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A42016 The exposition continued upon the nineteen last chapters of the prophet Ezekiel with many useful observations thereupon delivered in several lectures in London / by William Greenhil. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1662 (1662) Wing G1857; ESTC R30318 513,585 860

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which signifies to make dark obscure black all the Trees in the Assyrian Empire or in that part of Lebanon which belonged thereunto I caused to be affected with the fall of this Cedar And all the Trees of the field fainted for him All other Kings saith Maldonate not only Kings but all sorts were involved in this common calamity they were so sensible of their sufferings thereby that they fainted the word for fainting is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to cover for grief and Metaphorically to faint When grief is great then it causeth deliquium animae Vers 16. I made the Nations to shake at the Sound of his fall When high and great Trees fall they make a great noise and so did this King when he fell his own Subjects and other Nations were much troubled at his fall When I cast him down to Hell with them that descend into the pit In ver 15. it s said he went down to the Grave or Hell and here that God cast him down to Hell it s the same word God brought him from his height to the state of the dead he made him like those that were in the pit And all the Trees of Eden the choice and best of Lebanon all that drink water shall be comforted in the nether parts of the earth Those Kings and others which were gone before into the pit he speaks of as living and watered Trees when they should see this great Cedar cut down and brought into the same condition with themselves they should be comforted in that state they were in that is the common condition of great and small The Hebrew for choice and best of Lebanon is the Election and goodness of Lebanon Vers 17. They also went down into Hell with him unto them that be slain with the sword Those Trees before mentioned their condition was like theirs who were slain with the sword and so was this Assyrians he was cut off from all his glory and greatnesse and laid amongst the slain And they that were his arm that dwelt under his shadow in the midst of the Heathen His Princes Nobles Councellours Souldiers and Confederates these suffered with him and had some comfort that they had him with them in the Grave or in Hell The Septuagint for those words were his arme read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and his seed his posterity and friends were cut off with him First Observe The greatest Princes and Powers in the world have their day to leave their greatnesse and go down to the dust In the day when he went down to the Grave The King of Assyria had his day to come down from all his height and glory and to lye among the slain some dye natural some violent deaths be they great or small dye they must It s appointed unto men once to dye Heb 9.27 And as some have their day to grow high and great in the world so their day to descend into the Grave and be no more in the eye of God then a stinking carkasse Secondly Observe When great Monarchs and Princes are cut off the Lord fills all with mourning fainting and shaking When the Assyrian went down to the Grave the Lord caused a mourning made changes and alterations at Sea and Land He made Lebanon to put on black the Trees of the field to faint and Nations to quake at the sound of his fall so was it when the King of Tyrus was destroyed Ezek 26.15 16. ch 27.35 When the gods of the earth are slain and dye like men the earth and all other creatures have a kind of sense thereof and are affected at changes Thirdly Observe When great Oppressors and Tyrants fall it affords some kind of comfort to the dead All the Trees of Eden the choice and best of Lebanon all that drink water shall be comforted in the nether parts of the earth c. You have this livelyly set forth Isa 14.9 10. Hell from beneath is moved for thee to meet thee at thy coming it stirreth up the dead for thee even all the chief Ones of the Earth it hath raised up from the Thrones all the Kings of the Nations All they shall speak and say unto thee art thou also become weak as we art thou become like unto us Whether this was Senacherib Nebuchadnezzar or Belshazzar it matters not whoever he was he was a great Tyrannicall Prince and when he fell the dead rejoyced at it and comforted themselves that he was become like unto them Vers 18. To whom art thou thus like in glory and in greatnesse among the Trees of Eden yet shalt thou be brought down with the Trees of Eden unto the nether parts of the Earth thou shalt lye in the midst of the uncircumcised with them that be slain by the sword this is Pharoah and all his multitude saith the Lord God This verse is the Application of the former example unto Pharoah The Protasis was from the 3. verse hither and in this 18. is the Apodosis The same Question is put here to Pharoah wh●ch was in the 2. vers To whom art thou like in glory and in greatnesse among the Trees of Eden Look about Pharoah thou seest that thou art not like to the Assyrian in Lebanon Well who among the Trees of Eden art thou like for glory and greatnesse it may be thou equallest some of them be it so yet thou must be brought down with them to the nether parts of the earth to the Grave or to Hell thou that art like them in sinning must be like them in suffering Thou shalt lye in the midst of the uncircumcised In Cha. 28.10 It was said of the Prince of Tyrus Thou shalt dye the death of the uncircumcised that was without any hope of eternall life and here it 's said of Pharoah Thou shalt lye in the midst of those that are uncircumcised that is He should lye in a hopelesse and perishing condition of soul and body for ever as those did who were not in Covenant with God This is Pharoah and all his multitude saith the Lord God This is his condition and the condition of his Princes Nobles and People whatsoever thoughts he or they may have of themselves this must be their end Observe God teaches men by the examples of others what they must look for Here by the Assyrian Cedar the Aegyptian Pharoah is taught what to expect He being like the Assyrian in his sins had no cause but to conclude that Assyrian judgements would befall him What was he for his pride and wickednesse driven out destroyed brought down to the Grave Hell and an everlasting suffering so must I my wayes being the same with his like sins call for like judgements As the Assyrian was set out for the instruction of Pharoah so God sets up Pharoah for the instruction of all Princes and People to the end of the world This is Pharoah and all his multitude CHAP. XXXII Vers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10. And it came
the 30. vers to the end Vers 1. Again the word of the Lord came unto me saying Vers 2. Son of man speak unto the children of thy people Ezekiel being taken off by the Lord from prophesying to the Jews Ch 24.27 he was imployed two years upwards in prophesying to other Nations as appears by comparing Ch 24.1 with Ch. 32.1 having done with them here he is Cōmission'd again to prophesie to the Jews Son of man speak unto thy people cease now to speak any more to the Nations which are strangers to thee speak to thine own people to the Jews which are of the same root stock and kinred with thy self The Hebrew is to the sons of thy people It s observable God saith not to the children of my people or to the Jews but to thy people God did disown them they were so stubborn and disobedient that he would not acknowledge them for his Oft in this prophesie they are call'd Ezekiels people Chap 3.11 Chap 13.17 and four times in this Chapter in this 2. vers the 12.17 30. in all these verses its the children of thy people When the Jews sinned that grievous sin in making the Calf God disown'd them and said to Moses Go get thee down for thy people have corrupted themselves Exod 32.7 Sin makes breaches between the nearest relations and causes God to disown his own people and his own institutions Isa 1.14 The new Moons and the appointed Feasts my soul hateth When I bring the sword upon a Land By sword is meant war and the evils do attend it as Chap. 6.3 14.17 29.8 30.4 32.11 The Hebrew is thus A Land when I shall bring upon it the sword here is a Nominative Case viz Erez put absolute and Sanctius saith when a Pronoun follows that Nominative must be put in the place and Case of the Pronoun as our translation hath done saying I will bring a sword not upon it but upon the Land Land is not put for Judaea but indefinitely for any Land If the people of the Land take a man of their Coasts and set him for their watchman When a Land is in danger of being invaded the peoples care is to chose out one or other to set him in some eminent place for a watchman Montanus and the Vulgar render the word Mikzehem de novissimis suis They take one of the lowest and meanest rank but Katzah notes the border and extream part of a Land or any other thing It s better as our translation hath it a man of their Coasts or borders where the enemy was like to make his first approach A watchman Tzopheh is from Tzaphah which is accurately to observe to open the eyes and fixedly to behold an object and take special notice thereof so is a watchman to do 2 Sam. 13.34 The young man that kept the watch lift up his eyes and looked and behold there came much people He did not barely look but lift up his eyes and looked he made an accurate observation So 2 Sam. 18.24 The watchman went up to the roof over the gate unto the wall and lift up his eyes and looked and behold a man running alone he put forth himself to the utmost to make a discovery his eyes were intent upon it Vers 3. If when he seeth the sword come upon the Land c. This verse sets out the office of the watchman which is 1. To look diligently about him whether there be any danger approaching any enemy neer at hand coming to invade or make attempts against the Land 2. If so he is to blow the Trumpet presently and to give warning thereof stirring up all to procure publique safety He blow the Trumpet The Hebrew word to blow is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Takah which signifies to fasten but when it s joyn'd with the word Manus it notes to strike the hand or strike hands when with the word Shophar a Trumpet it signifies to blow as 2 Sam 2.28 Joab blew a Trumpet so 1 Sam. 13.3 Saul blew the Trumpet and Joel 2.1 Blow the Trumpet in Zion Trumpets of old were made of the horns of Beasts of Brasse and Silver And warn the people The blowing of the Trumpet was a warning to the people to look to themselves but this warning was not only by the voice of the Trumpet but also by the voice of the watchman for having blown the Trumpet upon the discovery and approach of an enemy the watchman was to shift for his life and liberty by returning to his people and so to call upon them to provide for publique safety The word in Hebrew for warning is Zahar which signifies to shine illuminate and metaphorically to warn because when a man is warned he is instructed and hath light given in unto him Vers 4. Then whosoever heareth the sound of the Trumpet and taketh not warning if the sword come and take him away Many are so taken up with the world that though they hear of danger at hand yet they will not hear but venture so long that they are caught the sword comes and takes them away The Hebrew is he that hearing heareth His bloud shall be upon his own head He hath no cause to blame the watchman he blew the Trumpet and warned him the fault is in himself that he took not the warning that he made not haste to secure his own life he is guilty of his own death and hath voluntarily brought it upon himself the whole fault is his own that is the meaning of this phrase His bloud shall be upon him or upon his own head which is frequent in Scripture Josh 2.19 It shall be that whosoever goeth out of the doors of thy house into the street his bloud shall be upon his head and we will be guiltlesse that is he shall be guilty of his own death not we 1 Kings 2.37 On the day thou goest out and passest over the Brook Kidron thou shalt surely dye thy bloud shall be upon thine own head thou shalt be the cause of thine own death not I said Solomon to Shimei Vers 5. He heard the sound of the Trumpet and took not warning his bloud shall be upon him Here the reason is given why he is guilty of his own death because he was within the sound of the Trumpet he heard it that proclaimed the danger was at hand but he was secure minding his profit or pleasure and took not warning But he that taketh warning shall deliver his soul He that gives heed to the blowing of the Trumpet and presently hastens into the City or flyes for his life he shall deliver his soul from the hands of the enemies coming he shall be safe the word for to deliver is from Malat which signifies fuga sibi Consulere to provide for ones self by flight saith Avenarius he doth so deliver his soul that is himself for soul here is put by a Synecdoche for a mans selfe Vers 6. But if the watchman
