gaius and Aristarchus the two companions of Paul were caught hold of and carry'd in an Hurry to their great Theatre where their plays were seen their Orations heard and their Malefactors tryed and punished for which end these two Fellow-Travellers of Paul were Hurryed vers● 29. The twelfth Remark is Divine providence can never be enough adored seeing God works Deliverances for his Servants in danger one way or other sometimes by their Friends and sometimes by their Foes made to become Friends as here from v. 29. to the 41. N.B. To say nothing of the deliverance of Gaius and Aristarchus out of that Eminent Danger they were involved into when caught hold of by the Rude rabble and pushing headlong into the Theatre to which they all rushed with one accord Verse 29. because the Scripture speaks nothing expresly how these two were delivered out of their violent and murdering hands yet is this therein necessary implyed because the Scripture doth mention how after this uproar Gaius and Aristarchus did accompany Paul into Asia Acts 20.4 again mention is made of Gaius as Paul's Host and the host of the whole Church Col. 4.10 and of Aristarchus twice after this once as Paul's Fellow-Passenger at Sea and Shipwrack Acts 27.27 and again as Paul's Fellow-prisoner Rom. 16.23 N.B. So that 't is manifest these two Good Ministers who are supposed to be the Messengers of the Churches mentioned 2 Cor. 8.18 19 23. were not now torn in pieces by the outragious rabble of those Insolent Idolaters in this Tumult N.B. But Paul's deliverance out of the most Imminent Danger is expresly Illustrated by the Holy Ghost in three Eminent Circumstances The first is when Paul would have entered in among this rude Rabble not only the Disciples suffered him not for the life of him from whom they had received the Faith was more dear to them than their own a blessed pattern for good people to preserve their Pastors verse 30. but also some of the chief of Asia supposed to be Heathen Priests who usually were Masters of those plays and shows in honour of their Idol-Gods or Princes of the Country do add to the Disciples intreaties their requests sent to him not to adventure himself among such an inraged Rabble such an head-strong ungovernable company that bellua multorum Capitum the beast with many heads or mad multitude verse 31. Whether these chief men who sent this saving Message to Paul were Princes or Priests it matters not However it was a mighty work of God's Providence in over-ruling those Heathens hearts and inclining them to countenance and favour persecuted Paul though these men were bad enough especially if as Beza saith they were such Idolatrous Priests as composed Stage-plays for their deified Diana yet the Father of Spirits made them shew some good affections towards Paul if not towards the Christian Religion The same God who made many Legal Priests obedient to the Faith Acts 6 7. might make these Idolatrous Priests thus far obedient also Christ can either find or make Friends to his Gospel and Ministers even among the worst of their Foes N.B. The second Circumstance was that of Alexander verse 33 34. whom some suppose to be the same man of whom Paul complains in his 2 Tim. 4.14 15 16. That he did him much wrong upon these three Grounds 1. That Paul wrote this Epistle to Timothy who was then at Ephesus c. 2. That same Alexander was of Demetrius's calling a Copper-Smith for they made Copper-Shrines of Diana and her Temple for the poor to buy as well as Silver ones for the Richer sort 3. This Alexander was an Ephesian N.B. But others Judge him to be another of that name yet a Disciple of Paul's at the first for which the mad Mobile caught him and carried him to the Theatre c. However all agree that he was a Jew because the Jews pushed him forward to make a Vindication of their
not so bad as to live without a Calling in the World Of this before at large The second Divine Truth Moses teacheth in this History is That every Man beside his particular Calling must mind his general Calling also There be some Atheistical Persons that stick not to say Let those that have leisure from secular Employs such as Church-men are attend upon the Service of God such as have nothing else to do let them Pray Hear Read and mind Matters of Religion we have other things to heed and to trouble our Head withal we must not Neglect our Callings Dare such Men make themselves worse than Cain who though he had his Calling yet could he as well as Abel set some time apart for the Service of God And so ought all Men to do the particular Calling must not justle out the general for the former is sanctified by the latter as Gen. 24.13 27. Psal 90. last 1 Cor. 10.31 The Duties of our general Calling are to help us in the Duties of our particular as Christs being in the Temple among the Doctors was not any hinderance to him from going home to be subject to his Parents Luke 2.46 51. There is a proper Season for both and every thing is beautiful in its peculiar Season Subordinate things are not contrary but may and must consist together Christs conversing in the Temple rather qualified him for than obstructed him in his filial Subjection so our conversing with Christ in the Temple in ways of Religion which is our general Calling as Gods Servants must make us return home better Husbands Wives Parents Children Masters Servants Ministers People in all the Duties of our particular Calling we lose that sanctifying Influence of Sermons Suppers Sabbaths when we do not carry home some more sweetness of Spirit to our Relations from them than we brought with us to them As the Merchant going out in a Morning about his Merchandizing if he meet with some bad Bargain or disappointment in his Traffick and Trading he returns home in so morose an Humour that none of his Family can please him no not though they all do their Duty so to do but if on the contrary this same Merchant meet another Morning with some brave Bargains that will advance his Estate and fill his Coffers Oh with what Candour and sweetness of Spirit doth he return home then is he all Honey and Love no Action no Relation can displease or disoblige him he takes all things that are done by the right Handle and putteth a most Candid Construction even upon Deeds done amiss to himself yea carries sweetly to all all that day unless or until another bad Bargain happen in losses and crosses to unhinge his Spirit again and to make him uneasie in himself Just so it is with a Christian that Spiritual Merchant Mat. 13.45 Let him go out in a Morning to the Ordinances of God if he there meet with a purchase of the Pearl of price Oh what an Heart-changing and a Life-changing Work is wrought upon that Man he may then say Ego non sum ego I am not the same Man I was as one once said to his tempting Curtizan he returns home fil●'d with meekness and lowliness which he hath learnt from Christ by his conversing with him in his Ordinances Mat. 11.28 29. But if any return home from Gods Worship with sourness of Spirit 't is an Infallible Evidence that they have made no good Bargains for their Souls at that time for 't is an undeniable truth that the Duties of our general Calling should better dispose us for the Duties of our particular Callings No Man is Born principally to serve himself in his particular Calling but his God and himself in Subordination to God and so the particular Calling must be Subordinate to the general and Prayer which is a duty of the general Calling must every Morning fetch down a Blessing upon the Duties of the particular Yea 't is not enough to pray for Gods Blessing upon our Labours in the Morning only and so walk with a carnal careless frame of Heart all the day in our worldly Affairs no but we should drive on the Trade of godliness as well as our own Trades in holy Ejaculations all the day long so shall we be both in Gods fear and in Gods favour all the day Prov. 23.17 and this is dividing aright for God He is a wise Merchant indeed that can drive a Trade in both Indies but he is wiser that can drive on his particular Calling on Earth and his general in Heaven Those two Sons of Adam are mindful of both those Trades and Callings and their practice is for us a pattern as is apparent from those particulars 1. Cain and Abel lived not in the State of Innocency but in that of the Fall as we do Had Man never sinned God expected some solemn Service from him how much more needful is our serving God since the Fall for testifying our Repentance and for Sueing out our Pardons and for seeking Reconciliation with God from whom we have faln and with whom we have faln out even into an enmity against him Rom. 8.7 Col. 1.21 These two Sons of Adam were in the same State we are in the faln State and what they did for recovery out of that State we ought likewise to do the same 2. This Service of theirs was after the promise of Christ in the Seed of the Woman Gen. 3.15 that first Gospel which ever was Preached so 't was Gospel-service which Cain and Abel performed here and surely Evangelical Duties concern us as well as them yea us more than them seeing Christ was only promised to them but he is manifested to us and preached to all Nations therefore we should abound in our Religious Service more than they 3. This Service of Cain and Abel was before Moses long before the Law so it doth not concern the Jews only but us Gentiles also even all Men in general to the end of the World This Service of those two Sons Adam was a natural Duty long before it was written in the Moral Law was a Law written in their Hearts to acknowledge Gods Soveraignty over them and their Dependency upon him Rom. 2.15 so that none of Adam's Off-spring can plead exemption from this natural Duty but all Jews and Gentiles that have been are or shall be are equally bound by the very Law of Nature to this Moral Duty of some Spiritual Service and Worship to God 4. And Lastly This Service of theirs was done per modum Sacrificii by way of Sacrifice and so it representeth to us the great Sacrifice for sin to wit Christ upon the Cross and it also remindeth us of all those Spiritual Sacrifices which we must offer up to God in Gospel-times to wit the Sacrifices of a broken Heart and of a contrite Spirit bleeding for sin Psal 51.17 yea and Sacrifices of praise our Thank-offerings to God for his providing us such a Saviour Psal
and Almonds as a present to his Joseph the Lord of the Land of Egypt Gen. 43.11 How much more ought we to prepare the best of our performances as a Spiritual present to our Joseph our Jesus who is the Lord of all Acts 10.36 Lord of all Lands of all persons of all things Lord of the Church and Lord of the World yea Lord of Heaven as well as of the Earth Mat. 11.27 and 28.18 Can we et any thing too good for so good a Lord. 2. We should tremble to be Cainites in our Worship of God lest Cain's Curse come upon us Josephus gives this Character of Cain that he was Covetous and Narrow-Souled grudging God his best yea turning over many a Sheaf to pick out the worst and lighted for his offering to the Lord. Just such doings are found among too many men There be three sorts of Cainites in the World 1. Such as spend many hours in Vanity yet cannot spare one hour for God and the good of their Souls 2. Such as are profuse in Villany upon their Lusts yet can find nothing to bestow in Pious and Charitable uses upon the Lord. 3. Such as swatter away all their Youth-time while the Bones are full of Marrow and Veins full of Blood both as ponderous Sheafs in ways of both Vanity and Villany and think to put off God with the poor pined Sheaf of their Old-age as if the great God would be put off with the Devils leavings whereas all our four Ages are due to God 3dly Cain offer'd of Dead things as was his Sheaf but Abel of Living things as was his Sheep as sensitive things are of a more noble nature than Vegetative so living services are better than Dead ones and such are all duties done in a formal perfunctory and superficial manner as Cain did 'T is true Abel's Burnt-Offering was more Honourable than Cain's Minchah or Meat-Offering in themselves for shedding of Blood was the staple Service in slaying their Sacrifices which pointed the Lamb slain from the Worlds foundation and there was no shedding of Blood in Cains Sheaf as there was in Abel's Sheep yet had Cain's Minchah been the best of the kind it had been acceptable but Cain's carelesness in the choice was the aggravation and the Dead Fly in the Apothecaries Pot of precious Ointment Eccles 10.1 he did not offer in Faith as Abel did but doubtingly and grudgingly looking upon it as lost labour what he laid out upon the Lord and never minding the recompence of reward Heb. 11.26 'T is the Fathers saying opimum Deo debetur optimum pro Religione pro gratitudine optimum God may challenge all from us who receive our all from him why should we grudge our Fat and our strength for God and lay out as liberally for the Lord as the Lord layeth out liberally for us why should his Heart and Hand be enlarged towards us and our Hearts and Hands be straitned towards him The second Difference in their action was in respect of their Devotion and Affections Abel offer'd in sincerity but Cain in Hypocrisie Abel did it out of Conscience to please God his Heavenly Father but Cain did it out of conformity only to please Adam his Earthly Father who had brought him up in that way of Worship and not out of any love to God Hence the second observation The bare outward action of Divine Worship will not commend us to God without inward affection God is not taken with glozing shows and formalities but requires Truth in the inward parts Psal 51.6 and would be serv'd sincerely out of love to his Name and zeal to his Glory He loves not a seeming without a Being and Real Religion he seeketh true Worshippers Joh. 4.23 24. Inference Then God is greatly to be feared in the assemblies of the Saints Psal 89.7 he is to be feared every where but especially in the place of his Worship The Heathen Poet could say Jovis omnia plenae all places are filled with Jehovah especially Bethel the House of God though out of doors and in the open Air Gen. 28.17 Where Christ's Disciples are gathered together in his Name Mat. 18.20 Oh then how should we demean our selves as in Gods presence Act. 10.33 Are Women enjoin'd modesty because of the Angels 1 Cor. 11.10 how much more we sound piety because of the God of Angels We should all be what we seem to be be to God what we seem to be to men and we should be to God at all times what we s●●m to be to men at any time therefore should we have Grace whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear for our God is a consuming fire Heb. 12.28 29. Alluding to that fire which consumed Nadah and Abihu for offering strange fire Lev. 10.1 2. False Affections are no better than strange Fire Oh that all may beware of of strange fire lest consuming Fire come down upon us and so write our sin upon our punishment or at least that Cains Doom come not upon us to be rejected of God But the 3. And principal difference that distinguished Cain and Abels action was Faith which is indeed the prime cause of all the other differences Abel offered in Faith but Cain did not so Heb. 11.4 'T was Faith that denominated Abel a Righteous man and Cain was a wicked man because he wanted Faith It was Faith that made Abel offer uberiorem agnum as Erasmus reads it a fatter and fuller Lamb or Plurimam Hostiam according to the Vulgar Latin a more plentiful Sacrifice by Faith Abel offered up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to Mountague Such as was first in nature in order and in excellency But Cains Infidelity or want of Faith undid him he did not only bring Macrum Sacrificium a lean Sacrifice but he did not divide aright for God Cain rectè obtulit non rectè divisit he offered rightly but he divided not rightly he gave God opus personae not ipsam personam not himself but of his Abel offered as well Se ut de suis himself as his Sacrifice which Cain did not From hence the third observation Every devout and Divine action receives from this grace of Faith its due and dignifying denomination 'T is Faith here that distinguisheth the Matter Nature and Property of this Religious action It is Faith that made Abel come to God with an honest and good heart Luk. 8.15 And out of a sense of duty and Love to God but Cain came in his Infidelity with a false and unsound heart so offers up his poor Starvling Sacrifice to God This may thus be exemplified Isaac commanded his Son to make him savoury meat such as he loved Gen. 27.4 And hereupon both Jacob and Esau his two Sons prepare savoury Morsels for him and bring it to their Father but it was Faith that did distinguish both their persons and actions Jacob by his having Faith got the blessing and Esau by his wanting Faith lost it 't
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
