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A15408 Hexapla in Genesin & Exodum: that is, a sixfold commentary upon the two first bookes of Moses, being Genesis and Exodus Wherein these translations are compared together: 1. The Chalde. 2. The Septuagint. 3. The vulgar Latine. 4. Pagnine. 5. Montanus. 6. Iunius. 7. Vatablus. 8. The great English Bible. 9. The Geneva edition. And 10. The Hebrew originall. Together with a sixfold vse of every chapter, shewing 1. The method or argument: 2. The divers readings: 3. The explanation of difficult questions and doubtfull places: 4. The places of doctrine: 5. Places of confutation: 6. Morall observations. In which worke, about three thousand theologicall questions are discussed: above forty authors old and new abridged: and together comprised whatsoever worthy of note, either Mercerus out of the Rabbines, Pererius out of the fathers, or Marloran out of the new writers, have in their learned commentaries collected. By Andrew Willet, minister of the gospell of Iesus Christ. Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621.; Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621. Hexapla in Genesin. aut; Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621. Hexapla in Exodum. aut 1633 (1633) STC 25685; ESTC S114193 2,366,144 1,184

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Ionathan to David and David to him all these when they tooke these oathes did sweare privately and as private men Simler 2. And seeing an oath serveth for the evidence of the truth and for the ending of strife and controversies in this behalfe there may bee as lawfull and as necessary an use of an oath privately as publikely not upon every occasion but when the matter is urgent and the case so requireth Vrsin 4. Morall observations upon the third Commandement 1. Observ. Against common and rash swearing THou shalt not take c. Here that common and notorious abuse of rash swearing in common and ordinary talke is reproved when the name of God is taken up prophanely and scoffingly without any kinde of reverence at all Chrysostome in his time finding fault with this abuse thus writeth Among the Iewes the name of God was so reverenced that being written in plates it was lawfull for none to carry it but for the high Priest but now Velut quiddam vulgare sic ipsius nomen circumfecimus We beare about every where the name of God as a common thing Chrysost. ad popul Antioch homil 26. Theodoret useth this fit resemblance Si vestem paulò pretiosiorem in dies festos multi adservare consuerunt c. If many use to keepe their better garment for holy dayes how much more should the name of God bee consecrated unto prayer and other holy exercises Ex Lippom. It was an use among the Heathen to keepe secret such names as they would have had in reverence there was a certaine hid and secret name of the City of Rome which is not now knowne which they say by the decree of the Gods was kept secret and one Marenus Soranus for naming the same but once in publike was adjudged to death Solinus in polyhistor cap. 1. de Roma The name also Demogorgon which the Gentiles held to bee the first God was not to bee uttered they thought when he was named the earth would tremble and Lucanus lib. 6. de bell civil writeth how Erit● the Sorceresse would thus adjure the Furies that if they did not consent shee would name Demogorgon Tostat. qu. 3. If the Gentiles were thus curious in not prophaning the names of their Idols it teacheth Christians that it is a shame for them so irreverently to use the name of the great God of heaven and earth whom they doe not only name but sweare by without any feare or reverence 2. Observ. Of the fearefull judgement of God threatning against blasphemers THe Lord will not hold him guiltlesse Though blasphemers and common swearers may escape the consure of men yet the Lord will not surely suffer them to goe unpunished If railers upon men are excluded the kingdome of God 1. Cor. 6.10 much more they which blaspheme the name of the living God If Gods hand should not be upon them here yet in the next world they are to expect nothing but everlasting horror unlesse they doe repent These that make a jest of religion and doe scoffe at the name of God are those abominable persons spoken of Revel 21.8 which shall have their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone Cajetane here noteth well Quoniam futurum hoc judicium divinum raro impletum videmus in hac vita c. Because wee see this divine judgement seldome to be fulfilled in this life it followeth that it is to be referred to the judgement following after this life Therefore let men stand in awe of this fearefull judgement that is threatned against all prophane swearers and blasphemers 3. Observ. Against breakers of their oath and perjured persons FUrther as rash swearing is condemned so it is a most horrible and fearefull sinne for one to take a false oath and not to doe and performe as he hath sworne a righteous man and such an one as shall dwell in Gods Tabernacle is described that hee sweareth to his owne hinderance and changeth not Psal. 15.4 All such therefore are condemned which make shipwracke of a good conscience herein Such are our knights of the post that will be hired to take false oathes like unto the Turkish S●i●i and Chagi who for a Ducket will take a thousand false oathes Oleaster useth this comparison If a man had given in pawne his sonne or any other precious thing for the performing of his oath he would labour by all meanes to redeeme it how much more when men have as it were pawned the name of their God Upon the fourth Commandement 1. Questions discussed QUEST I. Of the order of the fourth Commandement why it is put after the other 8. REmember the Sabbath day c. 1. Remotis impedimentis vèra religionis c. The impediments of religion being removed in the former Commandements as idolatry and prophanenesse or irreverence of the name of God this precept followeth Per quod homines in vera religione fundar●●tur By which men should be grounded in true religion Thom. 2.2 quaest 122. art 4. in Cor. Prius enim sunt removenda impedimenta alicujus rei instituendae c. For first the impediments of a thing to be instituted must be removed before the thing can be instituted Lyran. 2. And this is the cause as Cyril noteth why the other Commandements before going are propounded negatively but this affirmatively Quia ad act●m statim eos impell●● Because he presently draweth them here unto the act and execution Cyril lib. 4. in Ioah cap. 51. In the other Commandements first they are commanded to take away the impediments before the precept could be acted QUEST II. Why it is said only in this Commandement Remember c. 3. IN the other Commandements they were taught Deum primò venerari corde deinde ore First to worship God in heart then in mouth now it followeth here that we should worship him opere indeed Thom. Remember 1. Whereas Deut. 5. Moses rehearseth this Commandement thus Keepe the Sabbath day that thou sanctifie it but here he saith Remember the Sabbath day R. Salomon hath this conceit that both of these sentences were pronounced at once by a double sound of the trumpe which sounded forth the Commandements which is a fansie without any ground there Moses as the lawgiver doth not tie himselfe to the very same words keeping the sense Ex Tostat. 2. This memento remember some thinke is not referred to the Sabbath day but to the reason of the institution of the Sabbath taken from the creation this law therefore sendeth us backe to call to minde the creation of the world and how the Lord rested upon the seventh day after that in six dayes he had finished all the workes of the creation Tostat. So also Thomas Ponitur ut rememorationum beneficii praeteriti It is put as a remembrance of a benefit past But the connexion of the words sheweth that Remember is to be referred to the Sabbath day it selfe 3. Some will have this Remember to bee applied to the things to come
to offer a man into ones hand when he is suddenly killed Exod. 21.13 Tostatus who also includeth the punishment of death inflicted by the Magistrate that when the transgression is apparent and found out by witnesses then the Magistrate putteth to death as the man was stoned that gathered stickes Numb 15. But if the profaner of the Sabbath escape the punishment of man the judgement of God shall overtake him Tostat. qu. 12. 6. But beside these kinds of death which shall bee inflicted here in that it is said He shall die the death the other phrase In being cut off from among his people sheweth that beside there remaineth for them everlasting punishment in the next world as the Lord threatneth to the prophane fire unquenchable Ezech. 20.47 QUEST XVI Why the seventh day is called Sabbath Sabbaton Vers. 15. IN the seventh day is the Sabbath of holy rest unto Iehovah 1. Whereas the words in the originall are sabbath sabbaton some Hebrewes by the first understand the determined time of the Sabbath from evening to evening but because they know not certainly where the rest of the Sabbath should begin and where it should end they have added an houre more at the beginning and an houre at the end of the Sabbath and this they say is called sabbaton which is a diminutive word which is formed by putting to on as of ish a man is derived ishon a little man But it is a weake conceit to imagine that their additions which are brought in only by their tradition should be grounded upon Scripture 2. Oleaster therefore as the Hebrewes make both these words sabbath and sabbaton proper names for the seventh day of rest so hee translateth them thus requies requiri it shall be a rest of rest making them both appellative and common names because there was a greater rest required on the Sabbath than upon any other day whereupon in the Gospell Ioh. 19.31 the Sabbath is called a great or high day it was greater than the Passeover But Oleaster is deceived in this collection 1. For that Sabbath is called an high day because the Passeover did fall out upon that Sabbath 2. And though it be true that the Sabbath was a greater day of rest than the Passeover wherein they were allowed to do such works as were about that which they should eat Exod. 12.16 which were not lawfull upon the Sabbath Exod. 16.23 yet the rest of the Sabbath was not greater than of all other festivals for the tenth day of the seventh 〈…〉 where the same word is used 3. Therefore it is better interpreted It is the Sabbath of rest to make the first a proper name and peculiar to the seventh day and the other common So reade Vatad Iun. Pag●in agreeing with the Lat. Chald. Septuag who thus interprete 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Sabbath a rest holy unto the Lord. 4. Now in that there is so often mention made of rest there is more intended than the outward rest of the bodie only as though it were sufficient to spend all the day in lying downe playing sleeping 〈…〉 die ●acra opera perficienda sunt but upon that holy and sacred day sacred exercises also should be performed Lippoman QUEST XVII How the observation of the Sabbath is perpetuall Vers. 16. THat they may observe the Sabbath 〈…〉 their generations for an everlasting covenant 1. The Jewes hereupon doe take occasion to raile upon Christ tanquam 〈◊〉 as a law breaker for abolishing the Sabbath and so they presse these words literally as though the Lord ordained that the Sabbath injoyned them should be perpetuall But beside that the word gholam or 〈◊〉 doth not alwaies signifie that which is indeed perpetuall and eternall but sometime onely a long time Calvine or 〈…〉 a time not limited or determined the words which are annexed Throughout your generations shew that the perpetuitie of this Sabbath is restrained to their posteritie and that as long as their policie and Common-wealth continued Osiander 2. Some doe understand it to bee eternall in this sense quia erat ●terna rei signum because it was signe of a thing eternall August qu. 139. that is of our everlasting rest in Christ aternum manet ipso effectu it remaineth eternall in effect Calvine that is in ceasing from the works of sin 3. Some thinke that it is called perpetuall with relation unto the time of ceremonies quamdiu vellet Deus observari statum 〈◊〉 imperfectum Iudaicum c. as long as God would have that imperfect state of the Jewes to be observed Tostat. 4. But as I refuse not these two last interpretations so I thinke that there is more signified that God would have perpetually observed a day of rest set apart for his service though not that precise day prescribed to the Jewes as long as the world endureth so that it is not only spiritualiter sed moraliter aternum spiritually but morally eternall Pelarg. and not onely appointed for a politike order to avoid confusion that the people should have some certaine day to meet together in to heare the Word and receive the Sacraments Gallas For if the keeping of the Lords day were only grounded upon policie then any other day might as well be set apart as this which is now observed But I say further with Pelargus Nobis serv●vissime demandatam religionis exercenda curam That the care of the practice of religion upon the Lords day is straitly commanded us atque ad cam no● perpetuo ●lligari and that we are for ever tied unto it by the institution and practice of the Apostles Act. 20.7 1 Cor. 16.2 who as Gallasius well concludeth did substitute the Lords day in remembrance of Christs resurrection in stead of the old Sabbath Spiritu Dei quo ipsi regebantur by the Spirit of God whereby they were guided And here Thomas giveth a good note why the Sabbath onely is here mentioned the other festivals of the Jewes being omitted wherein there was a commemoration of some particular benefits as in the pasch of their deliverance out of Egypt on the Sabbath pracipuum beneficium creationis the principall benefit of the creation was remembred which is generall to all people and not peculiar only to the Jewes beside therein was prefigured Quies mentis in De● in prasenti per gratiam in futuro per gloriam The rest of the mind in God in the present by grace and in time to come by glorie Thomas Therefore seeing the seventh day of rest is a commemoration of the creation of the world and includeth a memoriall of Christs resurrection upon that day and is a symbole of our everlasting rest in heaven it ought to be perpetually observed QUEST XVIII Whether the world were made successively in time or in an instant Vers. 17. FOr in six daies the Lord made heaven and earth 1. Oleaster well concludeth from hence that God made the world and the things therein not all at once but successively
one day after another which he proveth by these reasons 1. Because the seventh day is determined wherein he rested then consequently they were six daies wherein he was making the world 2. Mention is made of the evening and morning therefore the day and night one succeeded another 3. And seeing light was created the first day and light and darknesse could not be at once in the same hemisphere the one therefore must needs successively follow the other 2. But yet although God made the world successively in respect of the daies which one succeeded another and all was not made in one day Yet Tostatus opinion is not to be received that in some of the works of the creation God did agere persuccessionem worke by succession and in time and did not produce the creatures in instanti in an instant The first second and fourth daies worke he granteth were done in an instant but the third daies worke was done successively the winde helping to drie it which is said to have moved upon the waters And the plants and trees were brought out of the earth in time God giving such great strength and force to the earth to bring them forth As he giveth instance of some herbs as 〈◊〉 parsely that will grow out of the ground in the space of two houres Likewise in the creation of man hee thinketh it is probable that the Angels made his bodie of the slime of the earth and the Lord breathed in the breath of life Contra. 1. That God created 〈…〉 Psal. 33.9 he spake and 〈…〉 2. That was not the winde which moved upon the 〈…〉 as in the same Psalme vers ● the Spirit is called the breath of Gods mouth By 〈…〉 Lord were the heavens made and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth 3. Neither did God use the helpe of the Angels in the framing of mans bodie he did it himselfe for when he said Let us make man in our image he consulted not with the Angels but with the blessed Trinitie for he was created in the image of God Genes 1.27 nor in the image of Angels for then Christ when he was made man should have taken upon him the nature of Angels which the Apostle denieth Hebr. 2.16 And it is directly said that God Iehovah made the man of the dust of the earth Genes 2 7. but Iehovah is not given unto any Angell it is a name peculiar unto God QUEST XIX How the Lord is said to have rested and from what Vers. 17. IN the seventh day he ceased and breathed 1. Which is a metaphor taken from those which when they have sore laboured doe breath and take aire Oleaster Not that God was wearied with the works of the creation but he onely left creating all things being finished which he intended to make and he did it for our instruction that we by his example might keep an holy rest 2. God then ceased from creating of another world Osiand or from creating any new workes for then the creation had not been perfect if any thing had been wanting neither could it have been said God saw all that hee had made and loe it was verie good Gen. 1.31 3. But he ceased not both from preserving that which hee had made which is no new worke but that was continued during all the six daies and is exercised still Tostat. For God is not like to a builder of an house or carpenter of a ship which having finished his worke so leaveth it but Gods providence still watcheth over that which he hath made Gallas Likewise the Lord ceaseth not from making particular works daily for he doth wonderous things and miraculous thorow the world sed non creat novas species he doth not create now any new kind Marbach 4. Then here appeareth the error of certaine Hebrewes which thinke that the Sabbath which is called Saturns day was appointed first to bee kept because that is an unluckie planet and unfortunate and therefore it was not fit to undertake any businesse upon that day for the reason appeareth to be this because God rested upon the seventh day and they will not say that God was afraid to doe any thing upon Saturns day Tostatus quest 11. 5. Againe hence is gathered a firme reason for the continuance and perpetuitie of the Sabbath because God did not create the heaven and earth only for the sonnes of Iacob but for all men Quibus ex aqu● Creator est nemi●em ergo ab isto Sabbatis●● excludi c. To whom he is a Creator alike and therefore no man is to be exempted from the keeping of the Sabbath Lippoman QUEST XX. What workes are to be rested from upon the Lords day what not ANd as God rested not from all kind of workes upon the seventh day so neither are all kind of workes unlawfull now to be done upon the Lords day of rest The workes that men attend are of two sorts either naturall or voluntarie 1. Naturall workes are not forbidden to be done as to eat drinke sleepe so they be done in order and measure 2. Voluntarie works are either good or evill evill workes are at all times unlawfall much more upon the sabbath 3. Good workes are either sacred or civill and politicall the sacred are either immediatly belonging to the worship of God as the duties of the first Table which principally are to be done upon the Lords day 4. Or they are such workes as are mediatly referred unto God as the workes of mercie the duties of the second Table which also if occasion so require are to bee done upon this day as to visite the sicke to helpe those that are in danger 5 The politike workes follow as the workes of mens vocation merchandise making of warre all which must be intermitted upon the Lords day and therefore that commandement beginneth with Remember that men aforehand should thinke of the Lords day and not deferre any of their busines till then but vrgent necessitie constraining such things may be done then as the Macchabees did fight upon the Sabbath and the Disciples of Christ being hungrie pulled the eares of corne Marbach QUEST XXI Whether Moses received the directions concerning the Tabernacle in the first or second fortie daies Vers. 18. THus when the Lord had made an end of communing with Moses c. 1. R. Sal●m whom Lyranus followeth understandeth this communing or speech of God with Moses only of the former charge concerning the Sabbath not of all the declaration before going which concerned the making of the Tabernacle which hee thinketh was done in Moses second going up to the Lord after the people had made the golden calfe and so he thinketh the historie to be transposed 2. Contra. 1. First as sometime in Scripture the order of time is changed and the historie transposed when there is any apparant cause to meet with some inconvenience which otherwise might follow so to imagine any such transposing where there is no such necessitie were
of the children of Israel whether the Levites also are there comprehended 34. qu. Of the forbidden uses whereunto this oyntment should not be put 35. qu. VVhether the anointing of Kings were not against this law 36. qu. What it is to be cut off from his people 37. qu. The spirituall application of this holy oyntment 38. qu. Of the spices whereof the holy perfume was made 39. qu. What is understood here by the word Samm●m spices 40. qu. Of the composition and manner of making this perfume 41. qu. Of the spirituall application of this incense 42. qu. How the Lord talked with Moses in the Mercie seat whether in any visible shape Questions upon the thirtie one Chapter 1. QUest How the Lord is said to call Bezaleel by name 2. qu. Whether Caleb the sonne of Jephuneh were grandfather to this Bezaleel 3. qu. Whether this Hur were the same before mentioned chap. 24.14 supposed to bee Moses brother in law 4. qu. Of the age of Bezaleel 5. qu. Of the difference betweene the gifts of wisdome understanding and knowledge 6. qu. Whether all the kinds of works are rehearsed here which were necessarie for the Tabernacle 7. qu. Whether the wise in heart received a new gift or increase rather of the old 8. qu. Why Moses was not made fit to doe the worke of the Tabernacle 9. qu. Of the garments of ministration what they were 10. qu. The spirituall signification of the furnishing of Bezaleel and Aholiab with gifts 11. qu. Why the precept concerning the Sabbath is here renued 12. qu. Why it was more forbidden to labour in the bui●ding of the Sanctuarie upon the Sabbath than for the Priests to sacrifice 13. qu. How the Sabbath is said to be a signe that the Lord did sanctifie them 14. qu. The reasons why the Sabbath must bee observed 15. qu. What death is meant in this phrase He shall die the death 16. qu. Why the seventh day is called Sabbath Sabbaton 17. qu. How the observation of the Sabbath is perpetuall 18. qu. Whether the world were made successively in time or in an instant 19. qu. How the Lord is said to have rested and from what 20. qu. What works are to bee rested from upon the Lords day what not 21. qu. Whether Moses received the directions concerning the Tabernacle 22. qu. VVhy Moses stayed fortie dayes in the mount with the Lord. 23. qu. VVhy the Lord gave the written law 24. qu. VVhy the Lord gave the law to the Israelites and to no other people 25. qu. VVhy the Lord delivered only two tables of the law 26. qu. VVhy the tables were made of stone 27. qu. VVhat is meant here by the 〈◊〉 of God 28. qu. VVhether Moses did write upon the tables 29. qu. How the law is said to have beene ordained by Angels Questions upon the two a●d thirtieth Chapter 1. QUest VVhether Moses had signified unto the people when he would returne 2. qu. VVhether the Egyptians were the first beginners and motioners of this idolatrie 3. qu. The occasions of idolatrie in generall and particularly of the idolatrie of the Israelites here 4. qu. Of the divers faults and infirmities at once here committed by the people 5. qu. VVhy the people say unto Aaron rise 6. qu. Of the divers kinds of idolatrie 7. qu. VVhy they say Make us gods not god 8. qu. How the Israelites would have their god to bee made to goe before them 9. qu. VVhy the people came to Aaron rather than to Hur his fellow Governour 10. qu. VVhether at this time the Israelites wanted the presence of the cloud 11. qu. VVhy they say they knew not what was become of Moses 12. qu. VVhy Aaron bad them pull off their earings Quaest. 141. in Exod. 13. qu. VVhether Aarons sinne is here to be excused Epist. 83. 14. qu. Of the greatnesse of Aarons sinne 15. qu. VVhy it pleased God to suffer Aaron to fall 16. qu. Why the golden Calfe is said to bee fashioned with a graving toole 17. qu. Why Aaron caused the likenesse of a Calfe to be made rather than of any other thing 18. qu. Whether the Israelites thought indeed the golden Calfe to be the God that delivered them 19. qu. Why Aaron proceeded to build an Altar before the golden Calfe 20. qu. How Aaron proclaimed a holy day unto the Lord. 21. qu. Of the sacrifices who and what was offered upon the Altar that Aaron made 22. qu. What is meant in that it is said They rose to play 23. qu. Whether this sinne of Aaron and the Israelites can any way be excused 24. qu. Of the lawfulnesse of play and recreation and how it must be moderated 25. qu. Why the Lord biddeth Moses get him downe 26. qu. Why the Lord saith to Moses Thy people 27. qu. Of the greatnesse of the sinne of the Israelites as the Lord himselfe describeth it 28. qu. VVhy they are called a people of a stiff● necke 29. qu. Why the Lord did not prevent the sinne of the people at the first 30. qu. Why and in what sense the Lord saith to Moses Let me alone 31. qu. VVhether the Lord changed his minde in saying I will destroy them and yet destroyed them not 32. qu. How the Lord promised to make a great nation of Moses 33. qu. Of Moses prayer in generall and the manner thereof 34. qu. Of the reasons which Moses useth in his prayer 35. qu. Why the Egyptians were more like thus to object than any other nation 36. qu. In what sense the Egyptians would say The Lord brought them out to slay them 37. qu. Why Moses maketh mention in his prayer of Abraham Isaak and Jacob. 38. qu. How the Israelites are promised to possesse the land of Canaan for ever 39. qu. How the Lord is said to repent 40. qu. Whether Moses at this time were kept in suspence or indeed obtained pardon for the people 41. qu. VVhat was written in the tables of stone 42. qu. Why there were but two tables neither more nor fewer 43. qu. How the tables were written on both sides 44. qu. Why the tables are called the worke of God 45. qu. How many precepts each table contained 46. qu. Whether the writing of the tables were the first writing in the world 47. qu. Where Joshua stayed all the while Moses was in the mount 48. qu. Whether Joshua first heard the noise 49. qu. Why Moses anger was kindled at the sight of the Calfe and not before 50. qu. Whether Moses sinned in his anger 51. qu. Whether Moses offended in breaking the tables of the Law 52. qu. What the breaking of the tables signified 53. qu. In what part the tables were broken and what became of the fragments 54. qu. Why the tables were broken at the bottome of the mount 55. qu. Whether the Calfe were burned to powder in the fire 56. qu. Why the powder of the golden Calfe is cast into the river 57. qu. How the Israelites were brought to drinke of the water
day and night whereas the elements as the aire are universally dispersed and spread it is also probable that this light might be gathered to that side of the earth where it was day and so to continue for a time as wee see the water was afterward brought to one place and so continueth which light after the creation of the celestial bodies might be drawne upward and have his reflection upon the beame of the Sunne and of other Starres QVEST. VII How the evening and morning were the first day Vers. 4. THe evening and morning were the first day 1. Some thinke that the evening is here taken for the day because it is the end thereof and the morning for the night being likewise the end thereof and that the artificiall day was before the night So Ambrose Chrysost. hom 3. in Genes 2. Others affirme the contrarie that the evening and morning are taken for the night and day being the beginning thereof the part for the whole and doe gather thereof that the night belongeth to the day following of this iudgement is Hierome in cap. 2. Iona which I hold to be the sounder for these two reasons 1. because this is the use of the Scripture to account the naturall day from evening to evening Levit. 23.32 From evening to evening shall you celebrate the Sabbath 2. The morning is part of the day and not of the night Mark 16.2 In the morning the first day of the weeke the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same which is here vsed by the Septuag for if the morning were part of the night and not of the day Christ in no sense could bee said to have risen the third day and so one of the principall points of our faith should be shaken 3. Further we refuse Eugubinus conceit which thinketh that in this first day there was only an euening not a morning as in the rest because the morning followeth after the night but here no night went before but the light was first for the words of Moses are plaine and evident that the evening and morning were the first day it consisteth of both these parts as the other dayes did and this first day had also a night going before not that darknes which was upon the earth as Iunius but when God purposed to make the light hee first caused the night to goe before and brought forth the light of the day Ramban Mercer 4. And the Sun not being yet made which by his course and turning about maketh it day and night at the same time in diuers places it may be thought that it was day and night at the same instant now over the face of the whole earth Mercer QVEST. VIII How God is said to see the light to be good Vers. 4. GOd saw the light 1. Not that God did not know the light to bee good before hee made it but Moses speaketh here according to our capacity that God approveth and ratifieth that worke now done which before he purposed to make and Ramban well referreth it to the stedfastnesse and continuance of this worke which God saw to be good 2. God made a separation betweene light and darknesse not only in respect of their names as Aben Ezra but in the things themselves giving to each of them their determined time Mercer 3. And in that it is said God called the light day c. 1. God onely did not make and ordaine the light to be the day Iun. Muscul. 2. nor yet directed or taught men so to call it Vatab. Mercer 3. but beside God gave these names himselfe Oecolamp QVEST. IX Why it is called the first or one day Vers. 5. WEre the first day or one day as the Chalde Septuagint and Hierome translate It is called then one and not the first day 1. not as R. Sol. because there was but one God in the world for so there was but one likewise in the rest of the dayes 2. Neither as Hierome because unity is good and two bringeth division for after the first day noxious and hurtfull things were created But the contrarie is evident out of the text that God saw that all which he made was good 3. Neither as R. Moss is it called one day because there were yet no more for it is so called in respect of the rest that follow 4. Wherefore the reason is this the Hebrewes use Cardinal numbers for Ordinal as the Grammarians speake as one for the first as Gen. 2.10 the name of the one that is of the first is Pishon so likewise in the new Testament Vna sabbati one day of the weeke is taken for the first day Mercer QVEST. X. Whether there are waters above the heavens Vers. 7. BY the firmament which separated the waters which were under the firmament from the waters above the firmament divers of the ancient Writers understand the starry heaven and that there are waters above those heavens which serve to mitigate the heat of the Starres and from whence that abundance of raine came wherewith the world was overflowne so Basil. hom 3. Hexemer Ambros. lib. 2. in Hexemer c. 2. Beda with others But this cannot bee so 1. for that the waters being of an heavy substance must bee there kept against nature 2. Neither could the great waters that drowned the world come from thence unlesse the heavens also should have beene dissolved the windowes of heaven were opened which was nothing else but the opening and loosing of the clouds which as Gods bottles did powre downe raine abundantly 3. Neither are wee to imagine such heat in the celestiall bodies which are of no fiery or elementall nature that they need to be refrigerated or cooled This firmament then is the spreading or stretching out of the aire as the word rachiang signifieth which divideth the raine and waters in the clouds and keepeth them from the waters below as is expressed in Iob. 26.6 which bindeth the waters in the clouds and the cloud is not broken under them Now whereas afterward vers 14. it is said Let there bee lights in the firmament of heaven it followeth not that the firmament before spoken of is the starry heaven for Moses here speaketh after the capacity of the vulgar people who imagine the Starres to bee in the firmament of the aire the eye being not able to distinguish betweene the region of the aire and the azure skie And according to the vulgar opinion Moses also calleth the Moone a great light because it so seemeth to the eye to bee the next in greatnesse to the Sunne whereas many other both of the wandring and fixed Starres doe exceed it in greatnesse And whereas that place is objected Psal. 148.4 Praise him ye waters above the heavens by heaven we are here to understand the lower region of the aire as Psal. 18.13 The Lord thundred in heaven and gave his voice hailestones and coales of fire but thunder lightning haile come not properly from the heaven but out