is likelyest to make way for the message they bring of what kind soever Here the Prophet was to warn them to tell them of their sins and the danger of them and who would not receive an admonition from God when it comes in his name backed with his authority when God in it seeks our good the freedom of us from death and damnation the bringing of us unto glory and salvation and especially when the soul of the watchman lyeth at stake for the sinner if he do not admonish the sinner Can any sinner be so obstinate as not to consider relent and return when God shall send one in his name unto him and the Prophet shall say Sir I come from God unto you and my life is at stake for you if I tell you not of your sins I am a lost man give me leave therefore to deal plainly with you you are covetous unclean proud froward ignorant unbelieving having a form of Godl nesse without the power and unlesse you take another course and serve the living God otherwise the you do you will perish soul and body eternally but if y●u will hearken I will shew you the good and right way the way everlasting which will make you blessed for ever When a watchman comes and deals thus with a sinner hath he cause to be angry No he hath cause to fall down and say Of a truth God is in you and with you I thank you for your counsell and seasonable admonitions and through the grace of God I will improve them and turn to that God who is so gracious and would have sinners come to the knowledge of the truth and be saved Ninthly Observe The Lord knowes who are wicked When I say to the wicked man The world calls them wicked who are righteous and those righteous who are wicked but it is not so with the Lord he knows who is an hypocrite who is covetous who is a lyar a formalist an enemy to grace and holinesse Known unto the Lord are all his works Acts 15.18 And he knoweth who are his 2 Tim 2.19 and who are not his there is not one Goat in the world but the Lord knows him not a Wolfe or Lyon but he takes notice of them he knew the house of Israel better then Ezekiel who dwelt amongst them whom he said was wicked was so indeed It matters not much what the world saith of men it call'd Paul a Babler Acts 17.18 An Heretick Acts 24.14 A Pestilent Fellow vers 5. But what said God of him Acts 9.15 He is a chosen Vessel unto me to bear my name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel Jobs friends and the Devil said Job was an hypocrite but God said He was a perfect man fearing God and eschewing evill Job 1.1 That men are what God who cannot lye who cannot be deceived pronounces them to be if he in his word do call a ●an for an hypocrite an unbeliever covetous proud c. he is so Tenthly Observe The Power of life and death is in the hand of the Lord. When I say unto the wicked O wicked man thou shalt surely dye God hath authority over the lives of men and can pronounce a sentence of death upon them at his pleasure He Commission'd Saul to smite Amalek to slay man and woman infant and suckling Oxe and Sheep Camel and Asse 1 Sam. 15.3 Wh●n Ahab let Benhadad go a man that God had appointed to destruction therefore saith he Thy life shall go for his and thy people for his people 1 Kings 20.42 The power of life and death God challengeth to himself Deut. 32.39 I kill and I make alive I wound I heal neither is there any that can deliver out of mine hand By this argument he proves himself to be God and it s none but God that kills or gives life Psal 68.20 Vnto God the Lord belong the issues from death The Hebrew is Lammaneth Totzaoth Exitus ad mortem the goings out to death its God that turns the key and le ts out the breath it s he puts a period to the life of the Creature would any live let them fear the Lord and depart from evill for The fear of the Lord prolongeth dayes Prov 10.27 Moses uses this argument to perswade them to love obey and cleave to the Lord He is thy life and length of thy dayes Deut. 30.20 Men have their lives from God and he draws the thread of them out to what length he please and therefore men should love fear obey and cleave to that God if they do not he will cut the thread of their lives asunder Prov. 10.27 The years of the wicked shall be shortned by one sicknesse judgement or other their dayes and years shall be shortned of what they might have been Eleventhly Observe Those watchmen that are unfaithfull in their places and do not tell the people of their sins and danger their account will be dreadful If thou doe not speak to warn the wicked from his way his bloud will I require at thy hand If a politicall watchman be unfaithful so that a man perish by the sword without warning his bloud lyeth upon the watchmans head and if the Ecclesiastical watchman be unfaithful and do not warn the wicked upon what pretence soever the bloud of that wicked man dying in his sins will be required of the watchman it lyes upon his head and he must answer for it the case of this latter watchman will be more dangerous then of the former because the one is to answer for the life of a man the other for the soul of a man which is of great price Let lazy sleepy perfidious watchmen look to it they suffer men to perish through their default and their bloud lives souls stand ingaged for the s●me Twelfthly Observe The failing of the watchman will not excuse or priviledge the wicked man If thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his way that wicked man shall dye in his iniquity Though he be not told that he is in a wrong way though he pretend ignorance that will not serve turn he shall dye in his iniquity warn'd or unwarn'd the watchman hath not done his duty what then must this exempt the wicked man from punishment No he hath not done his duty he should have minded studyed the Law of God walked according to that and have made it a Lamp unto his feet and a light unto his paths Psal 119.105 But his neglect of his duty and ignorance rather will aggravate then extenuate his fault the Law was near unto him and he might have known what was forbidden and so have avoided the same Thirteenthly Observe Those that regard not the warning of the watchmen they bring certain destruction upon themselves Whosoever hears the sound of the Trumpet and takes not warning his bloud shall be upon his own head If the enemy cut off that man he himself is guilty of his own death not the political
Egypt was as women fearfull and weak like women Isai 19.11 12 13 14 15 16. God being against Pharaoh all his Councels Enterprizes were blasted all his forces broken all his Cities made desolate and all his people consum'd or carried into Captivity better he had had all the Princes of the world against him then God for whomsoever he is against must be ruin'd Fifthly observe The flourishing and perishing of Kings Kingdoms and Armies is from the Lord. I will strengthen the Arms of the King of Babylon and put my Sword in his hand but I will break Pharaohs Arms and they shall fall down One of these great Kings should prosper his Kingdom flourish his forces stand and conquer the other should perish his Kingdom be laid waste and all his forces broken and scattered What King State or Army soever God is with he will strengthen uphold what King State or Army soever he is against he will break ruine and bring to nothing whatever their Strength Wealth or Councels are Sixthly observe Tyrannical wicked Kings oft come to very sad ends he shall groan before him with the groanings of a deadly wounded man Herodotus saith he was strangled by the Egyptians which had revolted from him to Amasis The Holy Scripture tells you what ends Adonibezek Athaliah Jezebel Ahab and Senacherib came unto Pilate who put Christ to death was deposed banished and at last slew himself at Lyons in France Of Thirty two Emperors who persecuted the Christians scarce any of them dyed a natural death some were poysoned some kill'd by the Soldiers some sentenc'd by the Senate and some slew themselves Galerius had such a Loathsome disease as that he could not indure the stink of it but slew himself to avoid it Vid. Fox Act. Mon. vol. 1. pag. 40 41. Seventhly observe God is the Author of Wars he sets one Tyrant against another and gives Commission how far they shall proceed I will put my Sword into the hand of the King of Babylon and he shall stretch it out upon the land of Egypt Nebuchadnezzar was a great Tyrant and God set him upon Pharaoh another great Tyrant and ordered him how far he should go even over all Egypt Tyrants cannot stir till God move them the Sword is his if he will not put it into their hands they cannot take it up and when he hath put it into their hand they cannot go one foot further then he hath appointed them CHAP. XXXI Vers 1 2. And it came to pass in the Eleventh year in the Third month in the First day of the month that the word of the Lord came unto me saying Son of man speak unto Pharaoh King of Egypt and to his multitude Whom art thou like in thy greatness THis Chapter as the two former is a Prophesie against the King of Egypt and in it you have these parts First the Chronologie of the Prophesie ver 1. Secondly the occasion of it viz. His Pride and confidence in his greatness ver 2. Thirdly a confirmation of his ruine set out by an example a majori ad minus from the Third verse to the Eighteenth wherein is notably described the Glory of Assyria her sin and fall thereupon Fourthly the Application of all to Pharaoh vers 18. Vers 1. In the Eleventh year in the third month in the first day of the month The Prophet had not Prophesies given in every month it was a month and Twenty-four days from the last Prophesie to this which was one month and eight or nine days before the destruction of Jerusalem and in the Eleventh year of their Captivity the Third month and First day of the month The Hebrew for First day of the Month is una mensis one of the month is an Hebraisme common in the Scripture as in Gen. 1.5 The Evening and the Morning were one day so is the Hebrew that is the first day Luke 24.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon one of the week that is the First day of the week Vers 2. Speak unto Pharaoh King of Egypt and to his multitude Pharaoh was a great King and had a great Multitude of Men Horses and Chariots and conceited himself greater then he was but how great soever he were in realitie or conceit God orders a Prophet to speak to him and to demand a question of him The Prophet was in Babylon Pharaoh in Aegypt and how he could speak to him appears not It s impossible that he should undertake so long a journey as t is from Babylon to Egypt It s more consonant to truth that he pen'd this Prophesie and sent it unto him by one means or other Whom art thou like in thy greatness This was the Question Ezekiel must propound to him and it was an upbraiding question taxing him for his pride arrogancie and vain confidences He had like most Kings many Flatterers who flattered him into a conceit that he was greater then other Kings yea so great in power that he might incounter God himself The Lord therefore thought meet to take down his Spirit by this question Whom art thou like in thy greatness what like unto me thou art so far from that as that thou art not comparable to some mortal men What sayest thou to the King of Assyria art thou greater art thou stronger then he no he went far beyond thee in Power Dignitie and Greatness yet for his pride arrogancie and confidences in what he had he was utterly destroyed and thinkest thou who art inferior to stand and avoid the Judgements of God when they come thou deceivest thy self First observe Kings are prone to be lifted up with and confide in their greatness Pharaoh sweld with his honor and multitude puting too much confidence therein Chap. 29.3 he is call'd the great Dragon and he lay secure in the midst of his Rivers saying my River is mine own and I have made it for my self he was proud and confident thinking none greater then himself Nebuchadnezzar was lifted up with his greatness Dan. 4.30 so was Sennacherib Isa 37.11 12 13. And not only wicked Kings but good ones have been overtaken with this evill David numbers the people and was too proud of and confident in his Multitudes 1 Chron. 21. Princes have many things to puff up their Spirits but God knows how to bring them down Secondly observe God will have them told of their Sins and taxed for them Go speak unto Pharaoh and say whom art thou like in thy greatness Thou proud Tyrant thou shalt fall though thou be great strong there is a greater then thy self and one stronger then thou art who hath sent a Prophet to tell thee of thy pride and arrogancie and to foretell thee of thy destruction Kings are no more to God then the meanest peasants if they sin they shall hear of it and smart for it Vers 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. Behold the Assyrian was a Cedar in Lebanon with fair branches and with a shadowing shroud and of an high stature and
