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A35538 An exposition with practical observations continued upon the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, fortieth, forty-first, and forty-second, being the five last, chapters of the book of Job being the substance of fifty-two lectures or meditations / by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1653 (1653) Wing C777; ESTC R19353 930,090 1,092

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Spirit in it and therefore it must needs make great turns God turned the captivity of Job when he prayed Sixthly Jesus Christ presents such prayers the prayers of faith the prayers of repentance unto God his Father Christs intercession gives effect or gets answer to our supplications The Father hears the Son always John 11.42 and so he doth all them whose prayers are offered to him by the Son Revel 8.3 The angel came and stood at the altar having a golden censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne The angel there spoken of is the angel or messenger of the Covenant prophesied of Mal. 3.1 that is Jesus Christ 't is he he alone who offers the incense of his own prayers with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden altar which is before the throne and being there represented doing so presently as it followeth ver 5. There were voices and thunders and lightenings signifying the wonderful effects of prayer till it should come after many turnings in the world or as I may say after a world of turnings to the Lords turning of Sions captivity as here of Jobs Seventhly Jesus Christ doth not only present the prayers of believers to God but also prayeth in them when saints pray he prayeth in them for he and they are mystically one And as Christ is in believers the hope of glory Col. 1.27 so he is in them the help of duty and so much their help that without him they can do nothing John 15.5 Now a believers prayer being in this sense Christs prayer it cannot but do great things Lastly As Jesus Christ presents the prayers of believers to the Father and prayeth in them or helps them to pray by the blessed and holy Spirit sent down according to his gracious promise into their hearts so he himself prayeth for them when they are not actually praying for themselves For saith the Apostle Heb. 7.25 He ever liveth to make intercession for them The best believers do not always make supplications for themselves but Christ is always making as well as he ever lives to make intercession for them The Apostle speaking of Christs intercession useth the word in the present tense or time which denoteth a continued act Rom. 8.34 Who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us The sacrifice of Christ though but once offered is an everlasting sacrifice and this other part of his priestly-office his intercession is everlasting as being often yea always or everlastingly offered The way or manner of Christs making everlasting intercession for us is a great secret it may suffice us to know and believe that he doth it Now it is chiefly from this everlasting intercession of Christ that both the persons of the elect partake of the benefits of his sacrifice and that their prayers are answered for the obtaining of any good as also for the removal of any evil as here Jobs was for the turning of his captivity Thus I have given a brief accompt of this inference that if prayer prevails to turn the captivity of others then much more our own Prayer hath had a great hand in all the good turns that ever the Lord made for his Church And when the Lord shall fully turn the captivity of Sion his Church he will pour out a mighty spirit of prayer upon all the sons of Sion The Prophet fore-shewed the return of the captivity of the Jews out of Babilon Jerem. 29.10 After seventy years be accomplished at Babilon I will visit you and perform my good word towards you in causing you to return to this place for I know the thoughts that I think towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evil to give you an expected end But what should the frame of their hearts be at that day the 12th verse tells us And ye shall go and pray unto me and I will hearken These words may bear a two-fold sense First The sense of a command Then shall ye call upon me and then shall ye go and pray That is your duty in that day Secondly I conceive they may also bear the sense of a promise then shall your hearts be inlarged then I will pour out a spirit of prayer upon you And ye shall go and pray unto me and I will hearken We may conclude the approach of mercy when we discern the spirits of men up in and warm at this duty Many enquire about the time when the captivity of Sion shall fully end we may find an answer to that question best by the inlargement of our own hearts in prayer David speaking of that said Psal 102.17 He will regard the prayer of the destitute the meanest and lowest shrubs in grace as the word there used imports and not despise that is he will highly esteem and therefore answer their prayer How much more the prayer of the tall cedars in grace or of the strong wrestlers when they call upon him and cry unto him with all their might day and night The Lord turned the captivity of Job when he prayed for his friends Nor was it a bare turn As Job did not offer a lean sacrifice to God in prayer but the strength of his soul went out in it so the Lord in giving him an answer did not give him a lean or slight return but as it followeth Also the Lord gave Job twice as much as he had before The Hebrew is The Lord added to Job to the double Some translate too barely The Lord made an accession