'twixt Devilish and Divine Dreams 1. Dreams from the Devil have a tendency to discover some future and secret things which belong not to us Deut. 29.29 but are left lock'd up in Gods Closet whereof he alone not the Devil hath the Key and 't is always in his keeping whereas the whole Duty we owe to God and Man is revealed in Gods Word To study this and to practise it the Devil despites and despises and he therefore gives us an Avocation from it by suggesting his Dreams concerning a Curious and Vain Knowledg of things not meet to be known that we may presumptuously pry into Gods Ark of secret matters and pretendedly boast thereof though no way profitable either to our selves or others This is a Science falsely so called 1 Tim. 6.20 which indeed is Ignorance and not only puffeth up question-sick Souls but always produceth Evil effects and we must therefore pray against such Dreams that God lead us not into Temptation c. 2. Dreams from the Devil do inflame the minds of Men to Lust and Revenge c. always tending to some sin or other as Nocturnal Pollution c. By this means the Bodies as well as Minds of Carnal Sinners are frequently defiled and sometimes Holy Saints may be likewise polluted by impure Dreams for the Devil of whose Devices we are not Ignorant 2 Cor. 2.11 may at some time take an advantage of a pretious Saint to fasten that sin upon him while asleep as he did upon Righteous Lot to commit Incest with his own Daughters which he cannot prevail with them to commit when awake A Notable Example hereof also we have in Cassianus Collat. 22. Cap. 6. Who tells of a certain Brother keeping his Body in subjection and duly preserving his Chastity by daily Temperance and Circumspection in all humbleness of Soul yet was he upon a time so deluded by the Devils Wiles in his Sleep when he had been solemnly preparing his Soul for Communion with his God he found his Body defiled while he was asleep with an Impure Flux This calls loud on us for Prayer and Watching 3. Dreams from the Devil draw off Mens minds from the pure Worship of God to Idolatry Heresie and all Abominations Therefore such Dreamers are expresly forbid by God in Deut. 13.1 A Dreamer of Dreams publickly obtruding his damnable Errors for Divine Truths to draw Men from God though he give a sign which by Gods permission may come to pass as Jannes and Jambres seem'd to turn Water into Blood Exod 7.22 or as the Jesuit to persuade the Indians to embrace Popery should commend it to them by a sign of assurance foretelling that the Sun shall be Eclipsed at such a time to confirm his Doctrine though they being ignorant of the constant causes hereof in the common course of the Heavens and how Eclipses continually occur in the two Nodes of the Dragons Head and Tail may by this Jesuitical Trick be deceived yet both these signs though they come to pass of Jannes and of the Jesuit are no better than cheats the latter being a Natural and the former a Diabolical work before both which the Divine Word whereby we must try the truth of all signs seeing some are fallacious 2 Thes 2.9 ought always to be preferred Such Deceivers and Dreamers God hath Doomed and Damned to die Deut 13.5 and chap. 18.20 Jer. 14.15 and Zech. 13 3. c. Add a Fourth Character to all the aforesaid three differences to wit Diabolical Dreams may be known as Diabolical Tentations are when 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent of God or of the Devil If Dreams be First Transcendently gross in themselves as High Atheism that there is no God Psal 14.1 or that God is such an one as our selves Psal 50.21 Psal 58.1 or for sorry Man to affect a Deity as Gen. 3.5 All which are against the common dictates of Natures light and therefore must be Satans injections and not Gods 2. Irksom and execrable to the Soul which trembles at them when suggested as Blasphemy and Cursing God Job 1.11 So Sodomy Buggery c. which ought not to be named among Saints without utmost abhorrency and likewise Self-Murder or the Murdering of Innocent persons 1 Sam. 16.15 and 18.10 c. The thoughts only thereof should make our Hairs start up and our Hearts fall down yea and our whole Flesh to shrink and shrivel The light of Nature condemns such Monstrous Sins and the Life or Law of Nature helps the very Gentiles to do those things contained in Gods Law Rom. 2.14 c. 3. Violent as well as Sudden like a Flash of Lightning giving the Tempted no time to consider or the Temptation and the Tendency of it the Tempters Fiery Darts Eph. 6.16 sometimes hurry away the Soul into Sin ere ever it be aware therefore our gaining time against them and not closing too soon with them to the Burning of our Hands and Hearts as half a Victory over them Gods way is to lead gently Isa 40.11 well knowing Jacob's tender Flock cannot march Lord Esau's hasty pace Gen. 33.13 making many stops as the Star did that guided the Wisemen Mat. 2.2 7.9 But the Devils way is to hurry headlong by Violence he did thus with Christs Body by Divine permission from place to place Mar. 4.5 8. And thus with the possessed Man Luk. 8.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was driven of the Devil as the Horse is with the Rider so the Greek signifies and thus he did with the Herd of Swine Mat 8.32 making them run violently down a steep place Thus also he doth with the Souls of Men 2 Pet. 2.17 which are driven by the Devils Tempest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies so dreadful a Storm as made Christs Disciples though Seamen cry out when raised by the Prince of the Air Mat. 8.25 4. Furious as Saul was to kill every one in his way when this Evil Spirit was upon him 1 Sam. 19.9 10. 5. Pertinacious that cannot be shaked off as Paul did the Viper Act. 28.5 That which Satan put into Judas's Heart was an obstinate Evil done deliberately and out-faceing the All-seeing Eye of his own Master saying Is it 1 c. 6. Insulting thus the Devil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Buffeted or Boxed Paul 2 Cor. 12.7 and so shamefully scoffed him that he prayed he might depart from him Piscator says it may be taken properly not figuratively Indeed the precise Indivisible point of the difference betwixt the Scum of our own depraved Spirits which naturally boyls up of it self in us and the suggestions of Satan either in our Dreams while asleep or in Tentations when awake is hard to Assign but Satan's in a word are usually as above and against the Inclination of our own Natures and against the Light of our own Consciences c. The Third sort of Dreams are the Divine and purely Spiritual call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Divinitus Immissa sent of God to Men to good Men
their Convoy by Sea and their Conduct by Land If Caesar's Barge-man could be comforted with Caesar's words in a Storm Quid Times Caesarem vehis ejus Fortunam Be not too timorous in this terrible Tempest but chear up thou carries Caesar so cannot miscarry A child of light walking in darkness need fear nothing while his Heavenly Father holds him fast by the hand Psal 23.4 and 138.7 Isa 50.10 2. When they Die and go down to the Grave as Jacob did go down to Egypt God so saith to them as he said to him Fear not to enter into that Sleeping-place of the Sepulchre I will surely awake you again and bring you back from the Jaws of a Temporal Death to the Joys of an Eternal Life and your frail Bodies that now Death and Grave do swallow up shall certainly rise again and by their very rotting shall be the more refined at the grand Resurrection 1 Cor. 15.36 42 43 44 c. The Second Inference is God comes usually to his Servants as he came here to his Servant Jacob while he was in suspense and did hang betwixt Hope and Fear God loves to perfect his strength in our weakness 2 Cor. 12.9 The Heart of Man is not in a capable case for receiving Divine Promises till it be first freed from false Fears Therefore God came to comfort Abraham with Fear not before he gave him the Promise Gen. 15.1 so his Grandson Jacob had the same Cordial Fear not before the promise both of his own personal safety and of his numberless Posterity Had God given Jacob only that General Promise I will be with thee It indeed had been enough had he said no more for a sufficient Security against all his particular Doubts and Fears yet out of his super-abundant Bounty he gives a distinct Answer and what might be satisfactory in every particular saying in effect to him 1. I Approve of thy Enterprise my Command is thy Warrant I will make thy Journey Prosperous according to thy Prayer 2. Thy change of place shall neither change my Promise to thee nor thy Company with me I am not chained to one place but am present in every place not tied to Canaan but will be with thee in Egypt 3. Though thou for a time forsake the Land of Promise yet thither will I again bring thee when Dead and thy Posterity while living for whom thy Body Buried there shall take and keep Possession till their Return so that this Promise contains the History of many yea more than two hundred years 4. And thy Jewel Joseph whom thou thought was lost hath been but lent to the Lord who will return him whom now thou so much longest to see with Advantage he was lost a Slave but shall he found a Lord yea a Lord of Lords and of the whole Land 5. Yea thy Joseph whom thou gave up for Dead shall close up thy Eyes when thou diest wherein God promised him both a quiet Life and a comfortable Death in Egypt his dear Joseph being present with him should have the Honour above all his Sons to do that last Office of Love of putting his hand upon his Fathers Eyes which were lift up wide open toward Heaven when he died having Hope in his Death Prov. 14.32 to shut them up which shall shortly be opened again to see God in the Flesh Job 19.26 By all these particulars God assured Jacob and so he doth no less to us the Children of Jacob that there is a Paternal Providence of God always attending upon him and all his whom he will never fail nor forsake Josh 1.5 and Hebr. 13.5 the particular Promise to Joshua is generally applied by the Apostle to all Believers Blessed shalt thou be in thy going out and Blessed in thy coming in Deut. 28.6 I will carry thee down and I will bring thee up saith God to Jacob thou shalt not want my presence at no time and in no place Semel Electus semper Dilectus saith Austin which is well Englished whom God once loveth he ever loveth even to the end Joh. 13.1 This Blessed Patriarch having now this Double Compellation Jacob Jacob and this Treble yea Quadruple Consolation from Heaven his Heart was much eased of his Fears his Spirit lightned from his Doubts his Faith now got above his Fear by the help of this Heavenly Vision that he Rose up from Beershebah v. 5. The word Rose up hath an Emphatical sense signifying Alacrity Importing that his Faith was now confirmed his Joints were Oiled and his Legs made nimbler by this Oracle of God as it had been with him by his Vision at Bethel Gen. 28.12 so that he doth now as he did then Gen. 29.1 Hebr. even lift up his feet went lustily on his way as fast and as far as his Legs would carry him He did so from Bethel though now he had Pharaoh's Royal Chariot to rest his old Legs in He goes cheerfully end ways to Egypt when his Encouragements outweigh'd his Discouragements as in David when distressed 1 Sam. 30.6 taking along with him his Cattle and Goods v. 6. though Pharaoh had in a Court Complement forbad it Gen. 45.20 yet this prudent Patriarch would not go down like a Beggar by carelesly casting away his All in this transport of Joy as 2 Sam. 19.30 and so to become a Trencher-fly to others He had learnt that Lesson 't is better to trust in the Lord in the lawful use of means subservient to Providence than to put Confidence in any man though his own Son or in the greatest of Men who are Princes as Pharaoh Psal 118.8 9. who oft proved but a lye Psal 62.9 They may die or their love may die and they themselves may live He had learnt that also why should we be chargeable to thee my Son 2 Sam. 13.25 Therefore he carries what Provision he had with him and his Family consisting of Sixty six Souls v. 26. went along with him to which if Jacob Joseph and his two Sons Manasseh and Ephraim be added they make up the Number of Seventy v. 27. though they are reckon'd by following the Septuagint then most in use to be five more Act. 7.14 Suppose so yet even that is but a small Number to descend from Abraham in 215 years time after the Promise of multiplying his Seed as the Stars c. The Fifth Remark is Moses mentions this small number that went down with Jacob thus industriously not only for distinguishing the Twelve Tribes nor to shew out of what Family Christ should descend naming Perez and Hezron which are named in Christ's Genealogy Matth. 1.3 and Luk 3.33 but the principal Reason is that this inconsiderable Number at Israel's going into Egypt might the more magnifie the Mercy Truth and Power of God in multiplying these few into an Innumerable Number in Egypt so that these Seventy Souls were become Six hundred Thousand besides old People Women and Children in 215 years more when Israel came out of Egypt This
and Mystery of Israel's Conduct to Canaan by Joshua HAving finished the five Books of Moses which contain the History of the first 2554 Years of the World according to Sir Walter Rawleigh's Reckoning such Variety being in the Computation of Chronologers I come now to the History of Israel's Conduct into Canaan under General Joshua who was Moses's Successor in the Government Constituted their Supreme Governour by God himself The Book of Joshua gives us a Narrative hereof on which Book the General Remarks are first to be observed and they are threefold The first is concerning the Scope of the Book The second is concerning the Author of it And the third is concerning the Subject of the whole Book First As to the Scope of it in the General 't is a solemn Doxology or giving Glory to God for the manifestation of his four Glorious Attributes his Mercy his Justice his Power and his Truth namely 1. His Mercy to Israel his Old Testament Church tho' they provok'd Him to the highest Displeasure with their most Heinous Sins both in Egypt and in the Wilderness c. yet God would not write Lo-ammi upon them Hos 1.9 so as to Unchurch or Unpeople them but his Mercy still Triumph'd over his Justice Jam. 2.13 bearing with their Evil Manners in the Wilderness forty years Act. 13.18 God's Pardoning-Mercy did follow them from their Departure out of Egypt until they came to the Borders of Canaan Numb 14.19 2. His Justice to those Cursed Canaanites who when their Sins were full Gen. 15.16 filled up their Ephah Zech. 5.6 and the measure of their Iniquity Matth. 23.32 were universally cut off by the Justice of God save only some Reserved not only for the Exercises but also for Drudgery to that Royal Nation 3. His Power that such a poor contemptible People born all of Bond-slaves and Brick-makers in Egypt all Foot-men should be impower'd to conquer so many War-like Nations who had Iron Chariots and Horse-men Josh 10.6 9. and 17 18 c. 4. His Truth in performing his Promise that God made to Abraham of giving Canaan to his Seed Gen. 12.7 13.15 15.18 tho' that Promise had been made four hundred years before this yet now God fulfils with his hand what his mouth had spoken and now doth as he had said Beside all this respecting God's Glory c. the Scope of this Book aimeth at a most Graphical Description and Character both of a right Godly Man and of a right Godly Magistrate such an one as Joshua appeareth to be as will be demonstrated occasionally in the sequel of this Discourse The second general Remark is concerning the Author of this Book which respecteth Joshua under a twofold capacity 1. As the Sacred Pen-man or Writer of it And 2. As the Principal Sword-man or Warriour in it 1. Of the Writer of it c. There be indeed various Opinions in this point As 1. Some make Isaiah the Author but without any Argument this is Gratis Dictum Or 2. Eleazer the then High-Priest whose Office was not only by speaking vivâ voce but also by writing to teach the People 3. Some say it was either Samuel or Ezra We grant some parts and passages might be added to this Book by either of them to wit what happened after Joshua's Death as Joshua wrote the last of Deuteronomy The Occurrences after Moses's Death 4. Others affirm it was written by Phinchas grounding their Opinion only upon mentioning the consequences of Joshua's Death which Joshua himself could give no particular account of But 5. The most probable Opinion is that Joshua was its Writer for 1. He is call'd Moses's Successor in Prophecyings that is in writing the Sacred Scriptures Ecclesiastic 46.1 2. Joshua being all along Moses's Minister might well learn from his Master to write his own Acts as Moses had done his 3. 'T is said Josh 24.26 Joshua wrote all these things c. The third General Remark respecteth the Subject of this Book which as it bearech the Name of Joshua so Joshua is the Subject of it throughout consisting upon three Topicks wherein he is described 1. By his Office or Figure he bare in the World 2. By his Actions both in the time of War and of Peace and 3. By his End First As to his Office He was solemnly called and inaugurated by God himself to be Moses's Successor in the Chief Magistracy and Conduct of Israel This was signified by the change of his Name from Oshea into Jehoshua or Joshua Numb 13.16 the former Name fignifying Save us O God or let God save us the latter God shall save us to teach us that under the Law which brings us as it were into the Wilderness we may desire wish and pray that there were a Saviour but under the Gospel we are sure of Salvation For as Moses foreseeing by the Spirit that this Man his Successor would certainly save Israel from all the Cursed Canaanites named him Joshua in Greek Jesus Act. 7.45 and Heb. 4.8 which signifies a Saviour Matth. 1.21 So he became a Type of our Jehoshua or Jesus who hath as the Captain of our Salvation Heb. 2.10 bound himself to fulfil all Righteousness for us Matth. 3.15 that He might ensure Salvation to us and Land us safe at the Key of a better Canaan the Kingdom of Heaven It was the manner of Monarchs to change the Names of their Ministers Gen. 41.4 5. and Dan. 1.7 upon the account of Honour but Moses learnt this from God himself who had changed the Names of Abram Sarai Jacob c. Gen. 17.5 15. 32.28 thereby putting a greater Dignity on them God at Moses Request constitutes Joshua his Successor in his Supremacy Numb 27.15 18. at which time Moses gave to his Minister his Honour or Glory v. 20. As if the shining of Moses's face Exod. 34.30 35. had been transferred upon Joshua Hereupon the Rabbins say that the face of Moses shone as the Sun and the face of Joshua shone as the Moon being inferior to Moses Deut. 34.10 yet our Joshua or Jesus is counted worthy of greater Honour than Moses Heb. 3.3 Secondly Joshua's Actions in his Publick Office are of three sorts 1. Military 2. Sacred 3. Civil relating to his Time both of War and Peace As to his Inauguration into Moses's Imperial Office whereof an Account is given Josh chap. 1. hath been already discoursed upon in the end of Deuteronomy therefore do I omit it here The first sort of Joshua's Actions were Military whereof we have this short Scheme 1. His sending forth the two Spies to search the Land chap. 2. 2. His Miraculous March through the midst of Jordan chap. 3. for a Memorial of which twelve Stones were taken out of the River and set up in Gilgal chap. 4. 3. His Besieging and Destroying of Jericho chap. 6. where Sacriledge was committed but Expiated chap. 7. After this 4. His Storming of Ai in chap. 8. 5. His Conquering five Kings chap. 10. 6.
