Selected quad for the lemma: world_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
world_n father_n heaven_n miserable_a 2,524 5 10.2318 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A11649 Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, the booke of the Psalmes, and the Song of Songs, or, Canticles VVherein the Hebrevv vvords and sentences, are compared with, and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions, and other records and monuments of the Hebrewes: but chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures, Moses his words, lawes and ordinances, the sacrifices, and other legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of Israel, are explained. With an advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew text, and allegation of the Rabbines in these annotations. As also tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the annotations upon each severall booke. By Henry Ainsworth.; Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, and the booke of the Psalmes Ainsworth, Henry, 1571-1622? 1627 (1627) STC 219; ESTC S106799 2,398,875 1,194

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

in Iesudei hatorah chap. 3. sect 8. The name of the Sunne is spiritually applied unto Christ Mal. 4. 2. whose face appeared like the Sunne shining in his strength Rev. 1. 16. ac whose death this created Sunne was darkned at noon day for the space of three houres Amos 8. 9. Mar. 27. 45. with him this spirituall Sunne his Church is cloathed Revel 12. 1. and shall shine also as the Sun in the kingdome of heaven Mat. 13. 43. lesser or little light that is the Moone called in Hebrew of her faire whitenesse Lebanah Song 6. 9. and of refreshing the earth with her coole influences Iaroach Deut. 33. 14. starres which also are for to rule the night Psal. 136. 6. called starres of light Psal. 148. 3. Of these some are fixed other some wandring starres or planets whereunto unstable men are compared Iude verse 13. The starres differ one from another in glory 1 Cor. 15 41. and are not for man to number Genes 15. 5. but GOD counts their number and calleth them all by names Psalm 147. 4. and with them he hath by his spirit garnished the heavens Iob 26. 13. Some of the starres or constellations have names in holy scripture as Ash Cosil Cimah and Mazzaroth or Mazzaloth Iob 9. 9. and 38. 31. Amos 5. 8. 2 King 23. 5. which wee call by other names Arcturus Orion Pleides Planets and Signes in the Zodiake They might well bee Englished water-starres winter-starres Thunder-starres and the like for by their rifing and influences stormes tempests faire and pleasant weather c. doe proceed by the disposition of God Consider those places Iob 38. Am. 5. Verse 17. set Hebr. gave them which word is often used for setting or putting as I have given my spirit Esa. 42. 1. that is I have put it Math. 12 18. It signifieth also a firme setling as thou hast giuen thy people 1 Chr. 17. 22. for which in 2 Sam. 7. 24. is written thou hast confirmed thy people Accordingly David sayth that God hath firmly constituted the Moon Stars Psal. 8. 4. Of the Stars with their orbes and sphaeres the Hebrew Doctors write thus The sphaeres are called Heavens and the Out-spred firmament c. and there are nine sphaeres that which is nearest unto us is called the sphaere of the Moone and the next above it is the sphaere wherein is the Starre called Cocab or Mercurie And the third sphaere is that wherein Nogah or Venus is The fourth sphaere hath in it the Sunne the sift Maadim or Mars the sixt hath in it the starre Tsedek or Iupiter the seventh Shabthat or Saturne and the eighth sphaere hath in it all the other starres that are seene in the firmament The ninth sphaere is that which turneth about every day from the east to the west and it compasseth all ron●● about c. The starres that are all in that one 〈◊〉 sphaere although they be one above another yet because the sphaeres are pure and cleare as chrystall and as Saphire therefore the starres in the eighth sphaere are seene underneath the first sphaere c. None of the sphaeres are either light or heauy or coloured redl or blacke or of any other colour and whereas wee see them of a blew colour it is onely to the appearance of the eye by reason of the height of the ayre Also they have neither tast nor smell because these accidents have no place but in bodies that are beneath them Maimony in Misn. treat Iesudei hatorah chapt 3. sect 1. 3. V. 18. over the day or as the Greeke translateth to rule the day for by their successive courses the light is dispensed of God unto the world by day and by night Ier. 31. 35. Vers. 20. the moving thing or as the Greeke translateth creeping things But the Hebrew Sherets is more large then that which wee call the creeping thing for it conteyneth things moving swiftly in the waters as swimming fishes c. Lev. 11. 10. and on the earth as running weasels mise c. Lev. 11. 29. and fowles also flying in the ayre Levit. 11. 29. Moving things in the waters there are innumerable one argument of Gods praise in Psalm 104. 25. Soule named in Hebrew nephesh of breathing and the scriptures apply this word not onely to mankinde but to all creatures that live and the breath of them as here and in Iob 41. 21. The Hebrewes say The soule of all flesh is the forme thereof which God hath given thereunto Maimony in Iesudei hatorah chap. 4. sect 8. V. 21. Whales or Dragons the Hebrew Tannin is used for both These are the greatest creatures in the waters one kinde of them called Levjathan is described in Iob 41. In the belly of a Whale Ionas lived three dayes and three nights Ion. 1. 17. And humane writers testifie that into the riuer of Arabia there have come Whales 600. foot long and 360. foot broad Plinie hist. b. 32. chap. 1. that they are not without cause called great Whales These Whales and Dragons are used in Scripture to signifie great Princes Psal. 74. 13. Ezek. 29. 3. creeping The Hebrew remes which hath the name of treading is also largely used for things creeping on the earth or swimming in the waters Levit. 11. 44. 46. Gen. 1. 25. V. 22. Blessed that is gave power to conserve their kinde by generation and to increase unto many for so the word blessing is often applied unto multiplication Gen. 24. 60. Ps. 128. 3. 4. This word is also largely used for Gods gracious giving of all good things earthly or heavenly Gen. 24. 35. Deut. 28. Eph. 1. 3. And when men give thankes therefore unto God that is called blessing also see Gen. 14. 19. 20. V. 24. cattell in Greeke it is translated foure-footed beasts The Hebrew Behemah is generally all beasts of the greater sort whereof the Elephant is called Behemoth Iob 40. 15. The Apostle once translateth it in Greeke Therion which properly is wilde beast Heb. 12. 20. from Exod. 19. 13. beast or wilde-beast named in Hebrew of life or livelinesse which is most seene in the wilde beasts In Perkei R. Eliezer chap. 11. the Iew Doctors say These that were created out of the earth their soules and their bodies were of the earth and when they dye they returne to the place where they were created as it is sayd in Psal. 104. 29. thou takest away their spirit they dye ●and another Scripture saith Eccles. 3. 21. and the spirit of the beast that goeth downward to the earth Vers. 26. Let us This is meant of the three in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Spirit which three are one 1 Iohn 5. 7. Hereupon hee is called God our makers Iob 35. 10. Psal. 149. 2. After the world was made and garnished the holy Trinity mentioneth the making of man the excellentest creature under heaven he is fearfully and marvellously made Psal. 139. 14. Man or earthly man in Hebrew Adam so called of Adamah that is
immediately after Mechijael in Greek M●delaal according to the name of Kainans sonne in Gen. 5. 12. Methusael in Greeke Mathousala as also they write Ehochs sonne Gen 5. 21. L 〈…〉 or Lem●●● so Gen. 5. 21. Kains posteritie accord in name with Seths Vers. 19. two wives so violating the law of mariage which by Gods ordinance was to be but with one wife Gen. 2. 18. 24. Adah by interpretation an Ornament as Zillah or Sella signified her Shadow Vers. 20. Iabal in Greeke Iobel father that is master as the Chaldee expoundeth it Every crafts-master that either first inventeth or perfecteth and teachech any art is called a Father So in the verse following dwell in tents that is used Shepherdy for shepheards used tents to remove from place to place where best pasture was to be found Esa. 38. 12. Song 1. 8. Ier. 6. 3. and 49. 29. The Hebrew phrase him that dwelleth is meant of many as the Greeke also translateth it them that dwell So dweller 2 Sam. 5. 6. is expounded dwellers 1 Chron. 1. 4. enemie 1 King 8. 37. 44. is enemies 2 Chron. 6. 28. 34. and many the like See also Gen. 3. 2. cattell Hebr. possession understanding the word cattell as it explained in Gen. 26. 14. hee had possession of flockes and possession of herds So the Greeke here translateth feeders of cattell The supply of such words is often made in the text it selfe as a thousand 2 Sam. 8. 4. that is a thousand charrets 1 Chron. 18. 4. Vzzah put forth to the arke 2 Sam. 6. 6. that is hee put forth his hand to the arke 1 Chro. 13. 9. See also Gen. 5. 3. Vers. 21. handle that is play upon as the Chaldee paraphraseth he was master of all that play on the Psaltery and knew musicke which the Greeke translateth this was he that shewed the Psaltery and the Harpe organ it hath the name in Hebrew of lovelinesse and delight and it was an instrument of joy Iob 21. 12. so was the Harpe called therefore the pleasant Harpe Psal. 81. 3. Thus God gave the Kainites skill to invent things profitable and delightfull to the flesh yet were they irreligious as is written they said vnto God depart from us and what should the Almighty doe for them For he filled their houses with good things Iob. 22. 17. 18. Vers. 22. instructer Hebr. a whetter or sharpner which the Chaldee expoundeth also a master He sharpely and wittily taught Smiths craft and instruments of warre The Heathens after faigned Vulcan which name seemeth to bee borrowed from this Tubal-cain to bee the god of Smiths Naamah she hath her name of Pleasance Thus with profits and pleasures they of the olde world passed their time eating and drinking marying and giving in mariage untill the day that the flood came and tooke them all away Math. 24. 38. 39. The Hebrew Doctors in Midras Ruth and Zohar say of this Naamah that all the world wandred in love after her yea even the sons of God as in Gen. 6. 2. that of her there were born evil spirits into the world Vers. 23. I have killed c. or I would kill a man in my wound yea a yong man in my hurt The Hebrew is of the time past as speaking of murther committed and so the Greeke translateth I have killed a man but it may also be interpreted as a boastfull threat for time to come that if any did wound or hurt him he should surely dye for it And it may bee that for violating the law of mariage by taking two wives God vexed him with a disquiet life betweene them that they lived in discontent and emulation one with another as there is an example in 1 Sam. 1. 6. 7. and both of them with their husband so in his wrath hee uttered these words unto them to represse their strife Or he thus boasteth of his valour for some other cause The Chaldee Paraphrast understood this in a contrary sense as if it were a question for have I killed c. that is I have not and expoundeth it thus For I have not killed a man that I should beare sinne for him nor destroyed a young man that my seed should be consumed for him to my hurt or for my stripe the originall word signifieth a wayl or mark of a stripe or wound in the flesh Vers. 24. seventy and seven fold that is if he that killeth Kain shall be punished seven fold then hee that killeth me shall be seventy seven fold It seemeth to be an insolent contempt of Gods judgement and abusing of his patience towards Kain v. 15. Because sentence against an evill worke is not executed speedily therefore the hearts of the sonnes of men is full in them to doe evill Eccles. 8. 11. Vers. 25. Seth Heb. Sheth that is Set or Appointed to weet in Abelsroome He was not borne till 130 yeeres after the creation Gen. 5. 3. It might be Adam had other sonnes and daughters before Gen. 5. 4. but none in whom such expectation of good was for Seths posterity onely remained at the Flood when all the world perished Gen. 7. seed that is another sonne that as Abrahams seed was called in Isaak Ismael being excluded Gen. 21. 12. so Eves seed should bee in Seth and not in any other of her children Seed is usually put for children as they left no seed Mar. 12. 22. is expounded they left no children Luke 20. 31. stead of Abel Eve sheweth a reason of her sonnes name also her faith grounded on Gods appointment setling of his mercy concerning this seed who should be faithfull as Abel and a father of the world who are all called the sonnes of Seth Num. 24. 17. and the father of our Lord Iesus after the flesh Luke 3. So in Ezek. 37 dead bones revive againe and in Revel 11. 11. the witnesses killed have the spirit of life from God entring into them Vers. 26. also himselfe or to him also when hee was 105 yeeres old Gen. 5 6. and the world 235. Enos so he is written in Greeke Luke 3. 38. in Hebrew Aenosh that is by interpretation sorrowfull grievously-sicke miserable So named as seemeth for the sorrowfull state of those dayes wherein great corruption grew in the Church Gen. 6. 2. 3. 5. Therefore this name is in Scripture usually given to all men as being Enos or sonnes of Enos full of sorrow and misery Psal. 8. 5. and 144. 3. And to abate mens pride David saith let the nations know that they be Enos or wofull men Psal. 9. 21. began men profanely to call or profanenesse began in calling or for calling on the name of Iehovah The Hebrew word may be translated men began or men profened but is commonly understood 〈…〉 ere of the learned Hebrewes to meane profanenesse and some translating it began yet take it thus men began to call their idols by the name of the Lord as images and representations of God were called Gods Exod. 32. 4. The