or an addition but that doth not reach the sense intended For a little more than he had before had been an addition to what he had before but double is more than a little or the common notion of an addition the Lord gave him twice as much or double to that great estate which he had before This doubling of his estate may be taken two ways First Strictly as four is twice two and eight twice four See the wild conceits of the Jewish Rabbins about the doubling of Jobs estate in Mercer upon the place In that strict sence it may be taken here as to his personal estate but as to persons it will not hold the number of his children was the same as before If we compare this chapter with the first chapter ver 3. we find his estate doubled in strict sence Whereas Job had then seven thousand sheep now saith this chapter ver 12. he had fourteen thousand sheep and whereas before he had three thousand camels now he had six thousand camels and whereas before he had five hundred yoke of oxen now he had a thousand yoke of oxen and lastly whereas before he had five hundred she asses now he had a thousand she asses Here was double in the letter In duplum i. e. in plurimum Quam plurimum numerus finitus pro infinito
neither foundation nor corner-stone Remember O Job and well consider that as when in the beginning I saw the earth without form and void Gen. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I by a creating word commanded it into form and fulness So when thou seest nothing but Tohu and Bohu confusion and disorder voidness and darkness in the earth even then I am laying the measures of Justice and stretching the line of Truth and Equity upon all that is done or suffered and will bring forth my work in full perfection Nothing shall be amiss or out of order when my work is finished how much soever it may seem to be amiss as to beginnings or present actings Therefore O Job leave off thy complainings and rest quietly in my dealings Some have questioned the Natural Works of God yet 't is impossible to mend any part or the least pin of them And 't is as impossible for the wit and understanding of Men or Angels to mend any thing in the Providential Works of God That 's the scope of this discourse even that the consideration of Gods power and wisdom in making the world should b●idle our curiosity and awe our spirits when they begin to quarrel with yea but to query about any thing that God hath done though it appear to us altogether irregular and confused or as done without either line or measure The Lords work is beautiful and glorious 't is also sure and strong As his Promise or Covenant is ordered in all things and sure 2 Sam. 23.5 So are his Providences too for they are the issues and accomplishments of his Promises o●dered as to means and sure as to the end They shall end o● issue in b inging about the things which are laid in the foundation and corner-stone of his purposes counsels and decrees all which work together for good to them that love God to them who are the called according to his purpose Rom. 8.28 And to convince Job from the Works of Creation that he ought not only to acquiesce or rest quietly under the Works of Providence whatsoever they were but to rejoyce in them the Lord tells him in the next verse that there was great rejoycing yea shouting for joy when the foundations of the earth were fastened and the corner-stone thereof laid JOB Chap. 38. Vers 7. 7. When the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy THere are two opinions among learned Interpreters concerning the general state of this verse First Some here reassuming the first words of these questions proposed at the fourth verse by God to Job Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth c. make this the second instance of Gods mighty power in the works of Creation Where wast thou when the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy As if the Lord had said I have as yet questioned thee only where thou wast when I made the earth which is the most inferiour part of the world But now I purpose to rise higher in my discourse and therefore I put these questions to thee Where wast thou when I set up the morning stars those sparkling lights which shine to the earth through the firmament of heaven as also the sons of God those blessed spirits all which sang together and shouted for joy at the appearance of my power and wisdom Secondly Others connect these words in a continued sense and sentence with the verse going before Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth c. at which sight the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy Taking the words thus they carry an allusion to or are a similitude taken from noble buildings or structures whose foundations use to be laid with solemnity and their corner-stones to be set up with shouting and acclamation That it was anciently customary to make such acclamations at the laying of the foundation of some eminent building besides what is clear out of humane Authors and Histories we have several Scripture evidences The 87th Psalm throughout setting forth the structure of the Gospel Church of the spiritual Zion by way of prophesie begins thus His foundation is in the holy mountains there 's the foundation of Zion laid Then followeth as at the second verse The Lord loveth the gates of Zion more than all the dwellings of Jacob. Glorious things are spoken of thee O thou City of God! Selah As if he had said there was a great acclamation high praises at the laying the foundation of Zion with which the Psalme closeth more expresly v. 7. As well the singers as the players on instruments shall