and uncircumcised there were some mighty men which did notable exploits were famous in their generations and dyed honourably in the battel or of their wounds these had pompous and great Funerals Cum armis sepeliebantur ut significaretu● eos Vsque ad Mortem usque ad Sepulchrum arma non abjeisse Bab Salum and were buried with their armour they dyed honourably and their honour went with them to the Grave but these should not be reckoned or laid amongst them And they have laid their swords under their heads When Souldiers of note dyed the custome was to honour them with laying their swords under their heads or by their heads and not only so but they used to bury them with their Arms. Lavater tels us that Gyraldus in a book he hath written of Sepulchres and severall Rites of burying saith he saw Arms and Boots found in old Monuments or Sepulchres But their iniquities shall be upon their bones By iniquities is meant the punishment of iniquities Their bones shall be scattered upon the earth for their tyranny and cruelty which they have exercised be exposed to the Beasts and Fowls for a prey so their iniquities shall be upon their bones O● thus they had their swords and arms go down with them to the Grave instruments of cruelty and bloud signifying that they carried their bloudy and tyrannical dispositions with them And their iniquities shall be upon their bones They shall suffer now they are dead and gone a full recompence of reward for all their sins or thus they lived wickedly and dyed cowardly and an ill name shall they leave behind them cursed shall be their memory Vers 28. Yea thou shalt be broken in the midst of the uncircumcised and shalt lye with them that are slain with the sword Some interpret this verse of Meshech and Tubal that they should be broken in pieces but rather it is the application of the former examples instanced in viz Meshech and Tubal unto Pharoah Thou shalt be broken and become a Companion of the uncircumcised suffering such things as they do Thou shalt be equall to them in punishment who hast not been behind them in sin Vers 29. There is Edom her Kings and all her Princes which with their might are laid by them that were slain by the Sword they shall lye with the uncircumcised and with them that go down to the pit Esau the son of Isaac was call'd Edom who gave that name to the Country call'd Idumaea which had many Kings and Princes they were circumcised being the posterity of Abraham but notwithstanding their circumcision being wicked they obtained nothing thereby neither that not their might and power stood them in any stead but they went down to the pit and had the portion of uncircumcised ones Here the Prophet answers an Objection which the Egy●●ans might make which was this We are circumcised and ●hat are like the Jews an holy people differing from the Na●●re and therefore we lock for some priviledge thereby and cannot be perswaded that our condition shall be like unto the uncircumcised Nations Yes saith the Prophet your condition will not differ at all from theirs for the Kings and all the Princes of Idumaea who came of the Jewish race and had circumcision upon better grounds then you had it they are dead gone to the grave and laid among the uncircumcised Vers 30. There be the Princes of the North all of them and all the Zidonians which are gone down with the slain with their terrour they are ashamed of their might and they lye uncircumcised with them that be slain by the sword and bear their shame with them that go down to the pit The word for Princes in Hebrew is Nesichim Men anointed with oyl so Kings and Princes were These Princes of the North were not the Babylonians whom God used to execute his pleasure upon Pharoah and the Egyptians but the Tyrians those of Damascus and Syria together with the Zydonians The Princes of those places were North to Egypt and being men of might they were a terrour unto others but their might could not preserve them from death they were therefore ashamed of their might and are laid with the uncircumcised in the pit First Observe That Tyrants in Hell are glad when other Tyrants like themselves come thither The strong among the mighty shall speak unto him 〈◊〉 of the midst of Hell Wh●n some great man comes to Court there is rising complementing and welcoming of him thi●ne so when great Tyrants come to the Court of Hell there be those rejoyce at it and congratulate their coming Secondly Observe No humane power can defend a man against death or keep him out of the pit Princes have the greatest power yet that prevail'd not the strong and mighty who were terrours to others were no terrours to death who came pluckt them out of their Armyes Thrones Castles Greatnesse and sent them down to the dead Ashur is there and all her company There is Elam and all her multitude There is Meshech Tubal and all her multitude There is Edom her Kings and all her Princes There be the Princes of the North all of them and all the Zidonians None of them all could exempt themselves from that condition it is not pollicy power or greatnesse can do it for the most wise most powerfull and most great God hath said Eccles 8.8 There is no man hath power over the Spirit to retain the Spirit neither hath he power in the day of Death and there is no discharge in that war neither shall wickednesse deliver those that are given to it Kings are strong but death is stronger than they Kings may make war with men and conquer or conclude peace but it s not so with death if they send out all their forces death fears them not but will slay them every one if they send men to treat and make a peace it will not be granted there is no discharge in that war death will have the bones and carkasses of Princes to gnaw upon as well as the meanest those that have been terrours made a great noise in the world death hath tamed and quieted them Thirdly Observe The greatest and most g● the wrong way and have the portion of Gods enemies Kings and Princes of Countreys with their companyes and multitudes go to Hell and lye with the uncircumcised Ashur Elam Meshech Tubal Edom with their Kings and people All the Princes of the North with the Zidonians and those that belonged to them went thither and had the reward of the uncircumcised of such as God owned not for his people but dealt withall as enemies Some there be that dye the death of the righteous Numb 23.10 that dye in faith Heb 11.13 and in the Lord Rev 14.13 and these are blessed their death is precious in the eyes of the Lord Psal 116.15 but as for others they dye in their sins and are accursed Fourthly Observe Mighty men who have ruffled it
see the sword come and blow not the Trumpet and the people be not warned All watchmen are not faithfuil some are sleepy and careless they see not the sword coming some are perfidious they see it coming but blow not the Trumpet they warn not the people and what then If the sword come and take away any person from among them That is if any man being not warned by the watchman shall be surprized and cut off as frequently in such cases it is his bloud will lye upon the watchman The Hebrew for any person is a soul if the sword come and take a soul from them He is taken away in his iniquity He is found in his sin and is cut off for his sin most Interpreters render the words propter iniquitatem suam for his iniquity He was wicked and for his wickednesse justly cut off But his bloud will I require at the watchmans hand Here is the punishment laid down of an unfaithfull watchman through his sleepinesse negligence or treachery a soul is taken away a man is slain by the adversary who if the watchman had given warning might have lived and therefore because he did not he is guilty of the mans bloud and must answer for it at his hands will God require it Vers 7 8 9. So thou O son of man I have set thee a watchman unto the house of Israel therefore thou shalt hear the word at my mouth and warn them from me When I say unto the wicked O wicked man thou shalt surely dye if thou do not speak to warn the wicked from his way that wicked man shall dye in his iniquity but his bloud will I require at thine hand Neverthelesse if thou warn the wicked of his way to turn from it if he do not turn from his way he shall dye in his iniquity but thou hast delivered thy soul IN these words the Lord applies the former similie of a political watchman unto the Prophet So thou O son of man c. and these 3 verses are the same with the 17 18 19. verses of the 3. Chapter of this prophesie Vers 7. I have set thee a watchman I have given thee to be a watchman unto the house of Israel that thou shouldest look about search the Scriptures find out what is evill sinful and what 's the punishment due thereunto what wrath God hath revealed from Heaven against all unrighteousnesse and tell the people thereof Therefore thou shalt hear the word at my mouth Thou must not speak of thine own head or out of thine own hearr but thou must take all up from me either what I have given out by Moses and other Prophets already or what I shall give out immediately to thy self Thus Habakkuk did Ch. 2.1 I will stand upon my watch and set me upon the Tower and will watch to see what he will say unto me He would have the word from Gods mouth And warn them from me Thou must not warn them in thine own name but in my name whose Prophet thou art whose words thou hast received and who hath impowered thee to tell men of their sins and dangers Vers 8. When I say unto the wicked O wicked man thou shalt surely dye Where God sayes so is hard to find in all the book of God You have not O wicked man thou shalt surely dye but in generals there 's that is equivalent as the soul that sins shall dye The wicked shall be turned into Hell Vpon the wicked he shall rain snares fire and Brimstone and an horrible tempest And the wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all unrighteousnesse of men These and such other places are Tantamount If thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his way When the watchman sees a wicked man in a wicked way as in a way of drunkenness whoredom idolatry oppression or any profanesse he is to warn him and tell him of the danger of his wayes if he through fear or favour incogitancy or carelesnesse neglect to do it the danger is great That wicked man shall dye in his iniquity The wicked man might object and say Why should I dye I was never warned by the watchman he saw me daily living in such courses and had he told me the danger of them I should have considered my wayes and turned from them This Objection is answered Thou art a wicked man thou hast lived in iniquity and now thou shalt dye in and for thine iniquity the light of Nature the dictates of thy Conscience the example of others might have taught thee to have done otherwise though the Prophet have neglected his duty thou shalt suffer for thy sins and he for his His bloud will I require at thy hand I set thee to be a watchman over him to observe his wayes to tell him of his sins to invite and provoke him to repentance by promises of mercy and threatning of my judgements that so he might have been saved but because thou wast unfaithfull and didst not thy duty he is lost and his bloud will I require at thy hands and recompence it upon thine head Vers 9. Neverthelesse if thou warn the wicked of his way to turn from it If thou be faithful in thy place and tell the wicked of his sins calling upon him to turn from them unto me the living God if this hath been thy care and practice thou hast done well He shall dye in his iniquity but thou hast delivered thy soul What ever befalls him death temporal or death eternal thou hast freed thy self and shalt nor be responsive for him at all his bloud shall be upon his own head and not upon thine First Observe Wars come not upon any people casually but by the providence of God When I bring the sword upon a Land It s God calls out the sword and causeth it to come he is the Lord of Hosts and Commissions Armies to make invasions where he please Secondly Observe In case of common danger the people have liberty and power to set up a politicall Officer for their good and safety When the sword is coming upon the Land if the people of the Land take a man of their Coasts and set him up for their watchman God expects they should do it and approves of it done they do not their duty unless they do it they must not stay till those in authority do it the Land may be invaded many lose their lives upon that account but it s their priviledge and in their power presently to appoint a man who may discover danger and give them notice of it Every man is a part of the whole and when that is indangered every one is to put forth himself to the utmost for security thereof Suprema lex est salus populi Thirdly Observe That in the Ecclesiastick State its Gods Prerogative to set up Offices and Officers Son of man I have set thee a watchman unto the house of Israel He might not set himself a
watchman And so in the Church-State if the wicked man be warned of his way and turn not from it he shall dye in his iniquity his bloud lyes at his own dore upon his own head the watchman is free Fourteenthly Observe There is great necessity that the watchmen deal faithfully and tell the people of their danger and sin Their souls their bloud lye at stake upon it if they be not faithfull their lives their souls go for it Those watchmen that are silent are cruel bloudy and soul-murthering men they murther the souls of the people and their own souls also those that speak that cry aloud that tell the people throughly of their sins not fearing their frowns nor respecting their favours that so if it be possible they may save their souls these are the most faithful watchmen Many wonder that the spiritual watchmen are so zealous particular that they open the nature of sin so much threaten such terrible judgements of God against sinners and preach damnation unto them that they are so frequent in such wayes but cease to wonder their souls are in jeopardy if they do it not If a mans whole estate were in hazard if he did not tell such a man that he were a lyar a drunkard and would he forfeit his estate through silence No he would tell him of his sins again and again The watchmans soul lyeth at pawn and he forfeits that if he should not tell sinners of their sins and warn them to turn from them Hence was it that Paul said Necessity is laid upon me and we unto me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 he preached and warned sinners night and day Acts 20.31 Lastly Observe That the watchmen warning the people and the people taking warning they do both secure themselves If the wat●hman Politic●l or Spi●itual blow the Trumpet warn the ●●ople he shall deliver his own soul if the people take wa●ning they deliver their souls Safety lyes in warning and it hearkning to wa●ning let not the watchmen of God be sleepy or silent but warn the people constantly that so they may save themselves and others Verses 10 11. Therefore O thou Son of man speak unto the house of Israel Thus ye speak saying if our transgressions and our sins be upon us and we pine away in them how should we then live Say unto them As I live saith the Lord God I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live turn ye turn ye from your evil wayes for why will ye dye O house of Israel HEre begins the second