Selected quad for the lemma: blood_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
blood_n bird_n face_n hyssop_n 30 3 15.4289 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 14 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

shut it up he shall be uncleane untill the evening And hee that lieth in the house shall wash his clothes and he that eateth in the house shall wash his clothes And if the Priest comming shall come in and see and behold the plague hath not spred in the house after the house was plaistered then the Priest shall pronounce the house cleane because the plague is healed And he shall take to purifie the house two birds and Cedar wood and scarlet and hysope And he shall kill the one bird in an earthen vessell over living water And hee shall take the Cedar wood and the hysope and the scarlet and the living bird and dip them in the blood of the killed bird and in the living water and he shall sprinkle the house seven times And hee shall parifie the house with the blood of the bird and with the living water and with the living bird and with the Cedar wood and with the hysope and with the scarlet And he shall let-goe the living bird out of the citie upon the face of the field and shall make-atonement for the house and it shall be cleane This is the law for every plague of leprosie and skall And for the leprosie of a garment and of an house And for a swelling and for a scab and for a bright-spot To teach in the day of the uncleane and in the day of the clean this is the law of Leprosie Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the 28. section or lecture of the Law called in Hebrew Metsorangh that is the Leper See Gen. 6. 9. THat he shall be brought The leper dwelt without the host and in the day of his cleansing hee was brought to the utmost part of the host and in ages following to the gates of Ierusalem and the Priest went out thither to meet him and performed certaine rites for him and after that he came into the host or citie and so by degrees into the Sanctuarie as after is explained And this comming to the Priest was requisite for every leper though he were never so well healed wherefore Christ said to him whom hee had cured Goe shew thy selfe to the Priest and offer the gift that Moses commanded Matth. 8. 4. Vers. 3. be healed The Priest healed it not but looked upon it when it was healed and directed and assisted the patient in duties of thankefulnesse to God who is both the striker and the healer Deut. 32. 39. Exod. 15. 26. Neither doth the Law send the Leper to the Physician or prescribe salves or medicines to cure him but leaveth him unto the worke of Gods grace which should after bee fully manifested in Christ who himselfe tooke our infirmities and bare our sicknesses Matth. 8. 16. 17. And the rites and sacrifices following which were a profession of thankes unto God in Christ closely taught them this but the Gospell declareth the way of curing to be by faith as unto the Samaritane that was healed of his leprosie Christ said Thy faith hath made thee whole Luke 17. 19. which faith causeth Lepers though they stand a farre off to lift up their voices and cry unto Iesus for mercy Luk. 17. 12. 13. who sendeth his word and healeth them and delivereth them from their corruptions Psal. 107. 20. Matth. 10. 7. 8. For being moved with compassion hee putteth forth his hand toucheth and speaketh and immediately the leprosie departeth Mark 1. 41. 42. and so healeth he the soules of sinners that come unto him The Heb. say Leprosie is the finger of God therefore it is unlawfull to endevour to heale it c. the only healing of it is by the hand of the Priest that maketh atonement for by mercy atonement is made for iniquity Prov. 16. 6. even as uncleannesse which is not done away but by water R. Menachem on Levit. 13. This being the judgment of the Iewes themselves the Lepers whom Christ healed were a good testimonie against them that he was the son of God Matth. 8. 4. and by that and other like workes hee declared himselfe to be he that should come Matth. 11. 3 4. 5. And he is the Priest who cleanseth us all leprous sinners and bringeth us into the true Sanctuary being washed sanctified and justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God 1 Cor. 6. 11. Vers. 4. and he shall take the Greeke saith and they shall take speaking indefinitely of the leper or any of his friends that might procure these things for his cleansing birds whether doves or turtles commonly used in sacrifices which are called birds in Gen. 15. 9. 10. or any other cleane fowles for the scripture determineth them not otherwise then that they must be cleane such as all are save those excepted in Lev. 11. 13. c. and all that are cleane for meat are called birds in Deut. 14. 11. The Hebrew canons say of these they must bee free birds that is such as are not tame or any mans owne but at libertie to flie from place to place and as God saith he shall take them for him so they expound it they must be taken in the name of cleansing of leprosie that is designed for that purpose onely Maimony in treat of Lepr chap. 11. sect 1. These two birds of which one was killed the other let goe alive were to figure out Christ who should be killed for our offences and rise againe for our justification Rom. 4. 25. The like was figured by the two goats on expiation day Levit. 16. Cedar wood or a Cedar sticke which the Hebrewes say was to be a cubit that is a foot and an halfe long and so thicke as the square foot of a bed Maimony ibidem and Thalmud Bab. in Negagnim chap. 14. sect 6. Cedar wood rotteth not the pitch that runneth out of it is said to keepe dead bodies from corrupting but corrupteth living bodies and it us good against the Leprosie and other foule ulcers Plinie hist. lib. 24. cap. 5. and Dioscorides l. 1. 〈◊〉 89. scarlet this the Iewes say was wooll died in scarlet or crimsin colour and so the Apostle in an other like case calleth it scarlet wooll Heb. 9. 19 and there was to be of it a shekel weight which weighed 320. graines of barley Maimony ibidem This scarlet colour resembled Christs blood and the essicacie therof in the soule restoring the naturall lively colour and vigour which the pale white leprosie of sinne had done away hysope or hyssope whereof see the notes on Exod. 12. 22. This was for length not to be lesse then an hand-bredth and they say it might not be Greeke hysope nor Roman hysope nor wilde hysope nor any other sort that was surnamed by the place but the common hysope that grew in gardens Talmud in Negagnim chap. 14. sect 6. These two plants were the greatest and the smallest that grew and so the Cedar is opposed to the bysope 1 King 4. 33. The Cedar that will not rot
figured incorruption and immortalitie and the Cedar is used to signifie Christ him-selfe in Ezek. 17. 22. 23. The hysope of sweet savour was used to sprinkle with and cleanse from sin see Psal. 51. 9. And the Cedar wood or the hysope that had the barke pilled off was unlawfull faith Maimony treat of Lepr chap. 11. sect 1. Verse 5. and he shall kill in Greeke and they shall kill meaning some man Chazkuni saith The commandement was by the Priest and the killing by any man earthen vessell the Hebrew doctors say by tradition it was to be a new earthen cup. It figured the basenesse and infirmitie of the Ministers of the Gospell 2 Cor. 4. 7. See further in Num. 5. 17. living water that is spring water as the Chaldee translateth it called living because of the continuall motion See the notes on Gen. 26. 19. And thus Christ expoundeth living water to bee a well of water springing up unto eternall life Ioh. 4. 10. 14. The Rabbines here say it might not bee water that had beene used about any businesse nor salt water nor water that had beene melted or warmed nor of waters that lie or faile as in Ieremie 15. 18. that is whose course or spring doth cease at any time nor raine water but living water which alwaies springeth and ceaseth not R. Sampson comment in Thalmud in Negagnim c. 14. And that of this water there was a quarter of a Log put into a new earthen vessell That quarter was as much as an egge and a halfe see the notes on Exod. 30. 24. They killed the fairest of the two birds though they were as much as might be of equall bignesse and price over the water in the earthen vessell and wrung it so that the blood might be discerned in the water and then they digged and buried the bird there before the● Maimony treat of Lepr chap. 11. sect 1. And Chazkuni noteth that the living water was mixed with the blood because the blood of it selfe was un inough to dip the cedar scarlet and hysope in Vers. 6. dip them and the living bird He bound together the hysope and the cedar with the scarlet wooll wound up lengthwise and about them he put the tops of the wings and tip of the taile of the living bird and dipped them foure in the water and blood that was in the vessell and sprinkled seven times upon the hand of the Leper and some say on his forehead and so let the b●● loose Maimony ibidem This manner of cleansing the leper figured the cleansing of us sinners by Christ who as the killed bird was put to death in the flesh but as the living bird quickned by the spirit 1 Pet. 3. 18. For though he was crucified through weakenesse yet he liveth by the power of God 2 Cor. 13. 4. who came not by water onely but by water and blood 1 Ioh. 5. 6. whose blood sprinkled purgeth our conscience from dead workes to serve the living God Heb. 9. 14. and 12. 24. But we have this treasure 〈◊〉 earthen vessels that the excellencie of the power may be of God and not of us 2 Cor. 4. 7. By the Hebrew doctors opinion the mixing of the blood of the bird and of living water signified judgment and me●y joyned together R. Menachem on Levit. 14. Vers. 7. seven times signifying hereby a f 〈…〉 cleansing for seven is a perfect number see the notes on Lev. 4. 6. So Naaman the Leper washed himselfe seven times in Iordan 2 King 5. 10. 14. And David praying to be cleansed of his spirituall leprosie saith wash me throughly from mine iniquitie Psal. 51. make him cleane that is pronounce him cleane or by these rites cleanse him the Greeke translateth and he shall be cleane let goe or 〈…〉 se and send away The like was done with the two goats on atonement day the one was killed the other let goe into the wildernesse Levit. 16. 7. 10. These figured the deliverance of Christ from death and of all such as are cleansed from their sinnes by his blood for he bare our griefes and cari●d our sorrowes or sicknesses Esa. 53. 4. Matth. 8. 17. And Solomon likeneth the escaping of the curse to the flying away of a bird Prov. 26. 2. Chazkuni maketh this comparison that the Leper had sitten as a bird solitarie on the house top and was 〈◊〉 and restrained from conversing with other men but now was permitted to come among his fellowes even as the bird had been bound in the hands of men but now was let goe and set free to goe among her fellowes the face of the field that is the open field like that phrase in Genes 1. 20. on the face of the firmanent The Greeke translateth it into the field Hence the Hebrew doctors say hee that letteth the bird loose may not turne his face towards the sea nor to the citie nor to the wildernesse for it is said in Levit. 