be there all my Springs are in thee Again Psal 118.22 23 24. there is no sooner mention made of the corner-stone the stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner but presently we have acclamations about it This is the Lords doing it is marvelous in our eyes This is a blessed work indeed This is the day which the Lord hath made we will rejoyce and be glad in it That corner-stone of salvation Jesus Christ being laid as I may say all the stars sang together and the sons of God shouted for joy This is the day which the Lord hath made If we go to those material buildings which were figurative of the Church and Christ we shall find the like Ezra 3.10 When the Jewes at the return of their Captivity began to build the Temple the Text saith at the tenth verse And when the builders laid the foundation of the Temple of the Lord then they set the Priests in their apparel and with their voices with the Levits and the sons of Asaph to praise the Lord. As soon as the foundation was laid they were all in song and raised up in holy rejoycings though some of the old men who remembred the first Temple wept when the foundation of this was laid That Scripture Zach. 4.7 speaks of the same thing where the Prophet in the Spirit fore-seeing the disappointments of all the enemies of the people of God thus triumphs over them by faith Who art thou O great Mountain before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a plain he shall bring forth the head-stone thereof with shouting That is the building of Hierusalem or the restoring of the Temple shall be brought to perfection and then they shall cry grace grace unto it Now in allusion to the practice both of men in common and of the people of God in special at the raising of great structures the Lord tells us here that when he laid the foundations of the earth and when he fastened the corner-stone thereof there was a Triumph made Then the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy Thus we have the state of this verse either taking it for another instance of the power of God in creating the Stars and the Angels or else subjoyning it as an acclamation
people which are are called by my Name shall humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked wayes then will I hear in heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land This was performed to the Ninivites a heathen Nation when they repented of the evil which they had done God repented of the evil which he threatned to do unto them or bring upon them and did it not brought it not But I shall not stay upon this useful poynt here because it is grounded upon a translation which is not as I conceive so clearly grounded upon the Original as our own The Lord turned the Captivity of Job In Hebraeo est pulchra paranomasia nam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est vertere aut convertere et 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 captivitas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew is very elegant He turned the turning or captivity of Job Why his Captivity Job was never lead captive in person he was not carryed away prisoner by the Chaldeans an● Sabeans who captivated his cattel How then is it here said The Lord turned the captivity of Job I answer These words The Lord turned the Captivity of Job may be taken two wayes First thus Jehova restituit quod captum fuerit Jobo Jun. Captivitas ponitur pro ipsis captivis Drus He turned that to Job whatsoever it was which was lead into Captivity So some translate The Lord restored that which was taken from Job His Cattel which were taken away by violent men his children which were taken away by a vehement wind were returned or restored to him again The word Captivity is elsewhere in Scripture taken tropically for things or persons captivated that which is captivated is called captivity The Lord turned the captivity of Job that is he returned that which was captivated or taken away Take a Scripture or two for that s●nse of the word captivity Judg. 5.12 Awake awake Deborah awake awake utter a song arise Barak and lead thy captivity captive thou son of Abinoam .. That is bring them back who were taken captives or thus lead those captive who have taken thy people captives So Psal 68.18 which is quoted by the Apostle Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he lead captivity captive The Psalmist gives us a prophesie and the Apostle reports the history of the glorious ascension of Christ When he ascended up on high he lead captivity captive Which text as the form●r may be taken two ways First Christ ascending led those captive who had led poor soul●●aptive that is the devils which the Apostle expresseth thu● Col. 2.15 And having spoiled principalities and powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it that is in his cross or ●uffering● or as our Ma●gin hath it in himself And as Christ spoiled those principalities and triumphed over them not only really but openly in his passion so he led them captive and triumphed over them more openly in his ascention Secondly He led those that were captives sinful men captive he brought them out of a miserable captivity into a blessed captivity that is from the cap●ivity of sin Satan and the world into a cap ivi●y to himself The Apostle speaks so of the mighty power of the Word in the mini●tery of the Gospel The weapons of our warfare that is the weapons with which we the Ministers of the Gospel m●ke war upon sinners to convert them are not carnal that is weak but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds casting down imaginations c. and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience