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

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Burla and the Arabik al Belor On two of these stones the names of the twelve Tribes were graven and borne on the high Priests shoulders Exod. 28. 9. 10. see the notes there Vers. 13. Gihon in Greeke Geon a river about the land of Cush There was also another river Gihon in Canaan neere Ierusalem whereof see 2 Chron. 32. 30. Cush the sonne of Cham the sonne of Noe Gen. 10. 6. whose posterity in these parts of the world are called Aethiopians and so the Greeke here translateth Ethiopia Vers. 14. Hiddekel The signification of this word is of sharpnesse and lightnesse for it was a swift running river The Greeke translateth it Tigris the Tigre which is the name of a beast very light of foot as Pliny sheweth in b. 8. chap. 18. Tigris also in the Medes and Persian tongue signifieth an arrow saith Pliny b. 6. ch 27. and Q. Curtius b. 4. speaking of this violent River By it Daniel saw visions of God Dan. 10. 4. The Chaldee calleth it Diglat whereupon the Latines also named it Diglato Pliny in b. 6. ch 27. Assyria in Hebrew Assur he was the sonne of Sem the sonne of Noe Gen. 10. 22. of whom his country was called Assyria famous through all the Scripture which usually nameth countries and posterities by the names of the first inhabitants and parents See the notes on Gen. 12. 10. and 19. 37. is Euphrates Hebr. it is Phrath which river the new Testament calleth Euphrates Rev. 9. 14. It hath the name of Encrease for the waters thereof waxe mighty by snow melting from the mounts of Armenia and doe make the country fruitfull This is called the great river Deut. 1. 7. and 11. 24. Rev. 9. 14. Vers. 15. garden in Greeke paradise to till or dresse the Greeke saith to labour it The Hebrew Doctors apply this mystically to Adams labour in and keeping of Gods law Pirke R. Eliezer chap. 12. And that the morall law and work therof was written in his heart is manifest seeing the same yet remaineth in the corrupted harts of men Rom. 2. 14. 15. Vers. 16. commanded Besides the law of nature graven on Adams heart whereby hee was bound to love honour and obey his Creator God here giveth him for a triall of his love a significative law concerning a thing of it selfe indifferent but at the pleasure of God made unlawfull and evill for man to doe that by observing this outward rite hee might testifie his willing obedience unto the Lord. See 1 Sam. 15. 22. 23. eating thou maist eat that is maist or shalt freely eat thus God first sheweth his love and liberality before he makes any restraint The doubling of words is often used in Scripture for more earnestnesse and assurance and in things to come for to signifie speedy performance Gen. 41. 32. Sometime God altereth this manner of speaking into other the like as 2 King 14. 10. smiting thou hast smitten for which in 2 Chron. 25. 19. is written thou saist loe I have smitten So Building I have builded 1 King 8. 13. or as in 2 Chron. 6. 2. and I I have builded Sometime the doubling of the word is omitted as hath any delivering delivered 2 King 18. 33. which another Prophet writeth thus hath any delivered Esay 36. 18. In translating also God useth sometimes the phrase which we follow here as in Heb. 6. 14. blessing I will blesse thee and multiplying I will multiply thee translated into Greeke from Gen. 22. 16. Seeing I have seene Act. 7. 34. from Exod. 3. 7. Sometime otherwise as shot through with darts Heb. 12. 20. for that which is in Hebrew shooting shot through Exod. 19. 13. Vers. 17. But of Heb. And of and is often used for but so translated in the Greeke version Esay 10. 20. and by the holy Ghost in the New Testament as 1 Pet. 1. 25. from Esay 40. 8. Heb. 1. 11. 12 from Psal. 102. 27. 28. So here againe in vers 20. and in Gen. 3. 3. and 42. 10. and in many other places 〈◊〉 thou maist not or thou shalt not eat This law was given both to the man and woman which were both called Adam Gen. 5. 2. and the woman confesseth so much Gen. 3. 3. and the Greeke version here manifesteth it saying yee shall not eat dying thou shalt dye that is shalt surely and soone dye or as the Greeke translateth ye shall dye the death Vnder the name of Death the Scripture comprehendeth deadly plagues as the punishment of Aegypt with Locusts is called a death Exodus 10. 17. Also inward astonishments feares c. as Nabals heart died in him 1 Sam. 25. 37. Likewise outward deadly dangers and miseries as Paul was in deaths oft 2 Cor. 11. 23. It is also used for death in sinne when men are alienated from the life of God Ephes. 2. 1. and 4. 18. And for the dissolution of mans soule and body which we commonly call death when the soule or spirit goeth out of the man Gen. 35. 18. Psal. 146. 4. And finally death is the perdition of body and soule in hell which is eternall perdition from the presence of the Lord and called the second death Mat. 10. 28. 2 Thessal 1. 9. Rev. 20. 6. 14. These and whatsoever else mortality misery death the Scriptures mention are implyed in this iudgement here threatned upon disobedience Rom. 5. 12. beside miserable bondage under him which hath the power of death that is the devil Heb. 2. 14. 15. On the contrary here is implyed upon condition of his obedience the promise of eternall life whereof the tree of life was a signe Gen. 3. 22. So Paul opposeth death as the wages of sinne and eternall life as the gift of God which now since mans fall is onely by Christ who giveth us to eat of the tree of life Rom. 6. 23. Rev. 2. 7. The Hebrew Doctors also say After the opinion of our Rabbines of blessed memory if Adam had not sinned he had never died but the breath which he was inspired with of the most high blessed God should have given him life for ever and the good will of God which he had in the time of his creation had cleaved unto him continually and kept him alive for ever R. Menachem on Gen. 2. 17. Vers. 18. himselfe alone or alone as the Greeke translateth it so 1 King 19. 10. I am left my selfe alone for which Paul saith I am left alone Rom. 11. 3 God who made other creatures male and female together did not so in mankind which Paul observeth saying Adam was first formed then Eve 1 Tim. 2. 13. making it one reason of the womans subjection as before him the Greeke here translateth it according to him and in the 20. verse like unto him meaning one that should be as his second selfe like him in nature knit unto him in love needfull for procreation of seed helpfull in all duties present alwayes with him and so very meet and commodious for him The Apostle hence
things under the Sun are vanity and vexation of spirit from mans birth to his dying day Ecclesiastes 1. 2. 3. 14. and 12. 7. 8. and an heavenly heritage is to bee sought for immortall and which fadeth not 2 Peter 1. 4. Of ground cursed there followeth barrennesse or unprofitable fruits and desolation Genesis 4. 12. and 3. 18. Esay 24. 6. and the end is to bee burned Hebrews 6. 8. So the earth and the workes therein shall bee burnt up 2 Pet. 3. 10. And as for mans sake this world is cursed and the creature made subject to vanity so it earnestly expecteth the manifestation of the sonnes of God that it may be delivered from the bondage of corruption Rom. 8. 19. 20. 21. in sorrow with painfull labour as Prov. 5. 10. Hereupon the Scripture mentioneth our bread of sorrowes Psal. 127. 2. Adam was to have labored in his innocency Gen. 2. 15. but without sorrow being under the Lords blessing which maketh rich and hee addeth no sorrow with it Prov. 10. 22. Concerning this sorrow or toyle of our hands Noe the figure of Christ was a comforter Gen. 5. 29. Vers. 18. thornes Heb. the thorne Hereby is meant harmfull weeds in stead of wholesome fruits Iob 31 40. Ier. 12. 13. for men of thistles doe not gather figs Mat. 7. 16. Thornes doe choak the good corne as Mat. 13. 7. And spiritually these signifie evill fruits which wicked earthly men bring forth Heb. 6. 8. of the field and so no longer the pleasant fruits of Paradise Gen. 2. 9. 16. But as Nebuchadnezar when he had a beasts heart was driven out among beasts to eat grasse as the oxen Dan. 4. 13. 22. so man not lodging a night in honour nor understanding but becomming like beasts that perish is to eat herbes with them Psal. 49. 13. 21. but by the labour of his hands his diet is bettered Vers. 19. sweat with much labour which Adam and all his posterity was condemned unto that this is a generall rule if any will not worke neither should he eate 2 Thess. 3. 10. The sweat of the face though it is to be distinguished from the care of the 〈…〉 d which Christ forbiddeth Mat. 6. 25. 34. yet it doth imply all lawfull labours and industry of body and mind for the good of both Eph. 4. 28. Mat. 10. 10. 1 Cor. 9. 14. so that the giving of the heart also to seeke and search our things by wisedome is a sore occupation which God hath given to the sonnes of Adam to be occupied therein and humbled thereby Eccles. 1. 13. bread that is all food whereof bread is the principall as that which upholds the heart of man Psal. 104. 15. Therefore that which one Evangelist calleth bread Mar. 6. 36 another calleth victuals or meats Mat. 14. 15. the ground or the earth called elsewhere our earth Psal. 146. 4. and our dust Psal. 104. 28. meaning till man returne to the dust of death the grave and there the wearied be at rest from their labours Iob 3. 17. Rev. 14. 13. dust thou art or thou wast to weet concerning the body as Gen. 2. 7. not the spirit which being immortall goeth unto God for eternall joyes or torments Luke 16. 22. 23. and 23. 43. This difference Solomon teacheth And dust returne to the earth as it was and the spirit returne to God that gave it Eccles. 12. 7. Here God condemneth mankind to death which is the wages of sinne Rom. 6 23. and to the grave the house appointed for all living Iob 30. 23. where they must wait till their change come Iob 14. 14. for it is appointed to men once to dye and after this is the judgement Hebr. 4. 27. Otherwise the life eternall could not bee obtained for flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdome of God neither doth corruption inherit incorruption therefore we must all either dye or be changed and this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortality and then shall Death be swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15. 50. 51. 53. 54. So the Hebrew Rabbines also taught saying that unto this world there cleaveth the secret filthinesse of the Serpent which came upon Eve and because of that filthinesse Death is come upon Adam and his seed For when God saw how uncleannesse cleaved and spred it selfe abroad in the world continually he intended to consume it and to root out the power of it and therefore the bodies doe consume and corrupt and have no continued life But when the filthinesse is consumed and the spirit of uncleannesse taken out of the earth behold God will renew his world without any other filthinesse and will wake up by his power those that dwell in the dust c. and the Lord will reioyce in his workes as the intendment of the creation was at the first R. Menachem on Gen. 3. The Greeke Philosophers have observed that some dead men putrified turne to Serpents Plutarch in vita Cleomenis If so it is a notable memoriall of mans first poysoning by the Serpent Vers. 20. Eve in Hebrew Chavah which is by interpretation Life as the Greeke also translateth it or Living Adam first called her Woman Gen. 2. 23. God called her Adam Gen. 5. 2. and now the man calleth her Eve Life by which new name he testifieth his faith in and thankfulnesse for Gods former promise in vers 15. In which he also trained up his children teaching them to sacrifice and serve the Lord. Gen. 4. 3. 4. So the Hebrew Doctors reckon Adam as a repentant sinner and by Wisdome that is faith in Christ brought out of his fall Ioseph Antiq. b. 1. c. 4. and the Author of the Booke of Wisedome c. 10. v. 1. all living that is as the Chaldee paraphraseth of all the sonnes of man meaning this both naturally of all men in the world and so of Christ the promised seed and spiritually of all that live by faith in which sense Sarah is also counted the Mother of the faithfull 1 Pet. 3. 6. Gal. 4. 22. 28. 31. V. 21. coats to cover the body from shame and harme and for a memoriall of mans sin a further signe of those garments of justice and salvation which men have of God that their filthy nakednesse doe not appeare Rev. 3. 18. 19. 8. 2 Cor. 5. 2. 3. 4. The Chalde● calleth these here garments of honor of skin that is in likelihood of the skins of beasts which God taught him to kill for sacrifice Which offerings were even from the beginning of the Gospell preached as appeareth Gen. 4. 3. 4. 8. 20. And after by the Law the Skinnes of the sacrifices were given to the Priests Lev. 7. 8. And the sacrifices being all figures of Christ Heb. 10. 5. 10 the Skins were fit to resemble mans mortification as the girdle of skin which Iohn Baptist wore Mat. 3. 4. and new life by putting on the Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 13. 13. 14. and the garments of
signified that he should with sundry other things worthy to bee observed in the briefe Historie of these tenne Fathers Vers. 21. Mathusala so in Luke 3. 37. in Hebrew Methushelach which is by interpretation He dyeth and the emission or dart meaning the flood commeth Enoch being a Prophet foretold in his sonnes name of the flood to come in the yeere that Mathusala dyed as came to passe Compare Iude vers 14. 15. Vers. 22. walked with God that is led his life and administred before God holily justly and faithfully and so pleasing to God as Gen. 6. 9. Wherefore the Apostle following the Greeke version saith he pleased God which without faith it is unpossible to doe Heb. 11. 5. 6. The Chaldee translateth he walked in the feare of the Lord and the lerusalemy Thargum saith he served or laboured in the truth before the Lord. And by comparing the like speech unto Eli 1 Sam. 2. 30. 35. it seemeth to imply a pleasing or acceptable ministration of office before the Lord. Wherefore Enoch is noted to be a Prophet Iude 14. And Noe who also walked with God Gen. 6. 9. was a Preacher of justice 2 Pet. 2. 5. Of Eli it is spoken touching the Priesthood 1 Sam. 2. 30. 35. and of David in the Kingdome Psal. 56. 14. and 116. 9. See also Gen. 17. 1. Thus Enoch was a speciall figure of Christ. Vers. 24. he was not to weet not found as the Apostle according to the Greeke saith Heb. 11. 5. and the Chaldee addeth he appeared not and yet the Lord killed him not The like speech is also used of them that are taken away by death Ier. 31. 15. which the Evangelist alledging addeth the word are or were that wanted in the Hebrew as in this place it is wanting also God tooke him that is translated him saith the Apostle that he should not see death Heb. 11. 5. where the Arabicke version addeth he was translated into Paradise meaning the heavenly Paradise mentioned Luke 23. 43. 2 Cor. 12. 2. 4. So Elias was taken up into heaven 2 King 2. and the Hebrew Doctors say that Enoch was taken up in a whilewind as Elias was and that he was disarayed of the foundation corporall and clothed with the foundation spirituall Also that God shewed him all the high treasures and shewed him the tree of life in the midst of the garden c. R. Menachem on Gen 5. and the Zohar on the same By this translating of Enoch God assured all the faithfull of their resurrection and eternall life therefore they after applyed the like worke of God to themselves after death as in Psal. 49. 16. And the Apostle teacheth we shall all be changed and shall have spirituall bodies and a building of God an house not made with hand eternall in the heavens with which house we desire to be clothed-upon c. 1 Cor. 15. 51. 44. and 2 Cor. 5. 1. 2. Ben Syrach saith Enoch translated was an example of repentance to all generations Ecclesiasticus 44. 16. Vers. 25. Lamech Hebr. Lemec Vers. 29. Noe so written in Luke 3. 36. 1 Pet. 3. 20. The Hebrew soundeth Noach which signifieth rest which proceedeth from comfort as the words following shew his name having affinity with Nachum comfort us from our worke that is comfort us with rest from our worke as the Greeke translateth he shall give us rest from our workes This prophesie his father uttered of him as hee that should be a figure of Christ in his building the Arke and offering of sacrifice whereby God smelled a savour of rest and said hee would not curse the ground any more for mans sake Gen. 8. 21. Of wee may reade it comfort us concerning our worke c. from the earth understand againe which commeth from the earth for the earth being cursed bare not fruits without great labour and sorrow Gen. 3. 17. 18. hath cursed Hebr. hath cursed it but this phrase our Tongue useth not for it I therefore say before the or that which And the Hebrew text sometime omits it as superfluous 2 Chron. 28. 3. with 2 King 16. 3. Vers. 32. 500. yeares old Hebr. sonne of 500. yeeres that is going in his 500. yeere An usuall speech in the Hebrew Scripture of mens age or of beasts Gen. 17. 1. Exod. 12. 5. But sometime it is not meant of naturall age properly as appeareth 2 Chron. 22. 2. compared with 2 King 8. 26. where Ahaziah is sonne of 22. yeeres for his owne life but sonne of 42. yeeres for the state of his kingdome And by being old or sonne of 500. yeere is not meant that yeere full ended but while hee was living in that yeere As appeareth by Gen. 7. 6. where Noe is 600 yere old which in v. 11. is explained to be In the yeare of the 600. yeere of his life Accordingly must we understand the ages of men and beasts spoken of in Scripture as when a Levite entred upon his Ministery being a sonne of 30. yeeres Num. 4. 3. it is meant going in the 30. yere of his life Therefore Christ fulfilling that and all other figures entred upon his Ministery when he began to be of 30. yeeres as is expressed Luk. 3. 23. And for the sacrifices in the Law which were to be of any yeerling beast after the Hebrew phrase sonne of a yeere Exod. 12. 5. the Iewes have left recorded that it must be strictly within the first yere of the life and if it bee but an houre older then a yeere it is not allowable for an oblation to God Maimony 8. book in Magnaseh Korbanoth chap. 1. S. 13. Noe begat that is began to beget for all his three sonnes were not borne in a yeere but Shem was borne two yeeres after when his father was 502 yeers old as may bee gathered by Gen. 11. 10. where two yeeres after the flood hee was but an hundred yeeres old and then was Noe his father 602. by Gen. 7. 6. See the like of Thara Gen. 11. 26. Sem Cham and Iapheth sounded in Hebrew Shem Cham and Iepheth of which Iapheth was the eldest Sem the next and C ham the youngest as is evident both by the former note of Sems age and by Gen. 10. 21. and 9. 24. But because Sem was in dignity preferred of God before his brethren Gen. 9. 26. 27 therefore he is first named The like is in the history of Abram and his brethren Gen. 11. 26. So Iaakob is named before Esau his elder Gen. 28. 5. and Ephraim before Manasses Gen. 48. 20. CHAPT VI. 1 The sonnes of God marry with the daughters of men 4 so Giants are bred 5 wickednesse increaseth 6 God repenteth that he made Man 7 and will destroy them 8 Noe findeth grace 13 and is forewarned of the Flood 14 The Arke with matter and forme thereof is commanded to bee made 18 for the saving of Noes house 19 and some of all living things 21 with provision of food 22 Noe doth all that God commanded
all such shall perish in the time of their visitation Ier. 10. 15. and 51. 18. Of this the Hebrew Doctors also say when Israel came out of Egypt what did the holy blessed God he threw downe all the images of their abominations and they were broken in peeces Pirkei R Eliezer chapter 48. judgments the Greeke translateth it vengeance This was done that God might be knowne to be greater than all the gods Exod. 18. 11. and to avenge the corruption that Israel had gotten by the idols of Egypt Ezek. 20. 8. Vers. 13. passe or leape the Hebrew is pasach and this sheweth the reason of the name Pasch or Passeover and so Christ is called because his blood clenseth us from all sinne and delivereth us from wrath 1 Ioh. 1. 7. 1 Thes. 1. 10. The Greeke translateth I will protect you the Chaldee I will spare you and so in verse 27. to destruction Hebr. to corruption that is to be corrupted or destroyed by the destroyer as vers 23. V. 14. festivally keepe it implieth mirth joy for their deliverance hereby remembred see Ex. 5. 1. and at their feasts they were commanded to rejoyce and forbidden to mourne or weepe Deut. 16. 11. 15. Nehem. 8. 9. 12. everlasting statute Heb. statute of eternity meaning an eternall ordinance to be kept once a yeere al daies of their life till Christ became our Passeover since which time it is also kept eternally in remembrance of his death untill he come Deut. 16. 1. 3. 1 Corinth 5. 7. 8. and 11. 25. 26. Vers. 15. Seven daies after the paschall day for it was a distinct feast and commandement The Passeover was to be kept on the fourteenth day of the first moneth at even the feast of Vnlevened bread beganne the fifteenth day of the same moneth and lasted seven daies of which the first day and the last the seventh day were holy convocations wherein they might doe no servile worke as Moses plainely sheweth in Levit. 23. 5 6. 7. 8. The Passeover in the ages following might not be killed and eaten in any place but where the Lord did chuse to place his name there Deut. 16. 5. 6. 7. which afterward was in Ierusalem but the feast of Vnlevened bread the Hebrewes thought themselves bound to keep in every place where they dwelled if they could not be at Ierusalem And the eating of it they say depended not on the eating of the Passeover but was a commandement by it self Maimony treat of Leven and Unlevened bread chap. 6. 8. 1. Howbeit with the Passeover they might eat no leven as before is shewed in verse 8. It is unlawfull to eat Leven in the fourteenth day from mid day and upward which is from the beginning of the seventh houre of the day and who so eateth it at that time is to be beaten by the law for it is said in Deut. 16. 3. Thou shalt eat no leven with it meaning with the sacrifice of the Passeover This they have expounded thus Thou shalt not eat leven from the houre that the Passeover may be killed which is between the two evenings and that beginneth at mid-day Maimony ibidem c. 1. 〈◊〉 8. These seven daies wherein they might eat no Leven figured the whole time of our life which must be holy with the unlevened cakes of sincerity and truth 1 Corinth 5. 8. and with thankfull remembrance of our deliverance out of miseries as this unlevened bread is called the bread of affliction Deut. 16. 3. For seven is a full and perfect number of daies and the whole world was created therein see the notes on Gen. 2. 2. and Lev. 4. 7. cause to cease that is put away or abolish as the Greeke explaineth it The Hebrewes expound it thus that a man should abolish it in his ●eart and count it as dust and determine in his heart that he will have no leven at all within his power but whatsoever Leven is in his power it be as dust and as a thing whereof he will have no use at all And by the exposition of the Scribes he is to search after Leven in secret places and in corners and to finde it out and to bring it forth out of all the bounds of his habitation And so they search out and abolish Leven that night at the beginning of the night of the fourteenth day by the light of a candle out of all holes and corners c. And the putting away thereof was thus either they burnt is or broke it small and threw it into the winde or threw it into the sea Maimony treat of Leven chap. 2. S. 2. 3. and 3. 11. This ordinance the lewes carefully observed for in the day before they did eat the Passeover called the Preparation Ioh. 19. 14. the father of the familie with other men having lighted waxe candles searched all corners to purge out all the remnants and crums of Levened bread very diligently first blessing the Lord who sanctified them by his commandements and had bidden them put away Leven as is recorded in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 treat of the Passeovers chap. 2. 〈◊〉 figured the putting away of wickednesse and malice out of our hearts and of wicked persons out of the Church 1 Corinth 5. 7. 8. 13. old L 〈…〉 Two words are used for Leven by Moses in this verse the one Se●r which hath the name of being left or remaining this we may cal old Leven as Paul speaketh in 1 Cor. 5. 7. The other Chamets so called of the sourexesse of the taste of it the Greekes by transplacing the letters call Leven Zumee These signified two sorts also of spirituall Leven the one hidden and secret which our Saviour saith is Hypocrisie Luke 12. 1. the other more open and apparent as false and corrupt Doctrine Matthew 16. 6. 12. evill manners as Malice and Wickednesse 1 Corinthians 5. 8. and wicked persons unto whom the Saints are opposed as being Unlevened-cakes 1 Corinthians 5. 6. 7. 13. So David calleth the malicious man and him that corrupteth the word of God and infecteth with errour a Levened person or Levener Psalme 71. 4. and the heart infected with errour and vexed with griefe is said to bee Levened Psalme 73. 21. Wherefore Leven was forbidden at the paschall Feast to leade men unto soundnesse in the faith of Christ and sincerity in all their conversation The footsteps of this Law remained among the heathens for the Flamen Dialis or Romane Priest might not by their cannons touch any levened meale Aul. Gellius book 8. chap. 15. and Plutarch in Quaest. Rom. scanneth the reason of it because Leven it selfe proceedeth from corruption and corrupteth also the meale with which it is mixed Now what Leven properly was the Hebrew Doctors shew thus Nothing is forbidden by the name of Levened bread in the Passeover but of five sorts of corne onely which are two sorts of wheat namely the common Wheat and the Rye and three sorts of Barley which are the common Barley and the Foxe eare