1453. out of the citie into the face of the field If when be lets it goe it comes againe he shall let it goe againe though it be an hundred times Moreover they say the Cedar wood and hysope and scarlet with which one lep●r was cleansed he may with them cleanse other lepers and so the bird that is let goe he may cleanse other lepers with it after it hath beene sent away and it is lawfull to be eaten But the bird that was killed is unlawfull to be used for any thing and who so eateth ought thereof transgresseth Maimony treat of Lepr chap. 11. sect 1. 7. These legall ordinances led the people unto Christ for if the blood of birds and water with cedar hysope and scarlet sprinkling the uncleane sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offred himselfe without spot unto God purge the conscience from dead workes to serve the living God Heb. 9. 13. 14. Vers. 8. all his haire on every part of his bodie so the Hebrewes say he must cause the rasour to passe ever all his flesh that is seene even his secret parts and the haire all over his body Maimony ibidem The haire naturally springeth of hot grosse matter or fume and argueth strength of nature so in the Leprous and uncleane the haire signified the strength of uncleannesse which was to be cut off for it is needfull to beat downe the power of uncleannesse which aboundeth in him saith R. Menachem on Levit. 14. So at the consecration of the Levites they were to cause a rasour to passe over all their flesh Numb 8. 7. and Sampson when hee lost his haire lost his strength Iudg. 16. 17. And God threatning to weaken the state of his people useth this similitude of shaving them with a rasour Esa. 7. 20. Contrariwise the Nazirite whiles hee was to be holy unto the Lord by his vow no rasour might come upon his head Num. 6. 5. that he may be cleane or and
Barley and Oates But the kindes of pulse as Rice and Millet and Beanes and Lontiles and the like there is not of them any levened bread For though the meale of Rice and the like ●●kne●ded and covered with cloathes like dough which is levened yet is it lawfull to be eaten for it is not levened but putrified The five sorts of corne aforesaid if they be kneaded with the liquour of fruits onely without any water they are never counted levened but are lawfull to be eaten for the juyce of fruits doe not leven but putrifie And the liquors of fruits are as wine and milke and honey and oyle olive and the juyce of apples and pomgranats and all such like But if any water be mixed with them they doe leaven They may not boyle wheat in water neither the beaten graine nor the meale for then it is perfectly levened and if that it be burst in the boylying They may not fr●e the paste in oile in a pan But they may boyle the graine and the meale of parched corne It is lawfull to boile the corne or the meale in the liquor of fruits Likewise paste that is kneaded in the liquor of fruits if they boyle it in the liquor of fruits or frie it in a pan in oyle it is lawfull for the liquor of fruits leven not c. In any ●roth or pottage that they boile if any Barley or Wheat be found therein and the graine be burst all that broth is unlawfull for leven is mixed with it If the graines be not broken they take them out and burn them and the rest of the pottage they may eat for corne so mixed or boiled and not burst is not by the Law perfectly levened c. Maimony in treat of Leven and Unlevened bread c. 5. S. 1. c. that soule the Chaldee expounds it that man So in verse 19. cut off the Greeke saith destroyed see Gen. 17. 14. The Hebrew cannons say who so eateth so much as an olive of leven in the Passeover from the beginning of the might of the 15 night unto the end of the one and twentieth day of Nisan if he doe it presumptuously is guilty of being cut off if ignorantly he is bound to bring the sameoffring appointed for the same If hee eat any whit of leven at all it is forbidden by the law and though he bee not to be cut off or bring an offring but for the foresaid quantitie of an olive yet he that eateth lesse than that presumptuously is to be chastised with stripes Maimony treat of Leven chap. 1. S. 1. 7. from the first c. that is who so eateth leven any of these daies Vers. 16. convocation an holy assembly of all the people and so a Sabbath as Levit. 23. 39. The like order was at other feasts Levit. 23. 2. 3. 7. 21. 24. 27. 35. So these feasts were for the honour of God and increase of faith and holinesse in his people assembling for religious exercises done dressed and made ready to eat which yet on the Sabbath day was unlawfull to be done Exodus 16. 5. 23. 29. and 35. 2. 3. Vers. 17. selfe same Hebr. the strength or body of this day so verse 41. and 51. see Gen. 17. 23. I brought forth God did this by his Angell as it is written he sent an Angell and brought us forth out of Egypt Num. 20. 16. The Hebrew Doctors say The redemption from Egypt was by the hand of the Angell the Redeemer with the power of the great God as is said in Exod. 32. 11 which thou hast brought forth out of the land of Egypt with great power and with a strong hand R. Menachem on Exod. 12. Vers. 18. first The Chaldee nameth it In Nisan in the tenth day see verse 1. The Greeke saith Beginning in the fourteenth day of the first moneth Verse 19. not be found from hence the Hebrew Doctors gather Whosoever leaveth leven within his power at the Passeover although he eat not of it yet hee transgresseth two prohibitions no old leven shall be seene with thee Ezod 13. 7. and old leven shall not be found in your houses Exod. 12. 19. Moreover Leven when the Passeover is gone over it is for ever unlawfull to bee put to any use Maimony treat● of Leven chap. 1 S. 2 〈…〉 stranger that is strangers as the Greek translateth it opposed to the naturall Israelites to be borne afterward in the land of Canaan Vers. 21. elders by whom hee would signifie this law to all the people as vers 3. So before in Exodus 3. 16. draw out separate from the resto●●he flocke and dest 〈…〉 ate unto this end as before in verse 5. 6. The Greeke translateth Goe and take 〈…〉 lambs or stocke beasts of the sheepe or goats as verse 5. So the Greeke and Chaldee translate it plurally neither is the Hebrew word tson used for one particular lambe but for many Passeover that is the Paschall Lambe called by figure of speech and 〈…〉 ally the Passeover as circumcision is called the covenant G 〈…〉 ●7 13. the Rocke Christ 1 Cor. 10. 4. bread and wine the body and bloud of Christ Mark 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 d many the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P 〈…〉 followeth 〈◊〉 〈…〉 Cor. 5. 7. Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is 〈◊〉 is killed 〈◊〉 Verse 22. hyssope called in Hebrew a 〈…〉 in Greeke by the Apostle hyssopos Heb. 9. 19. wherupon we English it eizop or hyssope but whether it were that herbe which wee commonly call by that name is uncertaine It grew out of wals 1 King 4. 33. The Iewes write that there were foure sorts of hyssope and that this spoken of in the Law was such as men used to eat of and season po●tuge with And the bunch spoken of was three stalkes of hyssope bound together Maimony in Misn. treat Of the red Cow chap. 3. S. 2. and chap. 11. S. 1. This herbe was used to sprinkle with in other services and purifications See Exod. 24. 6. 8. Leviticus 14. 4. Num. 19. 6. 18. and signified the instrument wherby the blood of Christ is sprinkled upon and applied unto our hearts which is the preaching of faith for faith purifieth the heart of sinners Acts 15. 9. and it commeth by the preaching of the Word Rom. 10. 14. 17. which ministreth unto us the spirit Galat. 3. 2. and wee are elect through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Iesus Christ 1 Pet. 1. 2. which purgeth our consciences from dead workes to serve the living God Hebr. 9. 14. See Psal. 51. 9. strike or sprinkler Hebrew make touch which the Greeke translateth set or put the Chaldee sprinkle not goe This also was but at the Passeover in Egypt for the present danger of death by the destroying Angells after it was not required and Christ with his Disciples went out that night they are the Pasche Matth. 26. 30. The houses of the Israelites thus sanctified by the paschall Lambe and blood thereof out
afarre off This though it were a speciall favour to the Elders and served for confirmation of the things spoken by Moses yet signified it the impotency of the Law which kept men afar off and could not bring them neere unto the Lord nor unite them unto him as the Gospell of Christ doth by faith Heb. 10. 19. 22. and 12. 18. 22. c. Vers. 2. with him with Moses not with the Elders therefore the Greeke translateth with them For the people abode beneath at the foot of the mount the Elders went up as it were halfe way and saw part of Gods glory vers 9. 10. but Moses himselfe went up to the top of the mount into the darke cloud v. 18. For the Law was to bee given by the hand or ministerie of a mediatour Gal. 3. 19. Ver. 3. will doe the Greeke addeth and heare or obey as is expressed in v. 7. Thus the covenant between God and Israel was established by mutuall and willing consent albeit they yet knew not the impossibilitie of the Law which is weak through the flesh Rom. 8. 3. So in Exod. 19. 8. Vers. 4. wrote in a booke Heb. 9. 19. for the stonie tables were written by the finger of God him-selfe Exod. 31. 18. an altar which represented God the first and chiefe party in the covenant pillars or statues the Gr. translateth them stones and pillars were wont to be of stones erected Gen. 28. 18. 22. and 31. 45. and 35. 14. according to or for the twelve tribes that is to represent them the other party in the Covenant and their hard stony nature as the tables of stone signified their stony hearts 2 Cor. 3. 3. 14. See Exod. 31. 1● Vers. 5. the yong men that is the first borne as the Chaldee translateth which were priests or sacrificers untill the Levites taken in stead of the first-borne of Israel Numb 3. 41. had the priesthood in their tribe And the Hebrew word doth not alwaies signifie men yong in yeers but fit for service or ministerie to their elders so Iesus the servant of Moses and other such servants are often called yong men Exod. 33. 11. Gen. 14. 24. 22. 3. 2 Sam. 18. 15. 1 King 20. 14. of peace-offerings Gr. of salvation By these two sorts of sacrifices whereof see Lev. 1. and 3. chap. the sanctification of the people was testified who by the death of Christ whom these sacrifices did figure out presented themselves wholly to God as obedient servants and shewed thankfulnesse for the peace and salvation which through him they had obtained Rom. 12. 1. 2. Heb. 13. 15. See also the notes on Exod. 19. 10. bullocks and other beasts as the Apostle testifieth of bullocks and of goats Heb. 9. 19. but the one is here named as principall Vers. 6. on the altar and so on the booke Heb. 9. 19 which as it seemeth was laid on the altar to bee sanctified thereby Vers. 7. and obey or heare hearken unto that is g 〈…〉 y learne and obey See the notes on Exodus 4. 31. Vers. 8. on the people which may be meant of the twelve pillars set up to represent the people vers 4. Howbeit the Chaldee paraphrase saith he sprinkled it on the Altar to make propitiation for the people Thus the first covenant or testament was not dedicated without blood as the Apostle observeth in Heb. 9. 