Christ 2 Cor. 10.4 5. Not only are our persons but our thoughts captivated to Christ by the power of the Spirit ministred in the Gospel Thus the Scripture speaks of captivity in both these notions the captivaters and the captivated are called captivity Here in this place we may take it in the latter sence the Lord turned the captivity of Job that is what was captivated or taken away the Lord as it were fetch 't back again and restored it to him In this sense Abraham when he heard that his Nephew Lot was taken captive led captivity captive Gen. 14.16 He pursued them that had taken him captive he brought back Lot and the rest of the prisoners together with the spoils Thus the Lord did not only deliver Job from all those evils which he was under but restored the good things to him which he had lost or were carried away Secondly We may take it thus The Lord turned the captivity of Job that is he took away or called in Satans commission which he had given him over Jobs estate and body and by which Satan held Job in captivity or as his captive for as we read chap. 2.6 Satan could not touch him till he had leave or a letter of license from God till God said Behold all that he hath is in thy power only upon himself put not forth thy hand chap. 1.12 Nor could he touch his person till his commission was enlarged and the Lord said again Behold he is in thine hand but or only save his life chap. 2.6 And as soon as his commission was taken away or called in by God he could trouble him no longer The Lord forbidding the devil to meddle any more with him Turned the captivity of Job Hence Observe First To be in any affliction is to be in bonds or captivity The afflicted condition of Job was a captivity Troubles in our estate troubles in our relations troubles in our bodies troubles in our souls are like bonds and prisons It is a very uneasie and an uncomfortable condition to be in prison and so it is to be in any afflicted condition considered in it self Job spake as much of himself while his affliction continued upon him strongly chap. 13.27 Thou puttest my feet in the stocks and thou lookest narrowly unto all my paths Job was not only as a man in captivity but as a man in the stocks which is a great hardship in captivity David calleth such an estate an imprisonment Psal 69.33 The Lord heareth the poor and despiseth not his prisoners Some are prisoners strictly being under restraint all are prisoners largely or as we say prisoners at large who are in any distress The Lord maketh many prisoners by sickness and weakness of body as also by poverty and the want of bodily comforts and conveniences The afflicted condition of the Church in any kind is expressed by captivity as captivity in kind is sometimes the affliction of the Church The ten tribes were led into captivity by Salmanazar Judah by Nebuchadnazzar Hence that promise Jerem. 30.18 Behold I will bring again the captivity of Jacobs tents And that prayer Psal 14.7 O that the salvation of Israel were come out of Sion When the Lord bringeth back the captivity of his people Jacob shall rejoyce and Israel shall be glad This Scripture may be taken both strictly
hunted David even as a wild Goat on the rocks or as a Partridg on the mountains Fifthly They who hunt the wild Goats are at a very dangerous pleasure they often fall upon the rocks and sometimes fall from the rocks Is it not so with those who without cause pursue good men have they not a dangerous service of it get they not many a fall The wicked saith David Psal 37.12 13. plotteth or as the Margin hath it practiseth against the righteous he gnasheth upon him with his teeth But shall it go well with him who doth this evil The next words answer The Lord shall laugh at him for he seeth that his day is coming What day surely a black day even the day of his destruction which is yet further confirmed in the 14. and 15. verses of the same P●alm The wicked have drawn out the sword and have bent their bow to cast down the poor and needy and to slay such as be of upright conversation or the upright of way But shall this end well with them or shall it be well with them in the end The next words tell us what their end shall be even this which is a dreadful end Their sword shall enter into their own heart and their bows shall be broken Sixthly 'T is observed of these wild Goats that when they seem to be very near falling from the rock and high places yet they fall not and that though they fall they take little or no hurt at all Some say they have a naturall art to save themselves they know how to fall upon their feet and so escape without harm This also is applicable to the case of godly men they are often near falling yet they do not fall and when they fall they take no hurt they have a divine art to preserve themselves and 't is a truth that though they do receive hurt in the flesh yet their spirit or better part takes no hurt Though a good man fall into affliction or temptation he shall not saith David Psal 37.24 be utterly cast down for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand Yea though he falleth saith Solomon Prov. 24.16 seven times that is often into affliction 't is true also of his falling into sin yet he riseth again out of affliction by deliverance out of sin by repentance With respect to the former the Church warned her insulting enemy Mich. 7.8 Rejoyce not against me O mine enemy when I fall I shall arise Babylon shall fall and rise no more but though Sion may fall yet she shall assuredly rise again Lastly It is said of the wild Goats that when they receive hurt they by a natural instinct seek