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A35537 An exposition with practical observations continued upon the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-seventh chapters of the book of Job being the substance of thirty-five lectures / by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1664 (1664) Wing C776; ESTC R15201 593,041 687

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few are there in power who do not much iniquity who do not either for want of better information or of a better conscience oppress grieve and afflict those that have to do with them or are subject to them God may do what he will yet will do nothing but what is right How infinitely then is God to be exalted in his truth and righteousness And thus the word of truth exalts him Deut. 32.4 2 Chr. 19.7 Rom 9.14 There is no unevenness much less aberration in any of the ways of God he never trod awry nor took a false step Who can say unto him without great iniquity thou hast wrought iniquity Hence we may infer If God works no iniquity in any of his wayes whether in his general or special providences Then All ought to sit down quietly under the workes of God Though he bring never so great judgments upon nations he doth them no wrong though he break his people in the place of dragons and cover them with the shadow of death he doth them no wrong Though he sell his own people for nought yet he doth them no wrong All which and several other grievances the Church sadly bemoans Psal 44. yet without raising the least dust concerning the justice of God or giving the least intimation of iniquity in those several sad and severe wayes Secondly We should not only sit down quietly under all the dispensations of God as having no iniquity in them but exalt the righteousness of God in all his dispensations as mingled also sprinkled with mercy Though we cannot see the righteousness of God in some of them yet we must believe he is not only so but merciful in all of them though the day be dark we cannot discern how this or that su es with the righteousnes much less with the goodness and mercy of ●od yet sit down we ought in this faith that both this and that is righteous yea that God is good to Israel in the one and in the other When the prophet was about to touch upon that string he first laid down this principle as unquestionable Jer. 12.1 Righteous art thou O Lord yet give me leave to plead with thee about thy Judgments Why doth the way of the wicked prosper Why is it thus in the world I take the boldness to put these questions O Lord yet I make no question but thou art righteous O Lord. It becomes all the sons of men to rest patiently under the darkest providences of God And let us all not only not charg God foolishly but exalt him highly and cry up both his righteousness and kindness towards all his people For who can say to God thou hast wrought iniquity Having in several other passages of this book met with this matter also I here briefly pass it over JOB Chap. 36. Vers 24 25. 24. Remember that thou magnifie his work which men behold 25. Every man may see it man may behold it afar off THese two verses contain the third advice counsel or exhortation given by Elihu to Job stirring him up to give glory to God in his providential proceedings with him There are three things considerable in these two verses First The general duty commanded which is to magnifie the work of God Secondly We have here a special reason or ground of that duty the visibility and plainness yea more than so the illustriousness of his work The work of God is not only such as some men may see but such as every 〈◊〉 ●ay see yea behold afar off Thirdly We have here an incentive to provoke to this duty in the first words of the Text Remember Vers 24. Remember that thou magnifie his work which men behold To Remember imports chiefly these two things First to call to mind what is past Mat. 26.75 Then Peter remembred the words of Christ. Secondly To remember is to keep somewhat in mind against the time to come in which sence the Law runs Exod. 20.8 Remember the rest-rest-day that is keep it in mind that when-ever it cometh or upon every return of that day 〈◊〉 may be in a fit posture and preparation for it Remember the rest or sabbath day to keep it holy To remember in this place is set I conceive in a double opposition First To forgetfulness of the duty here called for remember and do not forget it Secondly To the slight performance of the duty here called for the magnifying of the work of God Remember that thou magnifie As if he had said Be thou daily and duely affected with it do not put it off with a little or a bare remembrance the matter is weighty consider it fully As if Elihu had said to Job Thou hast much forgotten thy self and gone off from that which is thy proper work I have heard thee much complaining of the workes of God but thy work should have been to magnifie the work of God Though God hath cast thee down and laid thee low yet thy business should have been to exalt the work of God Remember it would much better become thee to act another part than this thou shouldest have acted the part of a magnifier of the work of God not the part of a complainer gainst it Remember that thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Augeas extollas ejus opus non accuses ut nunc facis Merc. Magnifie The root signifieth to encrease and extol We may consider a twofold magnifying of the work of God There is an inward magnifying of the work of God and there is an outward magnifying of the work of Go● First There is 〈◊〉 ●●d magnifying of the work of God when we think highly 〈◊〉 it thus did the Virgin in her song Luke 1.46 My soul doth magnifie the Lord. Her heart was raised up and stretched out in high thoughts of God Secondly There is an outward magnifying of the work of God To speak highly of his work is to magnify his work to live holily and fruitfully is to magnifie his work We cannot make any addition to the work of God there is no such magnifying of it but we must strive to give the works of God their full dimension and not lessen them at all As we must not diminish the number of his works so we must not diminish the just weight and worth of them There is such a charge of God to the Prophet about his word Jer. 26.2 Go tell the people all the words that I command thee to speak unto them diminish not a word Deliver thy message in words at length or in the full length of those words in which it was delivered unto thee We then magnifie the wo●k of God when we diminish not a tittle As we cannot add any thing to it so we must neither abate nor conceal any thing of it To magnifie is not to make the works of God great but to declare and set forth the greatness of them that 's the magnifying here especially intended Remember
praise him whether men do or no. All thy works shall praise thee saith David Psal 145.10 What then should they do for whom they are wrought The latter part of the verse shew what they will do who know what God hath wrought for them Thy Saints saith he shall bless thee They who have as most have low though●s can never give high p●aises of the works of God Thirdly In that this counsel and exhortion is given to Job in that this spur is as it were put to his sides Remember that thou magnifie Note The best men need monitours and remembrancers to quicken them about their duty of magnifying the works of God The Lord though he needeth not yet will have us to be his remembrancers to do our works for us if we would have our works done the Lord would have us by prayer to mind him of our own and of all his peoples condition Isa 62.6 Ye that are the Lords remembrancers so we put in the Margine and in the Text ye that make mention of the Lord c. The Lord will have us to be his remembrancers And though he is ever mindful of his Covenant yet he liketh it well to be put in mind of it But O what need have we of a remembrancer to put us in mind of the work of God and to magnifie his work We need a dayly remembrancer to put us in mind of what we should do how much more of what God hath done We need to be minded of that which 't is a wonder how we can forget our latter end or how frayle we are how much more do we need to be minded of those duties which fit us for our latter end and lead us to those enjoyments which never end F●urthly Observe Such is the sinfulness of mans heart and his sluggishness that he hardly remembers to magnifie God for those works which he cannot but see Elihu urgeth Job and with him all men to remember that they magnifie even that work of his which men behold and which every man may see How slack are they in or to that great duty of magnifying God who when they see or may see if they will his mighty works yet mind not the magnifying of him Fifthly Observe Some works of providence are so plain that every man that doth not wilfully shut his eyes may behold them He is altogether stupid and blockish that seeth not what all may see Hence the Psalmist having said O Lord how great are thy works concludeth such among brutes and fools Psal 92.6 The brutish man knoweth not neither doth a fool understand this It was the saying of Plato an Heathen That man is worthy his eyes should be pulled out of his head who doth not lift them up on high that he may admire the wisdome of the Creatour in the wonderfull ●abrick of the world I may adde and in the works of providence Are they not such that as the Prophet speaks He that runs may read them Sixthly Consider why doth Elihu thus charge it upon Job surely to humble him for his sin in that he did not magnifie God for his works Hence Note It is a great aggravation of our neglect of praising God for his works or of our not magnifying the works of God seeing his works are obvious to every man even to the weaker and ruder sort of men If the very blind may see them how sinfully blind are they who see them not The works of God should be sought out Psal 111.2 4. If they lie in corners yet they are to be sought out and they are sought out of them that have pleasure therein If God should hide his work under ground if God should put his Candle under a bushel as Christ saith men do not Mat. 5. yet 't is our duty to seek it out and set it upon a Candlestick that all may behold it and praise him for it Now if the most hidden works of God must be sought out that they may be magnified surely then when the works of God stand forth and offer themselves to our view and we cannot tell which way to draw our eyes from them how great a sin is it not to behold them not to give him the glory of them Seventhly Observe To magnifie the works of God is mans duty yea it is a most necessary and indispensible duty This is the poynt chiefly intended by Elihu in his present discourse with Job This containeth the sum and substance of the whole Text. To magnifie the work of God is so necessary so indispensible a duty that A remember is put upon it lest at any time it should slip from us The Lord knowing how great how weighty how comfortable how profitable a duty it is to keep the Rest day prefixeth this word Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy Exod. 20.8 I might give instance from several other Scriptures importing those duties which have a memento put upon them to be of great necessity and that the Lord will not bear with us if we lay them by or neglect the constant performance of them To forget any duty is very sinfull how much more those which we are specially warned to remember that we do them David was not satisfied in doing the duty of the text alone but must associate others with him in it Ps 34.3 O let us magnifie the Lord together that 's a blessed consort the consort of the blessed for ever The whole work and reward too of Saints in heaven is and eternally will be to magnify God and they have the beginnings of that work and reward who are sincerely magnifying his work here on earth God hath magnified his word in all things above his name Psal 138.2 and the reason is because his workes answer or are the fulfilling of his word to the praise of his glorious name Now if God hath magnified his word by his workes then we must magnifie his workes or him in his workes For wherein doth God magnifie his word but in his works He hath magnified his work by bringing his word forth in his works Surely then if God hath magnified his word by bringing it forth in his works then 't is our duty to magnifie the works of God which are the product effect and answer of his word But some may say how is that done I would give answer to this question in five things First Then we magnifie the work of God when we magnifie God for his work we cannot magnifie the mercy of God but by magnifying the God of our mercys We cannot magnifie his work while we neglect himself we magnifie God in his work first when we ascribe the whole efficiency of what we see done in the world to him and say This is the singer of God Or when we say according to this or that time What hath God wrought Numb 23.23 To magnifie the work of God is to give the whole of it to God 'T is the hand of God upon a work that sets
and Lightning In Thunder and Lightning the Law was delivered to Moses on mount Sinai Exod. 19.6 And to affect the peo●le of Israel when they had provoked God by their peremptory and discontented way of asking a King Samuel coming to deal with them about it 1 Sam. 12.16 17 18. said Stand and see this great thing which the Lord will do before your eyes Is it not wheat-harvest to day I will call unto the Lord and he shall send Thunder and Rain that ye may perceive and see that your wickedness is great And the Lord sent Thunder and Rain that day even while Samuel was speaking for their conviction and humiliation as the next words shew and all the people greatly feared the Lord and Samuel Thus possibly while Elihu was about to speak of Thunder for the humbling of Job God commanded it to Thunder for his deeper humiliation and if so the cause why Elihu trembled is apparent enough The terrible Thunder-claps which then rent the Clouds and even shook the earth might well cause him to tremble Secondly We may understand these words at this my heart trembleth with reference to the whole matter which Elihu had before him what he had begun to speak and was further to speak of Gods dreadful power might shake his heart with astonishment The due apprehensions of the greatness of God may soon strike man into a fit of trembling it did Job as himself confessed at the 21th Chapter of this Book v. 5 6. Mark ye and be astonished and lay your hand upon your mouth for when I remember I am afraid and trembling takes hold of my flesh as if he had said Quoties mihi divinae majestatis abyssus in mentem venerit expaves●it ●or meum c. Brent while I duly consider the great things that I have spoken those greater things if greater may be that I am about to speak I cannot but tremble and stand as one filled with astonishment How was the Apostle Paul amazed at that most mysterious dispensation of God in casting off his ancient people the Jewes the seed of Abraham his friend for so long a time Rom. 11.33 O the Depth c. At this my heart trembleth that is I am heartily afraid The heart is here put for the whole inner man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Motus commotus fuit corpore aut anima ex cura aut metu mali 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. or for all the powers of the soul and the word rendered to tremble notes a disturbance of the whole man both of soul and body the Septuagint render it by the same Greek word used Math. 2.3 where upon the wise mens coming from the East to inquire concerning the King of the Jewes it is said When Herod heard this he was troubled and all Jerusalem with him That news of a new King put them into a grievous fright they knew not what to make of it nor which way to turn themselves in such a turn of affaires in such a new world as that new-born King might make This word is else-where in Scripture used to note the suddenest surprize and the strongest possession of fear Thus when Isaac through the subtilty of Rebekah had given the blessing to Jacob which he intended for Esau 't is said that upon the appearance of his mistake he trembled exceedingly Gen. 27.33 Doubtless it did wonderfully astonish the good old man to think that God should carry him beyond and beside his own purpose to bless the yonger brother instead of the elder This strange disappointment by the over-ruling providence of God put him to a stand and troubled his thoughts more than a little especially because he was now taught that by his carnal affections to Esau he was running quite cross to the mind of God revealed Chap. 25.23 Read the same force of the word Exod. 19.16 to which the Apostle re●e●●ing saith Heb. 12.21 So terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake Read also the same impo●tance of the word 1 Sam. 4.13 Chap. 14.15 Such was the Condition of Elihu he was deeply affected t●embling ●ook hold of him The Spirits run to the heart in a time of fea● or upon a sudden f●ight as Ci●iz ns to the Castle in a day of danger and then the outward members being dese●ted by the spirits grow cold and tremble There is a natural infirmity called The palpitation or trembling of the heart But this of Elihu was supernatural at least some-what more then natural as arising either from the consideration of what God h●d done or of what himself was about to speak and not only did his heart tremble but Cordis palpitatio totius animae concursus ad cor in pavoribus o●idens est Galen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Effluxit Sept. Evulsum est August Emotum est Hieron Salit seu subsilit Tharg Hi● verbis excessum quem Graeci 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocant puto denotari quae 〈◊〉 effectus causam admirationem cum pavore subsequi solet Bold Et hum●nas motura tonitrua montes Ovid. 1. Met. Was moved out of its place Which is added to set forth the exceeding greatness of that fear which seized upon him The Text speaks as if his heart were indeed removed or taken out of his body It is usual in Scripture to affirm that as done which is like to be done The ship was said to be broken John 1.4 and the net Luke 5.6 because both were in eminent danger of breaking We say of a man in great fear his heart is ready to leap out of or out at his mouth One of the Ancients renders here my heart is pluckt out the septuagint It floweth out the Chaldee paraphrase takes up the fo●mer expression my heart leaps or jumps which as it doth sometimes for joy so often for ear or at the unexpected appearance of danger Some conceive by this moving of his heart out of his place that Elihu was in a kind of extasie that he was as it were car●ied out of himself upon the hearing of that dreadful voice of God the thunder taking it so Note Thunder is a terrible thing It hath made and may make the stoutest heart to tremble One of Christs Apostles was called Lebbeus Mat. 10.3 as much as to say the hearty man or all-heart Now he that is Lebbeus a man of the greatest courage the most hearty man may be put to a tremble at this when he heares it thunder Heathens have spoken much of this and by a peculiar word have called those who are much amazed men thunder struck Hos Laetinus Attonitos vocat Attonitus est cui casus vicini fulminis sonitus tonitruum dant stuporem Serv in tertium Aenid Tonitrus dici videtur a terrendo quod conterreat hominem Aliqui a tono ruendo quia magno cum sonitu fiat irruat Suetonius de Augusto Caligu●a men being so much amazed at the sound of
the God of glory speaking to us Some will excuse themselves they are ignorant they have never been taught to know God But did such never hear it thunder that ●eacheth much of God so much as will make them inexcusable who obey him no● who tremble not at his Power and Majesty Thunder calls for and more it commands our fear of our reverence and submission unto Go● e●●●cially when God together with this voice sends his arrow● bol●s o bullets to do great things against his enemies as he did against Pharaoh Ezod 9.23 and against the Philistines 1 Sam. 7.10 Yea the Lord threatened to distress Jerusalem with Thunder and with Earth-quake and with great noise Isa 29.6 Now if Thunder be the Voice of God or the noise of his Voice then take these brief Inferences from it First Let us see what a powerful and mighty God we have When it thunders every believing soul may ●ay This is the Vo●ce of my Father what cannot he do for me that can speak thus Secondly If God hath such a dreadful Voice if he thunder with his Voice we should learn to secure aim and fence ●ur selves against the dread and danger of Thunde● by the actings of Faith in him and of Repentance and godly Sorrow for our sinnings against him Some of the Heathens have given pittiful counsel what to do in time of thunder Seneca was a wi●e man Adversus tonitrua coelorum minas subterraneae damus dei defussi in altum specus remedia sunt Sen. lib. 6. Natur. quest cap. 4. yet he directs to poor shifts in such extreamities The remedies saith he against Thunder and the Batteries of the heavens are under-ground houses caves or holes of the earth to hide our selves in These were the best helps he could advise his Roman Gallants to when God uttered his mighty voice in Thunder But Christians know better how to hide themselves even in the goodness of God against those terrible appearances of his Power Thirdly If God speak with such a Voice as this in the Air take heed of slighting his Voice whensoever he speaks in the Church as Athiests and Epicures do He who speaks so loud in Thunder can thunder upon us at any time The Word preached if not obeyed will at last come upon all those who obey it not with as great a terror as Thunder Fourthly Let us not be amazed and frighted at Thunder as Heathens or Unbelievers Fifthly Let us not think lightly of it as if it either came by chance or meerly from natural causes Sixthly Let us fear the God of Thunder not fear Thunder as a God Some have superstitiously thought Thunder was a God and adored it so 't is reported of the Lithuanians anciently Lithuani fulmon deum esse pu●abant propterea illud adorabant Cromeru● l. 15. Hist Pol. and possibly some of them do so to this day Secondly In that Elihu calls so earnestly for attention to this voice Hear attentively the noise of his Voice Learn Those things which are most easie to be heard possibly may not at all be understood Who doth not hear when it thunders but how few are there who attend or understand the Thunder or hear Thunder attentively God speaks to us not only with a sti●● voice few hearing or attending him but though he thunders few attend him yea those wo ks of providence which speak lowder than Thunder and shine cle●rer ●●an the Lightning yet are neither heard no● seen As When his hand is lifted up some will not see Isa 26.11 So when his Voice is li●ted up when 't is lifted up not only like a trumpet but like thunder when he speaks most audibly yea most terribly some will not hear and he is not heard by many much less diligen●ly attended to how loudly how terribly soever he speaketh The Lord often thunders by the voice of this Word what are his te●rible threats but loud thunder-claps yet few hear or though they hear yet they attend not Not to hear the voice of God in his Word is as if you did not attend to the voice of Thunder Every word of God though spoken with a still voice hath a greater force in it than Thunder from the Clouds As the terrible works of God are signified by Thunder Rev. 10.3 4. So the terrible words of God his threatning words against impenitent sinners are resembled to Thunder And therefore such as the Lord fitted among his own Apostles for that dispensation are called in Scripture Sons of Thunder Mark 3.17 And they who dispence the Word with a strong voice and fiery zeal are truly so called to this day and may be said both to Thunder in their Exhortation and to Lighten in their Conversation And indeed the Word of God truly and faithfully dispensed by any is like Thunder For First As Thunder so the Word spoken is the Voice of God and a more excellent and distinct Voice than Thunder that only shewing in general that God is or that he is great and powerful this shewing us distinctly who and what God is and what he requireth of us Secondly Thunder throwes down and dissipates high things So doth the Word of God 2 Cor. 10.5 Thirdly Thunder is irresistable by any power of man it will make its way through all opposition so is and doth the Word of God Fourthly Thunder pierceth very subtilly it reacheth the bones quite through the flesh the Word of God doth more it divideth soul and spirit and the joynts and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the hea●t Heb. 4.12 Fifthly Thunder breaketh the hardest things which resist it but not soft things so the Word of God breaks the stout but binds up the contrite spirit it resists the proud but giveth grace to the humble Jam. 4.6 Now if the Word of God be in all these respects like Thunder Let us not only hear but attend or as the text saith hear attentively the sound of his voice If any ask when do we both hear and attend with the inward and outward ear the Thunder of God or his voice both in his works and in his word I answer First When we are stirred up to high and holy thoughts of God We are never rightly affected with the Word of God till our hearts are wrought up to and deeply at least truly affected with the God of the Word Secondly When our hearts are raised up in thankfulness for any discoveries of God in his goodness and mercy to us who can so easily destroy us by his power He that trembles at this voice of God and hath no sense nor tast of his goodness nor is moved to praise and serve him trembles only like a bruit beast Thirdly When we learn to depend and hang upon him for all as he that can do all things graciously for us as well as speak so terribly to us then we hear diligently the noise of his voice axd the sound that goeth out of his
Lord hath not called thy name Pashur but Magor Missabib that is fear round about I will make thee a terror to thy self thy own Conscience shall be terrible to thee A man had better fall into the hands of the most cruel Tyrants in the World than into the hands of his own Conscience But when a man is a terrour to himself then to have the Lord a terrour to him likewise to have God appearing in terrible Majesty how dreadful is it The awakened Conscience of a sinner carrieth in it as a thousand witnesses so a thousand terrours and God in his anger is more terrible than a thousand consciences Secondly God is terrible to sinners in the day of outward trouble when as David speaks Psal 65.5 By terrible things in righteousness he answereth the prayers of his People When God is doing terrible things in the World how miserable is their case to whom God also is a terrour in that day A godly man when God is doing the most terrible things shaking Heaven and earth and as it were pulling the world about our ears yet because he finds God at peace with him he is well enough But as for impenitent sinners when God is doing terrible things what will become of them I may bespeak them in the words of the Prophet Isa 10.3 What will ye do in the day of your visitation and in the desolation which shal come from far to whom will ye flee for help and where wil ye leave your glory As if he had said wh● or what can be a comfort to you when God is a ●errour to you And therefore another Prophet fore-seing such a terrible day coming makes this earnest deprecating prayer Jer. 17.13 O Lord be not thou a terr●ur to me in the evil day I know an evil a terrible day is at hand but Lord I beg this of thee that thou wilt not be a terrour to me in that day if men should be a terrour to me and God a terrour too it would be in●upportable Yet thus it will be with the unrighteous when God doth terrible things in righteousness and such things he will do in the latter dayes Take heed lest God appear with terrible Majesty to you in such a day Thirdly How terrible is God to impenitent sinners when awakened in the day of death What is Death In this Book Death is called The King of Terrours Now if when Dea●h is making its approaches to a person who lives in a contempt of the wayes and word of God if when his breath sits upon his lips ready to depart and the King of Terrours is ready to tear his caul and to rend his heart-strings asunder if then I say God appears in terrible Majesty what condition will such a one be in To have Death the King of Terrours and the Living the ever-living God in terrible Majesty falling upon a poor creature at once is a thousand deaths at once Fou●thly What will sinners do in the day of judgment that will be a terrible day indeed The Apostle 2 Cor. 5.10 having said We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ to receive according to what we have done in the body whether good or bad presently adds knowi●g therefore the terrour of the Lord we perswade men that is knowing how terrible the Lord will be to impenitent sinners to all whom he finds in their sins knowing this terrour of the Lord and how terrible the Majesty of the Lord will be to such in that day we perswade men we do all we can to pluck them out of their sins and turn them to God in Ch●ist Jesus who saves his people from their sins for to be sure that will be a most dreadful day to sinners Thus the M●j●sty of God will be terrible to the wicked and ungodly especially in these four dayes Only they who fear the Lo●d and take hold of his name by faith shall be able to stand befo●e his terrible majesty God will not be a terrour but a comfo●t to them ●hat fear him in every evill day Fu ●her the word as w●s shewed before signifies not only Majesty but Pra●se With God is ●errible praise dreadful praise Hence note First The Lord is most praise worthy With the Lord is praise The Psalmist every where s●ts fo th the praise-worthiness of God and presseth this duty upon us I shall not stay upon it only remember with the Lord is praise that is he is to be praised And from the attribute of his prai●e or that with the Lord is terrible praise Note Secondly Even in those things which the Lord doth most graciously for us and is to be highly praised by us even in th●se he is to be feared dreaded and reverenced God is to be praised not only with joy and thankfullness but with fear and reverence for with him is terrible praise It is the express word of Moses in his song after the destruction of the Egyptians in the Red Sea Exod. 15.11 Who is a God like unto thee glorious in holines fearful in praises We should not be affraid to praise God no we should be most forward to praise him but we should have a holy fear upon our hearts when we praise him Praise is the work of heaven from whence fear shall for ever be banished there will be perfect love and perfect love Casts out fear 1 Joh. 4.18 What-ever fear hath torment in it as all fear out of Ch●ist hath we shall have nothing to do with in that blessed life And even in this life praise which is the work of heaven on earth should be performed with such a spirit of love joy as is without all base tormenting fear we should have so much love to God in and for all the good things he doth for our soules especially ye and for our bodyes too in dealing out daily mercies that it should cast out all that fear which hath torment in it Yet there is a fear which should p●ssess our spirits while we are praising God a fear of reverence I mean which fear I doubt not will remaine in heaven for ever Glorified Saints shall praise God with that fear that is having an everlasting awe of the Majesty of God upon their hearts He is fearful in praises and therefore let us so praise him as remembering our distance so praise him as to be affraid of miscarrying in the duty and so instead of praising displease him in stead of honouring grieve him This duty of praise is very dreadful The Psalmist saith there is mercy or forgiveness with thee O Lord that thou mayst be feared Psal 130.4 Not only is the Lord to be feared in his wrath and in the executions of his justice but he is to be feared in his mercy in that greatest expression of his favour towards us the forgivness of our sins When we are in the highest exaltations of the mercy of God and of the God of our mercies yet then should our hearts be