18. 23. and the patternes of heavenly things were purified by the blood of these sacrifices signifying that Christ by his death should sanctifie himselfe for his people and them unto himselfe by the blood of a better testament Iohn 17. 19. Heb. 9. 13. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 2. And whereas the sprinkling and purifying in the Law was usually done with water scarlet wooll and hyssope Levit. 14. 6. 7. the Apostle telleth us that this here was so done though Moses nameth them not Heb. 9. 19. behold c. the Apostle explaineth it thus This is the blood of the Covenant or of the Testament which God hath commanded unto you Heb. 9. 20. Thus the Sacrament of the old Testament confirmed by the blood of beasts had a resemblance unto the New Testament established upon better promises and confirmed by the blood of Christ. But that was for workes of the Law this is for remission of sins Mat. 26. 28. Heb. 9. 15. Vers. 10. the God that is signes of the glory and presence of the God of Israel For never man saw God neither can see him 1 Tim. 6. 16. Therefore the Chaldee expounds it The glory of the God of Israel and the Greeke translateth they saw the place where the God of Israel stood of Saphire bricke Hebrew bricke of Saphire whereby is meant Saphire stone hewed like bricke wherewith the place under him was paved So also the Greeke translateth it Or it may be Englished of whitenesse of Saphire that is of white Saphire stone for bricke ●ath the name in Heb. of whitenesse The Chaldee translateth under the throne of his glory was as 〈◊〉 were a worke of precious stone The Saphire is also mentioned in Ezekiels vision of Gods Throne and glorie Ezekiel 1. 26. It is a very precious trans●atent stone of the colour of the skie see Ex 〈…〉 s 28. 19. The worke of bricke might call them 〈◊〉 remember their bricke worke in Egypt Exodus 1. 14. and 5. 16. 19. from which bondage God now had brought them to labour in the heavenly worke of his Law and the mysteries of ●he same whereby the throne of his glory should be erected among them and his Church which ●s as the footstoole of the Lord Lam. 2. 1. should have the foundations laid with Saphires Esay 54. ●1 and such should be the polishing of the Saints Lamentations 4. 7. the body the Greeke ●nd Chaldee translate the sight or semblance of heaven And this cleere heavenly appearance ●id see forth the favour of God towards them 〈◊〉 keepe his Covenant as on the contrary a darke or cloudy Heaven is a signe of Gods displeasure Ieremy 4. 23. 28. Zeph. 1. 15. It signified also the cleannesse puritie that should be in the people of God for clearnesse or in puritie Vers. 11. the Nobles or the select or chosen men as the Greeke translateth meaning those Elders spoken of in verse 9. laid not his hand that is hurt or affrighted them not because they went up by the leave and Word of God not of their owne temeritie which was before forbidden Exodus 19. 21. So the laying of the hand often signifieth Nehemiah 13. 21. Psal. 55. 21. so the Chaldee translateth they had not hurt and the Greeke not one of them was dismayed or killed did eate c. The Chaldee paraphraseth they saw the glory of God and rejoyced in their sacrifices which were accepted as if they had eaten and drunke So other of the Hebrewes as in Elle shemoth rabbah say they fed their eyes with the brightnesse of the Majestie of God Christ promising felicitie to his Disciples sayth
20. 43. Lam. 3. 40. 2 Cor. 7. 11. Vers. 7. his hand reach not that is he be not able enough to bring a lambe thus God providēd for the poorer sort This is that sacrifice which the Hebrewes call Gn●leh vajored that is Ascending and descending Thalmud Bab. in Cerethoth ch 2. because it ascendeth or is greater if the sinner bee rich and descendeth or is lesser if he be poore And they observe that Sixe are commanded to offer the oblation Gnoleh vajored greater or lesser The Leper at his cleansing Levit. 14. 21. c. The woman after child-birth Levit. 12. 8. He that sweareth the oath of testimonie Levit. 5. 1. He that sweareth the oath of pronunciation falsly through ignorance Levit. 5. 4. The uncleane person that eateth of the holy things ignorantly and the uncleane that commeth into the Sanctuarie ignorantly Levit. 5. 2. 3. Maimony treat of Ignorances chap. 1. Sect. 1. In these kinde of sacrifices the High Priest or the King was not charged to bring a greater as they were in the Sin-offring Levit. 4. 3. 23. but the offring fellower for the poore even to a pottle of flowre v. 11. The King and the anoynted Priest brought their offring for the oath of witnesse or for the oath of pronunciation or for defiling the sanctuarie and holy things thereof as other private persons For the scripture puts no difference betweene the offring of the king priest or private man save in the sin-offrings appointed for their ignorances Levit. 4. Maimony treat of Ignorances chap. 10. Sect. 7. turtle-doves see the notes on Levit 1. 14. If a poore man brought the oblation of the richer sort hee was discharged but a rich man that brought the oblation of the poore was not discharged Maimony treat of Ignorances chap. 10. Sect. 13. In that God would have men be at such charges for the expiating of their smallest sinnes and over-sights it was to teach them the uglinesse of their sinnes in his sight and with how great price by the blood of Christ they were to bee redeemed 1 Pet. 1. 18. 19. and how they should shew by such cost their thankfulnesse to God for his grace 1 Chro. 21. 24. and towards his priests the ministers of his grace which had their livelihood in part by such sacrifices Num. 18. 9. 1 Cor. 9. 13. 14. And in that he lessened the charge for the poorer sort it was to shew the riches of his grace who freely forgiveth the poore as well as the rich not in respect of their expences but of his mercie which is without respect of person Iam. 2. 5. 〈◊〉 55. 1. c. Rom. 3. 24. 25. c. Vers. 8. first that atonement might be made for his sinne after which was the Burnt-offring a figure of a new and holy life For Christ whom the Sin-offring typed out bare our sinnes in his 〈◊〉 the tree that we being delivered from sinne should 〈◊〉 in righteousnesse 1 Pet. 2. 24. Albeit the Burnt-offring also was to make reconciliation for sinne as is noted on Lev. 1. 4. cut-with-his nayl see Lev. 1. 15. where the like is for the Burnt-offring This here by the Hebr. canons was to be done at the south west horne of the altar The Priest held the 〈…〉 feet of the fowle between his two fingers and the 〈…〉 wings between his two fingers and stretched out the 〈◊〉 therof unto the bredth of his two fingers and cut it 〈◊〉 his naile And this was one of the hardest services 〈◊〉 were in the Sanctuary Maimony treat of offring the Sacrifices c. 7. S. 6. 8. Thus the priests greatest cun 〈…〉 was to be shewed in offring the sacrifices of the poore not divide hee might not 〈◊〉 the head from the body and if he did divide it hee did unlawfully and was beaten Maimony ibidem Sect. 6. See the notes on Levit. 1. 17. Vers. 9. the side Hebr. the wall He sprinkled of the blood upon the wall of the altar beneath the middest thereof and the rest of the blood hee wrung-out at the bottome It is a generall rule that which was put upon the wall the residue thereof was wrung-out at the bottome and this was the nether wall Maim ibidem This rite might fore-shadow the manner of Christs suffering both his sweating drops of blood Luk. 22. 44. and the shedding of his blood on the crosse which oblation was sanctified by his deitie as the blood of the sacrifice by the Altar Ioh. 17. 19. Heb. 9. 14. Matth. 23. 19. Vers. 10. the manner or ordinance Hebr. the judgement which word is here and often used for the manner or rite of doing a thing and it hath reference to the law in Levit 1. 15. c. The Greek and Chaldee translate it as is fit or convenient The Hebrewes give this reason why the doves were one a Sin-offring the other a Burnt-offring Because the Altar had nothing in the bird that was the Sin-offring save the blood thereof which is not food as Levit. 3. 11. therefore it was needfull to bring two one for a Sin-offring to be meat for the Priest Levit. 6. 26. the other for a Burnt-offring to be meat for the Altar Chazkuni on Levit. 5. for his sinne or from his sinne that is cleansing him from it Vers. 11. attaine not in Greeke finde not that is if he be not able as in vers 7. hee used another word of like meaning reach not So in Levit. 14. 21. 22. and 25. 26. 47. Num. 6. 21. an Ephah that is a Bushell the tenth part whereof was called an Omer about our Pottle the Chaldee here for an Ephah translateth three Seahs or pecks see the notes on Exod. 16. 36. oile because sin proceedeth from us for want of grace which oile figured and the memoriall thereof is not sweet or gratefull unto God which frankincense did signifie therefore neither oile nor frankincense might be given with the sin-offring nor with the jealousie offring which brought inquitie to remembrance Numb 5. 15. but with the meat-offrings both were given Lev. 2. 1. c. In the common Meat-offring Levit 2. the want of oile made it unlawfull for sacrifice The sinners meat-offring if oile were put upon it or upon the handfull thereof it was made unlawfull Maimony treat of unlawfull or polluted sacrifices chap. 11. Sect. 8. 10. Vers. 12. shall take or shall gripe shall gather up with the hand see Levit. 2. 2. This was the manner of all meat-offrings that a handfull was burned on the altar and the residue eaten by the Priests except the Priests owne meat-offrings for sinne or otherwise they were not eaten but all burnt Lev. 6. 16. 22. 23. according to or upon Iehovahs Fire-offrings which the Greeke translateth upon the Burnt-offrings to the Lord see the notes on Le. 4. 35. Vers. 13. shall be the Priests the residue which is not burnt on the Altar shall be for the Priests to 〈◊〉 the males among the priests were to eat it in the