Then one and thirty Kings of Canaan till he had subdued the who●e Land c. chap. 11 and 12. The second sort of his Actions were Sacred or Religious As 1. His Celebration of the two Sacraments Circumcision and the Passover chap. 5. 2. His Fasting and Prayer to pacifie God's Anger for the Sin of Achan chap. 7. 3. His building an Altar and publishing the Law chap. 8. 4. His conscientious keeping the Covenant tho' fraudulently gained with the Gibeonites c. chap. 9. 10. 5. His Erecting the Tabernacle at Shiloh chap. 18. 6. His Renewing the Covenant between God and Israel c. Josh 24.14 15. The third sort of his Actions were Civil as 1. His Dividing Canaan now conquered chap. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 c. 2. His Dismissing the two Tribes and half chap. 22. 3. His holding a Parliament at Shechem chap. 23. The third and last Topick is the last End of Joshua wherein his Death is described by Antecedents Concomitants and Consequents Josh 24. Now follow the particular Remarks upon all those three General Topicks or Heads of Argument namely Joshua's Office Actions and End First As to his Office The first Remark is Joshua in his Office was a clear Type of our Gospel Jesus who was his Antitype Here this grand Enquiry comes in to be answered How far there is a Parity or Congruity and a Disparity betwixt the Type and the Antitype First Of their Parity As First Where Moses ended there Joshua began So where the Law of Moses falls short it being too weak to bring to Canaan Rom. 8.3 there the Gospel of our Jesus supplieth effectually Heb. 7.25 Secondly Both their Names do signifie Saviours Matth. 1.21 and Joshua the Type hath the Name of Jesus the Antitype twice in the New Testament Act. 7.45 and Heb. 4.8 Thirdly As Joshua was the Son of Nun Josh 1.1 which signifies Eternity so our Jesus was the Son of the truly Eternal Father is called the Eternal King 1 Tim. 1.17 and who by his Blood hath purchased an Eternal Inheritance and Redemption for us preparing us for it by his Eternal Spirit Heb. 9.12 14. Fourthly As Joshua was the Servant or Minister of Moses Exod. 24.13 32.17 So our Joshua or Jesus was after a sort a Servant of Moses when he came in the Form of a Servant into the World Phil. 2.7 to fulfil all Righteousness Matth. 3.15 and not to destroy but to fulfil the Law Matth. 5.17 by finishing the work God gave him to do in the World John 17.4 Fifthly As Joshua was the Captain General who conquered the cursed Canaanites subdued Canaan and gave the Land in possession unto the Tribes of Israel Deut. 31.7 So our Jesus is the Captain of our Salvation Heb. 2.10 conquers all our Spiritual as well as Temporal Enemies for us going before us into the Heavenly Canaan as Joshua did before Israel c. there to prepare Mansions of Glory for each one of us John 14.2 Sixthly As Joshua saved Rahah and all her Relations that were found in her house which had the Red Cord hanging at the Window Josh 2.18 6.25 So our Joshua or Jesus saveth every penitent sinner that believeth in his Blood signified by the Scarlet Cord for pardon of sin But more of this Type and others in their proper places Seventhly As the Cloudy Pillar which had been Israel's Conduct all along through the Wilderness under Moses did quite vanish under Joshua who instead of the Cloud that had conducted Israel through the Red Sea had the Ark of the Covenant which represented the Angel of the Covenant Christ Jesus to conduct Him and all Israel through Jordan Josh 3.3 So tho' under the Law of Moses a Cloud of Obscurity and Shadows of Darkness abode all that time upon the Church of God yet this Cloud departed● through the Light of the Gospel under our Joshua or dear Jesus Heb. 10.1 Col. 2.17 The Cloud was indeed Israel's Guide in Moses's time for God was then seen Vailed in Moses but the Ark must be their Guide in Joshua's Time for God was then heard speaking from his Mercy-Seat the Covering of the Ark wherein were the Tables of the Testimony Our blessed Jesus leads us not now so much by the Eye as by the Ear for Faith now cometh by Hearing Rom. 10.17 Our first Parents gave then a listning Ear too much to the Father of Lyes We ought now to lend a listning Ear much more to the God of Truth and not neglect so great Salvation Heb. 2.3 Eighthly As Manna ceased under Joshua when Israel were come into Canaan Josh 5.12 So Ordinances and Sacraments shall cease when our Jesus shall bring us into the heavenly Canaan Rev. 21.23 Both the Cloud and Manna were for Passage not for Rest As Manna ceased when the Corn of Canaan was before Israel to make ordinary food thereon So do Miracles which were extraordinary cease when and where there is good store of ordinary and appointed Means the Ordinances of Christ before us Hereupon Augustin saith well He that now calleth for a Miracle is a Miracle himself The Divine Doctrine of Truth which we now Embrace and Believe is one and the same with that which was first delivered by our Lord himself and then by them that heard him who confirmed it by many extraordinary Miracles Heb. 2.3 So that now we are not to try Truth by Miracles but Miracles by Truth because there be many Lying Wonders 2 Thes 2.9 Satan is God's Ape can work miranda not miracula Ninthly As it was not Moses's work to Circumcise Israel for that Sacrament was intermitted during their forty Years wandring in the Wilderness the Lord dispencing with that Ordinance because of their frequent and sudden Removals therefore this work was reserved for Joshua to be done in Canaan Josh 5.3 So the Law cannot bring us to Canaan cannot sanctifie us nor circumcise our hearts Rom. 8.3 No this is work reserved for our dear Jesus by the Grace of the Gospel Heb. 7.19 Our Lord is the End of the Law to every Believer Rom. 10.4 Tenthly As Joshua led Israel through Jordan's Waters at a time when they did overflow all their Banks Josh 3.15 so our Jesus leads his Redeemed through many and great Floods of Affliction Psal 34.19 Yea through the Valley of the shadow of Death it self Psal 23.4 and brings them as safe to the heavenly Canaan as Joshua did Israel to the earthly Canaan Eleventhly As Joshua accepted of the Gibeonites who humbled themselves to him and earnestly imitated to be entertained into Peace with him and Protection under him so our Jesus accepts of all penitent sinners who seek Grace in time of Grace Twelfthly As Joshua made his Captains put their Feet upon the Necks of the Conquered Kings of the Cursed Canaanites Josh 10.24 not vainly or proudly to insult over them as that Pope did over the Emperor Frederick at Venice blasphemously belching out those words Thou shalt tread upon
Tacit Objection ver 19. saying If ye have any Misgivings of Heart that the Land which ye first chose be Unclean by the want of the Tabernacle c. the visible Signs of God's Presence then leave it and come dwell among us tho' we have room little enough for our selves rather than sin better we be Distressed than God Dishonoured we will trust God in our Conquering more of the Canaanites for us to make more room both for you and us This was an eminent Act of Brotherly Love to dispence with their own Inconveniencies rather than admit of a mischief being desirous to give them all lawful content c. The Fourth Remark is The Defendant's Answer to the Plantiffs Objection from ver 21. to ver 30. This Defence made here is twofold First The Negative Part And Secondly The Positive The Negative is express'd ver 21 22 23. and the Positive is contain'd in ver 24. to ver 30. First In the Negative part the Defendant peremptorily denies the Charge that their Altar was not erected for any such ends as for Sacrifice or Oblations upon it or to any separation from the rest of our Brethren in the Service of the true God much less for serving any Idol c. And this absolute denial of the Charge comes strongly corroborated with a most Grave and Pathetical Obtestation wherein El Elohim Jehovah the Lord God of Gods twice over the Seacher of all Hearts is solemnly appealed unto for their sincerity in God's Service notwithstanding the foul Calumny very unjustly cast upon them They make their Appeal from Man's Court which was fallible unto God's Court that was Infallible saying If God see us guilty Let the Lord himself Require it and not save us from either the Sword of our Brethren or from the Sword of our Enemies let him deny us both Safety here and Salvation hereafter Secondly In the Positive part 't is strenuously Asserted That their design in building this Altar was to a quite contrary end than that their Brethren charged them with for their purpose therein was only to prevent Apostacy both in themselves and in their Posterities therefore was this Altar erected as an exact Resemblance of that Altar in God's Tabernacle that it might be a standing Monument and Witness of our holding Communion with you in God's Service both in the Tabernacle now and in the Temple hereafter and this Argument is Amplified with many Emphatical and most Pathetical Expressions from ver 24. to ver 30. all to make it undeniably evident to their false Accusers that they had an utter Detestation of the very thought of any such Notorious Abomination The last Remark upon this Chapter is The Amicable Composure of this Difference among Brethren First The Embassadors depart fully satisfied with their Apology ver 30 31 32. Secondly The Satisfactory Account they give at their return causeth Israel to cease all thoughts of Warring against their Brethren ver 33. which they did not in the case of the Obstinate Benjamites Judg. 20. 3. The Monument of the Alter in its right use and end is confirmed ver 34. for this happy Conclusion of the Treaty all Israel blesseth God ver 33. N. B. Thus Quarrels among Brethren oft arise from meer Mistakes as betwixt Cyril and Theodoret who Excommunicated one another for Heresie c. yet afterwards coming to a better understanding of each others Meaning and finding they both held the fame truth they were cordially reconciled We must justly wonder at the over hasty Jealousie of the Ten Tribes against their Brethren whose Faithfulness and Valour for God and his People they had so long experience of in the Seven Years War yet now to find fault when themselves were fowly faulty of a rash Censure having only Allegata's Matters alledged but no Probata's or things proved but alas how oft doth Inconsiderate Zeal transport even Religious Men to Uncharitable Censures Would to God all such differences upon mistakes in our day may be as happily ended as this was here then God is among us as ver 31. perceivingly but Dissen●ion drives God from us and will let in Dissolution among us If we avoid not all giving offence carelesly and all taking offence causelesly Oh that the Lord would take away that Morosity and Malignity of a Censorious Spirit from us and give to us more meekness of Wisdom Jam. 3.13 The Renbenites c. here were really to be commended not only for their care in building this Altar for the Spiritual good of their Posterity least they should forsake the sincere Service of the true God in their following Generations but also for their Meekness when thus foully calumniated They did not bristle and set up the Crest in a way of scornful Defiance but they calmly sought to give due satisfaction to their offended Brethren And the Ten Tribes were verily more Blame-worthy for misconstruing their Religious Meanings and Doings upon such slender grounds as a bare Report without any solid proof misrepresenting the Matter to them N. B. Yet herein were they truly Praise-worthy not only that they were so blessedly blown up with a Zeal for God's Glory in preparing War against Idolatry yea even in one half of the Tribe of Manasseh against the other half beyond Jordan when the purity of their Religion came in competition with Brotherly Affection like Levi in that Heroick Act of Divine Justice Exod. 32.26.29 would not spare their own Brethren Deut. 33.9 but also and more especially that the Ten Tribes first sent Phinchas so famous for his Heroick Fact against Zimri and Cozbi whereby God's Wrath was appeased Numb 25.8.11 Psal 106.30 to compromize the Controversie which he happily effected without any imbrewing their Hands in one another's Blood Sure I am we want such a Phinchas in our Day to put an Happy end to our Unhappy Differences CHAP. XXIII JOshua the Twenty Third containeth General Joshua's calling a Parliament most probably to Shiloh the usual place of such Solemn Assemblies where Joshua made his Oration to the Elders Heads Judges and Officers of Israel the Representatives both of Church and State ver 2. whose words being uttered at Shilo the place of God's Residence on the Ark of his Presence to this Grand Councel before the Lord might more likely have the greater influence on them The Remarks hereupon are First This great Act of Parliament that passed at this time is expressed in Joshua's Oration the Prologue whereof offers it self first to our prospect wherein he prepares them for what he had to propound to this Parliament both from a consideration of his own Old Age which should have the more Authority with them ver 1 2. and then of God's Faithfulness in performing his Promise saying The Lord hath done much already for you and he will still do more if ye keep Covenant with him and Rebel not against him ver 3 4 5. Thus this good Man's Grace like good Liquor ran fresh to the bottom though Old Age disenabled
His no more c. was no more than that of Children no more till next time therefore David got him at last out of the Land when after the first Melting he had found him faithless In such a case Credulity is but folly V. 11 12 13. Contains Naomi's Disswasive to them for Tryal of their Truth and 't is question'd by some Whether Naomi did well in thus Disswading them seeing it had a tendency to drive them off from that Religion which was true and to fix them in that Worship which was Idolatrous as appears in v. 15. Orpah went back to her Devil-Gods to wit Baal-peor Chemosh Milchom c. but 't is answered No doubt but good Naomi did well in it to try the truth of their Affections Therefore V. 11. Why will ye go with me She would know what was their principal Motive Whether was it for her sake only or for expectation of Husbands from her She would have their Resolutions well grounded Hence Observ 1. New Proselytes and Converts should be full of Caution and Consideration they should be asking after their grounds why they leave the Idols of Sin to go along with Christ and Salvation Naomi might fear Afflictions might attend her in Canaan and this might become a stumbling-block to her Moabitess Daughters so as to make them renounce the good ways of the Lord which would have been a Scandal to the Weak a Scorn to the Wicked and a Cordolium to her self Such as will build the Tower of Godliness must count the cost Luke 14.28 lest they lose the things that they have wrought but that they may receive a full Reward 2 Ep. John v. 8. without a Non-putaram without any Fools Had-I-wist afterwards she doth not command them but Counsel them that it might be a free-will Offering in them to chuse or refuse as if she had said thus If ye will return with me into Judaea then must ye be devoted to the Worship of the True God but if this like ye not then return to Moab your own Countrey Twice over 't is repeated Turn again my Daughters Turn again my Daughters She would have their Resolves well grounded as all of new Converts ought to be they should with good Advice make War Prov. 21.18 and Luke 14.31 This Life is a Warfare and we have Twenty Thousand Enemies to fight against us Satan and his whole Myriads of Devils his Myrmidons of Lusts that War against our Souls 1 Pet. 2.11 and we have but little of strength to resist them We should follow the Lamb and his Gospel yea we should love the Gospel for the Gospels sake not because it is fringed with Ease and Honour God takes it kindly from young People that they will follow him through a Land that is not sown Jer. 2.1 2. that maketh Moses choice Hebr. 11.25 and the Spouse's Cant. 8.5 chusing Godliness though Afflicted and the Gospel though persecuted keeping the word of Patience Revel 3.10 God is tender of such Esa 63.9 to 15. Observ 2. 'T is very comely and commendable yea and sweetly Corresponding with this Scripture-pattern and President for Mothers-in-Law to carry to their Daughters-in-Law as if they were their own Natural Children Thus Naomi behaved her self to Ruth and Orpah even to the last if she did no more or not so much to the latter as to the former until the saw her comfortably cared for in the World in Ruth's Marriage to Rich Boaz 't was because Orpah deserted Naomi which Ruth did not and so withdrew her self from the Counsel and Kindness of her Mother by her returning unto Moab while both those Daughters stayed with their Mother she treats them kindly and does the best she can for them here she calls them her Daughters two times as if they had been Naturally Born of her you that are Mothers in Law or Step Mothers that is such as Step in to be instead of Natural Mothers you have need of Grace to supply the place of Nature which you cannot have that so you may adorn your place as Daughters of Sarah ought to do 1 Pet. 3.3 5 6 7. Observ 3. Candour and Kindness is a better way to prevail in Perswasion than Rigour Moroseness and Austerity Man naturally is a Noble Creature and will rather be drawn than driven Naomi like Naphthali gives goodly words Gen. 49.21 good words do ingratiate both with good and bad Men when especially they come not out of feigned Lips Psal 17.1 Deut. 33.23 No Noble Nature would be huffed and hector'd even unto that which is good It is good Policy therefore to preserve an Opinion of our Love in the Hearts of those whom we would perswade to any good and to treat them fairly as she here V. 12. Are there yet any Sons in my Womb that they may be your Husbands The Law required that the Brother dying without Issue his Widow should not Marry to a Stranger but his Brother should take her to Wife and should raise up Seed to his deceased Brother that the Inheritance might not be Alienated and a Name lost in Israel Deut. 25.5 6. each one was to keep to his Inheritance Numb 36.7 Levit. 25.23 Hence Observ 1. A minori ad majus from the lesser to the greater I argue Our Spiritual Inheritance ought not to be Alienated much more than their Temporal The Kingdom of Canaan was but a Type of the Kingdom of Heaven which is the Antitype If Naboth can say of the Type only God forbid I should Alienate my Inheritance when tempted to it by plausible pretences 1 Kings 21.3 which the Lord indeed had forbidden Levit. 25.23 Numb 36.7 Ezek. 46.18 how much more should we say so of the Antitype of the Gospel of its Ordinances and of the things of the Kingdom of God Religion is our Inheritance which we have received from our Fore-Fathers and we should say with Naboth the Lord forbid that we should Alienate it that we should forfeit it or fool it away and not transmit it to our Post●●●ty for so doing our own Children may Curse us their Parents in another World 'T is Religion that makes England the Lord's Land Hos 9.3 and Immanuel's Land Isa 8.8 Now assuredly if we do not live according to the Lord's Law we shall not be permitted to live in the Lord's Land Oh God forbid that our Land should cast us out or that our Sin should cast out the Gospel or that ever Christ's Land should become Antichrists I am too Old to have an Husband Observ 2. That Second Marriages are not Vnlawful This Grave and Godly Matron doth not say 'T is not lawful for me to take a second Husband my first Husband being Dead for the Scripture maketh the Woman free when the Husband is Dead and so likewise the Man Rom. 7.1 2 3 4. What then should hinder the second third or fourth Marriage Though undoubtedly Christian Moderation ought to be observed herein there must be a difference put 'twixt Lawfulness and Expediency 1