heaven and earth c. 4. It is also evident that the Sabbath was kept by godly tradition before the morall law was given as Exod. 16.23 To morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath to the Lord. 5. Thus the fathers ground the institution of the Sabbath upon Gods example in this place as Hierome trad in 2. Gen. Augustine Psal. 80. and Origen thus answereth Celsus lib. 6. objecting if God were weary that he needed to rest God rested saith he ut nos ab operibus quiescentes c. that we resting from our works should celebrate that day QVEST. V. Of the generations of the heaven and earth how to be understood Vers. 4. THese are the generations c. 1. This word generations is not here to be taken actively as some of the Hebrewes for those things which the heaven and earth brought forth of themselves but passively for the beginning and originall of the heavens and earth 2. The Masorites note that this word toldoth which signifieth generations is twice only found fully written with vau in the beginning in this place after the world was finished and in the generation of Phares in the end of Ruth and they yeeld this reason thereof because this generation in the perfection of the world was complete and that other whereof Messiah should come but all other generations are imperfect and therefore they are defective in letters but these observations are curious ex Mercer QVEST. VI. Of the name of God Iehovah Vers. 4. IN the day that the Lord God 1. This is the first place of Scripture where the Lord is called by his name Iehovah 2. The reason whereof the Hebrewes make to be this that as Elohim is a name of power and justice given unto God in the creation so now Iehovah a name of mercy is attributed unto God the whole worke being finished because therein his mercy appeared or rather now after God had made his worke full and complete he is also set forth in his full and complete titles Iun. 3. The Hebrewes very superstitiously forbeare the reading or naming of this word Iehovah and use in stead thereof Adonaei which word we confesse is soberly to bee used and that it conveniently cannot bee pronounced because it borroweth all the prickes from Adonai and wee condemne also the heathens profanation of this name who derive from them the oblique cases of Iupiter Iovis Iovi 4. This name Iehovah some would have to expresse the Trinity because it consisteth of three kinds of letters some by He double understand the two natures of Christ but this is too curious It is derived of haiah which signifieth Gods being and essence and therefore hee is called Iehovah as by whom man and all things else have their being ex Mercer QVEST. VII The world made in six dayes and not all at once Vers. 4. IN the day that the Lord made the earth and the heavens From this place Augustine would gather that all the wor●d was made in one day and that Moses doth divide the creation into six dayes worke that it might be the better understood of the simpler sort l. 4. de genes ad lit c. 21. the same was the opinion of Philo Iudaeus Procopius and Cajetanus a Popish writer But this opinion cannot stand 1. It is contrary to the Scripture Exod 21.11 For in six dayes God made heaven and earth And Moses writing the story of the creation must be taken plainly as he writeth For if the world was made at once how can it be true that it was made in six dayes 2 Augustine other-where holdeth the contrary that the world was not made in one day but in order and he giveth this reason because if the creatures had beene made together non haberent sensum infirmitatis c. they should not have the like sense of their infirmity as now they have one seeing another made before them quaest 106. ex vet testam Ambrose giveth the like reason ne increata crederentur the creatures were not made at once lest they might be thought not to have beene made lib. 1. Hexem c. 6. 3. Whereas Moses here saith in the day we will not answer with Gregory that it is so said because the matter or substance of the creatures was created at once in the beginning Gen. 1. 2. though they received their forme and perfection afterward lib. 32. moral c. 10. this also is Iunius opinion in his last edition for as yet the day was not created nor the light when the heaven and earth were made in the beginning and Moses here directly speaketh of the plants and herbs that were not made before the third day I allow rather Tremellius judgement in the first edition who translateth for in the day be●om in the time a part being taken for the whole as afterward vers 17. in ●he day thou eatest thereof that is in the time whensoever thou shalt eat thereof thou shalt dye the death so also Mercerus QVEST. VIII Of the mist that went up from the earth Vers. 6. BVt amyst went up because the Latine text readeth a fountaine Augustine being unskilfull of the originall much busieth himselfe about this matter sometime thinking that one fountaine is here taken for many whereby the earth is overflowne other while that some great river as Nylus might water the earth lib. 5. de genes ad lit c. 9. Others taking that to be impossible doe only understand Paradise to have beene watered with this fountaine as Albinus contrary to the text which saith it watered all the earth yea to make this matter more doubtfull the interlineary glosse saith that there fell no raine before the floud but that all the earth was watered with the fountaines and springs of the earth Wherefore to cleare these doubts we are to resort to the originall word gnedh which signifieth a vapour or a myst and let it here be noted that Per●tius a Jesuit writing upon Genesis in this place forsaketh the vulgar latine text and cleaveth to the Originall It being then agreed that wee are to read not a fountaine as Hieromes translation hath and the Septuagint but a myst or vapour yet there remaineth another doubt for some read affirmatively but a vapour ascended as all the interpreters but Tremellius who understandeth it negatively joyning it thus with the former verse there was not a man to till the ground or any vapour had ascended c. and so he would have the negative ain not used before to be supplied here This I take to be the best reading both for that it is most agreeable to the text which sheweth that God created the plants without any naturall helpe either of raine or mysts or artificiall of mans labour that neither raine had yet descended nor vapours ascended As also because the manner of Scripture phrase will beare it as Exod. 20.4 Thou shalt not make to thee any graven image or any similitude c. where throughout the whole
inquired when this sentence began to take place that in what day soever Adam did eat of the tree he should dye the death 1. Some thinke that a day is not here to bee taken according to mans account of dayes but as it is before God with whom a thousand yeares are but as a day and so Adam died within a thousand yeares after so Iustinus dialog cum Triph. but this sense seemeth to bee strained 2. Neither doe we refer these words in what day soever to the first clause only thou shalt eat and not to the second thou shalt dye the death as though the meaning should not bee they should dye the same day wherein they did eat but at any time after for this seemeth also to be but a forced sense 3. But we rather allow Hieromes interpretation that Adam began in the same day to dye not actually but because then he became mortall and subject to death lib. tradit in Gen. so Symmachus readeth thou shalt bee mortall 4. And beside that then actual●y Adam entred into misery and sorrow labour hunger thirst which are the forerunners of death 5. Adde unto this also that in the same day death entred by sinne into the soule of Adam in the very same day of his transgression QVEST. XXX Whether God made death THirdly seeing that by Gods sentence death seased upon Adam the question is whether God made death and whether this corporall death be a punishment of sin We answer 1. that as death is a defect of nature beside the first intention of the Creator brought in by sinne into the world that God is not the ●uthor of it but it is so only the fruit and effect of sinne 2. But as death is a just punishment inflicted for sinne so it is of God who though hee first made not death yet now hee disposeth of it thereby shewing his justice upon mans transgression so that as Augustine saith speaking of the beginning of darkenesse Deus non f●●●t tenebras s●d●rdinavit God made not darknesse but ordered them so may it bee said of death 3. Eugubi●us objecteth that death is not properly a punishment of sinne because it remaineth in the faithfull and it is not taken away by Christ. in Cosmopeia To which we answer 1. That death also at the last shal be destroyed by Christ 1 Cor. 15.26 The last enemy that shal be destroied is death 2. That although the death of the body remaine yet in the members of Christ in them it is not now as a punishment but as a consequent of their corruptible nature because all flesh is now as grasse Isa. 40.6 and death now unto them is not a curse but turned to a blessing in Christ being both a cessation from lab●ur and an entrance into rest Rev. 14.13 Blessed are they that dye in the Lord they rest from their labours and their workes follow them QVEST. XXXI Why it was not good for man to be alone Vers. 18. IT is not good for man to be alone 1. not as R. S●l left if man would have beene alone hee might be thought to be chiefe Lord in earth as God was in heaven for if man had beene alone who should have so thought or spoken 2. Neither was it not good in respect of God who by his infinite power and wisdome could otherwayes have multiplyed and increased man but in respect of that order and course of generation which God appointed for other creatures 3. Neither is this so said as though no man could live without a woman as the Hebrewes have these sayings nothing is good but a woman ●e that hath not a wife is not a man for God hath given unto some a speciall gift which may supply this want 4. Neither is S. Paul contrary to Moses where he saith it is not good to touch a woman for he speaketh in respect of those present times of persecution wherein their wives might have beene a let unto them Mercer 5. But this is so said 1. in respect of mutuall society and comfort 2. in respect of the propagation of the world 3. especially for the generation and increase of the Church of God 4. but most of all it was meet that woman should bee joyned to man because of the promised seed of the woman of whom came our Saviour Christ after the flesh QVEST. XXXII Wherein woman was a meet helpe for him Vers. 18. LEt us make an helpe meet for him The word cen●gd● signifieth as one before him or against him But we neither allow the conceit of some Hebrewes as R. S●lamon that the woman is said to be against man because she is contrary to him 2. Nor yet doe wee like of Tostatus conjecture because the male and female in respect of their naturall parts are contrary 3. Nor yet doe wee approve David Kimchi his collection that the woman is said to bee as before man that is as a servant to attend vpon him for shee is appointed to bee his fellow-helper not his servant neither is it like that if shee had beene ordained to any base use or service that she should have beene framed out of Adams side 4. Therefore shee is called a helpe like to man as Hierome readeth or according to him as the Septuagint or as before him as the Hebrew both because shee was made like unto man as well in proportion of body as in the qualities of the mind being created according to the image of God as also for that she was meet for man necessary for the procreation education of children and profitable for the disposing of houshold affaires 5. This maketh a manifest difference betweene woman which is alwayes before man cohabiting and conversing with him and other females which after their copulation forsake their males Luther QVEST. XXXIII When the woman was formed A Further doubt is moved by some at what time the woman was made where 1. wee reject the conceit of Cajetanus who making an allegory of this story of the framing of the woman out of Adams side is forced to affirme that God made man and woman together upon the sixth day and not the woman out of the man for thus the history of Moses is called into question and as well may the whole discourse of the creation of the world be allegorised as this narration of the making of woman And again it is contrary to the Apostle who saith that the woman was of the man 1 Cor. 11.9 2. We likewise refuse the opinion of Catharinus who thinketh the woman to have been made the seventh day for this also is contrary to the Scripture Exod. 20.11 In six dayes the Lord made heaven and earth the sea and all that in them is 3. So then we hold that the woman was made of a rib out of Adams side as Moses setteth it downe neither made together with him out of the earth nor yet made so long after him upon the seventh day but she was formed upon the six●h day
words of Adam as Epiphanius thinketh or immediatly uttered by the Lord to Adam but of Moses directed by the spirit of God who inserteth here a perpetuall law concerning marriage 2. The man is said to leave father and mother either comparatively and in degree that he is rather to leave them than his wife Oecolamp or conditionally if they shall seeke to dissolve the knot of marriage therein the sonne is to leave them Muscul. as also the leaving of the father and mother signifieth the erecting of a new family as the Chalde readeth hee shall leave his father and mothers bed for the ancient use was for children unmarried to lye in their parents chambers Mercer 3. They shall be one flesh not only in respect of carnall copulation as R. Sel. for so bruit beasts may be said to bee one flesh but in respect of their perpetuall society the conjunction both of their bodies and minds Now whereas the Apostle saith that he which is joyned to an harlot is one flesh the Apostle there applieth not that which is proper to marriage to fornication but sheweth what injury they doe to marriage which commit fornication yeelding that to harlots which is peculiar to wives to be made one fl●sh with them And yet this difference there is that the man and wife are joyned together both in flesh and spirit as it followeth in the same place he that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 but the harlot though joyned in body is severed in heart and affection QVEST. XLV How man was not ashamed of his nakednesse Vers. 25. THey were both naked and were not ashamed 1. Adam was not ashamed not as some Hebrewes say because Heva was of his owne flesh for afterward they were one ashamed to behold the nakednesse of another neither doth Moses set them forth as impudent and unshamefast persons such as the Adamites are pretending this example companying together like bruit beasts but this nakednesse of their bodies sheweth the nakednesse and simplicity of their minds for shame is the fruit of sin and therefore before sinne entred they were not ashamed 2. Some thinke that there remaineth yet in children that are not ashamed of their nakednesse some shadow of our first estate but children are therein unshamefast for want of reason as the like is to be seene in bruit beasts But in the kingdome of heaven we shall be all naked and without shame as Adam was and without feare or danger of sinne which Adam was not 3. Further notwithstanding their nakednesse they should not have beene offended with the weather either heat or cold not that their skin was like unto the nailes of the fingers as R. Eliezer thinketh which wa● taken away after their fall but God would have so tempered the elements and the quality of their bodies as that all things should have beene serviceable unto them 4. The places of doctrine 1. Doct. The Dominicall or Lords day is grounded not upon tradition or Ecclesiasticall institution but upon the scriptures IN that the Lord sanctified the seventh day and made it a day of rest we inserre that as the Sabbath kept then upon the seventh day in remembrance of the creation was of the Lords institution so the Lords day is now observed by he same authority in remembrance of the resurrection of Christ and our redemption by the same contrary to the Rhemists who count the observation of the Lords day but a tradition of the Church and Ecclesiasticall institution Rhemist Matth. 15. sect 3. Our reasons are these 1. The observation of a Sabbath or day of rest unto the Lord is commanded in the moral law which is perpetuall and not to be abrogated if this bee denied it will follow that there are but nine commandemets if that of sanctifying the Sabbath doe not binde now And although wee observe not now the same day for our Sabbath which the Jewes did yet the seventh day we keepe still retaining the substance of the law which is to keepe one day holy of seven The manner of computation and account of seven where to begin where to end and to bee tied to the very same prescript of the day was ceremoniall and a circumstance of the law and in that behalfe doth not conclude us 2. That which was by the holy Apostles by precept enjoyned and by example observed was of a divine institution thus the Lords day is prescribed by Saint Paul 1 Cor. 16.2 where the Apostle enjoyneth them to make collection for the poore in their meetings upon the first day of the weeke which then began to be observed for the Lords day he himselfe also Act. 20.7 observeth the same day and preacheth in it Saint Iohn calleth it the Lords day Revel 1.10 3. Every symbole significative or representing signe mentioned in scripture had a divine institution but so is the Sabbath a symbole or type of our everlasting rest Heb. 4.9 There remaineth therefore sabbatismus a sabbath rest to the people of God which words doe conclude that both the type remaineth that is a sabbatisme and the signification of the type everlasting rest 4. No constitution of the Church doth simply bind in conscience for Gods commandements only do so bind Iam. 1.12 There is one law giver which is able to save and destroy but the keeping of the Lords day bindeth in conscience for therein we are commanded not to doe our owne wayes nor to seeke our owne will nor to speake a vaine word Isay 38.13 which duties are alwayes commanded so especially upon the Lords day but these precepts the observation whereof is properly incident to the Lords day doe bind in conscience Ergo. c. 5. If the Lords day were but a tradition of the Church there should be no difference betweene that and other festivall dayes but all of the like necessity and with as great strictnesse are to be observed and kept these as the other But that were very absurd seeing we find the Lords day by the Apostles to have beene observed whereas no mention at all is made of the other in the scriptures and the Church of God in her practice hath alwayes made a difference betweene the observation of the Lords day and other festivals enjoyning that with greater devotion alwayes to be celebrated than the rest 6. This also hath beene the constant doctrine of the Church of God and the judgement of the fathers that the Lords day is of the Lords institution as may appeare by this sentence of Augustine Dominicum diem apostoli apostoli●i vir●religiosa sanctitate habendum sanxerunt c. The Lords day the Apostles and Apostolicall men have ordained with religious holinesse to bee kept because in the same our Redeemer rose from the dead and therefore it is called the Dominicall or Lords day that in it we onely may attend upon the divine service this is the first day in the world in it were created the elements
darknesse and the dayes begin to be longer than the night so then Christ brought light to the world the light of righteousnesse which chaseth away the darknesse of our sinnes Rupert 2. As in March all things began to revive and spring againe so Christ brought life and refreshing to the world Ferus 3. It was a generall received opinion among the Jewes that the same time that the Israelites were delivered out of Egypt the deliverance which they expected from the Messiah should be accomplished A●doe Masius in 5. Iosh. And so accordingly Christ the true paschall lambe was slaine in the Feast of the Passeover 4. The fulnesse of the Moone sheweth the fulnesse of time when the Messiah should come Rupert 5. The eating at even signifieth that Christ should suffer toward the end of the world Simler Secondly in the tenth of this moneth let every one take a lambe Like as the lambe was set apart foure dayes before upon the tenth day of the moneth so our Saviour came to Jerusalem upon the tenth day of the moneth five dayes before his Passion for upon the sixt day before Christ came to Bethanie Ioh. 12. and the next day he went to Jerusalem Ferus 3. The lambe signifieth Christ as Iohn Baptist calleth him the lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Ioh. 1.29 unto whom all the properties of the lambe doe most fully agree 1. The lambe is taken from the flocke so Christ tooke the nature of men in all things like unto us sinne only excepted Ferus It was a lambe without blemish so was Christ without sinne Simler A male to shew his strength Iun. of a yeere old not above but under it might bee to shew that Christ died at a full and perfect age Pellican Beside Christ is resembled to a Lambe for his patience he was as asheepe before the shearer not opening his mouth Simler for his innocencie Ferus And as a Lambe cloatheth so are wee cloathed with Christs righteousnesse Hierom. As the Lambe feedeth so are wee nourished spiritually by the body and bloud of Christ. Simler 4. The bloud of the Lambe was a most lively type and figure of the bloud of Christ 1. As they were delivered from the temporall death of the plague of the first borne so are wee redeemed by the bloud of Christ the undefiled Lambe 1. Pet. 1.19 Iun. 2. The bloud was sprinkled or stricked with hyssope upon the doore postes so the bloud of Christ doth not profit us unlesse it be sprinkled upon our hearts by faith Calvin 3. It was stricked upon the doore postes that we should at all times both going out of our houses and entring in thinke upon the passion of Christ and it was laid upon the upper doore poste to shew that we should not be ashamed of Christ. Pellican 5. The Lambe must be eaten whole so whole Christ must be received and acknowledged God Christ and man Christ perfect God and perfect man consisting of body and soule both the doctrine and life of Christ Pellic. Ferus The Arrians divided the Lambe that denied his Deity the Maniches that impugned his humanity the Apollinarists denied Christ to have a soule or rather it signifieth our perfect conjunction with Christ Iun. 2 The eating of unleavened bread signifieth the laying aside of the leaven of malice and wickednesse and that we should keepe our feast with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth as the Apostle expoundeth it 1. Cor. 6.8 3. The sower herbes signifie the afflictions that accompany the crosse of Christ. Iun. 6. Vers. 11. Thus shall yee eat it 1. By the girding of the loynes some understand the bridling of the affections Gregor Pellican rather it sheweth we should be ready for the Lords service as they which are prepared for their journey Philo as the Apostle saith Stand therefore your loynes girded up Ephes. 6.12 Borrh. 2. The putting on the shooes with Gregory signifieth the imitating of the examples of the Saints departed as the shooes are made of dead skinnes but this is too curious Pellican would have it to signifie our passing thorow this world where we have no abiding City rather it sheweth that wee should be armed and prepared to walke through the crosses of this life and not to bee offended with the troubles which follow the Gospell but as the Apostle saith wee should bee shod with the preparation of the Gospell of peace Borrh. 3. By the staffe in hand Pellican understandeth the enduring of labour Philo direction to guide us in the way Ferus and Iunius better the word of God whereby we are both guided and strengthened in the way Gregory the pastorall duty but the use is more generall than to belong to one calling 4. They are bid to eat it in haste which with Gregory signifieth ad solemnitatem patriae caelestis a●●●lare to long for our heavenly country as they made haste to goe to Canaan as the Apostle saith I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ. Some understand it of that feare which they are in which doe things in haste and there it is good semper pavid●m esse ne in presumptione secur●tate p●rielitamur alwayes to be fearefull lest b● security and presumption we should be indangered Pellican Some doe thus apply it Celeriter relinquendum esse Satana regnum that the kingdome of Satan must speedily bee left Borrh. Ferus beside the two first collections Festin●re nos faciant duo desiderium timor Two things cause us to make haste desire and feare addeth a third that as they were bid thus to be in readinesse at what houre of the night soever there should be a cry raised in Egypt Sic semper parati simus quasi omni h●ra nobis ex hoc mundo exeundum sit So we should be alwayes ready at what houre soever we are to depart this world But this ceremony betokeneth generally our readinesse and promptnesse to Gods service violentes esse rapere regnum Dei that wee should as it were take the Kingdome of God by force as our Saviour sheweth Matth. 11. Iun. in Analys QUEST XLI How Pharaoh is said here to have called unto Moses Vers. 31. ANd he called to Moses and Aaron 1. Ferus here well noteth Impii non evigilant nisidum judicium Dei sentiunt The wicked awake not till they feele the judgements of God Pharaoh is not so much awakened out of his sleepe as his hard heart is awakened 2. Now he granteth whatsoever they had said before making no reservation or exception of any thing as he had done Simler So wee see that terror and feare are the invincible weapons of God whereby Tyrants are constrained Pellican 3. This was Sera sed non seria animi demissi● This submission of his minde though it came at the last it came not in truth Borrh. for Pharaoh repented him afterward 4. Not onely Pharaoh thus called to Moses and Aaron but likewise Pharaohs servants
Sabbath formally who doth that which is expressely forbidden to bee done upon that day he materially breaketh it who doth a worke like unto that which is forbidden but yet is permitted by the law As if there were a law that no citizen should sell any thing to a stranger but such as were licensed to do it hee that so selleth being not allowed transgresseth the law formally he that doth it being thereunto licensed doth transgresse onely materially in that he doth the same thing which he committeth that transgresseth the law but not in that manner The same difference there was betweene the workes of the Priests which were allowed by the law upon the Sabbath day and the like workes of those which laboured in the building of the Tabernacle upon that day which were forbidden 3. Another difference is this the sacrifices belonged to the service of God which if they should have been intermitted upon the Sabbath the service of God should therby have been neglected But though the workes about the Tabernacle did cease upon the Sabbath Gods worship was not thereby neglected for they might as well be made upon other daies and so were 4. They were to do no servile works upon the Sabbath but many works necessarie for the building of the Sanctuarie were servile so were not the sacrifices and other duties performed by the Priests upon the Sabbath therefore the one were permitted upon the Sabbath and not the other Tostat. qu. 9. QUEST XIII How the Sabbath is said to bee a signe that the Lord did sanctifie them Vers. 13. IT is a signe betweene me and you that I the Lord do sanctifie you Which words are diversly expounded 1. Some make this the sense It is a signe that I sanctifie you in that I have separated you from other people selected you unto my self Vatab. Lyran. 2. Oleaster thus Sanctitas Sabbat● signum est munditia c. The holinesse of the Sabbath is a signe of cleanenesse which I require of you Vt ex dicato tempore Deo credamus magis nos ipsos dicuri Deo c. That by the time dedicated to God wee should know that wee our selves much more should be dedicated Cajetan But more is here signified than so the words implie an actuall sanctification not signified onely 3. Hierom saith it is so said because it was signum veri Sabbati a signe of the true Sabbath wherein wee shall rest from the labours of the world 4. So also Irenam Non sine symbole erant signa the signes were not without some symbole and signification Sabbat● perseverantiam totim di●i c. The Sabbaths holding our the whole day did signifie our continuance in Gods ser●●ce But here the Lord speaketh of an actuall sanctification not of a typicall signification 5. Some say it is so called quia signum erat ●ud●ris because it was a signe of the Covenant whereby the people did bind themselves to worship the Lord for their God and such signes were all the other ceremonies Marbach But there is a morall consideration in the sanctifying of the Sabbath therefore it was otherwise a signe than the other ceremonies 6. It was then a common signe betweene God and them they holding God to be their God Creator and sanctifier because the Sabbath was a commemoration of the creation and the Lord taking them for his people whom he created redeemed and sanctified Iun. Tostat. 7. Beside the keeping of the Sabbath was a signe of difference between them and all other prophane people of the world who derided the Jewes for their Sabbaths as 〈◊〉 derided them for this Quod septim●m partem 〈…〉 Because they lost the seventh part of their age in resting every seventh day Tostat. qu. 10. 8. And specially it was a signe of their sanctification because that day they were sequestred by an holy rest from thinking or studying upon prophane things and in respect of the exercises of religion upon that day whereby they were sanctified sanctifica●●r verbo Dei we are sanctified by the word of God Simler And they did meet together ad confirmandam 〈…〉 to confirme their faith by the sacraments Osiander And because every Sabbath discati● doctrinam meam you learne my doctrine c. Iunius QUEST XIV The reasons why the Sabbath must be observ●d Vers. 13. FOr it is a signe c. There are here divers reasons yeelded for the observation of the Sabbath 1. The first is à sine from the end it was a signe betweene God and them 2. Ab ●tili it is holy unto you that is ordained for your benefit and commoditie as our blessed Saviour saith Mark 2.27 The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath Pelarg. So also Cajetan It is holy unto you that is ad vestrum bonum mandatur custodiendum it is appointed to be kept for your good 3. A necessarie from the necessitie of it because if they did not keepe it they should surely die as thrice the punishment of death is here threatned to those that defile the Sabbath and doe any worke therein Pelarg. 4. From the authoritie of the Institutor quia dicatur Domino c. because it is consecrated unto God vers 15. It is the Sabbath of the holy rest unto the Lord therefore it ought to be observed Cajetan 5. A facili from the easinesse of the precept the Lord appointeth but one day for the holy rest whereas he alloweth six for labour Pelargus 6. Ab exemplo Dei from Gods example who created the world in six daies and rested the seventh Pelarg. Simlerus 7. A consequenti from the event or consequent in observing the Sabbath efficient in succedentibus generationibus c. They shall procure that a perpetuall covenant shall be established in their generations betweene the Lord and their posteritie for ever Cajetan QUEST XV. What death is meant in this phrase He shall die the death Vers. 14. SHall die the death Whereas there are divers kinds of death there is everlasting death both of bodie and soule in the next world and the temporall death in this life either of the soule in being deprived of the life of grace or of the bodie either by the hand of God by sudden and extraordinarie death or by the hand of the Magistrate according to these divers kinds of death so is this place diversly interpreted 1. Some referre it to everlasting death and excluding from the societie of Gods servants Iun. 2. Some understand it of being deprived of the life of grace Vita gratiae destituetu● hic infuturo seculo c. He shall be destitute of the life of grace both here and in the next world Lippoman 3. Some of being excluded from the people of God no more to be counted an Israelite E● Oleastr 4. Some of the violent death by the Magistrate Osiander Simler 5. Some of extraordinarie death when God cutteth one off and so punisheth him by death unlooked for as God is said
Hexapla in Genesin Exodum THAT IS A sixfold commentary upon the two first Bookes of Moses being GENESIS and EXODVS WHEREIN THESE TRANSLATIONS are compared together 1. The Chalde 2. The Septuagint 3. The vulgar Latine 4. Pagnine 5. Montanus 6. Iunius 7. Vatablus 8. The great English Bible 9. The Geneva edition And 10. The Hebrew originall Together with a sixfold Vse of every Chapter shewing 1. The Method or Argument 2. The divers readings 3. The explanation of difficult questions and doubtfull places 4. The places of doctrine 5. Places of confutation 6. Morall observations In which worke about three thousand Theologicall questions are discussed above forty Authors old and new abridged and together comprised whatsoever worthy of note either Mercerus out of the Rabbines Pererius out of the Fathers or Marlorat out of the new Writers have in their learned Commentaries collected Now the fourth time imprinted with the Authors corrections before his death By ANDREW WILLET Minister of the Gospell of Iesus Christ. IOHN 5.46 47. Moses wrote of mee but if you beleeve not his writings how shall yee beleeve my words LONDON ¶ Printed by Iohn Haviland and are sold by Iames Boler at the signe of the Marigold in Pauls Church-yard 1633. Hexapla in Genesin THAT IS A SIXFOLD COMMENTARIE UPON GENESIS Wherein six severall Translations that is the Septuagint and the Chalde two Latine of Hierome and Tremelius two English the Great Bible and the Geneva Edition are compared where they differ with the Originall Hebrew and Pagnine and Montanus interlinearie interpretation TOGETHER WITH A SIXFOLD USE of every Chapter shewing 1. The Method or Argument 2. the divers readings 3. the explanation of difficult questions and doubtfull places 4. the places of doctrine 5. places of confutation 6. Morall observations WHEREIN ABOVE A THOVSAND THEOLOGICALL questions are discussed and is comprised together whatsoever worthy of note either Mercerus out of the Rabbines Pererius out of the Fathers Marlorat out of the new Writers have in their learned Commentaries collected Divided into two Tomes and published to the glory of God and the furtherance of all those that desire to read the Scripture with profit Now the third time revised corrected and with divers additions enlarged By ANDREW WILLET Minister of the Gospell of Iesus Christ. IOHN 5.46 47. Moses wrote of me but if you beleeve not his writings how shall ye beleeve my words AMBROS EPIST. 41. Deambulabat Deus in Paradiso c. nunc deambulat in Paradiso Deus quando Scripturas lego Paradisus Genesis in quo virtutes pullulant Patriarcharum Paradisus Deuteronomium in quo germinant legis praecepta God sometime walked in Paradise c. and now God walketh in Paradise when I read the Scriptures Genesis is a Paradise wherein the vertues of the Patriakes doe branch forth Deuteronomie is a Paradise wherein the precepts of the Law doe sprout forth LONDON ¶ Printed by the Assignes of THOMAS MAN PAVL MAN and IONAH MAN 1632. TO THE HIGH AND MIGHTIE RIGHT VERTVOVS AND MOST CHRISTIAN PRINCE King IAMES our dread Soveraigne by the grace of God King of Great Britaine of France and Ireland Defender of the Christian faith MOST gracious Soveraigne as under the shadow of your Highnesse great and mighty tree I meane your Princely and peaceable government the goodly beasts of the field honourable and great persons doe solace themselves so the fowles of heaven and the little birds doe sit and sing in the branches thereof and there build their neasts and lay their young and I among the rest have brought forth my implumed and unfeathered birds those imperfect workes which heretofore I have dedicated to your excellent Majestie and now this which wanteth but the wings of your Highnesse favour to flie abroad To your pious and sacred Majestie therefore I here present this absolute Tractate upon Genesis such as hath not beene yet in respect of the order matter and manner set forth vpon this booke wherein whatsoever questions of weight are discussed and other necessarie matters added as the short preface following sheweth This my third work to your highnesse I here in all humility exhibite and offer as an unfained pledge of our hearty joy for the joyfull entrance of this third yeare of your Majesties happy reigne This divine booke of Genesis as Ambrose advised Augustine to read the Prophesie of Isaias Augustine sendeth Volusianus to the Apostles writings I would commend in the first place as it is in order first to be read of all the Scriptures wherein are declared and set forth the beginning of the world and the progresse thereof the punishment of the wicked and rewards of the righteous so many examples and enticements to vertue such judgements and dehortations from sin and the same so lively and effectuall ●s if they were now presently done before our eyes as Augustine saith of this historie of Genesis I know not how but as often as it is read the hearer is so affected as though the thing were even now effected This worthy history containeth the space of 2368. yeares above halfe the age of the world from the first to the second Adam It insisteth principally in setting forth the life and acts of six honourable Fathers as starres among the rest Adam Noah Abraham Isaack Iacob Ioseph from all these your Majestie may receive somewhat with Adam who in Enos time when religion decayed taught his sonnes apart from the wicked to call upon the name of God your princely care must bee that you and your people as separated from the superstition of the world should worship the Lord more purely with Noah God hath raised you up to bring rest and comfort to his Church as another Abram the Lord hath made you an high Father as Isaack to procure joy and laughter to the Church as Iacob a supplanter of Popish superstition as Ioseph to adde what is wanting in the Church or Common-wealth Much bound unto God is this Church and Common-wealth for your Highnesse peaceable and religious government that whereas we for our sins had deserved with Israel neither to have King nor Church as the Prophet Hoshea saith We have no King because we feared not the Lord and againe in the same place the thorne and thistle shall grow upon their Altars yet the Lord in mercy hath blessed us with both We praise God for your princely vertues your worthy clemencie equity bountie piety which doe shine in your Majestie as the pretious stones in the King of Tyrus garment your gracious clemencie is as a cordiall unto this land which having remitted some great offences must needs passe by smaller trespasses If David pardoned Shemeis rayling he could not but forgive Mephiboseths negligence Your princely peace made abroad doth give us hope of a peaceable state at home as Davids favour toward Abner a reconciled enemie was a signe of grace to Barzillai an ancient friend what would we have