is noted on Exod. 21. 6. tenth day This service being done upon this day every yeere shewed the inabilitie both of this Priesthood and of these sacrifices to make atonement in deed for the people as it is written For the Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the things can never with those sacrifices which they offred yeere by yeere continually make the commers thereunto perfect For then would they not have ceased to be offred because that the worshippers once purged should have had no more conscience of sinnes But in those there is a remembrance againe of sinnes every yeere For it is not possible that the blood of buls and of goats should take away sinnes Wherefore when Christ commeth into the world hee saith Sacrifice and offring thou wouldest not but a body hast thou prepared me Heb. 10. 1. 5. The commandement of fasting sanctifying this tenthday is againe repeated in Levit. 23. 27. 32. the sacrifices which it should have more then other dayes are expressed in Numb 29. 7. 11. And the Iubilee which was every fiftieth yeere began and was soiemnly proclaimed with trumpet upon this tenth day Lev. 25. 8. 9. a shadow of that acceptable yeere of the Lord the yeere of freedome which Christ hath proclaimed by the trumpet of his Gospell Luke 4. 18. 19. 21. 2 Cor. 6. 2. afflict your soules the Greek translateth humble your soules by the soule the body also is comprehended even the whole person as is noted on Levit. 2. 1. Gen. 12. 5. Affliction or humiliation is inwardly by godly sorrow for sinne which worketh repentance carefulnesse indignation feare vehement-desire zeale and revenge 2 Cor. 7. 10. 11. and a judging of our selves 1 Cor. 11. 31. and loathing our selves for the evils which we have committed Ezek. 6. 9. Outwardly by fasting and abstinence from all fleshly delights By the Hebrew canons they were to abstain this day from five things from meat and drink from washing themselves from anointing from putting on the shooes and all fine apparell and from carnall copulation Maimony in treat of the Rest of the tenth day c. 1. s. 4. 5. The Scriptures confirm these as David afflicted his soule with fasting Psal. 35. 13. Daniel by it and by not anointing Dan. 10. 3. 12. Israel by putting off their ornaments Ex. 33. 4. 6. David by going barefoot 2 Sam. 15. 30. wearing sackcloth Psal. 35. 13. and not washing nor anointing 2 Sam. 12. 20. 21. Vrias by not lying with his wife 2 Sam. 11. 11. But the chiefest of these was fasting and the day is called the Fast in Act. 27. 9. and the time by the law is from evening to evening beginning the ninth day of the moneth at even Levit. 23. 32. by which words the Hebrewes gather that they were to begin to fast and to afflict themselves in the evening of the ninth day next before to the tenth and so in the end of it to tary in their affliction a little of the night after the tenth day and therefore that it was necessary to adde somewhat of the working day unto the holy day both before and after But they exempted from this fast such as were sicke and all children under nine yeeres of age Maimony in treat of the Rest of the tenth day chap. 1. sect 6. and chap. 2. sect 8. 10. Moreover under this name of afflicting themselves and fasting the Lord required the putting away of all sinne and amendment of life as to loose the bands of wickednesse to undoe the heavy burdens and to let the oppressed goe free and to breake every yoke to deale bread to the hungry to cover the naked and the like Esa. 58. 6. 7. And so it figured our mortification with Christ that as in the sacrifices killed his humiliation unto the death was fore-shadowed Phil. 2. 8. so by the humiliation of the Church our suffrings with him were signified our baptising into his death and buriall and our walking in newnesse of life our old man being crucified with him that the body of sinne might bee destroyed Rom. 6. 3. 4. 6. 1 Pet 2. 21. Vnlesse we doe this we may fast but the Lord seeth it not and afflict our soule but he taketh no knowledge neither can wee make our voice to be heard on high Esa. 58. 3. 4. any worke for this was a solemne sabbath verse 31. and by ceasing from worke figured that they which would have expiation and atonement by Christs day must cease from their owne workes to doe the worke of God beleeving in him whom hee hath sent Heb. 4. 10. Ioh. 6. 29. stranger in Greeke Proselyte by the homeborne are meant Israelites borne in that land the stranger was of the heathens joyned to the faith and Church of Israel such were bound to all Israels ordinances See Exod. 12. 19. 48. 49. Vers. 30. he shall that is God by the Priest as verse 32. shall make etonement or expiation to cleanse or purifie you Herein was figured the power and efficacie of Christs Priesthood and sacrifice that he expiateth and maketh atonement for our sinnes with God 1 Ioh. 2. 1. 2. and cleanseth us by his blood and spirit from all sinne 1 Iohn 1. 7. Romans 8. 9. 10. 11. Vers. 31. sabbathisme or rest this word the Apostle keepeth in Heb. 4. 9. and being joyned to the word sabbath it noteth an exact and carefull rest therfore God threatneth to destroy them that did any worke this day Levit. 23. 30. See also the notes on Exod. 16. 23. Vers. 32. whom he that is whom God shall anoint or which shall be anointed as the Greek translateth whom they shall anoint Such words are often used without designing any person as is noted on Genes 16. 14. By this anointed the high Priest is meant Levit. 21. 10. shall fill that is shall consecrate see Exod. 29. 9. The Greeke translateth shall perfect or consecrate his hands Herein he also figured the Sonne of God who is our high Priest perfected or consecrated for evermore Hebr. 7. 28. garments of holinesse the foure forementioned verse 4. called in Greeke a holy stole or robe which word is used in Rev. 6. 11. and 7. 9. 13. 14. where the Saints that came out of their tribulation are arayed in white stoles or robes which they have washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb Christ. The mysterie of these garments is there touched and by it we may learne why the high Priest in the worke of Expiation might have none but white garments this day Vers. 33. the Sanctuarie of holinesse that is as the Greeke translateth the holy of the holy meaning the most holy place into which hee went first with incense and blood verse 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. the Tent the Holy place or first Tabernacle which he secondly expiated verse 16. c. all the people in Greeke all the congregation Because the expiation of the whole Church dependeth thus on the high
of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hand eternall in the heavens For wee that are in this Tabernacle doe groane being burdened not for that wee would be unclothed but clothed upon that the mortall thing might bee swallowed up of life c. 2 Cor. 5. 1. 4. So Peter calleth his death the putting off of his Tabernacle 2 Pet. 1. 14. And this similitude is very fit for as here in Moses Tabernacle the most holy things were first covered and taken away so the soule and powers thereof are first withdrawne from the bodie by death Then as the curtaines and coverings were taken off and folded up so the flesh and skin of our bodies are pulled off and eaten with wormes And as the boards of the Tabernacle were lastly disioyned and pulled asunder so shall our bones sinewes Compare the description of mans making in Iob 10. 8 12. of his dissolution Eccles. 12. And as the Tabernacle dissolved was afterward set vp againe Num. 10. 21. so shal our bodies at the day of resurrection 1 Cor. 15. lest they die Hebr. and die in Chaldee and not die as before in vers 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the 35 section of the Law see Gen. 6. 9. Vers. 22. Take Hebr. to take see vers 2. of them also in Greeke these also Though the Kaathites of the second brother were first numbred because they were to cary the holy things on their shoulders yet God would not have the other families neglected or to administer confusedly but counted appointed also to their charges wherin his providence shineth no lesse than before Vers. 23. towarre the warfare which the Greeke explaineth to minister see the notes on vers 3. to serve the service in Greeke to doe the workes this is an explanation of the former warfare Vers. 24. the service in Greeke the ministerie and for the burden in Greeke to serve and so boare By the service understand their ministerie in the Tabernacle when it stood wherein they assisted the Priests as also the taking downe and setting up of it Num. 10. 21. and by the burden their carying of the Sanctuary when it removed Vers. 27. At the mouth or according to the mouth in Chaldee At the word So after in vers 37. and 41. and 45. and 49. in all their burden in Greeke according to all their ministrations and according to all their works yee shall appoint in Greeke thou shalt appoint or number them in charge or in custodie in Greeke by names as in vers 32. all their burden in Greeke all their workes Vers. 28. their charge or their custodie their observation under the hand or in the hand that is under the government and direction of Ithamar so in vers 33. The Priests being the chiefe in the Sanctuarie and figures of Christ were to appoint and oversee all the workes of the inferiour ministers and so Christ and his Apostles did unto the ministers of the christian Churches Mat. 28. 20. 1 Cor. 12. 4 5 6. Tit. 1. 5. c. 1. Tim. 1. 3. and 3. 1. 15. Vers. 30. thirty yeeres in Greeke twenty five yeeres the reason of this difference is noted on ver 3. So after in v. 35. into the armie or warfare that is service in the Tabernacle as the Greeke translateth it to minister see vers 3. Vers. 31. the charge or custodie in Greeke observations the sockets which were an hundred made of an hundred talents of silver Exod. 38. 27. of the boards bars see Exod. 26. 18. 27. By reason of the weight of these things the Merarites had foure wagons allowed them for the cariage Num. 7. 8. Vers. 32. their sockets which were of brasse Exod. 27. 10 17. by names in Chaldee by their names the Greeke said the like of the Gershonites charge in vers 27. Whereas the sockets pillars pinnes cords and other instruments were many and seemed of lesse importance than the other holy things within the Sanctuary the Lord appointeth to have them delivered by names lest any should be neglected or left or to seeke when the Tabernacle should be set vp againe Signifying hereby the care that he hath of his Church and of every member even the least and so of all his ordinances Thus the good Shepheard is said to call his owne sheepe by name Ioh. 10. 3. And David gave unto Solomon both the pattern of all things to be made in the Temple and gave gold and silver by weight for every table candlestick lampe flesh-hook bowle cup bason c. 1 Chron. 28. 11. 17. Vers. 35. into the armie or to the warfare in Greeke to minister see vers 3. So after in vers 39. and 43. Vers. 36. two thousand seven hundred and fifty there were of the Kohathites in all eight thousand and six hundred Num. 3. 28. of which not a third part were able men for the Lords service as here wee see Vers. 40. two thousand and six hundred and thirtie In all there were seven thousand and five hundred Gershonites Numb 3. 22. of which little more than the third part were fit to serve in the Tabernacle Vers. 44. three thousand and two hundred So of six thousand and two hundred Merarites Num. 3. 34 there were moe than halfe fit to serve the Lord in his Sanctuary The numbers of them all and of such as were able to serve the Lord and contrary may be viewed thus Kohathires In all 8600. Able men 2750. Vnable 5850. Gershonites In all 7500. Able men 2630. Vnable 4870. Merarites In all 6200. Able men 3200. Vnable 3000. The wisdome and providence of God appeareth in these numbers The Kohathites that were most in the whose summe are fewest for the service of God the Merarites that were fewest in number yeeld most for his service And whereas the greatest burden was for the Merarires as the boards of the Sanctuary overlaid with gold the pillars the sockets some of silver and some of brasse lest they should murmur at their charge God furnisheth them with moe able men than any of the other families besides wagons given to ease them And whereas commonly in families the yonger and the aged sort are many moe than men of middle years it is here otherwise that the greater halfe of the Merarites are strong men betweene thirty and fifty yeares of age By this diversitie of number among the Levites families God sheweth his wisdome in fitting men for the worke wherto he hath appointed them whether it requireth multitude or gifts for To one is given by the Spirit the word of wisdome to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit to another faith by the same Spirit to another the gifts of healing by the same Spirit c. dividing to every man severally as he will 1 Cor. 12. 8. 12. David being employed in warres had many valiant Worthies and strong men for that purpose rehearsed in 1. Chron. 11. 12. ch So had
this song for you and teach it the sonnes of Israel put it in their mouthes that this song may be a witnesse for mee against the sonnes of Israel For I will bring them into the land which I sware unto their fathers that floweth with milke and honey and they shall eat and be filled and be fat and they will turne unto other gods and serve them and despightfully provoke me and breake my covenant And it shall be when many evils and distresses have found them that this song shall answer before them for a witnesse for it shall not be forgotten out of the mouth of their seed for I know their imagination which they doe this day before I have brought them in unto the land which I sware And Moses wrought this song in that day and taught it the sonnes of Israel And he charged Ioshua the sonne of Nun and said Be strong and couragious for thou shalt bring in the sonnes of Israel unto the land which I sware unto them and I will be with thee And it was when Moses had made an end of writing the words of this Law in a booke untill they were finished That Moses commanded the Levites which bare the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah saying Take this booke of the Law and put it in the side of the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah your God that it may be there for a witnesse against thee For I know thy rebellion and thy stiffe necke Behold while I am yet alive with you this day yee have beene rebellious against Iehovah and how much more after my death Gather together unto mee all the Elders of your Tribes and your Officers that I may speake in their eares these words and call the heavens and the earth to witnesse against them For I know that after my death corrupting yee will corrupt your selves and will turne aside from the way which I have commanded you and evill will befall you in the latter daies because yee will doe evill in the eyes of Iehovah to provoke him to anger through the worke of your hands And Moses spake in the eares of all the Church of Israel the words of this song untill they were ended Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the two and fiftieth Section or Lecture of the Law See the notes on Gen. 6. 9. And here Moses setteth the state of Israel in order before his death OLd Hebr. sonne of an hundred and twenty yeeres of which phrase see Gen. 5. 32. So long while Noe preached to the world building the Arke Gen. 6. 3 14. 1 Pet. 3. 19 20. Of these 120. yeeres Moses lived 40. in Pharaohs court in Egypt Acts 7. 20 23. forty in the land of Madian Acts 7. 29 30. Exod. 7. 7. and 40. yeeres he governed Israel I can no more goe out that is no more administer in my office see the Annotations on Num. 27. 17. This inability of Moses was not so much for his age for his eye was not dim nor his naturall moisture fled Deut. 34. 7. as for the ordinance of God next mentioned and Iehovah or for Iehovah hath said as is shewed in Num. 20. 12. Deut. 3. 25 26. And is often in stead of For as is noted on Gen. 12. 19. Or it may be taken as another reason why Moses might no longer governe them Vers. 3. Ioshua in Greeke Iesus who was substitute in Moses place Num. 27. 16 17 18. c. A figure of our Lord Iesus who by grace and truth bringeth us into Gods eternall rest after the ending of Moses Law Iohn 1. 17. Rom. 10. 4. Thus the people are comforted in respect of their sorrow for Moses death by promise of the Lords presence among them and Ioshuahs succeeding government under him Vers. 4. of the Amorite that is of the Amorites as the Greeke translateth by whose destruction before mentioned in Numb 21. 23. c. Deut. 2. and 3. Israel is encouraged against their other enemies the land that is the people of the land Vers. 5. commanded you which was to root them out and let none remaine Deut. 20. 16 17. Vers. 6. Be ye strong or Be confirmed Hold fast to wit your faith in God in Greeke Quit you like men which word Paul useth in 1 Cor. 16. 13. So after in vers 7. couragious or be hardy strong valiant in heart and carriage This word is applied to the heart in Psal. 27. 14. and armes in Prov. 31. 17. and signifieth an increase and stedfastnesse Prov. 24. 5. Ruth 1. 18. The like exhortation is often used as Ios. 10. 25. 1 Chron. 22. 13. 2 Chron. 32. 7. hee it is in Chaldee his Word it is So in vers 8. faile thee or let thee goe leave thee to thy selfe but will hold thee fast So vers 8. and Ios. 1. 5. Heb. 13. 5. Vers. 7. strong and couragious or confirmed and strong as vers 6. Iosua being to beare the charge and toile of the people hath the same exhortation and promise in particular that was before unto all and it was in the eyes of all lest any after Moses death should deny his authority A like speech Davide made to Salomon 1 Chron. 28. 20. Vers. 8. he will be with thee the Chaldee paraphraseth his Word will be thy helpe Vers. 9. this Law in Greeke all the words of this Law in a booke which bare the Arke they had the chiefe charge to looke to the Arke and other holy things and though the Levites bare it as appeareth by Num. 3. 31. and 4. 15. and 10. 21. yet sometime the Priests themselves also bare it as when they passed over Iordan Ios. 3. 6 17. when they compassed Iericho Ios. 6. 12. So after in v. 25. Moses spake to the Levites the Elders the Magistrates as the Priests by teaching so the Elders by governing are to look that the Law of the Lord be observed Mal. 2. 7. Hos. 4. 6. Mich. 3. 1. 2 Chron. 19. 6 8 9 10. Vers. 10. of seven yeeres that is of every seventh yeere which was a yeere of release Deu. 15. 1. the solemnity or the set time as the Greeke and Chaldee translate it the time release of debts Deut. 15. 1 2 c. that being freed from worldly cares they might apply their mindes to Gods Law A figure of the yeere of grace and remission of our debts by Christ whereupon wee should give our selves to holinesse Luke 4. 18 19 21. Rom. 6. 10 11 12 13. Boothes or Tabernacles whereof see Lev. 23. Vers. 11. which he shall chuse to set his Arke and Tabernacle and so to place his name there Deut. 16. 2. thou shalt reade speaking to Israel generally and it was performed in speciall by the chiefest of them either the high Priest as Ezra the chiefe of them that returned from Babylon read it Nehem. 8. 1 2 3 c. or as the Hebrewes say the King himselfe when they had a King used to reade For this Commandement was to Ioshua
62. 11. the fort or strong frontier ●konce rampart made for strength and safegard of the citie 1 King 21. 23. 2 Sam. 20. 15. So Psal. 122. 7. The Chaldee understands it of the strength of people the multitude disti●●tly view or lift up meaning the eyes to behold or reare up the bankes of buildings The Hebrew Pasgu is here only used of it is Pisgah the name of an hill or mount Numb 21. 20. and 23. 14. Deut. 3. 17. and 34. 1. The Greeke translateth here distinguish or distribute following the Chaldee Passeg which is to distribute or divide Vers. 15. ever and aye ever and yet to eternitie and perpetuitie will guide us or lead us to wit as a flocke of sheepe Psal. 78. 52. 72. therefore the Greeke turneth it poimanei he will f●●d or rule as a shepherd A like phrase is also used in speech of defence from enemies 2 Chron. 32. 22. untill death in Greeke for ever The Chaldee paraphraseth thus For this God is our God his divine Majestie is within it and his dwelling is in the heavens for ever and ever he will lead us in the daies of our youth PSAL. XLIX All are exhorted to heare Christs wisdome and parables 7 To build the faith of Resurrection from the dead not on worldly power but on God 17 Worldly prosperity is not to be admined for man without understanding perisheth like the beast To the Master of the Musicke to the sons of Korach a Psalme HEare ye this all peoples hearken ye● all inhabitants of the transitorie world Both sons of base man and sons of noble man together rich and poore My mouth shall speake wisdomes and the meditation of my heart prudencies I will incline min● eare to a parable I wil open with harpe mine hidden matter Why should I feare in the daies of evill when the iniquitie of my foot-steps shall compasse me They that trust in their wealthy power and glory in the multitude of their riches A man shall not redeeming redeeme his brother shall not give to God his ransome So precious shall be the redemption of their soule and it shall cease for ever That he may live yet to continuall aye may not see the pit of corruption For he seeth the wise doe die together the unconstant foole and brutish doe perish and leave to others their wealthy power Their inward thought is that their houses shall be for ever their dwelling places to generation and generation they proclaime their names on lands But man in honour doth not lodge a night he is likened to beasts that are silenced This their way is unconstant folly to them and their posteritie like well of their mouth Selah As sheepe they are put in hell death shall feed them and righteous men shall have rule over them at the morning their forme weare away in hell from his dwelling place But God will redeeme my soule from the hand of hell for he will receive me Selah Feare thou not when a man shall grow rich when the glory of his house shall be multiplied For he shall not when he die take any thing his glory shall not descend after him Though in his life he blesseth his soule and they will confesse thee when thou doest good to thy selfe It shall come unto the generation of his fathers unto continuall aye they shall not see the light Man in honour and understandeth not he is likened to beasts that are silenced Annotations THe transitory world see Psal. 17. 14. Vers. 3. base man in Hebrew Adam who was so called of Adamah the earth whereupon this title is given to the baser sort of people The Greek translateth it here earth-borne So the Apostle saith the first man of the earth earthly 1 Cor. 15. 47. noble man in Hebrew Ish which is the name of man in respect of heat valour noblenesse and dignitie whereby man is and excelleth and in opposition to the former word Adam it meaneth the great or nobler sort of people The Chaldee paraphraseth thus Both sons of Adam the first and sons of Iakob together righteous and sinner Vers. 4. wisdomes that is excellent and manifold wisdome so after prudencies for very excellent prudence and of sundry sorts So Solomon calleth the chiefe and most excellent wisdome wisdomes Prov. 1. 20. and 9. 1. Vers. 5. a parable or a proverbe in Hebrew Mashal which denoteth rule superiority or excellencie because such speeches prevaile much in the mindes of men and are in esteeme The new Testament in Greeke translateth it a parable Matth. 13. 35. from Psa. 78. 2. of the Latine we name it a Proverb in old English or Saxon it was called a big-spel Sometime it is used in the evill part for a by-word Psal. 44. 15. and 69. 12. mine hidden matter my darke question or grave doctrine my riddle The Hebrew Chidah riddle hath the name of sharpnesse as proceeding from a sharpe wit and needing the like to expound it See Iudg. 14. 12 18. Num. 12. 8. 1 King 10. 1. Prov. 1. 6. The holy Ghost expresseth it in Greeke by hidden things Matth. 13. 35. from Psal. 78. 2. Vers. 6. Why should I feare This is the hidden doctrine or riddle which the Prophet propoundeth as in his owne name and therefore also called it a parable By feare he meaneth dismay or discouragement See vers 17. the iniquitie that is punishment or death which is the wages of sinne see Psal. 31. 11. and by foot-steps or foot-soles he meaneth his waies or workes Or he may call death the punishment of his heeles or feet because the Serpent bruiseth Christ and his people but in the heele Gen. 3. 15. the sting of death being done away and it made a passage into life and glory 1 Cor. 15. 55. 57. Vers. 7. their wealthy power their riches which are thus called because they are gotten by power given of God Deut. 8. 18. with labour and industry and to the rich their goods are their strong citie Prov. 10. 15. therefore here they are said to trust in them contrary to 1 Tim. 6. 17. Iob 31. 24. Mark 10. 24. glory or praise themselves vaunt contrary to Ier. 9. 23. Vers. 8. not redeeming redeeme that is shall in no wise or not at all redeeme The Chaldee expoundeth it a wicked man cannot redeeming redeeme his captived brother Vers 9. So precious shall be or And deare costly is and consequently rare and hard to obtaine as Dan. 2. 11. 1 Sam. 3. 1. of their soule that is of their life So Exod. 21. 30. cease for ever that is it shall never be accomplished So ceasing is used for the not doing of a thing Deut. 23. 22. Zach. 11. 12. Vers. 10. That he may live this is referred to the end of the eight verse not give his ransome and so live And is here for That see Psal. 43. 4. The Chaldee expoundeth live to be the life eternall the pi● to be the judgement of Gehenna or hell Vers. 11. the wise The Chaldee saith For hee shall see wicked wise men that die the second death and
mindes of his people are inflamed is such as cannot be quenched with any calamities And thus it is said Who shall separate us from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distresse or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill or sword as it is written for thy sake we are killed all the day long we are accounted as sheepe of slaughter nay in all these things wee 〈◊〉 more then conquerours through him that loved us 〈◊〉 I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor 〈…〉 nor Principalities nor powers nor things present 〈◊〉 things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall bee able to separate us from the love of 〈◊〉 which is in Christ Iesus our Lord Rom. 8. 〈…〉 all the substance or all the riches wealth 〈…〉 ver gold c. that is in his house 〈◊〉 they would contemne it that is it would utterly or altogether be contemned or he would wholly be contemned As the love betweene Christ and his Church cannot be separated being united by the Holy Ghost so neither can love nor other grace of God be bought for money but is the free gift of God bestowed on whom he pleaseth Act. 8. 18. 19. 20. Rom. 9. 11. 16. So wisedome cannot be go 〈…〉 for gold neither shall silver bee weighed for the price thereof c. Ioh. 28. 15. 19. Prov. 8. 11. 19. Vers. 8. Wee have a little sister The godly here consult about a new Church arising whom they call a sister in respect of the unitie of faith little or small as being yong newly converted and nothing populous without breasts as having yet no stablished ministerie for such is the state of the Churches in their beginning as appeareth by Act. 14. 23. Tit. 1. 5. so that her children could not sucke out the sincere milke of the word and be satisfied with the breasts of her consolations 1 Pet. 2. 2. Esa. 66. 11. for she was not yet come to the estate of Israel whose breasts were fashioned and the Lord entred into covenant with her and shee became his Ezek. 16. 7. 8. when she shall be spoken of or wherein speech shal be of her when the fame of her calling and conversion shal come abroad what furtherance shall we yeeld to increase settle stablish her in the truth This sheweth the duty of love from one Church to another in communicating their graces each to other and praying one for another See an example in Act. 11. 19. 22. 23. This Hebrew phrase of speech to be had of her or in her may be understood two waies for or against her for her when treatie shall be of her espousals unto Christ thus David sent and spake of or with Abigail to take her to him to wife 1 Sam. 25. 39. against her as the people spake against God and against Moses Numb 21. 5. and Princes speake against me Psal. 119. 23. For no sooner doe a people turne to the Lord but the wicked doe oppose in word and worke And thus the Hebrewes in their Chaldee Paraphrase expound it here What shall wee doe for our sister in the day when the nations shall speake to goe up against her unto warre Vers. 9. If she be is wall The answere to the thing proponed made as some thinke by Christ to which the Chaldee paraphrast agreeth saying Michael the Prince of Israel will say or by other her sister churches desirous to procure her good a wall that is strong and well grounded in the truth and so become a citie which is often described by walles gates barres c. 2 Chron 8. 5. and 14. 7. Revel 21. 12. Spiritually it meaneth her faith and hope of salvation in Christ grounded on the doctrine of the twelve tribes of Israel and twelve Apostles of Christ Rev. 21. 14. 19. as Thou shalt call thy walles salvation Esa. 66. 18. and we have a strong city salvation will God appoint for walles and bulworkes Esa. 26. 1. Moreover when God signified the strength and courage of his Prophet against their enemies he faith I will make thee unto this people a fenced brazen wall and they shall fight against thee shall not prevaile ●er 15. 20. wee will b 〈…〉 d Here by we may be implied the Trinitie in the Godhead as Gen. 1. 26. Song 〈◊〉 11. or we may meane Christ inwardly effectually by his grace and his people her sisters outwardly and ministerially by the word of the Gospell a pallace or 〈…〉 le a tower a faire and orderly building such as were wont est times to bee set on strong walles of cities and this being of silver noteth the puritie excellencie and durablenesse of this pallace adorned with the graces of Gods word and Spirit that so she might be builded for an habitation of God through the Spirit Eph. 2. 22. and bee able to resist the forces of her enemies and if she be a doore if shee goe forward in the faith and practise of the Gospell that she be not onely built up as a wall but as a gate and doore fully edified as at the repairing of Ierusalem when they sanctified the gates and set up the doores of it Nehem. 3. which gates doores barres c. were for the safeguard of the inhabitants and shewed their care to resist and keepe out the enemies as appeareth by the contrary in Ier. 49. 31. as also to open that the righteous nation which keepeth the truths may enter in Esa. 26. 2. Psal. 118. 20. Therefore Angels are at the gates of the heavenly Citie to conduct Gods people into it Revel 21. 12. 27. and 22. 14. wee will inclose her or we will fence her about with board of Cedar which is faire strong and durable and of sweet savour of such the Temple was builded 1 King 6. 15. 18. V. 10. I am a wall or I became a wall that is I grew up and waxed strong in the faith love of Christ. The little sister sheweth her readinesse to receive and increase in the doctrine of the Gospell my breasts as towers my breasts are fashioned Ezek. 16. 7. the ministerie of the word established in mee to nourish up children unto Christ. The similitude of towers noteth also the strength power and glory of the administration of the Gospell and the open preaching of it out of pulpits of high places that all may heare For Migdal a towre is used for a pulpit in Neh. 8. 4. in his eyes in Christs sight findeth peace We all in our naturall corruption are enemies to God Rom. 5. 10. but being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 5. 1. for the worke of righteousnesse is peace and the effect of righteousnesse quietnesse and assurance for ever Esa. 32. 17. and this peace is injoyed by the Holy Ghost Rom. 8. 6. 9. and it is opposed to all the troubles tentations persecutions and afflictions in this life and world Ioh. 16. 33. and is that which guardeth our hearts and mindes