and if it abide in this colour two weekes they pronounce it uncleane and burne it Likewise if 〈◊〉 spread they pronounce it uncleane and burne it As if in a garment there appeare a greene spot or a red they shut it up 7. daies and in the seventh he looketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if it be spred hee pronounceth it uncleane and burneth all the garment And if it abide in the colour b●● sp●●ad not or if it be spred but be dimmor then the 〈◊〉 〈…〉 lours wherein it was shut up or if the colour bee gr 〈…〉 e more red or more greene but not spred they 〈◊〉 the spotted place and shut it up seven daies more And in the end of those 7. daies which is the 13. day he 〈…〉 eth if it be dimmer in colour the third time then is be bound to wash it and it is cleane And if the colour be ch●●ged from that it was as if it was greene and is 〈◊〉 or was red and is become greene hee rendeth 〈◊〉 the spotted place and burneth that which is rent 〈◊〉 and soweth a piece into the rent place and the residue of the garment is free and washed all over the second time and is cleane But if it abide in the colour wherein it was shut up at the first he pronounceth it uncleane and burneth it all A garment out of which the spot is rent at the end of the second weeke if any spot come again into it it is burnt Likewise if the spot spread in a garment after it is freed it is burnt Maim treat of Leprosie chap. 12. sect 1. 2. 4. Vers. 50. shall shut up in Greeke shall separate the plague meaning the thing that hath the plague of Leprosie on it see vers 4. Vers. 51. fretting or rankling this word is not used but in this case of leprie and in Ezek. 28. 24. where it is applied to a pricking or ranckling briar The Greeke translateth it a continuing leprosie the Chaldee a diminishing because that which fretteth both continueth long and wasteth the thing wherein it is So in chap. 14. 44. it is uncleane it is one of the maine uncleane things and as the Hebrewes write it maketh uncleane by touching it or by bearing it or by comming in where it is As a leprous garment or warpe or woofe or any vessell of skin plagued with leprosie if but so much as an olive of them come into a cleane house all that is in the house is made uncleane both men and vessels and are all made principall uncleane things c. The leprous thing is like unto the dead as it is said Let her not be as one dead Num. 12. 12. How doth the dead defile by so much as an olive so these things also by so much as an olive Maim in Lepr chap. 13. sect 13. 14. Vers. 52. in woollen Hebr. in wooll or in flaxe that is made of wooll or of flaxe This burning of leprous garments signified the abhomination which all should have of sinne for the consuming and abolishing of it and of all instruments and moniments thereof as by comparing scriptures for some particular evils may bee gathered See Deut. 7. 25. Esa. 30. 22. Iude verse 23. Act. 19. 19. Vers. 54. command that they wash the commandement is by the Priest the washing by any man as Baal haturim here observeth Vers. 55. his colour Hebrew his eye the colour is so called because it is discerned by the eye so in Numb 11. 7. Ezek. 1. 16. and 8. 2. fret-inward or a deepe-fret that diminisheth and consumeth it the Chaldee translateth it a breaking the Greeke thus it is confirmed or fast-setled in the garment or in the warpe or in the woofe bare-inside Hebrew the fore-baldnesse thereof or in the hinder-baldnesse thereof The words before used in verse 42. for the baldnesse of the head before or behind are here applied to the garment which when the wooll or stuffe is eaten off in the out side or in the inner with the fretting leprie is thereupon called bald The Greeke translateth them the warpe and the woofe as before is noted the Chaldee in the worne or old part thereof or in the new part thereof and so other the Hebrew doctors explaine it saying Karachath is the old-worn places and gabbachath is the new Maim treat of Lepr● c. 12. s. 9. Vers. 56. rend it rend the place of the plague out of the garment and burne it saith Sol. Iarchi But if it were still seene in the garment after this then the whole garment was burnt v. 57. Ver. 57. a plague breaking out-abroad or a spreading as the Chaldee saith an increasing leprosie In Greek a flourishing leprie Vers. 58. washed the second time Chazkuni explaineth it the second time for to clease it and the first time for to put away the plague of it These legall washings were carnall ordinances imposed on them untill the time of reformation Hebrew 9. 10. but our washing is by the blood and spirit of Christ wherby he hath washed us from our sinnes Revel 1. 5. so that we draw neer unto God with a true heart and full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evill conscience and our bodies washed with pure water Heb. 10. 22. and clensing our selves from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God 2 Corinth 7. 1. in us may be fulfilled that which is written These are they which came out of great tribulation and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Rev. 7. 14. CHAP. XIV 1 The rites and sacrifices in cleansing of the Leper with two birds cedar wood scarlet ●yzop and living water 10 with lambs flowre and oile 21 Lesser sacrifices for the poore leper 33 The signes of leprosie in an house 40 the pulling out of the stones thereof putting in new 45 The breaking downe of the leprous house 49 The cleansing of it if the plague be healed with birds cedar scarlet eyzop and living water 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Iehovan spake unto Moses saying This shall be the law of the Leper in the day of his clensing that he shall be brought unto the Priest And the Priest shall goe forth out of the campe and the Priest shall see and behold if the plague of leprosie be healed in the leper Then the Priest shall command and hee shall take for him that is to be clensed two birds alive and cleane and Cedar wood and scarlet and eyzop And the Priest shall command he shal kill one of the birds in an earthen vessel over living water As for the living bird hee shall take it and the Cedar wood and the scarlet and the eyzop and shall dip them and the living bird in the blood of the bird that was killed over the living water And he shall sprinkle upon him that is to be cleansed from the leprosie seven times and shall make him cleane and shall let goe the living
upon an altar without saying Hee that offreth without is not guilty till he offer upon 〈…〉 tar which he hath made without but if hee offer 〈…〉 Rocke or on a stone he is free to weet from the judgment of death for it is not called Korban an offring except it be on an Altar yea though it be without as it is written in Gen. 8. 20. And Noe built an 〈◊〉 Maim in Maas hakorbanoth chap. 19. sect 1. Vers. 9. doore of Tent and so in ages following to the doore of the House or Temple that is in the courtyard And if the Tabernacleor Temple should haply bee burnt as it was by the Babylonians 2 King 25. 9. yet was it lawfull to offer in the courtyard upon the altar as Ezra did after their returne Ezr. 3. 3. 4. 5. 6. So the Hebrewes say Who so killeth holy things at this time and offreth th●● out of the Court is guilty because it is meet he 〈◊〉 offer within For loe it is lawfull to offer although that be no house Because the first holinesse sanct●fieth f● that time present and for the time to come Mai 〈…〉 i● M●●s ●akorb chap. 19. sect 15. It figured that our service unto God must bee by faith in Christ and in the communion of his Church as before is shewed on verse 2. to doe it that is to offer it see the notes on Exod. 10. 25. cut-off in Greeke that soule shall be destroyed as in v. 4. Vers. 10. every man Hebr. man man which Ionathan expoundeth yong man or old man as in vers 3. and 13. the stranger in Greeke or of the proselytes adjoyned unto you This Law therefore seemeth not to binde the heathens any more then the sonner of sacrificing vers 5. so in v. 12. 13. any blood to weet of fowle or beast as is explained in Leviticus 7. 26. and this at his common table for as the former lawes were for sanctifying the people in their holy things so these which follow are for their civill conversation Whereas it is said it maketh atonement for the soule verse 11. left any should thinke he is not guilty save for the blood of holy things the scripture saith any blood Chazkuni on Leviticus 17. will set Hebr. will give my face which the Chaldee expoundeth my anger and so face is often used for anger which appeareth in the countenance as I will appease his face Gen. 32. 20. and the face of the Lord hath divided them Lam. 4. 16 and I will not cause my face to fall upon you Ier. 3. 12. and the face of the Lord is upon them that doe evill 1 Pet. 3. 12. and many the like the soule which the Chaldee expoundeth the man See the notes on Gen. 12. 5. cut it off that is destroy him as the Chaldee and Greeke translateth The Hebrewes say He that eateth so much as an olive of blood presumptuously is guilty of cutting-off if ignorantly he is to bring the Sin-offring appointed And the thing is plaine by the law that hee is not guilty but for all blood of cattell beasts and birds onely whether they be uncleane or cleane Leviticus 7. 26. But the blood of fishes and of Locusts and of creeping things and the blood of man they are not guilty for them by the name of blood The blood therefore of cleane fishes and locusts is lawfull to be eaten or drunke And the blood of uncleane locusts and fishes is unlawfull because it is the j●yce of their bodies Mans blood is unlawfull by the doctrine of the scribes if it be separated from the body but one may swallow downe the blood of his teeth without prohibition Maimony in treat of Forbidden 〈◊〉 chap. 6. sect 1. 2. Verse 11. the soule that is the life see Gen. 9. 4. So in Targum Ionathan it is expounded here and in verse 13. the life of the soule of the flesh the Gr. addeth of all flesh so Moses speaketh in v. 14. is in the blood the Greeke saith is the blood thereof as in verse 14. which blood is figuratively called the life because the seat thereof is in the blood as Moses here sheweth so that if the blood be gone the life is gone with it as daily experience confirmeth Hereupon David saith What profit is in my blood Psal. 30. 10. that is in my life and the shedding of blood is the taking away of ones life Gen. 9. 6. Chazkuni explaineth it thus For the soule of the flesh 1. of every creature it hangeth in the blood and therefore I have given it to make a 〈…〉 nt for the soule of man the soule commeth and maketh 〈…〉 ment for the soule have given it to weet the blood and so the life or soule of the beast to make atonement for your soules that is to be the expiation and ransome for your life or soule in figure of Christ whose blood was to be shed for the remission of sinnes Matth. 26. 28. through which he should make peace Colos. 1. 20. and men have redemption Ephes. 1. 7. who was to give his soule or life for a ransome for many Matth. 20. 28. And this is the cause why God forbiddeth all blood that men might be kept in faith and reverend exspectation of the blood of Christ which being once shed should spiritually be given unto his people for to drinke by faith unto the life and salvation of their soules Ioh. 6. 53. 54. 55. And to teach the people not to ascribe the worke of their salvation unto themselves or their owne workes but unto Christ onely was this prohibition of blood and the like was for the fat of all such beasts as had the fat burned on the Altar which therefore might not be eaten of men See the notes on Leviti●us 3. 17. and 7. 25. 26. it is the blood not of buls and goats save onely in shadow for it is unpossible that such blood should take away sinnes Heb. 10. 4. but the blood of Christ is it that maketh atonement and cleanseth from all sinne Hebrewes 9. 12. and 10. 19. 1 Iohn 1. 7. And as the Apostle saith without shedding of blood is no remission Hebrewes 9. 22. so the Hebrew doctors from these words of Moses say There is no remission of sins but by blood as it is written For it is blood that maketh-atonement for the soule Talmud in Ioma c. 1. Vers. 12. Therefore in Greeke For this cause Although other reasons may be rendred of the forbidding of blood as to restraine men from crueltie or from communion with idolaters for the Magi or wise men of Chaldea used to eat blood when they conve●sed with Divels and by them foretold things to come whereas otherwise the Chaldaeans eschewed blood as an uncleane thing as Maimony sheweth in Moreh nebuchim yet the maine if not the onely cause is here given of God to be the use of blood upon the Altar for their atonement which was meerely figurative and which had the end and accomplishment