signifies every believer a Servant 238 Service and Worship often the same in Scripture 237. God expects our se●vice and then especially when we suffer under his hand 237. To serve God what or the service of God described 238 239. To se●ve God our Freed●m 240. Service of God pleasant and easie in a twofold respect 240. Service of God not lean but pr●fitable 240 241 Sight of God two-fold immediate mediate and that by a threefold means 102. The sight of God or his discovery of himself to us very sweet to the the soul 104 Signes of changes in the weather and other natural things 424. Inferences from it as to other th●ngs 424 Signes why given by God 549 Sin how sinful it is to say there is no profit in leaving sin 17. The benefit or profit of leaving sin 19. God receives no hurt or damage by the sin of man how many or how great soever his sins are 31. Yet sinners shall be dealt with as if they had hurt him and why 31. How the sins both of good and evil men turn to the glory of God 32. Sin considered in a threefold opposition 33. Sin d●th six things to God yet cleared how no damage to him 34 35 36. The least sin hurtful 47 48. Sin hurts the whole Creation but chiefly man 48 49. The sad effects of sin as well as the filthy nature of it should move us to avoid it 48. Sin hurts others but th●se most who commit it 49. Sin is v●cal 92. God doth not severely mark the sins of his people 116. Sin mans work 224. God doth not suffer sin to grow potent in his people 226. There is an excessiveness in some sins 227. In what sence sin may reign in a righteous man 228. Sin may be seen and not the exceedingness of it 228. The exceed●ngness of sin shewed in three things 228 2●9 Sin a vain thing how 234. God will not indulge sin in any 293. Sin should have no respect 321. Sin not to be chosen in any case 324. Sin strictly taken cannot be chosen 325. Vpon what accounts sin is chosen by many 325 326. They make a very bad choice who choose sin rather than affliction 372. Sin worse than any the worst affliction 330 331 Singing an act of Praise 352 Skie two things considerable in it clearness and strength 568. How the skie may be said to be strong 569 Snow what it is 469. When it usually falleth 469. Six things wonderful concerning the Snow 472. Snow how like w●ol shewed in three things 472 473. Sno● and Rain at the command of God 474 Sodomites how expressed in the Hebrew 271 Song in the night what 70 71 73 Soveraignty of God over all creatures three Inferences from it 14 20 Soul how taken in Scripture 268 South why expressed by a word that signifies a secret place 487. Whirlwinds come from it 488 Sparing mercy God will not spare his own if they obey not 252 Speaking two things of great use in it 139. Speaking of two sorts 232 233 Spirits of men weighed ●y God 552 Standing-still two-fold that of the mind to what opposed 527 Star-gazers their vanity 27 Stormes in the hearts of men allayed by God 562 Streight who may be said to be in it 282. No streight so great but God can deliver out of it 283 Strength of heart wherein it consists 175. 183. Strength of wisdom in God two-fold 175. There is no strength against the Lord. 311 Suddenness of divine Judgments 300 Sufferings did not hurt the Martyrs and why 51 Sun in its brightness cannot be looked upon 602 Swearing the Lords saying as much as his swearing 549 Sword how taken in Scripture 252 T Tabernacle what 407 408 Teacher God is pleased to be a Teacher of his people 338. The teachings of God above all teachings 339. How God exceeds all Teachers shewed in seven things 339 340. Three Inferences from it 342. Several Evidences of our having been taught of God 342 343 344. Teaching 'T is mans shame when he acts not according to the teachings of God 82. Teaching is to make us knowing 576. There are two sorts of persons who call for teaching 577 Terribleness of God to sinners in four dayes 609 Thundering Legion 460. Thunder a terrible thing 436. Thunder the Voyce of God 440 442. Thunder called the Voyce of God in a twofold respect 442. Six Inferences from it 443. Word of God like Thunder shewed in five things 444. Thunder Gods Hera d. 454. Thunder how it followeth L●ghtning 454. Why we see the Lightning before we hear the Thunder 454. Six degrees or s●rts of Thunder 455. Thunder described 457. Marvels in Thunder 460. The effects of the Word like those of Thunder 461 462. Two Inferences from it 464 Tiberius the Romane Emperour his Character 630 Time at the dispose of God 379 Trembling what 436. Great appearances of God should make us tremble 437. A fourfold trembling 437 438 Troubles are streights 281 282 Trusting in God a Duty in darkest times 112. T●ust in God fixes the heart 113. Some not to be trusted 114. We should trust God more upon experience of what he hath wrought 365. The Eternity of God a gro●nd of trusting him 380 Truth will prevail though many be against it 23. No matter if we are alone so Truth be on our side 23. Some speak Truth with false hearts others speak falsly with a true heart 153. To speak truth a high commendation of the Speaker 154. Truth taught us by God four effects of it 342 343 344. Some Truths are specially to be attended to 524 U Valentinian his zeal and advancement 213 Vanity what a●d who 92 Visiting of three sorts 119 Unde●standing how an unde●●●an●ing man may be said not to unders●a●d 81 Uprightness That which is not done uprightly will not be done constantly 266 W Waiting on God in hardest times 112 113. Warnings G●d gives them before he sends great Judgme●ts 425 426. Warning God gives wa●ning before he strikes 455 Water of two s●rts 388. Wa●er held up in the Air by the Power ●f God 392 Way of God what it is 345 Whirlwind what 489 Wickedness what 47 Wicked men out of Gods Protection he takes not care of them 189. How God doth and doth not preserve the lives of the wicked 189 190. Wicked not so much preserved as reserved 191. Wicked men of two sorts 192. Their life sad 192. God will at last utterly destroy them 193. God will not be taken off by any outward respect from destroying them 301 Winds four Cardinal 487. What the Wind is 489. Winds come at Gods appoyntment 489. God makes a twofold use of the Wind. 490. Six uses of it for mercy or for the good of man 490 491. Winds the Broomes of Heaven 490. Afflicting effects of the Wind. 492. Seven Wonders observable in the Winds 493 494. What the Wind is 598. Causes of the Wind. 599. Life preserved by the Wind. 599. Spirit of God compared to the Wind. 601 Wise
the moral Law commands or forbids the light of Nature leads us to do and to forbear There is a generation of people grown up and spreading amongst us who cry up the light within them with neglect of if not in oppos●tion to the Word written and preached to them These make a very ill use of this notion For whosoever bids us look to the light within us to draw us off from the Word or light without us erre greatly and may quickly draw us into the greatest errors both in Faith and Practise 'T is dangerous to go or act against the light within us yet if we go or act alwayes by that light alone we shall be in da●kness before we are aware Natural light without Scripture-light proves a false light and may quickly lead us out of the way and besides our duty Therefore the Prophet when any should say Seek unto them that have familiar Spirits c. doth not say look to the light within you for resolution whether ye should hearken to such or no but to the Law and to the Tes●●●ony if they speak not according to this w●rd it is because there is no light in them Isa 8.20 If that which is called light within us speak not according to the light of the Law and Testimony without us there is no true light or as the Margin hath it no morning in us the Day-starre hath not risen in such hearts nor do they speak like children of the light Take heed of striking and so splitting against that Rock yet certainly there is a light within us that must not be resisted The Apostle reports that as the sin of the old Gentiles Rom. 1.28 They did not like to retain God in their knowledge they had a light of God by nature God was in their knowledge but they liked not to think of God but rather thought of the world and of any vanity than of God rather of the creature than of the Creator for this cause God gave them up to a reprobate mind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to do those things which are not convenient They who obey not who answer not the light of Nature in doing good shall be left to the doing of those evills which are against the light of Nature Such were those things which the Apostle calls by a modest word not convenient or not fitting that duty and decorum which man as man should carefully and religiously observe By which negative expression Not convenient he positively intends the vilest evils and debaucheries of Nature not to be named And if God were so wroth with the Gentiles for not answering the common Light of Nature no marvel if he spake so dreadfully against those that refuse and oppose the Light of the most glorious Gospel John 3.19 This is the condemnation that light is come into the world and men loved darknesse rather than light because their deeds were evil Not to answer the Light of Conscience within us rightly informed much more not to obey the Light of the Gospel without us leaves us under condemnation The Light within man will shew him very much what he ought to do and judge him for not doing it Thinkest thou this to be right Doth the Principle planted in thee comply with this Position But what was it that Elihu puts the Question about You have it in the close of the verse That thou saidst My righteousnesse is more than Gods Or according to the strictnesse of the Hebrew My righteousness is before Gods The Preposition here used is often taken comparatively and hath the same signification with that Math. 11.19 where Christ saith as we translate Wisdome is justified of her Children that is Christ or the Doctrine of the Gospel the Divine Light that shines there is justified that is approved and declared just by all who are her Children indeed born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God This is a good and profitable sence Though strangers do not will not justifie Wisdome yet her Children do and will Neverthelesse that comparative translation and reading which some contend for carrieth in it a clear truth also and serves to illustrate this Text in Job now under-hand Wisdome is justified more than her children or rather than her children or before her children That is more rather and before the Scribes and Pharisees who pretended highly that they were the children yea the chief if not the only children of Wisdome and while they made this boast they really resisted and opposed Jesus Christ who is wisdome and in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome And therefore how much soever the Scribes and Pharisees flattered themselves in their own opinion or were applauded and preferred by others as children of wisdome or as very wise men yet Jesus Christ the true Wisdome was justified by God and all good men more than they or before yea infinitely before them he was justified fully but they not at all Such a negative sence Christ intends in that comparative determination between the Publican and the Pharisee Luke 18.14 I tell you this man went down to his house justified rather than the other That is the Publican went home justified rather or righteous rather or more righteous than the Pharisee the proud Pharisee not being at all justified nor righteous but in his own eyes Some Comparatives imply a perfect Negative to the opposite party others only a partial Such a comparative sence Elihu intimates in Jobs asse●tion of his righteousness Thou saidst my righteousnesse is more than Gods Or I am to be justified rather than God But some may say where spake Job this where 's the Ch●pter and Verse did Job or could J●b overshoot himself to such a height of blasphemy I answer First Some indeed charge Elihu deeply as if he had feigned all these things against Job or formed them up in his own Imagination rather than grounded them upon any of his assertions but we need not thus wound Elihu to get a salve for Jobs sore Therefore Secondly I answer that although Job had not spoken this in so many words or syllabically yet he had spoken that from which Elihu might gather such a sence or of which he might make such an interpretation And therefore he seems to say at the thi●d verse If thou thinkest this a falsehood or too hard a charge and shouldst deny that thou hast said My righteousness is more than Gods I 'le tell thee what thou hast said which hath given me ground I think just and sufficient ground for this accusation Thou hast said What advantage will it be unto me and what profit shall I have if I be cleansed from my sin And is not this to make thy righteousnesse more than Gods But what righteousnesse is here meant I answer There is a twofold righteousnesse First There is the righteousnesse of our persons which is either imputed in justification or imparted in sanctification as hath
What profit shall I have if I be cleansed from my sin And although there should be no present profit or advantage though no visible no nor spiritual income as to present comfort should redound to us in this world by being cleansed from sin yet remember it is our profit and our best profit to be cleansed from sin to be emptied of sin to mortifie sin to destroy sin if we should have no profit in hand by leaving sin yet there is a profit promised that infinitely exceeds all the profits and pleasures which we can have or hope for by retaining our sin such profit and pleasure as will abundantly recompence us for all the worldly losses we are at and penitential sorrows which we pass thorow in keeping or cleansing our selves from sin The Apostle rejoyced at the sorrow of the Corinthians 2 Cor. 7.9 But is it good to rejoyce at the sorrow of others should we not mourn with those that mourn 'T is true we should yet 't is good to rejoyce in that sorrow which doth others good such was the sorrow of those Corinthians The Text is exp●ess Now saith St Paul I rejoyce not that ye were made sorry but that ye sorrowed to repentance for ye were made sorry after a godly manner or according to God that ye might receive damage by us in nothing There is then no damage no hurt by such sorrow But comes there any good any profit by it yes much every way for as it followeth v. 10. godly sorrow worketh repentance to salvation not to be repented of that is greatly to be rejoyced in What is matter of joy if salvation be not True repentance for sin is repentance to salvation And is there not profit is there not all profit in that As there is a Fountain opened the blood of Christ for sin and for uncleanness Zech 13.1 that is for washing away the uncleanness of sin so there are abundance of blessings flowing from that Fountain to all such as by the actings of Faith and Repentance wash and are clean Thus far of Elihu's first charge and the proof of it taken from Jobs own sayings How he answers and refutes those sayings of Job will appear in opening the next words JOB Chap. 35. Vers 4 5 6 7 8. 4. I will answer thee and thy Companions with thee 5. Look unto the Heavens and see and behold the Clouds which are higher than thou 6. If thou sinnest what dost thou against him or if thy transgressions be multiplyed what dost thou unto him 7. If thou be righteous what givest thou him or what receiveth he of thine hand 8. Thy wickedness may hurt a man as thou art and thy righteousness may profit the son of man THe former Context contained the Charge which Elihu brought against Job that he should say His righteousness was more than Gods and that it would be no profit to him if he were cleansed from his sin In the Context of these five Verses Elihu gives answer to those had Job positively and purposely said or asserted them blasphemous sayings or assertions And we have here First The promise or overture of an answer at the 4th verse I I will answer thee and thy Companions with thee Secondly We have the answer it self laid down in the 5th 6th 7th and 8th verses which answer consists in three particulars First That God cannot be hurt or endammag'd by our sin at the 6th verse Secondly That God can have no benefit or advantage by our righteousness at the 7th verse Thirdly That both Job himself and other men like himselfe may yea shall certainly have hurt and dammage by their sin as also benefit or advantage by their righteousness vers 8th Thus Elihu's answer obviates Job's passionate question at the 3d verse What profit shall I have if I be cleansed from my sin As if Elihu had said I know that neither thy sins can do any hurt to God nor can thy righteousnesse do him any good but thy sins may hurt thee and thy righteousnesse advantage thy self therefore lay down such wicked and desperate thoughts as these say not What profit will redound to me if I be cleansed from my sin c. That 's his answer according to our Translation Other readings present us with other forms of answer but I shall not stay upon them Vers 4. I will answer thee and thy Companions with thee Elihu makes overture of answering before he answers and tells him he will before he doth it I will answer thee or I will return thee words Answering is the returning of wo●ds to words yet not of empty words but of words fill'd with Reason and Authority to resolve him that is doubting or to convince him that is gain-saying I will answer thee And thy Companions with thee I will speak that which shall not only take off thy Objections but theirs also who are of thy mind or joyn in Opinion with thee I will answer thee and thy Companions with thee I will do both at once when I have answered thee they also will be answered one answer will serve thee and them Vna fidelia duos parietes dealbabo Drus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Socius amicus familiaris qui simul pascitur convictor One Line will mark and measure both Walls The word which we render Companions signifies any Friends or Familiars with whom we usually converse with whom we eat or who eat bread with us 2 Sam. 13.3 Prov. 17.17 We may take it either more strictly for a special intimate bosome friend who is to a man as his own soul as Moses speaks Deut. 13.6 or for a friend at large such as is called a Neighbour Exod. 20.16 Levit. 19.18 Yet the question may be Whom doth Elihu mean by Jobs Companions when he saith I will answer thee and thy Companions with thee Some by his Companions understand those who came to visit him in his affliction and maintained that long Discourse with him those three friends of whom we read Chap. 2.11 Eliphaz the Temanite Bildad the Shuite and Zophar the Naamathite The Septuagint conclude Elihu meant them only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. for thus they render I will answer thee and thy three friends But why should Elihu joyn them with Job seeing they held Opinions contrary to Job True they did yet they were not able to make good their Arguments or convince Job they had condemned Job but not answered him they did their businesse imperfectly and to halves or impertinently and to no purpose so that all their answerings were called no answer Chap. 32.3 And therefore Elihu might see reason to undertake the satisfaction not only of Job but of his three friends who had not given Job a satisfactory answer unto that hour Others take the word Companions in a more large sence for all that were of his Opinion As if Elihu had said I challenge all the world whosoever accompanies thee or takes thy part in justifying such sayings or assertions
as I have heard from thee I will answer them all how many soever they be I will undertake thee and all thy Party Thee and thy Companions with thee Hence Note He who hath truth on his sid● needs not fear the opposition of many no nor the opposition of all men To oppose two is a very great disadvantage but if a man have the truth on his side he may oppose all though he be alone He may be an Antipas Revel 2.13 a man against all men as that name of Christs faithful Martyr there mentioned doth import If there be a thousand of them he may undertake them all for in answering one he answers all Elijah said of himself 1 Kings 18.22 I even I only remain a Prophet of the Lord yet he stood up against all the Idolatrous Prophets of Baal who were no fewer than four hundred and fifty men That we have many with us is li●tle advantage and lesse honour many a time A long train of Followers will do us no good if our Cause be bad Truth is strong and will prevail 't is vain to fight against it though our partakers are many The ancient Fathers observed how some were wont to cry up those that had the multitude on their side and to boast that most were of their Opinion It was the saying of a Worthy in those times By my being alone Non mea solitudine minuitur verbum veritatis Dictum Liberti ad Constantium Arrianum Theod. lib. 2. Histor Eccl. c. 16. the word of truth and the truth of the word is not at all diminished One man and the truth are strong enough to oppose a multitude in error and a multitude of errors The more any men and the more men appear in opposing truth the more is God engaged in faithfulness to appear for it When one boasted to St Hierome that he had a multitude of Followers in his Opinion he answered That the number of his Companions did not prove him a Catholick Multitudo s●cio●um te nequaquam Catholicum sed Haereticum monstrabit Hieron l. 3. advers Pelag. but a Heretick But how did Elihu answer Job and his Companions The next verse tells us how Vers 5. Look unto the Heavens and see behold the Clouds which are higher than thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aspexit aliq tando ab o●ulis ad intellectum transfertur As if he had said Look to the Heavens and they 'l answer thee behold the Clouds and they will confute thee Thy very senses may convince thee that thou hast spoken these things against Reason And the Heave●s will tell thee that thy mistake in this matter is Heave●ly wide If thou turn thy eyes upward and considerest that distance which is between God Toto coelo erras who hath Heaven for the Habitation of his Hol●nesse and of his Glory and thee who dwellest in thy house of Clay here on Earth thou mayest see that thy sins cannot hurt him nor thy goodnesse extend to him The distance between Heaven and man is very great but the distance between God and man is far greater the one is immensurable but the other is unimaginable unconceiveable Therefore if the Heavens be so high that thou canst not annoy them with thine Arrows much lesse art thou able to annoy God who is higher and infinitely more out of Bow-shot and Gun-shot than the Heavens That 's the scope of his A●gumentation here to prove that Job could not or that no man can hurt God by his sin Look to the Heavens and see Both words are applyed to the sense or sight of the eye yet they have a reference also to an intellectual sight to the eye of the mind Look and see that is Take special notice of and contemplate the Heavens We may look and not see that is look and not consider look and not observe To look and see is to give earnest attention to the thing looked upon look curiously c●itically how high the Heavens are Look and see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Significat curiose inspicere intueri visa contemplare mente Aquin. We may apply the first word Look as some do to the truth of the thing look how high the Heavens are it may be seen by the eye that they are very high though we cannot see how high they are The latter word See may referre to the admirable contrivance and contexture of the thing seen as the forme● to the truth and reallity of it Look and see how wonderful how full of wonders the Heavens are see with admiration what a vastness what an ex●ctnesse there is in the Heavens above thee Thus the word is used by the Prophet Isa 42.18 Look ye blind that ye may see It is a Prophesie of Gospel times that is Consider the Messages and Mysteries of the Gospel exactly view them well that ye who are blind may behold the glorious light that shines forth in them There were many blind ones in Ch●ists time that looked upon the things of the Gospel and did not see the Pharisees lookt upon them and they were among the blind ones they indeed had better thoughts of themselves and therefore put that question to Christ in scorn John 9.40 Are we blind also They did not look so as to see they were blind when they looked and blind after they looked The holy Prophet exhorts poor blind souls to whom the Gospel should come to look better to look again and again till they saw Look ye blind that ye may see That is be diligent and humble that ye may see the light shining in the Gospel The proud Pharisees who would not see the light which Christ offered to them were the worst of blind ones This is the Look which the word in the Text calls for Look unto the Heavens and see it cannot be understood of the outward sight only for he that looks upon the Heavens cannot but see them but a man may look a great while upon the Heavens and not see them considerately nor understand what he seeth The words import attention and consideration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Intentis oculis intuitin est And so they are used and placed 2 Kings 3.14 Were it not that I regard the presence of Jehoshaphat the King of Judah I would not look unto thee nor see thee said Elisha to Jehoram King of Israel that is I would give thee no respect nor take notice of thee Nomen hoc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non potest significare Nubes quae sunt substantiae densae nempe Aer condensatus At Shehhakim dicti sunt a substantiae tenuitate qualis est substantia coeli ergo ver●o tenues coelos Pisc In this sense the Prophet represents the Church bespeaking the incompassionate Spectators of her calamity Lam. 1.12 Is it nothing to you all ye that passe by Behold and see that is weigh it well and consider if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow Look unto the Heavens
and see And Behold with like attention the Clouds There is some difference among Interpreters about this word which we render Clouds The Hebrew properly signifies Thinnes but a Cloud is thick and consists of many Aireal vapors condensed into a body and therefore this word cannot well be translated a Cloud saith this Author but the thin Heavens that is the higher Heavens those above the Airy Heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut plurimum Aethera nubes signifi●at Bold Again The Clouds are lower than the Heavens they are neerest to us they are ingendred in the middle Region nor do they at any time rise higher than that Region Forasmuch then as Elihu is endeavouring by the consideration of the highness of Gods royal seat or of the vast distance as the Prophet speaks of the habitation of his Holiness and of his Glory from us to prove that neither any good we do can profit him nor any evil we do teach to his disadvantage therefore it may seem not to make much for the purpose of Elihu to call Job to behold the Clouds which are neer us comparatively though their distance from us be really very great but I conceive notwithstanding that Criticisme of the word and this reason we may well enough abide by the Translation which saith Behold the Clouds for though the Clouds are thicker than the Ai● yet they are but thin and are soon dispersed by winde and ratified by heate Again Supposing as indeed they do that the Clouds move in the lower part of the Heavens it encreaseth and hightens the sense of the words to the purpose for which Elihu makes use of them As if he had said Behold and see the Heavens the upper Heavens the Starry Heavens they are higher than thou yea behold the Clouds which are neerest to us and much very much below the Starrs those especially which Astronomers call the fixed Starrs yet do but behold the Clouds which at the top of some hills one may touch with his hand some describe great men hiding their heads among the Clouds Behold I say the Clouds which are lowest yet they are higher than thou they are beyond thy reach much more the Heavens most of all God who is higher than the highest Heavens Thou canst neither add to nor diminish or blemish the beauty of the Heavens thou canst not make a cloud better or worse What then canst thou do to or against the God of Heaven To convince Joh of this is the purpose of Elihu in calling him to the view of the Heavens Now forasmuch as Elihu invites Job to the view and Contemplation of the Heavens Note First It is our duty to study and meditate the natural works of God or his works in Nature Especially the Heavens which are so eminent a part of his works The Scripture calls some Starr-gazers such are they who study the Heavens to a very evil purpose drawing men off from their sole dependance upon God by foretelling the events of things and destinies of persons from the positions and motions of the heavenly Bodies or Luminaries This kind of Studying and Contemplating the Heavens is one of the greatest vanities under Heaven a vanity often reproved in the Scriptures of the holy Prophets thus to be Starr-gazers or Heaven-beholders is our sin but there is a Contemplation of the Starrs which is our duty and commendation Psal 8.3 4. When I consider in that great volume of the works of God the Heavens the work of thy fingers the Moon and the Starrs which thou hast ordained What is man that thou art mindfull of him c. David did both look and see he beheld the Heavens for a good purpose a godly purpose his own abasement and the advancement of the glory and goodness or of the glorious goodness of God in spreading such a Canopy sparkling with perpetual fires for him to walk under and do his work by And doubtless did we with enlightned eyes behold and see the natural Heavens we should become more spiritual and heavenly Secondly In that we have here three words look see and behold Note The works of God Especially the Heavens are diligently to be Considered We may look to the Heavens and not see we may see the Heavens and not behold them Let me here again mind the Reader of the Emphasis of that word it notes a looking unto or upon the Object as a Hunter looks for a Hare or a Fowler for a Bird how doth he pry and look into every tuft and bush So the word is used Jer. 5.26 Among my people are found wicked men they lay waite or they eye and behold as one that setteth snares they set a trap they catch men All the visible works of God much more the Heavens should be diligently considered lookt into seen and beheld It was a good Conclusion of one of the Ancients who said That man hath not looked unto Heaven In coelum ron suspicit qui coelum tantum aspicit Origen that hath only looked upon Heaven A bare look is not sufficient he must look with admiration or till he cannot forbeare to admire as the first Latine word in that sentence signifies properly A man may look upon a Picture and yet not behold it discerningly he may say that 's the picture of a man yet not consider the Art of the workman in drawing it he may see it is the picture of a man not of a beast at a look but he must see it exactly if he would find out the worth and workmanship o● it A man in passage as some speak may see a house yet not apprehend the Symmetry of the Plat-form the skill of the Architect no● the commodiousnesse of its Scituation to discern these calls for serious consideration and setled reviews As in the Natural works of God the Heavens made for man so much more in his Spiritual works the making of a Heaven in man or man Heavenly require our deepest thoughts and most studious re-searches O how many are there who look transiently upon those works of God who never see nor behold them never enter into the secrets of them many know some Truths yet never looked into any nor laboured to comprehend with all Saints or as all Saints ought to do what is the breadth and length and depth and he●ght of them and therefore attain not to that riches of the full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgement of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ as the Apostle speaks Col. 2.2 but are like children tossed to and fro and carryed about with every wind of Doctrine as the same Apostle describes them Eph. 4.14 Remember we are to look and see and behold the Natural wo●ks of God how much more the Spiritual Mysteries of the Gospel and the works of grace these indeed are to be looked upon and seen and beheld those other are not to be left unlooked upon Note Thirdly The Heavens are a Divine Glasse wherein