ANNOTATIONS VPON THE FIVE BOOKES OF MOSES THE BOOKE OF THE PSALMES AND THE SONG OF SONGS OR CANTICLES VVHEREIN THE HEBREW WORDS and sentences are compared with and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions and other Records and Monuments of the Hebrewes But chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures MOSES his words lawes and ordinances the Sacrifices and other Legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of ISRAEL are explained With an Advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew Text and allegation of the Rabbines in these ANNOTATIONS As also Tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the Annotations upon each severall Booke BY HENRY AINSWORTH LVKE 24. 44. All things must be fulfilled which are written in the Law of MOSES and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes LONDON ¶ Printed for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop in Cornehill at the Signe of the three Golden Lions neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1627. ANNOTATIONS VPON THE FIRST BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED GENESIS VVHEREIN THE HEBREVV VVORDS and sentences are compared with and explained by the Greeke and Chaldee versions but chiefly by conferring with the holy Scriptures BY HENRY AINSWORTH DEVT. 33. 4. Moses commanded us a Law the inheritance of the Church of Iakob MALACH 4. 4. Remember the Law of Moses my servant which I commanded him in Horeb for all Israel with the Statutes and Iudgements LONDON ¶ Printed by Miles Flesher for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. A Preface concerning Moses writings and these Annotations upon them MOSES the man of GOD and first writer of holy Scripture was an Hebrew borne in Egypt about 2432. yeeres after the creation of the World and before our Saviour Christs comming into the flesh 1496. yeeres He was the sonne a 1 Chron. 6● 2. 3. 2. 1. 1. 34. of Amram the sonne of Kohath the sonne of Levi the sonne of Iakob the sonne of Isaak the sonne of Abraham our father in the seventh generation as Enoch was the b Iude v. 14. seventh from Adam When he was borne hee had a c Act. 7. 20. 21. 22. Exod. 2. divine beauty upon him he was marveilously saved from death being drawne out of the water and thereof had his name hee was nourished by K. Pharaohs daughter for her owne sonne learned in all the wisedome of the Egyptians and was mighty in words and in deedes Forty yeeres he lived in Pharaohs court which d Act. 7. 23. Heb. 11. 24. 25. 26. then he left choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to injoy the pleasures of sinne for a season esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Egypt Forty yeeres e Act. 7. 29. 30. Exod. 3. hee was a stranger and sheepheard in the land of Madian from whence God called him to feed Iakob his people and Israel his inheritance Which thing he also did with all f Numb 12. 7. fidelity forty yeeres being g Act. 7. 38. in the Church in the wildernesse with the Angel which spake to him in the mount Sinai and with our fathers where he received the lively oracles to give unto us and hee h Deut. 33. 4. commanded us a law which is the Inheritance of the Church of Iakob Of all the Prophets that arose in Israel there was none like unto Moses whom the Lord knew i Deut 34. 10. face to face and dying 120. yeeres old but his naturall strength not k Deut. 34. 5. 6. abated he was buried of God no man knowing of his sepulchre unto this day He wrote the law in five books containing a briefe l Gen. 1. c. history of things past a m Exod. 24. 5. 8. c. covenant between God and his Church then present and n De●● 〈◊〉 15. c. Iohn 5. 46. and 1. 17. a prophesie of further grace to come which now is exhibited by Iesus Christ. In his first booke he wrote the o Gen 2. 4. and 5. 1. c. generations of the heavens and the earth and of mankinde which we therefore of the Greeke word call Genesis that is Generation In the second he set downe the Departure of Israel out of Egypt with the Covenant which God plighted with them the same yeere that they went out which booke thereupon is named Exodus In the third hee describeth the sacrifices and service of God under the Leviticall priesthood called accordingly Leviticus In the fourth he reckoned the Numbers of the tribes and of their journeyes from Egypt to Canaan with the order wherein God setled that Common-wealth of Israel whiles they were travelling towards their Rest which booke is therefore called Numbers In the fift he wrote a repetition of the Law and covenant which God had given unto Israel and the confirmation of the same whereof it is named according to the Greeke Deuteronomie In the propounding of all these things Moses hath p Exod. 34. 30. 35. 2 Cor. 〈◊〉 a veile drawne over his bright and glorious face for in the histories are implied q Gal. 4. 24. Allegories and in the lawes are r Heb. 9. 9. and 10. 1. Col. z. 17. types shadowes of good things that were to come the body wherof is of Christ. In Genesis which history endeth with the going down of Israel into Egypt we have the Image of a naturall man fallen from God into the bondage of sinne In Exodus is the type of our regeneration and state renewed by Iesus Christ. In Leviticus the shadow of our mortification whiles we are made sacrifices unto God In Numbers the figure of our spirituall war-fare whereunto we are mustered and armed to fight the good fight of faith In Deuteronomie the doctrine of our sanctification and preparation to enter into our heavenly Canaan after Moses death by the conduct of Iesus the sonne of God The things which Moses wrote were not his owne but the s 2 Chro. 34. 14. Law of the Lord by his hand to him t Psal. 103. 7. Dan. 9. 11. Mal. 4. 4. the Prophets after bare witnesse Our Saviour also approveth of Moses and of u Luk 24. 25. 44. all that he spake and wrote what x Mark 7. 9. he said was the commandement y Mat● 15. 3. of God and what God spake z Mark 12. 26. unto him the same is spoken a Mat. 22. 31. unto us him therefore we are willed to heare which who so doth not will not be perswaded though one rose from the dead Luk. 16. 29. 31. But because his writings were the b 2 Cor. 3. 14. Old Testament under which the New was veiled and which many reading even to this day have a c verse 15. veile laid upon their hart so that they cannot fasten their eyes upon the end of that which is abolished therefore
of man is called in respect of himselfe an offence or fall because by it he fell from his good estate in respect of God it was disobedience as unto whom hereby he denyed subjection and renounced obedience Roman 5. 18. 19. Neither was it his owne sinne onely but the common sinne of us all his posterity which were then in his loynes for by this one mans disobedience many were made sinners Rom. 5. 19. and in Adam all dye 1 Cor. 15. 22. V. 7. naked both in body and soule which were bereaved of the image of God deprived of his glory subjected to inordinate lusts and thereupon to shame of which nakednes the Scriptures often speak as Ex. 32. 25. Ezek. 16. 22. Rev. 3. 17. 16. 15 Hos. 2. 3. 2 Cor. 5. 3. Sewed that is fastned together by twisting and platting the leaves and twigs for to gird about them fig leaves in Heb. leaf or branch as we english the word in Neh 8. 15. and as the Greek translateth it in Ier. 17. 8. This was to cover not to cure their filthy nakednes therfore in v. 10. they nevertheless do hide thēselves for shame The like naturall hypocrisie is elsewhere cōpared to the Spiders web Esay 59. 5. 6. And the ●igtree which had leaves no fruit was cursed of Christ and withered Mat. 21. 19. aprons named in Hebrew of girding about the loynes So Peter when he was naked girded a garment on him Ioh. 21. 7. And those parts of the body which serve for generation were then and still are most shamefull and studiously covered because sinne is become naturall and derived by generation Psalm 51. 7. Gen 5. 3. Therefore circumcision the signe of regeneration was also on that part of mans body Gen. 17. 11. Vers. 8. the voice of Iehovah this sometime signifieth any noise or sound Ezek. 1. 24. sometime the thunder Exod. 9. 28. 29. sometime Gods distinct voice like thunder as Ioh. 12. 27. 28. 29. walking this by the Greeke is referred to God walking it may also bee meant of the voice which is said to walke or goe on when it increaseth more and more Exod. 19. 19. the wind by the Greeke version this was the eventide So in the evening of the world at the last day the Lord shall descend from heaven with a showt with the voice of the Archangell and with the trumpet of God c. 1 Thes. 4. 16. hid themselves through conscience and feeling of their sinne and misery and for feare of Gods Majesty vers 10. Howbeit there is no darknesse nor shadow of death where the workes of iniquity may hide themselves Iob 34. 22. Amos 9. 3. Psalm 139. 7. 8. 9. Prov. 15. 3. Ier. 23. 24. from the face or the presence that is for feare of the Lords comming Vers. 10. feared or was afraid this feare was a terrour through feeling of Gods wrath for sinne as Israel also felt in themselves when they heard the voice of God at mount Sinai Ex. 20. 18. 19. 20. It was such as had torment with it which who so feareth is not perfect in love 1 Iohn 4. 18. and proceeded from the spirit of bondage Rom. 8. 15. Otherwise there is also a feare which proceedeth from the spirit of adoption and accordeth well with love and comfort 1 Pet. 1. 1. 17. Psalm 2. 11. and 147. 11. Ier. 32. 39. 40. Prov. 19. 23. This feare if Adam had kept he had eschewed evill Prov. 16. 6 am naked he dissembleth the maine cause which was his sinne pure nakednesse was Gods creature and he was naked before without feare or shame Gen. 2 25. Vers. 12. thou gavest Adams confession is mixed with excuses and further evils asking no mercy but charging the woman and God himselfe with the cause of his fall The foolishnesse of man perverteth his way and his heart fretteth against the Lord Prov. 19. 3. Vers. 13. what is this or For what that is Why hast thou done this Vers. 14. unto the serpent unto the beast and the devill which together were the meanes to draw into sinne vers 1. and therefore are joyned as one here 〈…〉 the punishment cursed this is contrary to blessed Deut. 28. 3. 16. and as to blesse is to say well 〈◊〉 my so to curse is to say evill so expounded by the holy Ghost as thou shalt not curse the Ruler Exod. 22. 28. which Paul citeth thus thou shalt not speake evill of the Ruler Act. 23. 5. And as Gods word is one with his deed so his curse is the powring out of evils upon the creatures for sinne unto their perdition Deut. 28. 20. c. So the fig-tree being cursed withered Mark 11. 21. the children cursed were torne of beasts 2 King 2. 24. And that the devill was implyed under this curse the Hebrew Doctors have acknowledged saying of God that hee brought those three and decreed against them the decrees of judgement and did ●ast Sammael the Devill his company out of his holy place out of heaven and cut off the feet of the serpent and cursed him c. Pirke R. Eliezer ch 14. So Peter saith God spared not the Angels that sinned but cast them downe to hell c. 2 Pet. 2. 4. And in Rev. 12. 7. 8. 9. speaking of a spirituall combat with the Devill in the Church it is said the Dragon fought and his Angels but they prevailed not neither was their place found any more in heaven and that great Dragon that old serpent called the Devil and Satan was cast out c As the Devill is cursed above all creatures Mat. 25. 41. so the cursed serpent is in Scripture a similitude of the most hurtfull venemous and hatefull beasts as Deut. 8. 15. Ier. 8. 17. Ps. 58. 5. Mat. 23. 33. thy belly or thy brest as the Greeke hath a twofold translation upon thy brest and belly meaning with great paine and difficulty For other creatures also goe on the belly Lev. 11. 42. but as Adams labour and Eves conception had paine and sorrow added to them vers 16. 17 so the serpents gate dust that is vile and uncleane meats noting also hereby basenesse of condition Mic. 7. 17. and hunger and penury which this beast should suffer above others which eate the herbs of the field Gen. 1. 30. This eating of dust is againe remembred in Esay 65. 25 where speech is of our Redemption from Satan by Christ which sheweth that these outward curses implyed further mysteries V. 15. enmity this is opposed to the amity and familiarity which had beene between the woman and the Serpent which God would breake And here beginneth the first promise of grace and life to Evah and mankind now dead in sinne and enemies to God Col. 2. 13. and 1. 21. For the amity of this world is enmity of God Iam. 4. 4. thy seed and her seed that is thy posterity and hers Seed is often used for children by the Serpents seed are meant not onely those venemous beasts which
to time and afterwards they circumcise him By which words is meant if he have an ague or like sicknesse but if hee have sore eyes or the like they circumcise him so soone as they are whole If a child be found on the 8 day to be very pale coloured they circumcise him not till the blood come againe into his countenance like the countenance of children that are in health Likewise if hee be very red they circumcise him not till his blood be sunk down into him and his countenance come againe like other children for this is a sicknesse and men must be admonished well of these things If a woman circumcise her first sonne and he die through fervency of the circumcision which decayed his strength Also she circumciseth her second child and he dye through the fervency of the circumcision whether shee have this child by her first husband or by a second loe her third child shall not bee circumcised in the time thereof but they defer it till he wexe great and his strength be made firme They circumcise none but children that are without sicknesse for perill of life putteth away all And it is possible to circumcise after the time but unpossible to restore the life of any one of Israel for ever Maimony treat of Circumcis ch 1. S. 16. 17. 18. your flesh that is the secret part or member of generation for so the word flesh here and in other places in speciall meaneth Ezek. 16. 26. and 23. 20. Lev. 15. 2. God set not the signe of his covenant on the lips eares or other parts of man which yet the Scripture calleth also uncircumcised Exod. 6. 30. Ier. 6. 10. but on the privy member to teach the regeneration of nature even of the whole man who is borne in sin Psal. 51. 7. and the derivation of his covenant to the seed of the faithful who are thereby holy Ezr. 9. 2. 1 Cor. 7. 14. and to signifie that the true circumcision is inward and secret Rom. 2. 28. 29. This which in the eyes of man seemeth a thing unprofitable foolish and ignominious doth God chuse to make a signe of the covenant of his grace in Christ who is also himselfe a scandall and foolishnesse to the world but the foolishnesse of God is wiser then the wisedome of men 1 Cor. 1. 23. 25. And that member of the body which man thought to be lesse honourable on it God put on more abundant honour as 1 Cor. 12. 23. that it should beare the marke of the heavenly covenant Vers. 14. that soule that is as the Chaldee expoundeth it that man see Gen. 12. 5. cut off The Greeke and Chaldee translate it destroyed and consumed This word is used before in Gen. 9. 11. and after often in the law Exod. 12. 15. 19. and 31. 14. Lev. 7. 20. 21. 25. 27 c. It is sometime spoken of God cutting off men by death for their sinnes Lev. 17. 10. and 20. 3. 5. 6. and so the Hebrewes understand it here and in all other like places that for willing transgression in secret God will cut them off by untimely death and if there be witnesses of it the Magistrate is to punish or kill them but for ignorant transgression they were to bring the appointed sacrifices Vnder this also eternall damnation is implyed Maimony in treat of Repentance chap. 8. S. 1. speaking of eternall death saith And this is the Cutting off written of in the Law as it is said in Num. 15. 31. that soule shall bee cut-off he shall be cut off Which we have heard expounded thus cut off in this world and cut off in the world to come Of this sanction here they say If the father or master doe transgresse and circumcise not they break a commandement but are not guilty of cutting-off for cutting-off belongs but to the uncircumcised person him-selfe Maimony treat of Circumcis c. 1. S. 1. Howbeit Moses the father had almost beene killed for not circumcising his sonne Exod. 4. 24. c. broken or made frustrate broken downe this word is opposed to the former stablishing or making firm in vers 7. The Hebrewes have a canon who so breaketh the covenant of Abraham our father and leaveth his superfluous-foreskin or gathereth it over again although he have in him the law and good workes hee hath no portion in the world to come Maimony treat of Circumcis chap. 3. S. 8. Which rule is true according to the Apostles interpretation applying circumcision to the heart spirit and faith in Christ Rom. 2. 29. and 4. 11. Col. 2. 11. Vers. 15. Sarah in Greeke Sarrha The letter j changed into h signified the multiplication of her children as before in Abrams name vers 5. And the Greeke having no h at the end of words doubleth therefore the letter r with an aspiration Sarrha and so the Apostles also write it Rom. 9. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 6. Sarai the Chaldean name is made Hebrew Sarah which is by interpretation a Princesse The Apostle calleth her a Freewoman and maketh her a figure of the new Testament and heavenly Ierusalem Gal. 4. 22. 24. 26. and the example of Abraham and Sarah thus called blessed and increased is set forth for their children the Church to consider and comfort themselves withall Esay 51. 1. 2. 3. Vers. 16. shall be to nations that is shall become nations and bee a mother of them both in the flesh and in the Lord. For all godly women are called her children 1 Pet. 3. 6. and Ierusalem her answerable type is the mother of us all Galat. 4. 26. Psal. 87. 5. 6. Vers. 17. laughed that is as the Chaldee translateth it rejoyced and so the word after importeth Gen. 21. 6. though sometime it implyeth also a doubting as in Gen. 18. 12. 13. but the praise of Abrahams faith who was not weake nor staggering but gave glory to God Rom. 4. 19. 20. seemeth to free him from this imputation Thargum Ierusalemy expoundeth it he marvelled Of this word laughed in Hebrew jsaak the child promised was called Isaak in whom Abraham saw the day of Christ and rejoyced old Hebr. sonne of 100 yeeres that is going in his hundred yeere So Sarah was daughter of ninety yeeres See Gen. 5. 32. At these yeeres both their bodies were now dead unapt for generation Rom. 4. 19. Heb. 11. 12. Vers. 19. shall beare or beareth speaking as of a thing present for God calleth the things which bee not as though they were Rom. 4. 17. Isaak Heb. Iitschak the same word used before in vers 17. and signifieth laughing or joy for besides his father and mother all that heare have occasion to laugh and rejoice for his birth Gen. 21. 6. in whom both Christ the joy of the whole earth was represented and all the children of promise Iohn 8. 56. Rom. 9. 7. 8. Gal. 4. 28. seed the Greeke version addeth to be a God to him and to his seed as before in verse 7. Vers. 20. heard the Chaldee
from off thy necke And Esau hated Iakob for the blessing with which his father had blessed him and Esau said in his heart The dayes of mourning for my father are nigh and I will kill Iakob my brother And the words of Esau her elder son were told to Rebekah and she sent and called Iakob her yonger sonne and said unto him Behold Esau thy Brother comforteth him-selfe as touching thee to kill thee And now my sonne obey my voice and arise flee thou unto Laban my Brother to Charran And tarry with him a few dayes untill the hot-wrath of thy Brother turne away Vntill the anger of thy Brother turne-away from thee and hee forget that which thou hast done to him and I will send and take thee from thence why should I bee bereaved even of you both in one day And Rebekah said unto Isaak I am yrked of my life because of the daughters of Cheth if Iakob take a wife of the daughters of Cheth like these of the daughters of the land wherefore have I life Annotations THat he could not see Hebr. from seeing which phrase the Apostle turneth in Greeke not to see Rom. 11. 10. from Psal. 69. 24. Vpon this occasion Gods workes were shewed in Isaak as Ioh. 9. 3. for in his blindnesse he gave Iakob the blessing which he would not so have done if hee had seene vers 23. elder in Heb ew greater to weet of age or by birth as the Greeke translateth Elder and lesser for yonger v. 15. see Gen. 10. 21. Vers. 2. my death the Greeke saith my end yet lived hee after this above fourty yeeres Genes 35. 28. 29. Vers. 3. Venison Hebr. hunting whereof venison hath the name as being gotten by hunting So v. 5. 19. c. Vers. 4. that I may or and I will eate so in v. 7. and 10. These two phrases are used indifferently as that ye be not judged Matth. 7. r. which another Evangelist saith and ye shall not be judged Luke 6. 37. See also Gen. 12. 12. that my soule or to the end my soule that is I my selfe as after in v. 7. it is repeated Isaak being to give the blessing in faith Heb. 11. 20. would eate savoury meat and drinke wine ver 25. to stir up and cheare his spirit that he might be the more fit instrument of the spirit of God For sorrow anger and other such passions doe distemper the mind which may bee mitigated by outward meanes as wine maketh men to forget their misery Prov. 31. 6. 7. and musicke allayeth anger wherefore Elisha the Prophet when he was moved against King Iehoram called for a musitian who when hee played the hand of the Lord came upon the Prophet 2 King 3. 14. 15. blesse thee as the Priests with authority blessed and put the name of God upon the people Gen. 14. 19. Num. 6. 23. 27. So the Patriarches derived the blessing before their death unto their children or some one of them as an inheritance by testament wherefore Paul speaketh of inheriting the blessing Heb. 12. 17. which also was of great authority and strength as being done by the Spirit of God and in faith and before the Lord as vers 7. See Gen. 28. 3. 4. and 48. 15. 16. 20. and 49. 25. 26. 28. Heb. 11. 20. 21. and 12. 17. Esau who had his name of Doing is here promised the blessing upon his deeds as the law also promiseth blessing and life to the doers thereof Rom. 10. 5. but Iakob got the blessing by faith as do all the faithfull Gal. 3. 9. Vers. 7. before Iehovah that is in his presence by his power and authority and for ever the like phrase is of cursing 1 Sam. 26. 19. And being done before his death it was with the more power case reverence and as by his last will and testament So Deut. 33. 1. Vers. 12. if so be or Peradventure my father will feele me and I shall be c. The Greeke translateth it Mé pote which word Paul useth 2 Tim. 2. 25. in like sense If so be or If peradventure God will give them repentance as a deceiver or as one that causeth to erre the Greeke translateth it a despiser the Chaldee a mocker Or we may English it a very deceiver for in the Hebrew as is often a sure affirmation Neh. 7. 2. and so the Greeke answering thereto Iohn 1. 14. a curse not feared without cause for cursed is he that maketh the blind to erre in way Deut. 27. 18. and deceitfulnesse in all Gods works maketh men lyable to the curse Ier. 48. 10. Mal. 1. 14. Vers. 13. upon me thy curse a speech of her faith to incourage him though it may be mixt with infirmity of cariage for it seemeth she relyed on the oracle of God in Gen. 25. 23. the greater shall serve the lesse which oracle Isaak might understand not of the persons of Esau and Iakob but of the nations and peoples their posterity and therefore thought it his dutie to give the blessing of the first birthright unto Esau to whom by nature it belonged and which might not bee changed for affection as the Law after provideth in Deut. 21. 15. 16. 17. But Rebekah understood it of these very persons also and therefore attempted this strange and perillous way to procure the blessing unto Iakob A like different meaning of that oracle is gathered by men at this day The Chaldee paraphraseth thus It was said unto me by prophesie that curses shall not come upon thee but blessings Vers. 15. desireable garments Hebr. garments of desire that is good sweet precious the Greeke translateth it a goodly robe or faire stole which was a long garment that great men used to weare Luke 20. 46. and 15. 22. The Priests after in the law had holy garments to minister in Exo. 28. 2. 3. 4. which the Greeke there also calleth a holy robe or stole Whether the first borne before the law had such to minister in is not certaine but probable by this example For had they beene common garments why did not Esau himselfe or his wives keepe them but being in likelihood holy robes received from their ancestors the mother of the family kept them in sweet chests from mothes and the like whereupon it is said in verse 27. Isaak smelled the smell of his garments These might well figure out those robes of innocency and righteousnesse wherewith the saints are clothed Rev. 7. 9. 14. and 19. 8. and 3. 18. The like mystery also is in the kids skins following see Gen. 3. 21. Vers. 19. firstborne This though it were not so properly and cannot in that respect bee excused yet was it true in mystery and spiritually as Iohn Baptist was Elias Matt. 11. 14. and we gentiles are the Circumcision Phil. 3. 3. Rom. 2. 28. and the children of promise are counted for the seed Rom. 9. 8. Gal. 4. 28. Vers. 20. brought it to passe or made it to meet or occurre in Greeke delivered it