in Christ. Colos. 2. 16. 17. And besides the former signification as the not eating of the flesh of such sacrifices as had their blood caried into the holy place signified that they which cleaved to the rudiments of Moses Law should have no portion in Christ as is shewed on Levit. 6. 30. from Heb. 13. 10. 13. so the not eating of blood which made stonement for the soules of men seemeth also to signifie that they which cleaved unto the legall sacrifices should not eat that is not have communion benefit or nourishment to their soules but they which come unto Christ by faith doe eat the flesh and drinke the blood in spirit and truth by which their atonement is made with God Ioh. 6. Matth. 26. compared with Heb. 13. 10. c. And as the way into the Holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Heb. 9. 8. so the communion with that blood whereby atonement for sins was made was not yet fully manifested while as the outward Tabernacle and figurative sacrifices therein were in use Verse 13. hunt a hunting and so take it by hunting This law for wild-beasts caught by hunting concerneth tame beasts also as touching the slaying of them as is said in Deut. 12. 21. thou shalt kill of thy herd and of thy flocke c. and thou shalt eat And as it is said in Deut. 15. 22. of the blemished firstlings which were to be eaten in their cities as the Roe-bucke and as the Hart From which words the Hebrewes say Here thou art taught that the wilde beast and the tame are alike in this businesse of killing c. Maimony in Shechitah or treat of Killing beasts chap. 1. sect 1. that may be eaten or which is usually eaten which Targum Ionathan expoundeth that is lawfull to be eaten he shall even poure-out or then shall hee shed the blood thereof so that no flesh of beast or bird might bee eaten in Israel unlesse the blood were orderly let out and the flesh cleansed of it And when the people in a warre flying upon the spoile slew cattell on the ground and did eat the flesh not puri fied from the blood they sinned against the Lord till Saul tooke order for the more lawfull killing of them 1 Sam. 14. 32. 33. 34. Of this point the Hebrewes have these rules It is commanded that who so will eat the flesh of any cattell wild beast or fowle it be slaine and afterward eaten He that slayeth blesseth God first who sanctifieth us by his commandements and hath given a charge concerning the slaying And it is unlawfull to eat of that which is slaine all the while that it doth tremble And who so eateth thereof before the soule the life bee gone out transgresseth Fishes and Locusts there is no need to slay them but the catching of them maketh them lawfull Behold hee saith in Numb 11. 22. Shall the flockes and the herds be slaine for them to suffice them or shall all the fishes of the sea be gathered for them The gathering of the fish is as the fleying of the beasts So of the Locusts there is mentioned their gathering onely Esa. 33. 4. that if any of them dye in the water they may be eaten yea it is lawfull to eat them alive The place where the beast must be slaine is the necke The instrument to slay it with may be any knife of metall or of stone or of glasse and the like cutting things which are sharpe and have no gap in them It is lawfull to slay in all places without the court of the Sanctuarie for within the court they slay but the holy things of the altar onely common beasts or fowles may not bee slaine within the court Deut. 12. 14. 15. So that which is slaine out of the place which God hath chosen is lawfull to be eaten in any of the gates but hee that slayeth common things within the court that flesh is unlawfull to bee used but they bury it Any man may slay as the deafe or the foole or the childe c. if others looke that it bee slaine lawfully but if a knife fall of it selfe and slay though it be after the manner of slaying yet it is unlawfull for it is said THOV SHALT KILL Deut. 12. 21. so it must be slaine by mankinde Hee that slayeth a beast in the name of a sacrifice for a vow or a sin-offring which he oweth it is unlawfull to be eaten c. Maim in Shecbitah 〈◊〉 1. and 2. c. The taking of beasts and birds by hunting may signifie the converting of sinners by the preaching of the Gospell as the catching of fishes is applied to the catching of men Luk. 5. 9. 10. And as Peter when hee was called to preach the word unto and communicate with the Gentiles was bidden in a vision to kill beasts and eat Act. 10. 12. 13. 28. so this Law for killing of beasts and burying their blood seemeth to figure out the mortifying of sinners by the word of God and burying of the old man naturall sinfull life after which communion with them is lawfull Rom. 6. 2. 3. 4. cover it with dust the Greeke translateth earth shall cover it The covering of blood is in use they say both within the land of Israel and without the land of common beasts but not of the sanctified Thalmud in Cholin c. 6. This taught a reverend regard which they should have of the soule or life of the beast which was in the blood that it should bee buried with a kinde of honour for buriall is honourable Eccles. 6. 3. It also shewed the lawfulnesse of killing these creatures for food that their blood being covered should not be imputed unto them of God as appeareth by the contrary Iob 16. 18. O earth cover not thou my blood and Ezek. 24. 7. 8. Her blood is in the midst of her see set it upon the top of a Rocke shee poured it not upon the ground to cover it with dust that it might cause hot-wrath to come up to take vengeance c. where blood not covered signifieth a crying to God for vengeance The Hebrewes performed this charge carefully for in their canons it is said Wee are commanded to cover the blood of the cleane beast or cleane fowle that is slaine Leviticus 17. 13. Therefore wee are bound to blesse before the covering of 〈◊〉 Blessed art thou O Lord our God King eternall which hath sanctified us by his commandements and give us a charge to cover the blood Hee that killeth fowle and many sorts of wilde beasts in one place blesse● with one blessing for them all and maketh one cov 〈…〉 of all their blood If the blood bee mixt with water if there be in it the appearance of blood it ought to bee covered otherwise it is free c. If the blood for suncke into the ground yet if the signe or marke th 〈…〉 of may be discerned it ought to be
covered Wee are not found to cover any blood but of the slaine beast which is lawfull to be eaten as is said in Levit. 17. 13. THAT MAY BE EATEN c. Wherewith must it be 〈…〉 red With any kinde of dust as earth lime chalke 〈◊〉 or other like rubbish that is small as powder but not 〈◊〉 a basket or a stone or thicke dung c which are 〈◊〉 kinde of dust It may be covered with embers or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 any sort Hee that slayeth must lay dust unde 〈…〉 and after that slay and after that cover it with 〈◊〉 and he that slayeth he must cover it And if bee haue not couered it and seeth it afterward hee is bound to cover it for this is a commandement by it selfe and dependeth not upon the slaying onely And hee may not cover it with his foot but with his hand or with the knife or with an instrument or vessel lest this rite gro● into a contempt and so the commandement concer 〈…〉 〈◊〉 be contemned For the honour is not to the commandment it selfe but to the blessed God which commanded it who hath delivered us from groping in dark 〈…〉 and hath ordained us a Lampe to make straight the things that are crooked and a Light to teach the 〈◊〉 of righteousnes and so it is said in Psal. 129. 105. Thy word is a Lamp unto my foot and a light unto 〈◊〉 path Maimony in Shechitah chap. 14. sect 1. c. Vers. 14. the soule that is the life as Ionathan expounds it the life of the soule for the soule Heb. in the soule In is often in stead of For but some here keepe the usuall signification and change the order as Chazkuni interprets it in the blood thereof is the soule thereof But Iarchi thus the blood is to it in 〈◊〉 of the soule for the soule hangeth in it the blood of any flesh to weet of beasts or birds not any of their blood Lev. 7. 26. So not onely that which commeth out in the slaying of the beast but that remaineth within in the heart or other parts is unlawfull to be eaten The blood which is the juyce of of the beast and the blood of the members as the blood of the milt and the blood of the kidneyes and the blood of the stones and the blood that is gathered in the heart and the blood that is found in the liver who so eateth of them is not to be cut off but is beaten for it is said yee shall not eat any blood Of that for which a man is to bee cut off he saith FOR THE SOVLE OF THE FLESH IS IN THE BLOOD he is not guilty of cutting off but for the blood wherein the soule or life goeth out Maimony in treat of Forbidden meates chap. 6. sect 4. is the blood figuratively spoken for is in the blood as verse 11. Vers. 15. every soule that is as the Chaldee translateth every man as verse 10. a carkasse to weet that which died of it selfe or is killed by an other thing and is not orderly slaine see Lev. 7. 24. Of this the Hebrewes say Hee that eateth presumptuously so much as an olive of the flesh of any cattell that is dead or wilde beast that is dead or fowle that is dead is to be beaten And whatsoever is not killed so as is meet loe that is a dead-carkasse Nothing is forbidden by the name of a carkasse but the sorts of cleane things onely because they are fit to be slaine and if they bee slaine after a lawfull manner they are lawfull to be eaten But uncleane things whose slaying availeth them not whether they be duely slaine or dye alone or the flesh be cut off from them alive who so eateth of them is not beaten as for a carkasse or a torne thing but as for eating of uncleane flesh Who so eateth a cleane bird alive all of it is beaten as for eating a carkasse Who so eateth of the flesh of an untimely birth of a cleane beast is beaten as for eating of a carkasse And it is unlawfull to eat of any beast that is borne untill the eight night after Exodus 22. 30. for who so tarieth not eight daies for a beast it is as an untimely-birth though he is not beaten for that The law forbiddeth a dead thing and that is a carkasse and forbiddeth that which inclineth to dye though it be not already dead and that is the torne thing There is no difference in the death whether it dye of it selfe alone or whether it fall and dye or whether it be strangled untill it dye or that a wilde beast hath rent and killed it Maimony in treat of Forbidden meats chap. 4. sect 1. 2. 3. 4. 8. As the forbidding of uncleane meats Levit. 11. spiritually forbid communion with wicked persons Acts 10. 12. 28. so this prohibition of things not duely slaine forbiddeth in mysterie to have religious communion with such as are dead in their trespasses and sinnes and which are not mortified by the worke of Gods word and spirit Ephes. 2. 1. 2. 3. 2 Cor. 6. 16. 17. Colos. 2. 13. and 3. 5. By the former explanation out of Maimony it appeareth that the strangled thing forbidden by the Apostles unto the Gentiles together with blood in Acts 15. 20. 29. was the carkasse or dead thing here spoken of for the Law otherwise mentioneth not the strangled And this compared with Deuteronomie 14. 21. where the Gentiles are permitted to eate such things giveth light to the true meaning of that decree in Acts 15. and a torne thing and is here for or distinguishing and disjoyning it from the carkasse aforesaid Any cleane beast or bird which by other beast or fowle or any other way was torne or maimed but not fully dead is here meant as is noted upon Exodus 22. 31. where this law is first given and shewed to tend also unto sanctification If it bee torne and dead it is a carkasse forementioned but this is a different precept and so meaneth torne things yet living as the Hebrewes observe Maimony in Forbidden meats chap. 4. sect 6. Againe The torne thing spoken of in the Law is that which is inclining to die And it is not called torne but that the scripture speaketh by an instance as that a Lion or the like hath torne it and broken it and it is not yet dead And there are other sicknesses or diseases which if they happen unto it it is accounted torne Maimony in Shechitah chap. 5. sect 1. 2. These beasts torne or inclining to death figured such persons as the Apostle likeneth unto naturall bruit beasts made to bee taken for a prey and destroyed which shall bee corrupted or utterly-perish in their own corruption 2 Pet. 2. 12. Where the Greeke words eis halosin that is for a prey or to be taken seeme to expresse the Hebrew terephah the torne thing here mentioned as in Iob 24. 5. the Hebrew latareph for a prey is turned in Greeke eis