as happy as now he is let men do their worst and be as wicked as they can Thy wickednesse c. The word wickednesse notes sin in the highest degree at least of a high degree every wickednesse is sin but every sin is not wickednesse yet we are not to unde●stand Elihu's meaning as if great sins only did mischief and hurt The truth is every sin doth hurt and mischief as a little poyson and the least poyson may do hurt unless it be corrected We use to say of some things A little doth not hurt Modicum non no●et but we canno● say a little poyson doth no hurt unlesse you do not take it or unlesse it be corrected a little poyson uncorrected will do hurt So then when Elihu saith here Thy wickednesse may hurt we are not to understand it only of great sins as whoredome murder perjury drunkenness and witchcraft c. but even of idle thoughts of vain words or undue passions these hurt as well as greater sins commonly called wickednesse Thy wickedness May hurt a man as thou art These words may hurt are not expressed in the Original Text but they are plainly intended and implyed Yet if we should leave them out of the reading the sence would be the same Thy wickedness is to hurt a man as thou art That is thy wickednesse is to the hurt or damage of a man as thou art it may hurt thee or thy brother it may hurt thy self or any like thy self Hence Note First That sin is a hurtfull thing Wheresoever sin is it doth mischief Sin is so bad in the nature of it that we have reason enough to avoid it and flye from it and sin is so dangerous in the Effects of it that we have further though not more reason to avoid it and flye from it indeed we should rather and that is our spiritualnesse in avoiding of sin avoid it because of the evil that is in the Nature of it because it riseth up against the Will and breaks the holy Commands of God we have greatest reason to depart from sin because it is a departure from God because of the blacknesse and filthinesse of it yet not onely the blacknesse of this Coal but the fire the eternal fire that is in it gives us cause enough to depart from it 'T is true a truly gracious heart would not sin though he might escape all the sad effects of sin but when he hears it is as hot as fire and as deadly as poyson and as killing as the plague when he hears that it is the ruine of Persons and of Families of Churches and Nations when he hears that 't is sin which hath done all the hurt and mischief that ever was in the world he sees he hath further reason to dread it and depart from it Again Thy wickedness may hurt a man Note Sin doth mischief to man and to man especially Sin doth mischief all the world over the whole Creation groans under the mischief and vanity which sin hath brought upon it Rom. 8.22 Sin hath done damage to the whole Creation but the great damage which sin doth is to man to him that acts it to others before whom it is acted or towards whom it is acted Sin is distributed into two sorts as to its hurtfulnesse Sin either respects our selves in the hurt it doth or others and those others are either God or our Neighbour sin hurts our selves most yet sin as it is a wrong to God may be said to hurt his honour and diminish the manifestation of his glory in the world as hath been shewed before And sin is really a wrong to our Neighbour There are a number of sins committed against our selves yea every sin though committed against our Neighbour hits and hurts our selves no man can hurt his Neighbour but he hurts himself most So that although there are many sins which respect others yet all are against our selves Some sins unbelief especially and the neglect of holy duties hurt our selves only there are sins which more properly hurt others as oppression and uncharitablenesse there are several sins which at once hurt others and our selves Adultery hurts self and others too evil words hurt our selves and others too as the Apostle tells us out of a Poet 1 Cor. 15.33 Evil communication corrupteth good manners that is you corrupt the good manners of others you debauch others by unsavoury speeches our ill example hurts our selves and others Our Neighbour is hurt by our sin First By any thing that is a wrong to him as to his Estate or as to his Person or as to his Credit Secondly By the scandal of it when we do that which is evil it hardens the wicked and makes them go on more securely in their sin and keeps them off from the wayes of God it endangers good men also and discourageth them in the duties they owe both to God and man in the profession of the Gospel Thus sin may hurt our selves and our Neighbours Thy wickedness may hurt a man as thou art But why saith he a man as thou art What a man just of thy Complexion or just of thy height stature and pitch what a man of thy State and Degree a man just of thy eminency in the world certainly no but when he saith A man as thou art his meaning is any man because all men are in many things alike they are all mortal and sinful and weak and apt to receive hurt by the sins of others Thus every man is a man as thou art Hence no●e All men are alike Though the faces of men are very differen● and we know one man from another because they are unlike in face yet as to their constitution and natural condition they are alike he that is greatest is such a man as the least and the strongest is such a man as the weakest the richest as the poorest the learnedest as the most ignorant and the godliest man is as the wickedest man as to his natural composition All men are alike in these foure things First all men need that which is good Secondly all men are sensible of that which is hurtful and afflictive to them Thirdly all men are apt to take hurt and to run into danger by the sin and ill Examples of others or to receive good by their good deeds and profitable examples all men being associated in the same common nature and familiar each to other Fourthly all men are alike in this that they are not self-sufficient but stand in need of the help of one another He that is helpful to a man like himself helpeth himself and doth acknowledge that considering humane frailty he may have occasion to call for and desire the help of another and therefore say some man hath two hands two armes that he may understand himself born as much to need and receive help as to give it Thus every man is a man as thou art and upon these and many other Considerations thou mayest
ones in the Text crying in all these respects the burden was so heavy upon them that it made them cry out for the very weight of it and they cryed and called for some charitable or tender heart to come and ease them of it and deliver them from it Elihu doth not rest in speaking this once but repeats it again By reason of the multitude of oppressions they make the oppressed to cry They cry out by reason of the arme of the mighty These words poynt us expresly to the cause of their cry or out-cry it was the arme of the mighty which may be taken either properly or figuratively Properly the Arme is a well known and most usefull member of the body And because there is a great deal of strength and power in the arme therefore by a figure the arme signifieth strength might or power and to say they cry out by reason of the arme of the mighty is as much as to say they cry out by reason of the power of the mighty Severissimum dei supplicium immissione aut descensione Brachii significatur The arme is frequently in Scripture put for power the powerful wrath of ●od is called the arme of God The Prophet Isa 30.30 speaks of the lighting down of his arme When the Lord lets his arme fall o● light down upon a man a family or a Nation in wrath it crusheth either or all of them to pieces And as the powerful wrath so the powerful grace of God is called his arme Isa 53.1 Who hath believed our report to whom is the arme of the Lord revealed That is his mighty power working by and manifesting it self in Christ and in the ministery of the Gospel for the conviction conversion and salvation of sinners Thus also the arme of man is the power of man Dan. 11.6 She shall not retain the power of the arme neither shall he stand nor his arme That is his power shall fall or both he and she Bernire and Antiochus Theus shall fall and be powerless Psal 37.16 The arme of the wicked that is their power shall be broken but the Lord upholdeth the righteous They cry out by reason of the arme Of the mighty The same word which in the first part of the verse is translated multitude is here translated The mighty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But what was the mightiness of these men There is a four-fold mightiness First there is mightiness of body that is natural might and 't is properly the might of the arme Secondly there is a mightiness in valour and in Armes Thus souldiers and warriers are mighty men they who having courage in their hearts have also weapons in their hands and swords by their sides are the mighty Such a one was Gideon to whom the Angel said Judg. 6.12 The Lord is with thee thou mighty man of valour Thirdly there is a mightiness of Authority And thus the Magistrate is a mighty man suppose he be weak in body yet he is mighty in power and can do great things Fourthly there is a mightiness of wealth and riches Thus Boaz is called a mighty man of wealth Ruth 2.1 Riches have so much might in them that in the Hebrew one word serves to signifie both might and riches We may understand the mighty man here in any or all these four senses The oppressed cry out by reason of the arme of the mighty They who have much bodily strength often oppress the weaker and so do the mighty in Armes and so do the mighty in Authority and so the mighty in riches have often done making the poor and the oppressed cry They cry out by reason of the arme of the mighty From the former part of the verse Observe Oppression is a common sin Not only was Babylon stained with it but Jerusalem That 's an amazing passage Jer. 6.6 Thus hath the Lord of hosts said hew ye down trees and cast a Mount against Jerusalem This is the City to be visited she is wholly oppression in the midst of her Not only was Jerusalem a City but The City a City above all Cities to be visited by an oppressing enemy and wh● even because she not only had oppressors in her but was oppression O how oppressive was that City which was oppression and that not only in some parts of her but wholly and that not in her skirts and suburbs but in the midst of her The Lord to shew that the Jewes were superlatively rebellious or most rebellious against him calleth them in the abstract rebellion as the Margin hath it Ezek. 2.7 and to shew how superlatively oppressive they were one against another He calls Jerusalem oppression Here in the Text we have a multitude of oppressions surely then there were a multitude of oppressors To heare of a multitude of sins of all sorts is very sad but when there is multitude of one sort and that one of the worst sort and such a sin as cannot go alone but draws after it a heap of almost all sorts of sin what a multitude of sins are there It cannot be denied but that oppression is a very common epidemical sin if we take and consider it in the full latitude of it For there is a two-fold oppression First there is a secret oppression To deceive defraud or go beyond another in the Apostles sense is to oppress him And thus 't is said Hos 12.7 He is a Merchant the balances of deceit are in his hand he loveth to oppress He doth not oppress by violence with a sword in his hand but by craft with balances in his hand he oppresseth while he over-reacheth in dealing and trading This sort of oppression runs up and down every where and though this kind of oppression make not a great cry yet it is a great sin a crying sin There is also a secret oppression under colour of Law many turn the very Rules of Justice into rods of oppression And this is by so much the worse by how much it hath the better cover Secondly there is an open oppression the Nimrods of the world the mighty Hunters ta●e and vex and trouble all they can and would make all tremble before them or run from them as the Hare and Hart from their merry but merciless pursuers Now if both secret and open oppressions are so commonly practised oppression may justly beare the title of a common sin Secondly Note Oppression is a very crying sin That cannot but be a crying sin which makes so many cry Oppression then is a crying sin First as to the nature of it Secondly as to the effect of it Oppression cryeth and it makes those cry who are oppressed Solomon saith Eccles 7.7 Oppression maketh a wise man mad That which puts a man even out of his wits or besides the right use of his reason will put him much to the use of his tongue causing him to complain cry out and clamour But who are they that are most given to and deepest
and done us good all our dayes In which sense the word is used 1 Sam. 12.6 And Samuel said unto the people it is the Lord that advanced Moses and Aaron We put in the Margin made Moses c. it is this word Eloah nomen singulare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 participium plurale Factores mei sic usu obtinuit de deo loquuntur promi●cue modo singulariter modo pluralitur Sensus autem ubique singularis est Ideo nomen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Elohim quando de vero deo dicitur interpretes reddunt semper deus ubi ratio habetur sensu● non terminationis Drus vid Merc Vbi est deus qui fecerunt me Heb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he made them g●eat and put them in those high places of Government and Trust The Lord is he that maketh men in this sense We say commonly of a man that is advanced to some great place He is a made man and on the contrary of a man that is thrown down He is an undone man God giveth us a being and a bodily fabrick he protects us in our being he advanceth us to a wel-being in all we may call him and call upon him as our Maker And when men would unmake us that is oppress and undo us then we should say in faith Where is God our maker who once gave us life and hath since lifted us up from the gates of death and put us into a good condition Many are crying out upon and possibly some railing and raging at men but who saith in the sense opened Where is God my maker There is one thing further considerable in the Grammar of the Text. The Hebrew is plural or a plural with a singular as Gen. 1.1 In the beginning God created The word Elohim rendred God is plural The word Bara created singular Thus here Where is God my makers Mr Broughton translates Where is the puissant my makers I might spend much time in shewing the consent of several Scriptures in that poynt Joshua said to the people who promised and engaged to serve the Lord ye cannot serve the Lord. Why could they not the reason follows For he is an Holy God Josh 24.19 The Hebrew strictly is God holyes he Thus the Prophet expresseth it Isa 54.5 Thy makers is thy husband Solomons admonition runs in the same plural stile Eccl. 12.1 Remember now thy Creators in the dayes of thy youth Deus sanctus est Ad verbum Dii sancti ipse Mont But though the Scrip●ure speaks of God sometimes in the singular sometimes in the plural number yet the sense is alwayes singular The true God being but One and the onemost one and therefore the plural word Elohim is alwayes rendred in the singular number God where men●ion is made of the true God they having regard to the true meaning or Divinity of the Text not to the Grammar or termination of the word There are usually two reasons given by learned translaters and interpreters why the true God who is but one in essence and being is so often expressed in the Hebre● text plurally First to insinuate or intimate unto us that Great and glorious mystery of the Blessed Trinity of persons in the God-head I say to intimate it we cannot make a full or convincing proof from it against any Antitrinitarian Adversary because though the word Elohim notes a plurality yet we cannot by any force of the word determine that plurality precisely to a Trinity that must be done by other Scriptures of which we have an abundant store to stop the mouth of all gainsayers Secondly they tell us This plural word is used to set forth the honour of God according to the usage of Kings and Soveraigne Princes called Gods who speak of themselves though single persons in a plural stile We and Vs But I conceive neither is this cogent though both this and the former may be piously improved So much for the opening of these words No man saith Where is God my maker Hence observe First Many cry and complain in affliction but look not to God in affliction Deut. 32.18 Of the Rock that begat thee thou art unmindfull and hast forgotten God that formed thee Which as it is often verified in times of peace plenty and prosperity so not seldome in times of trouble pressure and affliction Yea there are some who cry and complain in affliction yet turn away from God in affliction Hos 7.14 They have not cryed unto me with their heart when they howled upon their beds they assemble themselves for corne and wine and they rebell against me These are so far from seeking God indeed or saying Where is our maker with their heart that they rebell against him while they would be relieved and fed by him How frequently even at this day do some men storme and fret and rage little minding God in their afflictions though formally or vocally calling on him 'T is easie to complain but hard to pray in a day of trouble The Jewes are reproved for their regardlesness of God while they made great preparations in a time of danger and war or of a feared siege Isa 22.8 c. Thou didst look in that day to the armour of the house of the forrest ye have seen also the breaches of the City of David that they are many c. And the houses have ye broken down to fortifie the wall Ye made also a ditch between the two walls for the water of the old pool c. Here were politick warlike preparations yea God was little thought upon in all this as it followeth v. 11. But ye have not looked unto the maker thereof neither had respect unto him that fashioned it long ago 'T is thus with the most of men when outward misery comes upon them what crying what working is there yet little returning to God little turning into their own hearts Secondly Note When men oppress and vex us it is best to have our recourse to God and apply to him That counsel Look to me and be saved Isa 45.22 is true of temporal as well as of eternal salvation God is our best friend at all times even in the best times and it is best to look to him in the worst times David could say Psal 73.28 when flesh and strength and heart when all fayled him It is good for me to draw near to God Let our condition be what it will but especially if we are in a bad condition it is good yea best to go to him who hath our times that is all the changes of our condition in his hand to him in whose hand the arme of the mighty is and in whose hand alone there is might to help and deliver us from the arme of the mighty Is it not best to look to him in affliction who can either support us in or bring us out of our affliction as pleaseth him He that made us can protect and save us therefore in every pinching strait in
looks to him that is poor in spirit or of a contrite spirit let such be in Rags and lye upon the Dunghil the Lord will look to them and he hath a threefold look for them First A look of honour as respecting their Persons Secondly A look of care to supply their wants Thirdly A look of justice to deliver them from wrong And if they that are poor in spirit be rich also in the world they shall not fail to receive right from the hand of the Lord. The Lord giveth right to all sorts of men against their wicked oppressors but his poor the Godly poor believing poor those that are poor not only in purse but in spirit are more peculiarly under this priviledge of being righted by the Lord. And usually in Scripture the word poor is taken in a good sence Nomen pauperis in bonum sumitur pauperes sunt populus Dei for good men as the word rich in an ill sence for evil men Jam. 5.1 Go to now ye rich men weep and howl for the miseries that shall come upon you The Apostle speaks as if that were the case of all rich or as if he called all rich men to weeping and howling c. Yet some poor men are wicked and some rich men are righteous and therefore I conceive the word poor may be taken here for any wronged or oppressed poor yet especially for the Godly poor For though God giveth right to all men even the worst of men yet here the scope of Elihu is to shew that God takes most care of those whom the wicked do most not only neglect but injure and oppresse He giveth right to the poor Hence Note The poor especially the Godly poor are often wronged and go by the worst in the world Or thus The poor as poor usually suffer from and by the world As the world is apt to oppresse any poor so mostly the Godly poor Psal 12.5 For the oppression of the poor I will arise 'T is possible a rich man may be oppressed a mighty man may be oppressed by one mightier than he but usually the poor are oppressed and they trampled on who are already underfoot And therefore the Lord saith For the oppression of the poor for the sighing of the needy now will I arise and set him at safety from him that puffeth at him This is not exclusive the Lord will arise for the help of the rich and great when any such are wronged but he is said to arise for the help of the poor as intimating that the poor seldome come by their right or find help in the world unlesse God arise to help them or help them to it and because he hath said he will help them to their right we may be sure he will Davids Faith was strong upon this promise Psal 18.27 Thou wilt save the afflicted people Psal 72.4 He shall judge the poor of the People P●al 140.12 I know that the Lord will maintain the cause of the afflicted And his Experience was as clear as his Faith was strong Psal 37.25 I have been young and now am old yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken that is I have often yea alwayes seen him helped one way or other and sometimes set on high from affliction Psal 107.41 The Lord careth so for the poor as if he cared for none else and the best of the poor are little cared for by any but the Lord. Zeph. 3.12 I will also leave in the midst of thee an afflicted and poor people and they shall trust in the Name of the Lord. The rich of this world trust to creature helps but as the Lords poor know they ought not to trust in creature help so they have it not to trust to and therefore they trust in the Name of the Lord not only out of choice which is their grace and duty but out of necessity And what will the Lord do for them that trust in him not only out of necessity but choice he will surely take care of them and do them right Secondly Note God rights the poor freely He giveth them right he doth not sell it What freer than gift They need not bribe for it As he freely giveth them the Righteousnesse of his Son to justifie them so they have common right of free gift to relieve them Note Thirdly The Lord relieves or rights the poor speedily He giveth implyeth a present act and that doubles the mercy Note Fourthly God will always right the wronged poor He giveth imports even a continued act as he did it in former times in the dayes of old so he doth it at this day and will do it always As the Lord giveth right speedily so constantly with him is no variablenesse or shadow of turning Most men do right only by fits but the Lord is ever giving right Lastly He giveth right to the poor not to this or that poor man but to the poor Hence Note The Lord distributes right to all that are wronged As his Mercy so his Justice is not confined to a few but floweth out to all But it may be objected Why then are so many poor without their right If the Lord giveth right and giveth it continually and impartially why do the poor cry and sigh and groan and mourn why see we so many tears of the poor If they have right why do they complain I answer First The Lord giveth right to the poor sometimes when the poor perceive it not Psal 97.2 Clouds and darknesse are round about him Righteousnesse and Judgement are the habitation of his Throne When a man cannot see the Lord doing right yet the Lord doth right The Sun shineth when eclipsed or covered with a Cloud The Lord never ceaseth to right the poor though neither poor nor rich perceive how or which way he doth it Secondly I answer He giveth right to the poor even when they want right or when they are under the sorest oppressions by supporting their hearts in this perswasion that he will give them right The poor have right when their minds are satisfied that they shall have right There is no true Godly poor man in the world how much soever afflicted but his heart is or may be satisfied that he shall have right That 's a sure word Psal 9.18 The needy shall not always be forgotten the expectation of the poor shall not perish for ever And therefore we may pray with confidence Forget not O Lord the Congregation of thy poor for ever Psal 74.19 The poor may rest in this assurance while their troubles rest upon them that God will bring forth their Righteousnesse as the Light and their Judgement as the Noon day Psal 37.6 He hath right who believes he shall have it as he that believeth hath everlasting life in hope long before he attains the possession of it John 3.36 Thirdly Though we say The Lord giveth right to the poor both speedily and constantly yet he reserveth to himself a liberty as to
without fruit to us and therefore he openeth the ear to discipline and sheweth us the meaning of such a cross or sickness of such a loss or affliction He openeth their ear to d●scipline Hence note First It is a special power of God which helps us to understand his mind either in his Word or in his Works We neither understand the dealings nor sayings of God if left to our selves the heart of man is shut his ear is deaf the ear of his heart that 's the ear here intended till God say as in the Gospel to the bodily ear Ephatha Be thou opened Pro. 20.12 The hearing ear and the seeing eye the Lord is the maker of them both That 's a great truth First of the sensitive ear and eye 't is the Lord who hath made the one to hear and the other to see as he told Moses Exod. 4.11 and as 't is said Psal 94.19 Secondly 't is as true if understood of the intellectual eye and ear the hearing ear and seeing eye that is the ear that heareth obediently and practically that ear is of Gods forming and making such an ear did God create Acts 16.14 where it is said A certain woman named Lydia a seller of purple of the City of Thyatira which worshipped God heard us whose heart the Lord opened that she attended to the things that were spoken by Paul Further what was the season of opening the ear It was a day of affliction when they were bound in fetters and holden in cords of affliction Hence learn God useth afflictions as medicines or means to restore spiritual hearing Man is often cured of his spiritual deafness both as to the voyce of the word and workes of God by sickness A good man in health Fles prospera donum est dei consolantis res odversa est donum dei admonentis quod igiturpateris un de plangis medicina est non paena castigatio non damnatio August in Psal 102. Qui juhentis verba non audiunt ferientis verberibus admonentur ut ad bona aeterna paenae trahant quos praemia non invitant Greg l. 26. Moral c. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et dicit peace prosperity may have his ears so stopped that the Lord sees it needful to send some sharp correction to get out the ear-wax and unlock them Prosperity saith one of the Ancients is the gift of God comforting us adversity is the gift of God admonishing us why then dost thou complain that thou sufferest thy suffering is a medicament not a punishment 't is for thy bettering not for thy undoing 'T is a favour to feel God striking when we have not heard him speaking and he therefore strikes that we may attend what he speaks When words do not prevaile to open the ear fetters and cords shall That 's the second designe of God when he brings the righteous into streights Then he openeth their ear to discipline The third is given in the close of this verse And commandeth that they return from iniquity Here 's the issue of the former two The shewing them their transgressions the opening their ear are that they may return from iniquity and here is a command that they must And commandeth that they return c. The Hebrew text may be rendred He speaketh or saith that they return from iniquity and this speaking may be expounded two wayes First by perswading He speaks perswadingly The Lords afflictions are perswasions his stroaks are entreaties he beseecheth us by ou● sorrows and sicknesses and weaknesses and pains that we would return from our iniquity Secondly we take speaking or saying in the highest straine He speaks by commanding he speaks autho●itatively Thus we render He commandeth The command of God is twofold First formal or express when God gives the rule in so many words Secondly vertual The command of God I conceive is here to be understood in this latter sense When the Lord afflicteth the righteous he vertually commands or sends out his Edict that they return from their iniquity The word return implyes them formerly following some iniquity gone far from the Lord This returning is repenting all the Scripture over I need say no more of that As by sin we turn from God so by repentance we return from iniquity and as the Lord at all times commands the righteous by his word so they even force him sometimes to command them by his rod which is called discipline in the former part of the verse because sinners feel paine and find matter to learn all at once He commandeth that they return from iniquity The word rendred iniquity signifies a vain empty thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habet significationem nihili Ab operibus suis malis quae similia sunt vanitate nihilo Chald a thing of nought so the Chaldee paraphraseth it here He commands that they return from their evil works which are like to vanity and a thing of nought What is sin but a kind of nothing we look for great matters from sin but it is a vanity it is like an Idol nothing in the world that is it is not such a thing as it doth import or as it promiseth or as the opinion of men make it to be Iniquity is no such thing as it pretendeth or as is pretended The Lord commandeth that they return from iniquity that is from doing that which will profit them nothing at all or no more than a vaine thing a thing of nothing can And yet though iniquity be nothing good or profitable yet 't is all things evil and hurtfull nor had any thing ever hurt us or been evil to us had it not been for iniquity He commandeth that they return from iniquity Hence Note First Affliction hath a voyce God speaks loudly to us by affliction He speaks to us as loud in his works as he doth in his word he trumpets to us he thunders to us in his works God speaks aloud but sweetly to us in his works of mercy he speaks aloud but terribly to us in his works of judgement Secondly Seeing as was touched in opening the words this command is not to be taken for a standing Law for so God alwayes commands men to return from iniquity but the command here is a renewed act or a special dispensation there is as it were a fresh command issued when a man is under the afflicting hand of God Hence Note God reinforceth or reneweth his command to return from sin as often as he reneweth our afflictions That we return from iniquity is a standing an everlasting Law but when we are in affliction then there is as it were a fresh Edition of the command 't is as I may say new printed and proclaimed the fetters print this command upon our heels and the cords upon our hands that we return from iniquity Thirdly Note Iniquity is a vaine thing it is a nothing Shall we not then return from it one would think a little perswasion