and Death to them Return thou after thy Sister Hence Observ 3. That Love to the Ways and Worship of God is a sincere Love which doth urdergo Tryals and Temptations yet bears up against all This was the second shock that Ruth hath to grapple withal to wit her Mothers Perswasions as the first was her Sisters Example Naomi Counsels her to be gone and Orpah shows her the way of going and no doubt sollicited her sufficiently for her Society in her Defection yet Godly Ruth weathers out the point and rides out the Storm against Wind and Tide of both the Sisters Pattern and the Mothers Precept which to do her right was not any command upon her Daughter to forsake God and turn to Idols this cannot rationally be imagin'd that so Religious a Matron should cordially Counsel much less command her dear Daughter in whom she could not but observe some Pantings of Soul after the Service of the true God to embrace Idolatry yea here is a plain evidence in the Text to the contrary 't is very remarkable that her very seeming Perswasion doth indeed comprehend in it a very cogent Diswasion inasmuch as she makes Orpah's Actings in her departure to be rather odious and abominable than matter of choice or desirable this is intimated in her words Thy Sister is gone to her Idolatrous People to Worship among them their false Gods It must therefore be taken for granted That all this she did and said as aforesaid was to try the truth of her Love not only to her self but also to the true Religion not unlike that of Joshua to the Elders Chuse you this Day whom you will serve Josh 24.15 That Godly General could not by these words leave it to Israel's free choice whether they would serve God or Idols but it was to make proof of their professed Subjection to the Command of God whether it were Voluntary or otherwise and this would further oblige them to constancy in their Covenant So Naomi did here that Ruth might not say hereafter she was beguiled into her Mothers Religion by her Mothers over-ruling Perswasion therefore she gives her free choice and leaves her to her Liberty to do according to the Perswasions of God and the Inclinations of her own Soul V. 16. Intreat me not to leave thee Ruth being left to her choice was unchangeably resolved in her Choice and will not be shaken off from the Fellowship of this Godly though poor Desolate and Disconsolate Widow Hence Observ 1. We should be unchangeably resolved to chuse Affliction with the People of God rather than to enjor the Pleasures of Sin for a season This was Moses's Choice Hebr. 11.25 and it should be ours It was Ruth's choice here we ought with Ruth to chuse a suffering Condition with the Daughter of Sion than with Orpah to turn our backs of God and with the Daughter of Moab to take the pleasure of sin which lasts but for a Season Al tiph gegnibi Nè Irruas in me Hostiliter do not oppose me in a Hostile manner so fix'd Ruth was to make Naomi 's People her People and Naomi 's God her God that neither fair words nor foul Actions could unsettle her herein she gave demonstration of a true Convert Hence Observ 2. 'T is the blessed Character of a true Convert to have hearty Love for God and his People to desire Communion with both and to withdraw from the Company of God's Enemies So doth Ruth here preferring the Company of a Religious Mother before that of an Idolatrous Sister Her Companions shall be such as fear the Lord Psal 119.63 and so resolute was she in this that tide Life tide Death come good or come evil she will hold the conclusion and the Heavens shall sooner fall than she Renounce her Religion Thy People shall be my People and thy God my God Hence Observ 3. That Amity and Vnity which is made up by Principles of Religion and by the power of Godliness is the firmest Amity and Vnity in the World There is indeed an Amity or Friendship both practicable and profitable not only amongst the Men of the World one with another whereby the Kingdoms of the World are preserved in Peace and Power as to their several distinct Stations and Constitutions but also betwixt the Saints of the most High and the Men of the World as betwixt Abrabam and the Children of Heth Gen. 23.3 5 6 7. and as before this betwixt him and King Abimelech Gen. 21.22 23. Yea and after both these betwixt Isaac and Abimelech Gen. 26.26 27 28. As likewise betwixt Jacob and Loban and many others yet all such Amity is more from Fear than from Love Those Allies aforesaid made Alliances with those Patriarchs aforesaid being pricked in their very Natural Consciences which could not but stoop to that slamp of God's Image that they saw shining in them when they saw in them that which was more than ordinary they are afraid of the Name of God called upon by them their Hearts did ake and quake in them and hence did they seek unto them for Amity and Alliance that thereby they might make the better provision for their own Persons and Posterity N. B. How much doth this condemn the practice of that wicked Generation which speaks not Peace to God's People though God himself doth so to them Psal 85.8 9. which is their comfort though they be a People that would gladly live quiet in the Land Psal 35.20 that study to be quiet and to do their own business 1 Thess 4.11 Affecting rather Quietness from the World than over-much Acquaintance with it This made David cry not only Oh but Woe Psal 55.6 and 120.5 7. Yet the most true and cordial Amity is no where to be found but among the People of God one with another there is the Vnity of the Spirit in the Bond of Peace Eph. 4.3 that is the blessed Cement which keeps all together in Love Orpah may have favour and friendship for Naomi but alas it dwindles away when the Unity of the Spirit in the sincere Convert Ruth even glues her fast to her Mother No Bond like the Bond of Religion and therefore 't is call'd Religion à Religando from its binding and binding again 't is a firm and Indissolvable Bond I have sometimes wondred at that Oneness of Heart among the People of God even upon short knowledge one of another as if they had been acquainted Twenty Years one with another 'T is said Noscitur è Socio a Person is known by his Companion c. V. 17. Where thou diest I will die c. Before she had said in other terms where thou livest I will live whether Travelling abroad or resting at home she would not leave her Whither thou goest I will go and where thou lodgest I will lodge Now she saith I will not only Live with thee whether at home or abroad but I will Die with thee also Hence Observ 1. Such and so powerful is the
lose Samuel at such a juncture to his disgrace he therefore holds him violently by his Mantle and it rent in his Hand which Samuel told him was a sign of God's rending the Kingdom from him and giving it to one who should tear off the Skirt of his Garment which when Saul saw came to pass he said Now I know thou shalt surely be King chap. 24 4.20 The Seventh Remark is Samuel slays Agag and at the Importunity of Saul Samuel yields to go to Gilgal to own him as his Soveraign as yet being only Rejected but not Deposed but chiefly to Execute Agag v. 31 32 33. who had been as cruel to Israel as his Ancestors and having escaped the Sword of Lusty Saul did not dream of Death by the Sword of Old Samuel N. B. Whom yet God enabled to hew him in pieces as Phinehas stab'd Zimri and Elijah slew the Baalites all extraordinary Cases We are to walk by the ordinary Rule and not by extraordinary Examples which are no Presidents for us After this Samuel went no more to visit Saul now Excommunicated yet mourns for him v. 34 35. for the hardness of his Heart and hazard of his Soul which was more than Saul did for himself CHAP. XVI CHapter the Sixteenth is a Narrative of David's private Anointing to be King by Samuel upon Saul's Rejection by God wherein the Antecedents Concomitants and Consequents be considerable The Remarks first upon the Antecedents whereof The First is The Dialogue or Conference betwixt the Lord and Samuel in which is N. B. First God's Speech to Samuel How long wilt thou mourn for Saul c v. 1. Mourn he might but it was over-long that he mourned and not only so but pray'd also for his Restitution Do not so saith God seeing I have Rejected him lose not thy Prayers and Tears upon such a Reprobate an Aethiopian that will never be washed white with all thy Weeping Didst not thou tell him from me God is not a Man that will Repent chap. 15.29 I am resolved to Reject him and the Manifestation of my Resolve must make thee submit to my Pleasure and the Lord tells him As I am peremptory in Rejecting Saul so no less am I in providing me a King among Jesse's Sons one better than he whom the People provided for themselves therefore fill thine Horn with Oyl to Anoint him N. B. Saul was Anointed with Oyl out of a Glass Vial chap. 10.1 the brittleness whereof signified the Instability of Saul's Kingdom which would soon be broken but David must be Anointed out of an Horn-Vial which is of a more durable substance to signifie the continuance of his Kingdom that never should have an end and this was accomplished in Christ the Son of David N. B. Secondly Samuel's Answer v. 2. He saith nothing to the Negative part of God's Speech and therefore we may well suppose that he was satisfied it was his Duty to forbear Mourning any longer for Saul and praying any more for his Restitution But as to the positive part of it he makes his Objection saying How can I go If Saul hear it he will kill me N. B. A strange Question instead of a positive Answer and such an one as seemeth to favour of Humane Frailty in an old Servant of God who had so much and so long experience of the Lord's faithfulness to him in a most familiar Conversation with him Bernard could say Quid timet Homo in sinu Dei positus What need that Man fear who is seated in the very bosome of an All-sufficient God Samuel here should have strongly believed that the Lord who call'd him to this word would carry him safely through it But 't is more suitable to Samuel's Gravity and Godly Experience to suppose that he said How can I go Not so much out of any Diffidence and Distrust but out of a desire of Divine Direction therein N. B. As the Blessed Virgin did in her Question to the Angel How can this be seeing I know not a Man Luke 1.34 The Lord's Answer to Samuel's Objection makes it more probable for he directs Samuel how it might be done without danger saying Take an Heifer and say I am come to Sacrifice unto the Lord. This was usual for Samuel to do sometimes in one place and sometimes in another to keep up the Worship of God and to keep out the Worship of Idols unto which Israel was notoriously inclinable This therefore was one cause of his coming to Bethlehem but not the only cause nor was Samuel obliged to declare all that he came about N. B. Note well Some part of a truth may lawfully be concealed out of Civil Prudence as Jeremy did Jer. 38.27 N. B. As he is a Fool saith Solomon that believeth all he heareth Prov. 14.15 so he is no less that declareth all he knoweth The Lord farther directs Samuel to invite Jesse and his Sons to the Sacrifice and to the Feast that followed the Peace Offering and thou shalt Anoint unto me him whom I Name unto thee v. 3. N. B. This Jesse above all others must be an Invited Guest because he was Grand-Child to Ruth the Moabitess Ruth 4.22 who was now grown a great Lady in this little City Bethlehem and now noted to be the Great-Grandmother to the King of Israel so little lost Ruth by renouncing the Idolatry of Moab and cleaving close to the Lord God of Israel The Second Remark upon the Antecedents is The sad Alarm Samuel's coming to this City gave to the Citizens The Elders trembled at it c. v. 4 5. out of Reverence to him they met him at the Gate and Courted him with Is all well Knowing that he was now an Old Man and stirred seldom from his House at Ramah especially since he deserted Saul in so great displeasure they did justly wonder that he should now take so long a Journey from home and come to so small a City as Bethlehem was Micah 5.2 N. B. It must be upon some extraordinary Errand and their own Guilty Consciences feared the worst They might fear First That some grievous sin had been committed in the City and he was come to denounce some grievous Judgment against them for it Or Secondly That Samuel coming so privately might flee from Saul who was sore incensed against him for his so late sharp reproof and should they receive and harbour him this would horribly expose them to Saul's Rage and Revenge and so evil might befal Bethlehem for Samuel's sake as it did afterwards to Nob for David's sake Thirdly They might fear such a great Prophet as Samuel was came to foretell some sad Calamity would befal their City either from some Foreign Enemy or from Saul himself who now began to fall into Frantick Fits c. N. B. But good Old Samuel doth not only comfort them against all those Fears but also Invites them to a Peace-Offering and to the Holy Feast that followed it only with this difference their single Persons are