vestra quam privatim expertus sum ut liberiùs animi mei sensa palam expromerem vestrae enim humanitati sat sci● probatur Augustini consilium si quisquam est qui se non audet ingerere ad amicitiam faciendam cum aliquo nostro temporali honore aut dignitate revocetur offerendum est illi quadam commitate submissione animi quod petere per se ipse non audet desino jam plurib molestus esse excessi mensuram epistolae sed non excessi doloris modum ut ait Hieronym precor jam ut qua ipsi fratres conservos miseratione dignemini in terris ipsi abundè cumulatam apud misericordem patrem in coelis inveniatis Vestrae Reverentiae observantiss ANDREAS WILLETTVS THE FIRST BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED GENESIS CHAP. I. The Analysis or Logicall resolution IN this Chapter Moses treateth of the creation of the world first in generall how God created heaven and earth vers 1. then in particular in the rest of the Chapter where wee have the severall workes of God and their severall approbations that they seemed good unto the Make● The severall workes are distinguished into six dayes and in every dayes worke there are foure things to bee observed the authority whereby they are made as v. 3. The Lord said Let there be light c. the obedience of the creature in being made and there was light thirdly the approbation of the Creator v. 4. God saw that the light was good fourthly the distinction of the worke vers 5. The evening and the morning were the first day and so of the rest of the dayes workes Againe the order of the particular creation is this God createth the workes and c●eatures without sense afterward the sensitive and living creatures the first are either the superiour and celestiall as the light made the first day the firmament the second the contents of the firmament the Sunne Moone and Starres the fourth day or the inferiour creatures as the earth with the trees plants and herbs the third day The sensitive creatures are either unreasonable as the fishes and fowles made the fifth day v. 20. the beasts and cattell made the sixth day or the reasonable creatures man and woman made the sixth day In the framing and bringing forth of man there is set forth first the consultation of the Trinity v. 26. Let us make man c. then the creation wherein is to be considered the substance and forme of mans creation according to Gods owne image v. 27. the endowment of man created in his preheminence and domination over all other creatures vers 28. his increase and procreation b●ing forth fruit and multiply his maintenance and preservation vers 29. I have given unto you every herb c. that shall be to you for meat The Genesis or Grammaticall construction where the translations differ v. 1. God created b.g. T.H.p. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made s bara created heb v. 2. was without forme b.g. T. empty H. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 invisible s solitudo vast solitary p. tohu heb 3. moved upon the waters b.g. incubabat did sit upon T. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was carried upon c. s. motabat did flutter upon H. p. rachaph 6. the firmament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 b.g. H.p.s. expansum the broad or spread heaven T. heb rachang to spread 11. bud and herb b. bud of the herb g. herbam virentem greene herb H. herbam teneram tender herb or grasse T. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the herb of grasse s. bud herb p. heb seeding seed g.s. T.p. heb making seed H. apt to seed b. 12. after his kinde and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to his likenesse This is added by the septuagint 18. to rule in the day g. to rule the day b. T.H.p. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to rule the day s.p. heb 20. let the waters bring forth b. H. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 s. bring forth in abundance g. T. bring forth as wormes that is in abundance p. heb sharats 29. every tree b.g. T.p. heb gnets 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lignum every kinde of wood bearing fruit s. H. 3. The Exegesis or Theologicall explication of doubtfull questions and obscure places QVEST. I. What the heaven and earth was created in the beginning vers 1. Vers. 1. IN the beginning God made heaven and earth c. 1. Moses here doth not onely generally or summarily set downe the creation of the world which afterward is described in particular which was the opinion of Chrysostome remembred by Augustine lib. 2. cont Manich. c. 3. 2. Nor yet doe we understand a certaine first matter whereof the heaven and earth were afterward made as Augustine seemeth to thinke lib. 1. Genes cont Manich. c. 7. and one Philastrius Bishop of Brixia doth affirme it to be heresie to say that this was the element of the earth afterward created but another earth as the matter whereof other things were made catalog haeres 3. Neither yet do we approve the opinion of the Schoolemen which by the heaven understand only Coelum empyreum the highest heaven above the starrie skie the seat of the Angels and blessed Spirits and by the earth a confused substance whereout other things were formed afterward of which opinion were Alcuinus Rabanus Lyranus Tostatus Catharinus with others for Moses specially intendeth to set downe the creation of things visible and David expounding Moses speaketh of these heavens here created which should perish Psal. 102.25 which are not those highest heavens subject to no change 4. Neither yet doe wee here exclude the creation of those invisible heavens with Mercerus but in this word comprehend as well the invisible as visible heavens Colos. 1.16 Iun. 5. This heaven and earth then here mentioned to bee created in the beginning are the same heaven and earth which are now comprehending the generall matter and seed whereout all other things in heaven and earth were made first created in the matter afterward perfected in forme and lastly beautified with their ornaments this then was the order of the creation First the same heaven and earth were created in a confused substance and unformed matter then the forme was added in the first and second dayes workes Lastly the ornaments produced as trees and plants and beasts in the earth starres in the skie fishes in the sea fowles in the aire Thus S. Paul expoundeth Moses that God made the heaven and earth Act. 14.15 God made the world Acts 17.24 so that this heaven and earth first made was no other than the world though not yet set in perfect order Of this opinion are Basil Ambrose Theodoret and most of the ancient Writers QVEST. II. What beginning Moses speaketh of Vers. 1. IN the beginning c. 1. This is neither to be understood as Iohn saith in the beginning was the word for there hee speaketh of a beginning without a beginning that is from everlasting but this was the
and the Angels upon this day Christ rose the holy Ghost was given and Manna descended from heaven first on this day serm detempor 251. Wherefore I cannot wholly condescend to Mercerus judgement who saith politiae causa retinuerunt Apostols diem dominicum Sabbato subrogatum that the Apostles for policy sake have retained the Lords day in stead of the Sabbath in 2 Gen. vers 3. A policy I grant in the use of the Lords day but that is neither the only nor chiefe reason of the institution thereof There are three causes of the observation of the Lords day a religious and holy use for the Lord to this end did consecrate this day by his owne example and commandement to bee spent in holy exercises the Civill or politicall use of the Lords day is for the rest of our selves our servants and catte●ls the ceremoniall or symbolicall end was to shadow forth our spirituall rest in Christ in this last respect I confesse the ceremony of the Sabbath in part to be abolished for it is a symbole still of our everlasting rest in heaven Heb. 4.9 But in the other two respects the law of the Lords day is perpetuall for that as Philo saith it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 festum populare a popular or generall festivall to be observed of all people for ever I doe wonder then this doctrine of the Sabbath and day of rest now called the Lords day having such evident demonstration out of the scriptures and being confirmed by the constant and continuall practice of the Church in all ages that any professing the Gospell specially being exercised in the study of the scriptures should gainsay and impugne these positions following as erronious 1. That the commandement of sanctifying the Sabbath is naturall morall and perpetuall for if it be not so then all the commandements contained in the decalogue are not morall so should we have nine only and not ten commandements and then Christ should come to destroy the Law not to fulfill it contrary to our Saviours owne words Matth. 5.17 2. That all other things in the law were so changed that they were cleane taken away as the priesthood the sacrifices and the sacraments this day namely the Sabbath was so changed that it yet remaineth for it is evident by the Apostles practice Acts 20.7 1 Cor. 16.2 Apocal. 1.10 that the day of rest called the Sabbath was changed from the seventh day to the first day of the weeke and so was observed and kept holy under the name of the Lords day 3. That it is not lawfull for us to use the seventh day to any other end but to the holy and sanctified end for which God in the beginning created it for this were presumption to alter Gods appointment and the will and ordinance of the Creator must stand in the use of the creature otherwise the Apostle had not reasoned well for the use of meats from the end of the creation which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving 4. As the Sabbath came in with the first man so must it not goe out but with the last for if the keeping of a day of rest holy unto the Lord bee a part of the morall law as it cannot bee denyed then must it continue as long as the Lord hath his Church on earth and the morall Sabbath must stand till the everlasting Sabbath succeed in place thereof 5. That we are restrained upon the Sabbath from work both hand and foot as the Jewes were though not in such strict particular manner as they were for whom it was not lawful to kindle a fire upon the Sabbath Exod. 35.2 yet in generall wee are forbidden all kind of worke upon the Lords day as they were which may hinder the service of God saving such workes as either charity commandeth or necessity compelleth for it is a part of the morall precept in it thou shalt doe no manner of worke 6. That the Lord would have every Sabbath to be sanct●fied by the Minister and the people and that in the Church he ought to preach the word and they to heare it every Sabbath day but not each of these under paine of condemnation as the place is misconstrued is confirmed by the practice of our blessed Saviour Luke 4.16 and of S. Paul Act. 13.14 and 20.7 And hereunto are the Canons of our Church agreeable which require that every Minister preach every Lords day and likewise catechise the youth 7. That the Lord hath commanded so precise a rest unto all sorts of men that it may not by any fraud deceit or circumvention whatsoever be broken under the paine of his everlasting displeasure who doubteth of this but that every breach of any part of the morall law especially by deceit and circumvention deserveth in it selfe Gods curse and everlasting d●spleasure as the Apostle saith the wages of sinne is death and the Law saith Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the law to doe them as the Apostle citeth this text This doctrine of the Sabbath first grounded upon the authority of scripture hath accordingly beene ratified by the constant and perpetuall practice of the Church Origen saith In nostro Dominico die semper pluit Dominus Manna de coelo in our Lords day the Lord alwayes raineth Manna from heaven Hierome Dominicus d●es orationi tantum lectionibus vacat upon the Lords dayes they onely give themselves to prayer and reading Ambrose tota di● sit vobis oratio vellectio c. nulle actus seculi actus divinitatis imped●ant c. Let us all the day be conversant in prayer or reading let no secular acts hinder divine acts let no table play carry away the mind Augustine quom●do Maria mater Domini c. As Mary the mother of our Lord is the chiefe among women so among other 〈◊〉 this is the mother of the rest the whole grace of the Sabbath and the ancient festi●ity of the people of the Iewes is changed into the solemnity of this day Concil Tullen cap. 19. Oportet eos qui praesunt Ecclesiis c it behoveth those which are set over the Churches upon all dayes but especially upon the Lords dayes to teach the people c. Matisconens 2. cap. 1. Exhibeamus Deo liberam servitutem c. Let us exhibite unto God our free service not because the Lord requireth this of us to celebrate the Lords day by corporall abstinence but he looketh for obedience whereby we treading downe all terrene rites might be raised up to heaven But these allegations are here superfluous seeing there is a learned Treatise of the Sabbath already published of this argument which containeth a most sound doctrine of the Sabbath as is laid downe in the former positions which shall be able to abide the triall of the word of God and stand warranted thereby when other humane fantasies shall
neither goe upright before neither at that instant onely when Satan used him but whereas he did extoll himselfe against man he is brought to his first condition and his creeping and feeding of the earth which should not have beene ignominious before is acccursed and made reproachfull now Mercer Calvin QVEST. XXIV Of the enmity betweene the seed of the woman and the Serpent WHere the Lord saith I will put enmity betweene thy seed and her seed 1. This first is truly understood of Christ quia solus ita semen multeris est ut non etiam viri semen sit who was so the seed of the woman as he was not of the man and betweene Christ and Satan the greatest enmity was who consented to him in nothing 2. We may also understand by the seed of the woman all the Elect and by the seed of the Serpent all the wicked who are the sons of the Devill as Christ said to the unbeleeving Jewes Yee are of your father the Devill Ioh. 8.44 betweene whom the Elect and the wicked there shall be perpetuall enmity and therefore Rupertus saith the Scriptures are called the booke of the battells of the Lord Num. 21. which declareth the continuall combate betweene the Church of God and the world 3. Part of this sentence is literally true in the Serpent for as Rupertus noteth if a woman tread upon the Sepent with her bare foot he presently dieth but if he first bite her heele the woman dieth of that poyson But howsoever this be true it is most certaine that betweene man and those venomous creatures there is a naturall hatred that one cannot endure the sight and presence of the other 4. Some doe marvell why the Serpent is not made mute and dumbe seeing Satan abused his tongue and mouth to tempt the woman the Hebrewes thinke that the punishment is included in that dust is appointed to bee his meat for such whose mouthes are filled with earth cannot speake And to this day we see that the punishment remaineth upon the Serpent who maketh no perfect sound as other cattell doe but hisseth onely 5. Satan was accursed before God before nor any hope of recovery remained but now the sentence is declared to the comfort of man and Satans state declared to be irrepairable for his punishment shall endure all the daies of his life that is for ever 6. Some by the heele understand the end or extremity as Onkelos that in the end the Devill as a Serpent shall bite the heele some the inferiour part of the soule some the humanity of Christ which Satan pinched at when Christ was put to death but thereby Christ gave him a deadly blow upon the head But generally it signifieth the weaker parts of Christs body which is the Church that Satan shall bee nibling and biting at the heele as a Serpent doth when hee is overwhelmed and turned upon his backe that is hee shall touch the members of Christ and trie them with many temptations but hee shall not be able to hurt them Mercer 7. By the dust also some understand terrene and earthly things wherein the Devill is conversant being cast downe from heaven some the graves and sepulchers of dead men where the spirits appeare but this clause is properly referred to the Serpent who as he was Satans instrument to cause man to sinne and returne to the dust so that he should feed of the dust QVEST. XXV Of the sorrowes of women Vers. 16. I Will greatly increase thy sorrowes There is a threefold punishment inflicted upon the woman as Rupertus well noteth pro seductione conceptus multiplicitas pro gulae oblectamento vter● dolor pro scandalo quod viro exhibuit servitutis poena c. because she was seduced she hath sorrow in conceiving for the delight of her eye the paine of her wombe for the offence in enticing her husband subjection unto him But where the Lord saith I will multiply thy sorrowes and conceptions 1. It is neither with Oleaster to be referred to the bearing of the child so long in the womb for that is agreeable to nature and our Saviour was so borne in his mothers womb and therefore this was no part of the curse 2. Neither doth the curse consist in the multiplicity as Rupertus because many are borne which are ordained to destruction for simply the fruit of the womb is a blessing Psal. 27.3 3. But hereby the many sorrowes are signified which women doe endure in the conception of their children as faintnesse loathing of meat longing for strange things griefe ache unwilsomnesse perill of abortion and such like Secondly whereas women should before have brought forth without pain now their travaile is ful of labour in so much as many have miscarried in the birth of their children as Rachel and it is well observed of Aristotle that no other creature with such difficulty bringeth forth her young as woman doth which is an evident demonstration of this punishment laid upon them Thirdly where it is said the womans desire shall bee to her husband and he shall rule over her 1. It is not understood of the naturall desire the woman hath eftsoone of her husbands company notwithstanding her painfull travaile which is no punishment but a delight unto them 2. But of that subjection whereby by the law of nature practised among Pagans women doe depend upon their husbands The woman should before have beene obedient to man but of a loving society to be made partaker of all his counsells nor of an urging necessity as now whereby the woman in rerespect of her weaknesse both with her will dependeth of her husband for her direction and provision of things necessary and against her will she often endureth the hard yoke of an unequall commander QVEST. XXVI How the earth was cursed unto man Vers. 17. CVrsed be the earth c. 1. It is to be observed that the Serpent is onely pronounced accursed because his state is remedilesse and desperate but neither the man or woman are accursed for whom there is hope 2. The earth is accursed not in it selfe but in respect of the use of man as S. Paul saith that the creatures doe yet groane with us together 3. Some Hebrewes note that some men are exempted from this punishment to eat their bread in the sweat of their browes as Kings and Princes but no women are exempted from their punishment because the woman both sinned her selfe and enticed the man so did not Adam but this sentence is generall against all men that although one particular onely be expressed of the labour and toyle in tilling of the ground yet therein are contained all other the cares and troubles of this life from the which none are free 4. Some Hebrewes thinke that in mans innocencie he should not have travelled so for his bread as in threshing grinding bak●ng of it and it may very well bee that although man should not then have lived
worship him as also this line is continued to shew the accomplishment of Gods promise that the seed of the woman should breake the serpents head and so S. Luke doth fetch the petigree of Christ after the flesh from these fathers before the floud 2. Vers. 22. In that Henoch first walked with God in earth before he walked with him in heaven it sheweth that we must first seeke Gods glory in earth before we can bee admitted unto that everlasting glory so Saint Peter reasoneth that because we looke for new heavens and a new earth we should bee diligent to be found of him without spot c. 1 Pet. 3.13 3. Vers. 29. In that Lamech said of his sonne Noah this same shall comfort us c. it appeareth that the faithfull then looked for a comforter that should deliver them from the curse and give them true rest of which comforter and deliverer Noah was a figure who both by faith was made heire of righteousnesse himselfe Heb. 11.7 and by the arke which was a type of Baptisme 1 Pet. 3.21 did preach and testifie to the world the true deliverance by the Messiah CHAP. VI. The Method THis Chapter hath two parts 1. Gods determination to destroy the world 2. The preparation or making of the Arke In the first part there is set downe 1. the occasion which provoked God to purpose mans destruction which was the sinne of that age described in particular the sinne of carnall pleasure vers 1. of oppression and tyranny v. 4. in generall vers 5. 2. In Gods determination there is first his repentance that hee had made man vers 6. then the limitation of one hundred and twenty yeares to see if they would amend vers 3. 3. Gods full resolution to destroy all flesh vers 7. In the second part there is first set downe the ground of this favour of God towards Noah which was Gods mercy and grace towards him Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord vers 8. and Noahs justice and righteousnesse vers 9. which was by faith Heb. 11.7 then followeth in the next place the commandement of God concerning the making of the Arke and Noahs obedience thereunto vers 21. In the prescription or commandement for the Arke there is described 1. the forme and fashion thereof both of what matter it should be made vers 14. of what length breadth height vers 15. in what order for the cabbines vers 14. window doore vers 16. 2. The use thereof for the preservation of man vers 18. of beasts vers 19. of foules vers 20. and their sustentation in laying up their food vers 21. The grammaticall sense v. 2. They tooke them women T. they tooke them wives caet v. 3. sonnes of princes Ch. sonnes of God cat Elohim hebr of Gods or God v. 4. my spirit shall not remaine or continue in these men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 S.H. this evill generation shall not remaine forever Ch. my spirit shall not strive alwayes with man or because of man Tr. B.G. heb don to judge contend because their workes are evill c. a terme shall be given them of 120. yeeres if perhaps they will be converted Ch. my spirit shall not alwayes be as sheathed P. neden a sheath v. 4. There were Giants S.H.B.G.P. Ch. there were defectores backsliders Tr. Heb. Nephilim à naphal to fall because Giants cause men to fall through feare the first reading is the best 1. because they are called mighty or strong men heb gabar which the Septuagint also translate Giants 2. So it is taken Num. 13. 34. and cannot be otherwise 3. Because of the consent of interpreters and Iunius in his last edition so readeth v. 6. God considereth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 S. it repented God in his word Ch. it repented God caet v. 7. and the Lord said this clause the latine have not the rest have v. 6. and he thought S. he spake in his word that hee would breake the strength of them according to his good pleasure Ch. and hee was grieved in his heart cat praecavens taking heed for afterward hee was touched with griefe of heart H. v. 7. every one thinketh in his heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 diligently unto evill all the dayes of his life S. all the thought of his heart is intent to evill all time H. the sense of his cogitation i● evill all time Ch. the imagination of the thoughts of his heart onely evill every day T.B.G.P. rach onely v. 9. Noah pleased God S. walked in the feare of God Ch. walked with God T.B.G. v. 11. filled with iniquity S.H. Rapine Ch. violence T. cruelty B. G. chamas to oppresse v. 2. the time of all flesh is come before me S. The end of all flesh caet v. 14. of square wood S. levigatis plained wood H. Pine tree B. G. of Cedar wood Ch. of Gophe● T.P. which is a kinde of Cedar v. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gathering shalt thou make the Arke S. a window shalt thou make in the arke caet ●sahar a window heb a cleare light T. v. 16. the doore shalt thou make in the side S. thou shalt make the doore of the arke in the side below H. the doore of the Arke in the side caeter thou shalt make parl●rs tristega and three lofts therein H. thou shalt make the lower second and third roomes caet The explanation of doubts or theologicall explication QVEST. I. Of the greatnesse of the sinne of the old world 1. THe sinne of the world was very great seeing God could endure the wicked inhabitants no longer but swept them away with the floud which may appeare by these severall considerations 1. their wickednesse was universally spread vers 12. all flesh had corrupted his way 2. Their sinne exceeded in greatnesse it was come unto the very height vers 5. God saw that the wickednesse of man was great 3. Not onely the wicked race but the righteous seed the sonnes of God fell to folly vers 2. 4. They were exercised a long time in doing evill a thousand yeares and more that they were growne to such an habite that they could doe nothing but thinke evill in their heart 5. Unto this may be added their gracelesse obstinacie that having an 120. yeares given them by the preaching of Noe to call them to repentance yet despised Gods long suffering QVEST. II. When the world beganne to be so wicked 2. THis overflowing of iniquity beganne when men beganne to be multiplied upon the earth vers 1. not so soone as the world began to be peopled which might bee within two or three hundred yeares after the creation for then they began to build Cities Ninus King of Assyria who reigned there some 230. yeares after the floud is reported to have had in his armie 70. hundred thousand footmen and 200. thousand horse men in the like time after the creation might the world be exceedingly replenished
discerned by the feeling and therefore our Saviour saith feele and see a spirit hath not flesh and bones as yee see mee to have And some have reported that they have felt such bodies assumed by spirits as colde as yce and of a divers substance from humane flesh as Alexander ab Alexandro so writeth of another to whom a spirit appeared and Cardanus of himselfe If any man object that Abraham washed the Angels feet and yet discerned them not I will not answer with Pererius whose judgement I refuse not in the rest that Abrahams intent upon other things regarded it not But I note a difference betweene the operation of good and bad Angels that these never appeared with true bodies and therefore were called Phantasmata visions fansies Marke 6.49 But unto the other God gave the use of true bodies for a time during that ministerie or service as appeareth in that they did eat and drinke were lodged had their feet washed c. 3. But howsoever spirits may assume bodies they are not such as can be instruments of generation by conveying of humane seed as some have imagined because the scripture saith children are the inheritance of the Lord Psal. 127.3 And Evah confesseth when Cain was borne that she had obtained a son of God Gen. 4.1 and if that were true which is fabled of Merlin such kind of birth should be oftner seene in the world Wherefore by the sonnes of God in this place 1. Neither doe wee understand Angels good or bad 2. Neither men of tall and great stature as such things as are excellent in their kind are so called as high and tall trees are said to be the trees of God Psal. 104.16.3 Nor yet the sonnes of Princes and great men as the Chalde readeth to whom Mercerus subscribeth which are called Gods in scripture Psal. 82.6 I said ye are Gods c 4. Neither yet are they so called because they came of Seeth who as Suidas thinketh was in respect of his religion and great knowledge saluted as a God in earth 5. But they are here named the sonnes of God that were of the righteous seed and worshippers of the true God as the wicked are called the sonnes of the Devil and he their father Iohn 8.44 ye are of your father the Devill who although they were not indeed the sonnes of God in his eternall election yet were they so in respect of their externall calling QVEST. VII The meaning of these words My spirit shall not alwaies strive c. 4. Vers. 3. MY spirit shall not alwaies strive c. 1. Not as the latine text is My spirit shall not alwaies remaine which some expound of Gods wrath some of his providence some of the holy Ghost some of the soule and spirit of man inspired of God and then the sense to bee that Gods wrath shall not alwaies continue but he will punish them at once or he will no more protect them or take care for them neither his spirit shall be with them or he will take away their life and spirit from them For this variety of interpretation ariseth of the mistaking of the word which signifieth to contend or judge not to remaine 2 Neither is Pagmines interpretation so apt my spirit shall not alwaies bee sheathed as a sword in a scabbard and so hee would derive the word jadon of neden which signifieth a sheath 3. The meaning then of these words my spirit shall not alwaies judge or contend is neither as Hierom expoundeth non eos ad ●ternos servabo cruciatus I will not punish them for ever but render unto them here that which they deserve For S. Peter sheweth that their soules are now in the prison of hell and so everlastingly punished 1 Peter 3.19 Neither as Cajetane that God would no more punish them spiritually as hee had done by taking his grace and spirit from them but now he would inflict a corporall punishment upon them for God had not yet punished them giving them the space of 120. yeares to repent But either wee may understand these words with Oleaster that God would no longer strive with them in reprooving and admonishing them which they regarded not or with Iunius God would no longer consult or dispute the matter as it were with himselfe what to doe with them but if they amended not within that space set he would certainly destroy them QVEST. VIII What these Giants were 5. Vers. 4. THese were Giants c. Some thinke that these were called Giants not for their greatnesse of stature but their cruell and beastly conditions so thinke Philo Ioseph Damas. Cyril with others so also Iunius 2. But beside their fierce and cruell nature it is most probable that they were of huge and great stature Mercer for such there were also after the floud as the sonnes of Anak in comparison of whom the Israelites seemed as grashoppers Num. 13.34 such were the Emmims and Za●zummims Deut. 2.10 17. and Og the King of Basan whose bed was of iron being nine cubits in length and foure in breadth Deut. 3.11 and of this judgement are Ambrose Augustine Theodoret. 3. And these Giants huge in stature men of great strength as is shewed after in this verse did most abound before the floud and such also was the off-spring of this unlawfull copulation betweene the sonnes of God and daughters of men 4. And they were men of renowne that is famous over all the world because they did tyrannize over their neighbours and brought them in subjection of whom Berosius writeth that they had a City called Enos about the mountaine Libanus which ruled over all the world they did eat mans flesh and had unlawfull company with their mothers daughters with mules and bruit beasts 5. Some as Rasi doe referre this generation of Giants to the times of Enos further affirming that the Lord sent the Ocean Sea which destroyed the generation of these Giants and the third part of the world but the Giants which succeeded them were as wicked as they But of this inundation of the Ocean no mention is made in Scripture neither is it like that the generation of Giants began so soone in the world neither with Aben Ezra doe we understand this of the generation of Giants after the floud of whom came Og and the rest as though any of the Giants had escaped the floud to beget Giants afterward and that Noe and his sonnes were Giants it is not to be thought Mercer Neither were these Giants onely in Noahs time but when this violent rage of lust beganne to reigne in the world then this off-spring of Giants came in which continued till the time of Noah 6. Neither were these Giants onely of Seths race as some thinke nor yet onely of Cain as R. Sel. but in both families there were Giants after they thus coupled together with out the feare of God Mercer Calvin 7. So that the Nephilim here spoken of so named of Naphal which
So here the Lord holdeth on his unchangeable course of judgement in punishing sinne yet seemeth to repent in undoing his worke in destroying man whom he had made Perer. QVEST. XII Why the creatures are punished with man 9. Vers. 7. I Will destroy from man to beast c. Not onely man shall be destroyed but the other creatures with him and yet man onely had sinned The reason is 1. as Chrysostome sheweth because all things were made for mans use hic igitur cum e medio tollitur quis illorum usus erit and therefore when man is taken away there should be no use of them 2. Like as when the head is cut off all the members die so together with man the creatures over the which he had power are punished not onely he but his Hereby the severity of Gods punishment appeareth as also the greatnesse of mans sin that brought destruction upon many as Davids sin in numbring the people did upon the whole land 3. Because beastly men had abused the creatures to their filthy pleasure and riotous excesse it standeth with Gods justice to punish the instrument with the principall 4. The fishes are not also here threatned to be destroyed because they lived in that element wherewith God purposed to overflow the earth neither had man so much abused them as the other kinds and beside it pleased God to spare them among other creatures at other times the Lord threatneth also to take away the fish of the Sea Hosh. 4.3 Mercer QVEST. XIII How Noah is said to be perfect Vers. 10. NOah was a just and perfect man c. 1. Noah not yet any man living can be said to be perfect in respect of Gods justice or in the sight of God as the Psalmist saith If thou O Lord markest what is done amisse who shall be able to abide it Ps. 130.3 2. Neither yet in regard of that perfection which the Saints shall attaine unto in the Kingdome of God as the Apostle sheweth Not as though I had already attained either were already perfect Phil. 3.12 3. Neither yet is any so perfect as that he can be found in this life without sinne which was the heresie of the Pelagians for the Preacher saith there is not one just man upon the earth that doeth good and sinneth not Eccles. 7.20 4. Neither is any said to be perfect because they can keepe the commandements and doe more than is commanded in observing the Evangelicall counsell as Pererius and other Popish Writers 5. But Noah is said to be perfect in comparison of others and therefore it is added in his generation or in regard of the perfection which may be attained unto in this life which is rather in the will and desire to be perfect and in increasing and going still forward than in any actuall accomplishment of the desire and in this sense the Apostle having a little before denied himselfe to bee perfect yet saith to the Philippians Let as many as be perfect bee th●● minded Philippians 3.15 and so our Saviour biddeth us be perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect that is that we should more and more labour for perfection As Augustine saith Ingredi sine macula non a● surde dicitur non qui jam perfectus sed qui ad ipsam perfectionem irreprehensibiliter currit Hee is not amisse said to walke without spot not who is already perfect but runneth unto perfection without reproofe Thirdly how Noah is said to be perfect is expounded vers 8. Noah found grace in the sight of God it was the perfection then of faith whereby Noah was excepted as just and perfect in the sight of God being by faith cloathed with the perfection and justice of Christ. QVEST. XIIII How the earth was corrupt 11. THe earth was corrupt before God 1. That is the inhabitants of the earth where corrupt as Chrysostome saith Homo terra appellatur quia totus terrenus Man is called earth because he was become wholly earthly 2. Or they had infected the very earth with their abominations and made it accursed Iun. as the Psalmist saith A fruitfull land is turned into barrennesse for the wickednesse of them that dwell therein Psal. 107.34 3. The earth may be said to be corrupt that is defiled with those sinnes of uncleannesse which they committed as the Scripture testifieth that the land is defiled with such abominations Levit. 18.25 4. The earth was corrupt before God that is they were growne to such impudency and boldnesse in their sinnes that they would commit them even as in the presence and sight of God as the Prophet saith They declare their sinnes as Sodome they hide them not Isay. 3.9 QVEST. XV. Whether they which died in the floud perished everlastingly Vers. 13. I Will destroy them with the earth c. Here a great question ariseth whether all they which were destroyed in the floud perished everlastingly that is both in body and soule 1. For answer to this question we neither thinke that most of the old world were onely temporally punished which seemeth to have beene the opinion of Hierome that they which perished in the floud as likewise the Sodomites receperunt in vita malasua received their punishment in this life To the which purpose he urgeth that place Nahum 1.9 Non consurget duplex tribulatio Affliction shall not rise the second time and therefore it standeth not with Gods justice to punish twice for the same sinne both in this world and the world to come To this place I answer first that the Prophet speaking of the destruction of the Assyrians sheweth onely that thei● overthrow should be finall that God should not need to smite them againe As Abishai said to David when hee found Saul asleepe Let mee smite him and I will not smite him againe 1 Sam. 26.9 Thus Theohpylact and Theodoret expound this place Secondly if it bee expounded as it is alleaged it must be understood onely of penitent persons that such being afflicted in this life shall not need to be punished againe as we may see in the repentant theefe but concerning the the other theefe detemporali ad aeternum transvectus est supplicium he was carried from temporall to eternall punishment as Rupertus saith 2. Neither doe we approve their opinion that thinke many of the old world though incredulous before yet when they saw the floud comming in fine vitae poenetentiam egerunt did repent them even in the end of their life sic Lyranus Bellarmine For S. Peter calleth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the world of the wicked 2 Pet. ● 5 They then that were wicked so continued to the end 3. Neither is the opinion of Cajetanus to be received that thinketh non fuisse simpliciter incredulos id est sine vera Dei side that they were not simply incredulous that is without the true faith of God but only beleeved not Noah in this that the floud should