might serve the turn to hasten our return from a nothing and shall not a command do it when I say a nothing remember as was shewed sin is no such thing as you look upon it to be where are the profits that you have reaped by sin where are the contents and pleasures that you have taken by sin the profit the pleasure and content of sin are nothing there is no advantage to be had by sin Sin is something in the ill effects of it if you would have paine and dishonour and reproach you may have enough of it in sin and you will find sin a something in that sense but sin is a nothing that is no such thing as you expect and look for and therefore be perswaded to return from it Lastly From the whole text take notice of the purpose of God what he hath in his heart when he afflicteth his people the righteous for their iniquities and faylings for their faults and uneven walkings The scope of God in all this is not their hurt but good it is not to destroy them for their sin but to destroy their sin it is not to withdraw himself from them but to draw them nearer to himself all the hurt that the Lord intends us by any affliction is but to get out our dross and to fetch out our filth to bring us off from those things that will undo and ruine us for ever And how great an argument of the goodness of God is it that he designeth the evils which we suffer in these dying bodies to heal the evils and help on the good of our immortal souls that 's all the hurt that the Lord means us And the Lords heart is so much in this design the return of those he afflicts from their iniquity that he seems confident of it that when any are in affliction surely they will return Hosea 5.15 In their affliction they will seek me early surely they will And therefore the Prophet speaks of the Lord as defeated and disappointed of his purpose when he seeth such as he hath afflicted continuing in their sin Isa 9.13 The people turneth not unto him that smiteth them neither do they seek the Lord of Hosts As if he had said 'T is a wonder that being smitten they have not returned what a strange what a cross-grain'd people are these What doth the Lord smite you that you should run farther from him and follow your iniquity closer or hold it faster you may be ashamed that you turn not unto him that speaks to you but when you are smitten will you not return from iniquity remember the Lord therefore suffers you to be bound in fetters that you may be loosed from your sins he therefore suffers you to be holden in the cords of affliction that you might let go your transgressions Take heed you be not found disappointing him of his purpose How well it will be with those who do not disappoint him and how ill 't is like to be with such as do will appear further and fully in the two next verses JOB Chap. 36. Vers 11 12. 11. If they obey and serve him they shall spend their dayes in prosperity and their years in pleasures 12. But if they obey not they shall perish by the sword and they shall die without knowledge IN the former Context we heard what the blessed designes of God are upon the righteous when they are bound in fetters and holden in the cords of affliction namely to convince them of their sin to fit them for the receiving of Instruction and to bring them clear off from iniquity In these two verses Elihu proceedeth to shew what the issue of those afflictions will be in a double respect or case First In case the afflicted come up to and answer the forementioned designes of God that is if they take knowledge of their sin if their ears be opened to Instruction if they return from iniquity what then he tells us v. 11. If they obey and serve him they shall spend their dayes in prosperity and their years in pleasures that shall be the issue the blessed issue of all the afflictions with which they were exercised Secondly He shews us how those afflictions will issue in case the afflicted come not up to those designes of God in case they are not brought to a knowledge of sin nor receive instruction nor return from iniquity what then he tells us that v. 12. if they obey not this will be the consequent of their obstinacy they shall perish by the sword and they shall die without knowledge We have a parallel Scripture to this almost in terms Isa 19.20 If ye hear and obey ye shall eat the good of the Land but if ye refuse and rebell ye shall be devoured with the sword This text not only carries the sense but almost the words by which Elihu expresseth both the Lords pleasure and displeasure in this place to Job Vers 11. If they obey or hear That is take out the lesson taught them if they do that which the affliction teacheth them or which God teacheth by their affliction by their cords and fetters then c. The same word is frequently in Scripture used for obeying and hearing Psal 81.8 11 13. Psal 95.7 To what purpose is our hearing the will of God without obedience to it When young Samuel said at the Lord's call Speak for thy servant heareth 1 Sam. 3.10 his meaning was Lord I am ready to do what thou speakest We hear no more than we obey and therefore obeying and hearing may well be exprest by the same word The text is plain I shall only give this Note and pass on It is our duty to hear and obey when-ever God calls or speakes either in his word or in his works That which this text holds out specially is the voice of God in his works what God speakes by Fetters what he speakes by Cords If ever we hear and obey the voice of the Lord it should be when he teacheth us as Gideon taught the men of Succoth Judg. 8.16 with thornes and briars of the wilderness O let us take care of hearing and obeying this voice For First God is the Lord and therefore to be obeyed Secondly God is a Soveraign Lord and therefore much more to be obeyed Thirdly As all the Commands so all the Chastisements of God are just and righteous therefore they are most of all to be obeyed Fourthly To obey the Commands of God whether taught us in his Word or by his Rod is good yea best for us therefore we should obey for our own good If they obey And serve him or worship him The word which here we render to serve 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Religio at numinis cultus est servitus quaedam is very often in Scripture rendred to worship and sometimes worshipping is expounded by serving Mat. 4.10 Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve that also is the mind of the
were bound in Fetters and holden in Cords of affliction Now saith Elihu here they shall spend their dayes in prosperity and their years in pleasures Hence Note There is no condition so low and forlorn but the Lord is able to bring us out of it and into the enjoyments of fullest comforts He can change our Iron Fetters and Cords into Rings of Gold and Bracelets he can translate our dayes of trouble and our years of pain into dayes of prospe●ity and years of pleasure it was so with Job in the issue and he was the man that Elihu here intended Job was long bound in fetters and holden in the cords of affliction yet as Elihu told him he should so he did afterwa ds spend his dayes in prosperity and his years in pleasure the Lord doubled his Cattel to him his friends fil'd his Coffers and his Cabinets Every man gave him a peace of money and every one an Ear-ring of Gold his children also were the same fo● number his daughters the fairest in the Land himself also lived in the fulness of this outward Prosperity till he was full of dayes and he fed upon the delicious fruits of this Promise all his after-dayes Manasseh having run a course of unparallel'd wickedness was at last taken by the Captains of the host of the King of Assyria among the Thorns and they bound him with fetters and carryed him to Babylon 2 Chron. 33.11 yet when in his affliction he besought the Lord his God and humbled himself greatly before the God of his Fathers he was entreated of him and brought again to Jerusalem where he spent his dayes in prosperity and his years in pleasure If we turn to the Lord in affliction the Lord is ready to turn away our affliction or as the Church prayed in the half turn of her affliction Psal 126.4 to turn our captivity as the streams in the South that is to make both a most admirable and a most comfortable turn of our condition Streams in the hot Southern Countries are rare the Rain of those Lands usually is dust Streams in the South are also very welcome How glad are they of a cooling Showre from a Cloud who daily feel and are fainted with the scorching Beams of the Sun Such a turn shall they have saith Elihu who being holden in the cords of affliction turn from iniquity obey and serve the Lord. Thirdly From the matter of the Promise Note A comfortable passage through this life is a very great mercy as well as the hope of happiness for ever in the other life 'T is prosperity and pleasure in this world though nor meer worldly prosperity and pleasure which is here p●o●ised and we are not to slight any thing that comes by promise yea we should highly esteem those things which considered in themselves are little worth as they come to us through the Promise We may quickly over-rate and over-reckon outward things in themselves and we ever do so if we rate or reckon them any better than vanity but as they are promised and bestowed in a way of savour from God and as they are a part of the purchase of Christ and handed to us by him so are even outward things to believers thus they are very valuable Upon these terms to live and spend our dayes in good and our years in honest lawful pleasures is a great mercy From the whole take two Corolaries First How blasphemous then is their Opinion who say it is a vain thing to serve the Lord or that there is no profit in calling upon him which blasphemy was resuted Chap. 21.14 Secondly Would we have a good end of or out-gate from our afflictions then let us hear and obey Thus much of the first case what the issue of their afflictions shall be who obey The Second issue upon the contrary case followeth in the 12th verse Vers 12. But if they obey not they shall perish by the Sword and dye without knowledge Here contraries are set one over against another for their fuller illustration If they obey not that is if those righteous men spoken of before vers 7. obey not What it is not to obey is clear by what I said was to obey in opening the former verse I shall only take notice that in this latter part it is not said If they obey not and serve him not but only if they obey not and I conceive Elihu saith no more or proceeds no further because they who deny obedience will certainly deny service therefore he stops at that If they obey not They who are good in their state may often fail in doing that which is good for of those this Text yet speaks and is generally interpreted The Hypocrite in heart is spoken of in the next verse but here Elihu is speaking of the righteous and because he is so therefore by this disobedience cannot be meant an obstinate rebellion but a sloth or carelesness in attending to the Call of God for the amendment of some evil in their lives If they obey not Hence Note The calls and commands of God are not alwayes obeyed no not by good men not by the righteous The call and command of God is not at all obeyed by the wicked and it is not alwayes obeyed by the righteous The righteous sometimes hear the word but do not answer it and sometimes they feel the rod and do not attend it they cry out of the smart of the rod and of the sores which the lashes of the rod have made upon them they weep over or because of their sores yet they do not presently give glory to God by obeying him and leaving their sinnes I mean as to that special point of duty in which God would have them obey him and as to those special sins which God by that affliction calls upon them to leave Many good men do not presently understand the purpose of God in this or that affliction and while it is so with them they must needs fail in answerableness to it I know every godly man hath a general bent to obey God and serve him It is not with the godly in their afflictions as with the wicked under theirs of whom the Prophet speaks Isa 9.13 They did not turn to him that smote them yet even such Scriptures are in a degree applicable to many of the people of God they do not alwayes turn to him that smiteth them when they are exercised with variety of calamities they mind not the Lord as they ought And hence it is I say that though the righteous have a general bent to obedience yet they sometimes come short of that obedience which a special affliction or correction calleth them to yea they may be so short in answering it that the Lord may proceed to lay heavier and greater afflictions upon them even to the taking of them out of the world as it followeth in this verse If they obey not They shall perish by the sword Before they were bound in
of prophane spirits usually dye in their youth and are cut off in the Flower of their Age. They who multiply their sins substract from their dayes and they have least g●ound of hope to live long who live ill As bloody so deceitful men such are hypocrites in heart shall not live out half their dayes They who live not out half their dayes dye in youth That also is the meaning of Eliphaz Chap. 15.32 where he saith The wicked man shall have his recompence before his time as also when he saith Chap. 22.16 They were cut down out of time that is before the ordinary time of cutting man down by Death was come And therefore I answer Secondly they die in youth needs not be taken in that strictness as importing that they die before they come to mens estate but only that they die before the common time of dying To die in youth signifieth any immature death or when death cometh suddainly upon any they may be said to die in youth Thus here they die in youth that is some immature or suddain death overtakes them they come to an hasty or untimely end they prolong not their dayes on earth Thirdly this dying in youth may refer to the hypocrites unpreparedness or unfitness to die Unprepared persons may be said to die in youth because youths or younger men a●e usually unprepared to die Hence that serious memento or warning given them Eccles 12.1 Remember now thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth Young men are commonly so unprepared to die that whosoever die unprepared may be said to die in youth yea though they die in old age they die infants I may say at least in alusion to that of the Prophet possibly it may be a proof of what I say Isa 65.20 An old man that hath not filled his dayes by being good and doing good dieth a child As a child may be said to die an hundred years old when he dies full of grace so a man of an hundred years old may be said to die a child an infant when he hath no grace for though he hath been long in the world yet he can hardly be said to have lived at all So then how long soever the hypocrite in heart hath had a being on the earth and a breathing in the air he alwayes dieth in youth or before his time Moritur cum Juventa Jun. Ponitur ב pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut cap. 9.26 Psal 143.7 Pisc Aeque morientur pari judicio Dei conterentur atque juveniles illi animi qui proterve obnituntur Deo palam ad omne flagitium projecti sunt Jun. Vt hic vita mori dicitur sic Authores Latini dicunt vita vivere vitam vivere vita moritur cum homo vitam cum morte commutat Drus Vita eorum suppleo ausertur Pisc Cum meritoriis Pisc Latini vacant cinaedos pathicos qui in concubitu libidinoso vice mulieris funguntur Id. because he hath not yet learned the way to eternal life There is yet another reading of the wo●ds we say they die in youth that saith they die with youth or young men that is as dissolute deboyst vitious and riotous young men die so hypocrites die The hypocrite is opposed to the outwardly profane in his life but he shall be like him in his death As if Elihu had said look as vain voluptuous youths carnal youths or young men who give themselves up to their pleasures look as or how they die look what wrath is upon them when they die even so shall the hypocrites in heart die they die with the youth I shall touch this further upon the last clause where Elihu gives us this sence in other words and in words that more fully reach this sence for having said they die in or with youth he thus concludes And their life is among the unclean Here it may be queried forasmuch as he said before they die in youth how doth he here say Their life is among the unclean what life have they when dead I answer By their li●e we may understand that life which hypocrites in heart shall have after death which may be taken two wayes First for the life of the soul while the body remaines a consuming or consumed ca●kass in the grave that life after death the life of their soules is among the unclean Secondly for the life which they shall have after the resurrection of their bodies that will be among the unclean too Some translate the words thus Their life is taken away among the unclean we say their life is among the unclean The word is is not in the original text and we may make the supply by a word signifying to take away Their life is taken away among the unclean that is they shall die like the worst of sinners they shall make no better an end than the unclean and profane no better than the most foul and filthy Sodomites as the original imports For The word which we render unclean hath a double yea a contrary signification holy and unholy clean and unclean They who are holy onely in name are most unholy in heart and life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Duo contraria signifi●at sanctura profanum pollutum scortatorem Recte simulatores effaeminatis comparat quia ex pravitate animi contingit quod homines sint simulatores est enim proprium magnanimi esse manifestum Aquin. The Scripture often by the same word expresseth things of utmost opposition so here he calleth those who are most unholy by a word which signifieth holiness the Hebrew saith their life is among the Sodomites Mr. Broughton translates and their life with fornicators Sodomites who are the most unclean and filthy sinners worse than fornicators are expressed by a word by this word which also signifieth holy or holy ones Deut. 23.17 There shall not be a Sodomites or an holy one among you and therefore as we read of Sodomites in the land who are sinners against the the law of nature 1 Kings 14.24 so according to that law of Moses we read 1 Kings 15.12 and Chapter 22.46 as also 2 Kings 23.7 of the destroying of the houses of the Sodomites and of the removing of Sodomites out of the land Sodomites being the most abominable of all unclean ones how unclean are they whose life is among them or whose life is taken away wi●h them The Spirit of God doth rightly compare hypocrites to Sodomites and filthy persons because it proceeds from the heat of some base lust or other that any are hypocrites 'T is proper to those who are magnanimous or of noble spirits to be open clear-hearted and ingenious Their life is with the unclean Hypocrites have a great affectation to be numbered among the clean and holy and possibly they have been or may be high in the opinion of men for holiness for very Sain●s But their life shall be among the Sodomites or the unclean It being a shame to
express the abomination of that sort of sinners by a word proper to them the Scripture by an Euphemisme calls them holy we translate the Scripture sense and call them unholy or unclean Their life is among the unclean among Sod●mites Thus as the death of the hypocrite here is fully expressed in the former words He shall die with the youth that is like those sinful Sodomitish youths like those youths who live in the heat of abominable lusts though he seemed to have an heat of holiness so their life he●eafter is fully expressed in these latter words Their life is with the unclean This clearly sets forth hypocrites they are spiritual adulterers they pretend love to Christ as their husband but their hearts go a whoting after the world And therefore as their life was really in this world though they pretended otherwise so it shall be visible in the world to come among the unclean Hence Note First They who are like the unclean in this life shall be wrapped up with them in the next life after death or in the second death They who live like the wicked shall dy like the wicked and live with them if theirs may be called a life for evermore The hypocrite with all his varnish and fair colours shall not die like a godly man nor live with him after death though he hath lived the life of a godly man as to appearance yet he shal not die so nor live so when the dead rise he shal die and live like and among his own company the unclean He was secretly unclean in his life and he shall openly live among the unclean when he dyes Balaam a Sorcerer a Witch a false Prophet how did he beg that he might die the death of the righteous and that his last end might be like his Num. 23.14 The hypocrite would sain die like those whom he hath imitated and made a shew of all the dayes of his life But did Balaam dy like the righteous no he dyed as he lived like one that had loved the wages of unrighteousness Though hypocrites have lived in reputation with godly and good men yea have been reputed godly and good men yet when they die they shal go down among the unclean even among the debauched and filthy Sodomites they shal go to their own place and to their own company It is said of Judas when he hanged himself Acts. 1.25 He went to his own place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his proper place All things naturally tend to that which is congeniall or like to them heavy things downward light things upward What place is congenial to what place is the center of wicked men Surely Hell the bottomless pit is their own place and that 's the meaning of the text there Judas was a great while among the Apostles in an high place in a very excellent place he went like an Apostle or for an Apostle but that was not his owne place he was an hypocrite and when he dyed then he went to his owne place to th●t place which was proper to him In this life good and bad are mingled together in the same place the hypocrites and the sincere may be in one House in one Cong egation in one Church in the purest Church on ea●th there may be hypocrites in heart as well as sincere but when hypocrites die they shall be divided from all those with whom they were never truly or in heart united If it were possible all the godly or sincere should be in one place as to spirituals here that 's most comely and desirable though not attainable yet we cannot make the separation perfect in this life but at death it will be done perfectly death will not leave one hypocrite among the sincere not a weed among the herbs nor a chaff in the floor death will make perfect separation after death all the holy shall be gathered together into one society and all the unholy into another society by themselves It is said of Abraham he was gathered to his people Gen. 25.8 Not only to his kindred in the flesh but to all those that were of his faith Death will gather all to their proper place and company Godly Josiah was gathered to his fathers 2 Chron. 34.28 and the wicked are said Psal 49.19 to go to the generation of their fathers where they shall never see light Death will send every one to his owne The hypocrite shall no more shuffle himself among the righteous nor Satan himself nor any of his Sons among the Sons of God every man shall be for ever among his like Further note The smoothest-faced and closest hypocrite in the world shall fare as bad or no better then the foulest and deboystest sinner They shall die with the vile and be taken away among the unclean The fairest hypocrite shall have no more esteem with God then the foulest Sodomite that ever was in the world Christ saith if any refuse to receive the Gospel it shall be worse with them then with Sodom the cry of whose sins went up to heaven nor shall it be any whit better but rather worse with them who ●eceive the Gospel of Christ only in shew their hearts not being right with him How woful is their present condition who daily heap up wrath who in the sense opened die in or with youth and whose life after death is among the unclean JOB Chap. 36. Vers 15 16 17. 15. He delivereth the poor in his affliction and openeth their ear in oppression 16. Even so would he have removed thee out of the strait into a broad place where there is no straitness and that which should be set on thy table should be full of fatness 17. But thou hast fulfilled the judgement of the wicked judgement and justice take hold on thee ELihu having shewed how terrible God will be how dreadfully he will deal with subtile hypocrites The hypocrites in heart heap up wrath proceeds in this context to do two things further First that he might raise some hope in Job if he did it last humble himself he repeats the gracious dealings of God with humble and upright-hearted ones at the 15th verse I say he repeats it because he had spoken of it before vers 6 7. and this is a very useful and profitable repetition by which Job is doubly admonished to raise himself from his despair of a better condition forasmuch as God doth not afflict with a purpose to destroy but that he may heal and help the afflicted The greatest design of God in chastening us should be alwayes remembred that he intends only our good especially to make us thereby better or more partakers of his holiness Secondly he makes application of the whole doctrine to Job and that two wayes First by way of consolation assuring him he had been delivered in case he had humbled himself duly deeply before the Lord v. 16. Even so would he have removed thee out of the strait into a large place
also render it after so the copulative Vau is expounded Lev. 17.15 Jer. 10.13 Thus here Faciet eum intelligere quod pro peccatis punitur Aquin He delivereth the poor in afflion after he hath opened their ears that is after he hath made them understand that sin hath caused their sufferings and hath also made them obedient and ready to receive counsel from him as that phrase of opening the ear hath been opened He openeth or when or after he hath opened their ears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a radic● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 coarcta●it pressit co●pressit vim intulit praeposito in saepo valet per. in oppression or by oppression The word notes extream oppression we read it Num. 22.25 in the story of Balaam where 't is said his Asse crushed or pressed or oppressed his foot against the wall while he was going to curse the people of Israel that so Balak might oppresse them This word is used also Judg. 4.3 1 Sam. 10.18 and by it Elisha shewed how he would have Jehorams messenger handled 2 Kings 6.32 Oppression takes fast hold The Lord takes fast hold of sinners by oppression and will not let them go till he hath opened their ears but as soon as he hath opened their ears in or by their oppressions then out of hand he delivereth them in if not out of their afflictions From the connection of this with the former part of the verse Observe The evil of oppression or trouble is preparatory to or a usual meanes to fit us for our receiving of good He delivereth them in affliction when he hath opened their ears in or by oppression When once the soul by hearing the cry of the oppressor is made obedient to the call of God then God comes and workes deliverance Good men while free from evil are oftentimes like the wilde ass described in the 39th chapter of this book such as will not hear nor regard the crying of the driver though he be not an exactor as the word there signifies and we put in the Margine but a fair and gentle driver Few hear when spoken to till they feel as well as hear and therefore the Lo●d first sends them into trouble that they may hear and having by that meanes opened their eares to hea● he b●ings them out of trouble When we are truly humbled by affliction we are near deliverance from affliction The plaister must be kept on till the wound be healed The Lord will not leave off scourging or correcting his people till he hath brought them to such a post●re that they are fit for mercy The Lord helps and heals those who submit and if they whom he hath bound with the cords of affliction call humbly for release and relief he will not forsake them but restore them in due time to their former felicity He delivereth the poor in affliction when he hath opened their eares in or by oppression Elihu having laid down this general Doctrine makes Application of it in the two verses following Vers 16. Even so would he have removed thee out of the strait into a broad place Thus Elihu proceeds from the general Thesis or assertion of Gods deliverance to the Hypothesis accommodating the Doctrine to Jobs Case and Person Even so he would have removed thee c. This 16th verse contains the first part of the Application made to Job where Elihu informs him what the issue would undoubtedly have been if he had submitted which he did not as he ought to the afflicting hand of God and had not which he did and ought not filled his mouth and the eare of God with bitter complaints nor stood so stifflly upon his own defence and vindication This Elihu doth by a double allusion First to the bringing of a man out of close prison into a state of freedom or into an open air This he gives us in the former part of the verse even so would he have removed thee out of the strait into a broad place Secondly he doth it by alluding to the furnishing of a mans table with store not only of wholsome but of delicious meates who before fared very hardly This he doth in the close of the verse and that which should be set on thy table should be full of fatness As if he had said if thou had'st harkened to the voyce of God thou should'st have had both liberty and plenty had'st thou been bettered by thy troubles it had been better for thee and much better with thee thou hadst been enlarged fully thou hadst been supplyed abundantly with all manner of good things desirable even to the utmost of thy desires that 's the general scope of this verse more particularly Even so would he have removed thee out of a strait into a broad place Some read the verse with a retro-respect or as looking back to the time past as if Elihu had bid Job remember his former experiences whether God heretofore dealt not bountifully with him To this sense besides others Mr. Broughton translates which hath turned thee from distresses mouth Sic etiam averterat to ab ore angustiae in latitudinem cui non fuberat pressura ferculum mensae tuae plenum erat pinguedine Jun. to largeness where is no straitness and that which was laid upon thy table was full of fatness and he gives the gloss upon his own translation thus God once made thee wealthy and would again thou hast had experience how good a master and how liberal the Lord is to those that serve him thou thy self didst enjoy prosperity a long time farre from all trouble or touch of affliction Thus I say some refer the words to the time past but I rather keep to our own translation which expresseth the original text as an assurance of what Job should have had and might have expected in time had he complied as he ought with the purpose of God in his afflictions Even so would he have removed thee out of a strait into a broad place As if he had said God who useth and loveth to deliver the poor out of affliction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est proprie incitare fere ad malum a radice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would also have delivered thee out of thy affl●ction had'st thou been humbled under thy affliction had'st thou fallen down before him hadst thou submitted the matter to him and not disputed it with him as thou hast done hadst thou confessed his justice and not accused it or complained about it even so would he have removed thee c. The word which we translate to remove signifieth also To move or to perswade because he that perswades another Ex eadem radi●e variae loctiones interpretationes pullularant Pined moveth or removeth him from his opinion or intendment or from what his practise was before and brings him to be or do somwhat that he did not or was not before To be perswaded is to be inwardly moved to be moved