bountie in giving all people 's the use of those creatures as on the contrary false gods are said to divide or impart nothing unto them Deut. 29. 26. and the base minde of men to worship such things as are given for servants unto all men Vers. 20. fornace of iron that is fornace wherein 〈◊〉 melted so Egypt is called for the cruell op 〈…〉 Israel likewise in 1 King 8. 51. Ier. 11. 4. people of inheritance that is whom God shall 〈◊〉 take for his possession the Greeke 〈◊〉 and inheritance as this day under 〈…〉 〈◊〉 yee are or as yee see this day Vers. 21. your sakes or your words as the Greek 〈◊〉 the things spoken by you meaning 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ring words Num. 20. 3 4 5. where 〈…〉 〈◊〉 being grieved obeyed not the comman 〈…〉 God Num. 20. 12. Psal. 106. 32 33. 〈◊〉 spake of before Deut. 3. 26. and now a 〈…〉 to shew Gods severity against all 〈…〉 Vers. 23. stroke or cut that is covenanted or 〈◊〉 ●●●es doth often speake of the covenant first 〈◊〉 betweene God and them as that which was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of all religion to them and their seed after them and whatsoever men added altered 〈◊〉 diminished from it was to be reputed evill So Paul reforming abuses in the Churches calleth them to the first institution 1 Cor. 11. 23 24. charged thee or commanded thee that is commanded thee not to doe or forbidden thee so in Deut. 2. 37. for Gods precepts in the Decalogue are for the most part for bods or prohibitions yet usually called commandements The whole phrase is expressed in Ge. 3. 11. which I commanded thee not to eat of it that is which I forbade thee to eat of Vers. 24. fire to consume all his enemies and thine if thou obey him as Deut. 9. 3. and thee thy selfe if thou disobey him as Zeph. 1. 18. Heb. 12. 29. See also Exod. 24. 17. The Chaldee addeth his word is a consuming fire which is also true Ier. 23. 29. Deut. 33. 2. jealous the former word signified Gods power this his will hauing a jealous affection whereby he will not spare as Prov. 6. 34 35. See Exod. 20. 5. Vers. 25. waxen old that is continued long as the Greeke explaineth it and become ancient inhabitants Gods blessings were by Israel abused to sin as is here foretold and againe in Deut. 32. 15. Vers. 26. perishing yee shall perish that is surely and speedily perish in Greeke perish with perdition so in Deut. 30. 18 19. where againe hee calleth heaven and earth to witnesse Vers. 27. few men Hebr. men of number that is soone numbred for your fewnesse as the Greeke translateth few in number and in Iob 16. 22. yeeres of number are a few yeares see Gen. 34. 30. This is contrary to that promised blessing in Gen. 15. 5. Vers. 28. serve gods being given over to your owne lusts as it is written God turned and gave them up to worship the host of heaven Act. 7. 42. This same God threatned afterward in Ier. 16. 13. But the Chaldee here turneth it yee shall serve peoples that serve Idols the worke of mens hands nor smell the vanity of Idols is after this sort described in Psal. 115. 4. 7. Ier. 10. 3. 9. Vers. 29. seeke Iehovah the Chaldee translateth seeke the feare of the Lord meaning his true service Here Moses annexeth promises to comfort repentant sinners as also in Deut. 30. 1 2 3 c. all thy heart see an example of this in 2 Chron. 15. 15. Vers. 30. finde thee that is come upon or befall thee as the Chaldee explaineth it Vers. 31. thy fathers Abraham Isaak and Iacob See Levit. 26. 42. c. Vers. 32. of the heavens that is from one utmost part of the world unto the other By the heavens are meant the parts of the world under the heavens and the holy Ghost openeth this phrase for in Mat. 24. 31. it is written from the utmost parts of the heavens unto the utmost pa●ts of them for which in Mark 13. 27. is said from the utmost part of the earth unto the utmost part of the heavens By which it is evident that the heavens in this speech is put for the earth under the heavens for heavens comprehendeth the Aire also wherein wee breath as is noted on Genesis 1. 8. great thing Hebr. great word Moses hereby would teach that Gods words and works unto his Church are more great and marvellous than all his actions to other peoples whatsoever and therfore ought the more seriously to be considered Verse 33. voice of God the Chaldee saith the voice of the word of the Lord the Greeke of the living God and lived As at the apparitions of God men were wont to feare they should die Iudg. 13. 22. and 6. 22. So at the giving of the law all Israel desired that they might heare the voice of God no more lest they died Exod. 20. 19. Deut. 18. 16. which manifested the power of the law and the weaknesse of men Heb. 12. 19. So no man can see the face of God and live Exod. 33. 20. when God giveth his voice the earth melteth Psal. 46. 7. Verse 34. hath God or hath any God speaking of the true God and his workes unto Israel above all other people or of the reputed gods of the Gentiles none of which ever did such a thing assaied or tempted This is spoken not of God trying his owne strength but proving the obedience of his people and trying the strength of his adversaries The Chaldee translateth Or the tentations or signes which the Lord hath made to reveale himselfe c. tentations Moses here reckoneth seven things about Israels deliverance Tentations whereby God propounding his will tried their obedience as when God tempted Abraham Gen. 22. 1. Signes which many times are of ordinary workes and naturall as Exod. 3. 12. Wonders which are of extraordinary and supernaturall workes as Exod. 4. 21. and 7. 9. Warre upon the refusall and resistance of the enemie Exod. 8. 1 2. Strong hand not by cunning policies and stratagems as men often use in wars but by force compelling the enemie to yeeld Exod. 6. 1. Stretched out arme by open manifesting his power and plagues continually upon the resisters Esay 9. 12 17. Exod. 6. 6. and Great terrours which wounded the hearts of the very enemies Exod. 9. 20 27 28. and 10. 7. and 12. 30. terrours or feares the Greek and Chaldee translate visions or sights which are oftentimes fearefull but the Hebrew for fears and visions are one much like another which might cause the mistaking So in Deut. 26. 8. Vers. 35. so know that is that thou mightest know and acknowledge The end of all Gods workes was the manifesting of his glory to the information and salvation of his people This Moses often urgeth in this booke Vers. 36 to instruct or to nurture chastise by restraining from vice So Gods chastening and teaching out of his law are joyned together
gathereth another reason of the womans subjection in that the man was not created for the woman but the woman for the man 1 Cor. 11. 9. V. 19. them unto Adam or unto the man but the Greek version keepeth the Hebrew name Adam addeth the word them for to make the sense plain So the holy Ghost sometime doth in repeating matters as he blessed and brake Mat. 14. 19. that is and brake them Luke 9. 16. Shew to the Priest Mar. 1. 44. that is shew thy selfe Mat. 8. 4. See also Gen. 31. 42. would call them or call it that is every of them This sheweth Gods bounty in giving man dominion over all earthly creatures Psal. 8. for the giving of names is a signe of soveraignty Numb 32. 38. 41. Gen. 35. 18. and 26. 18. It manifesteth also Adams wisedome in naming things presently according to their natures as the Hebrew names by which he called them doe declare Vers. 20. he found not that is the man found not a meet helpe for himselfe among all the creatures therefore the woman when shee was made was the more acceptable Or as the Greeke translateth there was not found an helper like unto him So in Gen. 15. 6. he imputed it is translated it was imputed Rom. 4. 3. See also Gen 6. 20. and 16. 14. Vers. 21. a dead fleepe This the Greeke calleth an extasie or trance which the Scriptures shew to have falne also on men when they did see visions of God as Gen. 15. 12. Act. 10. 10. In such deepe-sleepe the senses are all bound up as 1 Sam. 26. 12. V. 22. builded To build the rib to a woman is to make or create a woman of it as with a speciall care or art and fit proportion Hereupon our bodies are called houses Iob 4. 19. 2 Cor. 5. 1. And although by building is meant making as the Lord will build thee an house 1 Chron. 17. 10. is the same that he will make thee an house 2 Sam. 7. 11. yet by the many words used in the generation of man-kind as creating Gen. 1. 27. making Gen. 1. 26. forming and inspiring Gen. 2. 7. and now building Moses would set forth this wondrous workmanship which the Psalmist so laudeth God for Psal. 139. 14. he brought God her builder was also her bringer and so her conjoyner in mariage with the man Mat. 19. 6. and the Scripture noteth a wife to be a speciall favour of the Lord Pro. 18. 22. and 19. 14. He also blessed them together as Gen. 1. 28. whereby may bee seene how Moses changeth the order in this Chapter inlarging things here which before he had touched briefly Vers. 23. This now or this time this once flesh c. Hereby Adam shewed both his thankfulnesse to God and love to his wife and from hence Paul teacheth that men ought to love their wives as their owne bodies for no man ever hated his owne flesh Ephes. 5. 28. 29. The like speeches are used of persons neere a kin that they are their bone and their flesh Gen. 29. 14. Judg. 9. 2. So the Apostle by this setteth forth Christs mystical union with his Church that we are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Ephes. 5. 30. woman or Mannesse of Man as in Hebrew shee is called Ishah of Ish which word Ish hath the signification of strength and valour so that the Scripture useth this word shew your selves men for be yee strong or couragious Esay 46. 8. 1 Cor. 16. 13. And it hath affinity with Esh which in Hebrew is fire for heat in man causeth strength and courage Therefore as Adam is used for base men borne of adamah the earth so Ish is used for noblemen Psal. 49. 3. Also Ish is used both for man and husband and Ishah both for woman and wife as in the verses following out of man The Greeke translateth out of her man and the Chaldee out of her husband Hence is a third reason of womens subjection because the man is not of the woman but the woman of the man as Paul saith 1 Cor. 11. 8. Vers. 24. leave his father c. This is a perpetu all law given of God as Christ sheweth Mat. 19. 4. 5. and teacheth that the band of mariage is the neerest conjunction in the world and all societies rather to be left then this betweene man and wife who may not depart one from another 1 Cor. 7. 10. 11. as they doe depart from their parents Gen. 24. 58. 59. and 31. 14. Lev. 22. 12. 13. The like is observed in the spirituall mariage between Christ and his Church Psal. 45. 11. 12. The Chaldee translateth it he shall leave the bed of his father and mother And the Hebrew Doctors gathered from hence a law unto all Adams sonnes against unjust carnall copulations and incestuous mariages with a mans fathers wife or mother in law and with his owne mother as after by he shall cleave to his wife they say is forbidden any other mans wife and all pollution with the male and likewise with beasts Maimony in Misn. book 14. treat of Kings chap. 9. 〈◊〉 5. to his wife or to his woman for it is the same word Ishah used before in verse 23. and by his woman he sheweth there is no lawfull conjunction for a man but with one and she a wife become his by mariage Wherefore all other women are in this respect called strangers to him Prov. 5. 3. 18. 20. And for shall cleave the Greeke saith shall bee glewed which word is also in Mar. 10. 7. maketh against all unjust divorces they shall be the Greeke translateth they two shall be one flesh and so it is alledged in the New Testament Mat. 19. 5. that hereby a man is restrained from more wives then one which is to be observed in other speeches of Scripture wherein like restraint is implyed as him thou shalt serve Deut. 6. 13. that is as Christ alledgeth it him onely Mat. 4. 10. Luke 4. 8. So but for the Priests Mar. 3. 26. which another Evangelist writeth but for the Priests onely Mat. 12. 4. Of like force is that saying a man is not justified by the works of the Law but by the faith of Iesus Christ that is by faith onely Gal. 2. 16. one or to one flesh See vers 7. This is meant in speciall by generation of children wherefore Paul doth by proportion apply these words even against unlawfull fleshly copulation 1 Cor. 6. 16. adding a further mystery of our union with Christ hee that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit vers 17. Vers. 25. not ashamed thought not themselves in any shamefull plight as a Chaldee paraphrase saith they knew not what shame was For they being innocent and adorned with the image and glory of God had nothing in soule or body that was defective miserable or shamefull but now by sin nakednesse in us is a want a filthy thing and a shame Deut. 28. 48. Rev. 3.
partly for religion partly for munition in time of war saying Let us build us a City and Tower c. and let us make for us within it a house of worship or Temple lest we c. a feare arising from their owne guilty consciences as is often in the wicked Iob 15. 20. 21. Lev. 26. 36. Prov. 28. 1. Vers. 5. came down that is shewed by his works that he tooke knowledge of this evill to punish it This is spoken of God after the manner of men so Gen. 18. 21. Psal. 144. 5. See the notes on Gen. 6. 6 The Chaldee explaineth it thus And the Lord appeared to take vengeance upon the workes of the Citie and Tower Vers. 6. there will not be cut off from them that is they will not be restrained so noting their wilfull persisting in the evill begun Or question-wise thus should they not be cut off or restrained meaning it was very meet they should Vers. 7. Let us goe downe The holy Trinity here determineth as when in Gen. 1. 26. he said Let us make man against the former determination of vaine men vers 4. So he dissipateth the counsell of the nations Psal. 33. 10. not heare that is not understand so in 1 Cor. 14. 2. hee speaketh not unto men for no man heareth that is understandoth and in Esay 36. 11. Speake Syriacke for we heare that is understand it so a hearing heart for an understanding 1 King 3. 9. Ioseph heard that is understood Gen. 42. 23. and sundry the like Albeit God might at first smite them all with deafnesse that they could not at all heare and then change their tongues A like judgement David wisheth against his enemies Psal. 51. 10. Vers. 8. scattered and so dissolved their communion and brought on them the evill which they sought to prevent vers 4. for that which the wicked feareth shall come upon him Prov. 10. 24. The Hebrew Doctors from hence doe conclude The generation of the division of tongues have no part in the world to come that is in the kingdome of heaven as it is written And the Lord scattered them from thence c. The Lord scattered them in this world and from thence the Lord scattered them in the world to come Thalmud Bab. in Sanhedr ch 10. left off to build the contrary miracle God wrought by the gift of tongues to build up Ierusalem Act. 2. 4. 6. 11. c. Vers. 9. Babel or Babylon in the Greeke translated Confusion because there the Lord Balal that is Confounded their language And Babel is the same that Balbel but for ease of speech the first l is left out and it accordeth with the Chaldee or Baby lonian tongue which soundeth the Hebrew Balal Balbel as the Chaldee paraphrast here hath it lip of all the earth that is language of all people on the earth see verse 1. And here tongues first were for a signe to unbeleevers as 1 Cor. 14. 22. that by this judgement they might be converted unto the Lord though they made no such use thereof as neither did those that mocked at the gift of tongues whereby the heavenly City was builded Acts 2. 4. 13. The Hebrew Doctors say that at this dispersion there were seventy nations with seventy sundry languages R. Menachem on Gen. 11. Vers. 10. old Hebr. sox and so in the rest that follow See the notes on Gen. 5. 32. and compare this genealogy with that there Ten Patriarchs are there reckned from Adam to Noe and ten here from Sem to Abraham both of them proceeding with the linage of our Lord Christ who came of all these fathers according to the flesh Luke 3. There each fathers generation is set down in three verses here but in two and their death is not spoken of Howbeit the lives of men are now shortned to the halfe Vers. 11. 500 yeere By this we may gather that Sem lived till Isaak sonne of Abram was fifty yeres old and saw ten generations after him before hee dyed A singular blessing both to him and them Vers. 12. begat Salah or Shelach and as the holy Ghost counted the time of Arphaxads birth two yeeres after the flood vers 10. so may wee gather it for all the rest as Sala was borne 37 yeeres after the flood and after the creation of the world 1693 The Greek translation inserteth here a man which never was by the Hebrew verity saying that Arphaxad begat Kainan and that Kainan lived 130 yeeres and begat Sala Also the time of each fathers procreation is for the most part changed in the Greeke This seemeth to be done purposely that the true genealogy might not bee knowne to the heathen for whom the Greeke Bible was first translated And because in all Greeke Bibles Kainan was set downe the Evangelist also to beare with the worlds weaknesse or for other causes seeming good to the Spirit of God reckneth Kainan betweene Arphaxad and Sala in Luke 3. 36. But neither here nor in 1 Chron. 1. nor in any Hebrew text in his name recorded See a like thing in Gen. 46. 20. Vers. 14. begat Heber after the flood 67 yeeres in the yeere of the world 1723. Vers. 16. begat Phaleg or Peleg after the flood 101 y. and of the world 1757. Vers. 17. 430 yeere So Heber lived till Abraham was dead Gen. 25. 7. and was the longest liver of all that were borne after the flood and they that came after him lived not past halfe his dayes Vers. 18. begat Ragau or Rehu after the flood 131 y. and of the world 1787. Vers. 20. begat Saruch or Serug after the flood 163 y. and of the world 1819. Vers. 22. thirty yeere at the same age Phaleg and Salah are before noted to have begotten their sonnes begat Nachor after the flood 193. and of the world 1849. Vers. 24. begat Tharah or Terach after the flood 222 y. and of the world 1878. Vers. 26. begat Abram Nachor and Haran that is began to beget and so begat one of these three to weet Haran not all in the same yeere The like was before in Noes begetting Sem Cham and Iapheth Gen. 5. 32. where Sem for dignity was named first as Abram is here and Iapheth the eldest last as Haran is here For Tharah the father dyed 205 yeares old vers 32. then Abram departed from Charran 75 yeere old Gen. 12. 4. wherfore Abram was borne not when Tharah was 70 but when he was 130 yeere old which was after the flood 352 yeere and of the world 2008. Vers. 28. land of his nativity that is his native country or as the Greeke saith wherein hee was borne Vr of the Chaldees that is Vr in the land of the Chaldeans which land Stephen calleth also Mesopotamia Act. 7. 2. 4. for it lay betweene two rivers And Chaldea is by humane writers also called Mesopotamia Plin. hist. b. 6. c. 27. Vr signifieth Light and Fire here the Chaldee paraphrast taketh it to be the name of a