which are herbs of bitter taste as wilde cichorie and endive These were to the Iewes a remembrance of their bitter life in Egypt Exod. 1. 14. and so a figure of the bitternesse of Christs afflictions whereof we that beleeve are made partakers by the fellowship of his sufferings being male conformable unto his death Phil. 3. 10. Ver● 12. till the morning if any were left till then it vas to be burnt see Exod. 12. 10. with the annotations not breake a bone this was fulfilled in Christ himselfe as Ioh. 19. 33. 36. See Exod 12. 46. The Hebrew Doctors say that for breaking abo●e a man was to be beaten But he is not guilty save for breaking a bone whereupon some flesh is or vherein is some marrow For breaking any other bone 〈◊〉 is not guilty But if there be any flesh upon it though he breake the bone in any other place than where he flesh is hee is guiltie although that place of the 〈◊〉 where he breaketh it be bare without flesh Also●e that breaketh it after another hath broken it is 〈◊〉 be beaten Maimony in Korban Pesach chap. 10. sect 1. 3 4. every statute of the Passe-over i● Greeke the Law of the Pascha This seemeth robe meant of the first Passeover the Law whereo 〈…〉 s given in Exod. 12. Howbeit here the Hebre 〈…〉 s have their exceptions and differences but 〈◊〉 warrantable I leave to be considered What d 〈…〉 fereth say they the second Passeover from the first At the first there is a prohibition that no lea 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ene or found in their houses neither may it be 〈◊〉 with leaven in them neither may they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it out of the company and they must use the Pr●se or hymne in the 〈…〉 ng of it and doe bring 〈◊〉 it the Ch 〈…〉 ah or F●ast-offering spoken of in Deut. 1 〈◊〉 And it ●ay be kept in un 〈…〉 〈◊〉 most part of the Church be uncleane by the dead But the second Passeover may have leavened and unleavened bread with it in the house and they are not bound to use the hymne in the eating of it and they may carry it out of the house where it is eaten neither bring they the Chagigah with it neither may it be kept in uncleannesse But both of them put away the Sabbath that is are to be kept even on the Sabbath day and the praise or Hymne is to be used in the doing of them and they must be eaten rosted in one house with unleavened cakes and bitter herbs and they must not leave ought of them till the morning nor breake a bone of them And why is not the second Passeover equall to the first in all things seeing it is sad in Num. 9. 12. according to every statute of the Passeover they shall doe it Because there are expressedin it some of the statutes of the Passeover to teach that it is not equall to the first save in the things that are expressed cōcerning it they are the cōmandemen●s concerning the body or substance of it they are the statutes of the Passeover For this is a generall rule that their dispersion in Egypt their taking of the Paschal lamb on the tenth day and the cha●ge to strike the blood with a bunch of hyssope on the u●per doore-post on the two side-posts and to eat it in●aste they were not things to be observed in the genrations following but in the Passeover of Egypt on●l Maim in Korban Pesach ch 10. s. 15. Touching t●e eating of the Passeover by the uncleane fore●entioned thus they say of it of other the lik● All the offerings of the Congregation their time is set Lev. 23. therefore they all doe put away the Sa●bath and uncleannesse by the dead And every oblati●n of them which is offred in uncleannesse is no● eaten but they burne on the altar such things therof as are to be burned theron the residue which sho 〈…〉 d be eaten are burnt as other holy things that are de 〈…〉 ed Levit. 7. 19. How doth it put away unc 〈…〉 nnesse If the time of that oblation be come and th● most part of the Church that offer it be unclean by t●e dead or if the Church be clean the Priests that s●●uld offer it be unclean by the dead or if the peop●e a●d Priests be cleane and the ministring vessels be un●l●ane by the dead loe then it is performed in uncleanne the uncleane and the cleane are impl●yed ther 〈…〉 ●ogether and come all of them into the ●●urt of the S●nctuary But they that are unclea●e by other un 〈…〉 annes as by running issues c. or ●y creeping things or dead beasts the like they a●e not imployed therabout neither come they into 〈◊〉 court although it be performed in uncleannes A●● if they transgresse do it or come into the court t●ey are guilty of cutting off for comming in and of ●ath for serving for nothing is put off but unclean 〈…〉 s by the dead man onely c. Vncleannesse by a 〈…〉 ad man is put away concerning the Congregation as it is written in Num. 9. 6. And there were men ●ho w●re unclean by the soule of a mā we have beene ●ught by word of mouth that they are particular me which are put off to the second Passeover if they 〈…〉 nclean But if the congregation be uncleane by 〈◊〉 dead they are not put away but the uncleannes 〈◊〉 put away they do the Passeover with uncleannes And the same law is for every oblation which hath 〈◊〉 time appointed therefore with the Passeover that 〈◊〉 putteth away uncleannesse And loe the thing is expressed in the Scriptures for it is said in 2 Chrō 30. 17. For there were many in the Church that were not sanctified therefore the Levites had the charge of the killing of the Passeovers for every one that was not cleane to sanctifie them unto the LORD For a multitude of the people many of Ephraim and Manasses Issachar and Zabulon had not cleansed themselves And what is that which is said in 1 Chron. 30. 18. yet they did eat the Passeover otherwise than it was written Because they made an intercalation of that yeere that is added a moneth because of uncleannesse as it is said in 2 Chron. 30. 2. And the King consulted and his Princes and all the congregation in Ierusalem to keepe the Passeover in the second moneth for they could not keepe it at that time because the Priests had not sanctified themselves sufficiently And else-where I have shewed that they are to make no intercalation of the yeere at all because of uncleannesse There was also an other thing in that yeere that King Ezekias made intercalation of the yeere in the 30. day of Adar or February which s●ould have beene the beginning of the moneth Nisan for March and he made that moneth Adar the second but the wise men agreed not unto him for they are to make
of Christ saith The labourer is worthy of his reward 1 Tim. 5. 17 18. and Christ himselfe sending his disciples to preach said unto them And in the same house remaine ●aing and drinking such things as they give for the labourer is worthy of his reward Goe not from house to house Luke 10 7. Vers. 32. beare sinne for it that is beare the punishment of sinne for the tithe which the Levites should doe if they heaved or separated not a tenth part of the best of that tithe from it as is before commanded profane the holy things Hebr. the holinesses This is a generall warning both to Priests and Levites that the holy things of the people be not profaned by them nor suffered to bee profaned by others And holy things might bee profaned if either they were eaten out of the time limited by God as in Lev. 19. 7 8. or if the Priests were uncleane when they did eat them as Lev. 22 2 3 9. or if others did eat them to whom they did not pertaine as Levit. 22. 10 15 16. or if other the like unlawfull actions were done or suffered The Ministers of God therefore had this charge upon them by all meanes to sanctifie the Lord his Tabernacle and holy things that so they might procure the welfare and salvation both of themselves and others as 1 Tim. 4. 16. CHAP. XIX 1. The Lord commandeth a red heiffer to be slain by the Priest some of her bloud to be sprinkled the residue with her body to be burned together with Cedar wood byssop and scarlet and the ashes of all these to be gathered up and kept for the congregation to make therewith a water of separation and purification from sinne 1● The Law for the use of it in purification of the uncleane by the dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses and unto Aaron saying This is the ordinance of the Law which Iehovah hath commanded saying Speake unto the sonnes of Israel that they take unto thee a red heiffer perfect wherin is no blemish upon which never came yoke And yee shall give her unto Eleazar the Priest and he shall bring her forth without the campe and one shall slay her before his face And Eleazar the Priest shall take of her bloud with his finger and shall sprinkle of her bloud directly before the Tent of the Congregation seven times And one shall burne the heiffer in his eyes her skinne and her flesh and her bloud with her dung shall hee burne And the Priest shall take Cedar wood and hyssop and scarlet and shall cast them into the midst of the burning of the heiffer And the Priest shall wash his cloathes and he shall bathe his flesh in water and afterward he shall come into the campe and the Priest shall be uncleane untill the evening And hee that burneth her shall wash his cloathes in water and bathe his flesh in water and shall be uncleane untill the evening And a man that is cleane shall gather up the ashes of the heiffer and lay them up without the campe in a cleane place and it shall be for a reservation for the congregation of the sonnes of Israel for a water of separation it is a purification for sinne And he that gathereth the ashes of the heiffer shall wesh his cloathes and shall be uncleane untill the evening and it shall be unto the sonnes of Israel and unto the stranger that s● j●urneth among them for a statute for ever Hee that toucheth the dead of any soule of man he shall be even uncleane