render to the Lord for all his benefits c. I will take the cup of salvation and call upon the name of the Lord Psal. 116.12 CHAP. IX The Method and parts of the Chapter IN this Chapter two principall things are declared 1. The restoring of the world and renewing of Gods covenant vers 1.10 2. The infirmitie of Noah in being drunke and such things as accompany the same from vers 20. to the end In the first part the covenant is renewed with mankinde from vers 1. to 8. then with all flesh vers 8.10.20 In the covenant made with man foure things are expressed his multiplication vers 1. domination and rule over all creatures vers 2. sustentation and food vers 3. preservation in providing that mans bloud be not shed God will require it at the hand both of beast and man vers 4 5 6. In the generall covenant made with all flesh first there is the promise that all flesh should not bee rooted out by the waters vers 10 11. then the signe and token thereof the bow in the cloud which shall be ● signe betweene the Lord and the world that it shall be no more destroyed by water And this is repeated foure times from vers 13. to 17. for the better assurance of it In the second part first Noahs infirmitie is described with the occasion thereof his drinking of wine vers 21 the effects thereof his nakednesse 21. Secondly the behaviour of his sonnes undutifull of Cham vers 2● reverence toward their father in the other two vers 23. Thirdly the verdict and sentence given by N●●h by way of prophesie upon his sonnes his cursing of Canaan of Cham 25. his blessing of Sem chiefly vers 26. and of Iapheth next vers 27. 2. The grammaticall sense v. 3. Everything that flieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 S. everything that creepeth reptile T.P. every thing that moveth H.C. B.G. heb remes that moveth or creepeth 4. Flesh in the bloud of life S. flesh with the bloud H. with the life and bloud Ch. with the the life which is the bloud caet heb with the life and the bloud 5. At the hand of man which shall shed the life of his brother Ch. at the hand of a mans brother caet 6. With witnesses by the sentence of the judge shall his bloud be shed Ch. for the bloud of ma● his bloud shall be shed S. his bloud shall be shed H. by man shall his bloud be shed T.P.B.G. sic hebr 7. Ingredimini walke upon she earth H. replenish or grow plentifully in the earth caet hebr sharatz to multiply in abundance Rule over the earth S. replenish or increase in the earth cat hebr rabbah signifieth to multiply and to be great 10. From all that goeth out of the Arke S. from all that goeth out of the Arke with all the beasts of the field caet 11. To destroy all the earth S. to destroy the earth cat 13. Betweene my word and the earth Ch. betweene me and the earth caet I doe set S.B. I will set H. I have given or set the bow T.P.G. sic heb 16. Betweene me and you S. betweene the word of God and every living thing Ch. betweene God and every c. caet 24. When he had learned H. he knew what c. caet His lesser sonne H.C. younger S.B.G. minimus his youngest sonne T. heb chatan parvus little 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a domesticall servant S. a servant of servants caet 27. God shall enlarge Iapheth H.S.C.P.G. peswade Iapheth alliciet T.G. pathah signifieth to enlarge and perswade let his glory dwell in the tents of Sem. Ch. 3. The Explanation of doubts QVEST. I. Of the benediction of increasing and multiplying after the floud 1. GOd said to Noe and his sonnes bring forth fruit 1. Though the Scripture make no mention of any sonnes that Noah begat after the floud yet this benediction belongeth also to Noah because he is increased in his sonnes Luther 2. This blessing doth properly and especially appertaine to lawfull marriage though there be a kinde of obscene ●ecundity also in unlawfull copulations for God speaketh to Noah and his sonnes Calvin 3. This increasing though by Gods blessing is extended to other creatures yet it is specially directed unto man for whose cause other creatures are multiplied 4. In that this blessing is rehearsed againe vers 7. it sheweth the certainty of it and the mighty increase of mankinde after the floud for it is recorded that within three hundred yeares Ninus King of the Assyrians had an army of seventeene hundred thousand footmen QVEST. II. How man hath yet rule and dominion over the creature 2. ALso the feare of you c. 2. Those three privileges which were given unto man in his creation of increasing and multiplying Gen. 1.28 of his rule and dominion over the creatures ibid. of his food and sustentation vers 29. are here renewed in these three first verses though not in that integrity and perfection for the generation of man is with much difficulty and perill his dominion over the creatures much impaired his food more grosse and with greater care provided 2. Yet man retaineth still his dominion and soveraignty over the creatures though not so absolute as Adam had it first we see though the savage and wilde beasts have cast off mans yoke yet such as are more necessary for mans use as Oxen Horse Sheepe remaine in subjection still secondly even the wilde and unruly beasts are tamed by the wit and industry of man Iam. 2.8 and the hand of man worketh many engines and instruments whereby they are taken and subdued as here fitly they are said to be delivered into the hand of man thirdly though God doe often punish mans disobedience by the cruell beasts which is one of the foure great plagues Ezek. 14.21 yet are they restrained by the power of God in that they over-runne not the earth to destroy man and partly they doe retaine a naturall feare and awe of man whom willingly they use not to assault but either provoked or constrained by famine or fearing some hurt to themselves QVEST. III. Whether flesh were eaten before the floud 3. EVery thing that moveth shall be meat for you 1. Some thinke that flesh was not eaten before the floud in the families of the righteous Mercer 2. Some that the eating of flesh was not at all in use before the floud which is the opinion of Lyranus Tostatus Vatablus But the liberty of eating of flesh is not here first granted it is onely renewed 3. Neither is their opinion to be approved which thinke that the eating of flesh was permitted before the floud but yet not used among the faithfull of ●hich judgement seeme to be Theodoret and Thomas Aquinas for to what end should the faithfull restraine themselves of that liberty which God gave them 4. Neither yet doe we thinke that the eating of flesh was
sins were but secret infirmities they might be borne with for a time but seeing they justifie open impieties and their filthinesse is manifest to all the world now a cloake cannot hide them Muscul. 6. Confut. The Pope how a servant of servants Vers. 25. A Servant of servants c. This title Pererius saith the Popes doe usurpe as a signe of great humility but we rather trust that as another Caiphas so the Pope prophesieth the ruine of his owne Kingdome that he shall become one day a servant of servants indeed as Canaan was and be● made a servant to those that have served him 7. Confut. The tents of Sem not of the Pope or Romanists have the preheminence Vers. 27. TO dwell in the tents of Sem c. Thus we see that Sem hath the prerogative and that the Gentiles received their light from the Jewes But the Pope would draw this privilege from the Jewes to the Romanes that whereas the Apostle saith that the Jewes beare the Gentiles as the root the branches and not they the Jewes Rom. 11.18 yet the Pope would have the faith and profession of the Romans to be the root and foundation of all beleevers 6. Places of morall observation 1. Moral Man must not rule over men as beasts Vers. 2. THe feare of you shall be upon every beast Gregory here hath a good note that the feare of man must be not upon men but beasts That man should not by cruelty or tyranny seeke to be feared of men And yet good men sometimes desire to bee feared of others but it is when the feare of God is not among them that they which feare not the divine judgements may bee by feare of men kept in some awe and then non tam hominib quam brutis annimalib dominantur they doe not rule so much over men as bruit beasts 2. Moral Sobriety in meats commanded Vers. 3. AS the greene herb Although God yeeldeth to the use of man for his food all kinde of fowles fishes beasts yet hee would have man to use them moderately and soberly not to abuse them to gluttony or excesse or not contented with such kinds as are at hand to search the deep for fish to ascend the mountaines to catch fowle to hunt up and downe the wildernesse onely to satisfie his greedy appetite But he ought to use the flesh of beasts as the greene herb that is soberly and without curiosity to take such thing● as are at hand 3. Moral Gods great care in preserving the life of man Vers. 5. I Will surely require your bloud Where we see the great care which the Lord hath in preserving the life of man he will require it at the hands of the beasts yea of a mans brother neither shall he goe unpunished by this it appeareth domesticum familiarem Deo hominis esse naturam that mans nature is as domesticall and familiar unto God and that therefore God will not suffer him to be unpunished that offereth wrong as it were to his domesticall and familiar By this men are taught both to take heed of bloud shed and so to fall into the judgement of God neither much to feare the sword of the wicked seeing the Lord himselfe will revenge the death of the innocent 4. Moral The bow a signe of Gods justice and mercy Vers. 13. I Have set my bow in the clouds and it shall be a signe c. 1. The bow is a notable monument of Gods justice to call to our minde the sinne of the old world for the which it was destroyed that wee feare to offend God in the ●ike it is also a signe of Gods mercy in forbearing to bring the like destruction upon the world againe and if God shew such mercy even to wicked men and bruit beasts how great are his mercies that he layeth up in store for his elect 2. We see also how farre the justice of God exceedeth his mercy the rigour of his justice was but for a time in once destroying the wo●ld by water but his mercy is perpetuall in the continuall preservation thereof so the Prophet Isay saith for a moment in mine anger I hid my face from thee c. but with everlasting mercy have I had compassion upon thee This is unto me as the waters of Noe Perer. 5. Moral The miraculous propagation of mankind Vers. 19. OF them was the whole world over-spread c. here appeareth the wonderfull providence of God that by three men the whole world was replenished when as they were subject to the rage and invasion of beasts and wanted many necessary things the earth having not yet recovered her former vigour and force decayed by the floud the like matter is to be seene saith Chrysostome in the Christian faith that God per duodecem piscatores illiteratos c. that God by twelve fishermen unlearned c. hath subdued the whole world to himselfe and propagated the faith 6. Moral Noahs awaking out of drunkennesse what it signifieth Vers. 14. THen Noah awaked c. This were to bee wished saith Musculus that they which are the Patriarks and take upon them to be the pastors of the Church were herein like unto Noah to awake also from their drunkennesse their ignorance errour and superstition As also all intemperate and riotous persons are to learne by this president to awake from their sinne and not to continue in their licentious course nor make a continuall trade and occupation of drunkennesse CHAP. X. 1. The Method and parts of the Chapter THis Chapter hath three parts according to the severall generations of the three sonnes of Noah Iapheth Cham Sem by whom the world was replenished the generation of Iapheth is expressed from v. 1. to v. 6. their names v. 2 3 4. their habitation and place of dwelling v. 5. the generation of Cham rehearsed from v. 6. to 21. their severall names together with their habitation then followeth the generation of Sem their names from v. 22. to v. 30. their habitation vers 30. 2. The grammaticall sense or difference of translations 2. Thobel Meso●eh S. Thubal Mesech H. Thubal Mesech c. 4. Citij Rhodij H.S. Cethim Dodanim H. C●tt●m Donanim c. 7. Regma Sabathaca S. H. Ch. Raamah Sabtecha T. B. G. A. heb Ragmah 8. A gyant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the earth S. a mighty man c. ghibb●r robustus strong 9. A giant hunter S. a mighty hunter H. B. G. a mighty man Ch. mighty in hunting T. P. heb 10. Arach S. H. Erech cat Eerech c. in the land of Babylon Ch. Sennaer or Sinhar cat sic heb 11. Out of that land came Assur S. H. cum caeter Out of this land he came into Assur Tr. built the streets of the City H. Rahoboth the City caeter rachab breadth 12. Dasem S. Resen caet 14 Cappadoces Ch. Captharim caeter 18. Cynaeum S.H. Ch. Cynaum caet cum s. Sini Eveum
to take them wives abroad from among the Idolaters 2. v. 31. Sarai is said to bee Thare his daughter in law but if shee had beene his naturall daughter shee should have beene so called 3. It was alwaies unlawfull saving in the beginning of the world upon necessitie for brethren or sisters of halfe or whole bloud to marrie together as Augustine saith Abraham lived in those times when it was unlawfull for brethren ex utroque vel altero parente natos necti conjugio of one or both parents to bee coupled in marriage as it may appeare also by this because Abraham to perswade Abimelech shee was not his wife said she was his sister she could not then be both his sister and his wife Indeed among some barbarous Gentiles as the Egyptians it was permitted to marry their sisters as Ptolomeus Philadelphus did take to wife Arsinoe his sister which is condemned by Pausanius but among the faithfull it was never suffered nor practised Thamer saying to incestuous Ammon speake to the King for he will not deny thee 2 Sam. 13.13 sought but a delay to put off his wicked act not as though shee thought the King might or would grant any such thing 4. Abraham calleth Sarai his sister as he did call Lot her brothers sonne his brother chap. 13.8 for so the Hebrewes use to call their neare kinsmen by the name of brethren and he saith she was the daughter of his father not of his mother because her father Haran who might be 50. yeare elder than Abraham was the sonne of Thare by another woman and not by Abrahams mother 5. So then this Iscah is also Sarai for to what end else should Iscah here be mentioned as a stranger and not pertinent to the storie 6. It is most likely then that Sarai was the daughter of Haran elder brother to Abraham who and not Abraham was borne in the seventie yeare of Thare not as Pererius supposeth that Abraham was borne in the seventie yeare and Aran many yeares before for it is evident by the text that Thare had no children before he was 70. yeare old Gen. 11.26 R. Sel. affirmeth also that this Iscah was Sarai and he noteth that they are both of one signification for Iscah or Iacah is a name of principalitie as Sarai is yet Aben Ezra thinketh otherwise that if Sarai had beene Harans daughter Moses would have called her the daughter of Haran as Lot is said to be the sonne of Haran v. 31. but that is no reason for in stead thereof shee is called the wife of Abraham of whom she now was rather to take denomination than of her father Mercerus also thinketh that this Iscah was not Sarai because in the same verse there would not bee so sudden a change and mutation of the name but I thinke the first opinion more probable that Iscah is Sarai for the reasons before alleaged 1. because it had not beene pertinent to make mention of Iscah if she had not belonged to this story 2. It is like that as Nahor married the one sister so Abraham did the other 3. that they might take them wives out of their owne kindred and not marry into the idolatrous stockes of the Chaldeans QVEST. XXII Why mention is made of Sarai her barrennesse Vers. 30. BVt Sarai was barren c. Sarai her barrennesse is noted 1. not as some Hebrewes imagine that she should be reserved for the birth of Isaak and not bee polluted with other births for the birth is no pollution of the wombe and if this were the reason Isaack might have beene the first borne 2. neither was Sarai barren that by this meanes Ismael should be borne of Agar to bee a plague afterwards to the Israelites as some Hebrewes thinke 3. But this was the cause that Gods power might afterward appeare in giving her a sonne in her old age QVEST. XXIII Abraham whether cast into the fire and then delivered by his faith Vers. 31. THey departed together from Vr of the Chaldeans It seemeth to bee an old tradition among the Hebrewes that Abraham was complained of by Thare his father in the dayes of Nimrod for refusing to worship the fire which the Chaldeans adored as God and therefore he was cast into the fire but was delivered by his faith and that this was the Ur that is the fire of the Chaldees out of the which Abraham was brought and they adde further that Aran seeing his brother delivered refused likewise to worship that Idoll and was cast into the fire wherein because hee had but a weake faith he perished and therefore it is said he died before his father that is in his presence This tradition Hierome seemeth in part to allow of and Lyranus also and Paulus Burg. But it is a meere fable as may thus appeare 1. because Abraham as most Chronographers agree was not as yet borne in Nimrods time but in the 43. of Ninus that succeeded Nimrod or Belus 2. If Abraham had beene so miraculously delivered it is like that either Moses would have remembred it in this story or the Apostle Heb. 11. where he commendeth the faith of Abraham or Ecclesiasticus chap. 45. would not have omitted where of purpose he setteth forth the praise of Abraham Iosephus also lib. 1. antiquit and Philo that wrote two bookes of Abraham remember no such thing 3. This Ur was the name of a City in Chaldea which Eupolimus in Eusebius calleth Camerinis Ammianus Ur lib. 25. Plinie O●choen the Septuagint translate it the region of the Chaldeans And here not onely Abraham but Thare Lot and Sarai all depart from Ur then it should seeme they were all cast into the fire Iosephus saith that in his time the Sepulcher of Haran was to be seene in Ur of the Chaldeans Haran then was not burned but buried Aben Ezra taketh Ur for the name of a place and Abrahams Countrey though Ramban would have Cuthena in Mesopotamia rather his Countrey QVEST. XXIII Whether Nachor went out with Terah from Chaldea Vers. 31. ANd Terah tooke Abraham 1. It is certaine that God was the author of this journey who spake to Abraham before he dwelt in Canaan Act. 7.2 and that Terah was made acquainted with Gods oracle by his sonne and obeyed the same Calvin 2. Terah is said to take Abraham c. because he was the chiefe and master of the family Muscul. 3. No mention is made of Nachor who chose rather to remaine in his Countrey and obey not Gods calling who afterwards notwithstanding followed and left his Countrey but went no further than Mesopotamia Gen. 24.10 and dwelt also in Charran Gen. 28.1 Mercer QVEST. XXIV Whether Terah Abrahams father were an Idolater COncerning Terah whether he were given to the Idolatry of the Chaldeans because he departed from Ur is a great question which may thus be decided 1. It is neither probable that as Suidas saith Sarug the grandfather of Terah brought in Idolatry commanding holy
them that gave them their several tongues hom 11. in Numb But the text it selfe overthroweth this opinion v. 9. The Lord Iehovah did confound their languages 3. Confut. Against Celsus that saith Moses borrowed of other writers THirdly Celsus objected that Moses borrowed this story of the towre of Babel of those that write of the Gyants called Aloides how they cast downe a great towre But Origen answereth that the writers of that history were after Homer who was after Moses so that he could not take any thing from them lib. 4. cont Cels. It is more like that they corrupted the true story of Moses with the Poeticall fictions 4. Confut. Against the Pagans that fable of the beasts that they had sometimes one language 4. CErtaine Pagans not beleeving that the world was not any time of one language compare this narration of Moses to that fable of the beasts that sometime they had all one language and one understood another till such time as they sent an embassage to the Gods that they might bee alwayes in their flourishing youth and never be old and for this their proud request their speech was confounded that now one understandeth not another The like truth say they is in this narration of Moses For how is it like that they could in that instant every man forget his former speech ex Philone But this is a doltish comparison betweene reasonable men and unreasonable beasts those being no more capable of speech than they are of reason And seeing all the world tooke beginning from one man before the floud from Adam after the floud from Noah why should it seeme incredible that the world used one language And why should it seeme unpossible that God to whom all things are possible in that instant could make them forget their language seeing that some diseases as the Lethargy doe bring such forgetfulnesse as that the patient knoweth not how to call things by their names and Pliny writeth of Corvinus Messala that he forgot his owne name 5. Confut. Against Philastrius that all the world was of one language not divers before 5. PHilastrius counteth it an hereticall opinion that all the world was of one language before the tower of Babel they are said so to be saith he that although they spake divers languages yet they one understood another and so in effect it was but as one But the text is contrary that the whole earth was of one language and one speech not of one understanding but of one lip as it is in the hebrew that is they framed their words and language after the same manner And how could every man understand so many languages which are held of most to have beene not so few as seventy without a miraculous gift such as the Apostles had and whereas Moses maketh mention of divers languages in the 10. chap. v. 5.20.31 there that is spoken by way of anticipation And here Moses setteth forth the beginning and occasion of the diversity of languages by a certaine figure called hysterosis which declareth that last that was done first setting the effect before the cause 6. Confut. Against Philo that this division of tongues is to bee understood historically not in allegory 6. FOurthly Philo draweth this story of the confusion of tongues to an allegory to signifie the confusion of vices Hoc est nunc propositum sub figura confusionis linguarum dijicere constipatu● vitiorum cuneum This is Moses purpose under this figure of confusion of tongues to cast downe the conjoyned muster of vices for to speake properly this parting of one language into many is a separation rather than a confusion Contra. 1. After this manner the whole story of Genesis may bee allegorized so that we should have neither creation of the world nor inundation of the same in true history but in devised allegory 2. This division of tongues is called a confusion not in respect of the divers speech which was indeed divided not united or confounded but of the speakers who were confounded in their affection in being astonished at so suddaine an alteration in their memory in forgetting their accustomed speech in their understanding because they one understood not another in their worke which was confused the server bringing one thing when the builder called for another 7. Confut. Against Plato and Aristotle 7. PLato his opinion is that words have their force and meaning from nature Aristotle that they were first framed as it pleased man But here wee learne that God gave unto man speech and he infused into men at once diversity of languages 8. Confut. Against the Lutherans that make an omnipresence of Christs body 8 Vers. 5. THe Lord came downe the Lutheranes Vbiquitaries that maintaine an omnipresence and ubiquity that is an every-where presence of Christs flesh being pressed by this argument that Christs body doth move from place to place therefore it is not every where doe answer out of this place that God is said to move and descend and yet he is every where But the reason is not alike for to ascend and descend is spoken of Christs body truly and properly but of the God-head only metaphorically and figuratively 9. Confut. Against the latine service in popery 9. Vers. 9. THerefore the name was called Babel because their language was so confounded that they one understood not another so what is the Church of Rome to bee counted but another Babel and synagogue of confusion where the people understand not the Priest no● one another in their latine service and prayers Muscul. 10. Confut. Against Pererius the marrying of the uncle and neece unlawfull 10. Vers. 29. THe name of Abrahams wife was Sarai who is held to be the daughter of Haran Abrahams brother which marriages were not then forbidden by any law but afterwards they were where the errour of the papists and namely of Bellarmine and Pererius may be noted who affirme that it was not forbidden by Moses law for the uncle to marry his neece for Othoniel the younger brother of Caleb married Achsa Calebs daughter Iud. 1.13 Contra. 1. To marry in this degree is forbidden in Leviticus by necessary collection Levit. 18.12 Thou shalt not uncover the shame of thy fathers sister for she is thy fathers kinswoman doth not the same reason hold for the other sex thou shalt not uncover the shame of thy fathers brother for hee is thy fathers kinsman Where the degree is prohibited in the male it holdeth also in the female sex unlesse they will say because the law saith thou shalt not cover thy neighbours wife and expresseth not thy neighbours husband that therefore the one should bee lawfull and not the other 2. Othoniel was not the brother of Caleb but either his nephew as the Septuagint read Othoniel the sonne of Kenez adelphon the brother of Caleb namely Kenez for so is the construction in the greek or else as Iunius collecteth Othoniel and Caleb were brothers children Caleb
Chaldea for Abraham was ready to have left his kindred if they had refused to goe with him And Terah is made the Author of this journey not as though they went forth without Gods calling but for that hee was willing to goe with Abraham whether for griefe of his sonnes death as Iosephus or for that though hee was somewhat superstitiously bent hee was desirous to goe out of that Idolatrous countrey therefore Terah Abrahams father being the head of the family is named as the chiefe QVEST. V. Of divers kinds of calling and renouncing the world THere are divers kinds of callings some are called immediately of God either by manifest revelation as Abraham or secret inspiration some are called by men as the Israelites by the Prophets some are called by affliction as Psal. 88.34 When hee slew them they sought and returned And three wayes doe men forsake the world 1. by actuall leaving and forsaking all they had as Abraham here and the Apostles under Christ. 2. by mortifying their affections as David was like a weaned childe Psal. 131.2 3. by sequestring their thoughts to the contemplation of heavenly things which S. Paul calleth the having of our conversation in heaven Phil. 3.20 QVEST. VI. Seven great blessings upon Abraham Vers. 2. I Will make of thee a great nation c. 1. God calling Abraham from his countrey leaveth him not destitute but promiseth a great recompence for his countrey hee is brought into a better land for a small kinred a great nation shall come out of him he is called from his fathers house but God will make him a father of many nations 2. The Lord bestoweth upon Abraham seven great blessings Pe-Perer ex Cajetan 1. I will make thee a great nation either because many and populous nations came of Abraham by Hagar and Ketura Gen. 25. or in respect of the people of Israel which was great not so much in number as renowne because of the Kings Prophets wise and vertuous men that came of them 2. I will blesse thee This blessing was able to make his barren wife Sara fruitfull Vatablus I will make thee rich prosperous Musculus Or I will blesse thee spiritually Rupertus 3. I will make thy name great 1. Abrahams name was reverenced even among the heathen as Iosephus sheweth lib. 1. antiquit 2. It was great in respect of the faithfull that are called the children of Abraham 3. Great because the Lord vouchsafeth to call himselfe the God of Abraham Isaak and Iacob 4. Great in respect of Christ that came of Abraham Matth. 1.1 Perer. 4. Thou shalt bee a blessing 1. It signifieth the certainty of this blessing whom man blesseth they are not alway blessed but he that God blesseth shall surely bee blessed 2. The excellency of this blessing he shall not only bee blessed but a blessing it selfe 3. And he should be a forme of blessing as they should say the God of Abraham Isaac c. blesse thee Calvin 5. I will blesse them that blesse thee c. Abrahams friends should bee blessed for his sake as Lot Gen. 14. Ismael 25. therefore Abimelech being a King did desire to make a league with Abraham because he saw God was with him 6. I will curse them c. So perished Pharao Og Sehon the Assyrians Chaldeans were punished for their enmity against the people of God Luther Therefore Balaam durst not curse the people of God because the Lord had not cursed them Numb 23. 7. All the families of the earth shall be blessed in thee 1. Not only because they shall take up a forme of blessing as the Hebrewes interpret the Lord blesse thee like Abraham for this forme among all the families of the earth was not used the Romanes in the coronation of their Emperours were wont to say ●is falicior Augusto melior Trajano be more happy than Augustus better than Trajane 2. Neither so onely because all Gentiles should be blessed for imitating the example of faithfull Abraham 3. Non tantum significat ipsum fore exempler sed causam benedictionis it signifieth he should not only be an example or patterne but a cause of blessing because in Christ the seed of Abraham as the Apostle expoundeth Galath 3.16 all the nations in the world were blessed Calvin QVEST. VII Of the computation of the 430. yeare mentioned by S. Paul Gal. 3.17 FRom this promise made to Abraham are we to account the 430. yeares which S. Paul saith were betweene the promise and the law Galath 3.17 1. Hereunto agreeth the computation of Moses that the Israelites dwelt in Aegypt foure hundred and thirty yeares Exod. 12.40 not in Aegypt onely but in Aegypt and Canaan as the Septuagint doe interpret that place for so long it was since Abraham first began to sojourne in Canaan at what time also by reason of the famine hee went into Aegypt so Iosephus maketh his computation to the building of Salomons temple from the departure of the Israelites out of Aegypt 592. yeares and from Abrahams comming into Canaan a thousand and twentie so that there shall be betweene Abrahams arrivall in Canaan and the deliverance of the Israelites out of Aegypt by this account foure hundred twenty eight 2. Genebrard then is greatly deceived that counteth six hundred yeares from Abrahams comming into Canaan to the Israelites going out of Aegypt for both Saint Paul is directly against him who as Genebrard would enforce hath no relation in that number to the time of the Israelites dwelling in Aegypt neither doth the computation of the yeares agree for from Abrahams comming to Canaan till Iacobs going into Aegypt are but yeers 215. which are gathered thus from the promise to the birth of Isaak 25. from thence to the birth of Iacob 60. from thence till hee went into Aegypt 130. and the time from thence till the Israelites going out though it cannot bee so certainely gathered is thought not to exceed two hundred and fifteene yeare more as shall bee shewed when wee come to that place of the fifteenth chapter 3. Though Saint Paul make mention of that promise which was made to Abraham and his seed which seemeth to bee that Gen. 22.18 yet by the account of the yeeres it must bee referred to this promise for the other renewed when Isaak should have beene offered up was fifty yeeres if Isaak were then 25. as Iosephus or if hee were 37. as some other Hebrewes thinke it was 62. yeeres after and so many yeeres should we want of foure hundred and thirty And then the same word seed is not here used yet there is the same sense for the Lord in saying in thee shall all the families of the earth bee blessed meaneth his seed 4. Further whereas Abraham is said to bee seventy five yeere old at his departure out of Charran and the promise was made before hee came out of Chaldea his time of abode could not bee long there not five yeares as Iunius supposeth but