histories testifie of that salt and dead sea as it was also called And the holy Scripture useth saltnesse for barrennesse Deut. 29. 23. Psal. 107. 34. This judgement of God brought upon one of the goodliest places in all Canaany signifying how that land and inhabitants should for their sinnes be deprived and made barren of all spirituall graces But by the Gospell and spirit of Christ graces are restored as was figured in a vision of waters issuing out of Gods house running into this sea healing the waters of it storing it with live fishes c. Ezek. 47. 1. 8. 9. 11. Vers. 4. served Chedor laomer herein God shewed the truth of Noes prophesie that Canaan should be Sems servant Gen. 9. 26. Chedorlaomer of Sems progeny was chiefe of all these Kings and Lord of the Canaanites Vers. 5. smote that is killed see vers 17. Rephaims or Raphaeans called of the Greeke and Chaldee paraphrast Giants and the Hebrew word is after used for such Deut. 2. 11. and Rapha was the name of a Giant that had foure sonnes Giants in Davids dayes 2 Sam. 21. 16. 22. But these Rephaims were now a people in Canaan Gen. 15. 20. Ashteroth a City in Basan where Og after reigned Ios. 13. 31. Zuzims these the Greeks call strong nations and the Chaldee Mighties Of them we reade not else-where unlesse their name was after changed by the Ammonites into Zamzummims Deut. 2. 20. Emims or according to the Greeke Ommeans these the Caldee calleth Terrible ones and so the Hebrue name signifieth They were a people great and many and tall as the Anakims accounted Giants and by the Moabites were called Terrible Emims Deut. 2. 10. 11. Shaveh or the plaine as the word signifieth of Kirjathaim which was a citie in the Land of Sihon afterwards King of Hesbon see Ios. 13. 19. Vers. 6. Chorites or Chorreans or Chorims a people that dwelt in Seir till Esau and his sonns drove them thence Deut. 2. 22. Gen. 36. 20. c. El-pharan by interpretation the Oke or plaine of Pharan or Paran which was a City by the wildernesse of that name see Gen. 21. 21. Vers. 7. En-mishpat that is by interpretation the Well of judgement and so the Greeke here calleth it the Chaldee nameth it the plaine of the division of judgement So called as it seemeth of Gods judgement or sentence given against Moses and Aaron for sinning at that place see Num. 20. 1. 10. 12. 13. the field that is the country or region so the field of Edom Gen. 32. 3. the field of Moab Gen. 36. 35. the field of Soan Psal. 78. 12. the field of Syria Hos. 12. 12. wherby those countries are meant the Amalekite so called afterward of Amalek son of Esau Gen. 36. 12. Hazezon thamar which the Chaldee calleth Engedi as it is also named in 2 Chron. 20. 2. a Citie in the Land of Canaan which fell to the tribe of Iudah Ios. 15. 62. a fruitfull place of vines Song 1. 13. Vers. 10. had many pits Hebr. pits pits which meaneth many or diuers pits so heapet heapes is many heapes Exod. 8. 14. rankes rankes Mar. 5. 40. for by many rankes fell that is were slaine there as the word also signifieth in Ios. 8. 24. 25. Iudg. 8. 10. and 12. 6. and many other places So there fell of Israel 1 Chron. 21. 14. for which in 2 Sam. 24. 15. is written there dyed See after Gen. 25. 18. Vers. 11. the substance or the goods cattell mony c. see Gen. 12. 5. their victuals or their meat the fruits of the land which were both sweet and plentifull made now a prey to the hungry souldiers The like judgements God threatned to the Israelites when they entred this land to possesse it if they brake his covenant Deuteron 28. 30. 31. 33. 51. Vers. 12. dwelt or was dwelling and so became partaker of their calamitie God thus chastening Lots former affectation of this pleasant country Gen. 13. 10. 11. Vers. 13. the Hebrew so named of his father Heber Gen. 11. 16. and hee and his children were commonly knowne by this title as in Gen. 39. 14. Numb 24. 24. Ier. 34. 9. Some thinke hee was so called of passing over the River when God called him from Chaldea Ios. 24. 2. but by Gen. 10. 21. it appeareth rather to bee of Heber the Patriarch and as this name of Hebrewes was the first title given to Abram and his seed so it indureth one of the last 2 Cor. 11. 22. Phil. 3. 5. the Okes or plaines see Gen. 13. 18. confederates Hebr. men or masters of league or covenant sworn-friends as the Greeke importeth Vers. 14. brother that is his kinsman see Gen. 13. 8. armed or drew out that is ledforth of his house Greeke numbred mustered trained or instructed we may understand it both of civill affaires and religion wherein hee had trained them the Chaldee calleth them young men and so doth Moses in vers 24. children that is servants borne in his house and to it belonging See after in Gen. 15. 3. pursued to weet after them as the Greeke saith meaning those kings fore-mentioned Dan a place in the north parts of Canaan called of old Leshem and being won by the Danites it was named Dan Ios. 19. 47. After it was called Caesarea so the Ierusalemy paraphrase calleth it Dan de Kasarjon Vers. 15. the left hand of Damascus called in Hebrew Dammesek and sometime Darmesek as 1 Chron. 18. 5. which was the head of Aram or Syria Es. 7. 8. and for the left hand both the Chaldee paraphrasts say north of Damascus and that rightly for the east is counted the formost part of the world and the west the hindmost Esay 9. 12. and the South is called the rightside opposed to the North Psal. 89. 13. Thus Abram pursued them passed in peace by a way that hee had not gone with his feet Esay 41. 3. Vers. 16. the substance or goods to weet of the S●do●ites as the Greeke version addeth Thus God gave the nations before Abram and made him rule ever Kings gave them as dust to his sword as driven stubble to his bow Esay 41. 2. A like victory God gave to David over the Amalekites 1 Sam. 30. 18. 19. c. And as the Hebrew have a saying that whatsoever befell unto the fathers is asigne unto the children so of this victory they write that it befell unto Abraham to teach that foure kingdomes should stand up to rule over the world and that in the end his children should rule over them and they should all fall by their hand and they should bring againe all their captives and all their substance Which are the foure kingdomes spoken of in Daniel R. Menachem on Gen. 14. Vers. 17. from smiting or from the slaughter as the Greeke turneth it and the Apostle hath the same word in Hebr. 7. 1. So in the Hebrew where one Prophet saith he smote 2 King 14. 5. another saith he killed 2 Chron. 25. 3.
2. give that is dispose and make my covenant or testament see Gen. 9. 12. and 6. 18. betweene me the Chaldee interpreteth it betweene my Word so after in v 7. 10. 11. See also Gen 9. 12. in very much abundance Hebr. in abundance abundance or vehemently vehemently so after in v. 6. and often Vers. 3. fell in reverence to Gods word and majesty and in thankfulnesse for this mercy See the like humiliation in Lev. 9. 24. Ezek. 1. 29. and 3. 23. Dan. 8. 17. Vers. 4. As for me Hebr. I the Greeke addeth And I. a father or for afather but the word for may be omitted in English as the Greeke here also doth and sometime the Hebrew it selfe as I will be for a lying spirit 2 Chron. 18. 21. that is I will be a lying spirit 1 King 22. 22. The New Testament in Greeke often keepeth the Hebraisme as Heb. 1. 5. c. a multitude that is of many nations as Paul expoundeth it Rom. 4. 16. 17. where the Apostle sheweth a twofold seed that which is of the Law and that which is of the Faith of Abraham who is the father of us all So by the multitude of nations is meant besides his naturall posterity all Christian beleevers in the world Gal. 3. 28. 29. who should inherit from him as children receive inheritance from their fathers the justice that is by faith and blessednesse accompanying the same through the covenant of grace propagated by Abrams doctrine and example see Rom. 4. and Gal. 3. To this the Hebrew Canons doe accord A stranger say they bringeth first-fruits c. for it was said to Abraham a father of a multitude of nations have I given thee to be Gen. 17. 5. Behold he is father of all the world which shall be gathered under the wings of the Majesty of God Maimony in Misn. treat of First fruits chap. 4. Sect. 3. Vers. 5. Abraham Abram signifieth A high father and the first letter of Hamon that is a multitude being put unto it maketh Abraham as if it were Abrahamon that is A high Father of a multitude of nations Abram is the first man in the world whose name is changed of God and it signified a change of estate and a renewing with increase of grace from God therefore this is after mentioned as one of his favours Neh. 9. 7. So Iakobs name is made new Gen. 32. 28. and all true Christians Esa. 62. 2. Rev. 2. 17. But Isaaks name was not changed for it was given him of God before his birth Gen. 17. 19. given that is freely made or as the Greeke interpreteth put thee and this the Apostle followeth in Rom. 4. 17. So Gen. 9. 12. and after here in vers 6. will give thee to be nations that is will make nations of thee Vers. 6. Kings as David Solomon and the rest of Israel besides the Kings of Edom and other Also the faithfull Kings of the Gentiles Revel 21. 24. Vers. 7. thy seed thy children especially Isaak verse 19. for in Isaak was his seed called Gen. 21. 12. So the children of the flesh are not the children of God but the children of the promise are counted for the seed Rom 9. 8. everlasting Hebr. covenant of eternity Although the outward signes and manner of dispensing this covenant were temporary and changeable as Circumcision into Baptisme Col. 2. 11. 12. yet the covenant it selfe remaineth one in substance for ever being st●blished by the blood of Christ the great Pastor Heb. 13. 20. Luke 1. 69. 72. 73. a God or for a God unto thee that is thy God as the Greeke translateth it Herein consisteth the power and life of the everlasting covenant whereby God himselfe his power wisedome goodnesse mercy c. is applyed unto man for blessing and salvation and wee are by adoption made the children of God 2 Cor. 6. 16. 18. For blessed is the people whose God Iehovah is Psal. 144. 15. they shall be delivered out of miseries Rev. 21. 3. 4. raised up from the dead Mat. 22. 31. 32. and God hath prepared for them an heavenly Citie Heb. 11. 16. Vers. 8. of thy sojournings that is as the Greeke explaineth it which thou sojournest in For God gave Abraham no inheritance in it no not so much as to set his foot on Acts 7. 5. but he by faith sojourned in the land of promise as in a strange country Heb. 11. 9. So this land figured unto him the kingdome of heaven as is shewed on Gen. 12. 4. But the rebellious sonnes of Abraham after they had full possession of Canaan are in another sense called sojourners there Ezek. 20. 38. and 11. 15. as being rather usurpers then lawfull possessors of that land everlasting so in Esay he saith thy people shall possesse the land for ever Esay 60. 21. howbeit they possessed the earthly land but a little while Esa. 63. 18. but the eternall inheritance was to be received by Christ reserved in the heavens for them and us Heb. 9. 15. 1 Pet. 1. 4. Vers. 9. thy seed thy children as before in v. 7. meaning al the faithful Herupon the Hebrew Doctors say Circumcision was commanded unto Abraham and his seed onely as it is written thou and thy seed after thee Gen. 17. 9. The seed of Ismael is excepted as it is written For in Isaak shall seed be called to thee Gen. 21. 12. And Esau is excepted for loe Isaak said to Iakob And he give to thee the blessing of Abraham to thee and to thy seed Gen. 28. 4. It is a generall rule that he onely is Abrahams seed that retaineth his law and his right way and these are they that ought to be circumcised Maimony in Misneh treat of Kings ch 10. S. 7. Vers. 10. my covenant that is the signe of my covenant or testament as is explained in verse 11. Hereupon are those usuall speeches when the signes and the things signified are named alike as the covenant of circumcision Act. 7. 8. the Lamb is the Lords Passeover Exod. 12. 11. the bread is Christs body Mat. 26. 17. 18. and many the like circumcised This word signifieth a cutting-offround-about to weet of the foreskin of the flesh So it was with shedding of blood and much paine and sorenesse to the flesh Exod. 4. 25. 26. Gen. 34. 25. It figured the circumcision that is the mortification of the heart and spirit in putting off the body of the sinnes of the flesh Deut. 10. 16. Rom. 2. 29. Col. 2. 11. and so it was a seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4. 11. Vers. 11. superfluous-foreskin The Hebrew Gnorlah signifieth a superfluity and stoppage that hindereth the due effect and operation of a thing and the Greeke Acrobustia which the Apostle useth in Rom. 2. 25. is in speciall that superfluity which is on the top of mans flesh to weet on the member of generation the foreskin that covereth the secret part Which God here commandeth to bee cut quite off as a signe of
to time and afterwards they circumcise him By which words is meant if he have an ague or like sicknesse but if hee have sore eyes or the like they circumcise him so soone as they are whole If a child be found on the 8 day to be very pale coloured they circumcise him not till the blood come againe into his countenance like the countenance of children that are in health Likewise if hee be very red they circumcise him not till his blood be sunk down into him and his countenance come againe like other children for this is a sicknesse and men must be admonished well of these things If a woman circumcise her first sonne and he die through fervency of the circumcision which decayed his strength Also she circumciseth her second child and he dye through the fervency of the circumcision whether shee have this child by her first husband or by a second loe her third child shall not bee circumcised in the time thereof but they defer it till he wexe great and his strength be made firme They circumcise none but children that are without sicknesse for perill of life putteth away all And it is possible to circumcise after the time but unpossible to restore the life of any one of Israel for ever Maimony treat of Circumcis ch 1. S. 16. 17. 18. your flesh that is the secret part or member of generation for so the word flesh here and in other places in speciall meaneth Ezek. 16. 26. and 23. 20. Lev. 15. 2. God set not the signe of his covenant on the lips eares or other parts of man which yet the Scripture calleth also uncircumcised Exod. 6. 30. Ier. 6. 10. but on the privy member to teach the regeneration of nature even of the whole man who is borne in sin Psal. 51. 7. and the derivation of his covenant to the seed of the faithful who are thereby holy Ezr. 9. 2. 1 Cor. 7. 14. and to signifie that the true circumcision is inward and secret Rom. 2. 28. 29. This which in the eyes of man seemeth a thing unprofitable foolish and ignominious doth God chuse to make a signe of the covenant of his grace in Christ who is also himselfe a scandall and foolishnesse to the world but the foolishnesse of God is wiser then the wisedome of men 1 Cor. 1. 23. 25. And that member of the body which man thought to be lesse honourable on it God put on more abundant honour as 1 Cor. 12. 23. that it should beare the marke of the heavenly covenant Vers. 14. that soule that is as the Chaldee expoundeth it that man see Gen. 12. 5. cut off The Greeke and Chaldee translate it destroyed and consumed This word is used before in Gen. 9. 11. and after often in the law Exod. 12. 15. 19. and 31. 14. Lev. 7. 