flee God striking them with a Panick fear they fled every Man to his Tent ver 12. being both discourag'd with their King 's foolish Idolatry and unsatisfied with the grounds of the Quarrel So the King forsaken by his Men was taken by the Enemy ver 13. Remark the Fifth Jehoash takes Amaziah left to shift for himself saith Sir Walter Rawleigh Prisoner at Bethshemesh carries him to Jerusalem and in the way threatens him with Death if he did not cause the Citizens to set ope the Gates and leave all to his Mercy He commands entrance in Amaziah's Name which they durst not deny the Gates were presently opened to Jehoash which held out two Years against Nebuchadnezzar Then he ransack'd the Temple and Palace of their Treasury breaks down four hundred Cubits of the Wall that the City might rebel no more took Hostages that the War might not be renew'd and returns to Samaria ver 14. Remark the Sixth Jehoash took not the Crown nor united the Kingdom of Judah thus subdued and their King his Captive to his Kingdom of Israel as he might have done had not God over-ruled him that his promise to David of a Lamp in Jerusalem might still be performed and he knew all Judah had great Love to David's House therefore returns he home to Samaria when he had dismiss'd the King Amaziah upon Conditions imposed by Covenant c. N.B. In the same Year of this Victory over Judah God smote Jehoash with Sickness and Death for his Sacrilege saith Sir Walter Rawleigh in Robbing God's Temple however it was surely for his forementioned Pride God punishing the King of Judah with the loss of his Treasure and Honour and this King of Israel with the loss of his Life ver 16. both of them for Pride Remark the Seventh Though Amaziah lived after this Jehoash fifteen Years ver 17. and 2 Chron. 25.25 yet was it but a lifeless Life being exposed to the hatred of his Subjects both for his Idolatry and Misgovernment which had brought so many Mischiefs upon them At last they made a Conspiracy against him ver 17 18. and 2 Chron. 25.27 for his turning from the true God to the Idols of Edom those Conspirators forced him to flee from Jerusalem to Lachish where he could find no Security for though he might live some time there as an Exile so contemptible was he become to his own People yet when they saw good they sent their Executioners thither and there flew him and brought him in a Chariot with Horses to Jerusalem ver 18 19 20. and 2 Chron. 25.28 N.B. The Rabbins say because he had brought the Idols of Edom to Jerusalem upon Horses therefore was his Corps brought thither upon Horses likewise and not upon Mens Shoulders Remark the Eighth All this befel Amaziah according to the Prophecy of the Man of God sent to bring him to Repentance This History is Recorded in 2 Chron. 25.15 16. but not in 2 Kings 14. The Story in short is this Amaziah serves the Idols of Edom as before God is angry at it yet in Wrath remembers Mercy so as to send him a Prophet to reclaim him when he might justly have at the same Time hurl'd him into Hell for disowning his Deliverer and for worshipping Idols that could not deliver either themselves or their Worshippers N.B. The King Threatens the Prophet to slay him for his Sawciness When the Prophet found him indocible he forbare to cast Pearls before an Hog but reads him his Doom God hath determined to destroy thee Vncounsellable Wretches are in the Way of Destruction Prov. 29.1 and this Judgment aforesaid befel Amaziah as was foretold him The Second Part of this fourteenth Chapter of the second of Kings relates to Jeroboam the second Successor to Jehoash ver 23 to ver 29. as to Vzziah and Azariah the Successor of Amaziah ver 21 22. that story belongs to the next Chapter Remarks upon Jeroboam the second First He was a Valiant and Victorious Prince who somewhat refreshed the low State of Israel reigning forty and one Years ver 23. which was the longest Reign of any King of Israel after the Division and before the Captivity though he walked in the Idolatrous way of Jeroboam the first ver 24. yet the Lord having Compassion upon his afflicted Israel made use of him to restore their lost Lands upon both sides of Jordan their Northern and Southern Borders ver 25 26 27. Remark the Second As Divine Goodness appear'd here in not determining as yet to write Lo-Ammi upon Israel which afterward he both said it Hos 1.6 9. and did it Chap. 17.18 So Divine Truth shines forth in fulfilling the Prophecie of Jonah ver 25. by which saith Grotius we learn when that Prophet lived supposed to be sent to Comfort Jehoahaz when humbled Chap. 13.3 4. Remark the Third After this Jeroboam's prosperous Reign forty one Years for reviving the almost decay'd Condition of Israel he dies and his Son Zachariah succeeds him ver 28 29. who was the fourth by lineal Descent from Jehu in whom God's Promise made to Jehu Chap. 10.30 was faithfully accomplished Here ver 25. Jonah the Son of Amittai is named as Jonah 1.1 whence some say that this Jonah was the first of all the Prophets next Elisha whose Prophecies are extant upon Record c. but more of this after the sixth Remark upon 2 Kings 15. where others Learned make Jonah the fourth Prophet of Israel and of all Jonah's Prophecies 2 Kings CHAP. XV. THIS 2 Kings Chapter the 15th treats both of the Affairs of Judah and of Israel too but the 2 Chron. 26. Chap. of Judah only The first part in both those Books and Chapters concerns the Kingdom of Judah namely of Vzziah Successor to Amaziah Remarks upon him are First This King had two Names of much Affinity saith Vatablus he is call'd Azariah Chap 14.21 and 15.1 and Uzziah ver 13 30. 2 Chron. 26.1 both names signifying the same thing for substance Azariah God's help and Vzziah God's strength Upon his Father Amaziah's Murder all the people of Judah took this Vzziah his Son when but sixteen years old and made him King Chap. 14.21 which they did either in opposition to the Conspirators or to shew their Affection to the House of David and that their quarrel was only personal against Amaziah whom they look'd upon as the Author of all their late Calamities Remark the Second The Character of this King ver 3. He did right as his Father had done this was no very laudable Character as Tilinus observes for as the Father began his Reign fairly but ended it foully so did the Son in the same manner without sincerity and only for a season neither of them did so well at last as at first whereas their last Works should have have been better than their first had they been of that golden Temper of Thratira Revel 2.19 but both of them waxed worse and worse 2 Tim. 3.13 They both basely
Coasts But the Effects of this Royal and Godly Message were twofold for first many of the Ten Tribes Mocked the Messengers They had so long wanted the Meat of God's Ordinances that the generality of them had quite lost their Appetites thereunto they looked upon Religion as so light and frivolous a matter as to laugh those to scorn for so many Fools that stirr'd a foot out of their own Country upon that Account Thus prophane were they become to contemn the Worship of God N. B. 'T is a sad Symptom of a coming common Calamity when Religion is become a Matter not of Form only but of Scorn also Nor was this all if Josephus may be trusted for Truth who says Those Scoffing Israelites did not only Scorn but also Slew the Messengers that Invited them yea and the Prophets too that exhorted them to go up to the Passover at Jerusalem in defiance of Hezekiah's Authority because they lived out of his Dominions However they did thus Ripen fast and became Ready for that Ruine which came upon them a few Years after for this offer of Grace was in the first Year of Hezekiah and about five Years after this they were all carried away Captive in the sixth Year of Hezekiah 2 Kin. 18.10 11. Remark the Fourth But the King's Call and Invitation had a contrary and a more blessed Influence upon others of the Israelites for divers of Asher Manasseh and Zebulon Humbled themselves under the sense of their Sins and were more easily drawn to Jerusalem the place where they hoped to find Mercy And according to the Judgments of some Learned Men they did find so much Mercy with the Lord at the Celebration of this Solemn Passoever that the Lord hid them when the rest of the Scorners were all carry'd away Captive However preserved they were if not from the Common Destruction yet from the Common Distraction for God will save the Humble Person Job 22.9 Zeph. 2.3 but the Grace of God did more powerfully operate in Judah than in Israel ver 12. inclining their hearts to an unanimous Complyance to God's and the King's Call Oh how well is God called the Father of Spirits Heb. 12.9 who holds the Spirits of all Mortals in his own hand and turns them which way he pleaseth 'T is said the Lord stirred up the Spirits of Pul and Tilgath-Pileser c. 1 Chron. 5.26 and what a strange Change was wrought here in the Men of Judah's Spirits who so lately had universally complyed with the Idolatrous Orders of Impious Ahaz and now are made as mad and forward for God as ever they had been against him like Paul Acts 26.11 2 Cor. 5.13 Remark the Fifth The Time appointed for this Passover was the second Month ver 2 13 15. which was point blank against the Law of Moses requiring it to be kept in the first Month Exod. 12.2 6. but the Law of Necessity saith Piscator in Cases extraordinary did justifie this Act out of it's appointed Time as it had done before with God's Allowance Numb 9.10 11. The Impediments here saith Osiander were not unlike the Impediments there where the Divine Dispensation was granted for to keep the Passover in the first Month at this Time according to God's first Law was impracticable yea impossible now upon a threefold Account N. B. First The Temple was not purified before the fourteenth Day of the first Month was past seeing they were sixteen Days in cleansing it 2 Chron. 29.3 17. and till it was duely cleansed the Feast of unleavened Bread could not be kept in it Secondly A competent number of Priests could not be got prepared for so solemn a Festival against the first Month for 't is said The Priests were but few and not so forward and free-hearied as the Levites 2 Chron. 29.34 and here 't is said The Priests were not sufficiently sanctified ver 3. for so solemn a service so soon Thirdly Another hinderance from keeping the Passover in the first Month was because the People could not so soon be assembled for its Celebration ver 3. for they could not be summoned until the Temple was purged The Second Part of this Chapter is the observance of this Sacred Service so acceptable to the Lord. Remark the First The Actions of the People both coming up to Jerusalem in a prodigious concourse brought thither by the Holy Hand of Almighty God ver 12 13.53.1 it was a Day of God's Power which made them such a willing People Psalm 110.3 and so forth-bearing they were that the Priests and Levites were ashamed ver 15. and well they might saith Vatablus because they saw their own former backwardness to such a blessed Business Chap. 29.34 now so notoriously upbraided by the forwardness of the Common People nor was this all that was notable in them but the People likewise arose which Vatablus saith signifi'd their Alacrity and broke down all the Altars which Ahaz had erected in the Temple unto his Idols ver 14. Whereas God had but one Altar Baal had many in every Street of the City Jer. 11.13 Remark the Second The Actions of the Priests and Levites 1. 'T is said Then they killed the Passover ver 15. namely when all the Baggage and broken Altars of Idolatry were first cast into the Brook Kidron N. B. Oh that we could do so and then come clean to the Lord's Supper 2 Cor. 5.7 8. 2. The Levites held the Bason to receive the Blood of the Sacrifice and then the Priests sprinkl'd it ver 16. as a Type of that Blood of sprinkling that speaks better things Heb. 12.24 3. They supplied the defects of the unclean ver 17. by sanctifying those that came unsanctified having more of desire to partake of the Passover than they had of Diligence to prepare for it either through want of due time beforehand saith Osiander for the thing was done suddenly Chap. 29.36 or it was for want of due Instruction c. and this Work of sanctifying the unclean that God's Passover might not be polluted by the unprepared is Attributed here to the Levites because they were more upright in Heart to sanctifie themselves than the Priests Chap. 29.34 therefore the Levites did stay the Sacrifice fley it and lay it by piece-meal upon the Altar and offered it up to God for sanctifying the unclean which was a Work proper to the Priests but that they had not sanctified themselves sufficiently ver 3. here and again a great number of Priests sanctified themselves ver 24. having then both more Time and farther need to do so saith Vatablus being ashamed to come behind all whose place was to go before all c. Remark the Third The Actions of the King praying for the unclean ver 18 19. Mark 1. The occasion of his Prayer was many of the ten Tribes who had been a long time without God without Law and without a teaching Priest 2 Chron. 15.3 came rudely and irreverently to the Passover for which they some way or
20. hereby all beard their Doom Princes as well as People Mark 3. Jehoiakim had so Debauch'd his own Conscience that he falls into a Rage to hear this Divine Revelation This was the Ninth Month answering to the latter part of our November and the former of our December so 't was a Cold Season yet the King's Soul was colder than his Body for while he was warming the latter in his Winter-Chamber the former was cold and careless of calling upon God not at all countenancing and encouraging his People with his Presence who at this very juncture were now Cold and Empty Fasting and Praying in the Temple and had been hearing the word of God read to them by Baruch ver 20 21 22. Mark 4 No sooner had Jehoiakim heard two or three Columns read by Jehudi but he Tiger-like catches up the Penknife cuts this precious Piece in Pieces and casts it in to the Fire ver 23 24 yet neither the King nor those cursed Court-Parasites were afraid N. B. Jehoiakin's Father good Josiah had his Heart melted at the hearing of the Law 2 Chron. 34.27 but so had not this desperate degenerate Son of his who like a Frantick Person doomed those innocent Papers as it were to a double Death they must be both cut and burnt and he himself will be the Executioner Mark 5. Elnathan who had been too active before for the King in apprehending and executing Vrijah the Prophet Jer. 26.22 and now possibly touched with some remorse interceded with the King for the Rolls saving c. Jer. 36. ver 25. Notwithstanding this Intercession of Elnathan and his two Partners Delaiah and Gemariah Jehoiakim desperately runs on headlong to perpetrate that unparallel'd Impiety to destroy it and not only so but immediately in a rage sent his Serjeants to Arrest Jeremy and Baruch but the Lord hid them from the hands of his Blood Hounds ver 26. N.B. The Rabbins say God cast a Scotoma or Mist before their Eyes as Gen. 19.11 and 2 Kings 6.18 or God might provide for them an hiding Place in some honest Man's House as those Princes had advised them to do ver 19. which they might warrantably do when hunted for their precious Lives seeing there is no Fence but Flight nor Counsel but Concealment to succour an Innocent Subject against the Mad Fury of an enraged Soveraign Mark 6. Shall this Frantick King escape by Iniquity No verily God in anger casts him down Psalm 56.7 for here he is made to know as God's Word cannot be bound 2 Tim. 2.9 so nor can it be burnt or abolish'd by all the Tyrants of the World God will revive and preserve it Matth. 5.18 as he doth here ver 27 28. adding a most doleful Doom to this destroyer of it ver 29 30 31 32. In the new written Roll 't is said that his Successor should but sit on the Throne for three Months and some odd Days and that himself should have a most Infamous Funeral the Burial of an Ass threatned before Jer. 22.19 whereas his good Father Josiah both lived and died in Glory c. Remark the Sixth No Historical Passage is found Recorded in Scripture as precisely fixed upon either the third fourth fifth sixth or seventh Year of the Captivity The Story of Jeremy's setting Wine before the Rechabites is indeed said to be in the Days of Jehoiakim Jer. 35.1 but in what Year 't is not mentioned yet as the end of that Action is clearly express'd that their abstinence from Wine c. did shew their faithfulness to a Law of their Father to aggravate thereby the Jews falshood and faithlesness to the Covenant of their God so they tell the Prophet there ver 11. the Reason why they now had left their Tents and were come into the City 't was for fear of the Chaldeans and of the Syrians that join'd with them to invade the Land 2 Kings 24.2 which was the Army that came up against Jehoiakim when he rebell'd against the King of Babylon as is before noted at the Instigation of the King of Egypt Therefore this Relation of the Rechabites must be about the latter Years of Jehoiakim who in the eleventh Year of his Reign which Dr. Lightfoot reckons the eighth Year of the Captivity was Captivated kill'd and buried with the Burial of an Ass 2 Kings 24.2 5 6. 2 Chron. 36.5 6. Jer. 22.19 and 36.30 31. Ezek. 19.9 't is supposed from this last Scripture that the Chaldeans put an Iron Collar upon this Captive-King's Neck and fasten'd an Iron Chain at it to drag him to and fro at Pleasure which Chain was enough to change the Roaring of this Lion into the Roarings of a despairing miserable Caitiff This hard usage might soon kill this proud King and break his haughty Heart c. which being done and he Dead they cast his Corps out like Carrion into some by-Corner c. N.B. A Just Hand of God upon this wicked Prince that he who had made so many to weep by his squeezing so much Money out of them to please Pharaoh should have none to weep over him when Dead that he who had so stately a Palace in Jerusalem should now not have so much as a Grave to House his Carcase in but be in an infamous Manner thrown into a Ditch or on a Dunghil to be devoured by the Beasts of the Earth and by the fowls of Heaven Remark the Seventh The Scripture of Truth doth in the next Place relate the most remarkable Occurrencies As First Of the eighth Year of Nebuchadnezzar's Reign 2 Kings 24.12 which was likewise the eighth Year of the Captivity for there is a Synchronism betwixt them both being of one Time and running in Parallel Lines together then were three thousand twenty three Jews carried Captive to Babylon at Jehoiakim's Captivity Jer. 52.28 which saith it was done in the seventh Year This seeming Contradiction Grotius Vatablus and Dr. Lightfoot do reconcile saying First The Siege began in the latter End of the seventh Year and the City was taken in the beginning of the eighth Secondly In the same Year was the next Captivity of Jehoiakin or Jeconiah who reigned but three Months and ten Days of that Year as before he was no sooner on the Throne but Jeremy denounceth his Captivity and the fall of that earthly Kingdom of Solomon calling the Earth Earth Earth to hear the Word of the Lord Jer. 22.24 29 30. and thereupon foretelleth the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ one greater than Solomon Jer. 23.5 6. denouncing woes against those cursed Guides that hastened the Ruine of David's earthly Kingdom from thence to the End then it was that ten thousand out of the City and eight thousand out of the Country were carried Captive 2 Kings 24.14 to 17. and with them Mordecai Esth 2.6 and Ezekiel Ezek. 1.2 and 40.1 Thirdly In the ninth Year of the Captivity came Zedekiah to the Kingdom 2 Kings 24.17 to 20. Jer. 52.1 2 3. 2 Chron. 36.11 12 13. the