obscuring of their sight concerning the object of the doore only as Perer. neither was it a blindnesse procured by any naturall meanes as by the obscuring the object darkning the aire or weakning the sight as Pererius imagineth but it was a miraculous and immediate worke they smote the men with blindnesse they smote not the medium or the object but their sight was generally blind that they had no discerning of one thing from another as the Aramites were blinded that they could neither discerne Elisha the prophet the way nor the City Calvin so that both their discerning and seeing faculty both inward and outward sense were dazled and therefore the word sanuere is put in the plurall number San●erim they were then as it were san blind which word may very well bee derived from the Hebrew so is the property of such not to discry or discerne things of any distance from them QVEST. IX Lot had only two daughters no other children Vers. 14. LOt went and spake to his sonnes in law c. 1. These were the men unto whom Lots daughters were espoused not already married as some of the Hebrewes thinke and Mercerus that Lot beside the two Virgins had two other daughters married but it may appeare that Lot had no more sonnes or daughters but only two because when the Angell had bid him bring out his sonnes in law his sons and daughters hee onely spake to his sonnes in law therefore sonnes he had none nor other daughters to speake unto but those two which were with him 2. It is evident also that only Lot his wife and two daughters were delivered out of the flames of Sodome 1. that it might appeare that there were no more righteous persons in Sodome so that the number of ten last mentioned by Abraham could not bee made up 2. If any other had escaped if men Lots daughters would rather have practised with them than their father if women they would have entised them to doe the like as they did As for the wine which they drunke they might either carry it themselves or upon beasts there was no such necessary use of servants in that behalfe or which is most like they brought it with them from Zoar. Mercer QVEST. X. Why Lot is willed to speake to those that would not heare him Vers. 14. HE seemed as though he had mocked It will be here questioned why the Lord willeth such to be warned whom hee knew would despise their calling The answer is ready God notwithstanding would have them to be called that they might be more inexcusable and his judgements appeare to be most just like as he hath appointed the Gospell to be preached to all the world yet many are called and few chosen as our Saviour saith Mat. 20.16 ex Calvin QVEST. XI Why Lot and the rest are forbidden to looke backe Vers. 17. LOoke not behind thee The Lord forbade Lot and likewise the rest with him to looke behind them not either because of the Angell that destroyed Sodome or for that it was dangerous to looke into the infected aire as the Hebr. but for these reasons 1. to try their obedience as hee did Adams in prohibiting the eating of an apple 2. to shew hereby the indignity of that place that was not worthy by any honest man to bee looked upon 3. to stay Lots curiosity that he should not too narrowly looke into Gods judgements or gaze upon his workes Perer. 4. as also for more speed sake as the Apostles were likewise forbidden to salute any by the way Iun. 5. that Lots desire and affection might bee sequestred from the pleasures and wealth of the City Calvin QVEST. XII How Lots wife looked behind him Vers. 26. HIs wife looked backe behind him 1. not behind her selfe as the Latine readeth 2. nether yet being behind Lot dragging after him did shee looke backe as Cajetane in c. 19. Genes Mercer 3. neither did she looke behind upon Lot that she might come after him Calvin for then she had not broken the Angels charge 4. but she looked toward Sodome behind and beyond her husband Iun. QVEST. XIII Why God so severely punished Lots wife SHe was turned into a pillar of Salt God shewed this example of severity upon Lots wife 1. for her disobedience 2. her incredulity in not giving credit to Gods word 3. her curiosity in desiring to see the City burning 4. her foolishnesse in pitying the ruine of her countrey kindred and people 5. her affection seemed yet to bee addicted to the pleasures of Sodome and therefore our Saviour giveth a caveat hereof Remember Lots wife Luke 17.32 that wee for saving and loving of this life lose not the next Perer. Calvin QVEST. XIV What pillar of Salt Lots wife was turned into PIllar of Salt 1. Not because Lots wife perished in the fire of brimstone mingled with salt as it is Deut. 29.23 as Aben Ezra for it might as well be said a pillar of brimstone 2. neither is it so called only because it was a durable pillar as an everlasting covenant is called a covenant of salt Numb 18.19 for salt hath a property to preserve things from corruption and decaying 3. Neither was she turned into a pillar of salt because she refused to bring the guests salt the day before as some of the Hebrewes dreame 4. Neither yet is it an allegory to signifie such to be as senslesse pillars which divert their affections from spirituall to earthly and sensuall things as Philo applieth it 5. But hereby is signified that she both was turned into a pillar of materiall salt and that also durable and of long continuance which Iosephus saith remained to be seene in his time B●rchardus long after maketh mention of it in his description of the holy land and the Thargum Hierosolymit saith that it is duratura usque ad tempus resurrectionis to continue till the resurrection but God would have that monument ut praestet fidelibus condimentum c. that it might be a seasoning to faithfull men to take heed of backsliding as Augustine noteth QVEST. XV. What became of Lots wife FUrther 1. Neither must it bee supposed that her soule but her body onely was turned into a pillar of salt Calvin 2. And the Lord might have mercy upon her soule though this chastisement was shewed upon her body 3. And it is most like that this miracle was done before Lot came to Zoar neither is it to be thought that Lot and his two daughters went before and his wife staid behind in the field to looke backe as Cajetane thinketh but it was done in Lots sight and presence for the better example sake before they entred into Zoar for when Lot departed out of Zoar mention is made only of him and his two daughters And they which have travelled that countrey doe testifie that this pillar was to be seene betweene Segor and the dead Sea where Sodome and Gomorrha stood Perer. ex Borchard QVEST. XVI
Perer. for God expresseth no condition in his promise 4. Nor yet need we answer that Iacob doth not vow the generall worship of God whereunto he was bound by his profession having received circumcision but a speciall service in consecrating that place to Gods service and offering of tythes or that it is lawfull for a man to tie himselfe by a new bond to performe that to God which he is otherwise bound to doe as the Prophet David saith Psal. 119.126 I have sworne and will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous judgements both these answers are true though not pertinent to this place ex Perer. 5. Wherefore Iacob doth not bring this forth as a condition If God will be with me this particle im is not here a conditionall but a word of time as it is taken vers 15. untill if that is when I have performed c. so is it taken here when God hath beene with me and kept me in this journey Iun Mercer and the words following are not to be read then the Lord shall be my God but when the Lord hath beene my God so they are not parcell of the vow which is complete in the 22. vers but they are part of the reason of this vow Rasi Iun. QUEST XVIII To whom Iacob voweth to pay the tenth Vers. 22. I Will give the tenth 1. Some thinke that he payed the tenth to Sem or Eber but Sem died before Iacob was borne and Eber also was dead many yeares before this in the 19. yeare of Iacob who is now supposed to have beene 77. yeare old 2. Therefore this giving of tithe was nothing else but the consecrating of the tenth part of his goods to be bestowed in building of Altars and in sacrifices for the service of God and such things as are devoted to religious uses are truly said to be given unto God sic Cajetan Mercer 3. Some Hebrewes referre this to the consecrating of Levi to the Priesthood but as Aben Ezra not men but cattell and beasts used to be tithed 4. Places of Doctrine 1. Doct. The ministery of Angels Vers. 12. THe Angell of God went up and downe By this is expressed the ministery of the Angels that are continually imployed for the good of the elect they ascend to report our necessities they descend to be ministers of Gods mercies as the Apostle saith Are they not all ministring spirits sent forth to minister for their sakes that shall be heires of salvation Heb. 1.14 2. Doct. How Gods providence is seene in permitting evill to be done in the world HEreby also is set forth Gods providence that watcheth over all things for the Lord standeth upon the top of this ladder whereby is signified the administration and government of the world Against which providence whereas it is objected that many evill things are committed in the world to the which the Lord is no way consenting Thomas Aquine answereth that although some defects are against the particular nature of things yet they are for the good of the universall and therefore as Augustine saith Deus non sineret malumesse in operib suis nisi sciret benefacere etiam de mal● God would not suffer evill to be in his works if he did not know how to turne evill into good But it will be said God ought to draw men against their will unto good Dionysius answereth Non est providentia divinae violare naturam sed est cujusque naturae conservatrix Gods providence doth not change or violate nature but is the preserver of na●ure leaving to things indued with reason to follow their owne will and inclination Lib. de Divin nominib cap. 4 par 4. 3. Doct. How God forsaketh not the elect finally Vers. 15. I Will not forsake thee c. Gods promises to his servants are so stable and firme in Christ that they are sure finally not to be forsaken as the Lord said to Iosua I will never faile thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13.4 Calvin 4. Doct. Lawfull to vow Vers. 20. IF God will be with me c. By Iacobs vowing both their errour is condemned that take away the use of all vowes from Christians and their superstition that vow not as they ought Iacob 1. directeth his vowes to God the papists vow unto Saints 2. He voweth to testifie his thankfulnesse they vow to merit 3. He voweth such things as were in his power as to pay tithe they such things as are beyond their reach as single life where the gift is not 4. Iacob voweth such things as God commanded they vow things of their owne inventing as to goe in pilgrimage to fast with bread and water to garnish Idols and such like concerning the which we may say with the Prophet who required this at your hands Isay 1. ●2 Calvin 5. Doct. Signes called by the names of the things Vers. 22. THis stone shall be the house of God This stone was not Gods house but a monument or signe of the place of Gods worship for there Iacob to fulfill this vow afterward at his returne built an Altar to God Gen. 35.7 Thus by a metonymie that which is proper to the thing is given to the signe in which sense the bread in the Eucharist is called the body of Christ Marl●r 5. Places of Confutation 1. Confut. How the Angels are reporters of our prayers unto God and yet no mediators Vers. 12. LOe the Angels of God ascended and descended upon it Hence Pererius would gather that the Angels descended from heaven to reveale unto us the counsels of God and to execute his will so their office is by ascending to report unto God our prayers vowes and necessities in Gen. 25. numer 23. We grant that the Angels doe report unto God the affaires of the world and the acts and gests of men and so their supplications in generall but this they doe as messengers not as mediators The Prophet Zachary sheweth a distinct office of the Angelicall spirits and Jesus Christ there called the Angell of the Lord they returne this answer to Christ W●e have gone thorow the world and behold all the world sitteth still and is at rest But the Angell of the Lord Christ the Mediator of his Church steppeth forth and prayeth O Lord of hosts how long wilt thou be unmercifull to Ierusalem Zach. 1.12 So then though the Angels be witnesses of our devotion and beholders of our teares and plaints they have no office of mediation neither have we any warrant to pray unto them 2. Confut. Against the Platonists that make three kinds of providence Vers. 12. THere stood a ladder upon the earth and the top reached to heaven Gods providence then descendeth from heaven to earth contrary to the opinion of the Platonists noted by Gregor Nyssen lib. 8. de provident cap. 3. who make three kinds of providence the first of God in taking care onely for things celestiall and spirituall and the generall causes of other things in the world the second
him by Pharaoh Vers. 38. to Vers. 42. 2. The great honour given unto him Vers. 42 43. 3. The changing of his name 46. 4. His marriage and children Vers. 50. 4. The accomplishment of the deames 1. In the seven plentifull yeares Vers. 49. to 54. 2. Then in the yeares of famine beginning 54 to the end 2. The divers readings v. 2. In a medow B.G.C.P. in fenne ground H. in achi S. in the reed T. achu signifieth grasse and reed it is like they stood among the reed because the leane kine stood by them in the brinke of the river when sedge and reed did grow Exod. ● 3 v. 7. Devouring all the beautie of the former H. and the thinne eares devoured the seven ranke and full catet caet Behold it was a dreame all have this clause but the Latine v. 11. Wee both saw a dreame a presage of things to come H. every one saw according to his dreame S. wee dreamed each man according to the interpretation of his dreame C.G.P. each mans dreame of a sundrie interpretation B. each mans dreame agreeable to the interpretation T. v. 14. And they offered him to him to whom hee said H. hee came to Pharaoh then Pharaoh said to Ioseph caet v. 16. Without God health shall not bee answered to Pharaoh S. not from my wisedome but from the face of God shall peace be answered to Pharaoh C. without me shall God answer prosperous things to Pharaoh H.G. not I but God shall give Pharaoh an answer for peace B. it is not in my power but God c. T. beside mee P. bilgnad beside without v. 20. Having devoured the former they shewed no token of fulnesse H. and when they had eaten them up it could not be knowne that they had eaten them up caet v. 22. I slept againe H.S. I saw againe in my dreame caet v. 26. Are seven yeares S. seven yeares of plentie caet v. 28. Which shall be fulfilled in this order H. this is the thing that I have said to Pharaoh G. this is the word that I have said to Pharaoh That God hath shewed to Pharaoh what he will doe caet v. 38. Who is full of Gods spirit H. in whom the spirit of prophecie is the face of God C. in whom the spirit of God is caet v. 42. Araied him with silke garments C.H.S.P. of fine linnen G. of raines B. vestis 〈◊〉 garments of fine cotten or gossipin T. he● shesh silke v. 40. At thy word shall all the people hee ruled C. B. bee obedient H. S. shall kisse thee on the mou●h T. P. shall bee armed at thy word G. some derive the word of shacach to move or run up and downe some of nashack to kisse some of nesheck armour so I take the last reading to bee best with Mercerus for though in those countries to kisse was a signe of obeisance and therefore it is said in the second Psalme kisse the sunne lest hee bee angrie yet to kisse the mouth was a signe of love rather than of feare and obedience Cantic 1.1 v. 43. And they cried before him Abrech G. P. tender father B. this is the father of the king C. that they should bow the knee before him H.T. heb ●arac to bow the knee so readeth Mercer Oleaster the Septuag omit this word v. 44. Without thee shall no man lift up his hand S. his hand or foot caet his hand to take armour or foot to ride upon an horse C. 45. And hee called him in the Egyptian tongue the Saviour of the world H. the man to whom secrets are revealed C. Saphinath paaneach caet v. 45. Priest of Heliopolis H.S. Priest of On. B. Prince of On. cae● cohen a Prince or Priest v. 47. The corne Was bound in handfuls H the earth brought forth handfuls of aboundance S. brought forth great store G. great store to lay up B. to lay up in barnes P. the inhabitants gathered the corne into barnes C. the earth brought forth by handfuls T. heb hee referreth it not to the binding of she●ves as H. or laying up in barnes as B.C. but to the aboundance that they had of every seed or graine an handfull which seemeth also to bee the meaning of the Septuagint v. 54. In all the world the famine prevailed and the famine was in all Egypt H. in all lands the famine prevailed but in all the land of Egypt was food caet v. 57. That they might qualifie the evill of their want H. because the famine was sore in all lands caeter 3. The Theologicall Explanation of doubtfull questions QUEST I. How long Ioseph was in prison and where wee must begin the computation of these two yeares Vers. 1. AFter two yeares Pharaoh dreamed c. 1. I neither thinke with Ios●phus and Mercerus that these two yeares must bee accounted from the beginning of Iosephs imprisonment and that he was but two yeares in the whole in prison for the beginning of this chapter best agreeth with the end of the former where mention is made of the Butlers restitution to his place so then two yeares after that Pharaoh dreamed Iun. 2. Yet doe I not thinke that these officers were an whole yeare in prison as some conjecture and that Ioseph and they were imprisoned much about one time for the keeper of the prison would not at the first give Ioseph charge of such prisoners till hee had experience of his fidelitie I rather thinke that Ioseph was in prison some time before and that hee was there a whole yeare before the chiefe Butlers deliverance and two yeare more after three in all QUEST II. Why Pharaoh dreamed and where Vers. 1. PHaraoh dreamed c. 1. The Hebrewes note that it is not here added Pharaoh King of Egypt till afterward when Ioseph was advanced by whose prudence and wisdome hee so governed that then hee was worthie the name of a King and not before but this is somewhat curious 2. This dreame is shewed to Pharaoh because it belongeth to the office and dutie of a king to provide for his people 3. This river was not a streame issuing out of Nilus as Iun. But Nilus it selfe which is usually called by the name of the river Exod. 2.3 and because Nilus doth water the plaine of Egypt where they have no raine and so maketh it fruitfull it serveth fitly to decipher the seven yeares of plentie Mercer QUEST III. The difference betweene the dreames of Pharaoh and Nebuchadnezzar Vers. 8. PHaraoh told them his dreames but none could interpret c. 1. Nebuchadnexzars dreame which hee dreamed Dan. 2. was unlike to this of Pharaoh for hee had forgotten his dreame not as some thinke because hee slept with full stomacke but God so disposing but Pharaoh very well remembreth his dreame there Nebuchadnezzar commanded to slay the wise men but Pharaoh of a more gentle nature spareth them 2. Neither did any
and handle them roughly to bring them to knowledge and confession of their treachery against him so Christian governors should not put the Iewes to death but use them hardly by laying taxes and impositions upon them that at the length they may be brought to repentance for their blasphemies against Christ as it is in the Psalme Slay them not lest my people forget it but scatter them abroad by thy power Psal. 59.12 Rupert lib. 9. comment in Gen. cap. 4. 2. Doct. Where the feare of God is not there can be no true vertue Vers. 18. THis doe and live for I feare God c. Ioseph biddeth them bee secure of his sincere and true dealing with him because he feared God so that true religion is the fountaine of vertue and honest dealing they therefore that feare not God may for a while make a semblance and shew of honestie but it cannot be in truth where the ground of true religion is wanting where therfore the feare of God is not we cannot expect any vertuous action as Abraham reasoned with himselfe when he sojourned in Gerar The feare of God is not in this place and they will slay me for my wives sake Gen. 20.12 3. Doct. The guilt of sinne remaineth when the act is past Vers. 21. THey said one to another we have verily sinned against our brother By this wee learne that although the act of sinne be done and past yet the guilt and conscience of sinne may continue as here the sinne which they had committed against Ioseph 23. yeares before is revived Muscul. As the Lord said to Cain If thou doest not well sinne lieth at the doore Gen. 4.7 It lieth lurking in the doore of the conscience ready upon every occasion to assault us 4. Doct. The author of affliction it commeth not by chance Vers. 28. WHat is this that God hath done unto us These men having a guilty conscience thinke that God meeteth with them in every corner yet this good perswasion they have that nothing hapned to them by chance as this the finding of their mony in their sacks mouth but they ascribe all to Gods providence they make him the authour of their crosses and affliction Calvin As David in like manner saith that the Lord bid Shemei curse him 2 Sam. 16.11 5. Places of Confutation 1. Confut. Saint Pauls prophecie of some that should give eare to the doctrine of devils fulfilled in the Synagogue of Rome Vers. 6. THey bowed their face to the ground before him Here Iosephs brethren unwittingly doe fulfill Iosephs prophecie that they should fall downe unto him and doe him reverence like as the Jewes did ignorantly accomplish many things in the passion of Christ which were foretold by the Prophets So also they which in these dayes give eare to the doctrines of devils in the Romish and Antichristian Synagogue doe fulfill the prophecie of the Apostle 1 Tim. 4.1 some of them of ignorance and simplicity but their blinde guides of malice and obstinacie against the truth Muscul. 2. Confut. Against Purgatory Vers. 8. IOseph knew his brethren but they knew not him Augustine propounding this question how it came to passe that all this time of Iosephs prosperity he sent no word to Iacob but he continued still mourning for his sonne giveth this reason Quoniam sine istis minutis peccatis Iacob esse non potuit volens Deus illa parva peccata in hoc seculo igne tribulationis consumere c. Because Iacob could not be without some small sinnes God would by this meanes purge them with the fire of tribulation in this world serm 82. de tempor If small sinnes then which they call veniall bee purged in this world then there is nothing remaining to be cleansed in purgatory fire afterward which they say serveth to the purging not of mortall but veniall sinnes and indeed Iob well sheweth that our purgatory fire is in the affliction and sorrow of this life where he saith Exibo ut aurum I shall come forth like gold Iob 23.10 And the Prophet saith That the Lords fire is in Sion and his furnace at Ierusalem Isa. 31.9 it is not then in hell or Purgatory I much muse that Pererius alleaging this sentence of Augustine could not perceive how strongly it maketh against Purgatory 3. Confut. Against the swearing by Saints Vers. 15. BY the life of Pharaoh ye shall not goe hence c. Thomas Aquinas justifieth this fact of Ioseph in swearing by the life of Pharaoh and would warrant thereby the swearing by creatures as namely by Saints for an oath saith he is made two wayes by execration when some creature is produced that God should shew his judgement upon if one sweare falsly as when one sweareth by his head or such like the other way is by contestation either directly when the name of God is mentioned or indirectly when some creature is named in whom the truth should be manifested so we sweare by the Gospell wherein Gods truth is expressed by Saints that beleeved in the truth so Ioseph sware by Pharaoh a minister of Gods truth and justice Thom. 2.2 qu. 89. ar 6. Con●ra 1. This subtill disputer doth justifie that kinde of oath which is directly forbidden by our Saviour himselfe as to sweare by the head Matth. 5.36 Neither shalt thou sweare by thine head wee may justly suspect him in the rest when at the first he dare controll the holy doctrine of the Gospell 2. Men use not to sweare by the Gospell but upon it when they lay their hands upon the book for so we reade that the Saints have used some visible ceremonie and rite in taking an oath as Abrahams servant layed his hand upon his masters thigh Gen. 24.3 Iacob did sweare unto Laban upon an heape of stones but neither did the one sweare by his masters thigh nor the other by the stones but by the name of God Gen. 24.3 Gen. 31.53 Iacob sware by the feare of his father Isaack after the same manner is a booke used as a visible object for further evidence in the ministring of an oath but Saints are neither visible nor present and therefore the case is not alike 3. It is also directly forbidden to sweare by any but by the Lord Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and serve him and sweare by his name and though onely be not here found yet our Saviour so interpreteth Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Matth. 4.10 and so consequently by him onely shalt thou sweare 4. Concerning Iosephs act I have shewed before quest 9. that although it may be somewhat qualified and extenuated yet it cannot be justified but it savoureth somewhat of the Egyptian manners and seemeth to be against that place Zephan 1.5 where the Prophet reproveth those that sweare by the Lord and sweare by Malcham that is their King whether they made the idoll or a mortall man their King both abuses are here reproved 6. Places
of Exhortation 1. Observ. The righteous not exempted from publike calamity Vers. 1. IAcob saw that there was food in Egypt c. Iacob among the rest of the Canaanites tasted of the famine whereby we see that the righteous are not exempted from publike calamities as Abraham was pinched in like manner with famine and constrained to goe into Egypt Gen. 13. for the ●ingdome which the righteous looke for is not of this world Muscul. 2. Observ. God at the first seemeth to deale hardly with his children as Ioseph did with his brethren Vers. 7. HE spake to them roughly Like as Ioseph at the first seemed to handle his brethren hardly yet inwardly he yearned in compassion toward them and in the end shewed them great kindnesse so the Lord dealeth with his children When he humbleth them by affliction he seemeth unto them as an enemie as Iob complaineth that God counteth him as one of his enemies cap. 19.11 but in the end he sheweth his gracious favour and fatherly affection Mercer 3. Observ. Against the custome of swearing Vers. 19. OR else by the life of Pharaoh c. Ioseph sweareth twice together such a thing it is to have an evill custome many that use to sweare are so accustomed to it that they cannot doe otherwise but sweare Calvin therefore we must take heed that sinne be not confirmed by custome but as the Apostle saith Be not overcome of evill but overcome evill with goodnesse Rom. 12.21 4. Observ. As men measure to others it shall be mete to them againe Vers. 21. WE would not heare him therefore this trouble is come upon us As they hardned their hearts against the pitifull complaint of their brother Ioseph so they confesse it to bee just that now their suit is not heard Thus it is just with God to pay men home in their owne measure therefore let men take heed how they use their poore brethren hardly the time may come that they may finde as hard measure at other mens hands therefore let every man remember that saying of our Saviour That which yee would that men should doe to you doe you unto them this is the Law and the Prophets Matth. 7.12 5. Observ. Affliction bringeth a man to repentance Vers. 21. ANd they said one to another we have verily sinned c. We see the wonderfull and admirable effect of affliction which bringeth a man to the knowledge of his sinne it is the Lords plow wherewith we are made fruitfull like to the helve which Elizeus cast into the water which fetched up the iron in the bottome so affliction raiseth up a sinner that lay drowned and mudded in his sinne Affliction hath three notable effects it maketh us to know God our selves and the world first it stirreth us up to thinke of God whom wee have offended and to turne us to him by true repentance as the Scripture testifieth of Manasses that after the Lord had humbled him by affliction then he knew that the Lord was God 2 Chron. 33.13 We are called to the knowledge of God three wayes 1. By inspiration and inward motion wrought in us by God himselfe 2. By the ministery of man as either by their examples or admonitions and instructions 3. We are forced by the necessity of affliction Perer. ex Cassian And as the profiting by affliction is a signe of spirituall health so the hardning of the heart under the crosse is a signe of desperate state as the Prophet Ieremie saith Thou hast smitten them but they have not sorrowed Ierem. 5.3 Secondly affliction causeth us to know our selves 1. Our mortall and corruptible state our vile and fraile nature that weareth and wasteth away with trouble anguish and sicknesse as the Prophet David saith When thou with rebukes doest chastice man for iniquity thou as a moth makest his beauty to consume Psal. 39.7 2. Beside man by his affliction seeth his faults as in a glasse and calleth to minde his former errours as David saith Before I was afflicted I went wrong Psal. 119.67 Thirdly affliction learneth us to know the world 1. How vaine it is as the Preacher saith Vanity of vanities all is but vanity Eccles. 1.2 2. It sheweth the instability and mutability of the world how suddenly men fall from riches to poverty from health to sicknesse from honour to misery as the Apostle saith The world passeth away and the lust thereof 1 Ioh. 2.17 3. Affliction layeth open the misery and trouble that is in the world for man is borne to sorrow as the sparks flie upward Iob 5.7 that a man may say of the world and the pleasures thereof with Moses in his song Their vine is the vine of Sodome and as the vines of Gomorrha their grapes are as the grapes of gall their clusters be bitter their wine is the poyson of Dragons Deut. 32.32 4. The deceitfulnesse of the world appeareth by affliction how it deceiveth the hope of those that trust to it like as Lot made choise of the pleasant fruitfull vale of Sodome which was soone turned into a filthy lake and poole of brimstome 5. Lastly By affliction and tribulation wee know the world to be evill wretched and wicked that there is no goodnesse in it as the Apostle saith The whole world lieth in wickednesse 1 Ioh. 5.29 ex Perer. CHAP. XLIII 1. The Method or Argument FIrst in this Chapter is declared the manner of Iacobs condiscending to send Benjamin into Egypt with his brethren where we have 1. Iudahs absolute deniall to goe without him vers 3 4 5. 2. Iacobs expostulating with his sonnes for confessing they had another brother and their answer vers 6 7. 3. Iudahs undertaking for Benjamin vers 8 9 10. 4. Iacobs condescending with his advice to take a present with them and double mony and his blessing of them vers 11. to 15. Secondly this Chapter sheweth how they were entertained at Iosephs hand 1. The preparation to their entertainment is set downe to the which belongeth 1. Their inviting to dinner vers 16 17. 2. Their conference with Iosephs Steward concerning their money and his satisfying of them vers 18. to 23. 3. The delivering of Simeon vers 23. 4. They addresse themselves and their present vers 24.25 2. The entertainment it selfe is declared in Iosephs friendly communication with them vers 27. to 30. his tender affection vers 30. bountifull feast with the manner of it vers 32. to the end 2. The divers readings v. 2. The man did charge us with an oath H.G. did testifie unto us with a witnesse or testimonie S. did solemnly protest unto us C.B.T.P. gunah to protest to witnesse heb v. 5. The man as we have often said did denounce unto us saying H. the man said unto us caet v. 7. We answered him consequenter accordingly H. we shewed him according to his question S. according to the tenour of these words S. according to the order of his words C. the meaning of his words
Gentiles as the younger brothers were preferred before their elder brothers the Iewes in Genes 48. Numer 7. Contra. 1. Iacob had no such intendment to prefigure the signe of the crosse but as the present occasion was offered because Ioseph had so placed his sonnes he could not otherwise but by crossing his armes lay his right hand upon Ephraims head so that Ephraim was not preferred to the right hand because Iacob would lay his hands acrosse but Iacob did lay his hands acrosse because Ephraim was to be preferred 2. Although the fathers did beleeve in the Messiah to come yet we finde not that they had so particular a knowledge as to describe the very fashion of the crosse on which Christ suffered 3. Confut. Against the invocation of Saints Vers. 16. LEt my name be named upon them This maketh nothing for the popish invocation of Saints Iacob meaneth not that they should call upon his name but should in the world be called by his name as the like phrase is used before vers 6. they shall be called after the names of their brethren as the women are said to be called by their husbands name Isay 4.2 Neither doe we reade that ever the Israelites made their prayers to Abraham Isaack and Iacob Mercer 6. Places of morall observation 1. Mor. God granteth beyond our hope Vers. 11. I Had not thought to have seene thy face yet loe God hath shewed me thy seed thus God dealeth most liberally with his children granting them many things beyond and above their hope Mercer as the prophet David confesseth thou did dost prevent him with blessings he asked life of thee and thou gavest him along life for ever and ever Psalm 12.3 4. 2. Mor. To submit our naturall affections to the will of God Vers. 19. HIs younger brother Although Iacobs naturall affection might be inclined as well as Iosephs to the elder yet he submitteth his affection to the will of God who had given Ephraim the Eldership so Abraham cast out Hagar and her sonnes because God so commanded although otherwise it was grievous unto him Genes 21.12 14. so we must learne to conforme our wills and affection to the will of God 3. Mor. Gods promise dieth not with his servants Vers. 21. BEhold I die and God shall be with you though Iacob died yet the promise of God died no●● the death of Gods saints though it be grievous to the Church yet it cannot hinder Gods purpose Calvin but as it is in the Psal. instead of thy fathers thou shalt have children whom thou maiest make princes c. Psal. 4● 16 God can raise up others instead of his faithfull seruants deceased AN APPENDIX OR ADDITION TO THIS SECOND BOOKE containing that divine Prophecie of IACOB in his last Will and Testament and the Historie of his solemne funerall and honourable buriall Dedicated To the right reverend Fathers in God TOBIE L. Bishop of Duresme and MARTIN L. Bishop of Elie. RIght Reverend Fathers among other honorable Friends whom I have remembred in this worke I thought it not fit in silence to passe by your Lordships of whose humanity humility and love especially toward Ministers and Preachers of the word as of the one I heare honourable report so of the other I have comfortable experience that unto you both fitly agreeth S. Pauls description of a Bishop that he should be gentle and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a lover of good men as Ambrose saith Episcopu● ut membris suis utatur clericis maxime Ministris qui sunt vere filii A Bishop should use Ministers as his members and Clergy men as children I have beene bold to ioyne you together in this Preface that as you were consociate together in your learned education in that famous college and are now still linked together in affection so I would not separate you in this dedication that as Ambrose saith Quemadmodum vobis ibi omnia fuere communia ita hic quoque jus dividuum nesciatis that as there you enioyed a certaine communion so here you should not have a division One of your Lordships hath an interest in me as being Patron of that Church to the which I am called the other hath an interest in this worke to whom one already a painfull and industrious man now as I heare with the Lord did dedicate his labours upon Genesis that which he begunne making but an entrance into this booke I have by Gods grace finished yet proceeding an other way than ●e● propounded to himselfe and as yet hath not beene attempted by any so that I may in some sort modesty say with Hierome Opus in manibus mauditim habeo non quod studium ●eum insolenter extollam sed quod sudoris conscius ad lectionem eorum pro vocem nescientes I have a worke in hand not heard of before no● that I insolently commend my study but only to provoke to the reading of that wherein I have so much laboured those which yet knew it not In this Booke of Genesis Moses the first and best Historiographer doth pen the lives and acts of the holy Patriarks Abraham Isaack Iacob Ioseph with the rest into whom God vouchsafed this great honour that so great a Prophet as Moses like unto whom there rose not up any in Israel should be the Chronicler of their doings Tullie in a certaine place remembreth of Alexander the great conquerour that beholding Achilles tombe he should thus say O fortunate adolescens qui tuae virtutis Homerum praeconem inveneris O happy young man which hadst Homer to be the setter forth of thy praise But much more happy are these fathers whose doings are commended and recorded by Moses The examples of these godly Fathers who practiced as they professed and so lived as they loved God whose obedience was answerable to their faith doe teach all Christians but especially us that are set apart to this function to beautifie and adorne our holy vocation with a godly conversation So Abraham is set forth in Scripture not onely as a faithfull beleever but as a fruitfull follower of good works by his faith he was justified with God by his works he is also said to be justified that is so declared and testified before men whose example we must imitate both for beleeving and living whose sonnes and daughters we are as the Apostle saith While we doe well Cyprian also well saith Nil prodest verbis proferre veritatem factis destruere virtutē serm de mortalit altaribus placere debent qui de altaribus vivunt tales sunt sacrati qualia sacra sunt de singular Clericor It profiteth not in words to pronounce verity and in deeds to renounce verture they which live of the Altar must please the God of the Altar consecrated men should be like to the sacred things In this last addition to this booke I have explaned the divine propheticall speeches and bequests of Iacob to his sonnes and especially