20. 21. 25. 27 c. It is sometime spoken of God cutting off men by death for their sinnes Lev. 17. 10. and 20. 3. 5. 6. and so the Hebrewes understand it here and in all other like places that for willing transgression in secret God will cut them off by untimely death and if there be witnesses of it the Magistrate is to punish or kill them but for ignorant transgression they were to bring the appointed sacrifices Vnder this also eternall damnation is implyed Maimony in treat of Repentance chap. 8. S. 1. speaking of eternall death saith And this is the Cutting off written of in the Law as it is said in Num. 15. 31. that soule shall bee cut-off he shall be cut off Which we have heard expounded thus cut off in this world and cut off in the world to come Of this sanction here they say If the father or master doe transgresse and circumcise not they break a commandement but are not guilty of cutting-off for cutting-off belongs but to the uncircumcised person him-selfe Maimony treat of Circumcis c. 1. S. 1. Howbeit Moses the father had almost beene killed for not circumcising his sonne Exod. 4. 24. c. broken or made frustrate broken downe this word is opposed to the former stablishing or making firm in vers 7. The Hebrewes have a canon who so breaketh the covenant of Abraham our father and leaveth his superfluous-foreskin or gathereth it over again although he have in him the law and good workes hee hath no portion in the world to come Maimony treat of Circumcis chap. 3. S. 8. Which rule is true according to the Apostles interpretation applying circumcision to the heart spirit and faith in Christ Rom. 2. 29. and 4. 11. Col. 2. 11. Vers. 15. Sarah in Greeke Sarrha The letter j changed into h signified the multiplication of her children as before in Abrams name vers 5. And the Greeke having no h at the end of words doubleth therefore the letter r with an aspiration Sarrha and so the Apostles also write it Rom. 9. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 6. Sarai the Chaldean name is made Hebrew Sarah which is by interpretation a Princesse The Apostle calleth her a Freewoman and maketh her a figure of the new Testament and heavenly Ierusalem Gal. 4. 22. 24. 26. and the example of Abraham and Sarah thus called blessed and increased is set forth for their children the Church to consider and comfort themselves withall Esay 51. 1. 2. 3. Vers. 16. shall be to nations that is shall become nations and bee a mother of them both in the flesh and in the Lord. For all godly women are called her children 1 Pet. 3. 6. and Ierusalem her answerable type is the mother of us all Galat. 4. 26. Psal. 87. 5. 6. Vers. 17. laughed that is as the Chaldee translateth it rejoyced and so the word after importeth Gen. 21. 6. though sometime it implyeth also a doubting as in Gen. 18. 12. 13. but the praise of Abrahams faith who was not weake nor staggering but gave glory to God Rom. 4. 19. 20. seemeth to free him from this imputation Thargum Ierusalemy expoundeth it he marvelled Of this word laughed in Hebrew jsaak the child promised was called Isaak in whom Abraham saw the day of Christ and rejoyced old Hebr. sonne of 100 yeeres that is going in his hundred yeere So Sarah was daughter of ninety yeeres See Gen. 5. 32. At these yeeres both their bodies were now dead unapt for generation Rom. 4. 19. Heb. 11. 12. Vers. 19. shall beare or beareth speaking as of a thing present for God calleth the things which bee not as though they were Rom. 4. 17. Isaak Heb. Iitschak the same word used before in vers 17. and signifieth laughing or joy for besides his father and mother all that heare have occasion to laugh and rejoice for his birth Gen. 21. 6. in whom both Christ the joy of the whole earth was represented and all the children of promise Iohn 8. 56. Rom. 9. 7. 8. Gal. 4. 28. seed the Greeke version addeth to be a God to him and to his seed as before in verse 7. Vers. 20. heard the Chaldee
and she saw him that he was a goodly child and she hid him three moneths And she could not longer hide him and shee tooke for him an arke of bulrushes and dawbed it with slime and with pitch and she put the childe therein and put it in the flags by the rivers brink And his sister stood afarre off to know what should be done to him And the daughter of Pharaoh came downe to wash at the river and her maidens walked by the rivers side and she saw the arke among the flags and sent her hand maid and tooke it And she opened it and saw the child and behold the babe wept and she had-compassion on him and said This is one of the Hebrewes children And his sister said to Pharaohs daughter shall I goe and call to thee a woman a nurse of the hebrew women that she may nurse the child for thee And Pharaohs daughter said to her Go and the maid went called the childs mother And Pharaohs daughter said to her Take this child away and nurse it for me and I will give thee thy wages and the woman tooke the child nursed it And the child grew great and she brought him unto Pharaohs daughter and he was to her for a son and she called his name Moses and she said because I drew him out of the water And it was in those dayes when Moses was growen-great that hee went-out unto his brethren and saw their burdens and he saw an Egyptian man smiting an Hebrew man one of his brethren And hee looked this way and that way and saw that there was no man and he smote the Egyptian and hid him in the land And he went-out in the second day and behold two Hebrew men strove-together and he said to the wicked one wherefore smitest thou thy neighbour And hee said who made thee a man a prince and a judge over us sayest thou this to kill me as thou killedst the Egyptian And Moses feared and said surely the thing is knowne And Pharaoh heard this thing and he sought to kill Moses and Moses fled from the face of Pharaoh and dwelt in the land of Midian and hee sate downe by a well And the Priest of Midian had seven daughters and they came and drew water and filled the troughes to water their fathers flocke And the sheedherds came and drove them away and Moses stood-up and saved them and watred their flocke And they came unto Reguel their father and he said why are ye come so soone to day And they sayd an Egyptian man delivered us out of the hand of the sheepherds and also drawing drew water for us and watred the flocke And he sayd unto his daughters and where is he wherefore now have ye left the man call him that he may eate bread And Moses was content to dwell with the man and he gave Zipporah his daughter unto Moses And she bare a sonne and he called his name Gershom for he sayd I have been a stranger in a forraigne land And it was after those many dayes when the King of Egypt was dead and the sonnes of Israel sighed for the servitude and cryed-out that their cry came-up unto God for the servitude And God heard their growning and God remembred his covenant with Abraham with Isaak and with Iakob And God looked upon the sonnes of Israel and God knew them Annotations A Man named Amram the sonne of Kohath the sonne of Levi Exod. 6. 16. 18. 20. To this religious family rather then any other God now appeared which mercy is remembred in 1 Sam. 2. 27. tooke to wife Exod. 6. 20. the daughter named Iochebed sister unto Kohath and next daughter to Levi aunt unto Amram her husband Exod 6. 20. Numb 26. 59. So Thargum Ierusalemy saith hee tooke Iochebed his aunt to him to wife Such mariages with their neere kindred were afterwards forbidden when the tribes and families were multiplyed Levit. 18. 12. a sonne this was not their first childe for Marie a daughter and Aaron a sonne were both borne before him Verse 4. Numb 26. 59. Exod. 7. 7. Vers. 2. a goodly childe or fayre proper child so the Apostle following the Greeke version translateth it in Hebr. 11. 23. the Hebrew being good meaning in forme and beauty as Gen. 24. 16. and Stephen addeth goodly or faire to God Act. 7. 20. that is exceeding faire or having divine beauty and g●●dlinesse and there be of the Iew Doctors which write to the like effect that hee had the forme of an Angel of God Pirkei R. Elie 〈…〉 chap. 48. And heathen writers make mention also of his beautifull personage Iustin. hist. b. 36. This Moses was by the father the seventh generation from Abraham as Enoch was the seventh from Adam and Abraham the Hebrew was the seventh from Heber and considering his mi●●des upon Egypt and his lawes unto Israel hee may be likened to that manchild who 〈◊〉 to rule all 〈◊〉 with 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 Rev. 12. 5. 〈…〉 together with his father therefore the Greeke translateth they hid And Paul saith By faith Moses was hid of his parents three moneths because they saw hee was a goodly childe and they were not afraid of the kings commandement Heb. 11. 23. This hiding was in his owne fathers house Act. 7. 20. in the yeare from the creation of the world 2433. Vers. 3. longer or any more by reason they dwelt mixed with the Egyptians Exod. 3. 22. and the kings commandement was strait and dangerous to transgresse Exod. 1. 22. Heb. 11. 23. arke or coffin whereof see Gen. 6. 14. Thus Moses as Noe was saved in an arke from drowning what that figured see Gen. 6. 15. c. bulrushes a thing there growing of which the Egyptians used to make leight botes and vessels to goe upon the waters Esay 18. 2. flags or sea weeds or sedge such as grew by that river and in the red sea and other seas Ion. 2. 5. Hereof the Redsea had the name see Exod. 10. 19. brinke Hebr. lip Vers. 4. his sister named Marie or Miriam of whom see Exod. 15. 20. Numb 26. 59. stood or set her selfe to stand and looke or espied as the Greek translateth it to learne what should befall him Vers. 6. saw the child or saw him namely the child had compassion or mercifully spared him see this word in Cen. 19. 16. Hebrewes so the Israelites were called of Heber see Gen. 14. 13. and 39. 14. The Chaldee translateth it Iewes so after verse 7. 11. 13. c. Vers. 7. a woman a nurse an Hebrew phrase the word woman may in English bee omitted as the word man in verse 11. 14. See Gen. 13. 8. 38. 1. Vers. 10. for a sonne adopted to be as her owne child and trained up in all the wisedome of the Egyptians Act. 7. 21. 22. Moses in Hebrew Mosheh but the Greeke of the new Testament writeth him Moses and Moyses Mat. 19. 8. Act. 7. 20. 35. 37. his name signifieth
gotten victorie over the spirituall Pharaoh the Beast Antichrist when they stand by the sea of glasse mingled with fire as Israel here standeth by the red sea having harpes of God as the women here had timbrels v. 20. and they sing the song of Moses the servant of God and the song of the Lamb the Son of God Rev. 15. 2. 3. 4. gloriously or excellently Hebr. excelling excelleth which the Gr. translateth is become gloriously glorious The Chaldee paraphraseth for he excelleth above the excellent and excellencie is his Vers. 2. Iah this is one of the proper names of God Psal. 68. 5. first used in this song and seldome but in songs and psalmes The Hebrew Halelujah that is Praise yejah is kept by the Holy Ghost in Greeke Allelouia Rev. 19. 1. 3. 4. 6. The memoriall of this name was kept also among the heathen Romans who called their greatest god Iu-piter that is Iah father The Greeke Bible usually translateth Iah Lord the Chaldee Feare and Th●rgum Ierusaelemy on this place expoundeth it the Feare of all the world Other Hebrewes make it an abridgement of the name Iehovah and a part of it Maimo●y in Iesudei hatorah chap. 6. S. 4. so it signifieth the essence or being of God as Iehovah also doth whereof see the notes on Gen. 2. 4. or as Iah is p●onounced with breathing it may signifie God who giveth to all Life and Breath and all things Acts 17. 25. my strength he which giveth me strength as in Psalme 68. 36 so the Greeke here translateth it Helper or he to whom I give strength that is strong praise as in Psalme 29. 1. give ye to Iehovah glory and strength so out of the mouth of babes and sucklings thou hast founded strength Psal. 8. 3. is expounded by our Saviour thou hast perfected praise Matth. 21. 16. Howbeit we may here retaine the name Strength which the Holy Ghost often ascribeth to God among other his praises as in 1 Tim. 6. 16. to whom be honour and strength in 1 Peter 4. 11. to whom be glory and strength and sundry the like Revel 1. 6. and 5. 13. Strength is here and alwaies ascribed unto God for by his owne strength shall no man prevaile 1 Sam. 2. 9. song or psalme melodie that is the argument of my song or whom I praise with Psalme so the Chaldee translateth it my praise also the Greeke in Esay 12. 2. though here it turneth it my protectour It is generally all melodie with voice of man Esay 51. 3. or instruments of musicke Amos 5. 23. These words the Prophets after use when they sing of Christ and of his graces as Psal. 118. 14. and Esay 12. 2. where the name Iehovah is added for Iah Iehovah is my strength and song There immediatly before he hath reference to Israels salvation from the Egyptians Esay 11. 15. 16. which being by him applied to our salvation by Christ sheweth that all these things happened unto them for types as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 10. 11. and he or for he as And he heard Esay 39. 1. is expounded For he heard 2 King 20. 12. And thou wilt save 2 Sam. 22. 28. is For thou wilt save Psalme 18. 28. a salvation or for a salvation that is hath saved helped or delivered mee from mine enemies who were too strong for mee So this phrase meaneth as in 2 Sam. 10. 11. If the Syrian be too strong for me then thou shalt be to me a salvation that is shalt helpe or rescue me Thus Christ is called Gods salvation Luke 2. 30. because by him God hath saved and delivered us out of the hands of our enemies Luke 1. 71. 74. The Chaldee here paraphraseth hee said by his word and hath beene to mee a redeemer an habitation or a comely dwelling and so will dwell with him the Chaldee explaineth it I will build him a sanctuarie Or wee may English it I will adorne him will doe him seemely honour as the Greeke translateth I will glorifie him my father this the Chaldee expoundeth my fathers it seemeth principally to intend Abraham the father of many nations Genes 17. 5. and with him Isaak Iakob and the rest to whom God gave his promises which now beganne to be performed to their children Gen. 15. 14. exalt with song and praise as this word is often used in Psalmes wherein God his name and actions are extolled Psalme 30. 2. and 118. 28. and 145. 1. Esay 25. 1. Vers. 3. man of warre that is a noble warriour for the word man added to other things often signifieth excellencie as a man of arme is a mighty one Iob 22. 8. a man of words is an eloquent person Exod. 4. 10. And so the Chaldee here expresseth it calling him the Lord and Victour of wars and the Greeke a breaker of warres Now did the Lord ride upon his horses and his chariots of salvation his bow was made quite naked Habakkuk 3. 8. 9. This also may have reference to Christ the Conquerour as Psalme 24. 8. Revel 19. 11. c. Iehovah this name among other things noteth Gods powerfull effecting of judgements upon his enemies for the salvation of his Church and hee is therefore called Iehovah of hosts Psal. 83. 14. 19. and 46. 7. 8. 12. See the notes on Genes 2. 4. and Exodus 6. 3. Vers. 4. the choise that is as the Greeke translateth his chosen captaines meaning the fairest best and valiantest as the Chaldee translateth the fairest so in Gen. 23. 6. Of these captaines see Exod. 14. 7. Like triumph shall bee over the enemies of Christ when all the fowles of heaven shall be called to eat the flesh of Kings and of Captaines and of mighty men and the flesh of horses and of them that sit on them c. Rev. 19. 17. 18. 21. Vers. 5. as a stone that they could not helpe themselves with swimming neither rise up any more for ever as Ierem. 51. 63. 64. So after in verse 10. they sanke as lead This is remembred in Nehem. 9. 11. their persecutors thou threwest into the deepes as a stone into the mighty waters A like judgment God will bring upon Babylon the spirituall Egypt for as a stone cast into the sea so with violence shall that great citie Babylon be throwne downe and shall be found no more at all Revel 18. 21. Ver. 6. become glorious or wondrous excellent ample and magnificent It may also imply is become glorious to me So David extolleth the workes of Gods right hand Psal. 118. 15. 16. Vers. 7. against thee the Chaldee saith against thy people for that which is done against them is against God himselfe Zacharie 2. 8. Matthew 25. 45. Acts 9. 4. eat them up that is devoure and consume them as the Chaldee explaineth it consumed them as the fire doth the stubble So Gods wrath is likened to fire Psalme 89. 47. and the wicked to stubble Esa. 5. 24. and 47. 14. Vers. 8. blast or spirit or winde of thy