Generall part of the Chapter which is a confirmation of the Prophet against those Calumnies the Jews made against the truth and justice of God The first is in the 10. vers The second in the 17. and 20. verses The Calumnie they raised against the truth of God was this in the 5. verse its said he that takes warning when the watchman gives it shall deliver his soul this said the Jews had not truth in it for Chap. 24.23 The Prophet had told them they should pine away for their iniquities therefore there was no hope for them though they took warning at the watchmans mouth we are appointed to destruction and it s in vain to mind what the watchman saith This is answered in the 11. verse But to open the words Vers 10. Therefore O thou son of man speak unto the house of Israel God had set Ezekiel to be a watchman unto the house of Israel to observe their sins and tell them thereof and here he commands him to do his duty speak unto the house of Israel thus The house of Israel was not now the 10 Tribes but the 2 Tribes left of the 10. If our transgressions and our sins be upon us Jerusalem being now taken or upon the taking the Jews were more sensible of their sins and so felt the weight of them in that sad judgement was upon them or coming upon them By transgressions and sins not only the guilt but the punishment of them is meant they had felt much in the time of Jerusalems siedge and more now in the taking of it God visited their iniquities upon their heads And we pine away in them When Gods hand is upon persons for their sins they consume and moulder away the pain and anguish they are under melts their fat eats up their strength and brings them to skin and bone Nemakkim it is from Muk or Makak which is to grow lean to become feeble to be dissolved in Mareorem into corruption or rottenness How should we then live The Jews seeing Jerusalem now in the enemies hand and themselves going into captivity speak desparingly saying We are like never to see good day but must pine away under the judgements that are upon us how should we then live its in vain to warn us and tell us of repenting and turning to the Lord we must dye in the condition we are in Vers 11. Say unto them As I live saith the Lord God This oath of God hath been spoken of Chap. 16.48 Ch 5. vers 11. It s the oath which God most uses Life is the most precious of all things and that God swares by as sure as I live or am the living God it is true which I say or let me not be the living God if I speak false you think I am a hard Master that you shall pine away in your sins and find no mercy though you should repent and return you are greatly deceived As I live saith the Lord c. He swares not by a truth that was question Numb 14.11 Nor by his Omnipotency for that was doubted of Ps 78.19 but by his life which was never in questioned The Learned observe that when this word Chai is referred to God so that himselfe swares or men sware by him it s written with Patach under it as here and in other places but when it is referred to men then it s written Chai with Tzere as Gen 42.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By the life of Pharaoh or as sure as Pharaoh lives So in 2 Sam. 11.11 You have them both together in 1 Sam. 20.3 Chai Jehovah vechei Naph shecha As the Lord liveth and as thy soul liveth I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that c. The Septuagint reads the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will not The Vulgar is Nolo mortem impit I am unwilling the wicked should dye the French ie u'appette point I covet not am not greedy of the death of the wicked Junius Si delector If I delight in the death of the wicked Vatablus Piscator Non delector I delight not in the death of the wicked or I am not delighted therewith Montanus hath it Si volam in morte impii If I shall will in the death of the wicked for so runs the Hebrew Im Echphotz bemoth Harashang The word Chaphetz signifies to
executed upon him As the righteousness of the righteous shall not deliver him when he sins so the wickedness of the wicked shall not damnifie him when he turns Here is a Nominative Case put absolute the wickednesse of the wicked Neither shall the righteous be able to live for his righteousnesse in the day that he sinneth His righteousness shall not uphold him do him any good when he falls into sin his sin will be the death of him and his righteousness he cannot live in it or for it Vers 13. When I shall say to the righteous that he shall surely live if he trust to his own righteousnesse Here the case of the righteous man is further amplified and ex●ounded let me make him a promise of life and say That in living he shall live so the Hebrew is yet if he trust to his righteousness and commit sin he shall not live When men have a Legall righteousness they are apt to trust in it to think it makes them acceptable to God that it will answer Justice for their sins divert wrath procure favour and so presume to take liberty and please the flesh in many things but their righteousness will not stand them in stead And commit iniquity Of this see Chap. 3.20 Chap. 18.24 where much hath been said of this expressions The will affections and heart are in committing iniquity it 's making a trade of sin such men are workers of iniquity Pharisees had a legall righteousness but they devoured widows houses made Proselytes and them twofold more the children of the Devill then themselves Matth. 23.14 15. These committed iniquity All his righteousnesse shall not be remembred That is none of his righteous deeds shall be so had in remembrance as to have any acceptance or reward they shall be laid by and forgotten instead thereof he shall have judgement for his wickedness that shall be remembred and rewarded But for his iniquity that he hath committed he shall dye for it The reward of his iniquity is death either he shall pine away under some stroak of God which is Mors minor a lesser kind of death or he shall be cut off by some judgement which is a death indeed a death with a witness Vers 14. Again when I say unto the wicked thou shalt surely dye if he turn from his sin c. In this vers and the two following the case of the wicked man is further explained as the promise to the righteous was with condition so the threatning of the wicked is with exception He shall surely dye unlesse he repent and turn and testifie the reallity of the same by doing that which is lawfull and right Or as it is in the Hebrew By doing judgement and justice by giving unto God and man what is prescribed of these words see Chap. 18.5 Vers 15. If the wicked restore the pledge Pignus est quod propter rem credi tam datur cujus possessionem solum ad tempus consequitor creditor sed dominium penes debitorem est A Pledge is something pawned for a thing borrowed the possession whereof for the present is in the hand of the Lender but the right is belonging to the Borrower Chabol is from Chabal to bind because Pledges are strong Bonds and Obligations Poor people were often necessitated to pawn their garments Beds Cattle Utensils which wicked men would keep and make their advantage of which they ought not to have done Deut 24.10 11 12 13. Therefore it s said here If the wicked restore the pledge if he be mercifull to those that be poor and afflicted Give again that he had robbed Robbers seldome make restitution of what they get by violence The word Gazal signifies to spoil a man of what is his Vi aperte as High-way Robbers do and also any violent wresting and forcing mens right out of their hands Now if the wicked did make restitution of what he had so gotten and Walk in the statutes of life without committing iniquity The statutes of life are the statutes of God which being exactly kept afford life to the keepers of them Ezek 20.13 They walked not in my statutes and they despised my judgements which if a man do he shall even live in them or live by them as it s Levit 18.5 If a man walk in these from day to day and keep them perfectly committing no iniquity what then He shall surely live he shall not dye This and the like promises are legall and made to legall righteousness and clearly evince that the Prophet speaks of a legall righteous man The Gospel saith not that a just man shall live by doing but that the just shall live by faith and that the law is not of faith If men could keep the Law do what it requires they should live by it but except Christ none ever did and so none was ever justified by the Law Gal 3.10 11 12. If a man could be found that walked in the Statutes of life without sinning he should surely live and live as comfortably as Adam did in Paradice and should not dye Vers 16. None of his sins that he hath committed shall be mentioned unto him The Hebrew is all his sins which he hath committed shall n t be mentioned unto him that is None of his sins shall be imputed or charged upon him Vid. Chap 18.22 He hath done that which is lawful and right he shall surely live The Life here spoken of cannot be eternal life because 1. A mans turning from his former wicked wayes and making restitution to men for wrongs done is no satisfaction to the justice of God for the breach of his Laws And 2. No man can so keep the law or statutes of life as thereby to obtain life eternal Here is no mention of Christ or faith in him without which eternall life cannot be had I conceive it s meant of a temporal life he that ceases from his wicked wayes that lives honestly doing lawfull and right things he shall not have cause to complain as the Jews did That they pined away under their iniquities but he should live in living as the Hebrew is and that is he should live a very comfortable life First Observe There is a righteousnesse will not profit a man when he hath most need When a man sins then he hath most need of righteousness to cover his sin to prevent judgement but then his own righteousness a legal righteousness a duty righteousness will stand him in no stead The righteousnesse of the righteous shall not deliver him in the day of his transgression he shall not be able to live in the day that he sinneth Let us therefore look after an Evangelicall righteousness for Christ hath told us That except our righteousnesse exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees we shall in no case enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Matth 5.20 They had a legal a duty an own-righteousnesse but they had not the righteousness of Christ the
far differing from theirs and Ezekiel must declare the Lords not his own thoughts unto them And 1. He charges them with their sinfull practices 2. Denyes them the possession of the Land Ye eat with the bloud It was commanded before the Law was given That they should not eat bloud Gen 9.4 Levit 19.26 That is neither bloud let out from the flesh nor bloud with the flesh one reason is given Levit. 17.14 Ye shall eat the bloud of no manner of flesh for the life of all flesh is the bloud thereof The Hebrew is Nephesh the soul of all flesh is the bloud thereof Nephesh is put sometime for the whole man as Gen 46.26 All the souls of the house of Jacob that is all the persons sometimes for the more noble part of man viz the reasonable soul Mat. 10.28 Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul Sometimes for the affections as Deut 6.5 Thou shalt love the Lord with all thy heart and with all thy soul Sometimes for the life as Isa 53.12 He hath poured out his soul unto death that was his life John 10.15 and so it s rendred and to be taken in the place cited the life of all flesh is the bloud thereof bloud properly is not the life or soul of flesh but the life or soul is said to be in the bloud or bloud Propter spiritus vitales animales qui animae organa virtutis ejus vehicula sunt sanguine evaporant Another reason why they might not eat bloud Duet in Gen cap. 9.4 is in the 11. vers of that Chap. I have given it to you upon the Altar to make an atonement for your souls for it is the bloud that maketh an atonement for the soul The bloud being to be offered upon the Altar represented the bloud of Christ which was to be shed for the remission of sins Matth. 26.28 and therefore not to be eaten A third reason was that they might not be cruell and bloudy minded but might in a special manner take heed of shedding mans bloud which is the ground of the prohibition Gen 9.4 5. But they minded neither the prohibition it self nor the reasons of it they did eat with the bloud that is they did eat the flesh with the bloud in it or they did eat the bloud drawn out from the flesh Some make question in these dayes whether they may eat bloud and the ground of it is from Acts 15.29 where it s ordered that Christians should abstain from bloud and things strangled But those that scruple eating of bloud do not scruple the eating of things strangled as Fowls and Rabbits and there is as much reason for that as the other as for the thing it self I shall only say what Christ saith Matth. 15.11 Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man but that which cometh out of the mouth this defileth a man And Paul Titus 1.15 Vnto the pure all things are pure And 1 Tim. 4.4 Every creature of God is good and nothing to be refused if it be received with thanksgiving And lift up your eyes towards your idols Idolatry was forbidden in the Law with great severity Deut 17.2 3 4 5. Exod 22.20 Chap 20.4 5. yet these Jews minded idols and affected them Of lifting up the eyes to Idols see Chap. 18.6 it notes adoration of them and expectation of help from them And shed bloud Shedding of bloud was a grievous sin and here it may be understood either of their oppressing innocent ones taking away their lives illegally or else of their children which they offered to Molech which was forbidden unto them Levit. 