the good of Israel I have seene for vengeance upon those that oppresse them In this sense Zacharie said at his death The Lord see it and require it 2 Chron. 24. 22. their taskemasters or his taskmaster speaking of the people as of one man see the notes on Gen. 22. 17. Taskmasters here properly are Exactors and is generally used for such as require and exact either money as in 2 King 23. 35. or any debt Deut. 15. 2. or otherwise doe oppresse any Esa. 53. 7. Here the Greeke translateth it workmasters the Chaldee rulers They figured spirituall tyrants also from whom will deliver his people Esa. 9. 4. and 14. 2. and 60. 17. Vers. 8. am come downe to wit in this vision as the Chaldee translateth I doe appeare or am revealed See Gen. 11. 5. them Hebr. him that is the people The Greeke translateth it them so doth the Holy Ghost in Act. 7. 34. the hand that is the power and dominion as Gen. 16. 6. and 32. 11. So Christ came to deliver us out of the hands of our enemies Luk. 1. 74. whereof this now was a type milke and honey under which all other blessings are comprehended there was no lacke of any thing Deut. 8. 7. 8. 9. Of this country see the notes on Gen. 12. 5. and as the land figured out a heavenly country so milke and honey signified spirituall blessings in Christ Song 4. 11. Psal. 19. 11. Esa. 55. 1. 1 Pet. 2. 2. This praise of the land is often mentioned by this phrase as in Exod. 13. 5. and 33. 3. Lev. 20. 24. Deut. 6. 3. and 11. 9. Ios. 5. 6. Ier. 11. 5. Ezek. 20. 6. And the Israelites upon the first view acknowledged it so to be Num. 13. ●● and yeerely professed the same by Gods co 〈…〉 nt Deut. 26. 9. 15. Yet the rebellious despised it and called Egypt a land that floweth with milke and honey Num. 16. 13. 14. Canaanite that is as the Greeke and Chaldee translate Canaanites Chethites c. See Gen. 10. 16. and 15. 20. So after verse 17. Vers. 10. send thee The secret inspiration which Moses had before from God Exod. 2. 11. Acts 7. 25. is here become an open calling and full commission and hee whom the Israelites had refused saying who made thee a ruler and a judge the same did God send to be a ruler and deliverer by the hand of the Angel which appeared to him in the bramble-bush Act. 7. 35. This sending of Moses is also mentioned as a mercie of God Psal. 105. 26. Mich. 6. 4. Hos. 12. 13. unto Pharaoh the Greeke addeth king of Egypt in Act. 7. 34. it is I will send thee into Egypt bring thou in Greeke thou shalt bring See the notes on Gen. 20. 7. Vers. 12. Certainly or Because I will be the Chaldee saith because my word shall be thine helpe this the present apparition of my glory in the bush which thou seest or this that followeth ye shall serve God at this mount The first was a signe to st engthen Moses in his businesse with Pharaoh Exod. 5. 22. 23. the latter to confirme him against the many rebellions of Israel mentioned in Num. 11. 10. 11. 14. 15. Deut. 9. 22. 23. 24. at this or by this mount This was fulfilled when at mount Sinai the law being given the tabernacle was made and sacrifice and other service performed unto God Exod. 19. and 25. c. which being a mount in the wildernesse in Arabia the worshippers children thereof were in bondage as was Agar and figured the old Testament and those under the same by Moses law Gal. 4. 24. 25. Now wee by Christ are not come thither but unto mount Sion where all the house of Israel and all in the land are to serve the Lord Heb. 12. 18. 22. Ezek. 20. 40. Rev. 14. 1. Vers. 13. what is his name This may imply after what manner and to what end God had now appeared whether for mercie or judgement For God by names manifesteth his workes as after appeareth in Exod. 6. 3. So the Hebrews teach in Elle shemoth rabba upon this place that when God judgeth his creatures hee is called Elohim God when he warreth against the wicked hee is called Sabaoth Lord of hosts when he doth mercie unto the world he is called Iehovah as in Exod. 34. 6. Iehovah Iehovah God mercifull and gracious Vers. 14. I am that I am The Hebrew Ehjeh asher ehjeh properly signifieth I will bee that I will be the Greek translateth I am he that Is. And God is called He that Is that was and that will bee Rev. 16. 5. where this name Ehjeh is opened as also the name Iehovah whereof see Gen. 2. 4. Exod. 6. 3. It implieth Gods eternall and unchangeable Being in himselfe before whom all nations are as nothing Esa. 40. 17. and the constant performing of all his words to be now and for ever that which he was before to Abraham Isaak and Iakob verse 15. So Iesus Christ yesterday and to day the same and for ever Heb. 13. 8. The Rabbines doe thus also explaine this name in Elle shemoth rabba upon this text The blessed God said ●●to Moses say 〈◊〉 them 〈◊〉 have beene and I the same now and I the same 〈◊〉 time to come c. I 〈◊〉 or I will be hath sent c. The Chaldee paraphrase called Ionathans giveth both expositions I ●e that was and hereafter will be hath sent me unto you Vers. 15. my memoriall or the memoriall of mee that whereby I will be remembred and mentioned alwaies To this the Prophets referre us as in Hos. 12. 5. Iehovah God of hosts Iehovah is his memoriall and Iehovah thy name is for ever Iehovah thy memoriall is to generation and generation Ps. 135. 13. and 102. 13. and generation or of generation that is all generations or ages The Chaldee supplieth the word and as the Hebrew elsewhere doth in Psal. 135. 13. saying to every generation and generation Vers. 16. Elders or Senatours in Greeke the senate such were not onely aged men but teachers and governours of the people as among other nations See Gen. 50. 7. By the Elders things were orderly communicated with the multitude as Exod 12. 3. 21. and 19. 3. 7. visiting the Greeke translateth with visitation that is surely or carefully visited and that in mercy as Gen. 21. 1. Albeit from the word twise repeated some of the Hebrewes gather a visitation in mercy concerning Israel and a visitation in judgment concerning the Egyptians for their afflicting of Israel as was promised in Gen. 15. 14. R. Menachem on Exod. 3. Vers. 17. Egypt or the Egyptians as vers 8. and as the Greeke translateth here Canaanite that is Canaanites Chethites c. See verse 8. Vers. 18. met with us that is appeared unto us and so called and commanded us to offer him sacrifice Men are said to meet with God by praier and hee to meet them by appearing and speaking unto
sonnes of Israel went and did even as Iehovah had commanded Moses and Aaron so did they And it was that at midnight Iehovah smote every first-borne in the land of Egypt from the first-borne of Pharaoh that sate on his throne unto the first-borne of the captive that was in the prison house and every first-borne of beasts And Pharaoh rose up in the night he and all his servants and all the Egyptians there was a great crie in Egypt for there was not a house where there was not one dead And hee called for Moses and for Aaron in the night and said Rise up goe out from amongst my people both you and the sonnes of Israel and goe serve Iehovoh as ye have spoken Also take your stockes and your herds as ye have spoken and goe and blesse me also And the Egyptians were urgent upon the people making hast to send them away out of the land for they said We be all dead men And the people tooke up their dough before it was levened their lumps of dough bound up in their cloathes upon their shoulders And the sonnes of Israel did according to the word of Moses and asked of the Egyptians jewles of silver and jewels of gold and garments And Iehovah gave the people grace in the eyes of the Egyptians and they gave them their asking and they spoiled the Egyptians And the sonnes of Israel journied from Rameses to Succoth about sixe hundred thousand on foote that were men beside little ones And also much mixed people went up with them and flockes and herds a very great possession of cattell And they baked the dough which they brought forth out of Egypt cakes unlevened for it was not levened for they were thrust out from Egypt and could not tarry neither had they made ready for themselves any victuall And the dwelling of the sonnes of Israel who dwelt in Egypt was foure hundred yeeres and thirty yeeres And it was at the end of the foure hundred yeeres and thirty yeeres even in the selfe-same day it was all the armies of Iehovah went out from the land of Egypt It is a night of observations to Iehovah for bringing them out from the land of Egypt this is that night of Iehovah of observations for all the sons of Israel through-out their generations And Iehovah said unto Moses and Aaron This is the statute of the Passeover no strangers sonne shall eat thereof But every servant of any man bought for money when thou hast circumcised him then he shall eat thereof A forreiner and an hired servant shall not eat thereof In one house shall it be eaten thou shalt not carry forth ought of the flesh abroad out of the house and yee shall not breake a bone thereof All the congregation of Israel shall doe it And when a stranger shall sojourne with thee and will doe the Passeover to Iehovah let every male of his be circumcised and then he shall come neere to doe it and he shall be as the home-borne of the land but any uncircumcised shall not eat thereof One law shall be to the home-borne and to the stranger that sojourneth among you And all the sonnes of Israel did even as Iehovah commanded Moses and Aaron so did they And it was in this selfe-same day Iehovah brought forth the sonnes of Israel out of the land of Egypt by their armies Annotations ANd or Also Iebovah had said to wit before Moses had gone out from Pharaohs presence and threatned the death of the first borne Exod. 11. 4. for this pasch all Lambe was got ready the fourth day before it was killed as after is manifest in verse 3. and 6. This moneth ●named in Hebrew Abib Exod. 13. 4. and Nisan Nehem. 2. 1. by which name the Chaldee calleth it in this chapter verse 18. it is with us called March or Aprill for it fell out sometime to be part of both the head that is as the Greeke translateth the beginning So the head that is the beginning of the yeere Ezek. 40. 1. unto you By reason of this their going out of Egypt the yeere which before began in September Exod. 23. 16 hath his beginning to the Iewes Ecclesiastically in Abib or March but for the Iubilees and civill affaires it began as it had done before Levit. 25. 8. 9. 10. This also Iosephus testifieth in Antiq. b. 1. c 4. See the notes on Gen. 7. 11. Because this release of Israel was a figure of the Churches redemption by Christ who reneweth the world 1 Cor. 5. 7. 8. 2 Cor. 5. 17. and who was to suffer death also in this moneth Iohn 18. 28. c. therefore God made it the head and first of the yeere that by it the Church might bee taught to expect the acceptable yeere of the Lord which Christ preached Luk. 4. 19. Vers. 3. the tenth that is the 10. day as the first Matth. 26. 17. is expounded the first day Mar. 14. 12. On this day the Israelites after did goe through Iordan into the land of Canaan Ios. 4. 19. And Christ our paschall Lambe on this day entred Ierusalem riding upon an asse colt and was received of the people with palme branches and crying Hosanna c. Ioh. 12. 1. 12. 13. c. In him this type was truly fulfilled that they or and let them take the Greeke translateth let them take leaving on t the word and which the Hebrew sometime doth as is noted on Gen. 8. 6. lambe or kid a young sheepe or goat as is explained in vers 5. It was a figure of Christ the true Lambe of GOD 1 Cor. 5. 7. Ioh. 1. 29. house that is as the Greeke translateth houses The whole armie of Israel was divided into twelve tribes those tribes into families the families againe into houses and then to particular persons as appeareth by Num. 1. and Ios. 7. 14. c. Vers. 4. to befor or to be above a lambe so that they cannot overcome the same by eating it up The words following shew this to be meant for eating and the Greeke translateth thus if there bee few in the house so that they are not enough for the lamb As the word little or lesse sometime signifieth unworthinesse Gen. 32. 10. so here and elsewhere it signifieth inability which the Scripture maketh plaine as too little to receive 1 King 8. 64. is expounded not able to receive 2 Chro. 7. 7. soules that is persons 〈…〉 make your count or shell number to wit how many are meet and sufficient for the cating of the lambe Our Saviour and his twelve disciples did eat the same together Matth. 26. 18. 20. Of this counting the Iewes doe write gathering it from this law that it must be made whiles the Lambe is yet alive and the passeover might not be killed but for such as were made count of and those they called sonnes of the society that is communicants And that if the Lambe were killed for such as were not counted therefore or for
either sitting or lying but this night lying onely Then the table is brought againe before him and hee faith This Passeover which wee eat is in respect that the Lord passed over the houses of our fathers in Egypt Then holdeth hee up the bitter herbs in his hand and saith These bitter herbs which wee eat are in respect that the Egyptians made the lives of our fathers bitter in Egypt Then hee holdeth up the unlevened bread in his hand and saith This unlevened bread which wee eat is in respect that the dough of our fathers had not time to bee levened when the Lord appeared unto them and redeemed them out of the hand of the enemie and they baked unlevened cakes of the dough which they brought out of Egypt Exodus 12. 39. Then hee saith Therefore are wee bound to confesse to praise to laud to celebrate to glorifie to honour to extoll to magnifie and to ascribe victory unto him that did unto our fathers and unto us all these signes and brought us forth from servitude to freedome from sorrow to joy from darknesse to great light and wee say before him Halelujah Halelujah Praise O yee servants of the LORD c. unto the f●●●trocke to a fountaine of waters that is the hundred and thirteenth and to the end of the hundred and fourteenth Psalme Then they blesse the Lord which redeemed them and their fathers out of Egypt and hath brought them unto that night to eat unlevened bread therein and bitter herbs And hee blesseth GOD who createth the fruit of the vine and drinketh the second cup. After this hee blesseth for the washing of hands and washeth his hands the second time and taketh two cakes parteth one of them c. and blesseth GOD that bringeth bread out of the earth Because it is said the bread of affliction or of povertie Deuteronomie 16. 3. as it is the manner of the poore to have broken meat so heere is a broken part Afterwards hee wrappeth up of the unlevened bread and of the bitter herbs together and dippeth them in the ●auce and blesseth GOD which commanded to eat unlevened bread and bitter herbs and they eat Then hee blesseth GOD which commanded the eating of the sacrifice and hee eateth the flesh of the feast offring and againe blesseth GOD which commanded the eating of the Passeover and then hee 〈◊〉 of the body of the Passeover After this they ●it long at Supper and eat every one so much as he will and drinke as much as they will drinke Afterward he eateth of the flesh of the Passeover though it bee but so much as an olive and tasteth nothing at all after it that it may be the end of his supper and that the taste of the flesh of the Passeover may remaine in his mouth After this he lifteth up his hands and blesseth for the third cup of wine and drinketh it Then filleth hee the fourth cup and accomplisheth for it the Praise or Hymne and sayeth for it the blessing of the Song which is All thy workes praise thee O Lord c. Psalme 145. 10. and blesseth God that created the fruit of the vine and tasteth nothing at all after it all the night except water And hee may fill the fift cup saying for it the great Hymne the hundred thirty sixe Psalm Confesse ye to the Lord for hee is good for his mercie endureth for ever unto the end of that Psalme But he is not bound they say to that cup as to the foure former cups These things are shewed by Maimony in his treatise of Leven and unlevened bread chapter 8. where also hee noteth some differences at this time when having no Temple they can have no sacrifice neither kill the paschall Lambe but onely use the unlevened bread bitter herbs and wine in their private houses After in his Copie of the Haggadah or Narration of the Passeover hee sheweth what words they used at the breaking and delivering of the unlevened bread This is the bread of affliction which our fathers did eat in the land of Egypt whosoever is hungry let him come and eat whosoever hath neede let him come and keepe the Passeover c. These observations of the Iewes whiles their common-wealth stood and to this day may give light to some particulars in the Passeover that Christ kept as why they lay downe one leaning on anothers bosome Ioh. 13. 23. a signe of rest and security and stood not as at the first Passeover neither ●ate on high as wee use Why Christ rose from supper and washed and sate downe againe Iohn 13. 4. 5. 12. Why hee blessed or gave thankes for the bread apart and for the cup or wine apart Marke 14. 22. 23. and why it is said hee tooke the cup after supper Luke 22. 20. also concerning the Hymne which they sung at the end Matthew 26. 30. and why Paul calleth it the shewing forth of the Lords death 1 Corinthians 11. 26. as the Iewes usually called their Passeover Haggadah that is a Shewing or Declaration But specially we may observe how the bread which was of old a remembrance of their deliverance out of Egypt was sanctified by the Sonne of God to bee a remembrance of his death and of our redemption thereby from Sathan 1 Corinthians 11. 24. 25. 26. for which we have much more cause to praise honour and magnifie the Lord than the Hebrewes had for their temporary salvation Verse 9. raw That raw whereof the Law warneth us is flesh whereon the fire hath begunne to worke and it is roasted a little but not fit for man to eat as yet saith Maimony in Korban Pesach chapter 8. S. 6. It might figure a full and due preparation by the preaching of the Gospell and shewing forth of Christs death with an examination of our selues that wee eat not unworthily and so eat judgement to our selves 1 Corinthians 11. 26. 28. 29. sodden at all or any way sod Hebr. sodden sod in water The Iewes explaine it so generally neither to be sodden in water nor in any other liquor or juyce of fruits Neither roasted and afterward sodden nor perboyled and afterward roasted c. Yet they say it was lawfull to baste it with wine or oyle or any liquor except water also lawfull to dip the flesh when it was roasted in liquors or juyce of fruits Maimony in Korban Pesach chapter 8. S. 7. 8. At the Passeover which Christ did eat the Euangelists mention his dipping of a sop and giving it to Iudas Iohn 13. 26. In seething the water is mixed with the flesh the forbidding whereof seemeth to teach the simplicitie that should be in Christ that wee know nothing but Christ and him crucified 2 Corinthians 11. 3. 1 Corinthians 2. 2. with fire a figure both of Gods Spirit compared to fire Matthew 3. 11. through which Christ offred himselfe to God Heb. 9. 14. and of the fire of Gods wrath which Christ was to suffer whiles he was made a curse for us by
before is noted doe understand not onely of the streets but not out of the roome nor society where it is to bee eaten a bone to foreshew that not a bone of Christ our Passeover should be broken as was fulfilled Ioh. 19. 33. 36. which signified his victory and deliverance out of affliction and death from which he rose the third day as Psal. 34. 20. 21. the Lord keepeth all his bones not one of them is broken And in hope of resurrection Ioseph gave charge of his bones and they were caried into Canaan Heb. 11. 22. Exo. 13. 19. The bones of the Passe over were burnt with the flesh that remained v. 10. as is testified by the Hebrew Doctors who also say that though it were a little kid whose bones were tender yet might they not eate them for that were the breaking of the bones Maimony in Korban Pesach ch 10. S. 2. 9. Vers. 47. doe it that is prepare offer and eate the pasche as is ordained For neglect and not doing it men were to be cut off Numb 9. 13. Vers. 48. a strangers The Greeke translateth when any proselyte come unto you and so the Chaldee saith when a stranger shall become a proselyte or joyne himselfe with you So this differeth from that which was before in v. 22. and also in ver 45. and is meant of a third sort of strangers that were converts in Greeke called proselytes such as were joyned to the Iewes Church Act. 13. 43. and 2. 10. Matth. 23. 15. Such they were wont to call strangers within the covenant and just strangers to distinguish them from strangers within the gates that did but dwell among them mentioned in Deut. 14. 21. and here in v. 45. doe the Passe-over that is keepe or celebrate it This phrase is used in Matt. 26. 18. Heb. 11. 28. and then so not onely himselfe but his male children must be circumcised ere hee might bee admitted to the Passeover for he was yet in his sinne whiles his children were through his default uncircumcised see Gen. 17. 12. 13. 14. Exod. 4. 24. 26. And thus the Iewes have interpreted this place that as the circumcision of himselfe if it be omitted debarreth him from doing the Passeover so doth the circumcision of his sons and of his servants c. and if hee kill it before hee doe circumcise them it is unlawfull Maimony in Korban Pesach chap. 5. S. 5. uncircumcised the Chaldee turneth it profane person So God saith No stranger uncircumcised in heart nor uncircumcised in flesh shall enter into my Sanctuary Ezek. 44. 9. And the Hebrew Doctors say Whiles the power of uncleannesse and the superfluous foreskin is upon him hee is unfit to be united with the divine Maiesty c. R. Menachem on Exod. 12. Vers. 49. that sojourneth the Greeke here as in ver 48. translateth the proselyte that is come among you So the obedient heathens might by faith in Christ have part in all the holy things with Israel alwaies for in Christ all are one Galat. 3. 28. Act. 15. 9. And unto strangers is promised inheritance with the tribes of Israel in the holy land Ezek 47. 22. 23. The Iew Doctors of old have thus written concerning this Moses our master gave the inheritance of the Law and commandements to Israel onely as it is written Deut. 33. 4. the inheritance of the congregation of Iakob and unto any of the other nations that willingly joyned himselfe a proselyte as it is written Numb 15. 15. as yeeare so shall the stranger be before the Lord. But whosoever is not willing they force him not to receive the law and the commandements But they force all that come into the world to receive the commandements given to the sonnes of Noe whereof see on Gen. 9. 4. and who so receiveth not them is killed and be that receiveth them is called the stranger that sojourneth c. Maimony in Misneh treat of Kings ch 8. S. 10. Likewise in their commentary upon Exodus called Elle shemoth rabbah upon Exod. 12. they say This is that which is written in Esay 56. 3. And let not the sonne of the stranger that hath joyned himselfe to the Lord speake saying The Lord hath utterly separated mee for Iob saith The stranger shal not lodge in the street Iob 31. 32. And why Because the holy blessed God exeludeth no creature but receiveth all For his gates are open every houre and whosoever would be received in he entreth and is received For this it was said by Iob the stranger shall not lodge in the street And againe he saith in the person of God I will open my doores to the traveller Iob. 31. 32. Rabbi Barachias said In whose person speaketh Iob this Doubtlesse because it shall be that the strangers shall be Priests ministring to the holyblessed God as it is written and the stranger shall be joyned them Esay 14. 1. and this joyning is not meant but of the Priests as it is written joyne mee unto one of the Priests offices 1 Sam. 2. 36. For it shall come to passe that proselytes shall eate of the Shew-bread c. CHAP. XIII 1 God commandeth to sanctifie all the Firstborne unto him 3 to remember the day of their going out of Egypt 5 to keepe the feast of Vnlevened bread in Canaan 8 to shew their sonnes the cause thereof 12 to set apart for the Lord the firstlings of beasts 16 Phylacteries for a signe of Gods former mercies 17 The way by which God led Israel in the wildernesse 19 The carying of Iosephs bones with them 20 Israel campeth in Etham 21 God guideth them by a pillar of a cloud and pillar of fire AND Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Sanctifie unto me every first-borne that which openeth every wombe among the sonnes of Israel of man and of beast it is mine And Moses said unto the people Remember this day in which ye came out from Egypt from the house of servants for by strength of hand Iehovah brought you out from hence no levened bread shall bee eaten This day you come out in the moneth of Abib And it shall be when Iehovah shall bring thee into the land of the Canaanite and the Chethite and the Amorite and the Evite and the Iebusite w ch he sware unto thy fathers to give thee a land flowing with milke and honey that thou shalt serve this service in this moneth Seven daies thou shalt eat unlevened cakes in the seventh day shall be a feast to Iehovah Vnlevened cakes shall bee eaten seven daies and no levened bread shall bee seene with thee and no old leven shall bee seene with thee in all thy border And thou shalt shew thy sonne in that day saying because of that which Iehovah did unto mee when I came out from Egypt And it shall bee to thee for a signe upon thy hand for a memoriall betweene thine eyes that Iehovahs Law may be in thy mouth for with a strong hand hath Iehovah brought
thee out from Egypt And thou shalt keepe this statute in his season from yeere to yeere And it shal be when Iehovah shall bring thee into the land of the Canaanite ashe sware unto thee and unto thy fathers and shall give it thee That thou shalt cause all that openeth the wombe to passe unto Iehovah and all that openeth the wombe of the yong of a beast which thou shalt have the males shall bee Iehovahs And all that openeth the wombe of an asse thou shalt redeeme with a lambe and if thou wilt not redeeme it then thou shalt breake the necke of it and all the first-borne of man amongst thy sons shalt thou redeeme And it shall be when thy son shall aske thee to morrow saying What is this that thou shalt say unto him By strength of hand Iehovah brought us out from Egypt from the house of servants And it was when Pharaoh was hard to send us away that Iehovah slew every first-borne in the land of Egypt from the first-borne of man even to the first-borne of beast therefore I sacrifice to Iehovah all that openeth the wombe the males and every first borne of my sonnes I redeeme And it shall bee for a signe upon thy hand and for phylacteries betweene thine eyes for by strength of hand Iehovah brought us out from Egypt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And it was when Pharaoh had sent away the people that God led them not the way of the land of the Philistines though that was neere for God said lest the people repent when they see warre and they returne to Egypt But God led the people about by the way of the wildernesse of the red sea and the sons of Israel went up harnessed out of the land of Egypt And Moses tooke the bones of Ioseph with him for he had swearing sworne the sons of Israel saying God will visiting visit you and yee shall cary up my bones from hence with you And they journeyed from Succoth and encamped in Etham in the edge of the wildernesse And Iehovah went before them by day in a pillar of a cloud to lead them the way by night in a pillar of fire to give them light for to 〈◊〉 by day and night He tooke not away 〈◊〉 pill●● of the cloud by day and the pillar of 〈◊〉 by night before the people Annotations SAnctifie or Hallow Consecrate that is put apart unto holy use for me and my service The men and uncleane beasts were to be redemed with money which was given to the Lords Priests the cleane beasts were to bee killed in sacrifice to the Lord Numb 18. 15. 16. 17. Moses is commanded here to teach this unto Israel Afterwards the Levites were taken for all the first-born Israelites and imployed in the service of the Lord Numb 3. 6. 12. that which openeth so the holy Ghost translateth it in Greeke Luk. 2. 23. but the Hebrew phrase is the opening or emission of every wombe or matrice meaning the first birth of man or beast and so the Chaldee in v. 13. expoundeth it the first-borne and in Exod. 34. 19. 20. the Greeke translateth it first-borne or firstling This law signified that Gods people which are a congregation of first-borne Heb. 12. 23. Exod. 4. 22. being redeemed from death by the blood of Christ should both themselves and theirs be consecrated to the service of the Lord Rom. 6. 13. 19. 22. and 12. 1 even as he is their God and sanctifieth them to himselfe from the wombe Psal. 22. 11. Esay 46. 3. Ier. 1. 5. Gal. 1. 15. V. 3. Remember The Heb. Zacor here in Exo. 20. 8. and Ios. 1. 13. are properly indefinites signifying To remember but used for Imparatives as Halok To go 2 Sam. 24. 12. is explained Lok Go thou in 1 Chro. 21. 10. To eat and to drink Esay 22. 13. is expounded Letus eat and drinke 1 Cor. 15. 32. and in Gr. Chairein To rejoice for Rejoyce thou 2 Ioh. 1. 10. But there be of the Hebrewes that say the word Zacor is indefinite because we are bound for ever to remēber this matter R Elias in Sepher reshith choc●●ah treat of Holinesse ch 6. This remembrance here commanded was not onely to keepe in minde for themselves but to mention and speake of it to others as after Moses saith in ver 8. Thou shalt shew thy sonne c. The Hebrew canons say It is commanded by the Law to tell of the tentations and marvellous workes which were done to our fathers in Egypt upon the fifteenth day of Nisan that is March as it is written in Exod. 13. 3. Remember this day c. and in vers 8. Thou shalt shew thy sonne c. And although he have no sonne though they bee great wise men they are bound to tell of the going out of Egypt and who so maketh a long speech of the things that fell out and came to passe it is commendable in him Maimony in Misneh treat of Leven ch 7. S. 1. servants the Greeke and Chaldee expound it servitude or bondage strength of hand the Greek expoundeth it strong hand and so Moses him-selfe speaketh in vers 9. This manner of deliverance figured also our redemption by Christ who being stronger than Satan the strong man armed overcame him and tooke from him all his armour wherein he trusted and divided his spoiles Luk. 11. 21. 22. levened of this see Exod. 12. 8. 15. It figured our sanctification in abstaining from all corruption in doctrine and conversation Matt. 16. 12. 1 Cor. 5. 8. Vers. 4. Abib which the Greeke translateth New fruits the word signifieth a greene eare or 〈◊〉 of corne Exod. 9. 31. and because in those Countries corne was ●ared and began to bee ripe in this moneth as witnesseth Philo in his third booke of Moses life it was called therefore Abib some of the Greekes name it the moneth of floures as Mac●rius Egypt in Hom. 47. It was part of March and part of April as we now call the moneths see also Exod. 12. 2. Vers. 5. Canaanite that is as the Greeke translateth Canaanites and Chethites c. see Gen. 10. 16. 18. Iebusite the Greeke version addeth Gergesites and Pherezites to make up the number of seven which is here understood as in Deut. 7. 1. serve that is observe as Exod. 12. 25. or as the Greek translateth doe this service which after followeth Vers. 6. Seven or a seven a weeke of daies figuring our whole life see Exod. 12. 15. a feast which among other duties was kept with an holy convocation Levit. 23. 8. Vers. 8. shew thy sonne It is commanded that wee shew our sonnes though they aske not according to the knowledge of the sonne must his father teach him saith Maimony in treat of Leven ch 7. S. 2. because or for this which Iehovah did unto me understand This is done or This feast we keepe for or because of that Such want of words is oft in the Scripture as in 2 Sam. 23.