holy place as the Meat-offring see Levit. 2. 3. and 6. 25. 29. and 7. 6. 7. Vers. 15. transgresse or sacrilegiously-trespasse defraud The Hebrew Maghnal though it ●e generally used for all transgression and disloyaltie that the inferiour committeth against the superiour as the wife against her husband Num. 5. 12. and the like yet for the most part it is applied to evils committed against the Lord and his covenant service and holy things wherof this law in speciall is and so differeth from all the other lawes The Hebrew doctors thus explaine it It is unlawfull for a private man to make profit or use of the holy things of the Lord Whether they be things that are offred upon the altar or things sanctified for the reparation or maintenance of the Sanctuary And who soever maketh profit or use to the value of a mite of the holy things of the Lord he transgresseth Maimony in Meghnilah or treat of Transgression chap. 1. Sect. 1. through ignorance or unadvisednesse by errour see Lev. 4. 2. If he did it presumptuously and God onely knew it he was in danger to be cut off by his hand if his presumption were knowne to men the Magistrate punished him The sacrifice was for ignorance onely Whosoever sacrilegiously-transgresseth presumptuously is to be beaten and must pay for the detriment c. Maim in Megnilah chap. 1. Sect. 3. the holy things these were many and manifold waies men might transgresse in them As for a man to eat within his private gates the tithe of his corne wine oile c. Deut. 12. 17. 18. to doe work with his firstborne bullocke or sheer his firstborn sheep Deut. 15. 19. to eat the first fruits of his land Exod. 34. 26. ler. 2. 3. to keep-backe ought of the price of things dedicated to holy use as did Ananias and Saphira Act. 5. 1. 2. c. and many like things All the most holy things men might sacrilegiously-transgresse concerning them by making profit or use of them from the time they were sanctified untill their blood was sprinkled When the blood was sprinkled they might transgresse concerning them in any thing that was wholly for the fire untill it was burnt and caried out to the place of ashes As the burnt-offring whether beast or fowle and the handfull of the meat-offring and the frankincense the meat-offring of the Priests c. they might transgresse concerning them from the houre they were sanctified untill they were caried out after their burning upon the altar unto the place of ashes So for bullocks and goats that were burnt without the campe So for the red Cow Num. 19. from the sanctifying thereof till it were made ashes for though it were of the holy things for the maintenance of the sanctuary yet loe it is said thereof it is a sin-offring Num. 19 9. The sin-offring beast and trespasse offring and peace-offrings of the congregation they might transgresse in them all from their sanctifying till the sprinkling of their blood When the blood was sprinkled they might transgresse in the fat and inwards til they were caried out to the place of ashes c. In the meat-offrings they might transgresse from the sanctifying of them yea though they were not as yet sanctified in a ministring vessel until the handful was burnt on the altar c. The shew bread they might transgresse therein frō the sanctifying of it yea though it were not as yet baken until the incense upon it was burned The drink offrings men might transgres in thē after they were sanctified The bones sinewes hornes hoofes of the most holy sacrifices which were separated before t●e sprinkling of the blood they might transgresse in them The ashes of the altar in the courtyard before they were taken from upon it or after they might transgresse in them Any beast of the most holy things that had able●ish c they might transgresse therein from the sanctifying of it till it was redeemed He that separateth mony for to buy his sin-offring burnt-offring or trespass-offring or for ●●●●le doves or pigeons they might transgresse therein from the houre of the separating thereof A man sanctifieth for the maintenance of the sanctuary a thing meet to repaire the same as stone or timber or a thing meet for the altar as lambes or doves or he sanctifieth for the altar a thing meet to repaire the sanctuary as stone or timber Or sanctifieth for one thing that which is not meet for it but for another or which is not meet for either of both as henns lands yea though it be but dust or ashes they might transgresse in any of these from the hour they were sanctified untill such things were redeemed as were meet to be redeemed These and many the like eases are shewed by Maimony in Meghnilah ch 2 c. of which hee saith in the end c. 8. s. 8. It is meet for a man to set himselfe to understand the ordinances of the holy Law and to know the end of matters according as he is able And the thing whereof he can finde no reason nor know any worth thereof let it not be light in his eyes And let him not break through to goe up unto the Lord lest he brake forth upon him Exod. 19. 24. Neither let him thinke of this as he thinketh of other cōmon things Behold how great weight there is in the law touching s●orilegious transgression And what though they bee wood and stone and dust ashes when the name of the Lord of all the world is called only upon things they are sanctified And who so useth them to common use hee transgresseth therin and though he doe it through ignorance hee must needs bring an atonement How much more concerning the commandements which the holy blessed God hath prescribed unto us that a man should not tread them under foot because he knows not the reason of them c. Behold it is said in the law Lev. 19. 37. 20. 22. ye shall keepe all my statutes and all my judgements and doe them Our wise men have sayd that keeping doing must be applied unto the statutes as unto the judgments c. Now the judgments they are commandements the reason or meaning whereof is manifest and the good that commeth by doing them is known in this world as the forbidding to rob to shed blood the commandement to honor father and mother But the statutes or ordinances are commandements the reason whereof is not known c. And all the sacrifices everyone genera●y are statutes or ordinances and our wise men have said for the service of the sacrifices the world 〈◊〉 continue for by doing the statutes and the 〈…〉 righteous men are made worthy of life in the world to come And the law setteth the commandement of the 〈◊〉 first saying And ye shal keep my 〈◊〉 my judgements which if a man doe he shall live by them 〈◊〉 18 3. ●n which last words of the Rabbine it app 〈…〉 how the
profaneth the Name of God and if it be before ten of Israel hee profaneth it publikely and he disanulleth the affirmative precept for sanctifiyng Gods name and transgresseth against the prohibition of profaning his name Maimony tom 1. in Iesudei hatorah ch 5. sect 4. Vers. 22. with a male or with man-kinde this was the sin of Sodom Gen. 19. 5. and of other heathens Rom. 1. 27. called the going after other flesh Iuce vers 7. They that thus sinned were by Moses Law to be stoned to death Lev. 20. 13. by the law of Christ they shall bee shut out of the kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6. 9. 10. like copulation with a woman Hebrew with the lyings or copulations of a woman Vers. 23. to lye downe thereto or that it may lye with her which sense the Greeke version also affordeth So in Lev. 20. 16. where such beastlinesse is punished with death And whether it be tame-beast or wild-beast or fowle all are to be stoned to death Maimony in Issureibiah ch 1. sect 16. confusion in Greeke a detestable thing Vers. 24. in any of these or in all these which Targum Ionathan expoundeth in any-one of all these every of which the Hebrewes call Nakednes after the scripture phrase and they say There are also other women which are forbidden by tradition and the doctrine of the Scribes these they call Secondaries as being second or next to the foresaid nakednesses and of them there be 20. women and they are these 1 The mothers mother and this is infinite as the mothers mothers mothers mother and so all upward are unlawfull 2 The mother of his mothers father onely and no further are forbidden 3 His fathers mother infinite as the fathers mothers mothers mother and all upward are unlawfull 4 The mother of his fathers father and no further 5 The wife of his fathers father infinite Though she were the wife of our father Iakob or Noe shee is unlawfull for every of us 6 The wife of his mothers father and no further 7 The wife of his fathers brother by the mother 8 The wife of his mothers brother whether by the mother or by the father 9 His sons daughter in law that is his sons sons wife infinite though it should be his sons sons sons sons wife even to the worlds end So that Noe if he were now living might never marry with any widow that had been wife to any of his sons 10 His daughters daughter in law or sonnes wife and no further 11 The daughter of his sons daughter no further 12 The daughter of his son son and no further 13 The daughter of his daughters daughter onely 14 The daughter of his daughters son onely 15 The daughter of his wives sons son onely 16 The daughter of his wives daughters daughter onely 17 The mother of his wives fathers mother onely 18 The mother of his wives mothers father only 19 The mother of his wives mothers mother onely 20 The mother of his wives fathers father onely So there are found of these which are secondarily unlawfull foure which are infinite The mothers mother and all upward The fathers mother and all upward The grandfathers wife and all upward The sons son wife and all downward Maimony in Ishoth or 〈…〉 of Wives ch 〈◊〉 sect 6. Vers. 25. doe visit or have visited that is punished or as the Greeke translateth recompensed the time past being used for the more certainty 〈…〉 the thing were already done spueth or v 〈…〉 teth out with ●othsomnesse and indignation 〈◊〉 the Greek explaineth it So after in Lev. 20. 〈◊〉 Vers. 26. any of these or any of all these abo 〈…〉 tions So in vers 29. stranger or sojourner 〈◊〉 Greeke proselyte Vers. 28. the nation in Greeke the nations 〈◊〉 Chaldee the peoples Vers. 29. the soules that is the persons 〈…〉 rooted out or destroyed as the Greeke and Chald 〈…〉 explaine it Of this judgement see Levit. 20. 〈◊〉 Gen. 17. 14. Vers. 30. my charge Hebrew my keeping or 〈…〉 die that is which I command to be kept In Greek my ordinances in Chaldee the custodie of my 〈◊〉 statutes of abominations that is most abo 〈…〉 statutes meaning their sinfull practices which 〈…〉 orow custome grew to be as a Law amongst them CHAP. XIX Sundry lawes teaching 2 holinesse 3 obed 〈…〉 4 and true religion To leave some of the fruits of the Land for the poore 11 Against lying swearing defraud 〈…〉 sing and unrighteousnesse 16 Against talebearing hate revenge 19 unlawfull mixtures and fornication 23 The law for uncircumcised fruits 26 Against observing heathenish manners 29 whoredome 31 familiar spirits 32 To honour the ancients 34 to love strangers 36 to have just ballances 37 and to observe all Gods statutes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto all the Congregation of the sonnes of Israel and say unto them Ye shall be holy for I Iehovah your God am holy Ye shall feare every-man his mother and his father and keepe my Sabbaths I am Iehovah your God Turne yee not unto Idols and make not to your-selves molten gods I am Iehovah your God And when ye sacrifice a sacrifice of Peace offring unto Iehovah yee shall sacrifice it for your favourable acceptation In the day that ye sacrifice it it shall bee eaten and on the morrow and that which remaineth untill the third day shall bee burnt in the fire And if it be eaten at all in the third day it is a polluted-thing it shall not bee favourably-accepted And they that eate it every one shall beare his iniquity because he hath profaned the holy thing of Iehovah and that soule shall be cut-off-from his peoples And when ye reape the harvest of your land thou shalt not wholly-rid the corner of thy field in reaping neither shalt thou glean the gleaning of thy harvest And thou shalt not gather-the-single-grapes of thy vineyard nor gleane the grapes that are broken off of thy vineyard thou shalt leave them for the poore and for the stranger I am Iehovah your God Ye shall not steale neither falsly-deny nor deale-falsly any-man with his neighbour And ye shall not sweare by my name to falshood and thou shalt not profane the name of thy God I am Iehovah Thou shalt not fraudulently-oppresse thy neighbour neither rob him the work of him that is hired shall not abide-all-night with thee untill the morning Thou shalt not curse the deafe and before the blinde thou shalt not put a stumbling-blocke but thou shalt feare thy God I am Iehovah Ye shall not do unrighteousnesse in judgment thou shalt not respect the person of the poore nor honor the person of the great man in justice shalt thou judge thy neighbour Thou shalt not walke a talebearer among thy people thou shalt not stand against the blood of thy neighbour I am Iehovah Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart rebuking thou shalt rebuke thy neighbour and not beare sin for him
with dust on his feete or with bags of money about him And I need not speake how it is unlawfull to spit in any part of the mountaine of the House but he must wrap up his excrements in his handkerchiefe And he may not make the mount of the house a thorow-fare to goe in at one doore and out at another to shorten his way but must goe round about and not come in there save for the thing that is commanded And all that went in to the mount of the House went in by the way of the right hand and turned and went out by the way of the left except hee unto whom some thing had befallen for which he turned towards the left hand Therefore they asked him what is befallen thee the thou turnest towards the left hand If he said because I am a mourner they answered Hee that dwelleth in this House comfort thee If he said Because I have the Niddui that is the lesser excommunication upon me they answered Hee that dwelleth in this House give into thine heart that thou maist hearken unto the words of thy neighbours Whosoever had accomplished his service and went his way did not goe out with his backe to the Temple but went backward by little and little and went softly sidelong till he was out of the courtyard and so did the men that kept the watch and their courses and the Levites c. all this was for reverence of the Sanctuarie And whosoever assembled into the Courtyard went softly unto the place whither it was lawfull for him to come and he was to consider that he stood before the Lord as he hath said Mine eyes and mine heart shall be there all dayes 2 Chron. 7. 16. And he was to goe with dread and with feare and trembling And it was unlawfull for any man to sit in all the Courtyard neither was there any seat in the Courtyard s 〈…〉 for the Kings of Davids house onely as it is writt●● And King David went in and sate before the 〈◊〉 1 Sam. 7. 18. And it is unlawfull for a man to make an house after the fashion of the Temple or a 〈◊〉 like the porch thereof or a courtyard like the c●●●t thereof or a Table like the Table there or a C 〈…〉 cke like the C 〈…〉 lesticke thereof c. With these rites which were in Israel wee may compare the 〈◊〉 of our Saviour who for reverence of the Sanctuarie drove out the merchants from thence and the sheepe and the oxen and poured out the changers money and overthrew the Tables and said Make not my fathers house an house of merchandize Ioh. 2. 14. 15. 16. And he would not suffer that 〈◊〉 man should cary any vessell through the Temple Mark 11. 16. And for turning their backs towards the Sanctuarie see Ezek. 46. 9. and 8. 16. But as the Sanctuarie of God was chiefly a figure of the body of our Lord Iesus Iohn 2. 19. 21. Hebrewes 9. 