18.21 of which bloudy sacrifices was spoken Ezek 16.20 21. And shall ye possesse the Land This is a stinging interrogation intimating that whoever possessed it they should not What do you look to possesse the Land that do such things that are so impious and prophane Did I n●t cast Heathens for their wickedness out of the Land you are in and do you think to continue in it that have exceeded them in wickednesse Ezek 5.6 No no the Land is not for you Abraham did not such things you are not his seed therefore you shall not inherit the Land Vers 26. Ye stand upon your sword Not you are in arms to defend your selves against Babylonians but you trust in your strength are ready for spoil violence and shedding of innocent bloud When any offended them in word or deed they meditated revenge and laboured by the sword to right themselves there was no place for justice but the Land was full of bloody crimes Ezek 7.23 Ye work abomination Of Abominations and what sins are so call'd was spoken Chap 5. vers 9. Chap 18. vers 12 13. In the 3. Observation Ye do that is detestable and loathsome to the very senses And ye defile every one his neighbours wife Adultery was a grievous sin and punishable with death Levit. 20.10 Deut. 22.22 yet this sin was frequent amongst them Jer 5.7 8. Cap. 7.9 9.2 That honourable state of marriage was abused and the bed defiled and it was a common and universal practice amongst them every one defiled his neighbours wife And shall ye possesse the Land Do ye trust in your swords violate all justice shed innocent blood do abominable things defile your neighbours wives and yet presume you shall possesse the Land O impudent creatures brazen-faced sinners what vain perswasions have you taken up its madness for you to dream of possessing the Land rather then such as ye shall inherit it it shall lye desolate without inhabitant The word here for to possesse is Jarash which is a word contrariae significationis that signifies contrary things as to possess and dispossess Josh 23.5 The Lord shall drive them from out of your sight and ye shall possesse their Land Here Jarash signifies to drive out and to possess when the Lord saith Shall ye possesse the Land his meaning is they shall be dispossessed of it and driven out of it First Observe Men in great misery under grievous afflictions are apt to flatter and deceive themselves with one vain confidence or other These Jews were conquered by the Babylonians had their City Temple Strong holds and pleasant places all laid waste they were a company of poor people that inhabited the wastes of the Land yet they flattered themselves with this conceit that they should inherit and possesse the Land and why there was a number a multitude of them Abraham was one and he inherited the Land we are many and it s given to us Their afflicted condition might have wrought other apprehensions in them and made them see and say All the chief Ones of the Land are cut off or carryed away captives the Land is fallen into Nebuchadnezzars hands we are his servants and slaves left to Till the Land and dresse the Vineyards that so a revenue may be raised for him but as for our selves we are like
another to hear what word the Lord gave out to the Prophet and they come being excited one by another and sit before the Prophet as Gods people they attended to what he said as if they meant punctually to observe the same but they did not do what he said their hearts were not in the business what worshipping was this of God to give him an ear and the world their heart So to speak against the Prophet behind his back and to speak fair shew much love to his face was not this hypocrisie did they not carry it religiously towards God and cunningly towards the Prophet However they carryed it the Lord saw their hypocrisie and discovered the same The Scribes and Pharisees wore long robes made long prayers and under pretence of them devoured widowes houses but the Lord Christ knew their hypocrisie and made it known though religiously and craftily carryed Matth 23. Fourthly Observe Many hearers pretend much love and kindnesse to the Prophets and yet behind their backs afford them not a good word When these Jews came to the Prophets house they shew'd much love with their mouths but when they were by the walls and at their own doors they shew'd as much ill will with their mouths they spake against him they slandered him they disgraced him out of the same mouth came bitter and sweet The Jews and Herodians pretended much love to Christ and said Master we know that thou art true and teachest the way of God in truth neither carest thou for any man for thou regardest not the persons of men tell us therefore what thinkest thou is it lawfull to give Tribute to Caesar or no Matth 22.16 17 18. Here they shewed much kindness with their mouths when there was gall and bitterness in their hearts Fifthly Observe When men draw neer to God in any duty of his worship he principally looks which way the heart stands whether that be real and towards him Their heart saith God goeth after their covetousness It went not after the word after God himself Isa 29. This people draw neer me with their mouth and with their lips do honour me but have removed their hearts far from me When their bodies were in the Temple their hearts were in their shops when their lips were speaking to God their hearts were conversing with the creatures Gods eye was upon their hearts The heart is the principal part in man and its the principall thing God aims at Prov 23.26 My son give me thine heart not thy hatt thy hand thy tongue thy foot but thine heart Whatever he hath without the heart is nothing but having the heart he hath all whatever is wanting let the eye be wanting a man is blind let the leg be wanting a man is lame let the whole body be wanting a man is sick yet if God have the heart he hath all Delilah had Sampsons bodily presence yet that sufficed her not because she thought she had not his heart Judg 16.15 How canst thou say I love thee when thine heart is not with me God hath no love from us nothing of us when our hearts are not with him Sixthly Observe Men have carnall hearts in spiritual duties These men were hearing Ezekiel prophesie and whilest they were hearing their hearts went after their covetousness the word was in their ears and the world in their hearts Ezekiel tells them of the things of God and they mind the things of the earth To be earthly minded at any time is blameable Phil 3.19 but to be so in spiritual things is grievous it s a despising a debasing of them when the things of God of Christ Heaven Salvation Life Grace and Glory are presented unto us which should take up our thoughts abundantly affect our hearts powerfully for us then to mind the dust sticks straws and pebbles on the earth to have our hearts upon them this is Zimmah a great wickedness horrible ingratitude Rom 8.6 To be carnally minded is death it argues a dead soul it tends unto death and ends in eternall death Seventhly Observe Covetousnesse is a sin adheres to Professors These that came to hear the Prophet and sat before him as the people of God their hearts went after their covetousness they had hearts exercised with covetous practices as it is in 2 Pet 2.14 The Pharisees made profession of religion they were hearers of Christ but the Text saith they were covetous Luke 16.14 Judas an Apostle and follower of Christ had a covetous heart and sold his Master for 30 pieces of silver Mat 26.15 Demas forsook Paul having loved the present world 2 Tim. 4.10 While he was with Paul his heart was in the world John seeing this evill incident to Christians disswades them from the love of the world by a strong argument 1 John 2.15 Love not the world neither the things that are in the world if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him He doth not know God to be his father and love him as a Father that loves the world he may think say and swear that he loves the Father but the Spirit of truth saith The love of the Father is not in him Let Christians therefore take heed of this sin for besides that it argues the love of God is not in us it choaks the seed of Gods word which should beget grace in us Matth 13.22 it makes us idolaters Eph 5.5 yea Covetous●esse unfits us for Church communion 1 Cor 5.11 it shuts us out of Heaven 1 Cor. 6.10 it exposes us to wrath Col. 3.5 6. to Gods hatred Psal 10.3 to a curse 2 Pet. 2.14 Verses 32 33. And lo thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that hath a pleasant voice and can play well on an instrument for they hear thy words but they do them not And when this cometh to passe lo it will come then shall they know that a Prophet hath been among them Vers 32. Thou art unto them as a very lovely song THe Hebrew is Ceshir agavim sunt canticum amantium as a song of Lovers so the word is rendred Jerem 4.30 Thy lovers will despise thee it s the same word Lovers have delightfull songs to please their ears and pass away time so the Prophets preaching was delightfull unto them to hear but as in musick and singing there is nothing comes of it when done so they heard the Prophet but nothing came of their hearing The Septuagint hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the voice of a Psaltery which was an instrument to sing unto The French is Comme une chauson de plaisanterie as a song of jesting or scurrility which greatly affect carnall hearts Some render the words eris illis canticum subsannatorum thou wilt be to them a song of scoffers that is however they seem to be greatly pleased and affected with thy prophesying yet in their hearts they laugh at thee and deride thee Of one that hath a pleasant voice and can play
into Heaven by vers 21. Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of Heaven Not any one which goes no further But he that doth the will of my Father which is in Heaven My father saith Christ hath made known his will he would have men do his will and then he will open unto them and let them into Heaven It s not mens hearing or saying but their doing what they hear which pleads stronglyest for their entrance into Heaven Many men commend the Preacher the Word with their tongues but disgrace both with their lives The best commenders of the Preachers and their doctrine are mens lives when they are doers of the word Matth 25.21 It s well done thou good and faithfull servant enter thou into thy masters joy Not well heard or well said but well done Let us see to it that we be not hearers only but doers of the word Rev 22.14 Blessed are they that do his commandements that they may have right to the Tree of life and may ●nter in through the gates into the City Fifthly Observe The judgements threatned by the Prophets of God shall certainly take place When this cometh to passe lo it will come He means the sword wilde beasts pestilence utter desolation which were threatned It seem'd somewhat unlikely that after a war a few poor people left in wastes holes caves forts woods fields should be cut off but the Lord had said it and he did effect it How improbable or impossible soever things appear to us what God threatens by his Prophets to doe without repentance intervene he will accomplish Sixthly Observe Whatever the thoughts of wicked ones are for the present of the Prophets the time will come when they shall have other kind of thoughts of them When this cometh to passe then shall they know c. When the sword wilde beasts pestilence utter desolation are upon them and the Land when they are in straits in the jawes of death then they will have other apprehensions of Ezekiel then now they have Ezekiel at present is a lovely song like a man that hath a pleasant voice some affect him some scoff at him others censure him but when death is before them then their thoughts will alter then they will say Ezekiel told us of these things that are come upon us and how to avoid them he call'd upon us to consider our wayes to turn from all our iniquities and to provide for our souls we then slighted him only gave him the hearing of what he said but now we see he was a Prophet of God delivered weighty things and we were fools that we hearkened not unto him doing what he said When young men who despise all the Preachers say against whoredom and wanton courses come to be in years find their flesh and bodies to be consumed then will they have other thoughts of them and what they preached then will they say How have we hated instruction and our hearts despised reproof we obeyed not the voyce of our Teachers nor inclined our ears to them that instructed us Prov. 5.11 12 13. There were Prophets amongst us who sought our good who tendred mercy and many precious truths unto us but we were so blinded with our lusts so conceited of our own wayes that we rejected them and whatever they tendred us Seventhly Observe The Prophets will be witnesses at last against disobedient hearers They shall know that a Prophet hath been amongst them They heard Ezekiel but did not what he said his person his doctrine did at last bear witness against them Where-ever the Lord sets a faithful preacher who takes pains among the people declaring the mind of God unto them and they do not practice what they are taught that Preacher will rise up in judgement against them his doctrine his prayers tears drops of sweat his life his sufferings reproaches death will all be witnesses against them If the rust of mens silver and gold will be witnesses against them and eat their flesh like fire James 5.3 because they let their silver and gold lye by them and did not improve the same for publique good and in charitable uses how much more will the truths of God which the Preachers have commended unto them being neglected and not improved to the good of the hearers and others bear witness against them and eat their flesh yea their souls like fire Thousands who have flocked after Ministers to hear them will find those Ministers witnesses against them because they heard them only and never did what they heard What a multitude of witnesses will London and England have against them at the latter day All the Godly faithful Ministers whose doctrine hath been heard but never obeyed CHAP. XXXIV Vers 1 2 3 4 5 6. And the Word of the Lord came unto me saying Son of man prophesie against the shepherds of Israel prophesie and say unto them Thus saith the Lord God unto the Shepherds Wo be to the Shepherds of Israel that do feed themselves should not the Shepherds feed the flock Ye eat the fat and ye cloath you with the Wool ye kill them that are fed but ye feed not the flock The diseased have ye not strengthned neither have ye healed that which was sick neither have ye bound up that which was broken neither have ye brought again that which was driven away neither have ye sought that which was lost but with force and with cruelty have ye ruled them And they were scattered because there is no Shepherd and they became meat to all the beasts of the field when they were scattered My sheep wandred through all the mountains and upon every high hill yea my flock was scattered upon all the face of the earth and none did search or seek after them EZekiel having reproved and threatned the judgements of God against the people for their sins he comes in this Chapter to deal with the Governours and Rulers of them through whose default they became so wicked and suffered the Babylonish yoke In this Chapter are these things considerable 1. A reproof of the Shepherds and judgement threatned against them in the first 10 verses 2. Gods care of and comfortable provision for his flock from the 10. vers to the 23. 