out the herb Betany growing among the rocks and upon mountains which gives a present and perfect cure to their bruises or hurts Thus when good men receive hurt in and from the evil world they have some herb or other some comfort or other for their cure they go to the Word of God to the Scriptures there they find Medicine for all their sicknesses Betany for all thei● bruises and a Salve for every sore Thus we may spiritualize our meditations upon these wild creatures the Goats of the rocks in allusion to the state of godly men in this life Knowest thou the time when the wild Goats of the rock bring forth Or canst thou mark when the Hinds do calve Here 's another sort of wild ones the Hind Canst thou mark the word imports the most strict and heedful marking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 solicitudinem diligent iam Connotat 'T is used by Jacob Gen. 37.11 when Joseph had told his dream his Brethren envied him but his Father observed the saying that is he marked what his Son had said The word is often used to note our dutiful keeping or heeding the commands of God which should be done with the greatest strictness care and observation Now saith the Lord to Job canst thou mark or observe when the Hinds do calve as if the Lord had said dost thou keep their reckoning exactly art thou able to tell the day and hour when they will calve The word rendred Hind comes from a root signifying strength Hinds are strong 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cerva though timorous and fearful creatures and for their fearfulness they have a help besides their strength that is their speed or swiftness and though their strength doth not serve them sufficiently to stand and make head against their pursuers yet it serves them as we may say to shew their pursuers a fair pair of heels or to run from them and escape their danger Canst thou mark when the Hinds Do calve It is the same word in the Original which in the former part of the verse is translated to bring forth Mas cum pinguerit longè secedit ut qui pondere suae corpulentiae capi se posse facile sentiat Aristot l. 9. c. 5. de natura animalium but because that special word calving is more proper to Hinds therefore we wave the general sense bringing forth which is applicable to any kind of beasts and take this not rendring as before when the Hinds bring forth but when they calve The Hind is a wild beast often spoken of in Scripture and well known in nature the male we commonly call a Stagg or Hart of which naturalists observe two things First That perceiving himself to grow fat in the latter end of summer and being conscious of his own inability to help himself by flight he retires naturally to covert in secret places that so he may be free from the pursute of hunters Cum su● amis●●it arma cavit ne inermis reperiatur Arist ubi supra Secondly Say they when he hath cast his horn then also he retires and gets into the thicket as far from sight as he can being sensible he hath lost his armes his defence and is therefore unwilling to come abroad where danger is till his head be grown again and he furnished with weapons for his own defence The Hind in the Text is the female and the Scripture speaks of the Hind in a twofold allusion First In allusion to Christ Secondly In allusion to those that are Christs Jesus Christ him●elf is often alluded to under this name and that in a three-fold respect 1. For his swiftness and speediness in coming to the relief and help of his Church Cant. 28.9 Behold he cometh leaping upon the mountains and skipping upon the hills my beloved is like a Roe or young Hart or Hind 't is the same word His leaping and skipping notes 1. His chearfulness 2. His speediness in coming The mountains and hills upon which he leaps and skips note the great obstacles and difficulties which stand in his way when he comes to help his Church his beloved Spouse Again Cant. 8.13 Be thou like the young Roe or young Hart upon the mountains of spices The Church describes the gracious hast which she desires Jesus
Secondly Consider the wicked proud man as one whom God treadeth down Then Observe God punisheth sinners with that which is most crosse to their lusts What more crosse to a high-spirited man than to be brought low and who can be brought lower than he that is trodden down As God sometimes punisheth Drunkards with thirst and Gluttons with hunger and covetous persons with poverty There is one saith Solomon Prov. 11.29 that with-holdeth more than is meet he doubtless is a covetous man that doth so it tendeth to poverty So God punisheth proud ones by that which is most contrary to their nature he abaseth and layeth them low The Prophet tells us Isa 3.16 17. how the Lord would punish wanton women who were proud either of their natural beauty or artificial dresses and ornaments The daughters of Zion saith he are haughty and walk with stretched forth necks and wanton eyes walking and mincing as they go and making a tinckling with their feet there 's their pride but what was their punishment the next words resolve us Therefore the Lord will smite with a scab the crown of the head of the daughters of Zion and the Lord will discover their secret parts they were proud of that which covered their skin and therefore the Lord punisht them with scabs or covered their skin with scurfe and scabs and as there the Lord shews what he would bring upon so what he would take from them Vers 18. In that day the Lord will take away the bravery of their tinckling ornaments about their feet and their Caules and their round tyres like the Moon And Vers 24. it shall come to pass that instead