in mind And therefore they who perswade or entice others to evil are said to turn them from the Lord and to thrust them out of the way which the Lord commandeth them to walk in Deut. 13.5 To perswade in any degree is to move Josh 15.18 and some perswade so strongly that they make in others great removes Further It signifies to deceive as will appear if you compare Text and Margin 2 Kings 18.32 and those Texts 2 Chron. 32.11 15. all concerning one matter He that is deceived is usually deceived by perswasion and is drawn away by some enticements Now because he that perswadeth or deceiveth another endeavoureth to turn or remove him from what he holdeth or intendeth to the contrary therefore as we render this word signifies also to remove to bring from one place to another or from one state to another He would have removed or translated thee Out of a streight into a broad place Here are two sorts of places a streight and a broad place What a streight place properly taken is all know The Heb ew is He would have removed thee out of the mouth of the streight 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Angustia et adversarius Hinc Septuaginta reddunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Septuagint render He would have removed thee out of the mouth of the enemy An enemy puts us to streights and th●refore the same word signifies a streight and an enemy he would have removed thee out of a streight place the hand of an enemy is so But mo●e generally by the streight place we are to understand any kind of tribulation or trouble whatsoever Troubles of any sort are justly called streights for they inclose and imprison us they abridge us of our liberty they ty us short up where we can scarce stir or breath A man in trouble is a man in streights Some expound these words allegorically taking the mouth of the streight for Hells mouth they that descend thither are indeed in everlasting streigh●s for though Tophet be deep and large as the Prophet speaks Isa 30.33 yet all that are there are in streights Hell is la ge to take in but streight to let out Gehenna est ampla ad recipiendum et angusta ad emitten●um so streight that it will not let one out for ever Others expound it tropologically or with respect to manners he would have delivered thee out of the mouth of the streight that is from the power of thy sins and corruptions for they indeed are streights and though we easily fall into them yet we hardly get ou● De put●o peccati et pr●vae consuctudinis cu●● ingressus facilis exi●us pr●●● angu●tu● Gregor or free of them again But we need not take up either Allegories or Tropologies the words are plain That which Elihu here inten●s by streights is great trouble deep misery into which a man being cast knows neither how to subsist nor how to escape Ye● out of that streight place he promiseth deliverance He would have removed thee out of a streight O●●ng sli●● e●t ingeas ●●la●itas abyssu● m●●●rum in quam de●ersus homo n●que subsistere n●que emergere potest Into a broad place That is to liberty and prosperity which are in Scripture compared to a broad place where a man hath room enough Thou hast known my Soul in adversity sai h David Psal 31.7 8. and hast not shut me up in the hand of the enemy thou hast set my feet in a large Room that is in a prospe●ous condition Thus Elihu here promiseth on Gods behalf He would have removed thee out of a streight into a large place Where no streightness is Sp●tium latum est ●mo la●issimum ubi n●lla angustia est That 's a broad place indeed No streightness implyeth greatest enlargement or enlargment to the uttermost not only of need but desire A broad place where there is no streightness is full lib●rty or fill of liberty A man may be in a very good in a very free condition and yet have some streights To be in so good a condition as to have no streights at all is the top and perfection of freedom And surely The full attainment of such an enlargedness is the reward of the next life not the enjoyment of this life The way of the wicked V●t impi●rum est lata angustissim●e via justo am est angusta latissime et definit in latitudinem jucund ssimam in this life is most streightly broad the way of the righteous in this life is broadly streight and endeth in a broadness of everlasting blessedness God at last will remove all his out of a streight into a broad place where there is no streightness Hence First See the Author of our deliverance is again here rememb●ed He would have removed c. As before he delivereth the poor in affl●ctions so here again He would have removed thee out of a streight into a broad place As all our mercies are of the Lord so let us acknowledge him in all Secondly From the Allusion Note Troubles are streights He is in a streight that knows not what to do thus 't is often with us in our troubles It was so with good Jehoshaphat 2 Chro. 20 12. when a mighty Enemy came up against him Lord said he we know not what to do but our eyes are towards thee he was in a streight what to do here on earth but he had a b oad place to look to even to heaven to the Lord of heaven and earth our eyes are towards thee As if he had said Lord we are in a streight but thou art never in streights Lord counsel us what to do Lord help us to do it The afflicted many a time know not what to do and many times they cannot do what they know they know this thing would do them good but they cannot do it they know that might be helpfull to them but they cannot reach it He is in a streight that doubts what good to chuse much more is he in a streight who seeth that what-ever he chuseth he must chuse some evil Paul was in the former streight and David in the latter Paul was in a streight it was a trouble to him being doubtfull which good to chuse Phil. 1.23 I am in a streight betwixt two betwixt what two betwixt two very good things namely living here in doing good and going to heaven to receive his reward he was in a streight whether to live here to do more work or to go to heaven to receive the reward of his work 'T is some trouble but a blessed trouble when we are in a doubt which good to chuse But they are in very great trouble who are in such a streight that whatsoever they chuse they must chuse evil That was Davids streight 2 Sam. 24.14 the Lord gave him a choyce and a very sad one of three evils either of famine or of pestilence or of flying and
him to take heed of speaking or uttering any thing rashly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Custodivit servavit unduely or unbecomingly of God in respect of his troubles and sufferings and this he urgeth upon him by two sorts of arguments as will appear when I come to handle the two following verses Take heed regard not inniquity As if he had said beware be well advised what thou dost and what thou sayest The word which we here render take heed signifies to keep and preserve but most properly to prevent and keep off any evil that it fall not upon us The noun from this root signifies a watch tower upon which a person stands to observe and give warning of any danger or to descry any approaching enemy 'T is translated take heed as here so 1 Kings 2.4 where David upon his death-bed gives counsel to Solomon his son and successor what to do and how to walk in the way of the Lord that saith he the Lord may continue his word which he spake concerning me saying if thy children take heed to their wayes that is if they are very watchful over their wayes both as to their personal and princely walkings if they walk in my statutes then I will do thus and thus for them Thus saith Elihu take heed look about you have your eyes in your head be careful These take heeds are frequent in Scripture From whence before I come to the matter about which Elihu would have Job take heed Observe It is our duty to be heedful We cannot be dutiful unless we are heedful a headless person cannot be a faultless person This duty runs quite through all we have to do take heed first to the inward motions of the soul take heed how what you think Pro. 4.23 keep thy heart with all diligence with all keepings with all heedings it is this word in the text heed thy heart that is thy first stirrings and motions unto any work Secondly take heed as to the first motions of the soul so to the affections of the soul which are soul-motions formed up and stated take heed of your affections how and what you desire how and what you love how and what you hate Thirdly take heed to the tongue how you speak and what you speak where you speak and why or for what ends you speak there is a great deal of take heed belonging to the tongue Fourthly take heed to the ear when ye hear others speak take heed how you hear and when ye hear and what you hear infection may soon come in at those ports Fifthly take heed to the eyes what you behold the eyes are windowes which often let in vanity yea I may say venome and poyson into the soul In a word take heed of all your actions or of your whole conversa●ion take heed what you do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod saepe animi intentionem vel contemplationem valet ad aliquem finem utpote ad miserandum vel interrogandum vel adjudicandum Bold and how you do it see that ye walk circumspectly take heed in and about all these things that ye sin not especially that ye neither have nor carry on any design or work that is sinful take heed that ye be not found falling into that errour to avoyd which Elihu calleth or awakeneth Job to this watchfulness take heed Regard not iniquity Here is the special matter in the text about which Elihu advises Job to be heedful regard not iniquity The word rendred regard signifies the turning of the face to look upon any object that which we much regard we turn about to look upon it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iniq●itas vanitas as that which we slight we turn away from it and will not look upon it we turn our face to a person or thing signifying our approbation and we turn away our face to shew our dislike and therefore we do well express this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Absurda indecentia Sept. which signifies to turn the face by regarding turn not thy face to iniquity look not to it give it not any respect or countenance regard not Iniquity The word signifies vanity properly All iniquity is vanity sin is vanity and sin hath brought vanity into the whole creation yea sin makes all things a vexation to us The Chaldee sai●h regard not a lie the Septuagint regard not things absurd or uncomly But what Iniquity doth Elihu here chiefly intend I answer It is a truth of Iniquity in general regard not any iniquity yet here Elihu speaks not in that compass as if he should say regard not robbery regard not murder regard not adultery and wantonness regard not any of these foul and gross sins but there was a special sin which Elihu had an aym at and which he thought Job gave too much regard unto regard not iniquity that is undue speeches and heart-g udgings or impatient complainings against the proceedings of God with thee that is do not stand so much complaining about what thou sufferest and justifying thy self in what thou hast done expostulate the matter no more with God wish not for the night of death c. This is to regard or turn thy face to iniquity take heed of these things do not regard these evils this kind of iniquity Further when Elihu saith regard not iniquity we are to expound him by these affirmatives slight it turn from it abhor it loath it despise it reject it all these affi matives are contained in that negative regard not Frequently in Scripture negatives intend their contrary affirmatives When that Scripture saith despise not prophesying 1 Thes 5. the meaning is ye shall regard it love i● follow it delight in it so on the other hand when this Scripture saith regard not iniquity the meaning is despise and oppose iniquity to the utmost Take heed regard not iniquity From this part of the verse thus opened Observe First It is no easie matter to keep our selves right when things seem to go wrong with us It is a hard thing to forbear iniquity when we are pinched with adversity not to speak unduely and uncomly not to speak amiss of God not to speak unbecoming our selves require ●reat caution in a day of distress We have need to take heed of this iniquity to be watchful in an evil day that we neither do nor say that which is evil When things are amiss with us we are very apt to speak and do amiss As soon as ever the hand of God toucheth us how do we grieve how do we complain how do we murmur how do we repine O regard not this 't is an iniquity to be taken heed of in a dark day in a day of trouble such as was upon Job as black a day was upon him as ever upon any in the world as to his personal condition If such a Cedar failed have not we poor Shrubs reason to look about in such
teaching as ye may see vers 45. Every one therefore that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh unto me That is every one whom the Father hath vouchsafed to teach and instruct that man cometh to me that is he believeth and obeyeth the Gospel and submitteth both in judgment and practise Every one that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh to me There is not one whom God hath undertaken to teach that doth miscarry Isa 32.4 The heart of the rash shall understand knowledge or the heart of the hasty Now hasty and rash persons are heady and inconsiderate persons and therefore none of the wisest they usually have little judgment or discretion who are much in passion but God can make the heart of the rash to understand knowledge that is he can make them understand and know things aright who seem most uncapable of and are naturally at the greatest distance from a rightness of knowledge and understanding To close the Point take these inferences from the who I. First If God be such a teacher then stay not in the bare teachings of men What are the teachings of men to the teachings of God Though you should have an Angel from heaven to speak to you yet stay not in his teachings wait for the teachings of God Till ye are taught of God ye never learn to purpose Set your selves not only as in Gods presence but as under his Spirit to be taught wait for the moving of the Spirit in every ordinance as they did for the Angels moving of the waters who lay at the poole of Bethesda for healing Joh. 5.4 Secondly Seeing God teacheth thus paramount seeing none teach like him then submit to his teaching Do not question any of his rules of life or doctrines of faith they are all righteous and full of divine truth you cannot do amiss if you do nor believe amiss if you believe no nor miss of blessedness in doing and believing what he hath taught Thirdly Then appear as they who are taught of God You will say How or when doth it appear that we are or have been taught of God I shall answer that query in four things First If you are or have been taught of God his teaching unteacheh or emptyeth you that in a threefold respect First of your own carnal principles The great business of divine teaching is to unteach to take men off from their own Will and Reason from their own Rules as also from those Customes which they have received by tradition from their fathers If you would appear as taught of God you must lay down all these The teachings of grace empty the soul of what it hath taken up by Nature Secondly the teachings of God empty the soul of all self-righteousness If ye be taught of God ye will be nothing in your selves Paul before the teachings of God came had confidence in the flesh and boasted in his own righteousness but when he was taught of God he threw off all those Thirdly If ye are taught of God that will certainly unteach and empty you of all unrighteousness The Apostle speakes fully to that Ephes 4.20 21. Ye have not so learned Christ if so be that ye have been taught as the truth is in Jesus If ye have been divinely taught then this teaching hath emptyed you of the old man as of all self-righteousness so of all unrighteousness towards others It is impossible any should take in the teachings of God and yet hold any sinfull practisings Secondly divine teachings as they empty and unteach the soul so they keep it very humble Knowledg endangers us naturally to high thoughts of our selves and hath a tendency in it to p●ide 1 Cor. 8.1 Knowledge puffeth up but charity edifieth Take knowledge barely as received of men even the knowledge of divine things for ye may have a humane knowledge of divine things this usually makes the heart swell but the knowledge we have from the teachings of God makes us humble it will cause us to cry out as the Prophet did when the Lord appeared and let out a more than ordinary manifestation of his glory Isa 6.5 we are undone It was so with Job when the Lord had schooled him and made himself more fully known to him th●n ever before he presen●ly cried out Chap. 41.5 I have hea●d of thee by the hearing of the ear but now mine eye seeth thee wherefore I abhor my self in dust and ashes Nothing keeps the soul so humble as the teachings of God Where we see any proud of what they have learned it is an argument that either they were never taught of God or that as yet they have not understood his teachings Thirdly The teachings of God do not only empty and humble the soul but they transform the soul and change it into another thing than it was as to its state and qualities The teachings of God change not only our manners but our very natures they not only give a light to the Understanding but a newness to the Will new Affections new Desires This is it which the Apostle calls the new creature 2 Cor. 5.17 and that this creature is wrought to its highest perfection by the teachings of God he sheweth 2 Cor. 3.18 We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the Spirit of the Lord. The glass wherein we have this sight of the glory of God is chiefly the Word The glory into which we are changed by those sights is our conformity to that holiness which shineth in the Word And this change is twofold First from sin to grace which is a degree of glory Secondly from glory to glory that is from a high to a higher and at last to the highest degree of grace Look what the Word is and calleth us to be that are we when taught according to the truth of the word by the power and Spirit of God Fourthly The teachings of God confirm the soul in that which is taught or we have learned If God teach any divine lesson that will stick We receive many lessons from men and let them slip as the Apostles word is Heb. 2.1 Doctrine taught us of God settles upon us we hold the substance of it and hold forth the fruit or power of it in every season of our lives yea if trouble or persecution arise for the truth they who are taught of God will hold it fast though they let go all they have in this world for it If God teach us the doctrine of Free Grace how we are justified by the righteousness of Jesus Christ without our own works If God teach us the doctrine of pure Worship how he is to be served and honoured according to his own will without the Traditions of men as Christ spake Mat. 15.9 If I say God teach us these or any other saving truths we cannot but hold them whereas they who have received them from men
in Prophesies of mercy and instruction so of judgment and desolation Thus the Lord charged his Prophet Ezek. 20.46 Son of man set thy face towards the south and drop thy words towards the south and prophe●●e against the forest of the south field Again Ezek. 21.2 Son of man set thy face towards Jerusalem and d●op thy words towards the hol● place and prophesie aga●nst the land of Israel Once more Amos 7.16 Drop no● thy word against the house of Isaac So tha● I say this dropping is us●d frequently as in a natural so in a spiritual sence He maketh small the drops Of water 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Forma duali significantur aquae duplices The word is of the Dual Number in the Hebrew and so it signifies both sorts of water the waters of heaven and the waters of the earth the upper and the nether waters the ●pper waters in the Clouds and the nether waters in the Springs We find them spoken of together in the first of Genesis at the 7th verse God divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament We find the upper waters spoken of singly Psal 104.3 Who layest the beams of the chambers in the waters Chambers are above And in the first of Genesis at the 9th verse we find the lower waters alone Let the waters be gathered together under the heavens Rabbi Selo exponit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multiplicat quia dum ita guttatim aquae decidunt multiplicantur Merc. Under-heaven waters are the lower waters One of the Rabbies renders the words thus He multiplieth the drops of rain and the reason of it is which falls in with our translation because the less any one thing is made the more is the general mass out of which it is made multiplied From the words thus far opened we may note somewhat for our instruction Taking the former signification of the words He draweth up the drops of water Observe The ordinary rain which watereth the earth is first fetched from the earth Plavia est vapor calidus humidus ex aquis locis humidis virtute Solis Stellarum usque ad m●diam aeris regionem elevatus ibi propte● loci frigiditatem in nubem condensatus c. Garc. de Meteorol part 2. cap. 25. God raiseth vapours from the earth and then watereth the earth with them All the rain which falls upon the earth was raised from the earth If I were to answer that question in nature What is Rain I might resolve it thus Rain is the moisture of the earth drawn up by the heat of the Sun into the middle Region of the Air which being there condensed into clouds is afterwards at the will of God dissolved and dropt down again in showers The Clouds at the command of God hold fast and at his command they break and let out their waters upon the earth This is as was toucht before a very ordinary yet a very admirable work of God As in spirituals all those acts of grace in faith and love and joy c. by which our hearts and souls are carried up to heaven come first from heaven so that rain which comes down upon us from heaven was first fetched from among us by the mighty power of God Rain according to natural Philosophy is thus generated The water and moisture of the earth being attenuated by the heat of the Sun-beams become vapours which being so rarified and resolved into an airy substance are by the same heat of the Sun drawn up to the middle region of the air where being again condensed or thickened into water they melt down into rain at the appointment of God We may consider rain briefly in all the causes of it Thus First The efficient cause of rain is God Secondly The instrumental cause is the heat of the Sun Thirdly The material cause is the moisture of the Sea and watery Land Fourthly The final cause of it is 1. Supream the glory of God 2. Subordinate and that threefold First the benefit Secondly the punishment Thirdly the instruction of man Secondly From that other signification of the word as it notes withdrawing or keeping back upon which some insist much Observe God when he pleaseth can with-hold the water or the rain He can give a stop to the rain and then the clouds yeeld us no more water than a stone He with-holds the drops of water The Lord threateneth the Vineyard with this stop Isa 5.6 I will command the clouds that they rain no rain upon it which is true of a natural and proper Vineyard and of proper natural rain though it be meant there of the people of God whom he metaphorically or improperly calleth his Vineyard and the rain there intended is the rain of instruction usually falling upon them Now as God doth often forbid the showers of the word that they fall no more upon a people as he sends forth a prohibition to stop the spiritual rain so he also stops and prohibits the natural rain Amos 4.7 8. I have with-holden the rain from you when there was yet three moneths to the harvest and I caused it to rain upon one city and caused it not to rain upon another city one piece was rained upon and the piece whereupon it rained not withered so two or three cities wandered unto one city to drink water but were not satisfied Thus in case of disobedience to his divine Law the Lord threatened to stop the common Law of nature and to make the heavens brass and the earth iron Deut. 28.23 And when the heavens are brass that is when they yeeld no more moisture than brass then the earth is as iron that is it yeelds no more food for the sustentation of man or beast than a bar of iron doth Such stops the Lord hath often put upon the courses of nature and can do again when he pleaseth though I believe he never did nor ever will do so but when highly displeased and provoked by the sin of man Take two or three inferences from it First If the rain or drops of water come not in their season let us acknowledge the hand of God It is God that hath lockt up the clouds when-ever they are lockt up God hath forbidden the clouds to let down their rain when-ever they with-hold it Men and Devils can no more stop the rain than make it Secondly When we want rain let us go to God for it 'T is the prerogative of God alone to help us in that streight and therefore the holy prophet sends a chalenge to all other powers or declares them disabled for this help Jer. 14.22 Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause rain or can the heavens give showers neither the one nor the other can The heavens cannot dispose of a drop though they possesse a sea of water God must hear the heaven before the heavens can