3. A sweet Prophesie of Christ and his Kingdom under the figure of David from the 23. vers to the end Vers 1. The Word of the Lord came unto me saying These words we have often had by them the Prophet declares himself to be a true Prophet false ones spake of their own heads they had no word from God they deluded the people with lying words but Ezekiel had a word from God and that word he commended to the people Vers 2. Prophesie against the Shepherds of Israel The Shepherds of Israel were the chief Rulers both Political and Ecclesiastical Princes Magistrates Prophets Priests and Levites Isa 44.28 Cyrus is call'd a Shepherd Zech 11.17 those in the
can weep shed tears in abundance for losse of Relations Estates Favours of great Ones yet never wept for sin these have a natural tenderness not a spirituall Besides what may be gathered from what is said I shall give some Characters of a tender heart First It s sensible of the Churches and Saints afflictions it mourns for and with them a tender heart bleeds when it goes ill with Sion and the people of God When the men of Ai smote but thirty six Israelites how was Joshua affected with it He rent his clothes and fell to the earth upon his face before the Ark of the Lord untill the even tide Josh 7.6 You may read Ps 79. 80. how greatly David or Asaph were affected with the desolation of Jerusalem and miseries befell the Church These were men of tender hearts and sensible of evils at a distance Such was Paul 2 Cor 14.29 and Jeremy whose eyes ran down with tears because the Lords flock was carryed away captive Jer 13.17 Secondly Where an heart hath a gracious and spiritual tenderness it s affected with the perishing condition of others it grieves to see men impenitent unbelieving going on in the broad way to be in a state of irregeneracy and pityes them Rom 9.2 3. Paul had great heaviness and continual sorrow in his heart and why for his brethren and kinsmen according to the flesh they rejected Christ and his Gospel through unbelief and hardnesse of heart they were in the broad way to destruction Christ seeing Jerusalem insensible of her own good he wept over her Luke 19.41 And in former times Jeremy had manifested the tenderness of his heart toward the Jews when he said unto them thus Hear ye and g●ve ear be not proud for the Lord hath spoken Give glory to the Lord your God before he cause darknesse and before your feet stumble upon the dark mountains and while ye look for light he turn it into the shadow of death and make it grosse darknesse but if ye will not hear it my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride Jer 13.15 16 17. Thirdly A tender heart dare not go out from God in any case but commits it self and way to him it consults with God and leans upon him for counsel and direction Josiah when the Law was found and he understood from it what wrath was due to the breach of it presently sends men to enquire of the Lord for himself and others what to do he took counsel of God and not of man 2 Chron 34.21 So Jehoshaphat he sought not to Baalim but to the Lord God of his fathers and David made Gods Testimonyes his Counsellers Psal 119.24 Hard hearts dare presume and venture to go out from God and into wayes he hath not warranted so did Gehazi Judas and Demas they followed the imaginations of their own hearts and declared that their hearts were Brasse Those that have hearts of flesh say with them in Isa 2.3 Come let us go up to the mountain of the Lord to the house of the God of Jacob and he will teach us of his wayes and we will walk in his paths not in our own Fourthly It s affected presently at the frowns and chidings of God at the appearance and shaking of the Rod. A child of a tender nature will melt when the Parent begins to manifest displeasure as to chide or take the Rod into his hand but it s not so with a stubborn nature that will hear bitter words and endure many stroaks before it will melt Jer 5.3 Thou hast stricken them but they have not grieved thou hast consumed them but they have refused to receive correction they have made their faces harder then a rock they have refused to return These had no tender hearts in them When Absolom had driven David out of Jerusalem he went up mount Olivet weeping He was presently affected with the hand of God 2 Sam 15.30 Moses was presently affected with the wrath that went out from God against the people Numb 16.46 Fifthly A tender heart feels much stoninesse in it self and complains of it O what a stony rocky Adamantine heart have I saith a tender hearted man its tendernesse discovers and feels hardnesse Eph 4.19 They were hardned in sin were past feeling Where hearts are all stone there is no sensibleness of the stonyness those have the tenderest hearts that feel most Brass and Iron in them David cryed oft to God for quickning Psal 119.154 156 159. Quicken me according to thy Word Quicken me according to thy judgements Quicken me according to thy loving kindnesse And why did he cry so for quickning because he felt much deadness and hardness in his heart A dead heart is an hard heart A man when dead is cold stiff and hard so a mans heart if dead within him is cold stiff and stony How may the heart be kept tender First By taking heed of every sin for its only sin that hardens the heart as the foot by treading hardens the earth so when sin walks up and down in the heart it hardens and obdurates the same Dan 5.20 Nebuchadnezzars mind was hardned in pride and the Apostle tells you Heb 3.13 That mens hearts come to be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sin Men think little sins can do them little harm but they harden their hearts and is that no harm is that little harm its the greatest harm can be done you Secondly By searching and examining of your hearts frequently that is a special means to keep them tender it s like digging of the Garden and ploughing of the Earth which keeps it from hardning the more digging and ploughing the more tender and crumbly is the earth that is the chiefest way to preserve it so and they who are ever searching their hearts examining them daily have them in a tender frame David communed oft with his own heart and his spirit made diligent search Psal 77.6 That kept his heart in a tender frame Thirdly By studying the word much and minding it there is great virtue in the word it 's like fire and will not only thaw the icyness of their hearts but keep them unfrozen the hardest mettals while they are in the Fire are soft and whilest mens hearts are in the Divine fire of the Scriptures they will be soft The Word is like Water and Oyl which moisten and supple the heart so that the tendernesse of it is preserved Fourthly By meditating seriously on Gods love the heigths depths lengths and breadths of his love When a soul is taken up with thoughts of the freeness greatness strength sweetness everlastingness and fruits of Gods love it will be in a melting frame that fire works kindly upon the heart love apprehended makes the heart tender Fifthly Look much to Christ crucified Zech 12.10 When we consider what Christ hath suffered for our sakes it will make and keep our hearts tender First Observe A tender heart is a choice mercy As a stony
breath so that they lived stood up and were full of vigour When God accompanies his Word it is a Creating-word an Inlivening-word yea and a Killing-word Ezek 11.14 It came to passe when I Prophesied that Pelatiah died It 's said of Elisha that he should slay those escaped the sword of Hazael and Jehu 1 King 19.7 But how should that be for he was no sword-man it was to be done by his Prophesying which was sharper then their Swords Fifthly Observe In the Resurrection men shall have their own bodies and souls again This Vision of the dry bones is by the Fathers and others held to be a lively representation of the Resurrection And see here the bones came together bone unto his bone the same bones which were united before were united again in this Resurrection and the sinews the flesh the skin belonged to them formerly the same came and covered them again so the same souls the same breath came and entred into them and they lived The Father had not the soul or body of the Son or the Daughter the soul or body of the Mother but every one had their own bodies and souls Job was of this faith saying Though after my skin wormes destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God Whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold Job 19.26 27. Sixthly Observe The souls of men do no sleep with their bodies in the dust nor vanish into nothing The Prophet calls for the soul of every body here to come from the four winds that is from those parts where they were Had they been in the bones or dust of the earth or vanished into nothing the Lord would not have directed the Prophet to have call'd for them from all parts of the world Verse 11. Then he said unto me Son of man these bones are the whole house of Israel behold they say Our bones are dryed and our hope is lost we are cut off for our parts 12. Therefore prophesie and say unto them Thus saith the Lord God Behold O my people I will open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves and bring you into the land of Israel 13. And ye shall know that I am the Lord when I have opened your graves O my people and brought you up out of your graves 14. And shall put my Spirit in you and ye shall live and I shall place you in your own land then shall ye know that I the Lord have spoken it and performed it saith the Lord. The Vision being related to the Prophet here Application of it is made by God himself to the house of Israel And here we may consider 1. The Complaint of the house of Israel ver 11. 2. Gods gracious Promises unto the house of Israel ver 12 14 3. The event or sequel thereof ver 13 14. Verse 11. These bones are the whole house of Israel The Bones themselves were not the house of Israel but they signified and represented the Condition of the house of Israel which being captive in Babylon were like unto the dry Bones in the open Valley To insist a little upon the Resemblance between them 1. The Bones were many very many the Valley was full of bones when they were quickned they made a great Army So were the Jews in the Valley of Babylon they were very many Those came out with Zerubbabel and Nehemiah were 49897. or Fifty thousand wanting One hundred and three Exra 2.64 65. Besides those that came with Ezra afterward Chap. 8. And many there were which never returned In those 70. years they were in Babylon they multipled into a great number 2. The Bones were without skin flesh and sinews the Worms Fowls or Wild beasts had eaten up them So the Jews were stript of Wealth and Substance the Babylonians had eaten up that Lament 1.10 The adversary hath spread out his hand upon all her pl●asant ●hings whatsoever Jerusalem had desirable the Babylonians laid their hands upon And ver 11. All her people sigh they seek bread they have given their pleasant things for meat to relieve the soul The Chaldaeans dealt hardly with them in the time of their Captivity Jerem. 50.17 33. They broke their bones they held them fast and wearyed them with burdens and Taxes they flea'd off their skins eat their flesh and suckt their bloud 3. The Bones were disjoynted and separated from their places one here another there So the Jews were rent from their Habitations and Countrey and were scattered all over Babylon Ezek. 34 6. My flock was scattered upon all the face of the earth that is chiefly the Babylonish earth They were forced out of Sion and dispersed into all parts of Babylon This made Jeremiah to say Chap. 50.17 Israel is a scattered sheep The Princes the Nobles the Priests the Prophets and the People were all scattered one from another the Bones of that Common wealth were pulled all asunder and thrown into several places 4. The Bones were dry yea very dry they had no moysture or Marrow in them Such was the house of Israel being in the furnace of Babylon Their long Captivity with the evils attending it had dryed up their moysture and marrow They wanted the Milk and Honey they had in Canaan for their bodies and the Manna they had for their souls they were without a Temple the Ordinances of it so that not only their bodies but their souls also were as dry bones for they said They were without hope 5. The Bones being uncovered lay exposed to the reproach and injury of any foot that passed by them And the Jews the time of their being in Babylon were exposed to scorns and injuries from all sorts Ezek 36.14 15 30. Lam. 5.1 Psal 137.3 The whole house of Israel was a derision and scorn to the Babylonians Behold they say Our bones are dryed This speech Our bones are dryed is Proverbial and notes a most miserable and forlorn condition such as those dry bones lay in so far off were they from life that the Prophet could not see a possibility thereof The Jews in Babylon were in such a condition they saw no possibility of their returning Captivitas est mors civilis Captivity and Servitude under enemies is a civil death such men are like those are dead and their bones dryed And our hope is lost Hope is the Element by which the afflicted live the Anchor of the soul in a storm the bladder keeps up a man from sinking when in deep waters and upholds a man in life when death knocks at the door but these Jews had lost their hope and were at the brink of despair they said We hoped a long time to return to our own land but we were deceived here we are held fast Jer. 50.33 Let who will hope to see Canaan again our hope that way is dead and in Babylon we must die We are cut off for our parts This is a Proverbial and Metaphorical expression taken either