upon every occasion 6. This darknesse did shew the spirituall darknesse of their soules and was a forerunner of the everlasting darknesse of hell which waited for them Ferus For the mysticall application of this Egyptian darknesse 1. Origen doth expound it of the unsearchable and impenetrable depth of the divine providence Augustine doth accommodate and applie it to the tenth Commandement Thou shalt not covet thy neighbours wife for such he saith are palpably blinded even as the Egyptians were 2. But more fitly doth the same Origen applie it to signifie the blindnesse of the Egyptians and the darknesse of their superstitious minde that were ignorant of the true knowledge and worship of God giving themselves to most filthie Idolatrie and it betokeneth also the grosse darknesse wherein the Gentiles were buried before they were called to the knowledge of the Messiah all the world was then in darknesse onely in Israel was light and the knowledge of God But contrariwise in the passion of Christ it was darke among the Jewes and light elsewhere which signified that light was sprung up to the Gentiles and blindnesse fallen upon the Jewes 4. Places of doctrine 1. Doct. The law is to be preached to the obstinate Vers. 4. IF thou refuse to let them goe behold to morrow I will bring Locusts Moses to Pharaoh being an obstinate and impenitent man preacheth nothing but the law and judgement the Gospell is not to bee preached to such but onely to the broken hearted as Christ saith That the spirit of God was upon him to preach the Gospell to the poore Luk. 4.18 This was a signe betweene the true Prophets and false that these alwayes cried to the people peace peace but the other told the people of their sinnes Ferus 2. Doct. The difference betweene the children of God and the children of the world Vers. 23. ALl the children of Israel had light where they dwelt In this difference betweene the children of Israel and the Egyptians is shadowed forth the divers estate betweene the children of God and the children of this world the one are lightned with the knowledge of grace the other sit downe in the region of darknesse and shadow of death as the Apostle saith Yee are all the children of the light and the children of the day we are not of the night nor of darknesse 1 Thess. 5.5 Borrh. 5. Places of confutation 1. Conf. That children are the members of the Church against the Anabaptists Vers. 9. WE will goe with our young and with our old with our sonnes and with our daughters Both young and old belonged unto Israel and to the Church of God which maketh against the Anabaptists that count infants no members of the Church and therefore denie them to be baptised But the Psalmist exhorteth not onely the ancient to praise God but the young also Young men and maidens old men and children Psalm 48.12 Ferus 2. Conf. Ignorance and darknesse not to be found in the Church of Christ but among the Egyptians Vers. 23. BVt all the children of Israel had light where they dwelt This externall light betokeneth the spirituall light of knowledge that the true Israel hath the light and knowledge of God It hath beene held as a principle among the Romanists and their practice sheweth them to bee of the same mind still that ignorance is the mother of devotion And great hath beene the ignorance and darknesse which reigned many yeeres under the Kingdome of Antichrist Borrh. And out of the darke smoke of the bottomlesse pit this mistie darknesse have come forth all those swarmes of Locusts Monkes Friers Masse Priests Seminaries whose endevour is to sow ●rror among the people and to settle them in ignorance of the truth to which purpose they forbid the Scriptures to be read or prayers to be said but in the Latin tongue they permit them not to read any books which may instruct them in the truth to sing Psalmes to conferre or reason of their faith All this sheweth that they would still keepe theirs in the Egyptian darknesse But thanks be unto God that hath caused the light of the Gospell of his Sonne to shine upon his Israel in this land that now that prophesie may be verified againe of this land which is also by the way of the Sea The people that sate in darknesse have seene great light and to them that sate in the region and shadow of death light is raised up Matth. 4.15 16. 6. Places of morall use 1. Mor. Of the necessity of good education Vers. 3. THat thou mayst declare in the eares of thy sonne Hence appeareth the necessitie of the good education of children that they should be instructed in the feare of the Lord in their youth and so will they not forget it when they are old Ferus This is the Apostles counsell that the fathers should bring up their children in the instruction and information of the Lord Ephes. 6.3 The want of good instruction in the youth is the cause of the licentiousnesse and unthriftinesse of the young men of this age 2. Mor. The departure of the Ministers of God dangerous Vers. 6. SO he turned him and went out from Pharaoh This sudden departure of Moses from Pharaoh and with indignation did foreshew the fearefull condition of Pharaoh whom the Ministers and Prophets of God forsake It was an evident argument of destruction at hand So their case is hard that are left destitute of the Ministers of Gods word Worldly men consider not this nay they many times wish in their hearts that there were not a Minister to speake unto them But like as the Jewes state was desperate when the Apostles left them and shooke off the dust of their feet against them Act. 13.51 so it fareth with those that are deprived of the presence of Gods Ministers Ferus 3. Mor. The office and part of good counsellers Vers. 7. THen Pharaohs servants said unto him It is the part of good counsellers to perswade Kings and Princes to deale well with the servants of God and to move them to the good of the Church and common-wealth Piscator Not to flatter the Prince to make themselves great or to deale unfaithfully and onely to seeke themselves as Shebna did Isai. 22. but to be like the faithfull Eliak●● and as Ebedmelech that obtained favour for Ieremie 4. Mor. Not one jot of Gods word to be omitted Vers. 26. THere shall not be an hoofe left In those things which God hath prescribed and commanded no● the least thing is to be omitted Moses was charged to make all things belonging to the Tabernacle even to the snuffers and ashpans according to the paterne which the Lord shewed him in the mount Exod. 25.9 Simler So not one jot of the word of God must be left undone but it must be kep● exactly to an haires breadth as wee say CHAP. XI 1. The method and Argument IN this Chapter there is a continuation of the narration of Moses
readie for him then the Passeover was killed not on the eve that began the fourteenth day but on the evening that ended it This onely doubt there is in one Saviours example that the Passeover is said to be prepared for him upon the first day of unleavened bread which was the 15. day Matth. 26.17 which if it were so then did he not eat the Passeover upon the 14. day But here the answer is that because the same night began the Feast of unleavened bread when they did eat the Passeover and the Romans used to count the night with the day before going it is therefore according to that common account then in use among the Jewes called the first day of unleavened bread because of the evening following Beza QUEST XII Whether it were not indifferent to use a Lambe or a goate for the Passeover Vers. 5. YE shall take it of the lambs or of the kids 1. Some thinke that it was lawfull to offer not onely lambs and goates for the pasch but calves also and bullocks as it is prescribed Deut. 16.2 Thou shalt offer the Passeover unto the Lord thy God of thy sheepe and bullocks and they give this reason further because some families might be so great that one lambe would not suffice them and therefore it is like they would chuse a beast according to their eating Cont. 1. If any other beast beside a lambe or goate had beene permitted the Lord would not in the institution of the Passeover which is commanded in every respect so precisely to bee kept have omitted it 2. In the place Deut. 16. he meaneth not the paschall lambe but other sacrifices which they offered during that solemnitie that they might take them of their sheepe or bullocks 3. Though the familie were never so great one lambe might suffice for every one to have a part it was not provided to fill their bellies it was lawfull for them afterwards to eat other meat but it was prescribed to be used as a sacramentall commemoration of their deliverance and so to be a food rather for their soules than their bodies 2. Paulus Burgensis is of opinion that it was not lawfull for the Hebrewes at any time neither then nor after to take a goate for their Passeover but onely a lambe 1. For in that moneth the sun being in that signe Aries the Lord by staying of an hee or ram lambe would signifie that he would therein judge the Egyptian gods who superstitiously worshipped rammes and sheepe 2. This also better shadowed forth Christ who is called the lambe that tooke away the sinne of the world not the goate 3. Therefore the meaning of the words is that they shall take a lambe from the flocke where there were mingled together both sheepe and goats to signifie that Christ tooke his flesh both from righteous and unrighteous progenitors that no man should despaire of forgivenesse Cont. 1. If that were the reason why a lambe was appointed a ramme had beene fitter that was growne to shew the judgement of God upon the rams the Egyptian gods than a lambe 2. Christ is called the lambe because of his innocencie and for that though at this time he that had not a lambe might take a goat yet afterward they did altogether use lambe for the Passeover 3. And to what end should the sheepe and goats bee mingled together in one flocke what if the lambe were taken out of a flocke where no goates were was it therefore unfit for the Passeover 4. Against this conceit of Burgen are all both the Hebrew and Latin expositors and which is most of all the Scripture it selfe which willeth the paschall beast to be taken either from the lambs or of the kids vers 5. there are three severall words here used sheh which generally signifieth a small beast either lambe or kid then ●ebesh the proper name for a lambe and ghez a goat If the meaning were that a lambe should be taken onely what needed any mention be made of goats at all 3. Some were of opinion that both a lambe and a kid were killed the one in every private familie upon the tenth day the other generally of the whole congregation upon the 14. day But this is contrary to the text which prescribeth that every man should take unto him a lambe sheh in the singular not two but one and that it should bee kept untill the 14. day at even neither at this time was there any publike sacrifice as is shewed before quest 8. 4. The opinion of the most then is that it was simple indifferent in every Feast of the Passeover for the Hebrewes to take a lambe if they had it or for want thereof a kid Lyran. Th●stat Perer. Fer. Simler But this libertie seemeth not to have beene generall for every Passeover for Christ who was the substance of this Sacrament is in the new Testament called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the lambe as Iohn 1.29 1 Pet. 2.19 Apocal. 5.6 which sheweth that the type answering to the bodie and substance was ordinarily of a lambe 5. Wherefore I thinke rather and therein subscribe unto Iunius that this was a libertie onely at that time in that confused estate but that afterward they used onely to kill a lambe for the Passeover and this generally is agreed upon among the Jewes themselves There were divers other rites here prescribed which are peculiar onely to this first Passeover as the preparing of the lambe 4. dayes before the striking of the bloud upon the doore posts the eating thereof with their loynes gi●t and their staves in their hand for neither are these rites prescribed in the repetition of the Passeover vers 14. and Numb 9. and our Sauiour did not use these ri●es at the eating of the Passeover who in every respect would have observed the paschall rites if they had beene perpetuall sic I●n in Matt. 26. QUEST XIII Why it is added vers 5. a male Vers. 5. A Small beast without blemish a male But whereas the usuall reading is a lambe c. a male ag●us 〈◊〉 as the Latine Augustine moveth a doubt why that 〈…〉 a male is added seeing the Latine terme agnus is of the Masculine gender 1. To thi● question Augustine 〈◊〉 three answers First he saith that the Septuagint 〈…〉 a s●eepe which is in the Neuter g●nder and so all the rest will agree but if it be translated 〈◊〉 a sheepe 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 doubt remaineth still Secondly he saith it might be read pecus which is in the Neuter gender but then saith he Aliud intelligeretur nec servaretur sacramentum Another thing should be understood and so the Sacrament or type would not hold because a lambe best resembleth Christ. Thirdly he saith that it is expressed a male for the more full signification all things being referred to Christ and this answer may be well received because the male signifieth strength and perfection which fitly agree unto Christ. 2. Some other
like sheep Siml The other word nahal signifieth to carry which sheweth both the tender ca●e of God that carrieth his children as the mother doth her infant in her bosome and the weaknes infirmity of the people that had need to be carried yea which is more Christ hath not only carried us but hath carried our sins Fer. 3. Two reasons Moses here useth to encourage the people not to doubt but that the Lord will protect them still because to that end he had redeemed them and beside the Lord is of great power and strength to carry them thorow all difficulties and lets whatsoever Calvin QUEST XIX What is meant here by Gods holy habitation VNto thine holy habitation 1. Some understand here mount Sinai where the tabernacle was first erected Vatab. But they were not planted in mount Sinai there they continued not as Moses saith they should be planted in Gods inheritance vers 17. 2. Some doe referre it unto the tabernacle which Moses saw by the spirit of prophesie should be erected and builded Osiander But the tabernacle was set up in the desert where they dwelt 40. yeeres in tents and boothes they were not there planted and Moses speaketh of a certaine place to the which the Lord would bring them but in the desert the tabernacle had no certaine place but was removed from one station to another 3. Some apply this speech to mount Zur Borrh. But there the tabernacle was not pitched till many yeeres after their comming to the land of Canaan 4. Therefore by the habitation of his holinesse or by his holy habitation the whole land of promise is better understood Iunius So called both because there was the Lords tabernacle where the Lords presence and as it were dwelling was and that was the land promised so often to the Fathers Pellican And the Lord wrought his signes and wonders there evident demonstrations of his presence and it was the place of the incarnation and birth of Christ. Simler QUEST XX. What nations should be afraid of the Israelites Vers. 16. THen the Dukes of Edom shall be amazed 1. Moses here sheweth by the spirit of prophesie that feare shall come upon the nations the Moabites whose feare is evident Num. 22. when Balaak hired Balaam to curse Israel the Cananites as Rahab testifieth Ios● 2.11 When wee heard it our hearts did faint and there remained no more courage in any of us The Edomites also were affraid which was the cause why they denied the Israelites passage thorow their country least they might have surprised it Simler 2. For the manner of their feare they shall be as still as a stone both because as a stone maketh no sound or noise so they shall not once mutter or move the tongue against the Israelites Osiand And as a stone is still without any motion or action so they shall suffer the Israelites to passe over Jordan without any resistance as is evident Iosuah 2. Iun. Obmutescent fient immobiles ut lapis They shall hold their peace and be immoveable as stones Pellican The Septuagint reade 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they shall become as stones that is dead hearted cold as stones through feare as it is said Nabals heart through feare died within him and was as a stone 1. Sam. 25.37 Simler QUEST XXI Why the Lord is said to plant his people Vers. 17. THou shalt plant them in the mountaine of their inheritance 1. This word of planting sheweth both the care which the Lord had of his people as the husbandman with care labour and diligence setteth his plants Simler It signifieth also the firme and sure possession which the people of God should have of that country that they should as plants take deepe rooting there as the Prophet saith in the Psalme 44.2 That the Lord had driven out the Heathen and planted them in Calvin 2. It is called Gods inheritance because it was prepared for his people adopted to be the Lords heires to whom he had given the right and privilege of the first borne before all the people of the world Exod. 4.22 Perer. 3. The whole country of Sion is understood by the mountaine of Gods inheritance because it was a land of hilles and mountaines Deut. 11.11 Iun. And with speciall relation also unto mount Sion which the Lord had chosen for his habitation as Psal. 132.13 The Lord hath chosen Sion and loved to dwell in it saying This is my rest for ever here will I dwell Calvin 4. The Land of promise is here set forth by three names It is called The mountaine of Gods inheritance prepared for the habitation of his people the place Where the Lord would dwell it should be as the palace of the great King the Lord would protect it and watch over it It is also called the Sanctuary of God for to this end had the Lord chosen that land therein to erect a tabernacle and the publike worship of God Cajetan QUEST XXII In what sense the sanctuary of the Iewes was called a firme and sure tabernacle THe place which thou hast made to dwell in 1. The Latine translator here readeth In firm●ssimo tabernaculo In the most sure tabernacle which thou hast made but the word is macon which signifieth a place not naco● that is sirme sure yet this sense and interpretation is true that it is called a sure tabernacle as the next words shew Which thy hands have established And the Lord promised to dwell for ever Psal. 132.14 2. It was then a firme and sure habitation not as some doe take it promised so to be conditionally that if the Jewes had continued in the obedience of Gods Commandements he would have dwelt among them for ever for the tabernacle was not appointed to continue for ever but the Sanctuary and the ceremonies and rites thereof were to give place unto Christ. But it was a firme and sure tabernacle because there the Lord was publikely worshipped at Jerusalem above a thousand yeeres from the first to the last as may thus appeare At the first the Sanctuarie with the Arke was in Shilo for 300. yeeres and more from the first entrance of the Israelites untill the time of Heli the high Priest then the Philistims tooke the Arke where it stayed seven moneths after it was placed in the house of Aminadab where it continued about 50. yeeres till the eight yeere of the reigne of David then it abode three moneths in the house of Ob●d Edom from thence it was removed to the city of David where it remained 42. yeeres till it was carried into Salomons temple where it continued about 420. yeeres from the 11. yeere of Salomons reigne till the captivity of Babylon and after the captivity the temple being reedified endured for the space of about 500. yeeres till 42. yeeres after the death of our Saviour So that from the first setling of the Arke in the temple in the 11. yeere of Salomons reigne untill the dissolution thereof 42. yeeres after
Christ were about 1000. yeeres In respect therefore of this long continuance it may be said to be a firme and sure tabernacle Perer. 3. The tabernacle was a type of Christ and his Church and in that sense was firme and sure Simler And beside we must understand as Lyranus well noteth Sub pr●missione templi materialis coeleste templum Vnder the promise of the materiall temple the heavenly temple of glory And as Pellican observeth Significat statum gloriae beatorum ubi haereditas sola est sanctorum It signifieth the state of glory where is the inheritance onely of the Saints And in this sense it was a most sure tabernacle QUEST XXIII Of the meaning of these words for ever and ever Vers. 18. THe Lord shall reigne for ever and ever 1. The Septuagint reade 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For ever and further or yet which Origen expoundeth thus if he had said In secula seculorum For ever and ever or for all ages although a long time should so be expressed yet it might bee supposed to have an end if not in respect of us yet unto God but now when it is added For ever and further Nullum sensum termini aut finis alicujus relinquit Now there is no place left at all for any end to be imagined 2. But the Latine translator readeth In aeternum ultra For ever and beyond or longer which Lyranus thus expoundeth because the word holam translated for ever sometime is taken for a finite time yet long as for the space of fifty yeeres the other word is added Vt significet aeternitatem to shew that hee meaneth eternity indeed Thostatus thinketh that ultra beyond additur ex abundanti ad significandam magnam affectionem loquentis is added of abundance more than need to signifie the great affection of the speaker because ultra aeternum nihil est beyond eternity nothing is Thomas thus interpreteth In seculum ultra id est ultra quameunque durationem datam For ever and beyond that is beyond any time or continuance that can be given or ultra aeternitatem participatam à creatore God is said to be beyond eternity that is such eternity as is participated unto the creature In regard that God hath eternity in himselfe hee is said to be more eternall than that to the which he giveth eternity So Hugo S. victor Et ultra ●on quantum ad temporis spatium sed quantum ad dignitatem ●d est super omnes For ever and beyond not in respect of the space of time but in respect of dignity because God reigneth above all Rupertus Vltra id quod vider● potes beyond that which thou seest or canst in thy minde conceive or thinke of eternity 3. But the cause of this great variety of opinion and businesse which these Interpreters make to themselves is because they labour still to justifie and uphold the Latine translation whereas the word hedh or ghedh as some reade signifieth not here yet or beyond but it is taken for perpetuity and eternity as the Lord is called Shocen heedh He which inhabiteth eternity Esay 57.15 The words then are better read For ever and ever the first ever may signifie the time of this present world the second the time after this world Non solum quamdi● durat seculum sed etiam post hunc mundum in aeternum regnat Not only while this world lasteth but after this world he shall reigne for ever Pellican And although the Kingdome of God in the externall regiment of that commonwealth of Israel were not eternall the temple long since being destroyed and the policy of that state being dissolved yet in respect of the true Israel of God the Kingdome of Christ hath no end Cajetan And as the Lord had now shewed his power upon the Egyptians in their overthrow and in the preservation of his people so for ever shall the Lord shew himselfe mighty in the protection of his Church and in the confusion of their enemies Ferus Thus the Kingdome of God is opposed against all terrene and earthly Kingdomes which are but temporall and against the vaine Gods of the Egyptians for the Lords Kingdome and not theirs should remaine for ever Simler Borrh. QUEST XXIV Whether this be a part of Moses song Vers. 19. FOr Pharaohs horses c. 1. Some thinke that this is no part of the song of Moses but rather an historicall narration shewing the cause why Moses and the Israelites did celebrate the praise of God both for their glorious deliverance and the overthrow of their enemies Calvin But it seemeth rather to be a part of Moses song containing the summe of the whole partly in the destruction of Gods enemies partly in the preservation of his people Simler And these reasons may shew it to bee part of the song 1. Because otherwise the song would seeme to bee defective because no mention is made before in the song how the Israelites went on dry land thorow the sea 2. It containeth a reason of the last sentence before namely of the power and Kingdome of God that God had given an evident demonstration of his power in the overthrow of Pharaoh Osiander The reason and amplification cannot be divided from the sentence 3. The like song is found Apoc. 12.10 I heard a voice saying now is salvation in heaven and strength and the Kingdome of our God and the power of his Christ for the accuser of our brethren is cast downe As there in that heavenly song the reason cannot bee sequestred from the first clause so neither in this song of Moses QUEST XXV Whether the Israelites went straight over the red sea Vers. 19. IN the middest of the sea Whether the Israelites went thorow the middest of the sea or part thereof there are three opinions 1. Some thinke that they fetcht onely as it were a semicircle in the sea and arrived againe on that side which is toward Egypt so Thostatus But this opinion is confuted before at large quaest 17. in cap. 14. 2. Some thinke that they went just over the middest of the sea from the West side to the East but that is not like because they arrived againe in the wildernesse Etham from whence they went when they entred into the red sea as it is evident Num. 33.8 It is not like that the wildernesse of both sides the sea comming betweene should be counted a● one desert and beare the same name and if they had gone right over they had kept the way to Arabia declining altogether from Palestina And although the word be betoch in the middest that is not so taken as though they precisely should keepe the middest of the sea but the word signifieth as much as within as Gen. 18.26 If I shall finde but fifty persons in the middest of the City that is within the City as Gen. 25.10 Ephron sate in the middest of the sonnes of Heth that is among them So the Israelites went in the middest
them a Law which sheweth the great perversenesse of the people that notwithstanding the Law given them ceased not to sinne against God or it is a reason why the Lord gave them a Law because they there tempted him this latte● sense Calvin preferreth Quod Deus populi malitiam castigaverit à quo tentatu● fuerat The Lord correcteth the malice of the people of whom he was tempted But if it were understood of the people the verbe would have beene put in the plurall number They tempted him as vers 23. When they came to Marah and vers 24. jil●●● hag●am the people murmured where people is in the singular but murmured in the plurall And againe the coherence of the sentence beareth not this sense There he set them that is the people a law and there he proved him the same him then he proved unto the which he set a law 2. Some thinke that Moses in Gods name proved the people Genevens But the same that is said before to set them a law doth also prove them that is God and not Moses 3. Therefore the meaning is that God tried here the faith and obedience of his people and this best agreeth both with the words before going that he which gave a law unto them is said also to prove them and with the words following And he said if thou wilt diligently harken c. As God thus said to his people so hee it was that proved them Simler QUEST XLVI Of the divers kinds of temptations Vers. 25. ANd there he proved him 1. There are three kinds of temptations God tempteth man and man tempteth God and the Devill is the tempter of man 1. God is said to tempt two kind of wayes either directly and immediately by himselfe or mediately by other By himselfe sometime he proveth and tempteth by blessings to see if the people will be thereby perswaded to obedience as he did by giving them Manna Exod. 16.5 and Deut. 8.16 sometime by afflictions to see if they will be faithfull as he proved the Israelites in the desert 40. yeeres Deut. 8.3 The Lord is said to tempt mediately when others are the instruments and agents but God the disposer as hee is said by false Prophets to prove his people whether they love the Lord with all their heart Deut. 13.3 2. Man also is said to tempt God as the Israelites did in the wildernesse provoke the Lord by their tentations 40. yeeres Heb. 3.10 And these tentations are of three sorts 1. By despairing and distrusting in the power and assistance of God as Psalm 78.41 They tempted God and limited the holy one of Israel they did limite and tye God unto meanes that when they saw no ordinary meanes to be provided for they despaired as they spake against God saying Can God prepare a table in the wildernesse Psal. 78.19 2. They are said to tempt and provoke God which presume upon God neglecting or refusing the meanes As our Saviour answered the Devill that would have tempted him to cast himselfe downe from the top of the pinacle and to trust in Gods assistance Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God to have presumed upon Gods helpe where there was no cause or necessity had beene a tempting of God So the Prophet saith that the King of Judah in refusing to aske a signe for the confirmation of their hope in God provoked God Isay 7.13 3. Men also tempt God by their curiosity where as they aske things of God which are not necessary as the King of Judah would not aske a signe because it was to tempt God Isay 7.12 which is generally true that he which beleeveth not Gods word without a signe tempteth him but hee was deceived in the particular for it is no tempting of God to aske a signe where the Lord doth offer it as in that place he did So the Sadduces and Pharisies are said to tempt Christ when they asked a signe for men doe as well tempt God of curiosity as of infidelity of this sort was the temptation of the Israelites When they tempted God in their hearts requiring meat for their lust Psalm 78.14 They did of wantonnesse and curiosity for their bellies as the other curiosity is for the mind lust for flesh when they needed not having Manna to content them 3. The Devill is said to be the tempter of man that is a seducer and leader of them into evill and therefore he is simply without any other addition called the Tempter Matth. 4.4 Here then Augustines distinction may well be received Vnam tentationem intelligimus quae decipit sic Deus non tentat altera● qua probat sic tentamur à Deo Wee understand one temptation which deceiveth so God tempteth none one that proveth so we are tempted of God The temptation of Satan hath a double act one toward God when hee tempteth and urgeth God against the Saints and therefore is called the accuser of the brethren the other toward men and so he is the deceiver of the world Revel 12.9 10. And in these temptations unto evill there is a principall tempter and chiefe egger unto evill which is the Devill and ministring and underserving tempters as the concupiscence of our owne nature So the Apostle saith every man is tempted When he is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and is entised Iam. 1.14 As Bernard also well saith Diabolus proprio baculo nos caedit manus nostras proprio cingulo ligat ut caro quae nobis data est in adjutorium fiat nobis in ruinam The Devill doth beat us with our owne staffe and bindeth our hands with our owne girdle that our flesh which was given for our helpe should bee unto our ruine Bernard meditat cap. 15. QUEST XLVII Of the difference betweene good and evill tentations IT shall not bee amisse here to shew the differences betweene good and evill tentations 1. They differ in the efficient cause God is the author of the one as God tempted Abraham the Devill of the other as hee entred into Iudas heart and tempted him to betray Christ. 2. The end is divers Deu● tentat ut doceat Diabolus ut decipiat God tempteth to teach us the Devill to deceive us August de tempore serm 72. Abrahams temptation sheweth the one and Iobs the other Deus tentat ut cor●●et Diabolus tentat ut subruat God tempteth to crowne us the Devill tempteth to confound us Ambros. lib. 1. d● Abraham cap. 8. 3. The manner also is divers the Devill promiseth faire and performeth foule he maketh himselfe a friend but in the end turneth a foe hee beginneth like a Lambe but endeth like a Lion Vt spirituales defra●det transfigurat se in angelum lucis ut fortes comprimat apparet ag●us To deceive those that are spirituall he transfigureth himselfe into an Angell of light to overcome the strong hee sheweth himselfe as a Lambe Augustin soliloq cap. 17. Hee inveigleth Judas with hope of gaine when hee betrayed
but tbe Sonne and the holy Ghost are of us to be worshipped Ergo the Father Sonne and holy Ghost are that one God Simler So our Saviour saith Yee beleeve in God beleeve also in mee Ioh. 14.1 Christ the Sonne of God is God because he is to be beleeved upon And againe This is life eternall that they know thee to be the only very God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ Ioh. 17.3 God the Father then and Christ his Sonne are the only very God And that the Sonne of God is to be worshipped with the Father the Prophet David sheweth Psal. 2. 11 12. Serve Iehovah in feare c. Kisse the Sonne lest he be angry In the former verse whom hee calleth Sonne here he nameth Jehovah So wee reade in the words of the Prophet Agur Prov 30.4 Who hath established all the ends of the world what is his name and what is his Sonnes name if thou canst tell Further that the Spirit of God is also one God with the Father and Sonne to be worshipped and glorified beside plentifull evidence out of the new Testament which shall not need to be inserted here because we are in hand with the law of the old Testament sufficient testimony may be taken from the law and Prophets as Gen. 1.1 The Spirit of God moved upon the waters But God only created the world So likewise the renovation of the heart is onely the worke of God because it is a new creation as David saith Create in me a new heart Psal. 50.10 but this is also the worke of the Spirit Take not thine holy Spirit from me ibid. vers 11. Likewise it is only Gods worke to teach us his will and to bring us to life eternall but this is wrought by the Spirit Psal. 143.10 Teach mee to doe thy will for thou art my God le● thy good Spirit lead me unto the land of righteousnesse Ambrose very fitly proveth the Spirit to be God by that place Iudg. 14.5 where it is said That the Spirit of the Lord came upon Sampson But Iud. 16.20 after his lockes were polled it is also said Hee knew not that the Lord was departed from him Hee which came upon him before was the same that departed from him now there called the Spirit of the Lord and here the Lord and Jehovah therefore the holy Spirit is Lord and Jehovah Ambros. lib. 2. de Spirit cap. 2. Dam●scen doth thus excellently prove the Trinity by this demonstration Vnus Deus non sine Verb● est God being but one is never without the Word but this Word hee hath in himselfe begotten of his owne substance not like unto our word which hath no substance but vanisheth in the aire because the condition of our nature is temporall But like as our word proceeding from the mind neque per totum menti idem est c. is neither the same with the mind nor yet altogether divers from it So is the Sonne unto the Father which is his Word the same in substance but divers in subsistence Oportet autem Verbum Spiritum habere nam verbum nostrum nequaquam spiritus est expers But the Word also must have a Spirit for neither is our word without a spirit but here is the difference our spirit is not of the same substance with us but the drawing in of the aire for wee are of a compound nature but the Spirit of the Word is of the same substance with the Word To this effect Damascen lib. 1. de fide orthodox cap. 6.7 And in the same place he useth another demonstration Impossible est Deum destitutum esse nativae foecunditatis c. It is impossible that God should bee destitute of naturall fecundity The Lord therefore must needs beget Sed ex propri● substantia generat but he begetteth out of his owne substance and that from all eternity for if the Sonne had not beene from the beginning coexistent with him of whom hee was begotten we shall bring in a change of his substance Nam cùm non esset Pater postea factus est Pater for so when he was yet no Father he afterward should become a Father c. Damascen ibid. Thus out of the first Commandement both the unity of the Godhead and the Trinity is concluded as Bernard thus elegantly inferreth Quid sibi vult iste ut ita loquar ●ine numero numerus si tria quomodo non numerus si unum ubi numerus What meaneth this number without a number if there be three how can there be but a number if one where is the number But here I have what I may number and what I may not number there is one substance and three persons c. Bernard lib. de considera● Thus by the unity of nature the errour of the Gentiles is abolished and by the joyning of the Word and the Spirit to the Father the Jewish opinion is overthrowne Et ex utraque secta nobis accedit utilitas ex I●daica opinione naturae unitas ex Gentilitia sola personarum discretio So by either sect wee receive some profit by the Iewes opinion the unity of nature by the Gentiles the discerning and difference of the persons only Damasc. ibid. Transgressors then of this Commandement concerning the unity of the Deity and Trinity of the persons are 1. They which affirme and hold one God but deny the three persons as the Montanists and Marcellians in times past and the Turkes and Jewes now 2. They which hold not the distinction of three persons only but the division also of substance as the Tritheists The Arrians and Eunomians are of the same sect qui filium Deum confitentur sed conditum asseverant which confesse the Sonne to bee God but yet affirme him to be made So they bring in another God contrary to this precept Thou shalt have no other Gods c. Theodoret. 3. They which brought in a quaternian of persons as Anastasius the Emperour and the Apollinarians 4. They also which affirme the three persons to be but three names given unto God in Scripture and therefore they say that the Father became man and suffered for us which are therefore called Patripassians 3. Places of Confutation 1. Confut. That justifying faith is not contained or commanded in the law 1. BUt although to beleeve in the Trinity be commanded in the first precept to adore and worship the Father Sonne and holy Ghost as the only God yet it followeth not that justifying faith which properly belongeth to the Gospell whereby we apprehend Christ and his merits should be contained and included in the law therefore we mislike that assertion of Bellarmine concurring therein with other Romanists That the Gospell differeth from the law as a perfect thing from an imperfect and that the Gospell is contained and included in the law as the tree in the seed Bellarm. de justif lib. 4. cap. 4. Some Protestants also come somewhat neere this opinion as Marbachius saith that they