them in remembrance that God made their fore-fathers dwell in tents when he brought them out of Egypt as also to mind them that here they had no abiding place but were to seek one to come And as this place of publick worship so any place for private dwelling was called a tabernacle Surely I will not come into the tabernacle of my house until c. Said David Ps 132.3 that is into my house which though it be a royal Pallace yet I look upon it but as a movable tabernacle But doth God dwell in a movable house God is immovable he makes no removes yet wheresoever God is pleased to shew himself in his power and marvelous works there we may say his tabernacle is The tabernacle of God where this noise this mighty noise is made is nothing else but the Clouds before spoken of The Clouds are Gods tabernacle they are called so expresly by a word of very near cognation unto this Psal 18.11 He maketh the Clouds his pavilion A pavilion is an extraordinary tabernacle a pavilion is that tabernacle which is proper to a King or to the General of an Army Now saith the Psalmist He maketh the Clouds his pavilion In them he shews his power and glory They are also called the chariots of God Psal 104.3 Deut. 32.6 and he is said to come in the Clouds as a Prince in his chariot He came in a thick Cloud Exod. 19.9 and he descended in a Cloud Exod. 34.5 which here is called his tabernacle So then the Clouds together with all that middle region of the air where the rain now and fiery meteors are generated are in Scripture allegorically called the tabernacle of God because there he seems often to dwell or reside for the producing of many wonderful works upon this inferiour world We may take the word here in a double allusion unto a tabernacle or unto two sorts of tabernacles First There were ordinary tabernacles wherein men dwelt The ancient Hebrews dwelt in tents or tabernacles these were tabernacles for civil use or for habitation in allusion unto which the Apostle speakes of the body wherein the soul dwels 2 Cor. 5. When the earthly house of this tabernacle shall be dissolved we know that we have a building of God an hsuse not made with hands eternal in the heavens Secondly There were tabernacles for military use souldiers tents or tabernacles As the whole heavens so the clouds especially may be called the tabernacle of God in both respects they a●e his house wherein he sits unseen and doth wonders all the wo●ld over in them he sh●weth his power and appears glo●iously and as a great P●ince or mighty General he sends out his edicts and orders from the clouds he commands winds stormes tempests snow haile for several dispensations to go from thence according as his own infinite wisdom seeth fit and the cases of men require whether in wayes of Judgment or of mercy as Elihu tells us yet more distinctly at the 31th verse For by them saith he judgeth he the people he giveth meat in abundance The clouds are very fit and commodious for Gods use in any of these respects either for the terrifying and punishing of the wicked or for the helping and feeding of them that fear him Now forasmuch as the clouds are called the tabernacle of God upon these accounts Learn first There God is said to be especially where he especially workes God is no more in one place of the wo●ld than in another as to his being and existence for he is every w●ere he filleth heaven and earth We must not think that God is shu● up in the clouds as a man in his tabernacle but because God workes much in the clouds and doth great things by the rain thunder and lightening therefore the cloudes whence these Meteors issue are called his tabernacle Where-ever God works much he is said to dwell Why is God said to dwell with them that are of an humble and contrite heart even because he workes much in them and much by them So because many great works of God are done in the Clouds as we shall see more particularly hereafter therefore the Lord is said to dwell there as in his tabernacle Secondly When 't is said Who can understand the noise of his tabernacle Observe The most dreadful storms and tempests the roaring winds which we hear at any time are sent out by God they are the noise of his tabernacle They go when he saith go Psal 148.8 Stormy winds and tempests fulfilling his will We may think stormes of all thing● least under command and order yet they are under an exact order The most stormy winds go not an haires breadth besides or beyond the commission which God gives them As often as we hear the roaring noise of the wind much more of thunder let us remember 't is the noise of his tabernacle Vers 30. Behold he spreadeth his light upon it and covereth the bottom of the sea Elihu insists still upon the workes of God He spreadeth his light Some understand by this light the lightening and it is a great truth God wonderfully spreads the lightening upon the da●k clouds as if they were all in a flame That 's clear to the eye when it lighteneth and God is s●yd Psal 144.6 To cast forth his lightening which comes neer this word in the text he spreadeth it But because in the next ch●pter Elihu speakes purposely of the lightening therefore I shall not stay upon that sence here but decline it Rather take light in the common notion He spreadeth his light that is the light of the Sun which is eminen●ly called Gods Light upon it that is upon the cloud spoken of in the forme verse and so the two parts of this verse yeild us a de●crip●ion as I conceive of the weather-changes made by God When we have had much rain and stormes God can presently spread his light up●n the cloud that is cause the light and heat of the Sun to conquer the clouds and scatter them And he also covereth the bottom of the Sea That is by and by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he makes it very dark by the gathering of thick clouds even as dark as the bottom of the Sea whither the light cannot come or dark to the bottom of the Sea R●dices maris sunt profundissimae infimaeque illius partes The original is the roots of the Sea that is the lowest parts of the Sea which we significa●tly translate the bottom of the Sea Some explicate the whole ve●se He spreads his light upon the face of the whole heavens and spreads the waters over the Ocean so that no bottom can be seen scarcely found Mr. Broughton by the roots of the Sea understands the earth Another saith he makes mention of the roots of the Sea because the waters of the Sea are as it were the roots of the Clouds they chiefly supplying the matter of which they are made Vapours drawn from
a spoon platter o● bool or such like utensils which are bowed with a convex and concave superficies it hath also particularly two eminent significations both of which are made use of in this place by Interpreters First it signifieth the hand so we translate it Job 16.17 There is no injustice in my hand The word which here we translate a Cloud is there translated a hand Now the hand we know hath a hollowness or cavity in it unless when it is purposely held forth plaine The second signification is that of the Text a Cloud which is also hollow and as most conclude the same word is put to signifie a hand and a Cloud because Clouds usually ●t the first appearance are but small or like a hand as Elijahs servant repo ted to him after his seventh going to view the Heavens 1 Kings 18.44 Behold a little Cloud like a mans hand In this sence we take it here in our translation Some render With his hand he covereth the light we say With Clouds He covereth the light He covereth or hideth the light that is from our eyes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Texit● abscondi● imponendo aliquid quo tegos tanquam operculo vel veste he causeth it to disappear or not to appear to us The wo d notes covering as with a garment or covering with any thing that intercepts and stops the sight and hence by a Trope it is applyed to the pardon of sin Psal 32.1 Blessed is the man whose sin is covered When the Lord pardons sin he is said to cover it because he will not suffer it to appear against the sinner nor be charged upon him to condemnation As pardon covers sins so Clouds cover the Heavens and when they are covered the light is covered With Clouds he covereth the light The Prophet Jeremy in his Lamentations Chap. 3.44 complained sadly because God who is light had covered himself Thou hast covered thy self with a Cloud that our prayers should not pass through As God doth sometimes cover himself o● hide the light of his Countenance from his people as with a cloud that their prayers cannot pass through so he of●en hides or cove●s the light of the aire with natural o● proper Clouds that the Sun beams for a time cannot pierce no● pass through With Clouds he covereth The light 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tum lucom tum solem a quo lux vel quia est fons lucu significat The word used by Elihu signifies both light and the Sun which is the fountain from whence light flows and issues yea the word signifies also fire The Sun Moon and Stars are called ignes the fires of heaven because like so many fires or mighty torches they give light to us on earth And by a metaphor the word signifies Joy Comfort all sorts of good things as on the other side by darkness troubles and calamities of all sorts are metaphorically exprest in Scripture With Clouds he covereth the light And commandeth it not to shine by the Cloud that cometh between As if he had said When a Cloud covereth the light 't is the command of God which puts the Cloud as a covering upon it Those words not to shine are not expresly in the Hebrew Text the●e it is only thus With Clouds he covereth the light and commandeth it by that which cometh between nor is the word Cloud exprest in the latter part of the verse we put it in as a suppliment in another Character more fully to express the sence of the Text. And commandeth it not to shine The word which we translate to command properly signifies to bid or command a thing to be done Verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod significat praecipere quum regit praepositionem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat intordicere Pisc but when it stands in construction as here with Gnal it signifieth to forbid or stay a thing that it be not done Gen. 2.16 God commanded the man or concerning the man c. As that command expressed a liberty to eat of every other tree in the Garden so it included a prohibition of eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge which is also expressed at the 17th verse We have a like construction of the word Gen. 28.6 1 Kings 2.43 He commandeth it not to shine By the Cloud that cometh between By that which come●h between or by that which meets it that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 occu●rit irruit aggressus est per Metaphor●m intercessit occurrit deprecandi cau●a Hinc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 per occurrens sc per occurren●em nubem qua●interveniente lucem solu tegit Drus Merc as we supply it by the thick and da●k Cloud which meets and intercepts the bright beames of the Sun The root of the word signifies to meet with force not only occurrere but irruere to rush upon to invade to assault or to charge as an enemy is charged in battel and it signifies by a Metaphor to intercede to make prayer or supplication for another which is as i● were a coming between man and man An Intercessor cometh between two parties the party offending and the party offended he interposeth himself to make up the breach or to take up the difference that if possible a reconciliation may be made The Latine word which we translate Latinely to intercede is of the same significancy and this Hebrew word is often so rendred Jer. 7.16 Pray not for this people nor make intercession to me that is thou shalt not come between me and this people to stop or stay me that I break not out into wrath or from pouring out my wrath upon them In other Scriptures it is used to note an act of intercession between man and man Gen. 23.8 as also an act of address by prayer and intreaty whether towards God or man Job 21.15 Ruth 1.16 And because the word properly notes meeting another with a kind of violence it intimates with what a holy violence with what strength earnestness and fervency of spirit we ought to meet God either in prayer for our selves or when we come as intercessors and stand before him in the behalf of others whether Persons Nations or Churches Many Interpreters as I shall shew afterward take the word in this sence here for an Intercessor or for a person that prayeth and intercedeth for another We in our translation expound it of a thing and that thing of a Cloud that interposeth or cometh between us and the Light He commandeth the light not to shine by the Cloud that cometh between or by the Cloud that passeth between us and the light of the Sun Hence note First The best and sweetest mercies we have in this world may quickly meet with a stop When we have the Light a Cloud may soon come between the Light and us Which as it is true of the natural Light and Clouds so of that which is Light in a figure our most comfortable enjoyments and that
heart trembled and it moved out of its place 2. Hear attentively the noise of his voice and the sound that goeth out of his mouth THis Chapter concludes the Conference of Elihu with Job and it consists of three parts First In it we have an enumeration together with a description of divers Meteors or wonderful works of God in the Air Thunder and Lightning Snow and Rain yet before Elihu speaks of them he doth two things by way of Preface to lead us with more reverence towards God into that discourse of Nature in which much of God appeareth First Elihu tells us how himself was affected either with the present sense o● with the fore-ap●●ehension of those things concerning which he was about to speak At this also my heart trembled and it moved out of its place Secondly He stirs up the whole Auditory then present and all others to a diligent attention and serious consideration of them Vers 2. Hear attentively the noise of his voice and the sound that goeth out of his mouth Having spoken thus in way of Preface Elihu proceeds first to a description of Thunder with its immediate fore-runner as to our sence the eye being quicker to receive its object than the ear th●ugh in truth and according to reason its companion the Lightning in the three Verses following 3 4 5 concerning both which he shewes First that they go not at random but have a guide he directeth it that is the Thunder and Lightning Secondly He shews the extent of their motion and Gods direction they are not confined to this or that part He directeth it under the whole heaven and his lightnings unto the ends of 〈◊〉 earth in the same Verse Thirdly He speakes of the irrevocableness of Gods decrees and orders about them at the 4th Verse After it a voice roareth c. and he will not stay them when his voice is heard Fourthly He concludes about these and many other works of God with an Elogie of all his works First In their greatness Secondly In their incomprehensibleness or he concludes them not only great but wonderful and incomprehensible Vers 5. God thundereth marvelously with his voice he doth great things which we cannot comprehend Having thus spoken of Thunder and Lightning he proceeds Secondly To shew the power of God which he describes in Snow and Rain First from their efficient cause at the 6th Verse Secondly By their effects First Towards men in the 7th Verse Secondly Upon or towards irrational Creatures the Beasts of the earth at the 8th Verse Thirdly He sets forth the Power of God in the Winds concerning which we have First Their original whence they come Vers 9. Secondly Their effects or what they produce cold and frost in the latter part of the 9th and 10th Verses Fourthly He treats of the Clouds and about them he declares four things First The melting or dissolving of them into Rain at the 11th Verse Secondly The scattering and dispersing of them by the wind in the latter part of that Verse Thirdly The disposing and ordering of them by the counsel and command of God at the 12th Verse Fourthly Their uses ends and operations at the thirteenth Verse Thus we have the first general part of the Chapter opened containing a description of the Meteors or manifold works of God in the Air all which hold forth and advance his mighty power and righteous administrations in this world towards the children of men which was the poynt that Elihu had laboured in all along and undertaken to demonstrate In the second part of this Chapter Elihu upon the whole matter gives Job serious counsel and admonition wherein First He stirs him up to consider these wonderful works of God at the 14th verse Secondly He asserts and urgeth the weakness and inability of Job or indeed of any man to understand them fully this he doth First In general at the beginning of the 15th verse Dost thou know when God disposed them c. Secondly More particularly in their several kinds First Of the Rainbow at the latter end of that 15th verse and caused the light of his Cloud to shine Secondly Of the Clouds and their various motions at the 16th verse Thirdly Of the heat according to the wind vers 17. Fourthly Of the Heaven or Skie vers 18. All which were such as he could not give a clear account of and therefore at the 19th verse Elihu bids Job do it if he could as for himself he durst not venture upon it verse 20. nor can any saith he vers 21.22 see far into these natural things or into the nature of these things These are the special poynts of his admonition to Job and from these he passeth to the Third Part or Conclusion of the Chapter and of his whole discourse with Job wherein First He makes a recapitulation of or sums up all that he had said of the unsearchableness of God in his works this he doth in the former part of the 23d verse Secondly He sets down positively what God is in a three-fold Excellency First Of Power Secondly Of Judgment Thirdly Of plentiful Justice at the middle of the 23d verse Thirdly He tells us what God will not do at the end of the 23d verse He will not afflict and from all makes two inferences at the the 24th verse Fi●st That therefore men ought to honour and to fear him Secondly That therefore God is not in the reverence nor fear of any man in the close of that 24th verse He respecteth not any that are wise of heart Thus I have given a prospect of the whole Chapter Now to particulars beginning with those two verses by which Elihu leads in his discourse of those wonderful workes of God First By shewing how himself was affected with them Secondly By calling upon others to be affected as himself was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Propter hoc Vers 1. At this also my heart trembled At this that is by reason of this or for this cause or because of this so the word is rendred Gen. 2.23 She said Adam of his wife or Second-self shall be called woman because she was taken out of man So here at this or for this cause my heart trembleth It may here be questioned what it was at which the heart of Elihu trembled I shall give a double answer to that querie First Some conceive that while Elihu was speaking about or about to speak further of that marvelous work of God the Thunder God to confirm what he had said or should say at that very instant caused it to thunder that so Job might be in a more humble reverential frame and so the better prepared to receive what Elihu had further to say unto him That there was a storm at or about that time may appear from the first verse of the 38th Chapter then the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind and said and we find that God hath often given great discoveries of himself in or by Thunder
shewed how himself was affected with a gracious fear and trembling labours to affect others also with the same fear in the next verse Vers 2. Hear attentively the noise of his voice and the sound that goeth out of his mouth We have here a doubling of the word in an unusual way That Hebraisme is ordinarily read Plus est inquit Rab. David quam audiendo audite nam infinitum postp●●titur ego nihil aut p●rum ref●rre puto hoc an illo m●do eff●r●s Drus hearing hear but in this place 't is hear in hearing which one of the Jewish Doctors saith hath a greater emphasis than the ordinary Hebraisme hearing hear Others find nothing of such a difference in those differing Heb aismes however both call for greatest heed in hearing what is spoken when 't is either said hear in hearing or hearing hear we should as our translation gives the sense fully Hear attentively There is a two-fold hearing First A hearing with the ear of the body there needs little stirring up of that ear to attend the voice of thunder here spoken of that speaks so loud that men cannot if they would not but hear that commands audience and attention that boreth the ear and makes its own way The deafest adders can hardly stop their eares so as not to hear the voyce of that not muttering charmer but but rouz●ng speaker Thunder Secondly There is a hearing with the ear of the mind a spiritual hearing such as the Prophet spake of Hab. 3.2 O Lord Non solum auditum excitat sed intelligentiam postulat I have heard thy speech c. that is I have heard it fully clearly understandingly affectionately obedientially Elihu is here stirring up not so much the outward sence as the affections with all the powers of the inner man to attend and take notice of that which was then to be heard what was that Hear attentively The noise of his voice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commotio perturbatio animi prae metu vel prae ira Audite audiendo cum tremore vo●em ejus Merc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Omnem sonitum articulatum aut inarticulatum significat in genere 〈◊〉 umque strepitum The word here rendred noise signifies both an angry noise and an awful fear Ps 4.4 such a noise as causes fear or such a fear as is caused by a dreadful noise Hence some read the words Hear his voyce with trembling we say hear the noise of his voice According to the former interpretation the noise of his voice is the noise of thunder that if any thing makes a noise a dreadful noise as was toucht before a noise like the roa●ing of a Lion Hear the noise Of his voice The word voice is taken in general for any sound articulate or inarticulate Ezek. 1.24 and it may very well signifie thunder because thunder in several scriptures is called absolutely A voice the voice of God and whole volyes of Thunder are called voices of God Exod. 9.28 Pharaoh entreated Moses that he would entreat the Lord that there might be no more mighty thundrings we put in the margin voyces of God It is said Exod. 20.18 the people saw the Thundrings the Hebrew is voices the meaning is they heard the Thund●ings as if they had been so many voices or they heard as it were voyces when it thundered Thus 't is said Rev. 4.5 Out of the Throne proceeded lightnings and thundrings and voices Again Chap. 10.3 seven thunders uttered their voyces Hear attentively the noise of his voice that is the noise of of his Thunder speaking aloud and aloft in the air And the sound that goeth out of his mouth The word imports secret silent meditation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sermo meditaetus proprie meditatio Sermonem etiam significat ore prolatum as also an audible sound of voice or words spoken and it may be applyed particul●rly to that more gentle quiet or whispering sound of thunder of which I shall have occasion to speak further at the 4th verse Some Thunders speak very loud others give a kind of gentle sound Philosophy tells us that this difference in thunder ariseth from the different constitution of the clouds in which it is bred and through which it breaks The greater may more properly be expressed by the words in the first part of this verse The noise of his voice and the lesser by these in the latter part Tonitruorum unum genus est cujus fit grave mu●mur aliud genus est acre quod crepitum magis dixerim quam sonum aliud frangor est subitus vehemens quo edito concidunt homines c. Sen. l. 6. Nat. q. c. 27. The sound that goeth out of his mouth Now Whether it be the noise of his voice or a whispering soft sound both or either must be attended Hear attentively the sound That goeth out of his mouth Thunder is said to go out of the mouth of God as words go out of the mouth of man and as men especially the minds of honest men are known by the words which go out of their mouths so God maketh himself known to the world or makes the world both know him and fear him in his power and greatness by the noise and sound of thunder Elihu chargeth Job to attend diligently this noise this sound and he calleth it the noise of Gods voice the sound that goeth out of his mouth Hence observe First God speaks to man in Thunder or Thunder is the voice of God to man And so 't is often called in Sc●ipture the 29th Psalme almost throughout is a proof of it Thunder being there seven times called The Voice of the Lord. The very Heathens had that apprehension of Thunder Poetae Jo●em tonant●m tonitr●●●m ●oc●m Jovis vocare solent calling it the Voice of the Gods Jupiter was si●named Thundring Jove H●re we have Jehovah the true God the living God sending out his Voice in Thunder That Voice spoken of by David Psal 68.33 is usually interpreted of T●under Lo he doth send ou● his Voice and that a mighty Voice Thunder may be called th● Voice of God in a double respect First Because it is a great and mighty voice and then those words of God have only the force of an Epithete Quod magnum e●t divi●●m esse dicitur 〈…〉 As the Cedars of God the Rivers of God are great Cedars and Rivers so a gr●at Voice is called the Voice of God God is great and therefore great things are ascribed to him Secondly Thunder is called the Voice of God because God formes and puts it forth by his power as a man doth his voice God may be said to utter his Voice when he sends out the Thunder And as Thunder is put forth by or speaks from God so it puts forth or speaks much of God it speaks and puts forth much of the Power and M●jesty of God When it thunders we should think we hear God
vel retardabit aliquis fulmen vel fulgur cum deus emittere petit Scult Neque differt illa cum audienda est vox ejus Jun i. e. fulgetra tonitruum praenuncia exhibet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non differt i. e. praemittit Jun Some understand the raine and showers which usually follow upon or after a great thunder and we commonly call them thunder showers Others understand the Lightning and the Thunder as if he had said When Gods purpose is declared that there shall be lightning and thunder he will not stay them or take them by the heele as the word properly signifieth whence Jacob had his name because when Esau was coming into the world Jacob took him by the heele as if he would have stayed or stopped his birth at least have got into the world before him and therefore Esau said Gen. 27.36 Is he n●t rightly called Jacob for he hath supplanted me these two times Which some render according to the letter of the Text My brother may well be called an Heeler for he hath heeled me these two times In this sense the Lord will not stay the birth and breaking forth of these terrible twins Thunder and Lightning Lastly learned Junius referrs them to the Lightnings only rendring He doth not defer them when his voyce is to be heard which he thus expounds He sends lightning before foretelling thunder will follow But I conceive the former exposition more cleare which refers this not staying or he will not stay both to thunder and lightning in consort or together Hence note When once God speaks the word and is resolved upon the doing of a thing there is no stopping of him nor will he stay his work He will not take thunder and lightning by the heele when he hath bid them go We have a parallel sense to this c●ncerning the thunder and lightning of divine Judgements Zeph. 2.1 2. Gather your selves together O gather your selves together before the decree bring forth As if he had said If once the decree bring forth if once God declare that wrath shall come there is no recalling of it He will not stay it when his voyce is heard for then Isa 43.13 The Lord will work and n●ne shall let him he will not stop it himself and none else can Thunder and lightning shall come whosoever stand in their way must down And as none can lett God by power so none shall lett him by prayer if once he be resolved ahd hath sent forth his decree therefore do not provoke the Lord to give out the word for then your case is desperate There 's no opposing the work of God or God in his working He will not stay them when his voyce is heard Vers 5. God thundreth marveilously with his voyce great things doth he that we cannot comprehend Consider how often this word is repeated He roareth with his voice He thundereth with the voice of his excellency and here He thundereth marveilously This may teach us First which hath been noted before that the works of God in nature are to be heeded Secondly that we are very backward to heed them Thirdly this is so often ascribed to God least we should think that thunder is only a work of nature God thundereth marveilously Tonat mirabilia Hebr Numerus pluralis indicat ingentem admirationem stuporem mortalium ad vocem tonitrui Pined The words may be read God thundereth marvels 't is in the plural number We render well God thundereth marveilously but there is a greater Emphasis taking it in the plural number God thundereth marvels Consider thunder and lightning in a proper or in a metaphorical sense there are many marvels or wonders in them Naturalists observe many marvels in natural thunder and lightnings these sometimes melt the sword without hurt to the scabbard dissolve the mettal not consuming the purse break the bones and not the flesh these spoyl the Wine without staving or breaking the cask kill or stifle the child in the womb and not the mother God thunders marveilously in these things Again how many marveilous Judgments hath God wrought by thunder how often hath he destroyed the enemies of his people and the blasphemers of his great Name by thunder and lightning from Heaven Anastatius the Emperour an Eutichian persecutor of the Orthodox Christians was slaine by thunder The History of the Church speaks of a Christian Legion or Brigade of Christians in the Army of Aurelius the Emperour who earnestly prayed the whole Army being in a great strait that God would appear for their help and the defeating of the enemy whereupon the Lo●d sent raine for their reliefe as also thunder and lightning by which the enemy was discomfited and destroyed whereupon that Legion was called The thundering Legion When Julian the Apostate meerly to despite the prophesie of Christ Mat. 24. who had said of the Temple at Jerusalem there should not be left one stone upon another Julian I say in despite of this prophesie yea to despite it gave command for the building of the Temple at Jerusalem and upon his command there was a great quantity of materialls brought together for that purpose but the Lord seeing the pride of this enemy sent a marveilous thunder with an Earthquake which not only amazed the workmen but scattered those materials put a stop to the work Now as there are many marvels wrought by natural thunder and lightning so also by that which is spiritual Nor will it be unuseful for us to consider them upon occasion of what is said of natural thunder in this Scripture God thundereth marveilously in the dispensation of his Word or in his dealings with the souls of sinners to bring them home to himself and to turn them from their sins We may not excluding the proper sense profitably expound the whole 29th Psalm in this spiritual sense wherein the Lord under the Allegory of a terrible thunder-tempest seems to give a prophetical description of his mighty power in propagating the Gospel to the ends of the earth which goeth not out as an empty sound beating the aire but with wonderful efficacy convincing the world of sin and of their need of Christ to save them from their sins And to shew that this is the scope of the Psalm David begins it with a strong exhortation v. 1 2. Give unto the Lord O ye mighty give ye unto the Lord glory and strength Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his Name worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness As if David had said O ye the mighty Princes and Potentates of the world who in most places and times have contemned God and his holy worship and being your selves either irreligious or engaged in a false religion have used your power against and hindered the progress of the Gospel and the advancement of true religion I advise and admonish you to lay down that spirit to embrace th● Gospel to love the power of godliness to propagate