of sweet smell there shall be stink and instead of a girdle a rent and instead of well set hair baldness and instead of a stomacher a girding of sackcloth and burning instead of beauty What could be more contrary to the pride of these women than that which the Lord brought upon them or punished them with What do proud women more desire than beauty and bravery And what do proud men look after but to be respected honoured and to have every one point the finger at them or bow the knee to them Now when the Lord blasts proud women in their beauty and bravery when he blasts proud men in their honour and estimation when he thus abaseth and treads them down he toucheth them in that which the spirit of pride prizeth most and with greatest regret parteth from Pride is a base height of spirit therefore the Lord abaseth the proud There are five words in the Text all tending directly to crosse the spirit of a proud man First He shall be abased Secondly He shall be brought low A proud man would fain be high he would sit at the upper end of the Table yea he would sit at the upper end of the World too but saith the Lord he shall be brought low Thirdly What would a proud man do He would tread upon the necks of all others but he shall be trodden under foot Fourthly Where would the proud man be He would be conspicuous in high places but he shall be hid in the dust Fifthly He would be lookt at by all men with admiration but saith God his face shall be bound in secret he loves to appear and make a fair shew in the flesh but he shall not appear at all .. Proud ones cannot get so high but God in his Justice will get above them and strip them of that wherein they have chiefly prided themselves Read Isa 14.11 12 13 14 24 25. and Isa 23.9 Those Scriptures tell us how the Lord deals with proud men according to their pride or rather contrary to their pride he gives them that which they most disgust and takes that from them which they most passionately desire Secondly Take wicked men in the common notion for those that do evil at the highest rate that draw iniquity with cords of vanity and sin as it were with cart-ropes Then Observe First Wicked men that is impenitent sinners high-handed sinners are in a very sad condition and shall come to a sad conclusion The Lord will tread them down Psal 9.16 17. The wicked is snared in the work of his own hands yea the wicked shall be turned into hell That is the utmost of sorrow and suffering shall be their portion Isa 3.11 Wo to the wicked for the reward of their doings shall be given them Isa 57.21 There is no peace saith my God to the wicked As the tumultuousness of their own spirits will not let them be at peace so neither will the righteousnesse of God Secondly From those expressions Tread down the wicked in their place hide them in the dust together bind their faces in secret Observe God will at last purge and rid the world of wicked men As wicked men would fain purge and rid the world of godly men they would destroy all the seed of the righteous so certainly God will destroy the wicked of the world and rid the world of them though not at once of every wicked man yet in their times and seasons that they shall not do the mischief which their hearts are full of The last of the Prophets speaks as much of the Lords vengeance upon all the wicked Mal. 4.1 The day of the Lord. speaking of some great day of the Lords appearance shall burn as an oven and all the proud yea and all that do wickedly shall be stubble and the day that cometh shall burn them up saith the Lord of Hosts that it shall leave them neither root nor branch 'T is utter ruin to be destroyed root and branch such shall the ruin of the wicked be Thus also the Prophet Isaiah comforts the Church Chap. 52.1 Awake awake put on thy strength O Zion put on thy beautiful garments O Jerusalem the holy City for henceforth there shall no more come into thee the uncircumcised and the unclean The wicked of the world are the uncircumcised they have not the spiritual circumcision the circumcision of the heart these shall no more trouble Jerusalem nor tread in Zions Courts Nahum 1.15 Behold upon the mountains the feet of him that bringeth good tidings that publisheth peace O Judah keep thy solemn feasts perform thy Vows for the wicked shall no more passe through thee he is utterly cut off The Hebrew is Belial shall no more passe through thee That is such as cast off the yoke of Jesus Christ shall no more bring Judah under their yoke This is also witnessed by another holy Prophet Zech. 14.21 In that day there shall be no more the Cananite in the house of the Lord of hosts they shall no more mingle themselves with the faithful servants of God much less rule over them Canaanites have often been in the house of the Lord but the Canaanite shall not always be there God will sweep them out of his house Answerable to these prophesies speaks the last prophesie Rev. 21.27 Chap. 22.15 which