Sins of the People were the true Cause why God gave them this wicked King who broke Covenant both with God Jer. 34.17 and with Man Ezek 17.18 19. God harden'd his Heart that he humbled not himself c. Remark the Eighth The next remarkable Passage Recorded is in the nineteenth Year of the Captivity which was the nineteenth Year of Nebuchadnezzar's Reign and the eleventh of Zedekiah's Then was the full fatal and final Fall of that Earthly Kingdom c. 2 Kings 25.2 Jer. 39.2 and 52.12 't is true this Time is call'd the eighteenth Year of Nebuchadnezzar ver 29. Jer. 52. and the ninth Year of Zedekiah 2 Kings 25.1 and Ezek. 24.1 but we must suppose the King of Babylon besieged Jerusalem about two Years before it was Tibbakang Hebr. broken up with Battering Rams saith Vatablus 2 Kings 25.4 8. nor may we say with Grotius that this Place of the eighteenth Year seems to be corrected by that Place of the nineteenth but better say with Lyra 't was the latter end of the eighteenth and in the beginning of the nineteenth and though the Books of Kings and Chronicles give no account of any Occurrence betwixt those Years of nine and nineteenth of the Captivity yet find we some Passages of Remark in the two Prophets of Jeremy and Ezekiel Mark First In Jeremy who relateth how Hananiah in the beginning of Zedekiah's Reign in the Fourth Year falsly foretold the return of the Captives within two Years Jer. 28.1 c. This Priest probably but a pretended Prophet had seen how ill Vrijah and Jeremy had sped by telling the Truth therefore he resolves to Preach Placentia pleasing Matters to have Honour from the Princes and likely lucre too from the People so he affronts Jeremy publickly in the Temple as a lying Prophet in saying the Captivity would continue for seventy Years but the Issue was Hananiah is struck with Death within two Months after his false Prediction because he taught Rebellion against the Lord as Jeremy had foretold him ver 14 15 16 17. Mark 2. After this Jeremy tells us how he sent a Letter to the Children of the Captivity in Babylon in the former part of Zedekiah's Reign the Date and Contents thereof are declared Jer. 29.1 2 3 c. and Chap. 30. and 31. altogether Consolatory to the Captives and Chap. 49.34 and Jer. 50. and 51. in another Letter afterward to Comfort them that they must Exercise Patience and not Antedate Promises as their false Prophets prompted them to do against whom Jeremy denounced their most dreadful Doom Jer. 29.21 22. yet would they but wait God in due Time would deliver them and destroy Babylon and Elam that help'd her Calvin saith that Zedekiah suffer'd Jeremy's Letters to be sent by his Messengers Non ex Pietatis studio not from any Respect either to God or to his Prophet but out of Self-Love for he had heard by Hananiah that Itconiah his Corrival and the Captives would in two Years Time come back to Jerusalem if so he must resign up his Throne wherein the King of Babylon had seated him therefore sends he Embassadors to Nebuchadnezzar to testifie how obsequious he was to his Lord and Master and was Content they should carry Jeremy 's Letters knowing the purport of them was to perswade the People there Patience and to live peaceably in Babylon and not think yet of returning to give him Disturbance Mark Thirdly In Ezekiel whom in the fifth Year of Jehoiakin's Captivity and the thirteenth of the first as Dr. Lightfoot computes the Lord raised up a Prophet in Babylon as Jeremy was in Jerusalem and he began to Prophesie in the fifth Year of Jehoiakin's or Jeconiah's Captivity or as some call it with Lavater a Transmigration because he yielded to the Besieger c. Ezek. 1.2 and the same Ezekiel foretells the fatal Issue of Zedekiah's breaking his Covenant First with God Ezek. 16.38 and then with Man even with the King of Babylon Ezek. 17.15 who had set him up and sworn him to be faithful yet he revolts and seeks succour from the King of Egypt which perfidious Perjury and Treachery was the true Cause of Ruining all 2 Chron. 36.13 Mark Fourthly Ezekiel also in the sixth Year of Jeconiah's Captivity and the fourteenth of the first hath the Lord shewing him All Ezekiel from Chap. 8. to the End Daniel 2 3 and 4. Chapters what just Causes he had to remove his Glory from the Temple Ezek. 8.1 c. Chap. 9. and 10. and 11. and 12. and so on to Chap. 20. All this must be while Zedekiah Reigned the King of Babylon had set him as a Vine Ezek. 17.6 but not Content with that he must needs be a Cedar out Caesar aut nullus therefore did he bend his Boughs and Roots toward the other great Eagle Pharaoh for relief ver 7 8. so falsified his Fidelity which was his utter Destruction Mark Fifthly Again Ezekiel Prophesies in the seventh year of Jeconiah's Captivity and of Zedekiah's Reign Ezek. 20.1 which was two Years and five Months before the fatal Siege began here some rank Hypocrites came to be resolv'd of Ezekiel whether it were better to shake off the Babylonian Yoke or patiently to bear it Whereas before-hand they came concluded what course to take ver 31 32. Ezekiel by his Prophetick Spirit pierced into their putid Hypocrisie loath'd their false looks and abhorr'd their Motion God had no Answer for such no more than he had for Saul 1 Sam. 28.15 the Prayers of such are an Abomination Prov. 21.27 yet tells them the Day of this Prophane Person was now come and the Crown must be overturned overturned overturned until Christ come Ezek. 21.25 26 27. the Earthly Kingdom shall be no more in its former Glory Remark the Ninth Now Ezekiel returns us to the eleventh year of Zedekiah and the nineteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar and of the first Captivity Ezek. 26.1 c. all which Computations Grotius c. make contemporary Now are Ezekiel's three hundred and ninety years compleated from the first Division of Israel's Kingdom into ten Tribes and two Ezek. 4.5 and now was the City and the Temple destroyed c. 2 Kings 25.2 to 20. 2 Chron. 36.17 to 21. Jer. 39.2 to 15. and 52.5 to 28. N.B. Having made this most necessary Digression in enquiring what happened betwixt the ninth and nineteenth of the seventy Years Captivity The Enquiry following is what followed this fatal nineteenth year Answer The Prophets Jeremy and Ezekiel do supply what is not Recorded either in the Book of Kings or in that of Chronicles Mark 1. Jeremy gives an account of what was done in the twenty third year c. Jer. 52.30 Nebuzaradan comes then and carries away seven hundred and forty five more Captives probably to revenge Gedaliah 's Murder Mark 2. Ezekiel tells of a Messenger that came with sad Tidings of all that had been done at Jerusalem unto him now Captive in Babylon Ezek. 33.21 and
Kingdom of Persia Remark the Second Hence Daniel nameth only Darius his settling the Kingdom consisting of 120 Provinces over which he set 120 Princes whereof Daniel was Chief c. Dan. 6.1 2 3. and this he did with all expedition even immediately after the Conquest of Babylon within the compass of that Year saith Dr. Lightfoot for which Haste Junius renders this Reason because he was now come to his Old Age which is call'd an Evil Age Eccles 12.1 and desir'd to see some Settlement before he died Josephus saith that Darius carry'd Daniel from Conquer'd Babylon along with him into Media out of his great Veneration to him because 1. He had foretold the fall of Belshazzar c. for which cause Nebuchadnezzar had favour'd Jeremy Jer. 39.11 c. 2. He saw in Daniel a Right Noble Spirit even the Spirit of the Holy God And 3. Because himself was now Old and unfit for Government and therefore Darius took Daniel along with him for his Assistance Jos Antiq. 10.12 N.B. 1. We read how Daniel Prophesied in the first Year of Belshazzar Dan. 7.1 c. of the four Monarchies which he calls Beasts because they were all Beast-like unruly troublers of the World especially of the Church in the World The Jews thought that when they saw the first Beast the Babylonian Kingdom destroy'd and themselves in hope of returning from Captivity they might enjoy sublime Peace and God's Plenty after their Return To this Daniel saith Nay in a plain Denial saying Three Beasts were yet to follow in troubling them and this Prophecy he wrote in Chaldee for a Caution to the Chaldees but Belsbazzar would not be caution'd but by Pride and Profaness ruin'd himself and all his N.B. 2. Daniel after that first Year of Belshazzar Prophesies again in his third and last Year Dan. 8.1 c. Now was Babylon closely besieged therefore Daniel could not be corporally at this time in Shushan the chief City in Persia but in Vision only ver 2. saith Maldonate tho' Josephus saith it was in Ecbatane a prime City in Media In this Chapter Daniel Prophesies how the Grecian Goat should destroy the Medo-Persian Ram as he had done the Babylonian and how in the 137th Year of the Grecian Monarchy when the Transgressions of the Jews are come to the full a little Horn should arise out of Alexander's Successors namely Antiochus Epiphanes which would cast down the Doctrine of Truth and its Professors to the ground prospering in such Practices for a little time which as Christ himself that Palmoni Hammadabbar or Excellent Speaker or Wonderful Numberer ver 13. Interprets to last not all out 7 Years which was much less than their 70 Years Suffering in Babylon for 23000 Natural Days of 24 Hours do but amount to Six Years Three Months and Twenty Days so Gracious was the Messiah to put so timely a period to his Peoples Sufferings at that time in their own Land ver 14 20 24. but the Prince of Princes against whom he Warreth shall at the end break him in pieces by laying a loathsom Disease upon him and so wrap him up without the hands of Man in the Sheet of Shame v. 25. This Prophecy Daniel writes in the Hebrew Dialect and all the following Chapters to the end of this Book because these all concerned the Jews to know as before he had writ in the Chaldean Tongue from the 2d Chap. ver 4. to this Chap. the 8th because it concern'd the Chaldeans c. This sad Vision made Daniel Sick out of Sympathy with Sion yet prudently he restrain'd his Sorrow and rose up to do the King's business ver 27. Which words make it manifest saith Polanus out of Calvin that Daniel was not now in Persia but in Babylon executing the Office of that Triumvirate or Chief of the three Princes who had the oversight of the 120 Governours whom Darius had plac'd over his 120 Provinces whose Accounts Daniel took both of Tribute and Affairs with his other two Co-partners N. B. 3. Darius being enamour'd with that excellent Spirit of Prophecy Prudence c. he beheld in Daniel design'd to preferr him over all the Princes and Presidents and to commit to him the Government of the whole Realm when he found himself disenabl'd for it by his Old Age Dan. 6.3 This singular Promotion of Daniel conceiv'd to be presently after the Conquest of Babylon and Settling of the Empire made this Holy Prophet a most obnoxious Eye-sore and object of Envy to all the Princes and Presidents who hereupon Club their Wit with the Devil as well as one with another ver 4. to find some fault in the Management of his High Matters that they might impeach him of High-Treason say Grotius and Vatablus and so take him out of their way but they failed in this Impious Project Remark the Third Is hereby Introduced No sooner had God promoted Daniel thus High for the good of his Church in her low Estate still in Babylon to have such a Friend in the Court as this prudent Prophet to Plead for them but presently the Devil imploys all his Imps and Instruments to Remove him out of the way and when they could find no Treason in him as to his Service of Man saith Grotius they resolve to find it in his Service of God They lay their Plot to destroy Daniel but God over-shoots the Devil in his own Bow Mark 1. Those Plotting Princes do Request of this King Darius to Establish a Royal but a most Irreligious Statute That whosoever shall ask a Petition of any God or Man for 30 days save of thoe O King he shall be cast into the Den of Lions ver 5 6 7 8. This Act of Vniformity by an Vnalterable Decree is the Plot. Mark 2. This too facile Old King now in his Dotage was easily overcome to pass this Act and to Sign it with his Signet Manual because saith Capellus it was accommodated to his ambitious Humour now flush'd up with his new Conquest of Babylon he can now swallow down Divine Honour done to him beside saith Junius this would exalt him above his Corrival Cyrus c. Mark 3. When Daniel understood what was done ver 9. hearing it proclaim'd He left the Court as unwholesome Air to breath in and retiring to his House he comfortably converseth with his God his Windows being ope as his Custom was ver 10. and this Custome he would not break in shutting his Windows now either to the scandal of the Weak or scorn of the Wicked who watched him and would have charged him with Dissimulation if he had shut them c. Mark 4. These Watchers found Daniel thus praying upon his Knees The Sun shall sooner stand still in Heaven than Daniel will stop his praying to his Father in Heaven Who can stand before Envy Prov. 27.4 those envious ones had now got matter enough they come with full Mouth to accuse Daniel to Darius ver 11 12 13. they call him in
enabled to hear a Word of Comfort which was this that Cambyses had ●ay hindring God's Temple laid the Foundation of the Persians Empire's Ruine for God ●●ll send the Prince of Greece Alexander the Great and others before him to overturn 〈◊〉 Empire c. ver 20. N.B. They spoil'd the Persians Plots against the Jews fi●●●● them other Work than to hinder God's House Michael the Messiah Prince of his Church orders and over-rules the whole Vniverse for its good c. ver 21. Thus some Converts 〈◊〉 have three touches from the Hand of Heaven before throughly Comforted Dan. XI and XII REmarks First Upon Dan. 11. 't is an History as well as a Prophecy Mark 1. The Angel Gabriel revealeth from Christ unto Daniel after his Prayer Dan 9. and his Fasting three Weeks Dan. 10. whereby he was prepared to receive this Prophecy the plain Naked Truth which should suddenly and certainly come to pass ver 2. where saith Grotius c. this eleventh Chapter ought to begin and from thence Gabriel explains the former Vision of the Ram and of the He-Goat Dan. 8. speaking only of such Kings of Persia as either hindred or help'd the Temple Mark 2. He foretels that the Persian Monarchy which had obstructed the building of God's Temple should be destroy'd by Alexander the Great after it was come to its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or heighth wherein it could bring into the Field even Millions of Men and cover the Seas with its Ships and thinking to drive down all before them ver 2 3. Mark 3. Then that Grecian Empire which swallow'd up the Persian when it seems in its Zenith and most Ruffling Grandeur expecting Embassadors at Babylon from all the World shall be broken like brittle ware and be divided into four of Alexander's Chieftains Cassander Antigonus Seleucus and Ptolomy ver 4. Mark 4. Then he foretels the Intestine Wars that should arise among those Successors of Alexander seven several times from ver 5 to ver 20. the last of which seven Wars was betwixt Ptolomy Philometer and Antiochus Epiphanes whom Gabriel calls a Vile Person ver 21. who should conquer Egypt ver 22 to 28. but be recall'd by Rumours ver 40 c. the Year before his Death his success ripen'd him for Ruine Mark 5. He foretels the sad State of the Jews all this Time who laying betwixt Egypt on the South and Syria on the North and so they were like Bread-corn betwixt two Mill-stones grinded to Powder during all those seven Wars aforesaid their marches to and fro being commonly through the Bowels of Judea but more especially by this Vile Antiochus not so much Epiphanes or Famous but Epimanes Infamous for his Madness against the Jews ver 28 30. to 39. and again ver 41 to 45. and 1 Maccab. Chap. 1.2.3.4.5 and 6. N.B. Though God's Church here went to wrack both by the North and by the South yet both North-wind and South shall blow good to it at last Cant. 4.16 God's Favour makes them Favonian or favourable Winds c. Remarks Secondly Upon Dan. 12. that brings in the Good and Comfort of the Church Mark 1. 'T is promis'd that Michael the strong Christ will protect his Church from the Persecutions of Antiochus that Type of Antichrist and deliver all his Elect Temporally or Eternally ver 1 2 3. Mark 2. Antiochus and so Antichrist's Time of Persecution is limitted more darkly ver 5 6. but more plainly upon Daniel's farther enquiry ver 8 to 12. The Man Christ Jesus ver 7. tells him the end shall not be till Time Times and half were over which he numbers fully in one thousand two hundred and ninety Days ver 11. before Antiochus's Death And then he adds forty five Days more ver 12. for some signal Mercy as that Victory Judas Maccabeus obtain'd about that time c. this Addition made the former to be one thousand three hundred and thirty five N.B. The number of the Beast Antichrist six hundred and sixty six if doubled make one thousand three hundred and thirty three and three Years and half make up one thousand three hundred and thirty five compleat Mark 3. Daniel is bid 1. To Seal up this Prophecy ver 4. the Secret of it was reserved to be made known in after Times And 2. He must be satisfied herewith and prepare for Death having a Promise both of Rest in his Grave and at his Resurrection out of it ver 9 13. here Daniel hath a kind Dismission from Troubles as Rev. 14.13 c. Esther CHAP. I. SOme General Remarks are requisite here before we come to the particular History As 1. Upon the Book 2. The Author And 3. The Time Remark the First In General concerning the Book it self whether it be Canonical is question'd by Athanasius and Nazianzen c. which they seem'd to doubt of because of the seven Apochryphal Fragments as so many Chapters were usually and abusively added and stitched to it I find indeed some Rabbins relate that when this Megillath or Volume of Esther comes to be read in it's course in the Jews Synagogues at their Divine Worship they have a Custome among them to cast only this Book of Esther upon the Ground before they read it and the Reason they render for their so doing is because they find not the Name of God or Lord in this whole Book But this Reason is in Truth no Reason if it be seriously consider'd what a Contexture of most eminent Passages and Acts of God's immediate Providences for relieving his Calamitous Church is contained in this History even such and so perspicuous as can scarcely be parallel'd in the whole Book of God any where or at any Time and Age. N.B. 1. This Book hath been constantly received as a part of the Canon of Sacred Scripture and reckoned among the Chetubin Hagiographa or Holy Writings by the Jewish Church notwithstanding the Name God or Lord be not named in it to which the Oracles of God were committed Rom. 3.2 that they might keep them carefully for and transmit them safely to Posterity and 't is more than probable yea it may be strongly presumed that the Jews were true to their Trust otherwise either our Lord Christ or his Holy Apostles who reproved their Rabbins for many other Corruptions c. would have rebuked them for their unfaithfulness in corrupting the Canon of the Scripture as a necessary Caution to the Christian Church N. B. 2. Rabbi Abraham the Spaniard relateth this Book of Esther is had in so much Reverence among the Jews that so oft as they do hear the mention of Haman's Name read in it they do even to this Day with their Fists and Hammers so beat upon the Boards and Benches as if they were beating upon Haman's Head it self to break out his Brains c. Remark the 2d in general concerning the Author of this Book N. B. 1. Sanctius saith out of Augustin and Isidore that Ezra was its Author But Bonartius answers