contumelious cariage against God and his ministers and is written for an ensample to us not to doe the like as 1 Cor. 10. 10. 11. So they murmured againe Num. 14. 2. this whole assemblie or all this Church The wildernesse whereinto God brought his people was a land of drought and of the shadow of death a land that no man passed through and where no man dwelt Ier. 2. 6. They that wandred there hungry and thirsty their soule ●●inted in them Psal. 107. 5. There the Lord afflicted Israel and suffered them to hunger that he might prove them and doe them good at their latter end Deuteronomie 〈◊〉 3. 16. But as yet this generation had not prepared their heart ar●ght and their spirit was not faithfull with God Psal. 78. 8. Vers. 4. bread Manna the wheat of heaven whereof they made themselves bread or meat Psal 78. 24. portion Hebr. word put for any thing and here for the portion of meat by the day Wherby God taught them also to take no thought for the morrow what they should eat or drinke as Matth. 6. 31. 34. prove them or tempt them Heb. him meaning the peoples spoken of as of one man Therefore the scripture useth these indifferently as is shewed on Gen. 22. 17. And this end of proving or tempting the people is also mentioned in Deut. 8. 2. Exod. 15. 25. Vers. 5. then they shall Hebr. and they shall prepare This is meant of every sixt day the evening of the Sabbath then were they to make ready their food that there might bee no working or fire kindled on the Sabbath day as verse 23. and Exod. 35. 3. day by day that is daily see Genesis 39. 10. Vers. 6. Iehovah hath brought and not we of our selves as was objected verse 3. So hee assureth them by the miracle of Quailes which God would give that their calling into that place and stare was of the Lord. Vers. 7. the glory a visible signe of Christs glorious presence among them appearing in the cloud as vers 10. to assure them that the Lord was with them in the midst of all their wants whereof they also doubted now as againe afterward in Exod. 17. 7. and that hee heard their murmurings By such apparations God used to represse the peoples tumultuous rage Num. 14. 10. and 16. 42. and 12. 5. But when he withdrew the cloud it was a signe of his face and favour withdrawne from them Exod. 33. 7. 9. 10. Or by the glory of Iehovah may be meant that glorious worke of his the Manna which they saw in the morning verse 15. So Christs divine worke in raising Lazarus from the dead is called the glory of God Ioh. 11. 40. So glory is used for glorious workes in Num. 14. 21. 22. Vers. 8. This shall be or understand from verse 6. ye shall know this Such wants are often to bee supplied as in Exod. 45. not against us to wit us onely or us so much as against the Lord for it was also against them verse 2. The like speech is in 1 Sam. 8. 7. Ioh. 12. 44. See also Gen. 32. 28. against Iehovah the Chaldee expounds it against the word of the Lord. Vers. 9. before Iehovah that is assemble together before the cloud wherein Iehovahs glorious presence was manifested verse 10. So Vzzah died before God 1 Chron. 13. 10. that is by the Arks of God 2 Sam. 6. 7. And the commandement to appeare before the Lord Iehovah Exod. 23. 17. was at the place which hee did chuse to put his name there namely the Tabernacle or Temple Deut. 12. 5. 6. Levit. 17. 4. 5. 1 King 14. 21. Vers. 10. the wildernesse where the cloud went before the people to guide them Exod. 13. 21. Vers. 12. betweene the two evenings towards eventide as the Greeke explaineth it see Exodus 12. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 came evening for naturally they 〈◊〉 in the day time over the sea and came to land towards even see Num. 11. 31. And Manna came 〈…〉 ing because it fell with the morning dew The Quailes are not in Scripture noted to be a spi 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Manna 1 Cor. 10. 3. the flesh therefore which was to fill their bellies came towards night the time of darknesse but the bread of heaven came in the morning which usually signifieth th 〈…〉 of grace from the Lord Psal. 30. 6. and 143. 8. Lam. 3. 22. 23. filled with bread in ea 〈…〉 ng with Manna a figure of Christ the Bread of life that came downe from heaven Ioh. 6. 48. 58. Vnto this speech Moses seemeth to have reference in Psal. 90. 14. Fill us in the morning with thy mercy Vers. 13. the quailes Hebr. the quaile put for a multitude of quailes as frog for frogs Exod. 8. 6. A like miracle God wrought for them about a yeere after this Num. 11. 31. This David rehearseth in Psal. 105. 40. they asked and he brought the Quaile that lay or that lay poured out Hebr. a●bed or an effusion of dew the Chaldee translateth a descension of dew that is dew which descended or fell downe which agreeth with Num. 11. 9. And the Psalmist saith God opened the doores of heaven and rained upon them Manna Psal. 78. 23. 24. The dew is often used to signifie the blessing and favour of God as Genes 27. 28. Iob 29. 19. Esa. 26. 19. Hos. 14. 6. Mich. 5. 7. Zach. 8. 12. and in mysticall speech of the birth of Christ figured by this Manna the dew is mentioned Psal. 110. 3. And as the preaching of the Word is likened to the dew Deut 32. 2. so Manna falling in and with the dew figured Christ given unto us by the preaching of the Gospell Rom. 1. 16. 17. and 10. 8. 14. Gal. 3. 1. 2. The Hebrew Doctors say of the dew that the holy blessed God will raise up the dead unto life therewith in the time that is to come and that is the Manna prepared for the just in the world to come R. Menachem on Exod. 16. Vers. 14. went up into the ayre vanishing with the heat of the Sun So going up is used for going away or vanishing in Ierem. 48. 15. roundthing or bare thing as the Chaldee translateth it pilled The Greeke saith like coriander according to verse 31. So that the Manna was covered and as it were hidden with the dew upon it till it ascended and lay also upon dew under it Num. 11. 9. to which it seemeth the Scripture hath reference when it promiseth Manna that is hid Revel 2. 17. Manna so the Chaldee and the Holy Ghost 〈◊〉 Greeke calleth it Ioh. 6. 31. of the Hebrew Man which by interpretation signifieth a prepared or distributed portion for it was a ready meat 〈…〉 as it was gathered if they would or to beat g 〈…〉 de and bake as the people liked Num. 11. 8. And the Iew Doctors some of them so explaine it calling it Angels food a prepared bread sent from heaven without 〈…〉 an labour
Mat. 23. 19. which altar also signified Christ who sanctified himselfe for his Church Ioh. 17. 19. and through the eternall Spirit offred himselfe without spot unto God Heb. 9. 14. so by the Godhead the death of Christ was sanctified and sufficient to cleanse all iniquity This first sin-offring differed from the rest that ordinarily followed for every such offring of the priest for sinne the blood of it was caried into the Tabernacle and put upon the hornes of the golden altar of incense Levit. 4. 3. 7. whereas this was not so but only put upon the hornes of the brazen altar of burnt-offring which stoodin the court-yard For the end of this first oblation was to make atonement for the altar it selfe and to sanctifie it that it might be fit afterward to sanctifie the sacrifices of the people which should be offred upon it as appeareth after in v. 36. 37. and more plainly in Ezek. 43. 25. 26. 27. Also this first offring was used herein like the offring of the common ruler and private person for the blood for their sin was put on the hornes of the brazen altar onely Lev. 4. 25. 30. because Aaron and his Sons were not yet full priests till the seven dayes of their consecration were ended Lev. 8. 33. 34. c. finger This rite of putting blood with the finger upon the hornes of the altar was for all sin off●●ngs Lev. 4. 6. 7. 17. 18. 25. 30. and not for any other kind of sacrifice And teacheth us the efficacy of Christs blood for the purging of our sins when it is so particularly presented unto God and applied by his Spirit as the finger of God Luk. 11. 20. is expounded to bee the Spirit of God Mat. 12. 28. Heb. 9. 12. 13. 14. The outward rite was performed thus When the priest tooke the blood in a bason he brought it to the altar and dipped the fore-finger of his right hand in the blood and striked it on one home of the altar wiping his finger on the lip of the bason for no blood might remain upon it he dipped his finger the second time and striked it on another horne and so did he to all foure beginning at the South-side and compassing the altar first Eastward then North then West and at the bottome of that horn of the altar where he made an end with his finger did he poure the rest of the blood which was towards the South These things Maimony sheweth in treat of the Offring of Sacrifices c. 5. s. 7. c. and are more particularly to bee opened in Leviticus all the blood that is the rest of the blood as the Greeke explaineth it This figured the fulnesse and perfection of the grace of Christ by his blood obtayning full redemption from our sins V. 13. the fat This in Scripture is often taken for evill because fatnesse hindreth sense and feeling So of the wicked it is said their heart is fat as grease Ps. 119. 70. and thou art waxen fat thou art waxen grosse c. then he forsooke God Deut. 32. 15. make the heart of this people fat c. lest they understand Esay 6. 10. This fat therefore which was a signe of mans corruption God wold have to be consumed by fire on the altar teaching thereby the mortification of our earthly members by the worke of Christ and of his Spirit Somtime the fat is used to signifie the best of all things as is noted on Gen. 4. 4. so it teacheth us to give the best unto the Lord. the inwards or inmost part that is the heart w ch is most inward and in the midst of the body So the inward of man is used for the heart and consequently for the thoughts and mind as in Ps. 5. 10. and 62. 5. and 94. 19. And that which the Prophet calleth the inward part Ier. 31. 33. the Apostle calleth the mind Heb. 8. 10. By the fat upon the inwards therefore is signified all corruption that covereth mans heart as carnall reason unbeliefe hypocrisie evill thoughts and purposes c. all which must be consumed and the heart purified by the Spirit of God caule that is above named also the caule of the liver in v. 22. It is thought to be the midriffe or the at skin that is above the liver the Gr. translateth it lobon the lap of the liver kidneyes or reine● which as they are the instruments of seed for generation so in Scripture they are used for the inmost affections and desires and are joyned with the heart of these only God is the searcher and possessor Ps. 7. 10. and 139. 13. and here are to be offred up unto God in fire figuring that w ch Paul teacheth Mortifie your members which are on the earth fornication uncleannesse inordinate affection evill concupiscence c. Col. 3. 5. And thus the Heb. of old understood these figures for they say Therefore the kidneys the fat which is on them the caule that covereth the liver were burnt unto God for to make atonement for the sin of man which proceedeth out of the thoughts of the reines and lust of the liver fatnesse of the heart c. for they all consent in sin R. Menachem on Ex. 29. fol. 111. shalt burne the originall word signifieth properly to perfume or resolve into smoke used for burning of incense applied here to the burning of sacrifices whereby the smoke went up towards heaven The Greeke translateth it Impose the Chaldee Offer V. 14. burne It was a generall Law that no sin-offring whose blood was caried into the Tabernacle c. should be eaten but burnt in fire Levit. 6. 30. and such sin-offrings as had not their blood caried in thither should bee eaten by the priests Levit. 10. 18. Howbeit this offring was burnt though the blood were not caried into the holy place One reason whereof seemeth to be that the priests might not eate their owne sin-offrings Lev. 4. 3. 12. Because they could not beare or take away their owne sinnes but needed another Saviour as well as all men and the eating of any mans sinne-offring signified the bearing and expiating of that mans sin Levit. 10. 17. without a figure how Christ the true Sacrifice for our sins should suffer without the gate of Ierusalem which was part of his reproch that he bare for us Heb. 13. 11. 12. 13. a Sin that is an offring for sinne so the Apostle according to the Gr. version translateth it for sin Heb. 10. 6. from Psal. 40. 7. And after this Hebrew phrase may that be understood of Christ that God made him who knew no sin to be sin for us that is a sin-offring or an exceeding sinner 2 Cor. 5. 21. Thus the law made men priests which had infirmitie needed to offer sacrifice first for their owne sins but we now have the Son who is consecrated for ever Heb. 7. 27. 28. Vers. 15. impose with both hands betweene the homes as before is
ordaining of sacrifices Exod. 29. 7. Hee sheweth that the executing of justice is acceptable to God as sacrifice 1 Sam. 15. 18. 22. The Chaldee translateth Yee have offered your offrings this day c. that he may give or that there may be given namely from God For this fact of the Levites who acknowledged not their owne parents brethren or children to spare them from death is after mentioned to their praise in the blessing that Moses uttered Deut. 33. 9. c. And this tribe of Levi was adjoyned by the Lord unto the priests and taken in stead of all the first borne of Israel Num. 3. 9. 41. 45. So the children wiped out as it were the staine of their Father Levi who had before abused his sword unto injustice for which he lost the blessing that else he should have had Gen. 49. 5. 7. V. 30. per adventure I shall or it may be I shall or if so bee I may the Greeke translateth that I may They are words that imply a difficultie though good hope to obtaine as sinners are taught to have upon their turning unto God Luk. 15. 18. So in Amos 5. 15. It may be the Lord will be mercifull and Ios. 14. 12. If so be per adventure the Lord will be with mee also in 1 Sam. 14. 6. Vers. 31. unto Iehovah before whom he fell down forty daies fortie nights as before for he was afraid of the anger and hot displeasure wherewith the Lord was wroth against them Deut. 9. 18. 19. of gold As Moses here particularly expresseth the sinne of Israel so the Hebrew Doctors gather from this example a generall rule that every sinner when hee repenteth must confesse that particular sin which he hath committed Maimony treat of Repentance ch 2. s. 3. V. 32. if thou wilt an unperfect speech through passion of mind such as are sundry times used in Scripture See Luke 13. 9. and the notes on Exod. 4 5. and 18. 11. The Greeke translation supplieth the defect thus And now if thou wilt for give them the sin forgive them The word If is used also in prayers as Gen. 24. 42. and 28. 20. thy Booke the Booke of life Phil. 4. 3. or of the living Psal. 69. 29. called the writing of the house of Israel Ezek. 13. 9. spoken of God after the manner of men This wish proceeded from great sorrow in heart for the fall of this people from the zeale of Gods glorie and love of his brethren for whose sakes he could wish himselfe accursed or separated from Christ as Paul also did Rom. 9. 1. 2. 3. Herein also Moses dealt as a mediator betweene God and men and was a figure of our Mediator Christ who layd downe his life for the sheepe Iohn 10. 15 and redeemed us from the curse of the Law when hee was made a curse for us Gal. 3. 13. although Moses could not fully effect the grace that hee desired for the people The intent of Moses say the Heb. Doctors was that he might die in stead of them and beare their punishment according to that in Esay 53. 5. he was wounded for our trespasses for the death of the just maketh reconciliation c. R. Menachem on Ex. 32. Vers. 33. Whosoever the Greeke saith if any hath sinned meaning such sinne as whereby men fall away finally against whom David prayeth Let them be wiped out of the booke of the living Psal. 69. 29. but who so overcommeth Christ will not wipe his name out of the Booke of life Rev. 3. 5. I will wipe or I should wipe him out if any Vers. 34. unto the place the word place the Greeke also addeth meaning the land of Canaan So God in indignation giveth over the people unto Moses and the conduct of the Angel and wold withdraw the signes of his presence from them as after he did in Exodus 33. Angel there was an Angel fore-promised in Exodus 23. 20. Howbeit R. Menachem on this place saith This Angel is not the Angel of the covenant of whom hee spake in the time of favourable acceptance My presence shall goe for now the holy blessed God had taken away his devine presence from amongst them and would have led them by the hand of another Angel And Moses speech in Exodus 33. 12. seemeth to imply so much when I visit or of my visitation that is when I see good to punish them for so visiting here signifieth as in Exodus 20. 5. By this God would teach the impossibility of the law to reconcile men unto God in that Moses could obtaine but a deferring of their punishment they still remaining under wrath Vers. 35. they made that is caused to bee made for they that occasion or cause a thing are sayd to doe they same as Iudas purchased the field Act. 1. 18. which was bought by the Priests with the mony which Iudas returned Matt. 27. 3. 7. see Ex. 7. The Greek here translateth for the making of the Calfe but the Chaldee saith for that they served it Amongst other punishments which God inflicted upon the people there was one speciall for this sin that God turned and gave them up to worship the host of heaven c. Act. 7. 42. so giving them over from one evill to another as he did also the Gentiles Rom. 1. 24. 26. 28. CHAP. XXXIII 1 The Lordrefuseth to goe as he had promised with the people 4 The people mourne for it and put off their ornaments 7 The Tabernacle is removed out of the campe 9. Moses entreth into it and God in a cloud talketh with him 12 He prayeth the Lord to shew him his waies 15 and to let his presence goe with his people 17 God granteth it him 18 He desireth to see Gods glory 19 God promiseth to proclaime his Name before him but his face no man can see live AND Iehovah spake unto Moses Go get thee up hence thou and the people which thou hast brought up out of the Land of Egypt unto the Land which I sware unto Abraham to Isaack and to Iacob saying unto thy seed will I give it And I will send before thee an Angel and I will drive out the Canaanite the Amorite and the Chethite and the Pherizzite the Evite and the Iebusite Vnto a Land flowing with milke and honey for I will not goe up in the midst of thee for thou art a stiff-necked people lest I consume thee in the way And the people heard this evill word and they mourned and no man did put his ornament upon him For Iehovah had said unto Moses Say unto the Sons of Israel ye are a stiff-necked people in one moment I will come-up in the midst of thee and consume thee now therefore put-off thy ornament from on thee and I shall know what I shall doe unto thee And the Sonnes of Israel stript themselves of their ornament from the mount Horeb. And Moses tooke a tent and pitched it for him without the campe afar off from
13. 15. perfect in Greeke without blemish See Exod. 12. 5. and Lev. 1. 3. Vers. 2. lay or impose his hand in Greeke his hands to testifie by this signe his faith in God through Christ see the notes on Levit. 1. 4. The difference there and here the Hebrew doctors thinke to be this that ouer the Peace-offring there was no confession of sinnes but speaking words of Praise unto God and that hands might be laid on in any place of the courtyard where he would in the place where it was killed Maimony treat of offring sacrifices chap. 3. Sect. 14. 15. he that is the Priest or some other Levite shall kill it see Lev. 1. 5. It might be killed in any place of the Court Maimony ibid. chap. 5. Sect. 4. and was not restrained to the Northside of the Altar as the Burnt-offring Levit. 1. 11. For these Peace-offrings the Hebrewes call the letghter holy things to distinguish them from the Holy of holies Lev. 2. 10. sprinkle according to the manner observed on Lev. 1. 5. For the Bur●offring Trespass-offring and Peace-offring the sprinkling of the blood of these three upon the Altar was 〈◊〉 alike Maimony treat of Offring sacrifices chap. 5. Sect. 6. It figured the sprinkling of Christs blood whereby we our words and workes are sanctified before God 1 Pet. 1. 2. Heb. 12. 24. Vers. 3. unto Iehovah wholly burnt upon the Altar unto the Lord. There were besides of every Peace-offring the Brest and the right shoulder which were waved and heaved before the Lord and given the Priests to eat whereof see Lev. 7. 30. 32. c. the other flesh of the Peace-offring was eaten by the owner that brought it and his family and friends Lev. 7. 15. 16. the fat or the su 〈…〉 This sometime signifieth the best of all things as is shewed upon Gen. 4. 4. and so teacheth to offer the best unto the Lord sometime it signifieth unbeleefe dulnesse and hardnesse of heart as 〈◊〉 is without sense Psalme 119. 70. Acts 28. 27. so the fat consumed in the fire signified the taking away of our corruptions by the spirit of Christ. And the kidneyes which are the seat of lust not the heart or braines which are the seat of wisedome and understanding were likewise burned to teach mortification of our members which are on earth fornication uncleannesse inordinate affection c. Colos. 3. 5. See the notes on Exod. 29. 13. Vers. 4. which is understand againe the fat which is upon the flankes or as the Greeke and Chalde● interpret it upon the thighs so the Hebrew doctors expound it as a distinct fat from the former and say it was the fat which is in the roots of the thighes on the forepart Maimony treat of forbidden meats chap. 7. Sect. 6. Vers. 5. shall burne it The order of offring this sacrifice was the Priest killed it and sprinkled the blood and flayed it and tooke out the inwards Afterwards he cut in pieces the flesh and separated the brest and the right shoulder Levit. 7. 30. 32. and put the inwards with the brest and shoulder into the owners hands And the Priest put his hand under the owners hands and waved all before the Lord on the East side And if it were a Thank-offring Levit. 7. 12. 14. he tooke of the bread that was brought therewith one cake often and laid it with the brest shoulder and inwards and waved all upon the owners hands First he laid the fat upon the owners hands then the brest and the shoulder above And the two kidneyes and the caule of the liver above them And if there were any bread hee laid it above and so waved all After that he salted the inwards and burned all upon the Altar but the brest and the shoulder were eaten by the Priests and the remnant of the Peace-offring was eaten by the owners But the Priests might not have the brest and shoulder till the inwards were burned Likewise the bread waved with the Thank-offring was eaten by the Priests and the rest of the bread by the owners If two brought a peace-offring in partnership the one of them waved it by leave of his fellow and if they were 100. one waved for them all If the owner of the sacrifice were a woman she waved it not but the Priest A woman never waved save onely in the offring of jealousie Numbers 5. and of a Nazirite Num. 6. Maimony in treat of offring sacrif chap. 9. Sect. 6. 7. c. upon the Burnt offring that is laying it on the altar after the Burnt-offring for that alwaies had the first place Sol. Iarchi here saith this teacheth us that the daily Burnt-offring was before any other oblation It signified that wee are first to bee reconciled unto God by the death of Christ apprehended of us by faith before any oblation of ours can be acceptable to God of rest Greeke of sweet smell in the Chaldee an offring which shall be received with favour before the Lord. See Levit. 1. 9. Hereby Gods acceptation of us and of our service praiers thanksgiving c. in Christ was signified H b. 13. 15. 16. Vers. 6. of the flocke sheepe or goats as after is explained but here is no mention of fowles as was for the Burnt-offring Levit. 1. 14. The Hebrewes say Peace-offrings are brought of sheepe and of goats and of bee●es of males or of females of great or of small but no fowle is brought for Peace-offrings Sm●l beasts are from eight daies old untill a complete yeere from day to day and great beasts of the herd till they be full three yeeres old from day to day and of the flocke till they be full two yeeres old from day to day if they be more then thus they are too old and may not be offred Maimony treat of Offring the sacrifice chat 1. Sect. 11. Vers. 7. a Lamb or sheepe of the first yeere as is noted on Levit. 1. implying also a sheepe of the second yeere which was lawfull to be offred as is before shewed Vers. 8. he that is the Priest or Levite shall kill it so in verse 13. see Levit. 1. 5. before the Greeke translateth at the doore of the Tent as Moses said in verse 2. so after in verse 13. and these phrases explaine one another Verse 9. whole rumpe the perfect or intire tayle which in some kinde of sheepe is very great and fat especially in those parts of the world and namely in Syria as Plinie mentioneth Hist. b. 8. c. 48. Therefore it is here commanded to be burnt upon the altar with the other fat and inwards Verse 11. the bread or the food meaning the flesh which the fire on the altar was to eat up and consume The Greeke translateth it a savour of sweet-smell so in verse 16. And because these things were burnt unto God therefore God calleth them also his bread Num. 28. 2. Ezek. 44. 7. and the Priests which burned them are said to offer the bread of
Iewes as Paul 〈◊〉 us 〈…〉 God but not according to knowledge being ignorant of Gods righteousnes and going about to establish their owne righteousnes For Moses describeth the righteousnes which is of the law when hee saith the man which doth these things shall live by them but the righteousnesse which is of faith speaketh otherwise That if thou confesse with mouth that Iesus is the LORD and beleeve in thy hart that God hath raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved Rom. 10. 2. 3. 5. 6. 9. his trespasse that is his trespass offring or for his trespasse it selfe aram perfect without blemish The 〈◊〉 was to be of the second yeere see the notes on Lev. 1. 10. with thy estimation or by thy valuation This is spoken to the Priest who was to esteeme and value all holy things as is expressed in Lev. 27 8. 12. c. of silver shekels Hebr. silver of shekels see the like transplacing of words in Lev. 6. 21. and 7. 21. and so the Gr. translateth a ram without blemish out of the sheepe of price of silver of sekels This some understand of the thing wherein the transgression is committed which the Priest should value as is explained in the next verse others understand it of the ramme brought for sacrifice that it should bee worth shekels of silver that is two at the least and besides that he should pay the principall and the fift part Thus Sol. Iarchi expoundeth it Which is worth two shekels and R. Levi giveth this reason because multiplication in numbers is first made by two therefore he saith shekels for two shekels Maimony 〈◊〉 Megnilah c. 1. s. 3. saith He that transgresseth through ignorance payeth for that which he hath made use of to himselfe and addeth a fift part thereto and bringeth a ram of two-shekels that is worth so much and offreth it for a trespass-offring makes atonement for himself Of the shekel see Gen. 20. 16. Againe in another place he saith All trespass-offrings in the law are brought being of the second yeere worth two shekels except the Trespass-offring of the Leper and of the Nazirite for they are of the first yeere and there is no price of them set The doubtfull Trespass-offring is brought of little or of great and by tradition we have learned that it comes not but worth silver shekels If rams be 〈◊〉 that he find not a ram worth two shekels let him not buy but tary till they be dearer and bring one of two shekels For loe the law provideth cōcerning the price determineth it M●●m in Pesulei hamukdashin c. 4. s 22. 23. Vers. 16 holy thing Hebr. holines which the G● translateth holies that is holy things The worth of it or of them must be payed fift-part so much was also added to holy things redeemed Lev. 27. 13. 15. 19. The payment of the principall with the addition of the fift part is commanded to be done together with the bringing of the sacrifice The payment of the principall and bringing of the trespasse hinder the atonement ●o weet if they be not brought together but the fift part hindreth not for it is said after he 〈◊〉 make atonement with the ram of the trespasse the r●● and the trespasse hinder but the fift part hindreth 〈◊〉 Meaning it may remaine as a debt to bee pay●● afterward Maim in Meghnilah c. 1. s. 3. 4. By the Trespasse Asham the scripture somtime mean 〈…〉 the pr 〈…〉 thing wherein the trespasse is committed which is to bee recompensed besides the sacrifice 〈◊〉 b. 5. 〈…〉 the Priest shall make 〈…〉 ment Tho●gh restitution was made by the 〈…〉 gressor yet atonement could not bee made but 〈◊〉 the Priest and sacrifice appointed both which 〈…〉 gured Christ by whose blood sinnes of all sorts which men through infirmitie doe commit are forgiven and purged 1 Iohn 1. 7. Verse 17. though he know it not this may also bee translated thus and he know it not and is guilty and beareth his iniquity This differeth from the former cases in verse 4. and 15. where there was knowledge of the sinne at least in the end but this law was for sinnes though never known certainly but in doubt or suspense so that David said not without cause Ignorances or Vnadvised-sins who can understand clense thou me from secret-sins Psal. 19. 13. Vers. 18. a ram perfect that is without blemish Of this the Hebrew canons say Every sin for the ignorant-doing whereof they are bound to bring the Sin-offring appointed Levit 4. they are bound when it is not knowne to bring the doubtfull Trespasse-offring Levit. 5. 17. 18. And what meaneth this If it be not knowne If it be doubtfull unto him whether he hath ignorantly-sinned in the thing or no. And this sacrifice is called Asham talui a doubtfull Trespass-offring because it makes atonement for that which is uncertaine and doubtfull unto him c. As for example there is a sabbath day and a working day and a man doth worke in one of them and knowes not in which he did it Hee eateth of a dish of meat and one witnesse saith unto him this which thou hast eaten is the fat forbidden in the law Levit. 3. 17. another witnesse saith thou hast not eaten fat now he bringeth a doubtfull Trespasse-offring and so in like cases Maim treat of Ignorances c. 8. S. 1. 2. On the other hand for some cases knowne they bring an other sort of sacrifice called Asham Vaddai that is a certaine or manifest Trespasse-offring concerning which in the same booke chap. 9. it is said For five transgressions men bring the sacrifice Asham and it is called a manifest Asham because there is not any doubt therein And these are they For lying with a bond-maid Levit. 19. 20. 21. For things taken-by-violence c. Levit. 6. 2. 6. For sacrilegious transgression Levit. 5. 15. For the uncleannesse of a Nazirite Num. 6. 12. And for leprosie when a man is cleansed from the same Levit. 14. 12. estimation or valuation The Greeke translateth it of price of silver see before in verse 15. Vers. 19. trespassing he hath trespassed that is hee hath certainely trespassed or he is surely guilty The Chaldee translateth It is a trespasse-offring for his sinne which he hath sinned he shall offer a trespasse-offring before the Lord. The rites about this sacrifice were the same with the former whether it were a manifest trespasse-offring or a doubtful trespasse-offring it was killed and the blood sprinkled then it was flayed the fat taken-out and salted and put on the fire of the altar and the flesh was eaten by the Priests in the court Maimony treat of offring the sacrifices c. 9. S. 1. The signification hereof was also like the former that by the death and blood of Christ we are clensed from all sinne 1 Ioh. 1. 7. Heb. 10. 10. 11. 12. CHAP. VI. 1 The Trespasse-offring for sins done against the Lord and a mans neighbour 8 The
Hebrewes testifie in Talmud Bab. in Ioma c. 1. that they had not the Fire from heaven any more See the annotations on Exod. 28. 30. shouted with astonishment and joy humbly thanking God for this signe of grace towards them as the Greeke translateth they were astonished and the Chaldee they gaue thankes So in 2 Chron. 7. 3. when all the sonnes of Israel saw how the fire came down and the glory of Iehovah upon the house they howed themselves with their faces to the ground upon the pavement and worshipped and confessed to Ieh●v●h saying For he is good for his mercy endureth for ever CHAP. X. 1 Nadab and 〈…〉 for offring of strange fire are 〈…〉 fire 6 〈…〉 and his sonnes are forbidden to mo●r●e for them 8 The Priests are forbidden wine when they are to go● into the Tabernacl● 12 The law of eating the holy things 16 Moses blameth the Priests for not eating the sin-offring 19 Aaron excuseth the transgression AND Nadab and Abihu the sonnes of Aaron tooke e●h man his censer and they put fire in them and put incense thereon and offred before Iehovah strange fire which hee had not commanded them And there went-out fire from before Iehovah and devoured them and they died before Iehovah And Moses said unto Aaron This is it that Iehovah spake saying I will bee sanctified in them that come ●igh me and before all the people I will be glorified and Aaron held his peace And Moses called Misael and Elzaphan the sonnes of Vzziel the uncle of Aaron and said unto them Come-neere cary your brethren from before the Sanctuarie out of the camp And they went neere and caried them in their coats out of the campe as Moses had spoken And Moses said unto Aaron and unto Eleazar and unto Ithamar his sonnes Make not bare your heads neither ●end your clothes that you dye not and wrath come upon all the congregation but your brethren all the house of Israel shall weepe for the burning which Iehovah hath burned And ye shall not goe-out from the doore of the Tent of the Congregation lest you die for the oile of the anoynting of Iehovah is upon you and they did according to the word of Moses And Iehovah spake unto Aaron saying Doe not drinke wine or strong-drinke thou or thy sonnes with thee when ye goe-in to the Tent of the Congregation that yee di● not it shall be a statute for ever through-out your generations And that ye may separate betweene holy and profane and betweene uncleane and cleane And that ye may teach the sonnes of Israel all the statutes which Iehovah hath spoken unto them by the hand of Moses And Moses spake unto Aaron and unto Eleazar and unto Ithamar his sonnes that were left Take ye the Meat-offring that is left of the Fire offrings of Iehovah and ●a● it in unlevened cakes beside the altar for it is holy of holies And ye shall eat it in the holy place for it is thy due and thy sonnes due of the Fire offrings of Iehovah for so I was commanded And the wave brest an● the heave shoulder ye shall eat in a clea●s place thou and thy sonnes and thy daughters with thee for they are given as thy due and thy sonnes due out of the sacrifices of the Peace-offrings of the sonnes of Israel The heave shoulder and the wave brest with the Fire offrings of the fat shall they bring to wave for a wave-offring before Iehovah and it shall be for thee and for thy sonnes with thee by a statute for ever as Iehovah hath commanded And Moses seeking sought the goat-buck of the Sin offring and behold it was burnt and he was wroth with Eleazar and with Ithamar the sonnes of Aaron that were left saying Wherefore have ye not eaten the Sin offring in the holy place for it is holy of holies and it hee hath given to you to beare the iniquitie of the Congregation to make atonement for them before Iehovah Behold the blood of it was not brought-in to the Holy place within ye should eating have eaten it in the Holy place as I commanded And Aaron spake unto Moses Behold this day they have offred their Sin offring and their Burnt-offring before Iehovah and such things have befallen me and if I had eaten the Sin offring to day should it have beene good in the eyes of Iehovah And Moses heard it and it was good in his eyes Annotations CE●●●er or fire-pan a vessell wherein coales of fire were put see Exod. 27. 3. thereon upon the fire How the incense was burned see the notes on Exod. 30. 8. strange fire that is other fire then God had sanctified on his altar As strange incense was expresly forbidden Exod. 30. 9. so strange fire was not commanded but implicitly forbidden by Lev. 1. 7. 6. 12. as afterward God plainly sheweth in Levit. 16. 12. Hereupon it is said in Rev. 8. 5. the Angell tooke the censer and filled it with fire of the Altar This transgression of the Priests in the beginning of their administration sheweth the weakenesse and imperfection of that Priest-hood and for the weaknesse and unprofitablenesse therof it was alterwards disanulled and a better Priest-hood of Christ who was holy harmelesse undefiled and separated from sinners is come in place thereof for the Law made nothing perfect Heb. 7. 18. 19. 26. So in the practice of the moral law the people even at the first fell into open impiety Exod. 3● Vers. 2. from before or from the face of the Lord. As a fire of mercie came from thence to consume the sacrifices for sinne offred according to the law Levit. 9. 24. so now a fire of judgment commeth to consume the sinners Chazkuni here observeth Measure for measure by fire they sinned and by fire they were plagued This is an example of Gods jealousie for the ordinances of the Law teaching the same much more for the Gospell Heb. 2. 2. 3. and 10. 28. 29. So he shewed an example of judgment upon two sinners at the beginning of the Christian church whereby great feare came upon all Acts 5. 1. 11. devoured or ate them that is killed them for neither their bodies nor their cloathes were burnt to ashes as appeareth by v. 5. And in Targ. Ionathan it is thus explained It burned their soules but their bodies were not burnt Hereupon our God is said to be a devouring fire Heb. 12. 29. Deut. 1 24. See a like judgment in Num. 16. 35. before Iehovah that is with sudden death before the Tabernacle wherein the Lords glory dwelt So Vzza for his errour in putting his hand to the Arke died before God 1 Chron. 13. 10. which is expounded by the Arke of God 2 Sam. 6. 7. And it is observed that these two Priests died childlesse Num. 3. 4. 1 Chron. 24. 2. Vers. 3. spake but where spake he this It may have reference to Lev. 8. 35. Or it might be spoken but not written before as Ioh. 20. 30.