their dens by a storm or by the Snow then they go to their dens and places of shelter or as we speak to Covert The word rendred Dens signifies a place of ambush or of lying in wait such are the dens of wild beasts as it is said of the wicked Psal 10.9 He lieth in wait secretly as a Lion in his den 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ereb a verbo Arab insidiari Et ingreditur bestia in insidias i. e. in latibula unde insidiatur Merc. to catch the poor c. It is this word Such kind of retreats have the wild beasts they have their dens which are al●o places to watch for their prey And as they often go to their dens upon choice or of their own accord so they are sometimes driven to them as in the text for shelter against a storm Then the beasts go into dens And remain in their places They not only go into dens but there they remain they keep home the storm keps them in As when the flood of waters the great rain of Gods strength was upon the earth Noah was shut into the Ark and there he remained Gen. 7. he did not only go in but stayed in till the flood was asswaged so it is said here of the beasts they remain in their places they will not budge nor peep out till the storm be over Hence note First Th● Providences of God in various seasons affect the very beasts of the earth Those creatures which live only a life of sense yet partake somewhat of reason at least they act according to reason they are sensible of what God doth though they know not that he doth it And is not this a great reproof to those who are not only not sensible of but slight those ●everer dispensations of God how beast-like are those men who have not so much sence of the dealings of ●od as the beasts have who though they have a knowledge beyond bruits yet they use their knowledge no better no nor so well as bruits and so they are either as the Prophet saith bruitish in their knowledge or as the Apostle Peter 2 Pet. 2.12 They are as bruit beasts in humane shape made to be taken and destroyed How can they avoid being taken and destroyed by the judgments of God or as Elihu expresseth it by the great rain of his strength who take not so much notice of them as to see their danger and get into a hiding place For Secondly When the beasts go into dens and remain in their places what is it that moves them to it Surely 't is to be as we say out of harms way Hence note Every creature by the light of nature would get out of danger Great snowes and rains of strength are dangerous or g ievous to beasts therefore they avoid them they will not stand in the open air while a storm lasts if they can help it Beasts will save themselves as well as they can and if so then take these two Inferences from it First For our instruction We are sent to school by God himself more than once to the beasts and creeping things of the earth Solomon sends us to the Ant a creeping thing he bids us consider her wayes and be wise Elihu in this text sends us to the wild beasts of the earth to Lions and Bares to Tigers and Wolves and bids us consider their wayes and be wise Here is matter of instruction for us What is that Get out of harmes way make haste out of danger when the cold Snow comes and the great Rain of the strength of God take heed you be not found abroad without a a shelter Surely God who hath provided dens for the beasts and places for those wilde creatures to hide themselves in hath not left us without a niding-place when the great rains of trouble fall or threaten to fall God invited his people of old where to look for and whither to go for shelter in such a rainy day Isa 26.20 Come my people enter thou into thy Chambers and shut thy door about thee hide thy self as it were for a little moment until the indignation be over-past For Behold the Lord cometh out of his place to punish the Inhabitants of the earth for their iniquity As if he had said Hide your selves till the storm be over till the great rain of my streng h be gone God who hath put an instinct into the creatures to go to their dens to their places in a stormy season doth specially call to men and among men specially to his own people when 't is a time of indignation to go into their Chambers and hide themselves till it be overblown Do not stand out in the rain do not stand in the storm get into your chambers what are these Chambers surely not the chambers of our houses they are poor refuges the rain of his strength will break or soak into those chambers how well soever roofed or ceiled The chambers in which the people of God are called to hide themselves are God himself the Power of God the Faithfulness of God the Truth of God the Goodness of God in these Chambers he calls his people to hide themselves Solomon assureth us Prov. 81.10 The Name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous runneth into it and is safe As God hath taught the beasts to run into their dens so he instructs us in his Word to run into his Name as to a strong tower where we may be safe David said Psal 57.1 Vnder the shadow of thy Wings shall be my refuge until this calamity be over-past That is I will put my self under thy protection while the stormy showers last The Hen g●thereth her young ones under her wings so would Christ the Jewish Nation both for comfort and safety and they refused him What followed The next verse tells us Desolation What could save them when the Roman Eagle spread her wings against them who would not come under the wing of Jesus Christ Matth. 23.37 'T is not any worldly refuge not any arm of flesh but the shadow of the Lords wings that can hide us in an evil day from the evil of the day They who get and keep close to God by Fai h need not fear the worst stormes which this world can raise against them And hence let sinners in general take warning suppose you should live all your dayes in this world without a storm I mean without any outward trouble yet remember there will be a stormy day the day of the great rain of the streng●h of God will come he will rain down vengeance upon all the ungodly in that day Vpon the wicked he shall rain snares fire and brimstone and an horrible tempest in that day Psal 11.6 Therefore see that you have a refuge against that day when many shall as it is said Rev. 6. Call to the rocks hide us and to the mountains fall upon us cover us from the presence of him that sits on the
For his Land Thirdly For Mercy He causeth it to come saith Elihu whether for Correction for his Land or for Mercy all these purposes and designs God hath in moving and ordering these vast and mighty bodies of the Clouds which hang like Mountains in the air Thus you have the parts of these words with their scope and tendency More distinctly Vers 12. And it is turned about by his counsel First Vapours are raised and condensed into Clouds by the counsel of God he causeth the vapours to ascend from the ends of the earth Psal 135.7 Which vapours as was shewed before are the material cause or matter of the Clouds Secondly As by the counsel of God the vapours are raised of which Clouds are made so this Text tells us that by his counsel the Clouds are moved and order'd in their motion which motion of the Clouds is very various somtimes one way somtimes another somtimes forward somtimes backward or retrograde somtimes their motion is circular as the word here used by Elihu seemeth to imply It is turned or whirled about 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to that of Solomon Eccl 1.6 The wind goeth toward the South and turneth about unto the North it whirleth about continually and the wind returneth again according to his Circuit We have here three words expressing the motion of the wind First it goeth Secondly whirleth about Thirdly returneth again and all this according to its circuits It is said of Samuel 1 Sam. 7.16 He went from year to year in circuit to Bethel and Gilgal and Mizpet and judged Israel in all these places Thus the winds according to the Commission they receive from God ride every year in circuit now they are in one quarter and anon in another and wheresoever they come they may be said to do judgment in a way of favour to some and in a way of displeasure unto others The wind hath his Circuits and as the Circuit of the wind is such is the Circuit of the Clouds the motion of the Clouds is from the wind some say from the Starrs but most generally as to the natural cause it is from the wind which way the wind moves that way the Clouds move And though the motion of the Clouds and Winds seems exceeding unsteady and changeable up and down without any certain rule in Nature yet they observe their Circuits and run their compasse as God appoynts them Mr Broughton renders And for varieties he turneth himself in his wise Counsels for their operation for whatsoever he Commandeth them It is tur●ed about say we By his Cou●sel It should seem that God even calls a Councel which way the Clouds shall be directed they go by his Councel The word in the Hebrew is a very significant one that I mean which we render his Counsel others his skill his art or cunning and there are not a few who render it they are turned about by his Engines as if God did use as it were artificial Engines to turn about those mighty bodies of the Clouds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Propriè rei nauticae peritia q●ae intractandis funibus potissimum c nsistit unde nominis appellatio Drus Convertuntur artifi●io ipsus T●● Ipsa quoque incircuitibus volvitur maclinis ejus Merc Vertitur solertiis ejus Drus Properly the word signifieth the Ropes and Tackling of a Ship in ordering which Ropes and Tackling the whole management of the Ship doth consist The Mariner shews his skill and art in steering his Ship a right course which he doth not only by guiding the Rudder but by ordering the Ropes and Tackling this way and that way to compasse or avoyd the wind And the Hebrew word Tachbuloth here used hath a very great nea●ness in sound to the Tackling of a Ship This is a most elegant Metaphor shewing how the Lord doth as it were steer the course of the Clouds or guide the Clouds as the Sea-man doth his Ship his Counsels may be compared to the Tackling and the Ropes or rather to the Helme by which the Ship is guided God is as the great Pilot sitting at the Stern and he turns these Clouds as his Ship he turns them about as a Ship tacks this way and that way to reach her Port and there unlade The Rain Snow Haile are the Lading which these swift Ships the Clouds carry from place to place to serve the providences of God towards man This divine conduct of the Clouds is very admirable the Lord knowing what parts of the Earth need those Commodities Rain Snow c. which those aerial Vessels are laden with for the enriching of the world We render it by his Counsel that is by those means which he in his Wisdome and Counsel useth to turn the Clouds about they are turned we translate the word Pro. 1.5 Wise Counsels and Pro. 20.18 Good advice there Solomon saith With good advice make warre And indeed good advice is the best tackling for Ships in a warre at Sea and the best ammunition for a warre at Land Councel is a noble a notable Engine The greatest things on Earth are turned about by it and so are those great things in the air the Clouds They are turned about by his Counsel That they may do whatsoever he Commandeth them Here 's the general design and purpose of God in turning about the Clouds whithersoever he please it is that they may do whatsoever he Commandeth them where we have the Clouds set forth First In their obedience They do the Commands of God Secondly In the universality of their obedience They do whatsoever he Commandeth Elihu compares the Clouds and Meteors to good servants who are ready to do what God their Master requireth of them and not only so but they do his Commands every where or wheresoever he requires them they do all his Commands and that in all places as the Text speaks in the next words Vpon the face of the world in the Earth That is wheresoever there is Earth or a World 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 orbis pars terra habitabilu Graecè 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habitable or unhabitable thither or so far doth God send the Clouds in his service or for the executing of his will Further when he saith Vpon the face of the World his meaning is upon the outside or uppermost part of the World and because the Heavens even the uppermost Heavens are a part of the world with which the Clouds have nothing to do their business lying here below therefore I conceive Elihu determines it expresly in the Earth The Clouds are not raised or made for the use and service of the world above but of the world below They do whatsoever he Commandeth them upon the face of the World in the Earth Hence observe First The motion of the Clouds is not of themselves nor meerly from any natural cause or power but of God He as it were by certain Engines and weights turnes them about they move not
Clouds a ruine to the world so he often makes them a correction 1 Sam. 12.18 19. Ezra 10.9 we have had many examples both of sweeping Rains and dreadful Thunders Lightning and Tempest coming forth from the Clouds The Apostle saith Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness c. God hath revealed his wrath from Heaven chiefly in and by the Ministry of his VVord he may be said also to reveal his wrath from Heaven against sinful man in and by the Ministry of the Clouds they have often lifted up their Voyce like a loud Trumpet and louder than a Trumpet to tell the sons of men of their tran●g●ession and to reprove them for their sin And therefore when we see extraordinary gatherings of the Clouds we should take instruction lest we provoke the Lord to send or cause them to come for correction The Clouds drop down many good Lessons and admonitions and if they are not attended to the next thing they drop is a Rod or Correction He causeth it to come whether for correction Or for his Land For whose Land Some refer it to the Cloud that is Pronomen sua alii ad nubem reserunt ut dicat pro terra in qua genita juit Drus for the Land out of which the Cloud was made for the Vapours which arise out of the Land by the attractive power of the Heavens make Clouds As if the meaning were he causeth the Cloud to fall down upon that Land out of which it was raised whereas oftentimes a Cloud is made of Vapours raised from one Land or Country and by the command of God is carryed to another Land or Country very far off But I rather take the Antecedent to his to be God himself His Land that is Gods Land or the Land of God But then the Question is what are we to understand by his Land hath God a Land distinct from others as the Princes of the World have are not all Lands his I answer First The truth is all the World is Gods Land so that wheresoever the Clouds fall they fall upon his Land Psal 50.12 The World is mine and the fulness of it saith the Lord. God is the great Land-lord of all the World Secondly Somtimes in special the habitable part of the World is called the Land of God Psal 24.1 there being a part of the World supposed uninhabitable or wherein no man dwels Thirdly His Land that is the Land which God doth peculiarly own Exod. 19.5 You are a peculiar Treasure unto me above all people for all the earth is mine As the Israelites were the Lords peculiar people so some Lands are his peculiars he specially calls them his Land Peculiaritèr terra Dei vocatur terra sancta in qua Dei cultus exercetur Sic nominat unamquamque gentem cui bene vult and entitles himself to them beyond all other Lands The Land of Canaan was called The Lords Land because he was known and worshipped there Hos 9.3 We may say in general Look in whatsoever Country or place God is truly known honour'd and worshipped that is his Land and that 's the Land here chiefly intended say some by his Land He causeth it to come whether for correction Or for his Land That is for the good and benefit of that Land wherein his Name is professed and himself truly worshipped That 's a good sence For doubtless the Lord takes more care of such a Land than of any other Land The eyes of the Lord were upon the Land of Canaan he took care of it from the beginning of the Year to the end thereof even to water it with the Rain of Heaven Deut. 11.12 Thus 't is said Psal 68.9 10. Thou O God didst send or shake out a plentiful Rain a Rain of munificences or liberalities whereby thou didst confirm thine Inheritance when it was weary Thy Congregation hath dwelt therein Every Land to which God bears special respect and good-will which whensoever he doth he doth it with respect to the people inhabiting there may be emphatically called His Land Yet Fourthly Forasmuch as the latter word for mercy seems to imply that special favour which God bestowes upon his own people in sending forth the Clouds with Rain therefore by His land I rather conceive the earth in general is meant or yet to take it more particularly that part of the earth which no man claims which is sca●ce habitable by man that which is a wast Wilderness or Desart for wild beasts that Land which is overgrown with Trees and Bushes a Land which no man dresseth or bestoweth any culture or husbandry upon even for that Land doth God take care as his Land thither he sends Rain that the Beasts may have Pasture and Plants moysture that it may be watered and provided for as well as those Lands that men by their care and industry manure as their own peculiars 'T is said Chap. 38.26 He that is God causeth it to rain on the earth where no man is on the Wilderness wherein there is no man Thus in the T●x He causeth it to come for his land a Land which hath no owner but himself Hence Observe God hath an universal respect to and care over all his Creatures Wheresoever God hath a foot of Land in the World though no foot of man comes there he sends the Clouds to do it service for the sake only of wild Beasts living there and of Trees and Plants growing there Psal 36 6 Lord thou prese●●st Man and Beast Not only doth God preserve men but b●●● and where no men are God provides for beasts that they may have food and live We may hence argue as the Apostle did in another case 1 Cor. 9 9. Doth God take care for Oxen Hath he respect to the wast Lands to the wild Beasts of the Wilderness surely then he will take care of inhabited Lands he will cause the Cloud to come and water the Land where men dwell especially where good men dwell to them he causeth it to come as it followeth in the Text For Mercy The third Message about which the Clouds are sent or caused to come is for favour God dispenceth mercy by the Cloud he causeth it to come for mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dei propensam omnibus benefaciendi voluntatem denotat The Original word rendred mercy hath a great significancy in it this especially a bountiful good-will towards others without respect to merit or any antecedent obligation When here 't is said He causeth it to come for Mercy we are to understand much more than was meant before when 't is said He causeth it to come for his land to feed the beasts and nourish the Plants and I conceive we may give a twofold interpretation of it First For Mercy that is for some eminent uses besides those that are for meer necessity to water the earth Rain is sent First To purge Secondly to cool the air Thirdly
word is a weariness to them they soon think they have enough Secondly There is need of patience for submission to what is heard How short soever the Sermon is yet when it pincheth the conscience and pricketh the heart it is not easily born They who hear quietly some wo●ds of truth will not endu●e some other we hardly continue hearing with any patience when to us the word heard is a hard saying and bares hard upon either our consciences or our practises when the singer is as it were laid upon and presseth the sore few can endure it 'T is easie to hear pleasing things but that which crosseth our spirits or our wayes calls for patience When Stephen the Proto-martyr preached to the Jews and brought the word home to their consciences by that close application Acts 7.51 Ye stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ear ye do alwayes resist the Holy Ghost as y●ur Fathers did so do ye At this word or when they heard these things they were cut to the heart saith the text and they gnashed on them with their teeth their patience was quite spent they could hear no longer And when St. Paul spake to that g●eat Assembly Acts 22.1 22 23. They gave him audience unto this word I will send thee to the Gentiles and then lift up their voices and said away with such a fellow from the earth for it is not fit that he should live Then they cryed out and cast off their clothes and threw dust in the air Thus they raved and were enraged like angry yea like mad dogs when once their title was questioned or as we speak their coppy-hold toucht by the mention of the Gentiles whom they greatly despised and judged themselves so much above Hearken to this to this pinching word to the word that strikes upon your lusts The length of a Sermon spoiles the patience of some but the strength and searching power of it spoiles the patience of more A sincere heart is willing to hear all and is most pleased to hear that word which gives deepest wounds to any corruption of heart or transgression of life Such words are wholsome though bitter or sharp and the more they make us smart the more medicinal and healing they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Stat sc permentis rectitudinem Aquin. Hearken unto this O Job Stand still and consider the wonderous works of God Elihu not only desires Job to hearken but to stand still and consider There is a twofold standing still First Bodily I do not conceive Elihu imposing any such gesture or composure upon Job as to stand still and not stir his body The Hebrew is but one word stand up There is a liberty as to any comly gesture of the body in hearing a man may lawfully sit as-well as stand and hear yet to stand up and hear sheweth a readinesse of the mind and a hungring desire after the Word Secondly There is a standing still of the mind The body may stand as still as a stake or stone while the mind is in strong motion yea while there are most vehement commotions and perturbations in the mind This still-standing of the mind in hearing what is spoken may be taken in a double opposition First To any impatience unquietness or uncomposedness of the mind when the word is spoken Secondly To any irreverence slighting or disregarding of the word spoken To stand still is to get the spirit quiet to hear patiently or to stand still is to get the heart into a reverential frame to hear affectionately So then to stand still implieth both patience and reverence We have like admonitions in the 30th chapter of this book vers 20. and chapter 32d vers 16. Yea that admonition of Balaam was of like sence with this Num. 23.18 Rise up Balak and hear When Balaam was about to deliver his parable and declare the mind of God concerning Israel he called upon Balak to rise and stand up that is to entertain the message with respect Hearken unto this O Job stand still Hence note We ought to be in a gracious quietness and composure of spirit when we are called to hear and mind what God hath done or spoken Further We ought to have a quiet sedate composed spi it not only when we hear doctrinal truths delivered from the word of God but also when we hear of the providences and various wo●ks of God As this word stand still may refer to the words going before Hearken unto this so to those which follow Consider the wonderful works of God And then the duty required in them reaches both his Word and Works It is a great power of grace which causeth the heart to stand still in this sence that is to be in a quiet frame when the works of God trouble us or are troublesome to us Thus M●ses bespake the Israelite Exod 14.12 Stand still and see the salvation of God It was a very t●oublesome time with the Israelites they were ready to give themselves and all they had for lost when Moses exhorted them to stand still Nothing but faith in God can make us stand still when we are ready to fail and that will certainly do it Unbelief makes the heart as unquiet as theirs was upon the report of a war against Judah Isa 7.2 And his heart that is the heart of Ahaz was moved and the heart of his people as the trees of the wood are moved with the wind 'T is hard travel of soul to sta●d still and see the salvation of God when every thing seen threa●ens des●lation The Lord is represented requiring us to do so Psal 46.10 Be still and know that I am God When the Psalmist had spoken of the desolating works of God he added this word from the Lord be still as if he had said the Lord commandeth you ●o be of a quiet and composed spirit when all things seem to be in a hurry or confusion for he had said before vers 8. Come behold the works of the Lord what desolations he hath made in the earth Yet even now saith the Lord Be still and know that I am God David at the beginning of the Psalm had professed a f●rm purpose in himself and in all the faithful w●th him for such a still-standing how-ever things moved or matters should go yea tumble in this world vers 1 2. Though the earth be moved and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea though the waters thereof roar c. We will not fear God is our refuge and strength How comely is it for man thus to stand still in a silent and believing consideration of what God hath done or is doing to which Elihu called Job expresly in the next words stand still Consider the wonderous works of God Here is First Consideration Secondly Consideration of the works of God Thirdly Consideration of the wonderous works of God To consider 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligere is
from the Clouds put his Bow in the Cloud A second significancy of mercy in the Rainbow is because the Bow is bended upwards or Heaven-ward the Bow doth not stand bent to the Earth or downward the string of the Bow is towards us not the back of it He that would shoot hath the bottom or back of the Bow in his hand and the string is towards himself but God that he might shew he doth not intend to shoot that Arrow any more holds the string of the Bow downwards which no man doth that hath a mind to shoot The Lord by this Bow in the Cloud shoots no man unlesse it be as one well expresseth it with admiration and love or I may say the Lord having shot his Arrowes of immoderate Rain from the Region of the air for mans chastning seems to return to Heaven with his Bow reversed as a token of peace and serenity to the wo●ld or that in Judgment he remembers his Covenant-mercy The wicked are said to bend their Bow they make ready their arrow upon the string that they may privily shoot at the upright in heart Psal 11.2 But he that tu●ns the string of his Bow downwards is not ready nor seems minded to shoot at all Thi●dly This bow shews mercy because there is no Arrow seen at it or with it Concisit iris aquas alimentaque nubibus assert Ovid 1. Metam Fourthly It sheweth or signifieth mercy because the Rainbow usually appears when Rain is ready to come implying that the Rain shall not hurt us and so we have a support of our faith as soon as we have any appearance of feare Fifthly When-ever the Rainbow appears there is clearness in some part of the air for it cannot be but when the Sun shines In the time of the Flood the light of the Sun was wholly obscured All the dayes which the world had during that dreadfull Rain we●e like the day described Joel 2.2 Zeph. 1.15 dayes of darkness and of gloominess dayes of Clouds and of thick darkness Therefore 't is said Gen. 8.22 Day and night shall continue for ever Intimating that in the time of the Flood the day was so ob●cured so black that it could scarcely be known to be day or distinguished from night But now when the Rainbow is seen the Sun shines to give assu●ance that though there be an appearance of Rain Lux in rube rorida mille effi●it colores et varias et pulcherrimas lucis temperationes Plin Natur Hist l. 12. c. 24. yet the light of the day shall not cease Sixthly The various colours of the Rainbow are very significant for our comfort making as some Naturalists have told us a thousand sweet delights for the eye by the admirable mixtures and shadowings of colours therein discernable Seventhly The Natu al Historian assureth us that where the Rainbow at any time toucheth the Earth as we may often observe it doth it leaveth a fragrant smell upon the grass shrubs and bushes Thus you see how properly and fitly the Rainbow is called The shining of the light of his Cloud as also what significations of favour are discernable in it From this explication of the words we may note Fi●st After troubles and stormes God will give his people comforts and calmes He causeth the light of his Cloud to shine Clouds are dark things but while the Cloud shews Rain Gods light in the Cloud shews faire weather That 's matter of rejoycing to all that fear God as with respect unto that particular Judgment of the Deluge so of all evils and troubles which fall upon them in this wo●ld This light shining in the Cloud may comfort and refresh us in the darkest night of sorrow It is said Psal 97.11 Light is sowne for the righteous and joy for the upright in heart And in the 4th of the Revelations which is as it were a Prologue or Preface to all the Prophesies of the dark times that should come upon the world and over the Church of God in this world we find Jesus Christ is represented with a Rainb●●●bout him vers 3. I was in the spirit and behold a Throne se●●●eaven and one sat on the Throne and he that sat was to look upon like a Jasper and Sardix stone and there was a Rainbow round about the Throne in sight like to an Emrald From this Throne it is that Jesus Christ doth as I may say dispence all the affaires of his Churches and people Now though Jesus Christ in the providential or mediatorial government of his Churches doth often send Clouds upon them and though Clouds and darkness are round about him yet the Throne hath a Rainbow about it And why a Rainbow to shew that Jesus Christ is mindfull of his Churches and people to save them when the Serpent casts out Floods to drown them 'T is said Rev 12.15 The Serpent cast out of his mouth water as a Flood after the Woman that he might cause her to be carried away of the Flood but Jesus Christ that sitteth upon the Throne hath a Rainbow about h●● which gives assurance that the Floods shall not quite overwhelme the Church she shall be delivered though it be in a Wilderness from those mighty water-floods of persecution raised and caused by the Serpent and his seed against the seed of the Woman or against the Woman and her seed Though Christ may suffer great Floods of sorrow and tribulation to be powred upon them yet there is a Rainbow about the Throne to which we may look and get our faith confirmed that the Woman and her Seed shall not be swallowed up Take one place more Rev. 10.1 I saw another mighty Angel coming down from heaven that was Jesus Christ cloathed with a cloud that is with dark dispensations such as his people should not well know what to make of but what follows and a Rainbow was on his head That Prophesie leads into a description of the greatest pressures and troubles that ever the Church of God was to suffer in this world Jesus Christ was cloathed with a Cloud but for the comfort of his Church there was a Rain-bow on his head there was light shining in this Cloud to bear up the spirits of his people that the mischief should not be to their destruction though it might be very much not only to their tryal but correction And we find the Church supported though not directly under this notion of a Rain-bow yet by a promise plainly hinting if not referring to it Isa 54.9 In the 8th verse the Prophet tells us that the poor Church was in very great trouble Why Surely because of some cle●●ly providences which interrupted the light of Gods counte● from shining upon them at least to their apprehension for thus he b●spake the Church In a little wrath have I hid my face from thee for a moment there was the Cloud but with everlasting loving-kindness will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer there 's