and set apart for the service of God In quantum speciale tempus determinatur in signum creationis in that a speciall time is determined in signe of the creation it is ceremoniall Thom. And in this manner the Jewes onely kept the Sabbath upon the seventh day and no other nations beside and therefore Seneca derided the Jewes as though they did Septimam partem ●tatis inutiliter amittere Lose the seventh part of their age without any profit because they rested every seventh day unto the Lord and Ovid calleth the Jew virum septimum the seventh man because hee kept the seventh day Tostat. QUEST V. To observe one day of seven unto the Lord is Morall BUt this must be added further that the prescribing of some certaine day for the service of God is not ceremoniall as Thomas before seemeth to affirme but the speciall limitation of the seventh day the prescription and taxation of which day precisely is now abrogated yet so as that still one day of seven must be kept still This then may be safely affirmed that to keepe one day of seven holy unto the Lord is morall and not ceremoniall and although the precise rest of the seventh day which was enjoyned the Jewes be now abrogated by the libertie of the Gospell because it was a type of our rest in Christ and the bodie being come the shadow ceaseth yet Christians are bound to observe one day of seven for the reason annexed to this Commandement taken from the example of God which rested on the seventh day serveth not onely for the ceremonie of the seventh day but is also morall to put us in minde of the creation of the world made in six dayes and beside in regard of the benefit of the creatures which after six dayes labour are to rest the seventh the rule of the Creator in this morall equitie is to be followed not to exceed that time in affording rest unto the creature that laboureth Novit Dominus mensuram virium creaturae for God best knoweth the measure of the strength of the creature Lippom. and hath appointed the time of rest for the same accordingly Yet somewhat more fully to explaine this matter there are some things which are simply morall and simply ceremoniall some things are of a mixt kinde as being partly morall partly ceremoniall simply morall are those things which are grounded upon the judgement of naturall reason as to appoint some time for the service of God is simply morall as is shewed before all nations through the world agree herein that a time must be set apart for the Lord but precisely to appoint the seventh day more than any other of the weeke is simply ceremoniall Quia non habet fundamentum à ratione sed à sola voluntate condentis legem c. Because it is not founded upon reason but upon the will of the law maker Tostat. But to appoint one day of seven and that day wholly for the space of 24. houres to consecrate unto Gods service and therein to abstaine from all kinde of works these things are not purely or simply ceremoniall but partly morall as grounded upon the judgement of reason though not totally and wholly for the first if above one day in seven should be kept perpetually holy gravamen esset laborantibus toties vacare it would bee burdensome to those that labour to rest so often and if but one day in a fortnight or moneth should be appointed Oblivisceremur Dei per desuetudinem cultus ipsius By discontinuing of the worship of God we should grow to be forgetfull of him it standeth therefore with reason that one day of seven should be celebrated to the Lord. Likewise that the whole day should be consecrated to that end though there be somewhat ceremoniall in it yet it is grounded also upon reason because the service of God requireth great attention Et non est rationabile opus Dei facere negligenter And it is not reasonable to doe the worke of God negligently for if but two or three houres in the day were appointed all could not so well prepare themselves for Gods service as now the whole day being set apart And for the third the cessation or resting from all kind of worke it hath this reason because the minde being occupied in other affaires could not be so free for God and therefore abstinence from all servile works is enjoyned Vt sic liberum esset nos tota die vacare Deo si vellemus That so it might bee free for us to acted upon God the whole day if wee would Now then those things which in the Sabbath were meerely ceremoniall are abolished but the other remaine which are not purely and simply ceremoniall Tostat. quaest 12. QUEST VI. What things in the Sabbath were ceremoniall what morall NOw then it may appeare what things in the Sabbath were ceremoniall what morall what mysticall 1. These things in the Jewish observation of the Sabbath were ceremoniall 1. The prescript of the day seventh day 2. The manner of keeping it with sacrifices oblations and other rites 3. The strict prohibition of all kinde of works even concerning their meat as in gathering and preparing of Manna Exod. 16. yea it was not lawfull upon that day to kindle a fire Exod. 35.3 and that under paine of death as he that gathered sticks was stoned Numb 15. 4. The Sabbath was a shadow of our spirituall rest in Christ and of Christs rest in the grave In all these respects was the Sabbath ceremoniall and bindeth us not now 2. These things also in the Sabbath are morall and perpetuall 1. The rest and relaxation of the creatures from their ordinary labour which was not the chiefe and principall but accidentalis finis the accidentall end of keeping the Sabbath that they might better attend upon the service of God Calvin 2. The Sabbath was instituted specially for the service of God for the remembrance of his benefits the setting forth of his praise the meditating upon his works as the creation of the world the redemption the resurrection of Christ. Simler 3. Conservatio Ecclesiastici ministerii The conservation of the Ecclesiasticall ministry was not the least or last end of the Sabbath that there should be in the Church ordained and so preserved Pastors and Doctors who should divide the word of God aright instruct the people and exhort them to repentance Bastingius Vrsinus 3. The Sabbath also as it was unto the Israelites typicall and ceremoniall in shadowing forth first Christs rest in the grave and our spirituall rest in him Marbach so now it is mysticall in shewing our spirituall rest and cessation from the works of sinne as the Prophet applieth it Isai. 58.14 teaching us how to keepe the Sabbath in not doing our owne wayes nor seeking our owne will it is also Symbolicall in being a pledge unto us of our everlasting rest in the Kingdome of God as the Apostle sheweth Heb. 4.9 There remaineth then a rest
suffring of them to serve six yeeres in regard of their necessity yet if they should hold them in perpetuall servitude they should usurpe upon the Lords right seeing they were his servants 2. Another reason is taken from the manner and condition of their service Deut. 15.18 Hee hath served six yeeres which is the double worth of an hired servant which is so said either because the service of six yeeres is double to the time of hired servants who used to covenant from three yeeres to three yeeres Vatab. Or rather because their workes were more laborious than were the hired servants Iun. For hee was to doe his worke for the which he was hired and no more but the other when he had done in his businesse in the field came home and ministred to his master first before hee did ea● himselfe Luk. 17.10 And they only served not their master by day but by night they kept their flockes in the field as is evident in the example of Iacob Gen. 31.40 Simler 3. A third reason is taken from a promise of blessing The Lord thy God shall blesse thee in all that thou doest Deut. 15.18 Simler 3. Though this Law concerning the freedome of servants did specially concerne the policy of the Jewes and so belongeth not unto us for now servants are not bought and sold among Christian● in the Romane Empire but only hired Osiander Yet the equity of this Law doth binde us that all they which have others in subjection under them should use their authority moderately and in mercy Galas 4. The word here used ch●pshi interpreted free signifieth also solitarie because servants were not solitary or alone by themselves in the house but attended on their masters they which were free were solitary and by themselves giving no attendance upon any Oleaster QUEST XIII Why the space of six yeeres is limited for their service BUt concerning the limiting of the space of six yeeres for service and the appointing of the seventh for liberty what might be the reason thereof thus it is diversly scanned 1. Some doe thus moralize it by six yeeres they understand the perfection of the active life because in six dayes the Lord made the world hee that will come unto contemplation must first approve himselfe in action Lyr●n 2. Isid●re maketh this application in sex atatibus hujus s●culi servientes c. when wee have served the six ages of this world in the seventh which is the eternall Sabbath we shall be free 3. But I preferre rather Rupertus conjecture that this privilege of going out free in the seventh yeere and serving six was proper to the Hebrewes Quia videlicet pater ●orum Iacob sex annis pro gregibus Laban servivit c. Because Iacob their father served six yeeres for Labans flockes and went out free in the seventh chusing rather to sojourne with his fathers Abraham and Isaack than to serve among his kindred for more profit therefore Haec ingenuit as patris illam posteris apud Dominum thesaurizavit This ingenuous minde of their father did treasure up this privilege before the Lord for his posterity that none should be compelled to serve above six yeeres Rupert lib. 3. in Exod. cap. 35. 4. But the best reason of all is because as the Lord had from the beginning given them a Sabbath of dayes which was the seventh day of rest so also he gave them a Sabbath of yeeres that every seventh yeere the land should rest and servants should rest from their labours and debters from their creditors and they had also a Sabbath of seven times seven yeeres prescribed that when they had counted seven times seven yeeres then the fiftieth yeere should be the great yeere of remission the yeere of Jubile which was a lively figure of that acceptable time of generall remission at the comming of the Messiah QUEST XIV How the servant is said to come in with his body and to goe out with his body Vers. 3. IF he came himselfe alone 1. Some read If he came with his garment he shall goe out with his garment Hierom. Lyran. But the word is guph which signifieth a body not gaph a wing of a garment the true reading therefore is If he came with his body that is alone without either the body of his wife or children Oleaster And so read both the Chalde and Septuagint If he entred alone he shall go out alone 2. But this case is excepted that if he in the time of service should marry a free woman and not a maid servant given him by his master in this case the free woman should not lose her freedome but should goe out with her husband Tostat. qu. 7. 3. And beside as if he brought a wife with him he went out with his wife so by the like reason if he had children before they should be free likewise Iun. Nay if he should g●t children during his service by a wife married before his service those children also should ●oe out with him and not remaine with his master partus sequitur 〈◊〉 the childe followeth the condition of the mother Tostat. quaest 6. 4. And of the former reading If he come in with his body rather than with his garment these two reasons are given 1. Because it is not like that the same garment with the which he entred could continue six yeeres Pallican 2. And the servant was not to bee sent out with his garment alone but with a liberall reward of sh●epe corne and wine Deut. 15.14 Simler 3. Beside the next clause confirmeth this reading but If he were married c. so to come in alone is to come without a wife or children Iun. QUEST XV. What manner of wife the master was to give to his servant Vers. 4. IF his master have given him a wife 1. Some indifferently understand any maid servant whether a stranger or an Hebrewesse and that such wife and her children shall be her masters till the time of servitude come out Genevens But the master had no power to give an Hebrewesse maid to his servant to wife but he must either take her himselfe or give her to his sonne vers 7 8. Piscat Tostat. It is understood therefore of such maid servants as were of other nations Osiana 2. But it seemeth that the master could not give a Cananitish woman to his servant to wife for they are forbidden to contract marriages with them Deut. 7.4 Tostat. quaest 7. Neither had the master power to give any free woman to his servant for the master was to give onely his owne but a free woman was none of his possession Tostat. 5. This must be understood if the servant will take a wife for otherwise he was not to be compelled for if there were not a free consent it is held to be no marriage and the Master could no more compell the servant to lye with a maid against his will to get children for his masters profit than to force his maid to
they did eat and drinke they onely escaped not death but all other kinde of punishment whatsoever Cajetan And this their health is expressed by these actions of life as Hagar argueth her life by another action of life Gen. 16.13 I have seene after him that seeth Iun. So also Gallas Simler 7. Before they were sprinkled with bloud Gods hand was in some sort upon them in terrifying them Whosoever touched the mountaine should die But now after their sprinkling they are cheared and refreshed and are not forbidden the sight of God which signifieth that we onely have accesse unto God by the bloud of Christ Rupertus Ferus QUEST XXV Whether this were a new commandement or the other mentioned vers 1 2. repeated Vers. 12. ANd the Lord said unto Moses c. 1. Some thinke that this is the same commandement repeated which was given unto Moses before vers 1 2. Iun. Tostatus addeth further that when the Lord said to Moses vers 2. Moses himselfe alone shall come neere to the Lord that Moses then 〈◊〉 know that he should goe up to receive the Tables for to what end should Moses have gone forth of the campe accompanied with Aaron and the rest if it had not beene to some end qu. 15. Contra. Yes it was sufficient that God called Moses and bade him come up into the mount though he at the same time had not shewed the end of his comming as chap. 19.24 when God bade him come up the cause is not shewed why he was called the Commandements of God are simplie to be obeyed though it please not the Lord alwayes to shew a reason thereof 2. Wherefore I thinke rather that this was a divers commandement from the former and given him at a divers time Piscator Osiander 1. Cajetane reason is Mandat non solùm ascendere in montem sed morari in eo He biddeth him not onely to come up into the mountaine but to abide there c. which was not said to him before 2. Calvin addeth further that after Moses with his companie were gone up and had seene this vision Altius evehitur Moses c. ut cognoscerent c. Moses is carried up higher that they should know that Moses would have gone no further but at Gods commandement c. It was requisite therefore that Moses should bee called againe and sequestred from the rest that he might not bee thought to have presumed without a warrant 3. Severus maketh a mysterie of it that Moses being gone up with Aaron and the rest Iterum a●di●● heareth againe come up And by these two ascendings hee understandeth the two senses of the law the literall and spirituall 4. Ferus maketh this application of it Hic jam tertio vocatur Moses in montem c. Moses is the third time called into the mount to shew that he which is set over the people of God ought often to ascend in prayer 5. Rupertus also understandeth here two ascendings using this reason It is said before vers 9. that Moses and Aaron with the rest ascended but not that they ascended unto the Lord as here the Lord saith Come up to me c. So also Hugo de S. Victor Come up to me which must be so understood that De colle in quo erat ad altiora montis proced●ret c. From the hill where he was hee should proceed higher into the mountaine QUEST XXVI What is signified by Moses going up to the mountaine COme up to me into the mountaine 1. Beda draweth this place unto a mysticall sense Moses is called up to the mountaine Vt ex altitudine loci colligat quàm excelsa sit lex That by the height of the place he should gather how high and removed from humane capacitie the law was which he was to receive As our blessed Saviour in the Gospell called his Apostles into the mountaine Matth. 5. and after his resurrection he also appeared in the mountaine when he gave commission to his Apostles to goe and preach the Gospell to all the world but here is the difference because the law which Moses was to receive was but given unto one people therefore Moses onely was called up but the Gospell being appointed to be preached to all the world Christ called all his Apostles to him up into the mountaine 2. Rupertus maketh this ascending up of Moses into the mount a figure of Christs ascending up unto God Non in montem terrenum sed in ipsum coelum Not into an earthly mountaine but into heaven to receive not the killing letter but the quickening Spirit as the Apostle saith He ascended up on high led captivitie captive and gave gifts unto men c. 3. Ferus doth thus moralize it that he which will behold God and give himselfe to contemplation must terrena haec inferiora despicere c. despise these inferiour and terrene things as Moses leaving the campe below ascended up into the mount QUEST XXVII Of the tables of stone whereof they were made and wherefore given Vers. 12. I Will give thee tables of stone 1. The fabulous Jewes imagine that these tables of the law were made of the Saphire a pretious stone Lyran. and that when Moses had broken them comming downe from the mountaine he gathered up the fragments and broken peeces and sold them whereby he was greatly enriched Thus these blinde Jewes are not ashamed to blemish their great Prophet Moses with the note of covetousnesse from the which he was most free Tostat. quaest 16. 2. As frivolous is that other conceit because they are said to be of stone that the tables were but one stone which sometimes seemed but one sometime two for in that they are called tables it sheweth they were more than one of one stone they might bee both that is of one kinde of stone and yet the tables were two 3. These tables of stone were created of God for that speciall use as Exod. 32.16 they are said to be the worke of God it is not improbable that they were noviter creata created of God anew as Tostatus but it is not like that they were written by the Angell which Tostatus thinketh to have spoken in Gods person in the mount for as God prepared the tables themselves so hee caused the writing they were the worke of God for the matter and the writing of God for the manner Exod. 33.16 4. All the lawes which God gave his people were not there written but onely the morall precepts the rest Moses writ sustained in the dayes of his flesh Pelarg. 2. This fast was kept by Moses and the like by 〈…〉 Christi idoneum haberet 〈…〉 That the humanitie of Christ might have a sufficient testimonie for unlesse Moses and Helias had fasted fortie dayes some might have doubted of the humanitie of Christ in holding out so miraculous a fast So Rupertus and Ferus following him 3. And these fasted to this end ut tanto miraculo homines mali c. that men being
it must be either of cleane beasts or uncleane but the uncleane nor ●●y part thereof were not to bee brought into the Tabernacle The cleane beasts were of two sorts either such which they might eat of but not sacrifice as the Hart the Rocbuck and the like but these being uncleane in respect of any religious use because they were not to be sacrificed no part thereof was to be brought into the Tabernacle And as for the cleane beasts which might ●e sacrificed the fat thereof was to be burned upon the Altar Tostat. qu. 6. 2. These spices were of two sorts some were to be tempered and incorporate together to make a soft and liquid ointment and some to be beaten to powder to make a sweet perfume they were to bring them not mixed or compounded but in their simple nature for neither did they know how to compound them but Moses by Gods direction shewed after how they should be made and beside if they had brought the ointment and perfume ready compounded there had beene danger lest they should have prophaned it for their private uses which is straitly forbidden chap. 30. Tostat. qu. 8. QUEST XIV Of the mysticall and morall application of these divers oblations COncerning the spirituall application and end of these divers oblations 1. Beda doth mystically interpret them by the gold he understandeth a sincere faith more precious than gold by silver the confession of faith by the blew or silke colour the lifting up of our hearts to heaven by the purple the sufferings and passions which are endured for the truth by the double scarlet the two fold love of God and our neighbours by the silke the chastity of the flesh by the goats heire whereof they made sackcloth repentance 2. But Rupertus application is more fit and lesse curious by these divers oblations he understandeth the divers gifts which God hath bestowed upon his Church As some he gave to be Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists Haec grandia dona aurum argentum sunt c. These great gifts are as the gold silver and precious stones whereby the spirituall Temple is built 3. Likewise Procopius maketh this morall use that as here the Lord accepteth not only the gold and silver sed neque la●aem caprinam aspernatur c. so neither doth he despise even the goats haire if it be offered with a franke mind c. So God refuseth not the smallest and meanest gifts which are offered unto him in faith as our blessed Saviour commended the devotion of the poore widow that threw two mites into the treasury QUEST XV. Of the signification of the Sanctuary and wherefore it was ordained Vers. 8. ALso they shall make me a Sanctuarie 1. Some Hebrew Rabbines as R. Abraham Ab. Ezra doe very curiously by the Tabernacle decipher the three worlds the Intellectuall world where is the seat of God with his Angels for so over the Arke was Gods mercy seat and the Cherubims stretching their wings over it represented the Angels and blessed Spirits And the Materiall world as they would have the blew covering to signifie heaven the vaile the clouds the seven lampes the seven planets by the fire on the Altar and the water in the laver they understand the element of fire and water So the third world which is called the little world which is within man they would have represented by this Tabernacle as in the Arke there were two tables so there is in mans minde understanding and reason as there were divers instruments in the Tabernacle for divers purposes so in man there are divers organicall parts for the naturall functions and operations And in this curious manner the Rabbines goe on pleasing themselves in their owne fansies whereas the Lord ordained not his Tabernacle for any such end or purpose but onely that they might have a place where to professe the worship of God that he might dwell among them and shew them comfortable signes of his presence in hearing their prayers and granting their requests 2. Yea these Rabbines to their curiosity adde impiety for they thinke that God ordained the Tabernacle and the instruments of divers figures and divers mettals Vt diversae virtutes à coelestibus influxae recipiantur c. That thereby divers vertues should have their influence from the celestiall bodies and to this end they say the Temple was afterward built at Jerusalem because of some supernaturall influence in that place more than in others In which Rabbinicall assertion Ab. Ezra bewrayeth 1. Both impiety making God as an Inchanter or Sorcerer working by figures and mettals as Magicians in their inchantments observe such things whereas the Lord by his Law condemneth all such superstitions 2. As also absurdity tying the Lords supernaturall working to certaine places and instruments Gods naturall operation indeed is exercised by such naturall subordinate meanes as he hath appointed but his supernaturall worke is not limited to places nor meanes 3. Likewise an impossibility followeth in making corporall and materiall things the instruments to convey spirituall graces whereas spirituall things are not derived but by spirituall meanes Tostat. qu. 9. 3. But the true ends wherefore the Sanctuary was ordained where these First the Historicall that seeing God had made the Israelites a peculiar people to himselfe that they might have a peculiar kinde of worship from all other nations therefore God appointeth a certaine place with certaine persons and Ministers by whom certaine rites and ceremonies should be performed whereby he would be worshipped with more reverence sanctity and purity than the Gentiles worshipped their gods Tostat. qu. 9. Secondly for the mysticall end Beda saith that this earthly Tabernacle representeth the heavenly unto the similitude whereof we should conforme our selves in earth Si ad Angelorum in coelis consortia tendimus debemus vitam eorum in terris c. imitari If we tend to enjoy the company of Angels in heaven we should imitate their life in earth The Tabernacle also signifieth Christ by whom God is worshipped and in whom God doth manifest himselfe unto us Simler Thirdly every faithfull man is this Temple of God as the Apostle applieth it Ye are the temple of the living God as God hath said I will dwell among them and walke there Whereupon Bernard maketh this morall application Et nos mundemus conscientiam nostram c. And let us purge our conscience that when the Lord commeth paratam in nobis inveniat mansionem he may finde in us a mansion prepared QUEST XVI How the Lord is said to dwell in the Sanctuary Vers. 8. THat I may dwell among them 1. God hath three kinde of temples Habitat principaliter in seipso c. He dwelleth principally in himselfe because he onely comprehendeth himselfe as Apocal. 21.22 The Lord God almightie and the Lamb are the temple of the celestiall Ierusalem Habitat Deus in do●● sacrata c. God also dwelleth in his sacred house by that spirituall worship which is
quantity but in vertue and power 5. 〈…〉 maketh this observation that Cherubim with van alwayes signifieth the creature but without van the worke it selfe of Cherubims But this observation doth not alwayes hold for in this place cherub 〈◊〉 the singular number is expressed with van though Cherubim in the plurall be written without is 〈…〉 they both in this place doe signifie the worke of the Cherubims 6. Therefore the best and 〈◊〉 sense of this word is to signifie a beautifull picture and is metaphorically translated from externall and materiall things to spirituall because the Angels are beautified and adorned with many excellent 〈…〉 In which sense the King of Tyrus in respect of his glorious state is called the annointed Cherub Ezech. 28.14 QUEST XXV What forme and fashion these Cherubims were of COncerning the forme and fashion of these Cherubims there are divers opinions 1. Iosephus thinketh they had the similitude of certain birds which are not knowne unto us being found only in the remote parts of the world and the reason of his opinion may be this lest if they had beene after the similitude of any knowne thing it might have ministred occasion of idolatry But Iosephus is convinced by that which is written Gen. 3. that the Cherubims were see to keepe the way to Paradise they were not fowles or other winged beasts but Angels which kept that way neither was there here any feare of idolatry because these Cherubims were not in the open view and sight of the people but in the most holy place whither none had accesse but only the high 〈◊〉 and that once in the yeere 2. R. Abraham Ab. Ezra thinketh that the Cherubims doe signifie any shape either of bird beast or man as Ezech. 1. the beasts which appeared having the face of an Eagle a Lion a Bullock a Man are chap. 10. called Cherubims Contra. The Prophet calleth them Cherubims not in respect of that forme and shape wherein they appeared but because he knew th●m to be Angels and blessed spirits that so appeared therefore he giveth the 〈◊〉 name to them all and there their forme and shape is expressed but when they are called Cherubims without any determination of their forme they are alwayes held to have appeared in humane shape Tostat. qu. 〈◊〉 3. Oleaster leaveth not this matter indifferent as Ab. Ezra but thinketh that these Cherubims had rather formam animalium the sonne of beasts such as Ezechiel describeth than of men because it is no where expressed that the Cherubims had the shape of men as there they are described to have the faces of beasts and beside if they had beene made like men with hands that would have hindered the stretching out of their wings Contra. 1. As though the Cherubims in Ezechiel are not as well said to have had the face of a man as of other creatures there expressed 2. To take away the other doubt and difficulty we need not imagine with Montanus who se●●eth forth the Cherubs with wings only without hands for that were an imperfect forme to give them the shape of a man without hands and the Cherubs described Ezech. 1 8. had 〈◊〉 which came under their wings but the Cherubs might very well be described with stretching out wings notwithstanding their hands which they either touched the mercy seat with as some thinke 〈◊〉 her held them upright as praysing God as R. Salomon 4. Montanus saith 〈…〉 That these Cherubs were divers in the shape of male and female But that is not like 〈◊〉 they were made to represent the Angels and blessed Spirits where is no diversity of sex of male or female 5. The opinion than of R. Salomon is the ●●st that the Cherubs were pictured and portraited in humane shape in the forme of young men because so the Angels used to appeare in times past as to Abraham and Lot and they 〈…〉 the Angeli were sent from heaven they are said to flie as birds 〈…〉 the ground Tostat. And what shape the Cherubims were of 〈…〉 be gathered by the description 〈◊〉 those which Salomon made which stood upright on their feet 2 Chron. 3. ●3 〈…〉 understood of any other than the humane shape Pelarg. Ribera They were pictured with wings and not naked as Montanus describeth them but clothed and apparelled because it is forbidd●n● chap. 20. 〈…〉 should be discovered at Gods Altar Iunius QUEST XXVI 〈…〉 Cherubim 〈◊〉 Seraphim BUt it will here 〈…〉 these are called Cherubim rather then Seraphim which is another name gi●en 〈◊〉 Angels 〈…〉 1. Some were of opinion that they might indifferently be called either Cherubim or Seraphim but Hierom confuteth them writing 〈…〉 say in their prayers Thou which sittest 〈…〉 no where used in Scripture but only 〈…〉 2. Others answer that the Seraphim● 〈…〉 which shall be revealed in the next world the Cherubims ad ministerium for the ministery and service of God and therefore the Cherubims are here pictured rather than the Seraphims Contra. 1. But the most holy place where these Cherubims were set was made to represent Gods glory therefore the Cherubim served here to set forth Gods glory 2. The Seraphims also were ministring Spirits as well as the Cherubims as they are set forth Isay 6. 3. Neither is it a sufficient answer to say that the Seraphims appeared with six wings a peece Isay 6. and these had but two they were therefore Cherubims not Seraphims for the Cherubs that here were described but with two wings Ezach 1.6 were said to have foure So that if that were a good reason these should neither be called Cherubims Therefore they are not so called or distinguished in respect of their more or fewer wings for the Angels being Spirits have neither wings nor any other visible shape of themselves but they are described and called diversly according to those severall offices and imployments wherein it pleaseth God to use them 4. Ribera maketh this to be the reason why God is said to fit upon the Cherubims which word signifieth multitude of knowledge to shew that God farre exceedeth the wisdome and knowledge even of those excellent Spirits and therefore he is said to sit above the Cherubims But beside that this signification of the word Cherub hath no ground as is before shewed God in this sense might as well be said to fit betweene the Seraphim which signifieth burning as fire for the Lord in brightnesse and in fiery justice exceedeth the Angels 5. This reason then may rather be yeelded Visiones ad rerum s●●arum argumenta accommodanda sunt Visions must be applied unto the argument and scope of the things themselves Iun. in Isai. 6.2 Now because Seraphim is a name given to the Angels in respect of their fiery and purging zeale they are so called when they are sent to purge and cleanse the world in being ministers of Gods judgements but Cherubim being a title of love and favour being taken for a beautifull and lovely picture this