seven daies He shall purifie himselfe with it in the third day and in the seventh day he shall be cleane and if he purifie not himselfe in the third day and in the seventh day he shall not be cleane Who-soever toucheth the dead the soule of a man that is dead and purifieth not himselfe hee defileth the Tabernacle of Iehovah and that soule shall be cut off from Israel because the water of separation was not sprinkled upon him he shall be uncleane his uncleannesse is yet upon him This is the Law When 〈◊〉 man dieth in a tent all that come into the tent and al that is in the tent shal be uncleane seven dayes And every open vessell which hath no covering bound upon it it is uncleane And whosoever toucheth in the face of the field one that is slaine with the sword or a dead bodie or a bone of a man or a grave he shall be uncleane seven daies And they shall take for the uncleane person of the dust of the burnt heiffer of purification for sinne and he shall put thereto living water in a vessell And a cleane man shall take hyssope and dip it in the water and shall sprinkle it upon the tent and upon all the vessels and upon the soules which were there and upon him that touched a bone or one slaine or one dead or a grave And a cleane person shall sprinkle upon the uncleane in the third day and in the seventh day and hee shall purifie him selfe in the seventh day and shall wash his cloathes and bathe his flesh in water and shall be cleane at evening And the man that shall be uncleane and shall not purifie himselfe that soule shall even be cut off from among the Church because he hath defiled the Sanctuary of Iehovah the water of separation hath not beene sprinkled upon him he is uncleane And it shall be unto them for a statute for ever and he that sprinkleth the water of separation shall wash his cloathes and he that toucheth the water of separation shall be uncleane untill the evening And whatsoever the uncleane person toucheth shal be uncleane and the soule that toucheth shal be uncleane untill the evening Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here is the 39 Section of the Law after the Hebrewes account See Genes 6. 9. THe ordinance or the statute constitution the prescript ordinance in Greeke the distinction of the Law As in the former Chapter God gave order for his Ministers the tribe of Levi by whom the service in his Tabernacle should be performed and his people should come neere unto him to offer all their sacrifices so here he giveth a Law for al men generally how they should be purified from their uncleannesse whensoever they were to come into his Sanctuary with their sacrifices and for the service of his holy Majesty that their hearts might be confirmed in his grace against their owne infirmities take unto thee that is take and bring unto thee see the like phrase in Gen. 15. 9. and Exod. 25. 2. and Levit. 24. 2. This heiffer was taken of the people to shew the interest that they all had in it and by faith in that which it figured Christ. a red heiffer Targum Ionathan addeth a three yeereling so in the Hebrew canons they say It is commanded that the red heiffer be of the third yeere or of the fourth yeere and it may be older
before his eyes For another man burned it as appeareth by vers 8. wherefore Targum Ionathan explaineth it another Priest shall burne The burning of the heiffer without the campe figured how Iesus that he might sanctifie the people with his owne bloud should suffer without the gate of Ierusalem Hebr. 13. 11 12. Vers. 6. Cedar wood this with the hyssop and scarlet following were used in the cleansing of Lepers that were healed Lev. 14. 4. See the Annotations on that place The Cedar is one of the greatest and tallest trees opposed to the hyssop as the lowest 1 King 4. 33. it is durable wood and rotteth not being choise or excellent Song 5. 15. figuring the perpetual efficacy of the death of Christ who by one offring hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Hebr. 10. 14. eyzop or hyssope whereof see Exod. 12. 22. As here it was burned with the heiffer so after in vers 18. a sprinkle was made with it figuring the vertue and odour of Christs death to purge our sinnes and to sprinkle our hearts from an evill conscience Hebr. 1. 3. and 10. 22. scarlet or twice died scarlet called in Hebrew Sheni tholagnath whereof see Exod. 25. 4. This bloudy colour sometime signifieth Sinnes Esai 1. 18. and it is the death and bloud of Christ that cleanseth us from all sinne Rom. 6. 10. 1 Iohn 1. 7. the preaching hereof maketh the lips like a threed of scarlet Song 4. 3. into the midst of the burning The manner of burning this heiffer in the ages following is described by the Hebrewes thus They made a banke or causey from the mountaine of the house of God in Ierusalem unto mount Olivet the mountaine which our Lord Iesus used to frequent Luke 21. 37. Joh. 18. 2. whither hee went the night that hee was betrayed ●o death Luke 22. 39 40 c. and it was over against the Temple Mar. 13. 3. and from thence after his resurrection he ascended up into heaven Act. 1. 9. 12. and the heiffer and hee that burned her and all that assisted him in the burning of her went out from the mount of the Temple unto mount Olivet upon that banke The Elders of Israel wen● before them on their feet to mount Olivet and there was a place to baptise or wash in and the Priest and they that assisted him to burne the heiffer went on the banke and came to mount Olivet c. and the Elders imposed their hands upon the Priest and said unto him wash once Hee went downe and washed and came up and wiped himselfe And there was wood laid in a row wood of Cedar and Oke and Firre-tree and Fig-tree which they tooke and made a pile of like a tower c. and the fore-part was towards the West that was towards the Temple Then they bound the heiffer and laid her upon the pile of wood with her head to the South and her face to the West and the Priest stood on the East-side with his face 〈◊〉 the West Hee killed her with his right hand and tooke the bloud in his left hand and sprinkled with the finger of his right hand of the bloud that was in 〈◊〉 palme of his left hand seven times towards the 〈◊〉 holy place of the Temple At every sprinkling 〈◊〉 dipped his finger in the bloud and the residue of 〈◊〉 bloud which was on his finger was u●lawfull to sprinkle with therefore at every sprinkling he wiped his finger on the body of the heiffer When he had made an end of sprinkling he wiped his hands on the heiffers body and came downe from the pile and kindled the fire with small stickes which he put under the stickes of the pile and the fire began to burne and the Priest stood a far off and observed it till the fire burned upon her and her belly cleft asunder And afterward he tooke Cedar wood and eyzop not lesse than an hand-bredth and wooll died in scarlet five sh●kels weight c. And he bound the eyzop with the Cedar with the tongue or long peece of scarlet and cast them into her belly Numb 19. 6 And hee cast them not in before the fire was kindled upon the b 〈…〉 ke of her body nor after that she was burnt to ashes and if he did it was unlawfull for it is said into the midst of the burning not before the fire is kindled on her body nor after she is turned to ashes Maimony in Pharah adummah ch 3. sect 1 2. Vers. 7. Wash his cloathes which was a signe of purification from uncleannesse as is noted on Lev. 11. 25. and 15 5. The same was concerning him that burned the heiffer vers 8. and the cleane man that gathered up her ashes vers 9 10. Hereby the imperfection of the Legall Priesthood was shewed in that the Priests which prepared the meanes of sanctification for the Church were themselues polluted in the preparing and doing of them as may be gathered by proportion from Hebr. 7. 27 28. and 10. 1 2 3. The sinne also of the Priests and others that procured the death of Christ though it was the life of the world seemeth hereby to be signified Matth. 26. 65 66 c. Act. 2. 22 23 38. and 3. 14 15 17 18 19. Albeit by the tradition of the Hebrewes they were very carefull about the cleannesse of the Priests when they did this worke for the Priest that burned this heiffer they separated him from his house to a chamber prepared in the Court of the Temple which was called the Stone chamber because all the vessels thereof were of stone which doe receive no uncleannesse and he ministred in a vessell of stone all the seven daies that he was separated and his brethren the Priests might not touch him for the more care of his cleannesse Seven daies before the burning of the heiffer they separated the Priest that burned her from his house as they separated the High Priest for his service on Atonement-day wherof see the notes on Levit. 16. 33. Also they separated him from his wife lest she should have her disease and so he be uncleane seven daies as Levit. 15. 24. Every of those seven daies of his separation they sprinkled him with the water of purification lest ●e should be uncleane by the dead and not know it end with the ashes of the heiffer that had beene burned already before Maimony in Pharah ch 2. Notwithstanding all this care Whosoever busie themselves about this heiffer from the beginning to the end doe make their garments uncleane and are bound to wash themselves and are uncleane till the evening And wheresoever the Law speaketh of washing of cloathes for uncleannesse it is to teach us that not the cloathes only upon him are uncleane but every cloth 〈◊〉 vessell which this uncleane person shall touch whiles his uncleannesse is on him is made uncleane And not this heiffer only but all Sin-offrings that are burnt without the campe whether bullocks or goats he that