say some read the context as one entire sentence and there is a clearness in it But I shall keep to our own reading and so we have two distinct questions Dost thou know how thy garments are warm Hast thou with him spread out the Skie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vt Exod. 34 18. I begin with the first Dost thou know How thy garments are warm Canst thou give an account of that sudden change whence it is that the South wind ceasing to raise stormes in the earth there should presently succeed such fervent heat that thou art not able to bear thy own ordinary clothes The text is that or how it cometh to pass that thy garments are warm As if Elihu had said I have dealt with thee about higher and greater ma●ters I will now put a question to thee which is more familiar Canst thou tell me how thy garments are warm Su●ely it thou ar● not able to give me a clear reason about that how art thou able to enter n●o the more reserved secrets of God tell me if thou canst How thy Garments are warm 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pos●●t 〈…〉 torte quod vestimentum sit pri●● hominis contra 〈◊〉 pers●● 〈…〉 te●●●m●ntum Brix The wo●d which we t●anslate garme●ts hath a very co●si●erable significancy in it coming f om a root rendred dec●i● ●al●hood and a lie The g●rments which we wear a●e bo●h a tegumen● o● covering of our nakedness and a testimony of our perfici●usness and fal●eness with the great God Be o●e man sinned he wore no garments nor had he need to wear any innocency was his cloathing nor was the natural man ever so gloriously adorned decks and drest as when he had no garm●nts besides his innocency When man prevaricated and dealt falsly with God when he s●nne● and broke the commandment his nakedness appea●ing and his ●hame he then got a simple cove●ing such as he could make for himself of fig-leaves till God p●ovided him a covering of skins Garments began with our sin till then saith Moses Gen. 2. the man and the woman were both naked and were not ashamed but when once man had sinned then shame came into the world and then both God and Nature p●ovided garments to cover his shame All this the word imports that we through sin having lost our natu●al garments our robe of created innocency and integrity we are constrained by s●●me to take up these artificial garments or coverings to hide our nakedness It is not unprofitable for us to remember 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Incaluit calidus fuit itaque Chami nomen vel a calore vel a nigredine factum Neque ut videtur sine numine cum quae Chamo contingit Aphrica immodico a stul●boret Bochart that the Spi●it of God in the Original language hath expressed our ga ments by such a word as leads us to the original of them our dealing falsly with God and sinning against him D●st thou know how thy garments Are warm The word which signifieth to heat or make warm I note that by the way also was the name of one of the sons of Noah he had three called Sem Ham and Japheth Ham or Cham was that son who saw his fathers naked●ess and told his two brethren without not g●ievingly but deridingly which brought a curse upon him This Cham had his name from heat and that portion and part of the world which according to the opinion of the learned was assigned to the posterity of Cham is one of the hottest climates in the world the inhabitants of those Countries by reason of the extream heat of the Sun being black are called Blackmores Aphrica Ammonia dicta cum ob cultum Ammonis i. e. Solis tum praecipue ob astus solares quibus exposita est Fuller Misc And all Affrica was called Ammonia either because the Idol of the Sun was wo●shipped there or because the Sun-beams are alwayes hot and fie●y upon it Yet as the word notes that extream heat which causeth blackness so any moderate heat Dist thou know how thy garments are warm From the notation of the word rendred garments Observe first When we put on our clothes we should remember our sin or Our garments are memorials of our sin The covering of our natural nakedness is a discovery of our spiritual and the●efore when we cover our natural nakedness we should think of our spi itual 'T is sin alone which makes us shamefully naked Moses saw the people were naked when they had made the golden Calf Exod. 32.25 not that they had no clothes on them but they had got a new sin upon them and had lost their former integ●ity which was a better ornament than clothing as also the protection of God which was a better guard or defence than armour Our garments which are an occasion of pride to many should be an occasion of humiliation to all Let us take heed of sinning in the use of garments seeing it was sin that brought in the use of garments I only mind the reader of it from the notation of the wo d. Secondly What is here said of garments Knowest th●u how thy garments are warm That is warm thee or keep thee wa●m Hence note Garments are given for warmth That 's one use or service of garments There is a fourfold use of garments First To cover our nakedness and hide our shame Secondly To distinguish our sex man from woman The law of M●ses fo●bad the man to wear the womans apparrel or the woman the mans Deut. chap. 22. vers 5. Thirdly Garments are useful for ornament There are garments of glory and honour garments to set forth the state and condition as well as the sex of the person wea●ing them Aaron and his sons had garments made them by Gods o●n appointment for glory and for beauty Exod. 28.2 40. The Kings and Princes of the world wear garments becoming their state and Majesty and inferiour Magistrates have their proper garments suiting their offices and dignity Fourthly Which is the common use of garments and that which the text speaks of they are for warmth to keep out the cold and to defend us from the injuries and violence of the weather yet we sca●ce know or do not fully know how that comes to pass Hence observe Thirdly How our garments warm us is a secret and that they warm us is from the blessing of God Though there be a natural cause of this warmth yet there is some what of God yea much of God in it The effect of that natural cause dependeth wholly upon the concurrence and power of God That Speech of the Prophet to the Jewes newly returned from Babylon and neglecting the Lords house while they too much attended the building of their own doth fully evince this for truth Haggai 1.6 Ye have sown much b●● bring in l●ttle naturally they that sow much should bring in much but God can stop the
the Sky takes occasion to give us a description of the Sky Hast thou with him spread out the Sky Which is strong and as a molten Locking-Glasse We have here two things considerable in the Sky First the strength of it Secondly the clearness of it But is the Sky strong that may be thought an improper and incong●uous Epithete The Sky seemeth to be a weak thing and the Ai● will scarce bear a feather yet saith he Hast thou with him spread out the Sky which is strong How are the Heavens or Sky strong Philosophers and Interpreters upon this place have largely discoursed the matter of the Heaven● which to our sence are a very thinn substance and therefore seem to have little strength in them I answer Though to sense and view the Sky or Heavens seem to have little strength in them yet indeed their strength is beyond that of Rocks and Mountains The learned Languages both Greek and Latine expresse the Sky by words which properly signifie strength and firm●ess Firmitas tribu●tur coelo propter immutabilitatem unde Septuaginta dicunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Latini Firmamentum and we following the Latine word commonly call it in our English tongue The Firmament as much as to say a firme thing When the Apostle would set forth the steadiness or as we translate the stedfastness of the faith of the Colossians he makes use of this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. 2.5 As if he had said I rejoyce to behold the firmament of your faith or that your faith is as fi●me as the Firmament Surely then the Sky or Firmament is very strong else the strength of faith which being strong is the strongest thing both actively and passively in the world had never been expressed by it The Heavens are said to be strong as saith is because of their lastingness and duration The Angels are pure Spirits they are purer and of a more spiritual substance than the Sky or Heavens yet they are strong so strong and powerfull that they are called Powers their strength is not a corporal strength of flesh and bone as ours and that of beasts is nor is it a strength by compactness of earthy parts as that of Stones and Metals is but 't is a strength of lastingness and activity arising from their spiritualness Thus the Sky especially taking it for the Heavens above th● air is pure there is a spiritualness in its nature and so a strength of lastingness in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fusile a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suadere liqui sacere non a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 coar●are Merc beyond that of any earthly or elementary body The Heavens are not made up of contrary qualities as elementary bodies are In them heat and coldness moysture and driness are mingled together and these contending with each other at last subdue each other whence all elementary bodies become weak and corruptible The Heavens have some cognation with elementary bodyes yet without the contrariety of active qualities Heaven is like the Element of the Earth in regard of firmness and solidity it is like the water in regard of its moveableness it is like the air in regard of its pellucidness or clearness it is like the fire with respect to its activeness Heaven shines yet 't is without heat 't is solid yet without dryness 't is compact yet without moystness 't is diaphanous and pellucid yet without po es or those small and unsensible holes whereby swea● and vapours pass out of the body So then the Scriptu●e calls Heaven st●ong or firme not as grosse bodyes are called fi●me and strong bu● because of its perpetual consistency and as to nature indissolubility which doth the more highly advance and commend the power of God who hath given it a strength and firmness beyond that of R●cks and Adamants For how fluid and moveable soever the Heavens are to view yet they are the most strong and durable part of the whole Creation Hast thou with him spread out the Sky which is strong And as a molten Looking-Glasse Some ●ead these words as an en●●●●●nrence Which is strong as a m●lten Lo●king-Glasse So Mr Broughton Couldst thou make a Firmament with him of the ●●ir setled as Glasse molten We put it disti●c●● in two parts which is strong a●d as a molten Looking-Glasse Poe●● v●teres 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 app●llarunt Some of the old Poets u●ed a like Epithete concerning Heaven they called i● The Brazen Heaven What the Lord threatens as a judicial affl●ction Deut. 28.23 The Heaven that is over thine head shall be B asse that Heaven resembles in its natural constitution 't is like B●asse o● like a molten Looking-Glasse by reason of its shining brigh●ness That which we commonly call Glass or a Looking-Glass is molten of which we read Ex●d 38.8 M●ses made the Brazen Laver of the Looking-Glasses of the Women The godly women among the Jewes made a bette use of thei Looking-Glasses than to dress themselves by they off●red them to the service o God in the Tabe●n●cle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est videre inde vijus sp culum R●b Kimhi in lib rad One of the J●wish Doct●●s wa●ns us to consider that the word which we rende● a Looking-Glasse may be taken for a look or for the appearance ●f a thing As if ●e had said The Heavens are not only strong but cleare L oking like or being o look on like a thing that is mol●●n Glasse is a diaphanous splendid body we may see through i● or see the representation of objects in it Thus th● Heavens are strong as steele and cleare as a molten Looking-Glasse Hence ●bserve Fi●st The Heaven are durable they are strong Secondly The Heavens are transparent they are as a Lo●k ng Glasse From this latter we may infer There is much to be seen in the Heavens They are a L●oking-Glasse which represent many things to us It hath been said The whole world is a Looking Glasse Se●ulum spoculum every Age we live in is a Looking-Glasse in which many both things and persons are discovered I may say much more the Heavens are a Looking Glasse wherein we may behold much of God and much of our selves And because the Heavens are called a Looking-Glasse it should mind us to look upon the Heavens they may mind us First What God is who hath made the Heavens Psal 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy work We may see God by the Heavens First In his nature that he is pure and holy He that hath made such a pure thing as the Heaven is how pure is he There is no dirt in the Sky no filth in the Heavens no uncleanness there the dust or filth of this world can get but a little into the air it cannot reach the Heavens The purity of God is such as may shame the purity of the Heavens and make them blush though the Heavens are
light of the Sun is but a Cloud yea but as a clod of earth The next words carry on this conviction yet further Vers 22. Fair weather cometh out of the North with God is terrible Majesty The former part of this verse hath a respect to the latter part of the former The wind passeth and cleanseth them fair or bright weather cometh out of the North. It hath been shewed before in opening the 9th verse of this Chapter that the South wind ingenders the Rain and causeth foule weather here saith Elihu fair weather cometh out of the North. The North wind saith Solomon Pro. 25.22 driveth away Rain so doth an angry countenance a backbiting tongue The North wind blows coldly yet it blowes clearly it clears the Air from Clouds We render Fair weather cometh out of the North. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aurum The word translated fair weather signifieth gold gold cometh out of the North. Fair weather in its season is worth much gold and may well be called golden weather the Sun in such seasons gilds both the Air and Earth with his precious beams And I find an ancient Interpreter sticking much upon the strict signification of the Hebrew word maintaining that gold is to be taken here properly Out of the North cometh gold because saith he in the Northern Countryes through the greatness of Cold the heat in those parts is so pent in the bowels of the Earth that it more fully concocts and refines the gold than in other places Out of the North comes gold that is the purest gold But I conceive that was not at all the business of Elihu here and I find the Scripture in another place expressing that which is shining beautifull and precious by gold Zach. 4.12 The oyle which the two Olive-branches emptied out of themselves through the two golden pipes is called gold or golden oyle that is Lux quovis auro splendidior ●ez bright oyle pure oyle and so because the light of the Sun shining in fair weather is purer and more defecate than the purest gold therefore this Scripture expresseth it by gold through the North a golden cometh saith Mr Broughton Again Some taking the word gold here metaphorically for any pretious thing take the word North metaphorically also for any evil thing that is for any affliction trouble or sorrow which we meet with in this world these are indeed as a cold chilling North-wind and so they will needs give the sence of this Scripture mystically thus Out of the North cometh precious things that is afflictions which are as a cold chilling North-wind make us more precious or through cold chilling afflictions we are made more and more precious Job saith and this text may have such an allusion and I give it no further to that Chap. 23.10 When he hath tried me I shall come forth gold that is I shall come forth precious Whether God doth try us by the North or by the South whether by the heat of prosperity or by the cold of adversity if we are under his tryal and are faithfull we come out gold we come out more precious from our tryals than we came in The Apostle hath a like allusion 1 Pet. 1.6 7. Ye are now for a season in heaviness if need be through manifold temptations that is troubles tribulations and afflictions That the triall of your faith being much more precious than of gold that perisheth though it be tried with fire might be found to praise c. Thus Out of the North comes Gold or this precious thing a tryed faith That 's a truth from the allegorical sense of this place but I shall not stay upon it The proper meaning is Elihu would have Job and all men know God hath his several Climates or places out of which he sends and dispenceth fair and foul weather foul weather cometh out of the South and fair out of the North. Out of the North cometh fair weather The Hebrew word rendred North signifieth hiding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abscondit occuliavit hinc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 septentrio aquilo quasi abscondita quia sol ibi multo per annum temp re ibi non conspiciatur because the remote parts of the North are much hidden from the Sun a great part of the year being quite dark and therefore the Northern Climate may well be called the hidden part of the world Some put a Question upon those words of David Psal 75.6 Promotion comes neither out of the East nor out of the West nor from the South Here are three of the foure Winds specified and it is said Promotion comes from neither of them But why is it not also said that Promotion comes not from the North that 's the question I answer It were answer enough to say that we ought not to put questions curiously about such things it should satisfie us that the Spirit of God is pleased to say it is so and no more Yet some tell us the reason why it is not said Promotion cometh not from the North is because indeed it cometh out of the North which say they is intimated in the Hebrew word for the N●rth which signifies ●idden or secret Promotion comes not from the East nor West nor South but from the North saith this Author it comes from the North in a figure or mysterie that is it comes from some hidden providence or secret hand which many take no more notice of than we do of the furthest part of the North. God promotes many in this world to power and sends them great prosperity we see not how or which way The causes and contrivances of it are hidden close and in the breast of God This also is a truth in that sence we may say Fair weather cometh from the North. Promotion is visible but the manner of it is a secret we see not the causes for which nor the wayes in which it cometh It is enough to touch these niceties and to touch them can do no hurt while the matter arising from them hath the clear consent of and is harmonious with other plain places of Scripture Fair weather cometh out of the North and as it followeth With God is terrible Majesty This is the Epiphonema the exulting conclusion of both these verses yea of Elihu's large discourse concerning the works of God in Naturalls As if Elihu had said All these things God doth and tell me then is not terrible Majesty with God in God or with God is terrible Majesty The word which we render Majesty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 celsitudo majestas a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quidem dedu●unt quod est confiteri celebrare laudare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Symmach Ad deum formidolo a laudatio Vulg comes say Grammarians from a root which signifies to confess to acknowledge to celebrate because Majesty Greatness or Excellency is and ought to be much acknowledged confest and celebrated The word notes
the righteous subject to them in this world 222. No condition so bad but God can change it to a g●od one 248 Chiromancy an unwarrantable Art 478 Choyce sin must not be our choyce what-ever we are put to chuse 324 Church why called Heaven in Scripture 573 Circumstances increasing sin 229. Consideration of circumstances do exceedingly heighten both our sins and the mercies of God 361 City two mystical Cities how built 35 Clouds their differences and spreading 399 400. Three questions answered about the Clouds 401 402. Vses of the Clouds both natural and spiritual 403. Clouds without water like the promises of the world 405 Clouds the Tabernacle of God 407 The same word signifieth a hand and a Cloud why 417. Cloud how it may be said to be wearied 500. Preachers of the Word compared to Clouds 502. Clouds are moved by the counsel of God 505 507. Clouds have their work or somwhat to do 508. Clouds are faithfull servants they do all that God commands 508. Inferences from it 509 510. Clouds sent for correction 5●5 516. 'T is a divine power which ballanceth the Clouds 550 Cold comes at Gods call 495. Cold how both usefull and hurtfull 495. Cold compared to affliction in the effects of it 495 496. Cold is a straitner 498. True in spirituals as well as in naturals 498 Command of God twofold 233 Conscience how terrible to be under the terrors of it when God is angry 609 Consideration what it is 528. Consideration opposed to two things 529 Conversion what done to a sinner in it 39 Covenant the benefit of the new Covenant 240 Creation the sole work of God 567. An Inference of comfort from it 568 Creature that God hath made a man a new creature a strong plea with God 69. Creatures necessary to one another but none to God 44 45. God can correct us by any of his creatures 515. God hath a care of all his creatures 518. God disposeth the motions of every creature 536 Crying of three sorts 264 Custome takes away admiration 534 D Danger every creature would get out of danger or harmes-way 483. Inferences from it both for instruction and reproof 483 484 Da●kness twofold 578. Improper darkness taken foure wayes in Scripture 579. Darkness or obscurity how in the Word of God 586 Death they who live like the wicked shall have their death 272. Death how an ascending 313. How sad their condition is who seek relief by dea●h 316. To wish for death in most a vain wish 317. Death when terrible 610 Deliverance from evil is the work of God 276. Deliverance in though not out of affliction 277 Dependance of man upon God for every thing 420 Despising what it is 169. Who are not despi●ed by G●d 169 170 Discipline what 231 Distress puts all men upon calling to God yet few do it aright 64 Distrust questions all that God is 122 D●opping the Word what it notes 387 Duty man seldome misseth trouble from God when God misseth duty from man 21 E Eare the opening of it what 230 Eare opened by affliction 232 Eclipses of Sun and Moone why wondered at and not their ordinary shining and motion 534 Effects God can stop the effects of all natural causes 565 Ends of our works to be looked to especially the end of Gods works 363. What the great ends of Gods works are 364 365. Ends of the earth why called wings 450 Establishment as well as preferment is from God 215 Eternity of God hath a double respect 378. Eternity what it is 378 Inferences from the eternity of God 378 379. Thoughts of eternity should take us up 383 Eresian winds what they are 494 Evill of trouble prepares for the receiving of good 278 Exaltation of several sorts all from God 335 336. God can exalt those that are lowest 336 Excessiveness or exceedingness of sin opened 227 Eyes of God what 201. A fivefold eye of God upon the righteous 202 203. How the eyes of God are alwayes upon his pe●ple 206. Objections answered 207 208. The happiness of the righte●us shewed in this 208. The duty of the righteous never to withdraw their eyes from God 210. A threefold eye to be kept alwayes upon God 210 F Faith appropriates God as our own 151. Faith should be great because God is great 370. Faith quiets the mind 528. The strength and firmness of Faith like what 569. How needfull Faith is in our coming to God 586 Fatness what it signifieth in Scripture 286 Feare how in Heaven 611. Feare of God what 639. It is the duty of all men to feare God 640. Feare of God set in a fourfold opposition 640. God to be feared when afflicting us 640 641. Why it may be supposed that all men feare God 641 God is to be feared because he is so powerfull and just 642. God is to be feared because so graci●us and mercifull 643. Three effects of the true feare of God 643 644 Fetters and Bonds what they signifie in Scripture 220 Finishing of a thing two-fold 241 Fore-seeing of evil how by a prudent godly man 427 428 F●ost how like ashes 473. what frost is 496. Why the same word signifies frost and baldness 496. Frost the gift of God 497 G Garments what the Hebrew word signifies and how it leads us to consider our first fall in Adam 558 559. A four-fold use of garments 559 560. That our garments warm us is from the blessing of God 560 Gift a Gift what 40. N●thing can be given to God or received by him as any addition to him 42 43. Glory of God the end of all his works 364 God is expressed in Scripture by a word of the plural number and what that may import 65. God no unrighteousness in the dealings of God with man 11. God self-sufficient needs nothing receives nothing of man 42 43. Heathens had such apprehensions of God 44. Four inferences from it 44 45. How God is or may be seen 103 104. Sight or discovery of God to the soul very sweet 104. God knows the right of every mans cause and will do every man right 109. Whom God doth not whom he doth despise 170 171. God hath a due regard to all sorts of men 171. God hath a wonderfull magnificent heart or Spirit 184. The magnificence of Gods heart discovered in three things 184 185. The Will of God the Rule of righteousness 346. His righteousness in all things 347. How God may be said to encrease 368. Greatness of God 369. In what se●ce God is not known 373 374. God eternal 378. God is a liberal house-keeper 413. Motions of all creatures under his command 450. It is easie to God to do great things 465. God can do all with a word 473. Inferences from it 473. God is very l●beral 501. God is not only a just but a bountifull master 520 God perfect in knowledge the perfection of his knowledge shewed seven wayes 553 554. Five inferences from it 554 555. How men speaking to God must
them it had been better for us not to have received them 364 Merciful men have special favours from God 521 Merit no merit in the best of men 649 Mighty men apt to despise others 173 Mightiness of man four fold 57. Mightiness of God in two things or of two sorts 160. The mig●tine●s of God set forth in seven assertions 161 162. Five Infere●ces fr●m the mightiness of G●d 164 165. Mi●acles God doth ●ot Mi acles to preserve or deliver the wicked 191 192. Mi acl●s as easie to God as his ordinary works 535. Mode●ation of Spi●it procee●s from true greatness of Spirit ●86 Modesty a great vertue and the grace ●f all our graces 158 Motions of the creature most violent and in appearance contingent under the dominion of God 450 N Name of God what 73 Nature work● of God in nature ought to be searched 145 Necessity no man necessitated to choose a sinful evil 283 Negatives in Scripture often carry a strong affirmation 153 187 188. Nero his seeming clemency 631 Night God gives his people occasions of rejoycing in the night as well as in the day 71. God gives his people a rejoycing frame of spirit in the night 72. Night taken two wayes 312 North-wind makes fair weather 603. why promotion is said not to come out of the North. 605 O Obeying and hearing expressed by the same word 237 Obedience due to the call of God either by his word or works 237. Obedience to God profitable to man 247. No obedience where no service 250. Good men fail in obedience 251 Oppression of three sorts 56. Oppression a common sin 58. Oppression is a crying sin 59. Power is commonly abused to oppression 59. Yet when poor oppress that worst 59 60. It is best to have recourse to God when oppressed by men 67. Oppression cannot bring down the pride of man 88 Oppressors mind not God 62 Opp●essed persons will be crying and complaining 86. Some under Oppression do nothing but cry and complain 87 P Pardon of great sins what may encourage us to ask it 372. The greatness of pardoning mercy in G●d 634 635 Passion not to be quieted but by Reason 382 Perfection two-fold 157 Perswasion what it is 280 Pleasure distinguished of in what pleasures to spend our dayes is a mercy 243. How that Promise of spending their dayes in pleasure is made good to the godly 245 246 Plenty and Scarcity are at the dispose of God 414. God useth natural means as the cause either of Plenty or Scarcity 414 Poor in Spirit how pleasing to God 195 196. Poor taken two wayes in Scripture 195. Poor shall have right done them by God 197. Objections answered 198 199 Poverty it self an affliction and the poor afflicted by others 194 196. Power of grea● use to do good and a great temptation to do bad things 60 Power of three sorts 335. They who have Power are apt to do wrong 347 Power of God in c●mmanding and working how excellent 619 Prayers of the proud and impenitent are not heard 89 92. The Prayers of vain persons are vain things 93. What prayers are vain shewed in seven particulars 93 94. How much God values holy prayers shewed three wayes 66 Holy p●ayer not alwayes presently answered but never disregarded 96. A dreadful judgment not to have prayer regarded 97. Not to pray in time of affliction very sinful shewed in three things 267. Prayers of the wicked not esteemed by God 307 Praise God fearfull in praises 611 Presumptuous sin what 35 Presumptions of evil men described 106 Presumption to do or speak amiss not fearing God should know it 589 P●ide oppression cannot bring down the proud heart of man 88. Pride a bad Mother of three bad children 169. Pride and high-mindedness the same 458 Promises some make them not minding to perform them 629. Four things ascribed to God in Scr pture which assure us he will perform his promises 630 P●omotion comes usually in a secret way 605 Pronounes mine thine have a great emphasis 149 Prophaning the Name of God what 34 Prosperity what 242. Promises of outward prosperity most in the Old Testament 246. Outward prosperity given many Godly 288 Protection of God towards man two-fold 191 Providences when they seem to cross Promises and Prophesies yet trust 113 Providential care of God towards his people is perpetual 206. Some works of Providence very plain 357. The P●ovidence of God reacheth to all places 453. The Government of the world is as much of God as the creati●n of it 536. Heathens dark about P●ovidence ascribed all to Fortune and second Causes 536 537. Comfort to the godly that all things are under the P●ovidence of God 537 Q Question one question put more than twenty times to J●b and why 535 Q●ietness of the Air much more of mens Hearts is of God 562. Christ can make the heart quiet in the midst of all outward u●quietness 563 R Rain fi●e things spoken of it 384 385. Rain comes fi●st from the earth 388. The causes of Rain 389. God can with-hold the Rain when he pleaseth 389. Four Inferences from it 90 39● That the water falls from Heaven in drops of R●in is of God 393. God hath store of Rain in his treasury 397. R●in a comparison between that ●nd the Word of God 397 398. R●i● s●all and great 471. Great Rain of Gods strength what 471. In what quantity soever the Rain falls it is by the special appointment of God 475. For what purposes Rain is sent 519. Rain undeserved 't is of free mercy that we have Rain 520 Rain-bow the signification of it 542 543. The forme and cause of it 543. Why expressed in the Greek by a word that signifieth to speak or shew forth 544. Whether the Rain-bow were before the fl●●d 544 545. The fitness of the Rain bow to assure mercy shewed in seven particulars 545 546 Ransom what it is several sorts of it Nothing but the blood of Christ can ransom sinners nor will that deliver some sinners 304 Remember taken two wayes 349 Reward and punishment without them Religion would vanish 14 Riches God regardeth not men for their riches or any outward greatness 306 309 Right how God gives it the poor 195 Righteous man righteous three wayes 39. A two-fold notion of the righteous 21. The Righteous alwayes under Gods eye 202 203. Righteous highly esteemed and exalted by God 213 Righteousness essential to God 11 Righteousness of two sorts 8 9. The righteousness or righteous actings of men contribute nothing to God 41. Three grounds of it 42 43. How and whom righteousness doth profit 51 52. Cautions about it 53. Righteousness when and how ascribed to God 147 Rods of two sorts 514. S Scholars great not alwayes the wisest men 177 Scourge God can make any creature a scourge to man 412 Sealing in Scripture hath a threefold signification 476. Sealing up of the hand what it signifieth 478 September how expressed in the Hebrew and why 448 Servant what it