Edifices and with Inhabitants taking a Poll of all the People ver 5 to 69. And Thirdly How He and the Chief Men gave Gifts to the Cities Treasury ver 70 to 73. Remark the First Upon the first Part is Pious and Prudent Nehemiah pitcheth upon such-men like himself for Piety and Prudence to be Chief Captains of the City-Watch namely his two tried and found faithful Friends Hanani and Hananiah to preserve the Cities Peace and principally to watch its Walls and Gates against the Incursions of the Enemy He chose not those principal Officers out of any carnal respect because they were related to him but because they both feared God above many which is the truest and surest ground of a firm Fidelity Mark 1. Though nothing be affirmed hereof concerning Hanani here the former of them yet enough had been Recorded before of his Piety and Zeal for God and his Countrey in taking such a tedious Journey from Jerusalem to Shushan to inform Nehemiah of the sad Estate of the City and to implore his helping hand to relieve it Chap. 1.1 2. so after such a plain Demonstration 't was needless to add here a new Commendation Mark 2. But Hananiah of whom no such account had been given before save only as a Repaizer Chap. 3.8 hath Ish Emeth Hebr. a Man of Fidelity given him here for his Character and one that feared God Merabbim Hebr. above many exceeding and excelling other Men therein or for many Days as Vatablus renders it to shew he was no Novice but stanch and try'd to whom Matters of Moment might safely be committed c. Remark the Second To those two faithful Favourites Nehemiah committed the Castody of the whole City the latter of which had been the Keeper of his Court and Palace wherein he lived like a Viceroy in great Splendour though at his own Charge as above Now Nehemiah having found him faithful over a little makes him Master over much Matth. 25.31 and knowing that they both feared God which was the best Defence against all Temptations to perfidiousness that they might meet with in his absence as other Nobles had met before this and the best ground of his Confidence in them Therefore he constituted them the Shomerims Hebr. or Keepers of the City-gates charging them not to open them till broad Day ver 3. when the Enemies approaching saith Masius may more manifestly be discovered and the Citizens all up and ready in Case of an Assault and their Office every Night was to feel with their Hands saith Junius whether the Gates were made Fast ver 3. moreover the Citizens were set to Watch upon the Walls saith Mariana in that watching Place which was next his own House every one in their Turns to make them more careful for their own safety Remark the Third ver 4 Shews the necessity of keeping this Order of a General Watch upon the Walls because the Circumference of the City was large six Miles in Compass saith Wolphius and the People but few that had yet return'd from their Captivity and their Houses were not yet generally compleated but they made a shift with sheds of Boards for present use near the Walls and many of the few that returned were dishearten'd by the Threats of the Adversary to remain there so retired back to Babylon and Persia and with them Zerubbabel saith Sanctius The Second Part is Nehemiah's replenishing Jerusalem with Inhabitants Remark the First While this good Man was musing in his Mind what Mischief might arise from the fewness of Citizens that inhabited the City at last he bethinks himself of such means whereby the City might be better Peopled and thereby become the better preserved ver 5 6 to 69. the means he made use of was to Congregate the Nobles Rulers and People and to take a Catalogue of them that so it might be known who appertained to the City and whose Calling lay therein and whose Inheritances lay in the Country that he might saith Grotius recal the Ancient Citizens and their Families to replenish the City N.B. Wolphius Objects here why was God so angry with David for this very Action of taking a Poll of his People c. He Answer 's it thus Nehemiah had just Causes to do so both for a sufficient Replenishment of the City with Citizens and for raising a summ of Mony out of that Poll to supply present importunate Necessities and likewise for a more Select number of Soldiers in this Emergency whereas David was no way urged by any of those urgent and necessary cogent Causes and Reasons It may farther be added what David did in that Case was not so much from want as from Wantonness Pride and Presumption c. Remark the Second Though this Act of Nehemiah was meerly a prudential Act commonly practised by prudent State-Polititians that know not God in Cases of the like Emergency yet this good Man ascribes this piece of Prudence not to himself or to his own Wit and Wisdom but to the Gift and Grace of God both directing and inclining him to it ver 5. wherein he humbly acknowledg'd with the Holy Apostle that the best of Men are not sufficient of themselves so much as to think a good Thought but his sufficiency is wholly from God 2 Cor. 3.5 and without him we can do nothing John 15.3 His humble Heart ingenuously owneth that this good Motion so useful and advantagious to the Church of God was handed down from Heaven to him He heard the joyful sound of God's goings in it and felt the Footsteps of his Anointed therein Psalm 89.15 51. N.B. Nehemiah made it more manifest afterwards that he firmly believed this good Motion of mustering up this Multitude of People came from God for out of them he taketh every Tenth Man to replenish the City with Inhabitants Chap. 11.1 2. after they had been first prepared by hearing the Law Chap. 8.2 Remark the Third The following Catalogue from ver 6 to 69. is the same in Substance saith Masius with that in Ezra 2. ver 1 to 68. they both begin and end alike they only differ in number as hath been noted before upon that Place This difference doth not at all weaken saith Wolphius the Truth of either of those sacred Catalogues seeing many Mutations saith Masius might be made both in Names and in Numbers within the Compass of an hundred Years and such a distance saith He as betwixt the first Catalogue at Zerubbabel's return and this here c. The Last Part is Nehemiah's Collection of Stores for the common good Remark the First This Collection was made ver 70 c. for the maintenance of the Ministry saith Osiander to which the Tirshatha Nehemiah's Name of Governour in the Persick Language gives Liberally and so did the Roshe Haaboth Hebr the principal Fathers c. according to their Ability which was very laudable being so lately delivered from Captivity N.B. This condemns the Custom of such saith He that tho' freed from Antichrist
Though we have four Terms expresly declared by Daniel concerning the Persecution of Antiochus As 1. By the two thousand three hundred Days Dan. 8.14 which makes six Years three Months and twenty Days 2. A Time Times and part of a Time Dan. 7.25 and 12.7 that is three Years and a part the former Date ended before the Sanctuary was defiled but during this second Term the daily Sacrifice was discontinued 3. Another Time set is one thousand two hundred and ninety Days Dan. 12.11 which ended at such Time as God's Altar was rebuilt and God's true Worship was restored by Judas Maccabeus And 4. Forty five Days more are added to the number aforesaid making them one thousand three hundred and thirty five Days Dan. 12.12 which forty five Days overplus ended at the Death of Antiochus most joyful Tidings to God's poor persecuted People for notwithstanding Antiochus's pretended Repentance c. we are told of 2 Maccab. 9.13 28. and Chap. 11. the Jews could have no Confidence in the Words of such an Hypocrite but his Death did fully free them from all their fears of him Yet may we not expect to find any such set Times of Antichrist's Persecution to be set down upon Record by Daniel the Old Testament Prophet no that Work was reserved for John the Divine in the last Book of the New Testament Wherein the number of the Beast or Antichrist's Name carries a marvelous Harmony with these numbers in Daniel for the number of that Man of Sin is said to be six hundred and sixty six Rev. 13.18 now twice six hundred and sixty six make one thousand three hundred and thirtȳt two and three Years and an half make up Daniel's number which is one thousand three hundred and thirty five compleat c. Remark the Fourth Dr. Willet hath most learnedly answer'd great Graserus his great Arguments wherein he contends to prove that this Prophecy of Daniel doth Literally and Historically concern the Roman Antichrist and not this Mad Antiochus The Discourse is extended into ten large Exercises too long here to Epitomize and therefore must I refer the Reader to Dr. Willet's Appendix to his Hexapla upon Daniel page 495 to 520. As likewise to Mr. Joseph Mede's Works who makes the History of the Type Antiochus to lead us by the Hand to understand the Mystery of the Antitype Antichrist that grand Head of the Apostasy in the last Times foretold 1 Tim. 4.1 c. bringing in the Doctrine of Daemons the forbidding of Meats and Marriages c. He shall magnifie himself as Antiochus did Dan. 11.37 Above all 2 Thess 2.3 4 to ver 10. Rev. 13. per totum and Rev. 17.3 c. as to Antiochus's Magnuzzim Heb. the God of Forces which he worshipped Dan. 11.38 the same Mr. Mede most excellently Interprets the Daemons or Tatelar Saints and Angels which Antichrist worships together with our Lord Christ in the Romish Church Nor is this any Novel Opinion for many of the Fathers make this Magnuzzim the Idol which Antichrist should Worship So that none comes nearer the Truth among many other Conjectures than Mr. Mede Much more of this abstruse Point the Reader may find in my Discovery of the Person and Period of Antichrist A little Book which Dr. Thomas Goodwin approved and promoted while he lived c. Apocrypha CHAP. II. Luke III. AS the first Means better than the doubtful Books of the Apocrypha for demonstrating the State of the Jewish Church in that Interval betwixt Nehemiah and the Messiah was Daniel's Prophetick History of Divine Infallible Inspiration As before all along in Chapter the first out of the Old Testament So this second Chapter produceth the like infallible Evidences concerning the same Subject out of the New Testament equally of Divine Authority with the Old Namely out of the Genealogy of Christ Recorded in Luke Chap. 3. yet with this difference betwixt Daniel and Luke the Prophet relateth the Things that befel the Jews without the naming of their Persons but this Evangelist Names only the Persons that succeeded from Time to Time without any Narrative of the things that befel them Remark the First 'T is the concurrent Judgment of Learned Men that Daniel doth not only Prophetically declare the things which occurred the Jewish Church until the first coming of Christ though they did not fall out as some say until three hundred Years after Daniel's Day but also the things that would occurr the Christian Church in the last Days how she should be mostly afflicted by Antichrist as the Jewish had been by Antiochus yet shall she be fully delivered by Christ's second coming Thus Cyprian was wont to Comfort his Christian Friends in his Day with these Words Veniet Antichristus fed superveniet Christus Antichrist will come but then Christ will come after him and overcome him Thus he Interprets Dan. 12.1 2 c. At that Time that is in the last Days and toward the end of the World shall Michael stand up c. N.B. Antichrist was not revealed in Cyprian's Time which Helvicus computeth the second Century betwixt two hundred and forty and two hundred and fifty Years after Christ which was long before that Revelation of the Man of Sin Now when Michael or Christ had made this double discovery unto Daniel both concerning the Malady and Remedy of the Jewish and of the Christian Church then giveth He Daniel to his great Comfort a fair and favourable Dismission out of this Life before the former of those two Confusions come upon God's Church Dan. 12.13 telling him Thou shalt Dye not only without fearing or feeling those troubles but also in a firm Faith both of the Church's glorious Deliverance and of his own blessed Resurrection out of the Dust of Death to an Everlasting Life after thy Soul hath rested in Abraham 's Bosom and thy Body hath got its sweet sleep in the Grave as in a Bed of Down then thou and all the Just shall have full joys beginning here some say for 1000 Years but compleated in Heaven eternally Remark the Second The Interspace betwixt the Second Temple and the Birth of Christ containing about 500 Years is filled up with Three Dynasties saith Dr. Prideaux the First is The Dukes or Chieftains in number 14 all Recorded by the Evangelist Luke under the Infallible Conduct of the Holy Spirit 's Inspiration Luke 3.23 24 25 26 27. This he doth by Ascent from the Mother of our Lord the Virgin Mary up to Zerubbabel the Builder of the Second Temple N. B. Matthew's Genealogy of Christ Matth. 1.1 2 c. is made by Descent from Abraham and so from David c. that Joseph tho' not Christ's Natural but only his Legal Father as being Marry'd to the Virgin Mary might appear to be of David 's Line of whom the Messiah was to come for the Jews Conviction tho' he was but his supposed Father But Luke runs up Christ's Genealogy by his Mothers side even as high as Adam and