11. so this precept hath chiefest respect unto him whom all ought to reverence and to honour the Son even as they honour the Father Ioh. 5. 23. Who when hee bringeth in the first begotten into the world he saith And let all the Angels of God worship him Heb. 1. 6. Vers. 31. Turne not unto them the Chaldee saith after them and so the Greeke ye shall not follow So in Levit. 20. 6. Hereby is forbidden consulting with or 〈…〉 ing of them as Deut. 18. 11. that have 〈◊〉 spirits called in Hebrew Oboth of Ob which is a bottle Iob 32. 19. in Greeke Eggastri 〈◊〉 as speaking with an hollow voice out of the belly or as out of a bottle in Chaldee Biddin Pit●●●s These were spirits of divination as Act. 16. 16. Or which see the annotations on Deut. 18. 11. And O●●th is here for Baale oboth such as have familiar spirits as is expressed in 1 Sam. 28. 7. So Spirits are used for spirituall gifts and men that have them in 1 Cor. 14. 12. 32. 1 Ioh. 4. 1. wizarde or cunning persons so named of their knowledge which they pretended to have These are joyned to the familiar spirits aforesaid as like unto them in sinne and both of them were to be killed by the Magistrate Levit. 20. 27. See the notes on Deut. 18. 11. This precept is added next the former of reverencing Gods Sanctuarie which figured Christ even as in Deut. 18. when God calleth them ●●om all such familiar spirits wizards c. he promiseth the Prophet Christ unto his people So here Chazkuni observeth ye shall reverence my S●●ct●●rie therefore turne not to them that have familiar spirits and to wizards for what have you to doe with such behold you have a Sanctuarie wherein is V 〈…〉 〈◊〉 Thu 〈…〉 im Vers. 32. rise up in signe of honour 1 King 2. 19. the ●oary-head that is the man which hath an 〈◊〉 head or gray-hayres which as it is the ho 〈◊〉 of old-men Prov. 20. 29. so God would have such to be honoured The Greeke translateth it the 〈◊〉 headed the Chaldee him that is skilfull in the L●● And so it is holden by the Hebrewes that learned men are by this law to be reverenced as the aged and that when such came within foure 〈◊〉 the yongers were to rise up and so soone as they were past to sit downe againe of the old-man or of the elder which was a common name for aged persons and for Magistrates usually called Elders Deut. 22. 18. and 25. 7. both are to be honoured the one for their age the other for their office But for their sins the Lord threatned the contrary Deut. 28. 50. which Ieremy saw fulfilled and lamented that the faces of Elders were not honoured Lam. 5. 12. By the Hebrewes account a man at sixtie yeeres was Old and at seventie Hoarie or gray-headed The old man here is in Targum Ionathan expounded the wise man Vers. 33. a stranger in Greeke a proselyte this Law is here repeated from Exod. 22. 21. see the annotations there vexe him in Greeke afflict him and Targum Ionathan addeth with hard words So it is explained by Sol. Iarchi vexations of words as thou shalt not say unto him yesterday thou wast an idolater and now thou comest to learn the Law which was given from the mouth of the Power of God Vers. 34. as one homeborne that is as a naturall Israelite for affection towards him and not communion in the holy things of God see the notes on Exod. 12. 48. 49. as thy selfe the same which was commanded before touching the Israelites verse 18. The Hebrewes write hereof thus The love of the stranger which commeth and gathereth him-selfe under the wings of the Divine-Majestie is a twofold commandement first because he is among our generall neighbours and againe because he is a stranger and the law saith YE SHALL LOVE THE STRANGER Deut. 10. 19. He hath commanded the love of the stranger even as hee hath commanded the love of
such a garment as was bound to have the Fringe that he might keepe this commandement and in the time of prayer he is to be warned hereof more especially It is a great shame for wise men that they should pray and not be arraied herewith A man must for ever be warned of this commandement of the Fringe for the Scripture maketh it of great weight and all the commandements every one depend upon it Maim in Zizith ch 3. sect 11 12. But they abused this as other divine ordināces to superstitiō hypocrisie were reproved by our Saviour for making their Phylacteries broad inlarging the borders or Fringes of their garments Mat. 23. 5. And this their vanitie neglecting the spirituall end appeareth in their writings for unto the thrums or threeds of the garment w ch were three inches they fastned threeds doubled in the midst whose length they say might not be lesse than foure inches but more than so they might be though a cubit or two cu 〈…〉 Maim in Zizith ch 1. s. 6. And for the vertue hereof they say Who so diligently keepeth this Law of Fringes is made worthy and shall see the face of the Majestic of God Baal hatturini on Num. 15. and when a man is cloathed with the Fringe and g 〈…〉 out therewith to the doore of his habitation hee is safe and God rejoyceth and the destroying Angell departeth from thence and the man shall be delivered from all hurt and from all destruction c. R. Menachem on Num. 15. Thus easie it is for men to abuse holy things and to pervert the right use and end of them by their owne inventions See the annotations on Exod. 13. 9. And although they 〈◊〉 so great religion in these Fringes yet as they have lost the spirit and life of this commandement so God hath deprived them of the outward ri●e that they have not at this day by their owne confession the blew or heaven-coloured ribband The blew Teceleth is not found in our hands at this day because we know not to make the die or colou● of it for every blew in wooll is not called Teceleth But the Teceleth or Blew spoken of in the Law it is knowne that it is unpossible to make it at this day and therefore we make the white o●ely saith Rambam or Maimony in his exposition on Talmud Bab. in Menachoth ch 4. and that ye seeke not or and ye shall not seeke or search as Num. 14. 36. which word Solomon applieth to his heart searching out things by wisdome Eccles. 1. 13. and 7. 25. The Greeke here translateth it turne aside the Chaldee erre or goe astray your heart in Chaldee the imagination of your heart Here God calleth men from their owne wisdome and inventions to his Law onely for every imagination of the thoughts of mans heart is onely evill every day Gen. 6. 5. And he that trusteth in his owne heart is a foole Prov. 28. 26. your eyes in Chaldee the sight of your eyes So the holy Ghost saith Walke in the wayes of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into judgement Eccles. 11. 9. And the Apostle mentioneth the lust of the eyes as that which is not of the Father but of the world 1 Iohn 2. 16. The Hebrewes say The heart and the eyes are the spies of the body and brokers to bring it into transgression the eye feeth and the heart lusteth and the bodie acteth the transgression Sol. Iarchi on Num. 15. The Lord condemning the heart which is the most noble of all the inward parts and the eyes which are the most excellent of all the outward teacheth that the whole man is corrupted thorowout and to be reformed by the Law and Spirit of God For except a man be borne of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Iohn 3. 5. you goe a whoring in Chaldee you orre or goe astray To goe a whoring after other gods is an usuall phrase for idolatrie Exod. 34. 15. Deut. 31. 16. 1 Chr● 5. 25. Iudg. 2. 17. the same is implied here as God saith I am broken with their whorish heart which hath departed from me and with their eyes which goe a whoring after their idols Ezek. 6. 9. but it meaneth also all other sinnes which mens uncleane hearts and impure eyes carry them unto with consent and delight see Lev. 20. 5 6. Psal. 106. 39. Iam. 4. 4. The Hebrewes say If any man be drawne after the thoughts of his heart he will be found a waster of the world because of the slendernesse or shortnesse of his understanding As sometimes he will search after idolatrie and sometimes will thinke peculiarly of the Creator whether there be any or none What is above and what beneath what was before and what shall be after And sometimes of prophesie whether it be truth or no and sometimes of the Law whether it be from heaven or no. And hee knoweth ●●t what to judge of them till he know the truth concerning his Creator but will be found a revolter unto heresies Concerning this thing is that warning in the Law where it is said And ye shall not seeke after your heart and after your eyes after which ye goe a whoring Num. 15. 39. as if he should say there shall not any one of you be drawne after his owne slender understanding or knowledge as to imagine that his cogitation can attaine to the truth so have our wise men said AFTER YOVR HEART this meaneth heresies and AFTER YOVR EYES this is whoredome And this is an occasion for a man to deprive himselfe of the world or life that is to come Maimony treat of Idolatrie ch 2. sect 3. CHAP. XVI 1 Korah Dathan Abiram and On with 250 Princes rise up against Moses and Aaron about the Priesthood and government of the Church 5 Moses referreth the triall of the cause unto God and reproveth Korahs ambition 12 He sendeth for Dathan and Abiram who reproach him and will not come up 15 He prayeth against them 16 and gathereth Korah and his company with their censers before the Tabernacle 20 The Lord threatneth to consume the rebels and commandeth the people to separate from them 31 The earth swalloweth up Dathan Abiram and all Korahs men and a fire from the Lord devoureth the 250 that burned incense 36 The censers are reserved to cover the altar for a signe unto Israel 41 All the congregation murmure against Moses and Aaron as they that bad killed the Lords people 44 The Lord killeth 14700 of them with a plague 46 Aaron by incense stayeth the plague 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Korah the sonne of Izhar the son of Kohath the sonne of Levi he tooke men and Dathan and Abiram the sonnes of Eliab and On the sonne of Peleth sonnes of Reuben And they rose up before Moses and men of the sonnes of Israel two hundred and fiftie
according to the like phrase in Zach. 11. 8. their soule loathed the way both for the longsomnesse of it and for the many wants and troubles that they found therein as in vers 5. So the Greeke interpreteth it for the way and Iarchi in like manner saying Because it was hard unto them they said we were now neere to enter into the land and we turne backward so our fathers turned and lingred 39. yeares unto this day therefore their soule was shortned for the afflictions of the way This way into the land of promise figured the way into the kingdome of God thorow the wildernesse of this world the wildernesse of peoples as in Ezek. 20. 35. into which kingdome wee cannot enter but through much tribulation Act. 14. 22. because the gate is strait and the way is narrow that leadeth unto life Matth. 7. 14. and we are to go thorow fire and thorow water Psalm 66. 12. The discouragement of this people sheweth humane frailty and infirmitie through want of faith and patience for as they erred in heart and knew not the Lords waies Psal. 95. 10. so many when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the Word by and by they are offended Matth. 13. 21. Vers. 5. spake against God The Chaldee expoundeth it murmured before the Lord and contended with Moses and so in vers 7. This was their wonted carriage in their tentations see Exod. 14. 11. and 15. 24. and 16. 2 3. and 17. 2 3. Num. 11. 1 4 5. 16. 13 14. and 20. 3 4 5. By God here is meant Christ the Angell of Gods face or presence in whom his name was Exod. 23. 20 21. Esay 63. 9. as the Apostle openeth this place saying Neither let us tempt Christ as some of them also tempted and were destroyed of serpents 1 Cor. 10. 9. this light bread meaning Manna as the Chaldee explaineth it this Manna the light meat in Greeke this vaine or empty bread So they call it either because it was light of digestion that they felt it not in their hot stomackes or in contempt counting it base and vile in comparison with other meats See Numb 11. 5 6 8. This Manna being rained upon them from heaven Psal. 78. 23 24. was both corporall and spirituall food unto them a figure of the hidden Manna which Christ seedeth his people with unto life eternall Rev. 2. 17. Ioh. 6. 48 49 50 51. So the contempt thereof was the contempt of Christ and his grace and into this sin doe all they fall that loath and leave Christ and has Gospell for the momentany pleasures of this life the enemies of the crosse of Christ whose end is destruction whose God is their belly and whose glory is in their shame who minde earthly things Philip. 3. 18 19. Vers. 6. fiery serpents or burning serpents as the Chaldee translateth the Greeke in this place calleth them deadly or killing serpents In the Hebrew they are named Seraphim that is Burners because when they bite a man he burneth with extreme heat and thirst it may be also in respect of their colour for some serpents are of a fiery colour Nicander in Theriacis Of the Hebrew Saraph the Greekes by changing the order of letters have borrowed the name Prester which is a kinde of venemous serpent called also Dipsas and Causon of which it is reported that who so is stung therewith he hath such a vehement thirst that he cannot be satisfied but is tormented with it centinually and though he drinke never so largely yet is he presently as thirsty as before And againe that the bitings of these serpents were left of the most ancient Physicians as altogether incurable Dioscorid lib. 6. cap. 38. 40. They are said to be like unto Vipers but their biting more hurtfull for the heart of a man is inflamed with their biting and his lips are parched and drie with thirst as Nicander writeth of them Sol. Iarchi saith they are called Seraphim burners because they burned men with the venim of their teeth The Prophet Esay mentioneth the flying fiery serpent in Esay 14. 29. and 30. 6. whereby it seemeth to be a kinde of serpent with wings With these and other serpents the wildernesse thorow which they went did abound as Moses sheweth in Deut. 8. 15. but God who guided them thorow it kept them from hurting his people till now for their sinne hee gave them power to bite and kill them as he saith otherwhere I will command the serpent and he shall bite them Amos 9. 3. Here also there was a remembrance of the first sinne that came into mankinde by the serpent and the death that followed thereupon Gen. 3. for as the venim of serpents killeth the bodie so the venim of Satan which is sinne killeth both body and soule and as the Serpent biting any one part the venim and contagion spreadeth over all the bodie and killeth the whole man so the poyson of sinne which entred by one man hath infected and killed all the lump of mankind Rom. 5. 15. 18. died The judgements of God are both inevitable and incurable of man Ier. 8. 17. Amas 5. 19 20. and 9. 1 2 3. Deut. 28. 27. And as no salve or medicine could heale the bodies of those that were bitten so can no work of man cure the biting of that old Serpent or sting of sinne but the venome thereof rageth and reigneth tormenting the conscience vnto death Rom. 5. 12 14 21. and 3. 20. Vers. 7. We have sinned The afflictions which God layeth upon his people are a meane through his grace to bring them to the sight and acknowledgement of their sinnes and seeking unto him as it is said When he slew them then they sought him and they returned and enquired early after God Psal. 78. 34. Yea the wicked are often forced hereby to confesse and seeke helpe of God as did Pharaoh Exod. 9. 27 28. that he take away or and let him take away the serpents in Hebr. the serpent put for the multitude of them as in Exod. 8. 6. the frog is for frogs and in Exod. 8. 17. the louse for li●e and many the like They desire the removing of the punishment after repentance and confession of sinne without which plagues are not only continued but increased Levit. 26. 21 23 24 28. Howbeit God did not presently take away the serpents but gave a remedy for such as were bitten vers 8. 9. Moses prayed As at other times so still hee sheweth himselfe an example of mecknesse unmindfulnesse of injuries and readinesse to forgive the wrongs done unto him Thus Samuel also did in like case and said Far be it that I should sinne against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you but I will teach you the good the right way 1 Sam. 12. 19 23. Vers. 8. Make thee a fiery serpent or a burning serpent Hebr. Saraph which the Greeke translateth a serpent hereby is meant a serpent of brasse vers 9. a similitude of