Chazkuni referreth it to Exod. 29. 43. others unto Ex. 19. 20. sanctified God is said to be sanctified both when he graciously accepteth and doth good unto them that serve him aright Ezek. 20. 41. and when hee punisheth them that transgresse as I will be glorified in the mids of thee Sidon and they shall know that I am Iehovah when I shall have executed judgements in her and shall be sanctified in her Ezek. 28. 22. So in this place and in Ezek. 38. 16. 23. Likewise God is sanctified of men when they cary themselves holily and uprightly in his sight as Sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts c. 1 Pet. 3. 15. that come nigh or my nigh ones that is the Priests and Levites as in Ezek. 4● 13. the Priests which are nigh unto Iehovah See also Levit. 9. 7. Num. 16. 9. So judgment beginneth at the house of God 1 Pet 4. 17. at his Sanctuary Ezek. 9. 6. before that is openly the Gr. translateth in al the congregation as if the like danger were unto them also for transgression see Ios. 22. 18. 20. glorified or honoured which is also not in shewing mercies onely as 2 Thes 1. 10. but in executing judgments as Exod. 14. 4. Ezek. 28. 22. And he is glorified of men when their thoughts words and actions are according to his will and to his praise Acts 4. 21. Rom. 1. 21. 1 Pet. 4. 11. 16. held his peace or was silent that is rested patiently without murmuring against the worke of God who had killed his sonnes So David saith I am dumb I will not open my mouth because thou hast done it Psal. 39. 10. And God said to Ezekiel the Priest Be silent that is Forbeare to cry make no mourning for the dead Ezek. 24. 17. Or hee mourned in silence for his sonnes death for so the scripture expresseth great sorrow and unutterable by keeping silence as Lam. 2. 10. Esa. 47. 5. Thus the Greeke translateth he was pricked and Aarons answer in vers 19. implieth so much So the heathens have said Curae leves loquuntur ingentes stupent Seneca in Hippolyto Vers. 4. uncle in Greek the sonnes of the brother of Aarons father for Vzziel was brother to Amram Aarons father see Exod. 6. 18. 20. 22. cary or take up this duty of buriall was laid upon their cousins the Levites not upon their next brethren the Priests that they might attend still to their holy ministration See Levit. 21. 1. c. out of or to a place without the campe ●o they used to burie without their cities Luk. 7. 12. Vers. 6. Mak● not bare or Make not free that is let not the hayre of your heads grow long The Hebrew Pharangh signifieth two things to make bare or uncover the head as Numb 5. 18. so the Greeke translateth here ye shall not put off the m●ters from your heads Secondly to make free for the haire to grow as the Chaldee here translateth yee shall not let your lockes grow For this also was a signe of mourning 2 Sam. 19. 24. See the notes on Gen. 41. 14. It is testified of humane writers that the Egyptians at their friends funerals did let the hayre of their head grow long but shaved their beards whereas other nations at funerals did shave their heads Herodot in Euterpe And that shaving of the beard was a signe of sorrow in Israel appeareth by Ieremie 41. 5. Hereupon is that law in Ezek. 44. 20. the Priests shall not shave their heads nor suffer their lockes to grow long they shall onely poll their heads where hoth extremities are forbidden The latter sense may also well be implied here as likewise after in Levit. 13. 45. and 21. 10. And concerning this the Hebrewes have these rules A Priest that letteth his haire grow-long it is unlawfull for him to come into the sanctuarie from the Altar forward and if he doe goe in and serve he is guilty of death by the hand of God as he that drinketh wine and serveth as it is written Neither shall any Priest drinke wine c. Ezek. 44. 21. and againe Neither shall they shave their heads nor suffer their lockes to grow long Ezekiel 44. 20. As he that drinketh wine is guilty of death Levit. 10. 9 so he that letteth his haire grow-long is guilty of death Yet profaneth he not his service hereby though he be guilty of death his service is allowable that is standeth in force and is not disanulled by it As Priests are not forbidden wine save in the time of their going into the Sanctuarie so it is not unlawfull for them to let their haire grow save at the time of their going into the Sanctuarie understanding this of the common Priest But the high Priest may neuer let his haire grow-long nor rend his clothes at any time Levi● 21. 10. because he is to be continually in the Sanctuary How long may a Priest let his haire grow Thirtie dayes as a Nazirite of whom it is said Hee shall let the lockes of the haire of his head grow Num. 6. 5. and there is no Naziriteship lesse then thirty dayes Therefore the common Priest that serveth shaveth him-selfe every thirty dayes The judgment of them that rend their garments and the judgment of them that make free or ●are their head is one Levit. 10. 6. if he serve with his clothes rent he is guilty of death by the hand of God although his service is allowable and not profaned Maimony in Biath hamikdash or Of entring into the Sanct. chap. 1. Sect. 8. 14. rend an other signe of sorrow Levit. 13. 45. and 21. 10. See Gen. 37. 34. From hence the Hebrewes gather that they which mourned for the dead were bound to rend their clothes because the Priests here being forbidden to mourne were forbidden to rend so that another was bound to rend And they were not to rend but standing as in 2 Sam. 13. 31. the King rose up and rent his garments And they were to rend the forepart not behinde or in the sides nor beneath save the high Priest he rendeth beneath The measure of rending was an hand-bredth and this on the upper garment onely They rend for the death of the Prince or of the Father of the Synedrion or of the multitude of the congregation as David and the men with him did for Saul and for Ionathan and for the people of the Lord 2 Sam. 1. 11. 12. Also when they heare the name of God blasphemed as in Esay 36. 22. and for the burning of the booke of the Law as Ieremie 36. 23. 24. and for the cities of Iudah ond for Ierusalem and for the Sanctuarie destroyed as Ierem. 41. 5. Maimony treat of Mourning chap. 8. and 9. wrath come or he that is God be wroth as at other times for the sinne of one or of few the whole congregation was afflicted Ios. 7. 1. 2. c. and 22. 20. 2 Sam. 24. 1. 15. 17. The Priests duty also was to stand
might be of any matter either of wood or of stone or of ma●tall but the one might not bee great and the other little the one of silver and the other of gold but both alike And they were of wood But in the second Temple they made them of gold And they put the two lots in one vessell which was a common vessell and of wood and it was called Kalphi On the east part of the court on the north side of the Altar there they set the Kalphi The goats were set with their faces towards the west and their binde parts to the East The high Priest came with the Sagan or second Priest at his right hand and Rosh beth ab at his left and the two goats stood before him the one on his right hand the other on his left He shaked the Kalphi and tooke out of it the two lots with his two bands in the name of the two goats opened his hand If the Lords lot were in his right hand the Sagan sayd to the high Priest hold up thy right hand on high if it were in his left then Rosh beth ab sayd unto him hold up thy left hand and he laid the two lots on the two goats the right on that which was at his right hand and the left on that which was at his left Maimony in Iom hakippurim ch 3. sect 1. 2. 3. This casting of lots was that the Lord of whom the whole disposion of the lot is Prov. 16. 33. might shew which of the two goats he would have to dye and which to live and it figured how the suffrings of Christ who was to be put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit 1 Pet. 3. 13. should be no other then whatsoever Gods hand and his counsel determined before to bee done Act. 4. 28. for Iehovah in Chaldee for the name of the LORD so after the Scape goat called in Hebrew Azazel that is the Goat-gone-away which the Greeke translateth Apopompaion Sent-away the Chaldee many interpreters keepe the Hebrew name untranslated and it is thought to bee the name both of the Goat and of the place whereinto he was sent in the wildernesse as verse 10. so by Sol. Iarchi it is expounded a strong and hard mountaine c. Ver. 9. did ascend that is did light or fall which is said here to ascend or come up because it was first taken up out of the vessell and after was laid upon the beast So in vers 10. and elsewhere Lots are said to ascend or come up as in Iosh. 18. 11. somtimes to come-forth as out of the vessell Numb 33. 54. Ios. 19. 1. and sometimes to fall as Ion. 1. 7. 1 Chr● 26. 14. Act. 1. 26. make him that is as the 〈◊〉 explaineth it offer him for sin the manner is after shewed in vers 15. by killing him to figure out the death of Christ according to the flesh Sol. Iarchi expoundeth it thus when he layeth the Lot upon 〈◊〉 he shall call him by this name saying A Sin-offring for the Lord. Ver. 10. presented alive after that the Priest hath killed his owne bullocke and the other Goat whose lot was to die ver 11. 15. 20. In the meane time after the casting of these lots the Hebrewes say that the Priest bound a long piece they call it 〈◊〉 tongue of scarlet of two shekels weight upon the hea 〈…〉 the Scape-goat and set him before the place of his sending away and the other which was to bee killed before the place of his killing and then he killed the Sin-offring bullocke which was for himselfe Maimony in I 〈…〉 kip ch 3. sect 4. and Talman Ioma c. 4. to make atonement as the Goat which was slaine was for atonement or expiation v. 16. 17. so was the live goat as here and in vers 21. 22. so that both of them were figures of Christ who is the atonement or propitiation for our sins 1 Ioh. 2. 2. 4. 10. for a scape goat or to azazel which is by some thought here to meane the place in the wildernes where this goat was let goe Vers. 11. shall make atonement laying his hands on the head of the beast confessing and asking pardon of God for his iniquities trespasses sins as is before noted on verse 6. This he was to doe for himselfe first and for his house that being reconciled to God hee might be fit as a figure of Christ to make atonement for the people Of this the Hebrew doctors say speaking of the practice in the ages following hee came to his bullocke the second time and laid both his hands on the head thereof and confessed a second confession for himselfe and his house and for the sonnes of Aaron all the Priests and asked mercie of God and then killed the bullocke Maimony in Iom hakipp. c. 4. s. 1. So elsewhere in the same treatise ch 2. s. 6. he mentioneth three confessions which the Priest made this day One which he made for himselfe at the first a second which he made for himself with the other Priests and both these were upon the bullocke of Sinne-offring which was for himselfe And the third confession was for all Israel upon the Scape goat for his house that is saith Sol. Iarchi for his brethren the Priests for they all are called his house as it is written O house of Aaron blesse ye the Lord Psal 135. 19. And all their atonement was not save for the uncleannes of the Sanctuarie and holy things thereof as in verse 16. That he made atonement for the Priests is expresly mentioned in v. 33. Ver. 12. shall take a censer after the bullock was killed before the blood was sprinkled this service of burning incense came betweene as to prepare the way into the holy place by the cloud the smoke of the incense upon the Mercie-seat verse 13. 14. So Christ before he entred with his owne blood into the most holy place of heaven Heb. 9. 11. 12. 24. prepared and sanctified himselfe and his way by prayer which was figured by incense Rev. 8. 3. 4. Ioh. 17. Matt. 26. 36. c. This Censer or Fire-pan as the word is Englished in Exodus 27. 3. is called in Greeke Pureion that is a Fire vessell in the new Testament never so named but Libanotos an Incense vessel or Censer Rev. 8. 3. 5. where mention is made of a golden Censer Of this here the Hebrewes say Every other day he whose duty it is to use the Censer putteth coles in a censer of silver c. but this day the high Priest putteth coles in a censer of gold Maimony in Iom hakipp. c. 2. sect 5. before Iehovah this was the burnt-offring altar in the courtyard where fire alwaies burned but from this manner of speech the Hebrewes say they tooke the fire from that part of the Altar which was next to the west that is towards the Sanctuarie Maimony ibidem chap. 4. sect 1. So Iarchi
accompany him And there remained betweene the last boothe and the rocke in the wildernesse two miles At every boothe they said unto the man loe here is meat and here is water if his strength failed him and hee had need to eat hee might eat but there never was man they say that needed so to doe And without necessitie no man might eat for it was their most solemne Fast. From the last boothe they went not with him to the Rocke but halfe way one mile their sabbath daies journey and stood a farre off to see what he did with the goat When he had put the goat downe the Rocke they at the boothes aforesaid waved with linnen clothes or white flagges to the end that they in Ierusalem might know that the goat was come to the wildernesse Talmud in Ioma chap. 6. and Maimony in his Comment thereon and in his Misneh in Iom hakippurim chap. 3. sect 7. c. Of their sabbath dayes journey see the notes on Exodus 16. 29. Vers. 22. all their iniquities by this it appeareth that as the killed goat figured Christ killed for the sinnes of his people so this living goat figured him also who bare our griefes and caried our sorrowes and on whom God laid the iniquity of us all Esa. 53. 4. 6. And because Christ was not onely to dye for our offences but also to rise againe for our justification Rom. 4. 25. to be crucified through weakenesse yet to live by the power of God 2 Cor. 13 4. to be put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit 1 Pet. 3. 13. and for that these two things could not fitly be shadowed by any one beast which the Priest having killed could not make alive againe therefore God appointed two that in the slame beast Christs death in the live beast his life and victory might be fore shadowed Heb. 9. 23. 24. 28. See the like mysterie in the two birds for the cleansing of the Leper Levit. 14. 6. 7. Or the sending of this goat into the wildernesse as the former was sacrificed in the Sanctuarie might figure out the salvation of Christ communicated with the gentiles and peoples of the world as Esa. 42. 1. 4. 11. and 49. 6. For the wildernesse is sometime used to signifie peoples Ezek. 20. 35. The Hebrewes say The scape goat made-atonement for all the transgressions of the Law both the lighter and the more heavy transgressions whether done presumptuously or ignorantly whether they were knowne unto a man or unknowne all are expiated by the Scape-goat if so be the partie doe repent Maimony in treat of Repentance chap. 1. sect 2. This goat was but a shadow of Christ and unto repentance must be added faith sor God hath set him forth to bee a propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3. 25. land of separation or a land cut-off a land separated to weet from other lands or from all people that is as the Chaldee translateth it a land that is not inhabited which the Greeke calleth Abaton waylesse or inaccessibles where no man goeth afterward Moses calleth it a wildernesse Or it may meane a place decreed of and determined whither to send him for the Hebrew word sometime signifieth a decree Iob 22. 28. Dan. 4. 17. Hereby was figured the utter abolishing of our sinnes by Christ both from the face of God that they should not appeare against us before him to be imputed unto us and also from us that sinne should have no more dominion over us nor we serve it any longer but having our consciences purged from dead workes should serve the living God 2 Cor. 5. 19. Heb. 9. 26. 14. Rom. 6. 6. 12. So the Prophet speaking of the like grace saith unto God Thou wilt cast all their sinnes into the depths of the sea Mich. 7. 19. And this word which Moses here useth is not elsewhere used in like sort for a land but for cutting off of other things and in particular is applied to Christ working our redemption that hee was cut-off out of the land of the living Esa. 53. 8. which the holy Ghost expoundeth thus his life was taken from the earth Act. 8. 33. and whereof himselfe speaking said whither I goe ye cannot come Ioh. 13. 33. That eternall Spirit through which Christ offred himselfe without spot unto God Heb. 9. 14. and by which he was made-alive after death 1 Pet. 3. 18. inabled his flesh or manhood to suffer such things as no other creature could come neere unto and thereby Sin is put-away and the body of sinne abolished Heb. 9. 26. Rom. 6. 6. The Hebrewes say of this goat sent away that the man which caried it threw it downe the rocke and so it dyed Thalmud in Ioma chap. 6. Vers. 23. Aaron shall come whiles the goat afore-said was going to the wildernesse these services following began and other after them in this order as the Hebrewes have recorded After he hath sent away the goat by the hand of him that led him hee returneth to the bullocke and goat wholse blood hee had sprinkled within the Sanctuarie and openeth them and taketh out their fat which he putteth in a vessell to burne them upon the Altar And he cutteth the rest of their flesh into great pieces but one cleaving to another and not parted asunder and them he sondeth by the hand of others to be caried out to the place of burning without the campe Levit. 16. 27. When the Scape goat is come to the wildernesse the high Priest goeth out into the womens court to read the Law And whiles hee is reading they burne the bullocke and the goat in the place of the ashes without the citie therefore hee that seeth the high Priest when he readeth seeth not the bullocke and the goat burnt When he readeth all the people stand before him and the minister of the Congregation taketh up the booke of the Law and giveth it to the Chief of the congregation and he to the Sagan or second chiefe Priest and the Sagan giveth it to the high Priest who standeth up when he receiveth it and standeth and readeth the 16. of Leviticus and Levit. 23. 27. 32. c. And when he readeth he blesseth God before and after c. After this hee putteth off his white garments and washeth himselfe and putteth on his golden garments and sanctifieth his hands and his feet and offreth the goat which is for the generall addition to this daies service Numb 29. 11. and offreth his owne ram and the peoples ram as it is said AND HE SHAL COME FORTH AND SHALL MAKE HIS BVRNT-OFFRING AND THE BVRNT-OFFRING OF THE PEOPLE Lev. 16. 24. And he burneth on the altar the fat of the bullocke and of the goat that were burnt without the campe And he offreth the daily evening sacrifice the Lambe Numb 28. 3. and trimmeth the Lempes as on other dayes Exod. 27. 21. After this he sanctifieth his hands and his feet and putteth off the golden
of the Kabbala that it is Satan one of the high rulers hee meaneth the Ruler of the power of the aire spoken of in Ephes. 2. 2 which is clad with Shagnatnez and is able to doe hurt and is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Satan the Idolater by transposition of letters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shagnatnez and the Gentiles which knew not the meaning of the word called him Satanas So the Divell is called in the Greeke tongue Rev. 12. 9. But their Canonists explaine the thing thus Nothing is forbidden concerning divers-kindes in garments but wooll and flaxe only Deut. 22. 11. And there is a thing like wooll that groweth on stones in the salt sea c. which is forbidden with flaxe because to the eye sight it is like sheepes wooll When wooll and flaxe are mixed together as when they are tozed together or spun together and so woven into a garment this is the divers-kindes forbidden in the Law To sow a woollen garment with flaxen threed or a flaxen garment with woollen threed c. is divers-kindes Of these divers-kindes there is no stinted-measure though it be but a threed of wooll in a flaxen garment or a flaxen threed in a woollen garment it is unlawfull If the wooll of sheepe and of camels or the like be tozed and spun together and if the halfe be sheepes wooll loe it is al as sheepes wooll and being with flaxe it is of divers-kindes But if the most part be of camels wooll it is lawfull to mixe it with flaxe for it hath all the forme of camels wooll Likewise hempe and flaxe tozed together if the most part be hemp it is lawfull to weave the threeds thereof with the threeds of wooll but if they be halfe to halfe it is unlawfull Maimony in Kilajim chap. 10. sect 1. c. So in Thalmud Bab. in Kilajim chap. 9. they say Nothing is forbidden by the name of divers-kindes in garments but wooll and flaxe together not come upon thee in Greeke thou shalt not put upon thee and so Moses explaineth it in Deut. 22. 11. Thou shalt not weare or clad thy selfe And this the Hebrewes understand strictly that nothing is forbidden but the wearing of it in garments therefore they say Garments of divers-kindes it is lawfull to make them and to sell them and nothing is forbidden but to weare them onely Deut. 22. 11. It is lawfull to dwell in a Tent made all of linsie-woolsie and to sit upon carpets beds c. made thereof Also to make shrowds of such to wrap the dead in for unto the dead there is no commandement Who so weareth linsie-woolsie or putteth it on is to be beaten Who so putteth it upon his neighbour if he that hath it upon him doe it presumptuously then he is beaten that hath it on him and hee that put it upon him transgresseth this rule Thou shalt not put a stumbling-blocke before the blinde But if hee that hath the garment on him knoweth not that it is linsie-woolsie but he that put it on him did it presumptuously he that put it on him is beaten and hee that hath it on is free Maimony in Kilajim chap. 10. sect 12. 25. 30. 31. Vers. 20. a man in Greeke if any man lye with a woman betrothed so the Chaldee expoundeth the Hebrew Necherepheth which comming of Caraph that is to publish and to reproach is diversly here understood of some for a woman in reproach and publike contempt of others publikely betrothed The Greeke translateth it kept or reserved to a man The Hebrew doctors explaine it thus The bond-woman charuphah betrothed spoken of in the Law is one that is halfe a bondwoman and halfe a freewoman and betrothed to an Hebrew servant Thalmud Bab in Cherethoth chap. 2. and Maimony in Issurei biah chap. 3. sect 13. But this betrothing is not complete as elsewhere he saith He that is espoused to a woman that is halfe bond and halfe free she is not espoused with complete espousals untill she be made free and when she is free they accomplish the espousals as the espousals of a girle which is growne great and he needeth no other espousals Maim treat of Wives chap. 4. sect 16. not redeemed the Chaldee explaineth it thus not redeemed with money or freedome is not given her by a bill of dismission a scourging The Hebrew Bikkoreth signifieth first a carefull-inquisition or visitation and by consequence a scourging or beating and this is meant of her onely as the Chaldee version sheweth and the Greeke saith there shall be a visitation of her and so the Hebrew Canons explaine it She is to be beaten and he is to bring a sacrifice Maimony in Shegagoth chap. 9. sect 1. and elsewhere in Issure biah chap. 3. sect 14. he saith The lying with this bondwoman differeth from all other unlawfull copulations for loe shee is to be beaten Levit. 19. 20. and he is bound to bring a trespasse offring Lev. 19. 21. So in the Thalmud in Cherethoth chap. 2. it is said In all unlawfull copulations whether it be man or woman they are alike in stripes and in sacrifice but in the case of the bond-woman the 〈◊〉 is not like to the woman in stripes nor the woman to the man in sacrifice not free for if she were free the punishment of them both should be death Deut. 22. 24. Vers. 21. his trespasse-offring whereof see Lev. 5. Vers. 23 into the land of Canaan the Greeke addeth which the Lord your God giveth unto you This Law was peculiar for the Land of Canaan not for other countries tree for food or tree of food that is whose fruit serveth for mans meat So this law concerneth not other trees that are for timber and as the Hebrewes thinke not fruit trees which are not intended by the owner for food They say He that planteth a tree for food and he intendeth it to be a fense for a garden or that he hath planted it for timber not for fruit it is free from the Law of the uncircumcised fruits If he plant it for fense and after changeth his minde and reputeth it for food or planteth it for food after reputeth it for fense as he shall please to intend so is hee bound concerning it If he planted it three yeeres for fense and thenceforth for food it is not the fourth yeere sanctified for whatsoever hath not beene three yeeres uncircumcised cannot be the fourth yeere sanctified He that planteth for to observe a commandement as when hee planteth a Citron tree for branches at the feast of Tabernacles or an Olive tree for oile for the Candlesticke in the Sanctuarie it is bound to this law of the uncircumcision That which the heathens planted before Israel came into the land was free from it but after they came into he land though the heathens planted it it was bound thereunto Whether a man plant a slip or branch of a tree or pull up the whole tree out of his place and plant it in
saith after the feast day as in verse 11. and Targum Ionathan saith after the first good day of the Passeover And by the Hebrew canons They reckon from the beginning of the day th●r fore they reckon in the night from the night of the sixteenth of Nisan Maimony thidem chap 7. ●●ct 22. seven sabbathes that is as the Greek● and Chaldee expound it seven weekes So in Luk 18. 12. I fast tw●se in the Sabbath that is twise 〈◊〉 the weeke for the Iewes used and still doe to fast on the second and on the 〈◊〉 day of every weeke as is testified by R. Iudah in M●sar chap. 4. Likewise in Matth. 28. 1. the first of the Sabbath that is the first day of the weeke And hereupon this was called the feast of Weekes because of the ex●ct numbring Exod. 34 22. complete o. perfect intire that is wanting nothing as the word importeth la● 1. 4. Bat Sol. ●a ch● here saith It teatheth that they were to begin to number from the evening the mo●●ow after the Sabbath for else they were not complete Verse 16 the morrow after the seventh sa●●ath the Chaldee saith 〈◊〉 after the seventh weeke the Greek till the morrow of the last weeke of the seven fiftie dayes Hereupon the Hebrewes observe that it was commanded to number the dayes with the weekes And they held it needfull to blesse God every night which sanctified them by his commandements and commanded the numbring of the shease that is of the fiftie dayes from the waving of the sheafe Maimony in Tamidin chap. 7. sect 22 25. And of this word fiftie in Greeke Penteconta the feast is called in the new Testament Pentecoste Act. 2. 1. Cor. 16. 8. a new meat-offring of the first fruits of the wheat harvest as the former was of barley harvest therefore this was called also the day of the first fruits Numb 28. 26. Vers. 17. your habitations in the land of Canaan They bring not the two loaves but from the land and of new fruits saith Maimony in Timidin chap. 8. sect 2. for a wave-offring Hebr. bread of waving that is to be waved before the Lord. This was brought at the churches charge the manner is noted on Levit. 24. 8. two loaves or cakes which word is added both by the Greeke and Chaldee the manner of this service is said to be thus They brought three Sea●s that is an Ephah or Bushell of new whea● and did beat and tread them after the manner of all meat-offrings and ground them to flowr● and waved of them two tenth-deales that is two Omers and the residue was redeemed and might be eaten by any man These two cakes or loaves of new corne a tenth deale must be taken from ech Scah and an halfe Then they tooke the two tenth deales and kneaded them one by one and baked them one by one And the making of them might not be on the feast day nor on the Sabbath if the evening of this feast of Pentecost were a Sabbath they baked them in the evening of the Sabbath and they were eaten in the third day after their baking which was the feast day And it is expressed in the Law that they should be levened and thus they did it they brought leaven from some place and put it into the measure of the tenth deale and filled that tenth-deale with flowre and so levened it with that leven They made the length of each cake seven hand-bredthes and the bredth foure handbredths and the height foure fingers Maim in Tamidin chap. 8. sect 3 10. with leven in Greeke levened so Leviticus 2. 11. and 7. 13. Vers. 18. perfect in Greeke unblemished of the first yeere Hebr. sonnes of a yeere see Exod. 12. 5. one bullocke in Num. 28. 27. there are two bullockes and one ram here is one bullocke and two rammes those were an addition in respect of the feast day these are a further addition in respect of the two loaves therfore to be offred with them as before he saith The Hebrewes explaine it thus In the fiftieth day from the numbring of the sheafe is the feast of Weekes Exod. 34. 22. or of Pentecost Act. 2. 1. and it is a Retention or solemne assemblie and this day they offer more than other dayes two bullocks and aram and seven lambs all of them burnt offrings and a goat for a sin-offring and these are the offrings spoken of in Num. 28. 26. 27. 30. and they are the addition of the day And yet they bring more for this day a meat offring of new wheat in two leaves And they offer with the loaves a bullocke and two rammes and seven lambs all burnt offrings and a goat for a sin-offring and two lambs for Peace offrings and these are the oblations spoken of in Levit. 23. So there are to bee offred this day over and beside the two daily-sacrifices three bullockes and three rammes and fourteene lambs twenty beasts in all for burnt offrings and two goats for sinne which are eaten and two lambs for peace-offrings which are eaten Maimony in Tamidin chap. 8. sect 1. These sacrifices figured Christ unto them by whose death their sinnes should be pardoned their persons sanctified and their thanksgiving unto God made acceptable by whom also the fruits of the land were blessed unto them and as the wheat is better then barley so their first-fruits which they brought in signe of homage to the Lord was more of the wheat than of the barley and with many moesacrifices drinke-offrings which were usually given with all sacrifices the measure of them is ●er in Num. 28. 5. 7. 12. 13. 14. of rest in Greeke of sweet-smell in Chaldee which shall be accepted with favour Vers. 19. shall offer Hebr. shall doe as verse 12. a Sin-offring whereby they acknowledged their unworthinesse to appeare before God or to injoy the fruits of his land otherwise then by Christ their sacrifice of Atonement of Peace-offrings or of payments wherby they payed thanks and praises unto God for his mercies which being done also with sacrifices shewed that by Christ we must offer praise to God continually Heb. 13. 15. It is observed by the Hebrewes that the Church or Congregation never offred a●y Peace-offrings but these Maimony treat of Offring sacrifices chap. 1. sect 4. See the notes o● Leviticus 4. 14. Vers. 20. wave them with the loaves The 〈◊〉 is recorded to be thus They brought the two 〈◊〉 the Peace-offrings and waved them whiles they were yet alive and afterwards killed them and sayed them and tooke the brest and the shoulder of ech of them 〈◊〉 as in Levit. 7. 30. 32. and laid them downe by the 〈◊〉 loaves and the priest put both his hands under the● and waved them all together in the east side the place of all wave-offrings Afterward he burned the fats of 〈◊〉 the lambs and the rest of the flesh was eaten by the Priests Likewise the two loaves the high-priest 〈◊〉 the one of them and the