David Davids jewell or not able song Cethem is fine glistering gold Psal. 45. 10. of that this Michtam may be derived for a golden jewel and so note the excellency of this Psalme The like title is before the 56. 57. 58. 59. and 60. Psalmes Preserve me O God Christ speaketh this Psalme by David his figure as we are taught in the new Testament Act. 2. 25 31. and 13. 35. and here is handled his mediatorship death resurrection and ascension in thee Chaldee in thy word Vers. 2. Thou hast said he speaketh this to him-selfe Thou ô my soule sayest so the Chaldee Paraphrase explaineth it and the Greeke to make it plainer translateth I have said Or it may be spoken to the Spouse or Church of Christ. my good not unto thee understand extendeth not or pertaineth not to thee or is not for thee which the Greeke expoundeth thus of my goods thou hast no need For if man be just what giveth he to God or what receiveth he at his hand Iob 35. 7. The Chaldee saith my good is not given but of thee Vers. 3. To the Saints to wit my good extendeth as else-where Christ saith for their sakes sanctifie I my selfe that they also may be sanctified through the truth Ioh. 17. 19. are in earth such is the meaning of the Hebrew phrase in earth they the relative being put for the verbe which sometime the Hebrew it selfe explaineth as he not the King of Israel 1 King 22. 33. for it was not the King 2 Chro. 18. 32. so he overseer 2 King 25. 19. for was over-seer Ier. 52. 25. and sundrie the like excellent or noble glorious wonderfull an honourable title givē to Christiās See Ps. 8. 2. The Chaldee addeth excellent in good works all my delight in them or in whom all my pleasure is Heb. Chephtsibam that is my pleasure in them so in Esay 62. 4. the Church is called Chephtsi-bah that is my pleasure in her Vers. 4. Their sorrowes shall be multiplied This is meant of Idolaters who hastily endow that is offer sacrifice to another God and so increase their griefes which may be understood of afflictions or of grievous idols for the Hebrew ghnatsabim sorrowes is often used for idols as in Psal. 115. 4. and so the Chaldee Paraphrast taketh it here saying the wicked multiply their idols and after they hasten to offer their gifts Accordingly the sense may be this They whose grievous idols are multiplied they that endow another God I will not powre out their oblations that is I will not partake with them or be a mediatour for them endow another or hasten to another A similitude from dowries given in mariages meaning gifts and oblations hastily brought for divine worship powred out oblations or shed-offerings effusions properly put by figure of speech for effused or powred out liquour commonly called Drinke-offerings which were wont to bee powred out upon the sacrifices and by Gods law were to be of wine or Shecar Numb 15. 5 7 10. and 28. 7. but among idolaters were of bloud The Chaldee giveth this sense I will not receive with favour their drinke-offerings nor the bloud of their sacrifices take up their names that is not mention or speake of them according to the law Exod. 23. 13. Ios. 23. 7. Vers. 5. of my part or of my partage that is of the inheritance parted shared and diealt unto me So the Greeke turneth it of mine nheritance The word is generally used for lands cities goods spoiles c. that are shared out And this here hath reference to the law of the Priests which had no part among the people for that the Lord was their part and inheritance Numb 18. 20. The Lord is his peoples part Ier. 10. 16. and 51. 19. and againe his people are called his part Deut. 32. 9. my cup that is measure and portion of joyes or afflictions Psal. 23. 5. and 11. 6. my lot this also is used for an inheritance obtained by lot Ios. 18. 11. Iudg. 1. 3. The Apostle calleth Christs Church by this name 1 Pet. 5. 3. The Greeke translateth thou art he that restorest mine inheritance to me Vers. 6. The lines or Cords such were used in measuring of lands or heritages Psal. 105. 11. and 78. 55. 2 Sam. 8. 2. and figuratively a line is put for the portion measured Jos. 17. 5 14. 〈◊〉 is faire for me or which is faire unto mee that is which pleaseth me well Vers. 7. counselled me given me counsell by his word and Spirit touching my sufferings and the glory that shall follow 1 Pet. 1. 11. Luke 24. 25 26. God is wonderfull in counsell and excellent in worke Esay 28. 29. Vers. 8. I have proposed or equally set the Greeke which the Apostle followeth saith I beheld before Act. 1. 25. he is at my right hand The word is is supplied Act. 2. 25. For God to be at the right hand is powerfully to assist and comfort as on the contrary for Satan to be there is greatly to resist and annoy Psal. 109. 6. Zech. 3. 1. I shall not be moved or that I be not moved Act. 2. 25. Vers. 9. my glory This by the Apostle is applied to the tongue Act. 2. 26. which is the instrument wherewith we glorifie God See Psalm 30. 13. and 57. 9. Gen. 49. 6. dwell in confidence or abide with hope that is boldly safely and securely meaning that his flesh his body should abide or rest in the grave with sure hope of rising againe from death the third day Vers. 10. my soule The Hebrew Nephesh and Greeke Psuchee which we call soule hath the name of breathing or respiring and is therefore sometime used for the breath Iob 41. 12. it is the vitall spirit that al quick things move by therfore beasts birds fish and creeping things are called in Scripture living soules Gen. 1. 20. 24. And this soule is sometime called the bloud Gen. 9. 4. because it is in the bloud of all quick things Lev. 17. 11. it is often put for the life of creatures as keepe his soule Job 2. 6. that is spare his life a righteous man regardeth the soule of his beast Prov. 12. 10. that is the life so to seeke the soule is to seeke ones life to take it away Psal. 54. 5. Mat. 2. 20. It is also many times used for ones selfe as Iob justified his soule that is himselfe Iob 32. 2. Take heed to your soules that is to your selves Deut. 4. 15. so Gen. 19. 20. Luke 12. 19. And thus it is put for the person or whole man as give me the soules that is the persons Gen. 14. 21. so an hungrie soule Psal. 107. 9. a full soule Prov. 27. 7. a wearie soule Prov. 25. 25. eight soules 1 Pet. 3. 20. seventie five soules Act. 7. 14. and many the like It is used also for the lust will or desire as Psal. 41. 3. Exod. 15. 9. for the affections of the heart Psal. 25. 1. for the body of
of thy salvation and firmly sustain me with a free spirit I wil teach trespassers thy wayes and sinners shall convert unto thee Deliver me from blouds O God the God of my salvation my tongue shall shout thy justice Lord thou shalt open my lips and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise For thou delightest not sacrifice else would I give it burnt offering thou wilt not contentedly accept The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a heart broken and contrite O God thou wilt not despise Doe well in thy good pleasure unto Sion build thou the wals of Ierusalem Then shalt thou delightfully accept the sacrifices of justice the burnt offering and the whole oblation then shall they offer up bullocks upon thine Altar Annotations HE had gone in to wit into the chamber as Iudg. 15. 1. that is had lien with as the phrase importeth Gen. 6. 4. and is expressed 2 Sam. 11. 4. Bathsheba the daughter of Eliam 2 Sam. 11. 3. called also Bathshua daughter of Ammiel 1 Chron. 3. 5. She was wife to Captaine Urijah the Hittite and whiles her husband was at the leager of Rabbah David lay with her and she being with child he first sought to cover his fault by sending for Vrijah home that he might be esteemed the father which not succeeding he sent him backe with privie letters to Ioab the Generall for to procure his death Which being done David married his wife Bathshebah so thinking to cloake his sinne But God was displeased and sent Nathan to reprove David whereupon he repented and made this Psalme for an example unto and comfort of sinners See the historie at large 2 Sam. 11. and 12. Vers. 4. much wash mee or multiply wash mee that is thorowly wash me againe and againe He applieth the washings used in the Law Lev. 11. 25. 32. Exod. 19. 10. Num. 19. 19. to the spirituall washing from sinne in the bloud of Christ Rev. 7. 14. 1 Ioh. 1. 7. So after in verse 9. and Ier. 4. 14. The Hebrew Hereb or Harbeh multiply is used for much as 2 King 10. 18. where it is opposed to little And that which in one place is written harboh multiply in another is la-rob and rabbah much as 1 King 10. 10. with 2 Chron. 9. 9. 2 Sam. 8. 8. with 1 Chron. 18. 8. Vers. 5. I know or acknowledge So Isa. 59. 12. Ier. 3. 13. Vers. 6. Against thee or Vnto thee onely This is either because he concealed his sinne from men but could not from God 2 Sam. 12. 12. or that onely God could remit the punishment of his sin Isa. 43. 25. So Psal. 41. 5. I have sinned and so am deprived of the glory of God as Rom. 3. 23. that which is evill c. which displeaseth thee This hath reference to 2 Sam. 11. 9. and 11. 27. that thou maiest be just that is thou hast suffered me to fall into sinne that thou maiest be just or justified in whatsoever thou hast spoken for the salvation of thy servant or punishment of my sinne 2 Sam. 12. 10. For the injustice of man commendeth the justice of God Rom. 3. 4 5. or it may have reference to the former words I know and acknowledge my sinne that thou maist be just when thou speakest or in thy speaking that is in thy words as Rom. 3. 4. so after in thy judging maist be pure or cleare sincere unreproveable and consequently maist win the victorin in judgement whereupon the Apostle according to the Greeke version saith maist overcome Rom. 3. 4. The Hebrew Zacah also in the Syriak tongue is used for overcomming Vers. 7. in iniquitie the perversenesse or vitiosity of nature commonly called originall by the Apostle inhabiting sinne Rom. 7. 17. whereby all men are carnall sold under sinne Ioh. 3. 6. Rom. 7. 14. The Chaldee calleth it the sinne of evill concupiscence This David maketh the fountaine of all his actuall sinnes painfully brought forth borne with sorrow The Hebrew signifieth the painfull travell of child-birth Isa. 26. 17 18. and 51. 2. Psal. 29. 9. conceived or was warme in heat as Gen. 30. 38. 39 41. Vers. 8. the inward parts or the covered parts the heart roots where wisdome is seated of God Iob 38. 36. named in Hebrew of covering plaistering or pargetting the secret or the closed place which being referred to the person meaneth the heart which God reneweth Ezek. 36. 26. and wherein he writeth his lawes Heb. 8. 10. And thus the Chaldee expoundeth it the close place of the heart which the Apostle calleth the hid man of the heart 1 Pet. 3. 4. or if it be referred to the thing it meaneth the secrets of wisedome Iob 11. 6. the wisedome of God in a mysterie the hid wisdome manifested by the Gospell 1 Cor. 2. 7. And thus the Greeke applieth it saying the unmanifest and hid things of wisdome thou hast manifested to me hast made or wilt make me know thus he riseth by faith out of his sin being taught wisdome of God Vers. 9. Thou wilt purge me from sinne or prayer-wise Purge thou me from sinne or make me sinlesse expiate or purifie my sinne Prayers are often made in this manner as with assurance that they shall be performed See the note on Psal. 17. 8. Eizop or hyssop of the Hebrew Ezob and Greek hyssopos an herbe or tree growing out of the wall 1 King 4. 33. appointed in the law for to sprinkle and cleanse with Exod. 12. 22. Num. 19. 6. 18. Lev. 14. 4. 6. 49. Heb. 9. 19. and the sprinkling with it was the last part of the purification of the uncleane here used to signifie the ful cleansing from sinne by the bloud of Christ Heb. 9. 13 14. whether it were that herb which we now call eizop or no is uncertaine The Childee paraphraseth Thou wilt sprinkle me like a Priest which sprinkleth the uncleane with the purifying waters with hyssop with the asbes of a heifer and I shall be cleane wash me another legall rite for purifying the uncleane Lev. 14. 8. and 15. 5. 8. 13. 22. figuring our sanctification Heb. 10. 22. Tit. 3. 5. Isa. 4. 4. Vers. 10. to heare joy the joyfull tidings of the forgivenesse of my sins bones that thou hast crushed or brayed nothing hereby the greatnesse of his griefe and affliction Iob 2. 2. 5. and 30. 17. and 33. 19. 21. Psal. 38. 4. Vers. 11. Hide thy face that is regard not my finhes to visit them on me See the contrary Psal. 90. 5. and 109. 14 15. Ier. 16. 17. Vers. 12. firme spirit a spirit ready prepared stedfast and certaine The like is applied to the heart Psal. 11 2. 7. and 57. 8. Vers. 13. from thy face or from thy presence This was an effect of Gods utmost anger against sinners 2 Kings 24. 20. Ier. 7. 15. and 52. 3. Gen. 4. 16. thy spirit of holinesse thy holy Ghost which the Chaldee expoundeth thy holy spirit of Prophesie Vers. 14. the joy of thy salvation the joy