resemblance 3. Arias Montanus in his description maketh them to be plaine corners comming out straight without any turning upward or downeward But the contrary appeareth Ezech. 43.16 where it is said the homes shall goe upward 4. Therefore according to the signification of the word erant figurae forte corun they had the proportion it is like of an horne Cajetane which were not only for ornament but for divers uses 1. Unto these hornes they used to binde their sacrifices Psalm 118.27 2. The hornes of the Altar were a sanctuary to them which laid hold of them as is evident in Ioabs practice 1 King 2. P●larg Ma●bach 3. Oleaster also thinketh that they served to hold up the grate which hung within the Altar upon the foure hornes by rings and chaines 4. They also signified that God was the strength of Israel as David calleth him the horne of his salvation 1 Sam. 22.3 Gallas 5. And upon these foure hornes or corners did they use to sprinkle the bloud of the sacrifices whereby was shadowed forth the bloud of Christ that should by faith be sprinkled into the foure corners of the world Simler 6. Tostatus imagineth another use of these hornes to hang the brasen instruments and vessels upon which were of foure sorts as it followeth in the next verse quast 4. But he is deceived in following the vulgar Latine there were five severall kindes of instruments and not foure only QUEST VI. Of the vessels and instruments belonging to the Altar Vers. 3. THou shalt make his ashpans c. 1. The first word sir signifieth ollam or lebetem a great pot or caldron a great vessell made to receive such things as were put into it whether they were drie or liquid They had pots and caldrons beside to seeth the flesh of the sacrifices in but these were not to that end they served only to receive the ashes as it is expressed in the text Tostatus thinketh that the vessels wherein the flesh of the peace offerings was sod were not consecrated vessels but such as they provided which brought the sacrifice to whom it belonged to seeth the flesh and then to give the Priest his due as may be gathered 1 Sam. 2.13 14. where the Priests boy came to him that boiled the flesh and thrust in his fleshhooke and tooke up that which came next to hand And beside Levit. 2.28 it is thus prescribed that the earthen pot wherein the flesh of the sinne offering was sodden should be broken if it were a brasen pot it should be scoured but if they had beene consecrate vessels they were holy already they needed not to be so purged But herein Tostatus is deceived he maketh all the offerings alike whereas that Law in Leviticus is concerning the sinne offering which was so holy that even the Priest was to wash his ministring garments if any of the sinne offering dropped upon it even in the holy place therefore the vessels though otherwise consecrate after they had touched the sinne offering were to be cleansed as well as the Priests consecrate garments therefore it is like that there were other peculiar vessels appointed for the seething and dressing of the flesh of the sacrifices in the court of the Tabernacle though these here expressed served only for the Altar 2. The next instrument is jaghim which some interpret scopas beasomes as Vatab. Pag●in Genevens But seeing all these were made of brasse it is not like they were beasomes some take them for firetongs Lat. Tostat. But they were an instrument quo cineres removebantur wherewith the ashes were removed Oleaster They were then palae the fire-shovels which tooke the ashes from the Altar Iun. Montan. Osiander They are called jaghim of jaghah to remove or take away as Isai. 28.17 The haile shall sweepe away or take away the vaine confidence 3. The third sort is misreketh which commeth of zarak to sprinkle they were not to sprinkle with as Montanus translateth them aspersoria the sprinkles being made of brasse neither to carry the ashes Osiander For to that end were the two former instruments but they were pelves sparsoria the sprinkling basons which held the bloud Vatab. Pelves ad fundendum sanguinem basons to powre out the bloud Hugo de S. Victor So Iunius reades crateras bowles goblets This third kinde is omitted by the Latine Translator 4. The fourth kinde is mazleg which some take to be a fire-forke which served lignis componendis to couch the wood upon the fire Osiander The most take it for a fleshhooke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. fuscinula Iun an hooke which served to pull the flesh out of the pot as 1 Sam. 2.12 Tostat. Oleaster It is like they had fleshhookes to that purpose but this being appointed for the Altar served to this end Quibus carbones partes victimarum componebantur wherewith the coales and parts of the sacrifices were laid in order Pelarg. 5. The last word is machta which some translate forcipes tongs Iun. Montanus But there is another word used for tongs Isa. 6.6 melekachaim of lakach to take some take them for censers Chal. Genev. as the word is sometime used Numb 16.12 But the censers were no instruments belonging to the brasen Altar they were therefore certaine fire-pans which they kept the fire in of chatah to take or receive as Isai. 30.14 There is not a sheard found to take fire from the hearth there the same word is used The use of these fire-pans was ad portandas prunas to carry the coales Hugo de S. Victor To transport them to the Altar of incense Cajetan Ad fovendum ignem and to keepe sire in when they covered the Altar Osiander Marbach QUEST VII Whether all the instruments were of brasse Vers. 3. THou shalt make all the instruments thereof of brasse 1. Cajetane thinketh that all the instruments fit for the service of the Altar are not here named and therefore this generall clause is added But it is evident chap. 38.3 that those five sorts were all the instruments that belonged to the Altar It will be objected that the tongs which the Angell tooke a coale with from the Altar are not here mentioned It may be answered that although they be not here expressed in that very word yet the fire forkes here mentioned which some call sorcipes firetongs were to that use and under that name they may be comprehended or under the last as Iun. 2. Iosephus thinketh that all these instruments were of gold But therein he evidently doth contradict the text which saith Thou shalt make all the instruments of brasse 3. It is evident then that nihil ex ferro admittitur nothing is made of iron Cajetan It will be demanded then wherefore as well the iron as brasse which they tooke in the spoile of Jericho Iosh. 6.19 was consecrate to the Lord and was to come into the Lords treasury Tostatus answereth that the iron might serve to divers purposes though it were not used to make any of
bee here further asked if it bee not lawfull now for the Ministers of the Gospell to bee distinguished by some distinct apparell in their ministerie For answer and satisfaction unto this demand I will produce two grave testimonies of two learned Writers in this age Marbachius of late the Professor of Divinitie in Straughsborow and Gallasius not long since a Minister of the Church of Geneva Marbachius thus writeth In Ecclesia omnia decenter fieri debent ad aedificationem c. In the Church all things ought to be done decently and to edification Itaque tali vestitu utendum qui non sit offendiculo c. Therefore such a garment must be used as is not offensive but bringeth some commendation and authoritie to them which minister and may discerne and distinguish them from other men Gallasius also thus delivereth his judgement upon this place Ego quidem fateor hoc ad decorem pertinere ut ordines in politia distinguantur c. I confesse that this appertaineth to comelinesse that degrees should be distinguished in the Common-wealth neither is the Gospell against decencie and order but rather helpeth and maintaineth them Sed nego ad verbi aut sacramentorum administrationem vestem lineam c. But I denie that the linen garment or pall belongeth to the administration of the word or Sacraments I would not truly have any stirres or tumult moved in the Church for the use of externall things seeing it is indifferent yet the superstition into which men are readie to fall and the abuse I hold to be condemned We must also take heed lest while we tolerate things indifferent or are constrained to winke at those things which cannot be amended wee detract from other mens libertie Thus farre Gallasius of this matter 2. Controv. That we offend in our best works Vers. 38. THat Aaron may beare the iniquitie of the offerings The people then sinned even in their religious works which sheweth in ipsis benefactis nostris peccatorum labem inesse c. that even in our best works there is some blemish of sin which cannot be acceptable unto God but for the worthinesse and mediation of the true high Priest Christ Jesus whom Aaron prefigured Simler To the same purpose also Calvin Discamus nostra obsequia ubi in conspectum Dei veniunt peccato permixta esse Let us learne that even our service when it commeth into Gods sight to bee examined is mixt with sin and is onely sanctified by Christ c. So the Prophet Isaiah saith chap. 64.6 All our righteousnesse is as a stained clout Hereby then appeareth the error of the Romanists who hold that a just man in his good works doth not sinne so much as venially Concil Trident. sess 6. can 25. See more hereof Synops. Centur. 4. err 70. 3. Controv. Against merit in good works Vers. 38. TO make them acceptable before the Lord. Tostatus saith here that the Priest was accepted of God and the Lord was well pleased with him because he ascribed all holinesse unto God as it was writen in his forehead Holinesse to Iehovah Hoc autem protestari meritorium est Deum nobis placatum reddimus And to protest this is meritorious and by this meanes we doe pacifie and appease God toward us qu. 19. Contra. 1. The former doctrine that the people sinned in their very offerings in their best works which are spotted and blemished with some imperfection or other overthroweth this error for that which meriteth at Gods hand must be perfect our best works then being imperfect are not meritorious Therefore Calvin much better here inferreth This place teacheth us Quicquid honorum operum Deo offerre studemus adeo nihil mercedis mereri c. That whatsoever good works we offer unto God they are so farre from meriting any reward that they make us guiltie before God unlesse the holinesse of Christ wherewith God is pleased doe procure pardon for them c. 2. The Scripture evidently testifieth this as Dan. 9.8 We doe not present our supplications before thee for our owne righteousnesse So Luk. 17.10 When ye have done all say ye we are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our dutie to doe If then we are unprofitable servants in our best service we are farre from meriting or deserving any thing and if we doe no more than our bounden dutie nor yet all that we have no reason to expect any reward beyond our desert See more hereof Synops. Centur. 4. err 79. 4. Controv. Against the Popes triple crowne Vers. 36. THou shalt make a plate of pure gold Ribera following Iosephus who speaking of this plate of gold saith Hunc aurea corona triplici circundabat c. He beset round the Priests miter or bonnet with a threefold crowne c. hereupon thus inferreth Hinc factum arbitror ut summus pontifex triplicem in capite coronam gerat c. Hence it is that the chiefe Priest meaning the Pope doth now beare a threefold crowne upon his head c. And he addeth further Quamvis hujusmodi corona c. Although such a crowne was received from the Apostle Peter which is yet to bee seene in S. Peters Church which Silvester shewed unto Constantine c. This he saith S. Peter used by the instinct of the Spirit that the veritie might be answerable to the figure that Christs high Priest might weare that which the high Priest the figure of Christ did weare Contra. 1. All this is grounded upon an uncertaine text for there is no mention made here of a triple crowne it is but Iosephus report without any warrant out of the text the golden plate indeed is called the holy crowne chap. 29.30 But of a threefold crowne there is not one word 2. They may be ashamed to abuse the world with such foppish fables who ever will beleeve that S. Peter ever did weare a triple crowne or that any of the Apostles used any such worldly pompe whose glorie was their povertie and contempt of the world their crowne their sufferings their obedience to powers and subjection their renowne 3. And if there had beene such a glorious crowne it had belonged rather to S. Paul than to Saint Peter for hee was the Apostle of the Gentiles the other of the circumcision 4. And if any such crowne had beene then it is more like that Constantine gave it to Silvester whose donation they pretend for their great soveraigntie and privileges than that Silvester first shewed it to him 5. And if that indeed be Peters triple crowne which yet is to be seene why doth the Pope refuse to weare that but rather maketh choice of a massie triple crowne of gold and precious stone 6. I had thought that Aaron had beene a figure of Christ not of the Pope and temporall things doe not prefigure temporall one triple crowne another but that outward crowne shadowed forth the spirituall Kingdome and regall dignitie of Christ. 5. Controv. Of the single
and appointed for warre 2. That also may be called the booke of life wherein those things are written which lead and direct us unto life eternall as that may be called a booke of warfare wherein the precepts of the act military are contained So the Scriptures are called the booke of life wherein the truth is contained Eccles. 24.26 3. The booke of God is that divine power wherein every mans doings shall bee brought to his remembrance as it is said Dan. 7.10 Iudgement was set and the bookes opened 4. There is also a booke of the righteous which conteineth the acts of the Saints for the memory of times to come In this place he thinketh the booke of God here may be taken either the first or second way Burgens addit 8. But Moses here speaketh of a booke only written by God but those bookes of the Scriptures and of the righteous were written by men 8. Tostatus maketh three bookes one a great booke wherein are all things registred in the world and all men foreseene good or bad which booke hee saith is divided into two other bookes the one which only containeth the names of those which are ordained unto life which is called liber praedestinationis the booke of predestination the other wherein they only are written whom the Lord foreseeth shall come to everlasting destruction and this is called liber praescientia the booke of Gods prescience And in this place Moses by Gods booke understandeth the booke of predestination Tostat. qu. 41. But as Tostatus resolveth well that the booke of life and of Gods predestination is here understood so yet that assertion of his that there is a booke of prescience wherein their names are written which shall be damned hath no warrant in Scripture for although it be most true that as the number is certaine with God of those which shall be saved so the Lord knoweth who are left unto destruction yet the Scripture only giveth the name of a booke unto the first and they which are rejected are not said to bee written in any booke but only not to be written in the booke of life Psal. 69.28 Apocal. 27.8 9. Therefore thus better are the Lords bookes distinguished 1. There are two generall and common bookes as they may be so called the one is the booke of Gods prescience and providence wherein the Lord seeth and directeth all things which hee himselfe doth in the world of this booke speaketh the Prophet David Psal. 139.26 In thy booke were all things written Simler 2. The second generall booke is the booke of remembrance before the Lord wherein all the acts of men good and evill are as registred before the Lord as Malach. 3.16 it is said A booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord so Apocal. 20.12 other bookes beside the booke of life were opened the booke of every ones conscience Borrh. 3. Then the third booke is the particular summe of all the elect appointed to salvation and this is the booke of life which Moses meaneth here Simler QUEST LXXIX How the Lord is said to have a booke TAke me out of the booke c. 1. This is a metaphoricall speech sicut nos ea literis consignamus as we use to signe with letters those things the memory whereof we would have kept so God is said to have a booke not that he needeth any booke of remembrance but because all things are present before him as if they were written in a booke Simler Iunius 2. So also Thomas Liber vitaein Deo dicitur metaphorice The booke of life is said to be with God by a metaphor according to the use and custome of men for they which are chosen to any speciall place or service conscribuntur in libro are written in a booke as souldiers and Counsellers as among the Romans the Senators were called patres conscripti the fathers whose names were written or registred 3. So also Burgens Sicut liber militiae vocatur in quo scribuntur electi ad militiam As the muster booke or of warfare is so called wherein their names are written which are chosen for warre so the Lord is said to have a booke of life wherein all they are comprehended which are ordained to salvation Burgens addit 8. QUEST LXXX Whether any can indeed be raced out of the booke of life TAke me out of the booke of life 1. Some thinke that the elect indeed may be raced out of the booke of life for they which are elected Si secure vivunt absque penitentia à numer● electorum Dei excluduntur If they live securely without repentance are excluded out of the ranke and number of the elect Marbach To the same purpose also Osiander Deletur rursus de libro vitae c. He is blotted againe out of the booke of life which by his sinnes loseth the celestiall inheritance 2. Contra. But this is an unsound opinion 1. For thus either they must make God ignorant of things to come that he certainly forseeth not the end of the elect and reprobate and so is deceived in his decree in ordaining some to be saved which shall not be saved or else they must be driven to confesse that Gods decree is mutable that hee changeth his sentence in excluding those upon their sinnes which were before elected But neither of those are to be admitted for neither is God subject to change Iames 1.17 neither can his prescience or foreknowledge be deceived as the Apostle saith The foundation of God remaineth sure c. the Lord knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2.19 But this were no sure foundation if they which God in the decree of his election knew to be his should afterward fall out not to be his 2. Indeed they which live and dye without repentance cannot be elected But it is impossible that they which are elected should finally fall away or be void of repentance but as God hath decreed the end of such to be everlasting salvation so he hath also ordained the way and meanes which they should walke in as the Apostle saith Ephes. 1.4 As he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world that wee should be holy and without blame before him in love Therefore Tostatus with other of that side are herein more sound than the moderne Lutherans Qui intus scripti sunt in libro vitae secundum firmam Dei praedestinationem impossibile est deleri c. It is impossible for those to be blotted out which are written in the booke of life according to Gods firme and certaine predestination Tostat. qu. 43. So also Lyranus Impossibilis est deletio c. It is impossible to be blotted out if we take it simplie to be written in the booke of life So also Burgens QUEST LXXXI Of the two wayes whereby we are said to be written in the booke of life BUt one may be said two wayes to bee written in the booke of life 1. Lyranus hath
these two reasons may be given because such commonly as are used in that service are lewd persons themselves and so odious and men that are evill bent would not have any punishment inflicted upon sinne and therefore they hate the very minister of justice But seeing that God useth as well good Angels as evill in the execution of his judgments and the place and calling of a Judge is honourable that giveth sentence upon the wicked and seeing it is as pleasing to God to punish a wicked person as to set free the righteous it cannot be an odious thing in it selfe to be a minister of justice Simler 7. Doct. The number of the elect certaine with God Vers. 32. TAke me out of the booke God then hath as it were a booke written wherein all the names of the elect are contained whence it may be concluded and inferred that the number of the elect is certaine with God and none of them can possibly perish Piscator as the Apostle saith The foundation of God is sure and hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are hi● 2 Tim. 2.19 5. Places of Confutation 1. Controv. That it is not lawfull to make images to represent God by Vers. 5. TOmorrow shall be the holy day of Iehovah It is evident then that neither Aaron nor yet Israel did thinke this Idoll to be their God but they thought this tended to Gods honour and they used this only as a visible representation of God the Romanists therefore use but a slender shift when they alleage that they are unlike the former Idolaters Quod stat●● simulachra neque vocent neque exist●ment deos Because they doe neither call nor thinke their images to be gods for no more did the Gentiles thinke that the very idols which they worshipped were their gods they called them all by a figurative speech because they were made to represent their gods likewise those are but vaine pretences which are commonly used by the popish Idolaters Nolum●s à Deo recedere ipsum quaerimus c. his adjumentis imbecillitas nostra sublevatur c. Wee purpose not to depart from Gods service wee seeke and serve him but by these meanes our infirmity is helped c. for all this here the Israelites pretended Gallas See more hereof quest 18. before and Synops. centur 2. error 44. 2. Controv. The Papists proved to be Idolaters like unto the Israelites Vers. 6. ANd offered burnt offerings c. Though the idolatrou● Israelites intended here the service of God yet in as much as they set up an Altar before the golden calfe danced before it and praised it they were very formall Idolaters and idoll Worshippers The Romanists therefore are not here wrongfully charged to worship idols seeing they set them up in their Church before Altars decke them with flowers adorne them with apparell and jewels burne candles before them and incense kneele unto them and knocke their breasts yea they set their similitude of beasts before their images as a dog they dedicate to Rachus an hog to Antonie a Dragon to S. George an Hart to Hubert Gallas 3. Controv. Against the Iewes that boast they came not of Idolaters THe Jewes likewise are here refuted who make their boast Quod ex iis qui idololatria dediti fuerunt non descenderunt That they are not descended of them which were given to idolatry whom Cyril thus confuteth Patres eorum in deserto vitulum conflatilem adoraveru● Their fathers in the desert worshipped the golden Calfe and in the time of the Judges they went after strange gods and under the Kings Judea as well as Israel played the harlot Ierem. 3.8 and committed spirituall fornication 4. Controv. That the Pope may erre Vers. 5. WHen Aaron saw that he made an Altar before it By this that Aaron was seduced and not only made a calfe for the idolatrous people but erected an Altar and proclaimed an holy day we see that even holy men of excellent gifts and high calling erroribus peccatis gravissimis obnoxios are subject to errours and grievous sinnes Piscator Which sheweth the shamelesse pride of them which being neither in calling nor gifts like Aaron yet say they cannot erre B. Babing The Pope is farre inferiour to Aaron who erred at the least he would not challenge to be superiour to Peter who erred in denying his master and after was received when he was reproved openly by S. Paul Galath 2. See more of this Synops Pap. Centur. 1. error 47. 5. Controv. Against the invocation of Saints Vers. 13. REmember Abraham and Isaack c. The Romanists doe urge this place to prove the invocation of Saints who they say being in heaven doe pray for us here in earth But herein they contradict themselves holding that the Fathers under the old Testament were in that dungeon of darknesse which they call Limbus Patrum and so were ignorant of such things as were done in the world but it is evident in this place that Moses doth not make these Fathers Mediators or intercessors for Israel but only presseth and urgeth the covenant which the Lord confirmed by oath unto them 6. Controv. Against merits LYranus further upon this place noteth Allegat merita Patrum Moses alleageth the merit of the Fathers But Moses insisteth only upon the promise which the Lord made to Abraham which was fou●ded upon the Mesiah therefore Non propter patrum merita sed respectus promissi Messia petit he maketh request not for the merits or worthinesse of the Fathers but in respect of the Messias who was promised Simler For neither was Abraham himselfe justified by his workes of merits but by faith as Saint Paul sheweth Rom. 4.3 7. Controv. Against the Lutherans that tolerate images in their Churches Vers. 20. ANd he tooke the calfe Moses did not only restraine the people from worshipping this abominable idoll but he defaceth it and taketh it out of the way which practice and example of Moses sheweth their errour who although they condemne the adoration of images yet thinke they may be tolerated in their Churches But Moses could not indure the sight of this Idoll So the Apostle saith Babes keepe yourselves from Idols Ioh. 5.21 They must not only beware of worshipping them but take heed of the offence that may come by the sight of them Gallas 8. Controv. Against the Popes insolencie that indureth not to be reproved Vers. 21. ANd Moses said unto Aaron c. Though Aaron were appointed of God to be the high Priest yea he was Moses elder brother yet Moses doth no● forbeare him but doth openly reprove him therefore the insolency of the Bishop of Rome is intolerable who holdeth scorne to bee reproved unto whom his clawbackes ascribe so much Vt simille 〈◊〉 ducat ad ●re●m n●m● ei dicat cur facis sic c. That although he should lead a thousand soules to hell none should say unto him why dost thou so Simler Paul rebuked Peter openly who by
as a reason of his presence which the Lord had alleaged before as a cause of his departure chap. 33.3 Then he intreateth the Lord by his owne mercifull nature which was ready to give pardon And thirdly he putteth God in minde of his covenant which he had made with his people to be his inheritance Iun. 3. And Moses confesseth and saith our sinnes including also himselfe because there are none perfect in Gods sight Simler As Daniel also prayeth Dan. 9.5 We have sinned and committed iniquitie Cajetane thinketh he hath relation to Aarons sinne for the which he intreateth but the other sense is better 4. Moses maketh mention only of iniquity and sinne omitting the third that is transgressions which proceed of pride and contempt against God Tostatus and Cajetane give this reason because the people were not guilty of that kinde of sinne to offend against God excontemptu of contempt But by these two all other sinnes rather are understood Simler For Moses would make a full and ample confession of their sinnes that he might move the Lord to compassion 5. Moses also wisely frameth his prayer and groundeth it upon the Lords owne words for as the Lord had professed himselfe ready to forgive sinnes and iniquity so Moses saith pardon our iniquitie and the Lord had said that he reserved mercy to thousands so Moses intreateth that he would take them for his inheritance for ever Ferus QUEST XX. What covenant the Lord here renueth with Moses Vers. 10. BEhold I will make a covenant before all the people 1. Cajetane seemeth to thinke that this was the speciall covenant made with Aaron and Moses the one to be the governour of the people the other to be the high Priest But Moses made no suit or request for himselfe but only in the peoples name and therefore the Lord meaneth that generall covenant which he would now ●enue with his people as it is evident by the ordinances which are here propounded which concerned the people in generall Simler 2. Ferus seemeth to understand this covenant of that solemne league which Moses made with the people Deut. 29. in the land of Moab But that was only a renuing of the covenant here made because the people which had seene the Lords great wonders in Egypt were all then dead this covenant then was at this time revived when the Lord writ the second time the Commandements in the tables of stone which were signes of the covenant and sent downe Moses with them unto the people Simler 3. There were two speciall parts of this covenant one was absolute that the blessed Messiah should be borne of that nation the other was conditionall for the inheriting of the land of Canaan which afterward through their disobedience they were deprived of when they went into captivity Simler QUEST XXI Of the divers kindes of marvels Vers. 10 I Will doe marvels There are three kinde of wonders or marvels in the world 1. Some are such as are strange and unusuall yet not beside the order and course of nature but are wrought by the skill and device of men such were those which were called the wonders of the world as the temple of Di●na at Ephesus Maus●lus tombe the image of the Sunne at Rhodes and Iuppiters image at Olympus made by Phidias the wals of Babylon which Semiramis made and the Pyramides in Egypt 2. Some are done beside the ordinary course of nature by the operation of Spirits but they differ from true miracles and wonders for either they be counterfeit workes done by the deceit and collusion of Satan such were the Magicians serpents that contended with Moses and the wonders which Antichrist shall worke by the power of Satan 2 Thessal 2. or they are done to a false end to confirme superstition and false religion such as have beene practised by superstitious Monkes in pilgrimages and at the reliques of Saints to hold the people in errour Simler 3. But the true miracles are indeed such as are wrought by the power of God above and beyond the ordinary course of nature and these are of three sorts either such which only worke terrour and admiration such as were the sound of the trumpet and thunder and the appearance of fire in mount Sinai when the Law was delivered or such as were for some necessary use and present benefit as the raining of Manna the bringing forth of water out of the rocke and such were all our blessed Saviours miracles which alwayes tended to some profitable end or they were such as were sent for the destruction and punishment of the wicked as was the opening of the earth to swallow up Cora Dathan and Abiram and the sudden death of Ananias and Sapphira in the new Testament Act. 5. Simler QUEST XXII What marvels these are which the Lord here saith he will doe Vers. 10. MArvels such as have not beene done in all the world 1. Some understand these marvels to be those wonderfull signes which should be shewed in the day of judgement for otherwise these signes were never given unto the Jewes ad literam according to the letter Gloss. interlinear But it is evident that the Lord speaketh of such signes as Moses and the people among whom hee was should see they were presently then to be performed and such strange and wonderfull workes the Lord shewed indeed unto his people in the wildernesse 2. Rupertus understandeth them of the incarnation passion resurrection of Christ so Ferus of the miracles which Christ wrought in the dayes of his flesh for otherwise saith Rupertus Majora signa visae sunt c. greater signes were seene in Egypt than any done among that people before Christ came But the Lord here speaketh of such workes as he would doe by the ministery of Moses It is a terrible thing that I will doe with thee that is by the ministerie Iun. 3. Oleaster referreth it to that familiarity which Moses had with God like as never any had before him or after But that was no terrible thing but rather gracious and favourable 4. Tostatus understandeth these marvellous things of the shining of Moses face because that served specially as a signe to confirme the covenant and league made here with the people the other wonders which were done after in the wildernesse being so long after did not so properly belong to the confirmation of this covenant qu. 11. Contra. 1. The wonders here spoken of are such as should be terrible but the shining of Moses countenance was not terrible but glorious which they were notwithstanding afraid to behold for the great glory 2. And that was but one wonderfull worke but these are many here spoken of 3. And all the signes and wonders which the Lord wrought for his people in the desart were confirmations of his love and evident signes of his presence 5. Cajetane especially referreth these marvels to those terrible signes which were specially shewed to confirme Moses and Aaron in their office and calling as the
any evill courses Cyril ibid. It is therefore by a metaphor ascribed unto God by a similitude taken from the husband who cannot indure that the love which his wife oweth unto him should be imparted to another Gallas 4. Beside he is called El zelo●es a jealous God or strong and jealous signifying Non impune plebem suam per alienos Deos fornicaturam That his people shall not without punishment commit fornication with other gods Augustin ibid. Fortis est ad propulsandam injuriam Hee is strong to defend his owne wrong c. and to punish the offenders Cajetan Vindex est Deus fidei rupiae God is an avenger of violated faith Simler And as the Wise-man saith Iealousie is the rage of man and he will not spare in the day of vengeance Prov. 6.34 Much more will the Lord be avenged of those which seeke his dishonour QUEST XXXI Why they are commanded to cut downe the groves Vers. 13. ANd cut downe their groves 1. The Gentiles used to plant woods and groves by their idolatrous altars which superstitious use the Lord would not have his people to imitate the reasons whereof were these 1. Tostatus thinketh that they made certaine images and figures in the barkes of trees which they used to consult with quaest 13. But to this end rather as Oleaster noteth out of R. Salom. they planted woods that they might under the shadow of them eat and drinke and give themselves to all carnall pleasu●es So also Lyranus As also they placed a certaine religion in the shadow of trees and in the top of hils as the Prophet Ieremie noteth chap. 2.20 Calvin Therefore the Lord would not have such groves either to be planted by his people or being planted b●fore to stand Iosiah is commended for his zeale in breaking downe of the altars and cutting downe of groves 2 Chron. 33.8 2. If Abrahams example be objected who planted a grove in Beersheba and there called upon the name of the Lord Gen. 21. the answer in generall is that Abraham did not plant that wood for any religious use the word there used is eshel which signifieth any kinde of fruitfull tree but the word here is ashera which signifieth trees which are consecrated to the worship of some God Paguin But in particular it may be further answered with Calvin that the planting of this wood was tranquilla fixaque habitationis signum a signe of a quiet and setled habitation that Abraham rested in this place and for his more commodious dwelling planted a grove or with Pellican out of Targ. Hierasolym that Abraham planted fruitfull trees for hospitalitie to entertaine strangers that they eating of the fruit thereof might be stirred up to praise God Borrhaim addeth further that Abraham here built an Altar and so called upon God the wood was not made to that end And yet if Abraham had intended any religious use in making this grove as a Temple to serve God in neither was there any Law then to the contrary nor yet doe we reade of any such superstition taken up in those times as afterward QUEST XXXII Why idolatry is called fornication Vers. 15. ANd when they goe a whoring after their gods 1. As there is a bodily fornication which is an unlawfull copulation of the body with those whom men ought not to come neere so there is a spirituall fornication Cum mens contra debitum divini ordinis conjungatur quibus●ibet aliis re●●us c. When the minde is beside the divine order joyned to any other thing than unto God so there i● also a spirituall chastity Si mens hominis delectetur in spirituali conjunctione ad id cui debet conjungi scilicet ad Deum c. If the minde be delighted in spirituall conjunction to that to the which it ought to be joyned unto that is unto God and doe abstaine from all other Thomas 2. And in three things is idolatry compared to fornication 1. In that fides Deo data violatur faith made to God is violated as in bodily fornication and adulterie the faith which each gave to other is falsified 2. As they which are given to carnall wantonnesse thinke no cost too much that is bestowed that way but doe doat upon their pleasures so idololatrae sunt prodigi in idola c. idolaters are prodigall upon their idols 3. Because fornicatio cum idololatria pleri●nque conjuncta est fornication is for the most part joyned with idolatrie As among the Gentiles neere unto their idolatrous temples they had their brothelhouses and in many of their sacrifices and idoll services as of Bacchus Flora Priapus they used much obscenity and filthinesse So the Israelites when they coupled themselves with Baal P●or committed both spirituall and bodily fornication Numb 25. And how these two still are joyned together where Popish idolatry is practised the histories of former times and the experience of those dayes doth evidently testifie Simler QUEST XXXIII How farre it is lawfull and unlawfull to eat of things consecrated to idols Vers. 15. ANd they call thee and thou eat of their sacrifice c. 1. Concerning things offered unto idols of themselves the meat is not polluted or defiled thereby for an idoll as Saint Paul saith is nothing in the world nihil habet deitatis it hath no deity in it it is of no power and therefore non potest ab eo derivari virtus c. there can no vertue be derived from it being but made of wood stone or mettall or such like into that which is consecrated to it and so the creature is good still though it be superstitiously abused And therefore such meats of themselves may as well be used after they are so offered to idols as before 2. But there are certaine lets and scandals which may arise of eating such things which maketh it unlawfull 1. The first let is in a man himselfe if he be not well perswaded and resolved that it is lawfull to eat such things for then he sinneth against his owne conscience as the Apostle saith He that doubteth is condemned if he eat Rom. 14.23 2. Then offence may be given unto the weake brethren who against their conscience seeing another to eat may bee incouraged to doe the like and so their conscience is wounded in which respect Saint Paul saith Hee will not eat flesh as long as the world standeth to offend his brother 1 Corin. 8.13 3. An offence may be given unto the Infidels who by our eating of their sacrifices will judge us to favour their idols and so have an evill opinion of us as dissemblers and condemne our liberty Yet here a divers case is to be considered for if the Infidels did not tell us or suppose wee know not that the meat was offered to idols then it may be eaten without any offence giving but if any man say This is sacrificed to idols eat it not saith the Apostle because of his conscience that shewed it thee 1 Corinth