in the best p 370 392. Servants ought not to slander their Masters p. 390 407. But be faithful to them p. 540. Sin hath many degrees from bad to worse p. 369. It may lye long before reckon'd for p. 414. How it is from God p. 472 473. Sincerity is best known by Secresie p. 558. Sodomites suppress'd by Josiah p. 618. Solomon's Sapience in all his Structures both for Sacred and Civil Services p. 442 to 458. Souls have no Sexes in Point of Prophecy p. 616. Strive who can get the greatest Interest in Christ as they did in David p. 409. Sun standing and going backward p. 609. Horses of the Sun p. 619. Supper of the Lord is the best Feast that ever was p. 664. T. Temple the best of Buildings p. 444 445 c. Set contrary to Romish Churches p. 449. How it was a Type p. 450 to 452. It and the City were Burned p 628. And Built again p. 691. The many Sentiments upon Ezekiel's Temple c. Appendix p. 754. The Literal and Mystical Sence thereof p. 755. Reasons why 't is Mystical Ibid. Tempt Satan doth us to Sin that he may accuse us for Sin p. 402. Testament the Old Testament closeth up with a sweet Sentence p. 733 734. Thanksgiving Days for Deliverance ought to be observed p. 689 718 719. Topheth what it signifies p. 588. and p. 619. Truth not always known by the Major Vote p. 515. U. Valour is vain when God is against the valourous p. 566. Virgin forced may be vexed but not violated p. 377. Unbelief hinders good Men of God's Blessings as well as the bad p. 547. The three grand Doubts of it answered p. 569. W. War of Sennacherib against Hezekiah is related like a Comedy p. 601. Wealth lurches the Worldling as the Ass his Rider p. 401. And as Servants did Shimei p. 434. There is no Content in the Confluence of it p. 509. Weary Men sooner are for good than for Evil p. 473. Wicked Manasseh yet repented p. 612. Widows of Ministers ought to be cared for p. 553. Will the Determination of Man's Will by God's Decree is consistent c. p. 423. Wit of a Woman is quick at a pinch p. 641. Wives faults are fixed on their Husbands not hindring them p. 511. Must have Husbands Consent in matters of Moment p. 535. Wizards suppress'd by Josiah p. 621. Word of God which is certain must not be forsaken for uncertain Wor●● Vol. 3. p. 477. X. Y. Youth is full of Vanity p. 615. Z. Zeal of Elijah p. 500 c. Zephany when he Prophesi'd c. p. 624. FINIS THE FOURTH VOLUME Of the SACRED History and Mystery OF The New-Testament Logically Discust and Theologically Improved Beginning at The Birth of Christ and ending at the last of the Revelations Wherein is held forth the Life of Christ and the Lives of all the Apostles Tora oar Hebr. Prov. 6.23 Lex lux the Law is light If the Law of Moses be the Light of Men tho' it be Vailed how much more is the Gospel of the Messiah who was the true Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the World John 1.9 Seeing it is so clearly Revealed and so plainly Explained here The Preacher sought to find out words of delight even words of Truth Eccles 12.10 Philip said to the Eunuch Understandest thou what thou readest he answered how can I except some man guide me Acts 8.30 31. By Christopher Ness Minister of the Gospel in London LONDON Printed by Thomas Snowden for the Author in the Year 1696. To the truly Noble Lord Judge Rookesby My Lord ANtiquity of Pedigree may most truly be stiled the worthless Moss of Antient Times and is too often found to be only a Nobility by Parchment The Etymologist doth define Nobilis quasi prae aliis Virtute Notabilis intimating that the more Noble in Title a Man is the more Notable in Virtue he ought to be 'T is the saying of one of the Heathen Sages Nobilitas sola est atque Unica Virtus signifying that Titles of Honour should be the shadows of Virtue hereupon a morose Philosopher affirmed that Honours without Virtues are but the Mask of Vices A Noble Genealogy from Antient Times is but the matter of true Nobility 't is Virtue only that is the form and soul of it which doth animate and quicken it and without which it is no better than a dead carcass that soon putrifieth into stench and dwindles away into nothing when Honour is not found growing upon the back of Virtue and is not born up by it as by i●s supporting Pillar Hereupon it was once a most tart Sarcasm of one who rose to Honour by Virtue to one who ended his Honour by Vice Meum genus à me incipit Tuum verò in te desinit and the witty Poet singeth Quae nos non fecimus ipsi vix ea nostra voco The Platonick Definition of Nobility is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in English its sense is that the best Gentility is a virtuous exercise of generous Manners Upon this account the Men of Berea were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is better Gentlemen or more Noble than those of Thessalonica Acts 17.11 Assuredly that Nobility is the best and most truly Divine where God is the Top of the Kin and Religion the Root of it c. Now My Lord those happy Conjunctions I speak without vanity are most happily found in your Lordships both Parentage and Person in whom Honour and Holiness had their mutual and reciprocal Splendour For first I had the happiness to have a personal and particular knowledge of your Honourable Descent from a truly honourable and holy Father Coll. Rookesby who was pleased to dignifie me with a Call of being his Chaplain and whom I thereby became acquainted with c. to be a truly Noble and Religious Patriot of the late designed and so much desired Reformation c. as also from a godly Mother and Grandmother both which I very well knew to be grave Matrons and Mothers in Israel and cordial well-wishers in their capacities to the power of Godliness And secondly as to your own Person I have known your Lordship long to be an unfeigned Friend of our Lord the Bridegroom and of his Royal Bride the Church Tantus quisque est quantus ille est apud Deum All Honours are well measured by the nearest approach to the King of Kings who is the best Fountain of the truest Honour therefore the right valuation of every Man amongst Men must be according to the valuation which that Man hath with the great God This or that Man becomes not to be honourable because he commendeth himself or is commended by his fellow-creatures but 't is he whom the Lord commendeth 2 Cor. 10.18 The Custom among the Jews and Persians was to call their most honourable Courtiers Men of the King's presence Thus haughty Haman was so characteriz'd and after him Modest Mordecai had the same Character How much
many Vndertook to write it Luke 1.1 yet was it fit work for none but for the Four Evangelists who were all extraordinarily qualified by Divine Inspiration for that High Enterprize and were Eye-witnesses of those great Truths which They do distinctly yet coherently Record concerning Christ Hereupon though others Attempted yet none Effected it save these Four who 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Took it in hand Matthew wrote his Gospel Eight years after Christ Mark Ten Luke Fifteen and John forty two According to the common opinion from the most Antient Copies Whoever writes the Life of our Lord Jesus must light their Lamp at this Golden Candlestick having these four flaming Candles all lighted by Fire from Heaven To fetch any feigned Stories of Christ not founded upon Gospel-Evidence from other fabulous Authors is but a speaking wickedly for God and talking deceitfully for Him Job 13.7 As my Design is to Avoid this latter so my Desire is to Observe the former In this Essay I shall shift off and shun the cunningly Devised Fables Artificially compiled and composed not without some shew of Wisdom and Truth such as the Romanists lying Legends abound withal It being but a laborious loss of Time to search into such Things whereof we can have neither Proof nor Profit the Gains will not pay for the Pains And the Task about Toys can never be worthy the Toil 1 Tim. 4.7 2 Tim. 4.4 Tit. 1.14 and 2 Pet. 1.16 I shall therefore keep close to the more sure word ver 19. Scripture Authority N. B. The Life of the Lord Jesus hath a manifold preheminency Col. 1.18 above the best Lives of the choicest and chiefest of all mortal men in many respects As First The Life which Christ lived upon Earth was not only a Godly Life but it was a Life without the least praevarication from the Rule This Immaculate Lamb did lead such an Immaculate Life that he challeng'd his most Critical Adversaries to convince him of any one sin John 8.46 c. Secondly The Life of Christ was not only a Godly Life in compleat Universal Obedience to the Commands of God but it was the very Life of God 'T is said of some men that they are Alienated from the Life of God Eph. 4.18 that is They cannot live a Godly Life because they do not partake of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 not having the Image of God Imprinted on them nor the Life of God Imparted to them But 't is said expresly that Christ's Life was God manifested in the Flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 and that Christ is the express Image of God's Person and the Brightness of His Glory Heb. 1.3 The Father and the Son are called Equals in the Greek Plural Phil. 2.6 that is every way Equal in Being Life and Operation Christ is Alius from the Father not aliud yet Co-essential and Co-equal not a secondary Inferior God as Arrius saith Thirdly That Christ led not only the Godly Life of a mere Man but also the Godly Life of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-Man So he had a Duplication of a Godly-Life both that of an Holy God and that also of an Holy Man and both in purity and perfection Fourthly Christ lived in his Humane Nature not only a single Temporal Godly Life upon Earth like that of a Godly Man to wit from his Birth to his Burial but even a Double one also to wit from his Resurrection to his Ascension beside that of Eternal Life in the same Nature in Heaven Fifthly Over and Above all These may be added That the Godly Life which Christ led upon Earth as the Son of Man was the light of Men John 1.4 His Life was a Lovely and Lively Looking Glass for all men to Dress themselves by in their Generation-Work both of Doing God's Work and of suffering God's Will The Life of Christ is the most perfect pattern of all True Piety for our Practice and Imitation We must all learn of him Mat. 11.29 and we should walk as he walked 1 John 2.6 From hence naturally ariseth this great Fundamental and most Evangelical Divine Truth That The most Sanctimonious Life of our Lord Jesus Christ is the light the Lanthorn and Law whereby all Men Women and Children ought to be Directed in all parts both of Active and Passive obedience while they live in this lower World They must all live as their Lord lived For the further and fuller Illustration of the light Hereof let me call in besides those two Texts aforementioned to wit Mat. 11.29 and 1 John 2.6 Hereafter Amplified other corroborating Scriptures As First It is expresly asserted by the Apostle Peter that the life of Christ was the leaving us an Example 1 Pet. 2.21 the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a Copy to write after A Samplar to work by and the most perfect pattern to Regulate our steps in walking the good ways of God Secondly The Apostle Paul affirmeth that whom God doth foreknow them he doth Praedestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Son c. Rom. 8.29 Now this Conformity to Christ is extensive 1. To his Holiness and Diligence in Doing his Father's work He must be about it Luke 2.49 and it was Meat and Drink to Him to be so employed John 4.34 2. To his Humility and Patience in suffering his Father's Will Mat. 26.39 and thus the same Apostle was Ambitious to become conformable to Christ's Death as well as to his Life Phil. 3.10 And 3. To his Happiness and Glory in Heaven as the Wages of that Double work on Earth which also was the Top-branch of the same Apostle's Ambition That His Body might be fashioned like the glorious body of Christ which is the principal Standard of Glory Phil. 3.21 1 Cor. 15.20 49 c. Thirdly Our Lord Jesus himself saith That He hath given us an Example for doing as he hath done c. John 13.15 The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a pointing out our way to us and therefore are we so oft bid to Follow Him and if we be Right Followers of Christ we must Tread in the same Foot-steps of Christ In so Doing we shall find that his footsteps drop fatness for us to gather up for the fatning of our Souls Psal 65.11 And if we be Disciples of Christ we must learn of Him to be lowly and Meek c. Mat. 11.29 we must learn to be Holy as He was 1 Pet. 1.15 and p●re as He 1 John 3.3 and the same mind must be in us that was in Christ Phil. 2.5 act as a Picture resembles a Man in outward Lineaments only but as a Child his Father in Inward Dispositions also for Christ is our Father Isa 9.6 And thus are we bid to Preach forth the Praises Vertues and Graces of Christ as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies 1 Pet. 2.9 Our Lives should be as so many Sermons upon Christ's Life while we strive to express Him to the World
them in Honesty for he had Moral Justice which he would have acted Luke 23.20 c. and a natural Conscience which restrained him from that foul act of Injustice He was persuaded in his Mind that Jesus was Innocent and the Jews out of Envy had delivered Jesus into his hands Mat. 27.18 by the frivolous charges they brought against him Loth he was to Sin against the Light of his Conscience though but an Heathen How many Christians as well as those Jews did Pilate excel herein tho' a poor Pagan N.B. Note well Alas How many fall short of this Heathen in this his honesty who may rise up in Judgment at the last Day to condemn them as Mat. 12.41 42. N.B. Look how the Lepers Conscience smore them in the midst of their Jollity saying to them We do not well to tarry here c. 2 King 7.9 So Men's Consciences tell them They do not well to Swear Whore Lye c. yet even those call'd Christians go on still in such lend courses that even this blind Heathen may shame them out of their sins but if not their Rebelling against Light Job 24.13 and their continued courses in Sin against the checks and chidings of their own Consciences will be costly to them at the last To have a Worm or Snake crawling in a Man's Bowels though it should keep quiet sometimes is judged worse ro him than the worst of Deaths yet is this nothing to the Worm of Conscience N. B. Note well Which is a furious reflection of the Soul upon it self and upon its own wilful folly and now most woful misery This is a Worm that cannot be fled from as all other Plagues may but is like the Ague the Sick Man carries along with him and no gallant room or merry Company whatever hope of relief he hath therein can give him ease Nay 't is a thousand times worse than the worst or most Pestilential Ague in the World though never so torturing tormenting for this is a continual Remorse without Intervals of Intermission 'T is a Worm that never dies Mark 9.44 but ever and for ever sets the Soul upon the Rack notwithstanding all this Men will not refrain from sinning against Conscience as Pilate at least for a while did here until They Dye and then their Friends scramble for their Goods Earth-Worms for their Bodies and Devils for their Souls wherein which is worst of all this Never-Dying-Worm is unremoveably seated and goes along with them to torment them for ever as an Addition to the Torments of Hell Alas How many go dancing in their Bolts and delighting in their Bondage down to Hell to whom the Preaching of Damnation is but like the Painting of a Toad which Men can look upon and handle without Affrightment Conscience I say 1 Cor. 10.27 29. which is God's Spy and Man's Overseer is too little observed In an Angry Conscience we may Read an Angry God The fifth Circumstance in Christ's Indictment is the Matter of their Accusation which is reduced to three heads 1. His Perverting the People 2. Forbidding to pay Tribute to Caesar 3. His making himself a King Luke 23.1 2. His Accusers would first have Imposed upon Pilate's Belief in the general saying If he were not a Malefactor c. John 18 30. They seem'd by no means to break their own Law of slaying the Innocent Exod. 23.7 All whom Christ cured could have answered He was no Malefactor but a Benefactor to them Had they asked others as Christ bad them John 18.21 How many might have stood up to Witness for him more than as their many false Witnesses they Suborn'd to Witness against him Had they asked Nicodemus one of the Sanhedrim he could Witness that No Man could do such Miracles as he did except God be with him John 3.2 or the Blind Man John 9.33 or the People Mark 7.37 they would have said he was no Malefactor but did All things Well Or their own Officers and Sergeants sent to take him without Legal Summons they could tell them Never Man spake like this Man John 7.46 yet must Innocent Jesus be a Malefactor though they could not prove What evil he had done Luke 23.22 Even in the Judgment of an Heathen Judge before whom these shameless Chief Priests were not ashamed to turn sordid Informers against their own Country-man yea the best of that Country and most Innocent of all Mankind in the whole World and hereof more particularly 1. Representing him a Seducer and Perverter of the People 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gr. As if he had turned them up side down and made them run out of their right Minds and Wits Luke 23.2 and stirred them up to Sedition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gr. ver 5. as if he had caused an Earthquake in them to throw their Church and State from off the Hinges Thus Christ was Accused by those Wicked Priests who were far worse than Pilate of the same Crime that Elijah was by Wicked Ahab for being a troubler of Israel 1 King 18 17. Who only call'd People off from the Worship of Idols to the true God as the Messiah did the Jews from their corrupt conversations not perverting nor subverting but truly converting them into the way of Truth The same false Accusation Tertullus laid to Paul's charge Acts 24.5 N. B. Note well Now if so precious a Man as Paul than whom saith Chrysostom the Earth never bare a better since it bore Christ were counted and called 〈◊〉 Pest c. let us not think much if we be so slandered c. 2. As they Accused Christ to Pilate of his Heretical Doctrine or Heresie in their first charge So now of Sedition both in the Law being made Capital Crimes Deut. 17.2 8 12. in denying Tribute to Cesar which was notoriously contrary to both his Preaching and Practice Mat. 22.21 Mat. 17.24 25. He rendered to Caesar the things that were Caesar's and rather than offend those who might well have exempted so publick and so profitable a person Works a Miracle for payment of his Tribute c. 3. They accused him likewise for making himself a King which was more false than the former in both which they make him guilty of High-Treason especially in this last yet most falsly for when that People whose Bellies he had filled with a Miracle of Multiplying the five Loaves would have made him King by force John 6.15 c. He withdrew himself from them and absconded in a Mountain Apart to Avoid that Royal Honour which their blind devotion would have conferred upon him as the Superstitious still do with their Will-Worship at this Day Nay Jesus was so far from being Ambitious to be made a King N. B. Note well That he would not be made so much as a Judge in Civil Matters no not the lower Office of an Arbitrator Luke 12.14 alluding to the Taunt cast upon Moses Exod. 2.14 because his Errand into the World was not to be busied about Secular but