p●rtion was that if a man had two sonnes his goods were divided into three parts whereof the eldest had two parts and the youngest the third For the first-borne was to be reckoned as two sonnes as Ioseph who had the first birth-right 1 Chron. 5. 2 was two tribes Ephraim and Manasses The Hebrewes explaine it thus The first-borne is to receive a double portion of his fathers goods Deut. 21. 17. As if he leave five sonnes and one of them is the first-borne he is to have a third of his goods and every of the other foure receiveth a sixt part If he leave nine sonnes the first-borne hath a fi●t part and every of the other eight a tenth part And so according to this partition doe they part alwaies Maimony treat of Inheritances ch 2. s. 1. According to this phrase Eliseus desired a double portion of Elias spirit 2 Kin. 2. 9. that he might have so much more as any of his other disciples of all that is found his the word found of●é signifieth things present as in Ge. 19. 15. 2 Chron. 5. 11. and 31. 1. So in this case by the Hebrewes judgement The first-borne had not a double portion of the goods which might come after his fathers death but of the goods which were assuredly his fathers come into his hand or power ss it is written OF ALL THAT IS FOVND HIS As one of the heires of his father that dieth after the death of his father the first-borne and the single brother doe inherit his goods alike And so if his father hath a debt owing him or hath a ship at sea they are heires of it alike Maim treat of Inheritan●●● ch 3. sect 1. It is also said found his he saith 〈◊〉 found hers and by the Hebrewes it is holden ●●at The first-borne hath not a double portion of his mothers goods but the first-borne and another sonne that are heires to their mother doe share alike whether he be the first-borne for inheritance or the first that openeth the wombe The first-borne for inherita●ce is ●e that is first-borne to his father as it is written in v. 17. THE BEGINNING OF HIS STRENGTH and they respect not the 〈…〉 er though she have borne many sonnes if he be 〈◊〉 fathers first-borne he hath a double portion He 〈◊〉 ●●mmeth into the world after untimely births 〈◊〉 were before him is the first-borne for inheri●●●ce And so one borne at his fulltime if he be borne 〈◊〉 he that commeth after him is the first-borne 〈…〉 ritance If a man have sonnes while hee is an 〈…〉 en and after becommeth a proselyte he hath no 〈…〉 borne for inheritance But an Israelite that hath 〈…〉 by a bond-woman or by an heathen woman 〈…〉 ch as he is not called his sonne he that com 〈…〉 after him of an Israelitesse is the first-borne for 〈…〉 nce and hath a double portion Maim ibi 〈…〉 ch 2. s. 8 9 10 12. of his strength or of 〈…〉 our So Iakob said of Reuben his eldest 〈…〉 49. 3. The Greeke translateth of his children 〈…〉 this is the first reason of the Law from nature 〈…〉 e. the right Hebr. the judgement which 〈…〉 eeke explaineth thus the first birth-rights 〈…〉 or belong unto him And this may be un 〈…〉 ood in respect of the Iudgement or Law of 〈◊〉 L●rd which is added unto the former reason 〈◊〉 nature and maketh the first-bornes right more firme unto him Wherefore as Esau before-hand sold his birth-right and the sale was confirmed Gen. 25. 33. so generally The first-borne that selleth the portion of the birth-right before it be parted his sale is firme because the portion is his before it is parted saith Maimony treat of Inheritance c. 3. s. 6. And by reason of this right of the first-borne his children after him do inherit also as this Hebrew canon sheweth Who so hath two sonnes a first-borne and another and they die both of them whiles he liveth and leave children behinde them the first-borne leaveth a daughter the single brother leaveth a sonne the sonne of the single brother shall inherit of the old mans goeds a third part which was his fathers portion the daughter of the first-borne shall inherit two thirds which was her fathers portion And such is the right of brethrens children and of the fathers brothers children and of all that doe inherit if the father of one of the heires were a first-borne the heire receiveth the portion of his first birth-right for him Maimony ibidem c. 2. s. 7. By this Law was fore-shadowed how the elect the Israel of God Gal. 6. 16. which are his first-borne Exod. 4. 22. and Church of the first-born which are written in heaven Heb. 12. 23. shall have a double portion and inherit the good things of God as they which have the promise of the life which now is and of that which is to come 1 Tim. 4. 8. and are the heires of God and joint-heires with Christ Rom. 8. 17. and being justified by his grace are made heires according to the hope of eternall life Tit. 3. 7. God having begotten them againe to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for us 1 Pet. 1. 4. Vers. 18. stubborne or perverse revolting refractarie that turneth away from God and his Law and it implieth the affection of the heart as Ier. 5. 23. and the cariage and action as an untamed heiffer Hos. 4. 16. Neh. 9. 29. And so the Apostle translateth it into Greeke by two words disobedient or unperswaded and gaine-saying Rom. 10. 21. from Esay 65. 2. So here the Greeke expoundeth it disobedient rebellious The Hebrew Moreh signifieth one that changeth or turneth to the worse both in heart and action and in particular turneth from and opposeth the word of God as Deut. 1. 26. 43. and 9. 7 23 24. The Greeke here translateth it Contentious The instance of this rebellion is shewed in v. 20. obeieth not or ●earkeneth not the Chaldee translateth receiveth not the word chastened or nurtured which implieth both words and acts as by rebukes stripes and outward punishment Levit. 26. 23 28. and sometime by the hand of the Magistrate Deut. 22. 18. in which sense the Hebrews understand this here And having spoken before of words this therefore is meant of blowes also Vers. 19. and his mother both of them so that one alone was not enough to cause him to be put to death The Hebrew Doctors as they are alwaies warie in cases that concerne the taking away of any mans life so in this above others they set downe many and strange limitations as first they restraine it to those particular sinnes of gluttony and drunkennesse vers 20. and that gluttony to be eating of flesh onely and drunkennesse with wine onely Also that the sonne is not to be put to death unlesse hee have stollen somewhat from his father and bought therewith flesh and wine for riot and eaten and drunke it without his
The Proselyte bringeth and professeth as it is said to Abraham A father of a multitude of nations have I given thee to be Gen. 17. 5. Behold he is the father of all the whole world which are gathered under the wings of the divine Majestie And to Abraham was the oath at first that his sonnes should inherit the land Likewise the Priests and Levites doe bring first-fruits and professe because they have cities and suburbs He that separateth his first-fruits and selleth his field bringeth them but professeth not for he cannot say WHICH THE LORD HATH GIVEN ME because the land is not his And he that bought it is not bound to separate other first-fruits of that sort because he that sold it hath separated them already and if he doe separate any he may bring them but not make profession but of another sort he may separate bring and professe He that separateth first-fruits and they are lost before they come at the mount of Gods house he separate other for thē he bringeth the second but professeth not because he cannot say THE FIRST OF THE FRVIT OF THE LAND Deut. 26. 10. for they are not the first c. Hee that bringeth first-fruits of one kinde and maketh profession and commeth againe bringeth first-fruits of another kinde hee maketh no profession over them for it is said I PROFESSE THIS DAY one time in the yeere doth hee make profession and not twise He that bringeth first-fruits after the feast untill the dedication although he separated them before the feast bringeth them but maketh no profession because it is said in vers 11. AND THOV SHALT REIOYCE IN ALL THE GOOD so there is no professing but at the time of rejoycing from the beginning of the feast of Weekes untill the end of the feast Maimony in Biccurim ch 3. sect 12. c. and ch 4. sect 1. c. In that which is said of the Proselyte or Stranger Maimony differeth from his fellowes for in Thalmud Bad. in Biccurim ch 1. sect 4. it is said The Proselyte bringeth but professeth not because he cannot say which thou hast sworne to our fathers to give unto us but if his mother were an Israelitesse hee bringeth and professeth But the former well agreeth with the mystery of the Gospell for as it is prophesied in Ezek. 47. 22. Yee shall divide the Land by lot for an inheritance to you and to the strangers that sojourne among you which shall be get children among you and they shall bee unto you as borne in the countrey c. So when Christ came Zacheus the chiefe Publican became the sonne of Abraham Luk. 19. 9. and in Christ there is neither Iew nor Greeke but all are one in him and Abrahams seed and heires according to the promise Gal. 3. 28 29. And in him is this service in the mystery of it fulfilled when wee at our Pentecost that is when wee receive the first-fruits of Gods Spirit Act. 2. Rom. 8. 23. doe honour him with our persons our substance and with the first-fruits of all our increase Prov. 3. 9. offering the sacrifice of praise unto God continually the fruit of our lips confessing to his name Heb. 13. 15. For as the first of all fruits were holy so the Church is holy unto the Lord of all peoples in the earth Rev. 14. 4. Iam. 1. 18. as it is written Israel is holinesse unto Iehovah the first-fruits of his revenue Ier. 2. 3. And as these first-fruits were brought into the Sanctuary in a basket so the good Israelites whom God would accept for his are likened to a basket of good figs set before the Temple of the Lord even like the sigs that are first ripe and them God promiseth to acknowledge and to set his eies upon them for good and that they shall bee his people and he will be their God c. Ier. 24. 1 2 5 6 7. A Syrian ready to perish Hebr. An Aramite perishing or of perdition that is ready to perish through poverty affliction and misery As in Prov. 31. 6 7. Give strong drinke unto him that is ready to perish c. Let him drinke and forget his poverty and remember his misery no more An Aramite is after the Greeke called a Syrian as is noted on Gen. 10. 22. this Syrian here spoken of was Iacob who dwelt in Syria with Laban the Syrian twenty yeeres in hard service Gen. 28. 5. and 31. 38 40 41 42. Hos. 12. 12. and therefore though hee was naturally an Hebrew yet for his misery is called a Syrian as contrariwise Iether who by nature was an Ismaelite 1 Chron. 2 17. is for his faith and state of grace called an Israelite 2 Sam. 17. 25. And thus God said to the Iewes that dwelt in Canaan thy nativity is of the land o● Canaan thy father was an Amorite and thy mother a Chethite Ezek. 16. 3. Others understand it here of Laban translating A Syrian was destroying my father or working his perdition and to this the Chaldee agreeth saying Laban the Syrian sought to destroy or undoe my father and the vulgar Latine A Syrian persecuted my father The Greeke differeth from both translating My father left Syria By this speech they were taught to acknowledge their first estate and originall to have beene most miserable and so we ought all to confesse Ephes 2. 2 3. a few men in Chaldee a small people they went downe but with seventy soules Gen. 46. 27. Vers. 6. evill intreated did evill or vexed and this is a commemoration of their second maine affliction whereof see Exod. 1. c. and it was afigure of our bondage under sinne and Satan which wee being delivered from are to mention with thankfulnesse Rom. 6. 17 18. Tit. 3. 3. hard servitude in Greeke hardworkes they made them serve with rigour that their lives were bitter unto them Exod. 1. 14. God would not have us forget our former miseries though wee bee come out of them hee sundry times commandeth this Thou shalt remember that thou wast a servant in Egypt Deut. 16. 12. Remember that yee having beene in times passed heathens c. were without Christ being aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel c. Ephes. 2. 11 12. Vers. 7. wee cried out in Chaldee wee praied see Exod. 2. 23 24 25. heard our voice in Chaldee accepted our praier saw in Chaldee it was revealed or manifest before him see Exod. 3. 7. our labour or our molestation Vers. 8. out stretched in Greeke and Chaldee an high arme see Exod. 7. c. terriblenesse or terrour this the Greeke and Chaldee translate visions and so in Deut. 4. 34. Vers. 9. milke and honey under which two all other earthly blessings and heavenly also in figure are implied and hereby they acknowledge the truth of Gods promises made unto their fathers whereof see the notes on Exod. 3. 8. So after in vers 15. Vers. 10. the first-fruit in Greeke the first-fruits of the fruits As wee our selves are
62. 11. the fort or strong frontier ●konce rampart made for strength and safegard of the citie 1 King 21. 23. 2 Sam. 20. 15. So Psal. 122. 7. The Chaldee understands it of the strength of people the multitude disti●●tly view or lift up meaning the eyes to behold or reare up the bankes of buildings The Hebrew Pasgu is here only used of it is Pisgah the name of an hill or mount Numb 21. 20. and 23. 14. Deut. 3. 17. and 34. 1. The Greeke translateth here distinguish or distribute following the Chaldee Passeg which is to distribute or divide Vers. 15. ever and aye ever and yet to eternitie and perpetuitie will guide us or lead us to wit as a flocke of sheepe Psal. 78. 52. 72. therefore the Greeke turneth it poimanei he will f●●d or rule as a shepherd A like phrase is also used in speech of defence from enemies 2 Chron. 32. 22. untill death in Greeke for ever The Chaldee paraphraseth thus For this God is our God his divine Majestie is within it and his dwelling is in the heavens for ever and ever he will lead us in the daies of our youth PSAL. XLIX All are exhorted to heare Christs wisdome and parables 7 To build the faith of Resurrection from the dead not on worldly power but on God 17 Worldly prosperity is not to be admined for man without understanding perisheth like the beast To the Master of the Musicke to the sons of Korach a Psalme HEare ye this all peoples hearken ye● all inhabitants of the transitorie world Both sons of base man and sons of noble man together rich and poore My mouth shall speake wisdomes and the meditation of my heart prudencies I will incline min● eare to a parable I wil open with harpe mine hidden matter Why should I feare in the daies of evill when the iniquitie of my foot-steps shall compasse me They that trust in their wealthy power and glory in the multitude of their riches A man shall not redeeming redeeme his brother shall not give to God his ransome So precious shall be the redemption of their soule and it shall cease for ever That he may live yet to continuall aye may not see the pit of corruption For he seeth the wise doe die together the unconstant foole and brutish doe perish and leave to others their wealthy power Their inward thought is that their houses shall be for ever their dwelling places to generation and generation they proclaime their names on lands But man in honour doth not lodge a night he is likened to beasts that are silenced This their way is unconstant folly to them and their posteritie like well of their mouth Selah As sheepe they are put in hell death shall feed them and righteous men shall have rule over them at the morning their forme weare away in hell from his dwelling place But God will redeeme my soule from the hand of hell for he will receive me Selah Feare thou not when a man shall grow rich when the glory of his house shall be multiplied For he shall not when he die take any thing his glory shall not descend after him Though in his life he blesseth his soule and they will confesse thee when thou doest good to thy selfe It shall come unto the generation of his fathers unto continuall aye they shall not see the light Man in honour and understandeth not he is likened to beasts that are silenced Annotations THe transitory world see Psal. 17. 