whereas the Rock did only signifie Christ So Gen. 41.26 The seven good kine are seven years and the seven blasted ears are seven years none of these were years but all of them signifie so many years So Dan. 4.22 The tree which Nebuchadnezzar saw whose top reached to heaven and branches to the ends of the earth is said to be Nebuchadnezzar himself It is thou O King that is it signified him it was not him himself The Papists trouble the world with their absurd sense of those words Mat. 26.26 28. This is my body and this is my bloud they will have them to be taken literally and make us lose our senses that we may believe the Bread and Wine are the very flesh and bloud of Christ but we neither see nor tast any such thing only we believe that they represent the same unto us and are to convey the fruit and benefit of Christs death unto us Thirdly Observe Gods people are sometimes brought into great streights and exigents they know not what to do they are heartless and hopeless Our bones are dryed our hope is lost we are cut off for our parts They saw nothing but destruction before them they saw no possibility of escaping they thought their condition desperate Such was Josephs condition when his Brethren cast him into a pit Gen. 37.24 Such was the Israelites condition at the Red-sea when the Egyptians were behind them the Sea before them and no door of hope left unto them Exod. 14. their hope was gone and nothing but death presented it self unto them ver 11. when the Anchor of hope is broken men are in a Sea of troubles tossed up and down ready to sink every moment Job himself was somtime in this case Chap. 7.6 My dayes are swifter then a Weavers shuttle and are spent without hope he had neither hope of restauration to his former condition nor of continuance of his life he looked only to make the grave his house and darkness his bed Chap. 17.13 14 15. His hope was gone and he thought he must go to corruption and the worms Fourthly Observe When men are in great Afflictions they manifest great weakness These Jews being in such an afflicted condition they forgot what Promises God had made to them of Returning after 70 years Jer. 25.12 13. Chap. 29.10 They minded not Gods Power or Faithfulness but said We are cut off for our part God hath cut us off from our Land and cast us into this Furnace of Babylon where we shall be consumed When Saul hunted David like a Partridge upon the Mountains and his life was in Jeopardy Did he not say in his heart I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul 1 Sam. 27 1. Here he manifested his weakness greatly God had told him he should be King and sent Samuel to annoint him Chap. 16. but he forgot this and gave way to the reasonings of flesh Jeremiah being in a suffering condition scorn'd and defam'd by the People he resolves to cast aside his Commission and speak no more in the name of the Lord he curses the day of his Nativity and the man brought tidings of his Birth wishes He had slain him from the womb or that the womb had been his grave c. thus did he declare his infirmities Chap. 20.8 9 15 16 17. not considering what God had promised him Chap. 1.5 8 9 17 18 19. The like did Job Fifthly Observe There be states of men in this life which do resemble the dead and they are two especially both which are here held forth 1. The state of great and long Afflictions These Jews in their Captivity are likened unto dry bones men in their graves This made Jeremiah say Lament 3.6 He hath set me in dark places as they that be dead of old The state of Death is a state of Darkness and so is the state of Affliction Isa 59.10 We grope for the wall like the blind and we grope as if we had no eyes we stumble at noon day as in the night we are in desolate places as dead men They were in deep Affliction and destitute of all Counsel they saw no way or means how to get out of the same David being under great Calamities goes further and shews you that such a state is not only a state of Darkness but of Consumption of being Forgotten and Broken Psal 31.9 12. I am in trouble mine eye is consumed with grief yea my soul and my belly I am forgotten as a dead man out of mind I am like a broken vessel So Psal 44.19 Thou hast sore broken us in the place of Dragons and covered us with the shadow of death He calls great Afflictions the place of Dragons because they sting bite and indanger a mans life the shadow of death death is very near and overshadows the man is in them his grace is designing and he is ready to be put thereinto This consideration made Heman say his soul being full of troubles My life draweth nigh unto the grave I am counted with them that go down into the pit I am as a man that hath no strength free among the dead like the slain that lie in the grave whom thou remembrest no more and they are cut off from thy hand thou hast laid me in the lowest pit in darkness in the deeps He shews you clearly that great Afflictions especially Soul●●fflictions are a state of Death 2. The state of Sin which these Jews were in for it 's said I will put my Spirit into you and ye shall live At that time they were dead being in an unregenerate estate Men being in their sins are no better then in a state of death They are in Darkness ignorant of Christ the Gospel and Mysteries thereof Ephes 5.8 They are in bondage to their Lusts and to Satan 2 Pet. 2.19 Rom. 6.16 2 Tim. 2.26 Joh. 8.44 They are senseless eyes they have and see not ears and hear not hearts and understand not Matth. 13.14 15. They have hearts of stone and are past feeling Ephes 4.18 19. They are corrupt and unsavory Ephes 4.22 Rom. 3.13 This is the condition of sinners which the Gospel accounts and calls A state of Death Mat. 8.22 Joh 5.25 Ephes 2.5 Col. 2.13 Sixthly Observe God is afflicted with the afflictions and sufferings of his people O my people you are in your graves here in Babylon you are afflicted reproached oppressed but I am sensible thereof and do sympathize with you in that condition not a word is spoken against you not an unjust act done unto you but I hear I feel the same The words are twice mentioned O my people O my people in the 12. and 13. verses to shew the Lord was much affected with their calamities and languishing condition When the Jews were in Egypt that house of Bondage and in the Wilderness they were like men in their graves oft covered with the shadow of death and Did not God pity them Psal 106.44 He regarded th ir
verse Prophesies of Gogs invading the Mountains of Israel the destruction of Gog and the time of both After many dayes thou shalt be visited The Scripture speaks of a double Visitation 1. One in Mercy and Favour as Exod. 4.31 When Moses and Aaron were sent to deliver the Jews out of Egypt and when Sarah conceived and bare Isaac Genes 21.1 These were Gods merciful Visitations of them 2. One in Judgement as Numb 16.29 If these men viz. Corah Dathan and Abiram be visited after the Visitation of all men that is they shall not die a common death have a common judgement but some extraordinary punishment So Psal 89.32 I will visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with stripes I will punish them This is the sense here After many dayes thou shalt be visited that is punished The time when it should be is not punctually but indefinitely set down after many dayes If we take Antiochus to be Gog in the Type it was in the Macchabees dayes if we look at the Anritype the time is yet to come In the latter years thou shalt come into the land From the time of this Prophesie unto the death of Antiochus Epiphanes Chronologie tells us there were 420 or 430 years whe eupon Expositors do account the years that he came to Judea and took Jerusalem and defiled the Temple with Idols to be the latter years Junius saith Consequentibus annis In the following years Piscator hath it Posteri●ribus diebus In the after dayes or times Posterioribus annis In the after or latter years in the time of Christ saith Vatablus The Hebrew is Beacharith Hashshanim which Montanus and the Vulgar render in Novissima annorum In the last of years which according to John is after the 1000 years Rev. 20.6 7 8. And so Mariano he makes the Visitation of Gog to be In fine mundi post mille annos In the end of the World after the thousand years Then shall Gog come into the land compass the camp of the Saints about and the beloved City ver 9. That is brought back from the sword and is gathered out of many people The Jews were driven by the sword into Captivity by it scattered into many Provinces and held under slavery and so they are at this day but the time is coming that the two Houses as well as the two Tribes shall be brought back from the sword and gathered out of many people Land is put for The Inhabitants of the Land Against the mountains of Israel The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Al signifies ad super contra to upon against Some therefore render these words to or upon the mountains of Israel and in that sense they refer to the Jews who were brought back and gathered out of all people to the Mountains of Israel that is the Land of Judaea We read them Against the mountains of Israel and so they refer to Gog who should come against Judaea Which have been alwayes waste The Hebrew word for alwayes is Tamid which signifies diu a long time and so the French Translation hath it Longuement desertes Deserted or wasted for a long time 70 years were they desolate all the time the Jews were in captivity and shortly after Christ his dayes were they left desolate and are so to this day Some make the mountains of Israel to signifie The Church the sword and wastings to be the Persecutions which it hath alwayes indured But it is brought forth out of the nations By it the Prophet means the Land and by Land the People who being 〈◊〉 into Egypt Babylon Persia and other places were to be brought forth to the Land of Israel The words import the thing done because of the certainty of it And they shall dwell safely all of them When the Jews returned out of Babylon repossessing their own Land they dwelt safely confidently without fear or disquietment therein for 430 years saith Sanctius after which time Antiochus did sorely vex them and interrupt their peace which they thought would be everlasting So did Demetrius Nicanor and others as in the Macchabees is evident The time remains for the compleat fulfilling of these words First Observe God bears sometimes with the worst of men a long time After many dayes God bears with Gog and Antichrist the grand enemies of his Church worser than whom cannot be found or expected His patience is large he is a God long-suffering He bare with Antiochus that vile person Dan. 11.21 many dayes Vessels of wrath are indured by Him with much long-suffering Rom. 9.22 Secondly Observe Though wicked men be spared long yet at last they shall suffer After many dayes thou shalt be visited God may stay a thousand yea 10000 dayes and then visit As there is a time for wicked men to fill up the measure of their iniquities so there is a time for God to fill up the Vials of his wrath and when they are once full then they shall be poured out God sometimes is long before he hears the Prayers of his but at length he remembers them Luk. 18.7 8. and sometimes he is long before he punisheth the wicked but at last he visits them he hath his time for it Jer. 49.8 Vers 9. Thou shalt ascend and come like a Storm thou shalt be like a Cloud to cover the Land thou and all thy Bands and many People with thee THe manner of Gogs proceeding is here set down and that 1. Under the similitude of a Storm 2. Under the similitude of a Cloud Thou shalt ascend and come like a Storm A Storm comes suddenly violently with noise and doth much hurt breaking and bearing down all before it such should the coming of Gog be Dan. 11.40 41. it 's said The King of the North shall come against the King of the South like a Whirlewinde he shall enter also into the glorious Land and many Countreys shall be overthrown This is spoken of Antiochus whom divers Expositors make to be Gog. The word Shoah for a Storm is from Shuah which signifies to make a noise to spoil and to amaze and so do Storms Thou shalt be like a Cloud to cover the Land thou and all c. Clouds are Vapours drawn up by the heat of the Sun into the middle Region of the Air where by the Cold they are condensated and so spreading make the Heavens black and intercept the Light Gog with his Forces should be as a Cloud spreading over the face of the Land interrupting the peace and comforts of the Godly and by his hostile acts cause fear sorrow and mourning By these two Metaphors are set out the tumult violence spoyl and multitude of Gogs Army or by the Storm their threats and cruelty and by the Cloud false Opinions flatteries and allurements which they should use to pervert the faith of the Saints First Observ The Church and people of God are subject to calamimities He shall come like a Storm Windes clouds storms do trouble and