of the spirituall seed of Christ promised to be that the Church shall say in her heart Who hath begotten me these Esai 49. 21. For by twelve Apostles and seventy disciples Christs kingdome began to be preached and that immortall seed of the word soone begat many ten thousands of Iewes Act. 21. 20. and many moe of the Gentiles even innumerable Reu. 7. 9. And here also we may observe that whereas the yeere before when all the tribes were first numbred from 20. yeeres old and upward their summe was 603550. men Exod. 30. 14. 38. 26. now in the second yeere when they are againe numbred and the tribe of Levi not reckoned with them there are found the same iust number of 603550. so there were so many young men of nineteene yeeres old as now supplied the want of the Levites put apart for the Lords service that Israel might s●e they should lose nothing by whatsoever was imployed in the seruice of God V. 49. Onely or But the tribe it is an exception which the Greeke translateth thus See the tribe of Levi thou shalt not muster to wit among the other Israelites but apart by themselves Num. 3. 15 c. V. 50. appoint or constitute give charge as bishops which hereof have their name Testimony that is the Tables of the Law kept in an Arke within the Tabernacle Exod. 31. 18. they shall be are according as God appointed their burdens Num. 4. 25. 31. 36. and to helpe them for some things six waggons were allowed them Num. 7. 7 8 9. round about the Tab. and next unto the Tabernacle betwix● the camps of Israel and it whereof see chap. 2. 3. V. 51. setteth forward being carried after the cloud when God removed it from place to place Num. 10. 11. 17. 21. the stranger any Israelite or other that is not of the tribe of Levi. So for the worke of the Priesthood both Israelites and Levites are counted strangers save the seed of Aaron only Num. 16. 40. put to death either by men or by the hand of God as was Vzzah for putting his hand to the Arke 1 Chron. 13. 10. So in Thargum Ionathan it is expounded he shall be killed with fire flaming out from before the Lord. V. 52. by his owne campe the Greeke trans●ateth in his owne order which is described in chap. 2. by his owne standard in Greeke according to his owne regiment see Num. 2. 2. V. 53. no feruent wrath no punishment from God as was in Vzzahs case 1 Chron. 13. 〈◊〉 charge or the custodie the watch and ward and doe the workes appointed of God see Num. 3. 7. 8. c. and 18. 3. This debarring of the people from the worke of the sanctuarie and committing it to the Levites charge shewed the separation o● of all mankinde from God and their unworthinesse to come neere unto him or his holy things untill they be called and sanctified of God thereunto Which being not effected by the Law or rudiments thereof for the Mount where the L 〈…〉 was given might not be touched Heb. 12. 18 is now performed unto us by Christ who 〈…〉 shed us from our sinnes in his owne bloud and 〈◊〉 made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father Revel 1. 5 6. so that we have libertie to exter 〈…〉 the Holiest by the bloud of Iesus Heb. 10. 19. CHAP. II. 1. The order of the Tribes pitching about the Tabernacle 3. On the East side Iudah Issachar and Zabulon 10. On the South side Reuben Simeon and Gad. 17. The Tabernacle in the midst of 〈◊〉 campe 18. On the West side Ephraim Man 〈…〉 and Benjamin 25. On the North side Dan A 〈…〉 and Naphtali ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses and unto Aaron saying The sonnes of Israel shall encamp every man by his standard with the ensignes according to the house of their fathers over against round about the Tent of the congregation shal the● encampe And they that encampe for most Eastward shal be the standard of the campe of Iudah according to their armies and the captaine of the sonnes of Iudah shal be Naasson the sonne of Aminadab And his armie and those that were mustered of them were seventy and foure thousand and six hundred And they that encampe next unto him shall be the tribe of Issachar and the captaine of the sonnes of Issachar shal be Nethaneel the sonne of Zuar And his armie and those that were mustered thereof were foure and fifty thousand and foure hundred The tribe of Zabulon and the Prince of the sonnes of Zabulon shal be Eliab the sonne of Helon And his armie and those that were mustered thereof were seven and fifty thousand and foure hundred All that were mustered of the campe of Iudah were an hundred thousand and eightie thousand and six thousand and foure hundred according to their armies they shall set forward first The standard of the campe of Reuben shal be Southward according to their armies and the captaine of the sonnes of Reuben shal be Elizur the sonne of Shedeur And his armie and those that were mustered thereof were six and fortie thousand and five hundred And they that encampe next unto him shal be the tribe of Simeon and the captaine of the sonnes of Simeon shal be Shelumiel the sonne of Zurishaddai And his armie and those that were mustered thereof were nine and fifty thousand and three hundred And the tribe of Gad and the captaine of the sonnes of Gad Eliasaph the sonne of Reguel And his armie and those that were mustered of them were five and fortie thousand and six hundred and fifty All that were mustered of the campe of Reuben were an hundred thousand and one and fifty thousand and foure hundred and fifty according to their armies and they shall set forward second And the Tent of the congregation shall set forward the campe of the Levites in the midst of the campes as they encampe so shall they set forward every man in his place according to their standards The standard of the campe of Ephraim according to their armies shal be Sea-ward and the captaine of the sonnes of Ephraim shal be Elishama the sonne of Ammihud And his armie and those that were mustered of them forty thousand and five hundred And next unto him shal be the tribe of Manasses and the captaine of the sonnes of Manasses shal be Gamaliel the sonne of Pedahzur And his armie and those that were mustered of them two and thirtie thousand and two hundred And the tribe of Benjamin and the captaine of the sonnes of Benjamin shal be Abidan the sonne of Gideoni And his armie and those that were mustered of them five and thirty thousand and foure hundred All that were mustered of the campe of Ephraim were an hundred thousand and eight thousand and an hundred according to their armies and they shall set forward third The standard of the campe of Dan shal be Northward according to their armies and the captaine of the sonnes
their service Num. 4. 3. And also because there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inheritance given them among the sonnes of Israel Num. 26. 62. but the Lord was their inheritance Deut. 10. 8 9. Now to be numbred apart and not with others signified some speciall favour towards such and care over them as Num. 23. 9. Aaron Aaron the elder brother of Moses and 〈◊〉 Levites therefore their names are mentioned here V. 3. he filled that is consecrated or perfected 〈◊〉 the Greeke translateth See the annotations on Ex●● 29. 9. and Levit. 8. V. 4. dyed by a fire from the Lord Levit. 10. 1 2. This is mentioned againe in Num. 26. 61. 1 Chron. 24. 1 2. had no sonnes the Hebrewes as Chazkuni upon this place say if they had had sonnes those sonnes had beene before Eleazar and Ithamar for whosoever is fore-most in inheritance is foremost for honour or dignitie in the sight of Aaron or before the face that is whiles Aaron lived as before the face of Tharah Gen. 11. 38. is while Tharah lived before the Moone and Sunne Psal. 72. 5. 17. is whiles they continue to give light The Greeke translateth With Aaron Elsewhere it is said by the hand of Aaron 1 Chron. 24. 19. Of these two there were so many Priests in Davids dayes that he distributed them into 24. courses sixteene of Eleazar and eight of Ithamar 1 Chron. 24. 3. 4. The Hebrew Doctors say Moses divided the Priests into eight wards or courses foure of Eleazar and foure of Ithamar and so they were untill the Prophet Samuels dayes Then Samuel and David the King parted them into 24. courses And over every course or ward there was one chiefe Provost And they went up to Ierusalem to serve by course every weeke And every sabbath day they changed one course went out and the next after them came in c. Maimony tom 3. treat of the Instruments of the Sanctuarie chapt 4. sect 3. Compare 1 Chron. 9. 22. 25. 2 King 11. 5. 7. V. 6. present it or cause it to stand speaking of the tribe In Greeke present them V. 7. his charge Hebr. his custody or obseruation that is that which he commandeth them to obserue See this phrase in Lev. 18. 30. 〈…〉 of all the congregation the Greeke explaineth it of the sonnes of Israel as in v. 8. So 〈◊〉 2 Chron. 35. 3. serve the Lord your God and his people Israel It meaneth also such things as they were charged to keepe but the Levites now were taken in their stead 〈…〉 to serve the service in Greeke to worke or doe the workes of the Tabernacle which in Num. 8. 11. is said to serve the service of the Lord. After in the 8. verse the Greeke translateth according to all the workes of the Tabernacle The Hebrewes write thus The s●ed of Levi are all of them separated for the service of the Sanctuarie And it is commanded that the Levites be prepared and readie for the service of the Sanctuarie whether they be willing or not willing as in Num. 18. 23. And the Levite he shall serve the service of the Tent of the congregation And the sonne of Levi which will take upon him all the Levites commandements saving one thing they receive him not in till he take all upon him Maimony treat of the Instruments of the Sanct. chap. 3. sect 1. V. 9. are given are given that is as the Greeke here and Moses himselfe in Num. 18. 6. explaineth it are a gift given o● they are wholly given So the Ministers of the Gospell are called gifts Ephes. 4. 8. 11. 〈…〉 unto him for his helpe in the charge and worke of the Sanctuarie they ministring unto him and he and his sonnes ministring before the Tabernacle Num. 18. 2. 6. V. 11. shalt appoint or constitute set in office as Bishops or Overseers The Greeke explaineth it thou shalt constitute over the Tabernacle of Testimonie their Priests office for every thing of the Altar and within the veile Num. 18. 7. the stranger that is whosoeuer is not of Aarons seed as is explained in Num. 16. 40. for no man taketh the honour unto himselfe but he that is called of God as was Aaron Hebr. 5. 4. So Chazkuni here expoundeth stranger to be Israelite or Levite that commeth neere to minister And Maimony in Biath hamikdash chap. 9. sect 1. saith Who is the stranger Whosoever is not of the seed of Aaron the males And after God himselfe forbiddeth the Levites to come night he vessels of the Sanctuarie and the Altar on paine of death Numb 18. 3. put to death by the magistrate or by the hand of God as was Korah for presuming to doe the Priests office Numb 16. V. 12. every first-borne which before the Levites were taken in their stead did minister to the Lord as is noted on Exod. 24. 5. And upon what occasion God tooke the Levites instead of the first-borne is to be seene in Exod. 32. 26. 29. Deut. 33. 9. shall be mine to minister before me as the Chaldee expoundeth it V. 13. I smote in Chaldee I killed see Exod. 12. 29 30. The Lord having slaine all the first-borne of Egypt and spared the Israelites did therefore challenge for his owne and sanctifie to him-selfe all Israels first-borne Exod. 13. 2. but tooke the Levites and their cattle in stead of Israels first-borne men and cattle Num. 3. 45. and gave them as a gift to Aaron to minister unto him Who being in his Priesthood a type of Christ all these rites are in him fulfilled For unto Christ God gave children Hebr. 2. 13. and they are a congregation of first-borne written in heaven Hebr. 12. 23. being of Gods owne will begotten by the word of truth that they should be a kinde of first-fruits of his creatures Iam. 1. 18. to whom he also giveth the first-fruits of his Spirit Rom. 8. 23. These wait on and follow the Lambe Christ being bought from among men and first-fruits unto God and to the Lambe Rev. 14. 4. These were brought for an offering unto the Lord out of all nations and of them the Lord hath taken for Priests and for Levites Esai 66. 20 21. and Christ hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father that we may serve him day and night in his Temple Rev. 1. 6. and 7. 15. V. 15. Muster or Number Hebr. Visit. This was done by Moses and Aaron v. 39. and by the Princes of the congregation Num. 4. 34. though here the commandement is directed unto Moses onely house in Greeke houses old Heb. sonne of a moneth Tho cause why the Levites were numbred from this age was for that they came in place of the first-borne of Israel whose redemption is appointed from a moneth old Num. 18. 15 16. And they were counted after the houses of their fathers not of their mothers for if a woman of Levi were maried to a man of Iudah or any other tribe her sonne was not a Levite The Hebrew canons say
at all but is to be admonished must be carefull that he be cleane both he and his vessels that he may separate a pure cake Maim in Biccurim chap. 8. sect 11 in your or throughout your generations in all ages wherefore this ordinance was kept by Israel after they were returned out of Babylon Nehem. 10. 37. And besides that all their bread was sanctified unto them by these first-fruits and God was honoured by whose word man liveth and not by bread onely Deut. 8. 3. it seemeth to have a further signification of the chosen people of God as Paul applieth this phrase of the first-fruits and of the lump of dough unto the state of Israel Rom. 11. 16. as the Prophet speaking of the first-fruits also saith Israel was holinesse to the LORD the first-fruits of his increase all that eat him shall beguilty c. Ier. 2. 3. And thus the Iewes of old understood this commandement of the Cake that it signified in mystery the congregation of Israel called the first-fruits of the world which whe● it is put into the oven that burneth with the fire of the holy blessed God it is necessary to separate there-from a cake that it bee not partaker of severe judgement and there-from is a blessing reserved in the world Ezek. 44. 30. R. Menachem on Num. 15. Vers. 22. when yee shall have sinned ignorantly or if yee have erred that is done unadvisedly of ignorance errour or oversight whereto is opposed sinning with an high hand vers 30. See the annotations on Levit. 4. 2. As in the two former Lawes the Lord repeated and inlarged the doctrines of faith and of good workes so here hee doth the like concerning the forgivenesse of sins which his people through infirmitie doe fall into that all the chiefe points of Christian religion are here renewed unto them have not done all The words of this Law differ from the former in Lev. 4. 2. 13. which spake of doing that which should not be done whereas this speaketh of not doing all which should bee done There also the sacrifice which the congregation should bring was a Bullocke for a Sin-offering Lev. 4. 14. here in vers 24. they are willed to bring a Bullocke for a Burnt-offering and a goat-bucke for a Sin-offering Whether is this difference in respect of the commandements forbidding evill workes and requiring good as the words seeme to import Or as the Hebrewes expound it doth this here respect the sinne of idolatrie onely Or as others understand it is that for all the tribes generally and this for the severall tribes cities and townes as they were severed in the land of Canaan Or is this in mysterie an increase of the sacrifice in Canaan as in prophesie of the dayes of the Gospell the Meat and Drinke-offerings which Christians should spiritually offer with their sacrifices are of greater quantitie than those which were offered under Moses Ezek. 46. 5. 11. compared with Num 15. 4 5 6 7. and 28. 20 c. Vers. 23. Even all This sheweth the large extent of this Law and the weight thereof by repeating things so expresly The Hebrewes which understand this of idolatrie onely say that that one commandement is as all the commandements c. and that this sheweth that whosoever professeth idolatrie is as if he denied all the Law wholly and all that the Prophets have prophesied as it is written AND HENCE FORWARD Sol. Iarchi on Num. 15. and Maimony tom 1. treat of Idolatry chap. 2. sect 4. Verse 24. by ignorance in Greeke unwillingly see Lev. 4. 2. from the eyes understand hidden from the eyes as is expressed in Lev. 4. 13. This the Hebrew Doctors understand of things erroneously taught by the governours and practised by the people concerning idolatrie as is shewed in the annotations on Lev. 4. 13. and so Sol. Iarchi expoundeth here this place shall make readie● that is shall offer for a sacrifice Levit. 4. 14. And this the Hebrewes understand not of one sacrifice for the twelve tribes but for every tribe so much If the errour be in idolatry that they the governours have erred and taught it they bring a Bullocke for a Burnt-offering and a goat-bucke for a Sin-offering for every tribe and this oblation is that which is spoken of in Num. 15. saith Maimony in Shegagoth chap. 12. sect 1 and Talmud in Horajoth chap. 2. See the notes on Lev. 4. 14. This exposition for the number may seeme probable because the people returned from captivitie offered for all Israel in Burnt-offerings twelve bullockes and twelve goat-bucks for a Sin-offering according to the number of the tribes Ezr. 8. 35. youngling Hebr. son of the herd a bullocke was alwaies of the second yeare or upward so the goat-bucke following Burnt-offering which signified atonement and sanctification by the death of Christ as is shewed on Lev. 1. of rest that is of sweet smell as the Greeke translateth the Chaldee saith to be accepted with favour before the LORD to the manner or right ordinance Heb. to the judgment meaning the measure prescribed of God in v. 9 10. for a Sin-offering in Greeke for sin This word in Hebrew is written with want of a letter which elswhere usually is expressed whereupon Sol. Iarchi noteth that it is not as other Sin-offerings for all Sin-offerings that are by the Law brought with the Burnt-offering the Sin-offering is before the Burnt-offering as it is said in Levit. 5. 10. And the second he shall make a Burnt-offering but this Burnt-offering is before the Sin-offering The manner of offering this Sin-offering was like the bullocke in Lev. 4. it was killed in the court-yard the bloud was carried into the Sanctuarie and sprinkled seven times before the Lord the fat was burned on the Altar in the courtyard and the body of the beast was carried forth and burnt without the campe so figuring Christ who should bee slaine for the sinnes of his people and by his owne bloud enter into heaven his bodie being crucified without the gate of Ierusalem Heb. 9. 11 12. 24 and 13. 11 12. If the great assise of Magistrates ignorantly sinne in teaching idolatrie the whole congregation bringeth twelve bullockes for Burnt-offerings and twelve goats Sin-offerings and they are burned because their bloud is carried into the Sanctuarie c. Though but one tribe onely commit the sin if it be the most part of the church then all the congregation bring for idolatrie twelve bullocks twelve goats Maimony in Shegagoth chap. 12. sect 1. V. 25. for all the congregation or for every congregation wherby may be implied the severall tribes cities townes and synagogues So in vers 26. an ignorance or an errour in Greeke and unwilling Sin so in v. 26. brought their oblatio in Greeke have brought the gift thereof a Fire-offering in Chaldee an oblation before the LORD this is meant of the Bullocke the Burnt-offring as Sol. Iarchi noteth their Sin-offering this is the goat saith Sol. Iarchi
thus seeing the Law had twise said that the breaker of the Sabbath should die Exod. 31. 4. and 35. 2. Sol. Iarchi saith it was not declared what manner of death he should die but they knew that hee that prophaned the Sabbath was to die And the Chaldee called Ionathans paraphraseth thus This judgement was one of the foure judgements that came before Moses the Prophet which he judged according to the word of the holy God Some of them were judgements of lesser moment and some of them judgements of life and death In the judgements of lesser moment of pecuniarie matters Moses was readie but in judgements of life and death be made delayes And both in the one and in the other Moses said I have not heard viz. what God would have done For to teach the heads or chiefe of the Synedrions or Assises that should rise up after him that they should be ready to dispatch inferiour causes or money matters but not hastie in matters of life and death And that they should not be ashamed to enquire in causes that are too hard for them seing Moses who was the maste● of Israel had need to say I have not heard Therefore he imprisoned him because as yet it was not declared what sentence should passe upon him The foure judgements which hee speaketh of were about the uncleane that would keepe the Passeover Num. 9. 7 8. and the daughters of Zelophead that claimed possession in the land Num. 27. 4 5. these were the cases of lesse impor●ance about the blasphemer Lev. 24. and the Sabbath breaker here both which hee kept in 〈…〉 ard till he had answer from the Lord. Verse 35. stone him This was esteemed the heaviest of all the foure kinds of death that malesa 〈…〉 s suffered in Israel see the notes on Exod. 21. 12. without the campe Hereupon they used to carrie such out of the cities and execute them farre off from the judgement hall as S●l Iarchi noteth So they dealt with Stephen casting him out of the citie and stoning him Act. 7. 58. likewise with Naboth 1 Kings 21. 13. also with the blasphemer Levit. 24. 14. which was a circumstance that aggravated the punishment being a kind of reproach as the Apostle noteth Heb. 13. 11 12 13. And this severitie sheweth of what weight the commandement touching the Sabbath is the prophanation whereof God would have thus to be avenged And it further signified the eternall death of such as doe not keepe the Sabbath of Christ entring into the rest of God by faith and ceasing from their own works as God did from his Heb. 4. 1 2 3 4 10. 11. Verse 37. And Iehovah said After the violating of the Sabbath and punishment for it God giveth a Law and ordaineth a signe of remembrance to further the sanctification of his people that they might thinke upon his commandements and doe them Vers. 38. sonnes of Israel This Law for Fringes concerned Israel onely not other nations and as the Hebrewes say men onely were bound to weare them not women Women and servants and little children are not bound by the Law to weare the Fringe But by the words of the Scribes every childe that knoweth to clothe himselfe is bound to weare the fringe to the end he may be trayned up in the commandements And women and servants that will weare them may so doe but they blesse not God as men doe when they put them on and so all other commandements which women are not bound unto if they will doe them they doe them without blessing first Maimony tom 1. in Zizith or treat of Fringes ch 3. sect 9. that they make they themselves and not heathens for them a Fringe which is made by an heathen is unlawfull as it is written Speake to the sonnes of Israel that they make unto them Maim in Zizith ch 1. sect 12. a Fringe that is Fringes as in Deut. 22. 12. Moses speaketh of many and so the Greeke and Chaldee translate it here A Fringe is in Hebrew called Tsitsith or Zizith which in Ezek. 8. 3. is used for a locke of haire of the head and is here applied to a Fringe the threds whereof hang downe as locks of haire And the Hebrew Doctors call it also Gnanaph that is a Branch because it hangeth as branches or twigs of a tree The Branch which they make upon the skirt of a garment is called Tsitsith because it is like to Tsitsith a locke of the head Ezek. 8. 3. And this Branch is called White because we are not commanded to die or colour it And for the threds of this Branch there is no set number by the Law And they take a thred of wooll which is died like the color of the Firmament and tye it upon the Branch or Fringe and this thred is called Blew Maim in Zizith ch 1. sect 1. 2. The Fringe is called in Greeke Craspoda and this word is used by the holy Ghost in Matt. 23. 5. and of it the Chaldee also calleth it Cruspedin The word Gedilim used for Pringes in Deut. 22. 12. were the thrums of the cloth which was woven and Tsitsith the Fringe here spoken of were threeds tied unto those thrums with knots on the skirts Hebr. on the wings This is expounded in Deut. 22. 12. on the foure skirts or wings The skirt end or border of a garment is usually called a wing as in Ruth 3. 9. 1 Sam. 15. 27. and 24. 5 11. Deut. 22. 30. Zach. 8. 23. Ezek. 5. 3. Hag. 2. 12. so the foure ends or corners of the earth are called the foure wings thereof Esai 11. 12. Eze. 7. 2. Iob 37. 3. and 38. 13. The garment which a man is bound to make the Fringe on by the Law is a garment which hath foure skirts or more than foure and it is a garment of woollen or of linnen onely But a garment of other stuffe as of silke or cotton or camels haire or the like are not bound to have the Fringe save by the words of our wise men that men may bee admonished to keepe the precept of the Fringe For all clothes spoken of in the Law absolutely are not save of woollen and linnen onely When hee maketh a fringe on a garment that hath five or six skirts he maketh it but on foure of the skirts as it is said UPON THE FOVRE SKIRTS Deu. 22. 12. A garment that is borrowed is not bound to have the Fringe for 30 dayes after and thence forward it is bound A garment of wooll they make the white thereof of threeds of wooll and a garment of flax or linnen they make the white thereof of threeds of flax and so of every garment after the kinde thereof c. Every man that is bound to doe this commandement if hee put upon him a garment which is meet to have the Fringe must put on the Fringe and then put the garment on and if he put it on without the Fringe he breaketh the commandement But