14. Vers. 3. base man in Hebrew Adam who was so called of Adamah the earth whereupon this title is given to the baser sort of people The Greek translateth it here earth-borne So the Apostle saith the first man of the earth earthly 1 Cor. 15. 47. noble man in Hebrew Ish which is the name of man in respect of heat valour noblenesse and dignitie whereby man is and excelleth and in opposition to the former word Adam it meaneth the great or nobler sort of people The Chaldee paraphraseth thus Both sons of Adam the first and sons of Iakob together righteous and sinner Vers. 4. wisdomes that is excellent and manifold wisdome so after prudencies for very excellent prudence and of sundry sorts So Solomon calleth the chiefe and most excellent wisdome wisdomes Prov. 1. 20. and 9. 1. Vers. 5. a parable or a proverbe in Hebrew Mashal which denoteth rule superiority or excellencie because such speeches prevaile much in the mindes of men and are in esteeme The new Testament in Greeke translateth it a parable Matth. 13. 35. from Psa. 78. 2. of the Latine we name it a Proverb in old English or Saxon it was called a big-spel Sometime it is used in the evill part for a by-word Psal. 44. 15. and 69. 12. mine hidden matter my darke question or grave doctrine my riddle The Hebrew Chidah riddle hath the name of sharpnesse as proceeding from a sharpe wit and needing the like to expound it See Iudg. 14. 12 18. Num. 12. 8. 1 King 10. 1. Prov. 1. 6. The holy Ghost expresseth it in Greeke by hidden things Matth. 13. 35. from Psal. 78. 2. Vers. 6. Why should I feare This is the hidden doctrine or riddle which the Prophet propoundeth as in his owne name and therefore also called it a parable By feare he meaneth dismay or discouragement See vers 17. the iniquitie that is punishment or death which is the wages of sinne see Psal. 31. 11. and by foot-steps or foot-soles he meaneth his waies or workes Or he may call death the punishment of his heeles or feet because the Serpent bruiseth Christ and his people but in the heele Gen. 3. 15. the sting of death being done away and it made a passage into life and glory 1 Cor. 15. 55. 57. Vers. 7. their wealthy power their riches which are thus called because they are gotten by power given of God Deut. 8. 18. with labour and industry and to the rich their goods are their strong citie Prov. 10. 15. therefore here they are said to trust in them contrary to 1 Tim. 6. 17. Iob 31. 24. Mark 10. 24. glory or praise themselves vaunt contrary to Ier. 9. 23. Vers. 8. not redeeming redeeme that is shall in no wise or not at all redeeme The Chaldee expoundeth it a wicked man cannot redeeming redeeme his captived brother Vers 9. So precious shall be or And deare costly is and consequently rare and hard to obtaine as Dan. 2. 11. 1 Sam. 3. 1. of their soule that is of their life So Exod. 21. 30. cease for ever that is it shall never be accomplished So ceasing is used for the not doing of a thing Deut. 23. 22. Zach. 11. 12. Vers. 10. That he may live this is referred to the end of the eight verse not give his ransome and so live And is here for That see Psal. 43. 4. The Chaldee expoundeth live to be the life eternall the pi● to be the judgement of Gehenna or hell Vers. 11. the wise The
wasted all things as did Nebuchadnezar in the Temple 2 King 24. 13. and 25. 9 13 14 c. Vers. 4. thy synagogues or assemblies either the courts and places about the temple where the people assembled or the other synagogues in Ierusalem as after in vers 8. he speakes of all the synagogues in the land places where prayers and lectures of the law were used Act. 16. 13. and 15. 21. The assembly of Christians is called also by this name synagogue Iam. 2. 2. their signes or banners which are signes of victory or of idolatry See after vers 9. Vers. 5. He was knowne He that is A man or every one of the enemies was knowne that is renowmed or famous as having done some notable act as he lifted on high or as he that bringeth aloft that is as a man brings the axe aloft over his head to fell downe the thicke wood with might and maine They cut downe the wood of the temple as men doe trees in a forest thicket of the wood that is the thick wood or tree whose boughes are wrapped one in another or if we understand it of the wood-worke in the Temple the infolded graven wood which he that did most eagerly cut downe was most renowmed Vers. 6. And now or And then at the same time So Ps. 27. 6. carved workes gravings or as the Hebrew phrase is openings used for graven or carved workes Exod. 28. 11. The Greeke here turneth it doores which also have their name of opening Vers. 7. thy sanctuaries the temple which had divers holy places was burned by Nebuzar-adan 2 King 25. 9. to the earth to wit burning or rasing downe to the ground Vers. 8. Let us make spoile or wee will oppresse prey upon them Of this Hebrew root the Dove hath her name in that tongue as being subject to the prey and spoile of Hawkes c. wherefore in vers 19. he calleth the Church a turtle-dove Vers. 9. our signes the testimonies of Gods presence and favour extraordinary or ordinary as the sacrifices c. Dan. 11. 31. So Circumcision the passeover the Sabbath c. were for signes to Israel Gen. 17. 11. Exod. 12. 13. and 31. 13. or as the Chaldee expoundeth it the signes which the Prophets gave us any Prophet that could see and foretell by the spirit an end of these troubles Lam. 2. 9. A Prophet N●bi is one that from the inward counsell of God uttereth oracles In old time he was called a Seer 1 Sam. 9. 9. Amos 7. 12. how long to wit this affliction shall endure The like speech is in Psal. 6. 4. Vers. 11. draw it c. this word or some such seemeth here to be understood as often in the Hebrew see Psal. 69. 11. The drawing the hand out of the bosome denoteth a performance of the worke without ●●acknesse as we may see by the contrary Prov. 26. 15. full end by consuming our enemies and accomplishing our deliverance Vers. 13. the sea in Chaldee the waters of the red sea of the dragons or whales meaning the noble men of Egypt who pursuing the Israelites were drowned in the red sea Exod. 14. 28. For great persons are likened to Dragons or Whale-fishes as Ezek. 29. 3. Vers. 14. the heads that is the head as the Greek translateth it called heads for the excellency and principality of Livjathan or of the whale meaning Pharaoh king of Aegypt who was drowned with his Princes Psal. 136. 15. Livjathan is the name of the great whale-fish or sea Dragon so called of the fast joyning together of his scales as he is described Iob 40. 20. and 41. 6 c. and is used to resemble great tyrants here and in Isa. 27. 3. So the Chaldee expoundeth it the heads of Pharaoh● mighty men in dry desarts that is to the wilde beasts of the wildernesse which might devoure the Egyptians after they were drowned and cast upon the shore Exod. 14. 30. The beasts may be called a people as Conies Pismires Locusts c. are called peoples and nations Prov 30. 25. 26. Ioel 1. 6. See also the notes on Psal. 72. 9. unlesse by these dwellers in dry places we understand the Israelites in the wildernesse to whom the spoile of the Egyptians was as meat as elsewhere they said of the Canaanites they are bread for us Num. 14. 9. This the Chaldee favoureth Vers. 15. didst cleave the fountaine bringing a well and streame of water to thy people out of the rockes Exod. 17. 6. Num. 20 11. Isa. 48. 21. Psal. 105. 41. rivers of strength that is strong rough or vehement rivers as the waters of Iarden were dried up that Israel might goe thorow Ios. 3. 15 17. The Chaldee Paraphrast addeth also the rivers Arnon and Iabok whereof see Num. 21. 14. Deut. 2. 37. Vers. 16. the light The Hebrew Maor is properly a lightsome body as is the Sunne Moone Stars c. Genes 1. 14 15. and here may be meant of the Moone as the Chaldee translateth it for the S●●e next followed For these God is else-where also celebrated Psal. 2 6. 7. 8. 9. Vers. 19. soule of thy turile-dove that is the life of thy Church called a turtle-dove for their danger to be pre●ed upon by the wicked as before v. 8. being of themselves weake mo 〈…〉 ull and ●●morous also for their faith and lo●●lty towards God and innocency of life In these respects a●● doves mentioned Hos. 11. 11. Ezek. 7. 16. Isa. 38. 14. and 59. 11. Song 4. 1. and 6. 8. Matth. 10. 16. So the Chaldee explaineth it Give not the soules of them that teach thy law to the people which are like wilde beasts wilde company or wilde beasts as the Greeke translateth it meaning the cruell people like wilde beasts as the Chaldee saith The same word straight-way followeth for the Church or lively stocke of Christ. See the notes on Psal. 68. 11. 31. V. 20. the covenant which thou didst make with our fathers as the Chaldee addeth to explaine it it may be meant of the covenant with Abraham and his seed as is expressed Psal. 105. 8 9. 10. or which was made with Noah that the world should no more be drowned as once it was when it was full of cruelty Genes 6. 13. 17. 18. and 8. 21 22. which covenant the Prophets apply to the Church after Esa. 54. 9. the darknesses that is darke places as in Ps. 88. 7. and 143. 3. he meaneth that the base obscure places werefull of violence even folds or habitations of cruelty no cottage being free from the rapine of the enemies Darke places may be put for base or meare 〈◊〉 as in Prov. 22. 29. darke or obscure persons are the base sort The Greek here also translateth it darke persons meaning the vile gracelesse enemies Vers. 22. pleade thy plea defend thine owne cause see Psal. 35. 1. from the foole understand which thou sufferest from the foole or impious Nabal which word was also before v. 18. whereof see Psal. 14.
to thee the deaw of thy youth Iehovah sware and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever according to the order of Malchisedek The Lord at thy right hand hee hath wounded Kings in the day of his wrath He shall judge among the heathens hee hath filled with corpses he hath wounded the head over a great land Of the brooke in the way shall hee drinke therefore he shall lift up the head Annotations IEhovah that is God the Father assuredly said see Psal. 36. 2. to my Lord that is to Christ whom David here calleth his Lord though he was also his sonne according to the flesh Mat. 22. 42 45. Rom. 1. 3. Act. 2. 34. So the Chaldee The Lord said unto his Word meaning Christ Ioh. 1. 1. sit at my right hand sitting noteth reigning with continuance 1 Cor. 15. 25. Heb. 10. 12 13. So sitting on his throne 1 King 3. 6. is expounded reigning in his stead 2 Chron. 1. 8. Gods right hand meaneth his power and majesty in the Heavens Luk. 22. 69. Mark 16. 19. Heb. 1. 3. and 8. 1. and this above all Angels Heb. 1. 13. thine enemies even all of them the last whereof is death 1 Cor. 15. 25 26. Of this place the Apostle giveth this exposition Every Priest standeth daily ministring and oft times offering the same sacrifices which can never take away sinnes but this man having offered one sacrifice for sinne fitteth for ever at Gods right hand henceforth expecting till his enemies be put the footstoole of his feet Heb. 10. 11 12 13. Vers. 2. the rod or staffe scepter of thy strength thy strong staffe O Christ that is the powerfull word of thy Kingdome Isa. 11. 4. Mat. 13. 19. which was to come out of Sion and Ierusalem Isa. 2. 3. Luk. 24. 49. Acts 1. 4. and 2. 1 2 c. For in Sion Christ reigneth Psal. 2. 6. Rev. 14. 1. rule thou that is thou shalt surely rule or have dominion see the Notes on Psal. 37. 3. Vers. 3. voluntaries a people of voluntarinesses or of liberalities as Psal. 68. 10. that is shall most freely willingly and liberally present themselves and their oblations to thee as Iudg. 5. 9. Act. 2. 41. Exod. 25. 2. Rom. 12. 1. Psal. 47. 10. and 119. 108. Song 6. 11. of thy power or armie as Psal. 33. 16. that is when thou sendest forth thy powerfull Gospell and Preachers of the same to conquer the world Rom. 1. 16. 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. Rev. 6. 2. Psal. 45. 4 5 6. in the beauties of bolinesse or in the comely honours of the Sanctuary meaning either the comely or honourable places of holinesse or of the Sanctuary as Psal. 29. 2. that is the Church or rather in the beautifull ornaments of holinesse that is holy graces and vertues wherewith Christ and his people are adorned as the Priests and Levites of old with Vrim Thummim and holy garments Exod. 28. 2 40. Isa. 52. 1. So the Warriers in heaven are cloathed with fine linnen white and pure the righteousnesse of the Saints Rev. 19. 14. 8. of the wombe c. This place is difficult and may diversly bee understood either of Christ himselfe or of his people and againe if of Christ either in respect of his Godhead or of his Manhood Of his Godhead that the Father saith unto him of the wombe that is of mine owne essence before the early morning that is before the world was to thee was or thou hadst the dew of thy youth or birth so noting the eternall generation of Christ before all worlds as is shewed Prov. 8. 22 23. 24 25. And this sense the Lxx. Greeke Interpreters seeme to follow translating Of the wombe before the morning starre begat I thee If it be meant of Christs manhood we may take it thus of the wombe of the darke morning or of the obscure wombe of the virgin thou hadst the deaw of thy birth If of Christs people before mentioned it may thus be read Of the wombe of the morning to thee shall be or shall come the deaw of thy youth that is thy youth thy young or new-borne people shall be to thee as the morning deaw which falleth secretly from heaven and abundantly covereth the earth For so the deaw is sometime used 2 Sam. 17. 12. and unto raine deaw ice c. the Scripture applieth the names of wombe and begetting Iob 38. 28 29. and the increase of the Church is by this figure described as The remnant of Iakob shall be among many people as a deaw from the Lord as showers upon the grasse that waiteth not for man c. Mic. 5. 7. This last sense accordeth best with the beginning of the verse of the wombe or from the wombe of the morning of the early morning or before the dawning the morning or day-dawning in Hebrew Mishchar is named of the blacknesse or darknesse which also the Scripture sheweth Ioh. 20. 1. and the letter M. is either a preposition signifying from or before as Isa. 43. 13. or but a part of the word here meaning of to thee understand was or shall be that is thou hast or shalt have deaw of thy youth or of thy birth that is thy youth which is like the deaw Youth or nativitie may either be taken properly for young age as Eccles. 11. 9. or figuratively for young persons meaning the regenerate which are as new borne babes Ioh. 1. 13. and 3. 3. 1 Pet. 2. 2. Vers. 4. sware For as much saith the Apostle as it is not without an oath c. by so much is Iesus made surety of a better Testament Heb. 7. 20. 22. a Priest or Sacrificer see Psal. 99. 6. for ever Among the Levites many were made Priests because they were not suffered to endure by reason of death but this man because he endureth ever hath an ever lasting priesthood Wherefore hee is able also perfectly to save them that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make intereession for them Heb. 7. 23 24 25. to the order or according to my speech both these interpretations are good the one from the Apostles authority Heb. 7. 17. the other from the Hebrew propriety dibrathi as Iob 5. 8. meaning the manner and order of Melchisedek as God speaketh of him in the historie where he is brought in without father mother kindred beginning of daies or end of life continuing a Priest for ever as the Apostle gathereth Heb. 7. 1 3. from the narration Gen. 14. 18 c. of Melchisedck the King of Salem and Priest of the most high God whose name and office is opened Heb. 7. 1 2 c. from which he inferreth If perfection had beene by the Priesthood of the Levites c. what needed it that another Priest should rise after the order of Melchisedek and not to be called after the order of Aaron Heb. 7. 11. Vers. 5. The Lord Christ as in vers 1. which the Chaldee calleth Shecinah the divine presence of the LORD at