base ones but the chiefest and so drink their bloud Of Rams of Lambs and of Goats of Bullucks all of them Fatlings of Bashan By these Metaphorical expressions are set out the dead carkasses of men who were of several dispositions and qualities some were like Rams and Lambs others like Goats and Bullocks some were sweeter and more tender flesh then others Rams and Goats or great Goats as the Hebrew word signifies were Leaders Lambs and Bullocks were those under the Leaders All of them were well flesh'd and fat like the Kine of Bashan Bashan was an high Hill Psal 68.15 beyond Jordan which yielded strong Oaks and fat Cattle Ezek. 27.6 Amos 4.1 Vers 19. And ye shall eat Fat till ye be full and drink c. The Fowls of Heaven and Beasts of the Field are resembled unto Men at a F●●st where having meat and drink which likes them 〈◊〉 eat and drink plentifully The fat flesh and bloud of men is sweet and so pleasing to Fowls and Beasts which should cram and fill themselves therewith Vers 20. Thus ye shall be filled at my Table The word for Table is Shulcan from Shalach to send because it 's sent out or extended at length so that it may contain many dishes and guests may sit down thereat to feed upon those dishes The Mountains of Israel were the Table here the Carkasses of Men were the Dishes the Fowls of Heaven and Beasts of the Field the guests Such plenty and variety of dishes they should have as had not been seen at any Table before every Guest should be fill'd With Horses and Chariots with Mighty Men and all Men of Warr. In the Hebrew it is With Horse with Chariot with Mighty Man and all Man of War all singulars put for plurals here is declared who are meant by Rams Lambs Goats and Bullocks in the 18. verse Horse-men Chariot-men Men of Might yea all Men of Warr. Saith the Lord. Lest it should be thought an incredible thing the Lord ratifies it saying Thus saith the Lord God Jehovah who is able to make such preparations for the Fowls of Heaven and Beasts of the Earth hath said it and will do it First Observe That all Creatures are at the command of God and ordered to do this or that according to his wise Providence Speak to every feathered Fowl and to every Beast of the Field Were not these creatures at the beck of the Lord and subject to his over-ruling Providence it had been in vain for Ezekiel to have spoken so unto them In the 1 King 17.4 God commanded the Ravens to feed Elijah and they did come and bring him meat Morning and Evening duly v. 6. Psal 50.11 It 's said God knows all the Fowls of the Mountains and he calls them to what service he pleases He call'd tor Quails to satisfie the lustings of the Israelites Numb 11.31 God asked Job the question Whether the Eagle moun-fed up at his command Job 39.27 implying that though man hath no command over the Fowls of Heaven yet himself hath And so over Fishes and Beasts Jon. 1.17 Chap. 2.10 The Whale came and went at Gods command and did the service he appointed Levit 26.22 I will send wild Beasts amongst you which shall rob you of your children And this he did 2 King 2.24 The Lord caused two shee-Bears to come out of the Wood and destroy 42. of their children God is the Lord of Hosts and can command an Army of Creatures at his pleasure to benefit his Servants or to plague their Enemies Secondly Observe God doth execute some great and signal Judgement when he summons the Creatures to eat the Flesh and drink the Bloud of the Slain Oft-times the Bodies of Jews and Gentiles have been given for meat unto the Fowls and Beasts as Jer. 7 33. and Chap. 34.20 Ezek. 29.5 But they have not been summon'd and call'd by open Proclamation as here it is The Prophet must speak to every feathered Fowl and to every Beast of the Field and say Assemble your selves and come Gather your selves on every side Such a Proclamation you have but twice more in all the Scripture once in Jer. 12.9 Come ye assemble all the Beasts of the Field come to devour he speaks of that great destruction of the Jews by Nebuchadnezzar The other place is Rev. 19.17 I saw an Angel standing in the Sun and he cryed with a loud voyce saying to all the Fowls that flie in the midst of Heaven Come and gather your selves together to the great Supper of the great God that ye may eat the flesh of Kings and the flesh of Captains and the fl sh of Mighty Men and the flesh of Horses and of them that sit on them and the flesh of all men both free and bond both small and great This place runs parallel with Ezekiel and sets out the greatness and signalness of Gods Judgements upon the Enemies of the Church And it 's conceiv'd by some to be the very same Judgement Ezekiel speaks of viz. that of Gog and Magog Thirdly Observe It 's matter of delight and pleasure unto God to destroy the Enemies of his Church and People Come to my Sacrifice that I do sacrifice for you The Jews took great pleasure in sacrificing of Creatures unto God 1 Chron. 29.21 22. And God was well pleased with Sacrifices Gen. 8.20 21. Here he calls the destroying of Gog and Magog his Sacrifice his Feast or Table he took as much delight in their slaughter as in any Sacrifice or in any Feast Wicked men are Bryers and Thorns and God hath as much pleasure in the cutting down the one as the Husbandman hath in cutting down the other God delights in acts of Judgement as well as in acts of Mercy Isa 48.14 He will do his pleasure on Babylon and his arm shall be on the Chaldaeans The destruction of Babylonians and Chaldaeans God calls His pleasure the Hebrew is Chephzo Voluntatem ejus his will It 's Gods will to destroy all the Enemies of Sion and the doing of it pleases him Fourthly Observe God is impartial in his Judicial Dispensations he punisheth the great Delinquents as well as the lesser Mighty men Princes those that ride in Chariots Rams great Goats are slaughtered and given to the Fowls and Beasts aswell as the inferior sort the men of War Lambs and Bullocks They were all in the same confederacy in the same warr against the Land of Israel and God winked not at the greatest nor spared the meanest but made them all a Sacrifice God is a righteous God and executes his judgements without respect of persons Let not great men flatter themselves they will not be exempted when God comes forth to judgement though they be Princes Fifthly Observe Great men and vulgar ones also may be a prey to the Creatures and lye without burial for a season Princes Mighty men and others after their death lay upon the Mountains of Israel and had their flesh eaten and bloud drunk by Fowls and
Beasts which was another judgement added to the former and the greater to the Heathen because they thought their souls did wander up and down upon the Earth nisi corpora fuissent humata as Tertullian saith The Athenians had the buryal of the dead in such honour that if a Captain neglected to bury the dead which fell in warr they punished him with death for it It is a great ignominy to lye unburyed Hence the Beast when the Witnesses were kill'd would not suffer their bodies to be buryed but let them lye in the Streets that so they might be the more ignominious Sixthly Observe God provides for the brute and dumb Creatures and that abundantly Every feathered Fowl and every Beast of the Fi●ld shall be filled at my Table God doth not only feed the Creatures but sometimes feasts them This World is Gods Family whercin are millions of living Creatures and not one of them is neglected of God Psal 145.15 16. The Eyes of all wait upon thee and thou givest them their meat in due season they have their Break-fast Dinner and Supper and lest we should conceit one hath too much another too little it follows Thou openest thy hand and satisfiest the desire of every living thing he satisfies the Fishes of the Sea the Beasts of the Earth and Fowls of Heaven How should this teach men to depend upon God not giving way to distrust or discontent Matth. 6.26 Behold the Fowls of the Air saith Christ for they sow not neither do they reap nor gather into Barns yet their heavenly Father feedeth them Are ye not much better then they He saith not the Fowls of the House they are cared for but The Fowls of the Air that have none to look after them unless it be Fowlers to take away their lives neither do they know where to get the next meal when they have gotten one nor what hole or bush to lodge in at night yet their heavenly Father provides for and feeds them Does he take care of such Creatures and will he not take care of you Yes certainly he will and why ye are better then they ye are rational they irrational ye are his sons they his servants Vers 21 22. 21. And I will set my Glory among the Heathen and all the Heathen shall see my Judgement that I have executed and my Hand that I have laid upon them 22. So the House of Israel shall know that I am the Lord their God from that day and forward THe Lord having declared what destructive judgements he would bring upon Gog and Magog he comes here to make known the end of his so dealing with them viz. the manifestation of his glory amongst Heathens and his own People Vers 21. I will set my Glory among the Heathen I will give my Glory saith the Hebrew that is I will cause it to be evident amongst them By Glory understand the glory of his Justice and Power All the Heathen shall see my Judgement that I have executed These words give light to the former The Heathen seeing the dreadful judgements of God upon Gog and his should acknowledge the Justice and Power of God And my Hand that I have laid upon them They shall not only have a bare sight but experimental knowledg they shall find themselves concern'd therein and feel the hand of God heavy upon them for the strength wealth liberty and glory of the Heathen will be much impaired if not totally ruin'd by the overthrow of Gog. Vers 22. So that the House of Israel shall know that I am c. They did know the Lord to be their God before but this signal stroke of God upon their Enemies being a signal mercy unto them should so ingage them unto God that from that time forward they should afresh and eminently acknowledge God to be their God and none to be like unto him that he will not desert them in their streights but be their Deliverer First Observe The great end of Gods judgements upon sinful men is his Glory I will set my glory among the Heathens and all the Heathen shall see my judgement c. God doth therefore execute judgement that he may be glorified When sinful people will not give glory to God for his Mercies he will fetch glory out of them by his Judgements They are the work of his hand and what ever that be it 's honourable and glorious Psal 111.3 Not only his works of Creation but those of Judicial Providence Upon what Nation soever Army or Navy the Lord shall lay his hand he will work out his glory thereby that is the end of all his works and judgements Secondly Obsérve Dreadful judgements upon the wicked are ingaging mercies unto the godly So shall the h●use of Israel know that I am the Lord their God from that day and forward The hand of God upon Gog and his should so affect their hearts that they should experimentally know and say The Lord is our God he hath laid low our enemies he hath freed us from their Insultations Threats Oppressions he is our Deliverer our Saviour our Redeemer Isai 25.9 It shall be said in that day Lo this is our God we have waited for him and he will save us This is the Lord we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation When God executed severe judgements upon the enemies of his people then were their hearts thus affected and engaged unto the Lord then they rejoyced in God their Saviour and said He will save He hath saved us and he will save us When the godly see that great judgements upon their enemies are great mercies unto them their faith is advanced thereby and they are perswaded God will never leave them their hearts are warmed and they cannot but own and praise him Vers 23 24. 23. And the heathen shall know that the house of Israel went into captivity for their iniquity because they trespassed against me therefore hid I my face from them and gave them into the hand of their enemies so fell they all by the sword 24. According to their uncleanness and according to their transgressions have I done unto them and hid my face from them THe Heathen had base and blasphemous thoughts of God they imagined he was not able to keep his people out of the hands of Nebuchadnezzar and his gods to vindicate himself therefore the Lord tells them the true cause why they were carried into Captivity namely for their iniquity It was not Impotencie in God but Iniquity in them which caused it 23. The house of Israel went into captivity for their Iniquity The Hebrew is the house of Israel were led into Captivity in their Iniquities God took them in their Iniquities and carried them away into Captivity in them or for them Boavonam the Septuagint saies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for their sins their crooked and perverse doings Because they trespassed against me The word Magnal or Maal signifies Stubbornly and Contemptuously