God to error from the true worship of God to idolatry and from communion with God to creature-comforts and contentments you go after vain things which cannot profit To be vain and to be unprofitable are the same thing Take heed of sin for you cannot make any profit of it you cannot raise any true revenue out of it you will one time or other be ashamed as the Prophet speaks of all those revenues your hope that way is vain Secondly Then how vain a thing is it to oppose the Church of God! Why because there is no ground of hope for success in that attempt The world hath been upon it all along but they could never effect nor accomplish what they have imagined they have done all but prosper in it they never had their end which is the end or total destruction of the Church Pharaoh would oppose and vex Israel the Church of God and keep them low but he could not attain his end for the more he oppressed them the more they multiplied therefore all such are said to imagine a vain thing Psal 2.1 2. Why do the Heathen rage and the people imagine a vain thing the Kings of the earth set themselves and the Rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against his anointed but all in vain Nothing less came of it than what they imagined or their imaginations came to nothing yea brought them to nothing I saith the Lord Zach. 12.3 will make Jerusalem a burdensome stone for all people all that burden themselves with it shall be cut in pieces If any meddle with Jerusalem they will find they lift at a very heavy stone and that they meddle not with their match they shall surely be not only overmatcht but overthrown at length who do so The Church is founded upon a rock and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it Mat. 16.18 that is neither the counsels nor confederacies neither the power nor the policy of men or devils shall be able to prevail against it The History of the Church saith of Dioclesian a cruel persecuter that for very vexation he gave up the Government of the Empire because he saw he could not suppress Christianity by all his machinations against the Christians And doubtless they in the Gospel John 12.19 were not a little troub●ed when they said among themselves Perceive ye how we prevail nothing Behold the world is gone after him Thirdly Note The loss of hope or hope lost is the greatest loss When God would shew mans worst condition he saith His hope is in vain he doth not say his labour is in vain but his hope is in vain that pincheth most of all and that 's it which will pinch Hypocrites most at last who were in hope of injoying God but not only their labour but their hope shall be in vain when they come big with expectation and say Lord Lord we have done thus and thus when as the foolish Virgins they shall knock boldly and cry earnestly Lord Lord open to us the answer given them will be only this I know you not that is I know you not for mine as you presumed your selves to be even while you walked not as mine in wisdom but in your own folly This loss of hope will grieve more than the loss of Heaven As Christ told the Pharisees You shall weep and gnash your teeth when you see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdom of God and you your selves thrust out You thought that you should be saved above all men but saith Christ you shall be thrust out and lose your hopes This the Lord speaks to shew the worst of their condition who attempt to take Leviathan Their hope shall be in vain In the latter part of the verse the Lord gives us a farther account why their hope is in vain Shall not a man be cast down at the sight of him Is there any hope of taking him at whose very sight a man shall certainly be cast down There is a twofold casting down First a casting down by outward violence when a man is thrust down as we speak by head and shoulders Thus David cast down Goliah by a sling and a stone Secondly There is a casting down by inward trouble as we usually say such a man is mightily cast down Trouble of spirit heart-vexation and fear cast down many before any hand toucheth them Christ speaking of Capernaum saith Luke 10.15 And thou Capernaum which art exalted to heaven shalt be thrust down to hell As if he had said thou hast been high in thy expectations and highly priviledged in thy enjoyments having had the Gospel preached to thee but thou shalt not only fall down but thou shalt be thrust down into hell with a kind of violence When the Lord in the Text saith Shall not one be cast down we are to understand it of a casting down by the strong impression of astonishment and fear of dread and trouble seizing upon the mans spirit who comes near Leviathan and therefore it followeth Shall not one be cast down At the sight of him A man shall no sooner see him but he shall sink and if so then how little hope hath any one to grapple with him and to take him There is small hope of overcoming this Leviathan when a man at his sight or as far off as he can see him is so afraid of him as to be cast down with fear The very sight of a Whale is a terror to Mariners and Sea-men they are afraid their Ship may be overturn'd and spoyled by him Some read the words thus Will he be cast down even at the sight of him and they give this meaning of it Will the Leviathan be cast down at the sight of a man when he cometh prepared to take him Thou thinkest Leviathan a poor spirited fish or that he will be afraid of thy looks or to see thee as other fishes are who when they see or apprehend a man near scuttle away as we say but thou wilt find Leviathan is a fish that will not be afraid at the sight of thee This is a good sense but I conceive that before given more sutable that the sight of Leviathan or a Leviathan as soon as seen is so terrible that a man will be stricken with fear as soon as he seeth him Shall not one be cast down at the sight of him Hence note First The sight of the eye worketh much upon the heart The Lord saith not Shall not one be cast down by the force of him but at the very sight of him The eye hath a mighty operation upon the inward man yea upon the whole man the eye hath a mighty force upon the heart as to three things First It hath a mighty force upon the heart as to joy If we see a person that we have a great deal of love for how do we rejoyce presently at the sight of him 'T is true also of things It is