purification the third day was mysticall having reference to the resurrection of Christ w ch was on the third day after his death 1 Cor. 15. 4. whereof see the annotations on Gen. 22. 4. The seventh day was also mysticall as being the number of perfection of the Sabbath and of accomplishing a work as is noted on Gen. 2. 2. Ex. 12. 15. and Lev. 4. 6. and so it figured our full cleansing and ceasing from our sinfull and dead works after that we are sprinkled with the bloud of Iesus and water of his Spirit Heb. 4. 9 10. and 9. 13 14. wash his cloathes w ch was a common rite for all that were defiled with other uncleannesses wherof see Lev. 11. 25. and 14. 8 9. and 15. 5. bathe his flesh in Greeke wash his body the word flesh is expressed before in v. 7. it is meant of his whole body or all his flesh as Lev. 15. 16. cleane at evening after the Sun is set at what time a new day beginneth and so in mysterie a new life to begin This cleansing of the defiled by the dead figured Christs worke of grace upon dead and sinfull men of him it is prophesied Hee shall sprinkle many nations Esai 52. 15. and of him doth the Apostle open this figure saying If the blend of buls and goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the uncleane sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without blemish unto God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9. 13 14. The sprinkling of the ashes of the heifer figured the applying unto us of Christs death whereunto he was delivered for our offences and was raised againe for our justification Rom. 4. 25. The living water wherewith the ashes were mixed figured the Spirit of God which they that beleeve in Christ doe receive Ioh. 7. 38 39. of which he gave this promise Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shal be clean Eze. 36. 25. These being applied unto our consciences by faith as with hyssop w ch purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. by the preaching therof Gal. 3. 2. doe baptise us into Christs death that like as he was raised up frō the dead unto the glorie of the Father even so wee also should walk in newnesse of life Rom. 6. 3 4. And so we draw neere unto God with a true heart in sul assurance of faith having hearts sprinkled from an evill conscience and bodies washed with pure water our robes washed and made white in the bloud of the Lambe Heb. 10. 22. Rev. 7. 14. and cleansing our selves frō all filthines of the flesh and spirit we perfect holinesse in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7. 1. Of these mysteries the Hebrew Doctors though estranged from the true life and light of Christ retained some knowledge for they say When the living water is mixed with the ashes it purifieth the uncleane whereas before that while the ashes were alone they defiled all that were imployed about them And behold the living water signified the water that is on high which taketh away uncleannesse from the ashes c. And loe when it is sprinkled on the uncleane the uncleannesse fleeth from him c. and a cleane spirit resteth upon him and purifieth him R. Menachem on Num. 19. Vers. 20. uncleane by any of the things afore-said about the dead not purifie himselfe or not be purified to wit by having the water sprinkled upon him as the Chaldee explaineth it and the latter part of this verse manifesteth that soule in Chaldee that man cut off in Greeke and Chaldee destroyed defiled the Sanctuarie by comming into it before he hath beene purified For such were shut out of the host Num. 5. 3. how much more out of the Sanctuary Therefore Porters were see there at the gates that none which was unclean in any thing should enter in 2 Chr. 23. 19. An unoleane person that commeth into the Sanctuary presumptuously his punishment is cutting off Num. 19. 20. if ignorantly then he is to bring the sacrifice appointed Lev. 7. Maim in Biath hamikdesh 〈◊〉 3. s. 12. See the annotations on Lev. 5. 2 3. Vers. 21. wash his cloathes as being uncleane and so to continue untill evening likewise he that toucheth the water of separation shall wash his cloathes and be uncleane untill evening This interpretation Chazkuni here giveth of it that in the former branch uncleannesse is implied untill evening and in the latter branch the washing of his cloathes also is implied though not expressed This is one of the mysteries of this Law that a clean mā as he is called in v. 18 19. was made uncleane by sprinkling or touching the holy water which sanctified those that were uncleane and so it had contrary effects to purifie the uncleane and to poulute the cleane as the Sun melteth wax and hardneth clay Hereby the Holy Ghost seemeth to signifie the imperfection and insufficiencie of these legall rites which in their greatest vertue did but sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh as the Apostle saith Heb. 9. 13. and yet even then also left the purifier himselfe in uncleannesse which hee had not before That by consideration of these effects the people might be led unto Christ and his Spirit who is able to purge the conscience from dead workes and to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him Heb. 9. 14. 7. 25. The Hebrewes understand this of such as sprinkled or touched the water when there was no need as when no unclean person or vessell was to be sprinkled with it Maimony in Pharah ch 15. Vers. 22. whatsoever or whomsoever Hebr. all implying men vessels c. the uncleane to wit by the dead of whom was spoken before shall be uncleane to wit untill evening as the end of the verse sheweth and this is an inferiour degree of uncleannesse for the man or vessell polluted by the dead was uncleane seven dayes vers 11. 14. but that w ch such an unclean man or vessell touched was uncleane till the end of that day So in the Hebrew Canons A man which is defiled by the dead and the vessels which that man toucheth are uncleane seven dayes as it is said And yee shall wash your cloathes in the seventh day and ye shal be clean Num. 31. 24. But a man that shall touch a man which is defiled by the dead whether he touch him after that he is separated from the things that defiled him or touch him whiles he toucheth the dead lo this second man is uncleane till the evening as it is said in Num. 19. 22. And the soule that toucheth shall be unclean untill the evening Mai. in Tumath meth ch 5. s. 2. the soule in Chaldee the man that toucheth to wit him that is defiled as before is noted or it the thing which is defiled by the te●d of an uncleane man
but Sihon gathered together all his people and went out against Israel into the wildernesse and he came to Iahaz and fought against Israel And Israel smote him with the edge of the sword and possessed his land from Arnon unto Iabbok even unto the sons of Ammon for the border of the sons of Ammon was strong And Israel tooke all these cities and Israel dwelt in all the cities of the Amorite in Heshbon and in all the daughters thereof For Heshbon was the citie of Sihon the King of the Amorites and he had fought against the former king of Moab and taken all his land out of his hand even unto Arnon Wherefore they that speake in proverbs say Come into H 〈…〉 bon let the city of Sihon be built and prepared For a fire is gone out from Heshbon a flame from the citie of Sihon it hath consumed Ar of Moab the Lords of the high places of Arnon Woe to thee Moab thou art perished ô people of Chemosh he hath given his sons t●at escaped and his daughters into captivity unto Sihon the king of the Amorites And their lamp is perished from Heshbon even unto Dibon and we have laid them waste even unto Nophah which reacheth unto Medeba And Israel dwelt in the land of the Amorite And Moses sent to spie out Iazer and they tooke the daughters thereof and drove out the Amorite that was there And they turned and went up the way of Bashan and Og the king of Bashan went out against them he and all his people to the battell at Edrei And Iehovah said unto Moses Feare him not for into thy hand have I given him and all his people and his land and thou shalt doe unto him as thou diddest unto Sihon king of the Amorites which dwelt in Heshbon And they smote him and his sonnes and all his people untill there was none left him remaining and they possessed his land Annotations KIng of Arad Arad seemeth to be the name of the citie where the King reigned as in Ios. 12. 14. and so the Chaldee here explaineth it in the South the South part in the land of Canaan Numb 33. 40. the way of the spies or the way of Atharim as the Greeke version retaineth the Hebrew name as proper and it might be a way so called and well knowne in that time But the Chaldee translateth it the way of the spies meaning that they came towards Canaan after they had beene turned backe towards the red sea Num. 14. 25. and had beene at Ezion-gaber Num. 33. 35. they returned towards Canaan again along by Edoms coast to come unto the land which the spies had searched Num. 13. a captivity that is some captives or prisoners So captivity is used for captives or people taken in warre in Num. 31. 12. Iudg. 5. 12. 2 Chron. 28. 5. and often as poverty for a company of poore people 2 King 24. 14. and spoile for spoiled people Amos 5. 9. thankesgivings for a company of thanksgivers Neh. 12. 31. and many the like The Canaanites having heard of the overthrow which was given Israel ●8 yeares before Numb 14. 45. and of the hand of God against them so long in the wildernesse were hardned and emboldened to encounter them now when they heard againe of their comming and Satan endevoured hereby to discourage Israel that as their fathers through unbeleefe being afraid entered not into the promised land Deut. 1. 27 32 35. so the children also might be deprived And God for a chastisement of their sins and for the triall of their faith suffereth the enemie at first to prevaile that his people might know that they should not conquer the land by their owne strength or for their owne worthinesse Psal. 44. 3 4. Deut. 9. 4. Vers. 2. vowed a vow calling upon God for helpe and religiously promising to devote unto him their enemies and all their substance See the Annotations on Gen. 28. 20. If giving thou wilt give that is if thou wilt indeed give and it implieth a prayer which often is uttered after this manner as Iabez called on the God of Israel saying If blessing thou wilt blesse me c. 1 Chron. 4. 10. utterly destroy or devote in Greeke anathematize things devoted after this manner the persons were to die their goods confiscate to the Lord Levit 27. 28 29. So when Iericho was devoted the people and beasts were killed the citie burnt the goods carried into the Lords treasury Ios. 6. 17 19 21 24. Vers. 3. hearkned to the voice that is as the Chaldee explaineth it received the prayer of Israel gave up the Canaanite to wit into their hand as the Greeke here repeateth from vers 2. they utterly destroyed Hebr. he utterly destroyed or devoted speaking of Israel as of one body But how could they being so farre off in the wildernesse destroy their cities lying within Canaan Numb 33. 40. into which they came not till after Moses death It seemeth the accomplishment of this vow was performed long after when they were come into the land For the King of Arad is reckoned for one of those that Iosua conquered Ios. 12. 14. See also Judg. 1. 16 17. They now conquered the Canaanites armie that came out against them and devoted the spoiles which they tooke and when their cities came into their possession they utterly destroyed and devoted them and so payed their vow which now they promised he called or they called meaning Israel unlesse it be applied in speciall to Moses The Greeke translateth they called Hormah or Chormah in Greeke Anathema that is Devotement or utter destruction By this name they both set up a memoriall of Gods mercy who gave their enemies into their hand and of their dutie to keepe the vow which they had promised Vers. 4. to compasse the land because Edom had denied them passage thorow it Numb 20. 18 21. by reason whereof their travell was increased soule of the people was shortned or was straitned that is was grieved or discouraged This word when it is applied to the hand signifieth inability as in Numb 11. 23. Esay 37. 27. 2 King 19. 26. unto the soule as in this place it meaneth griefe vexation or discomfort so in Iudg. 16. 16. Samsons soule was shortned that is vexed unto death and in Judg. 10. 16. the Lords soule was shortened that is grieved for the misery of Israel and sometime it is with a kinde of loathing as in Zach. 11. 8. my soule was shortned for them that is loathed them A like phrase is of the shortnesse of the spirit which also signifieth anguish trouble and vexation as in Exod. 6. 6. Iob 21. 4. and want of power as in Asic 2. 7. The Greeke here translateth the people was feeble minded or of small soule or courage because of the way or in the way but In often noteth the cause of a thing as the Lords soule was grieved in that is for or because of the misery of Israel Iudg. 10. 16. or
in the eyes of Moses and in the eyes of all the congregation of the sonnes of Israel and they were weeping at the doore of the Tent of the congregation And Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest saw it and he rose up from amongst the Congregation and tooke a javelin in his hand And hee went in after the man of Israel into the tent and thrust both of them thorow the man of Israel and the woman thorow her belly and the plague was stayed from the sons of Israel And those that died in the plague were foure and twenty thousand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest hath turned my wrath away from the sonnes of Israel whiles hee was zealous with my zeale among them that I consumed not the sonnes of Israel in my zeale Therefore say Behold I give unto him my covenant of peace And there shall be to him and to his seed after him the covenant of an everlasting Priesthood because hee was zealous for his God and made atonement for the sonnes of Israel And the name of the man of Israel that was smitten that was smitten with the Midianitesse was Zimri the sonne of Salu a Prince of a fathers house of the Simeonites And the name of the woman the Midianitesse that was smitten was Cozbi the daughter of Zur he was an head of nations of a fathers house of Midian And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Vex thou the Midianites and smite yee them For they vex you with their wiles wherwith they have beguiled you in the matter of Peor and in the matter of Cozbi the daughter of a Prince of Midian their sister which was smitten in the day of the plague for Peors sake Annotations ABode in Shittim a place in the wildernesse in the plaines of Moab neere Iordan called Abel Shittim in Num. 33. 48 49. In this place Israel did sit or abide untill after Moses death and from thence Iosua removed them to Iordan where they passed over to Gilgal Ios. 2. 1. and 3. 1. Wherefore God after willed the people to remember the things that befell unto them from Shittim to Gilgal that they might know the righteousnesse of the Lord Mic. 6. 5. And the history now following sheweth how when Balak the Princes of Moab and Midian and Balaam their prophet had plotted and practised with all their art and might to withdraw Gods favour and blessing from his people but prevailed nothing the prophet gave Balak and the Midianites counsell to put a stumbling-blocke before the Israelites to see if they could withdraw the people from the love feare and obedience of the Lord their God that Israel sinning might fall and bring themselves into the curse which Balaam could not bring upon them and so perish By this wicked counsell they prevailed against many to the death of 24. thousand Israelites but the state and body of the Church was by Gods grace still preserved the wicked being taken away by his judgement the people some of the people of Israel for they that fell to this wickednesse did all perish but they that cleaved to the Lord remained alive Deut. 4. 3 4. to commit whoredome or to commit fornication which the Chaldee expoundeth to erre or goe astray after the daughters of Moab understanding also the daughters of Midian as appeareth by vers 6. 17 18. This evill they fell into by the wicked counsell and doctrine of Balaam who taught Balak to cast a stumbling-blocke before the sonnes of Israel to eat things sacrificed to Idols and to commit fornication Revel 2. 14. So Moses likewise saith Behold these women caused the sonnes of Israel through the word of Balaam to commit traspasse against Iehovah in the matter of Peor Num. 31. 16. That hypocrite who had so often blessed Israel and pronounced those accursed which cursed them who had heard and uttered the oracles of God had his eyes opened had escaped the sword of the Angell c. to the end that he should not speake or doe any thing but what the Lord commanded yet after all this hee was the authour of this mischiefe that it might appeare how evill men and seducers wax worse and worse decei 〈…〉 g and being deceived 2 Tim. 3. 13. and t 〈…〉 me● might beware of false prophets which come in sheepes cloathing but inwardly are ravening wolves Matth. 7. 15. Vers. 2. they called that is the daughters of Moab called or invited Thus the intended warre of Moab against Israel was turned to a pretended peace and feigned amitie alluring the people by fleshly baits to defile their bodies and soules with whoredome and idolatry By the women of Moab and of other strange peoples Solomon the wise was also drawne into sinne 1 King 11. 1 4. sacrifices of their gods or of their god in Greeke and Chaldee of their idols meaning of Baal-Peor whereof David speaketh thus They were joyned unto Baal-Peor and ate the sacrifices of the dead Ps. 106. 28. By the dead meaning Idols unto which the Scriptures doe oppose the living and true God 1. Thess. 1. 9. Ier. 10. 9 10. did eat and so communicated with their idolatry for they which eat of the sacrifices are partakers of the Altar 1. Cor. 10. 18. This sinne God in speciall manner had forewarned them of in Exod. 34. 14 15. bowed to their gods in Greeke and Chaldee to their idols This people whom God had guided thorow the wildernesse fortie yeares who had seene Gods workes and felt his punishments for their owne and their fathers sinnes were delivered from many enemies round about and now abiding in Shittim were ready to enter into the promised land are here prevented and overthrowne through their owne corruption Vers. 3. was joyned or was coupled was yoked unto which word the Apostle seemeth to have respect when he saith Be yee not unequally yoked together with unbeleevers 2 Cor. 6. 14. to Baal-Peor which the Chaldee expoundeth to them that served Baal-Peor that was the Idoll of the Moabites and Midianites called in Greeke Bel-phegor Baal is by interpretation a Lord or Patron by which name it is probable that the heathens called the Sunne or some starre as is noted on Lev. 18. 21. Peor or Phegor was the name of a mountaine Numb 23. 28. and of the Idoll there worshipped Numb 25. 17. Ios. 22. 17. And because Baal was a common name to many Idols and much reverenced of the peoples through corruption the Israelites called also the LORD Baal but he blameth them for it saying Thou shalt call me no more Baali Hos. 2. 16. and in detestation of the name the Prophets put Bosheth that is Shame in●stead of Baal that is Lord as it is written They went to Baal Peor and separated themselves unto that Shame Hos. 9. 10. and the Greeke Interpreters in 1 King 18. 25. translate Baal Shame yea and the Hebrew Prophets sometime put one for
familie of the Ashbelites of Ahiram the familie of the Ahiramites Of Shephupham the familie of the Shuphamites of Hupham the familie of the Huphamites And the sonnes of Bela were Ard and Naaman the familie of the Ardites of Naaman the familie of the Naamites These are the sonnes of Benjamin according to their families and those that were mustered of them five and fortie thousand and six hundred These are the sonnes of Dan according to their families of Shuham the familie of the Shuhamites these are the families of Dan according to their families All the families of the Shuhamites according to those that were mustered of them sixty and foure thousand and foure hundred The sonnes of Aser according to their families of Iimnah the familie of the Iimnaites of Iisvi the familie of the Iisvites of Beriah the familie of the Beriites Of the sonnes of Beriah of Cheber the familie of the Chebrites of Malchiel the familie of the Malchielites And the name of the daughter of Aser was Serah These are the families of the sonnes of Aser according to those that were mustered of them three and fiftie thousand and foure hundred The sonnes of Naphtali according to their families of Iachzeel the familie of the Iachzeelites of Guni the familie of the Gunites Of Iezer the familie of the Iizrites of Sillem the familie of the Sillemites These are the families of Naphtali according to their families and they that were mustered of them five and fortie thousand and foure hundred These were the mustered of the sonnes of Israel six hundred thousand and a thousand seven hundred and thirtie And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Vnto these the land shall be divided for an inheritance according to the number of names To the many thou shalt give them the more inheritance and to the few thou shalt give them the lesse inheritance to every man according to those that were mustered of him shall his inheritance be given Notwithstanding the land shall be divided by lot according to the names of the tribes of their fathers they shall inherit According to the lot shall the inheritance thereof be divided betweene many and few And these are they that were mustered of the Levites according to their families of Gershon the familie of the Gershonites of Kohath the familie of the Kohathites of Merari the familie of the Merarites These are the families of the Levites the familie of the Libnites the familie of the Hebronites the familie of the Mahlites the familie of the Mushites the familie of the Korachites and Kohath begat Amram And the name of Amrams wife was Iochebed the daughter of Levi whom she bare to Levi in Egypt and she bare unto Amram Aaron and Moses and Mary their sister And unto Aaron was borne Nadab and Abihu Eleazar and Ithamar And Nadab and Abihu died when they offered strange fire before Iehovah And those that were mustered of them were three and twentie thousand all males from a moneth old and upward for they were not mustered among the sonnes of Israel because there was no inheritance given to them among the sonnes of Israel These are they that were mustered by Moses and Eleazar the Priest who mustered the sonnes of Israel in the plaines of Moab by Iordan neere Iericho And among these there was not a man of those that were mustered by Moses and Aaron the Priest who mustered the sonnes of Israel in the wildernesse of Sinai For Iehovah had said of them Dying they shall die in the wildernesse and there was not left a man of them save Caleb the sonne of Iephunneh and Ioshua the sonne of Nun. Annotations AFter the plague after the death of the 24 thousand that perished for the sinne of Peor Num. 25. 9. the Lord commandeth the people to be numbred which should have inheritance in his land to signifie his love and care of those that cleaved unto him Deut. 4. 3 4. The Hebrewes explaine it by the similitude of a shepherd who when wolves have gotten among his flocke and w●rried some of them he counteth them to know the number of those that are left Againe As when they came out of Egypt and were delivered to Moses they were delivered him by tale Exod. 38. 26. so now when Moses was ready to die and to deliver his flock again he delivered them by tale Sol. Iarchi on Num. 26. Eleazar who now was high Priest after the death of Aaron his father who had before numbred them with Moses Num. 1. 3. And this Eleazar was he who after with Iosua divided the land of Canaan to this people Ios. 14. 1. c. Vers. 2. the summe Hebr. the head which the Chaldee expoundeth the count or summ● see Exod. 30. 12. This was the third time that Israel was numbred for to fight the Lords battels agains● the Canaanites and to receive their land for an inheritance See the Annotations on Num. 1. 2. 20 yeares old Hebr. sonne of twentie yeare see Num. 1. 3. house that is as the Greeke explaineth it houses of their fathers Iarchi saith they were reckoned by the tribe of the father and not after the mother So in Num. 1. 2. goeth forth with the armie able to goe out to warre the warfare of the Lord see the notes on Num. 1. 3. Vers. 3. spake with them in Chaldee spake and said to number them but Targum Ionathan addeth spake with the Princes and said to number them So it accordeth with Num. 1. 4. plaines or champion countrey of Moab see Num. 22. 1. Vers. 4. From 20 yeares old Hebr. from a sonne of 20 yeares as vers 2. and here is to be understood the people are to be numbred or the like Vers. 5. the first-borne Reuben for this cause is here first numbred as also in Num. 1. 5 20. though he lost his dignity by his sinne 1 Chron. 5. 1. and was put downe to the second quarter as they encamped about the Sanctuarie and marched towards Canaan Num. 2. 10. 16. Enoch in Hebr. Chanoch see Gen. 5. 18. and 46. 9. of the Enochites Hebr. of the Enochite or Chanochite the singular number put for the plurall so after thorowout this chapter See the annotations on Gen. 10. 16. And here Reuben hath foure families according to Gen. 46. 9. and 1 Chron. 5. 3. Vers. 7. mustered or numbred Hebr. visited See the notes on Num. 1. 3. 43 thousand c. at the former muster they were 46 thousand and five hundred Num. 1. 21. so they increased not but decreased whiles they travelled in the wildernesse Vers. 9. the called that is renowned famous see Num. 1. 16. and 16. 1 2. c. strove in Greeke made insurrection in Chaldee gathered themselves together This mutinie stirred by the chiefe of the tribe seemeth to be one cause of their decrease by the hand of God against them Vers. 10. and Korah that is the men and goods that pertained unto Korah as Num. 16 32. the congregation died in Greeke his congregation meaning
inheritances by the name of Lets as Come up with me into my lot Iudg. 1. 3. And not lands onely but whatsoever befalleth unto men frō the hand of God is called a lot as This is the portion of them that spoile us and the lot of them that rob us Esay 17. 14. and Thou hast neither part nor lot in this matter Act. 8. 21. and That they may receive forgivenesse of sins and a lot that is inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith c. Act. 26. 18. The part of the lot that is of the inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. So that in the Greek used by the Apostles Cleros a lot and Cleronomia a division by lot is the common name of an inheritance 1 Pet. 5. 3. Ephes. 1. 14. 18. Vers. 56. According to the lot Hebr. At or Vpon the mouth of the lot as the lot whereon the name of the tribe or of the inheritance is written shall speake This lot being of the Lord figured the diversities of gifts in the Church which the Spirit of God divideth to every man severally 〈◊〉 will 1 Cor. 12. 4. 11. as also the dispensation of his graces concerning our heavenly inheritance which the Election onely obtaineth that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth Rom. 11. 7. and 9. 11. Vers. 57. of the Levites who though they had no inheritance in the land vers 62. yet were they to have 48 cities and their suburbs for their habitation Num. 35. which also fell unto them by lot Ios. 21. 4. c. Vers. 58. Korachites or Korhites of Korah the sonne of Izhar the sonne of Kohath the sonne of Levi Num. 16. 1. Korah himselfe died in the rebellion but his sonnes died not Num. 26. 11. therefore they are reckoned here for a familie in the fourth generation from Levi which is one degree further than the other families And whereas in Exod. 6. 16. c. there are reckoned of Gershon two sonnes Libni and Shimei here the familie of the Libnites is mustered but Shimei left out There Kohath hath foure sonnes Amram and Ishar and Hebron and Vzziel here Vzziel is omitted neither is Ishar named but in his sonnes the Korhites Vers. 59. she bare to Levi by she understand Levies wise or Iochebeds mother Sol. Iarchi expoundeth it his wise bare her in Egypt she bare to Amram that is Iochebed Amrams wife who was also his aunt bare to Amram Exo. 6. 20. Marie Hebr. Mirjam she was a prophetesse see Exod. 15. 20. Num. 12. 1. Vers. 60. unto Aaron was borne Here Moses children Gershon and Eliezer are againe omitted see the notes on Num. 3. 38. Vers. 61. and Abihu died and they had no sonnes Num. 3. 4. See the historie in Levit. 10. Vers. 62. 23 thousand who at the former numbring were but 22 thousand Num. 3. 39. So they increased in the wildernesse a thousand males Vers. 65. dying they shall die i. they shall surely die this was threatned for their rebellion refusing to go into the promised land Nū 14. and the fulfilling of Gods judgment is here shewed and Iosoua in Greeke Iesus the son of Naue these two survived because they faithfully followed the Lord Num. 14. 24. 38. See the Annotations there In that all the rest were dead save these two it sheweth that all the 600 thousand men now mustered which should conquer Canaan were a valiant company betweene 20 and 60 yeares of age none being above 60 but Caleb and Iosua and as they were in body so in minde being trained up these 38 yeares in the study of the Law and ordinances of God and beholding his workes having Moses and Aaron for their leaders and Gods good spirit for their instructer Neh. 9. 20. CHAP. XXVII 1 The daughters of Zelophehad sue for an inheritance 5 Moses bringeth their cause before the Lord who granteth their request 8 The Law of inheritances when a man dieth without a son 12 Moses is bidden goe up and see the land and is told of his death for his trespasse 15 He requesteth of the Lord that a man may be set governour in his place 18 The Lord appointeth Iosua to succeed him 22 And Moses by imposition of hands ordaineth him to his office THen came the daughters of Zelophehad the sonne of Hepher the son of Gilead the son of Machir the son of Manasses of the families of Manasses the son of Ioseph and these are the names of his daughters Machlah Noah Hoglah and Milcah and Tirzah And they stood before Moses and before Eleazar the Priest and before the Princes and all the congregation at the doore of the Tent of the Congregation saying Our father died in the wildernesse and he was not among the Congregation of them that gathered themselves together against Iehovah in the congregation of Korah but in his sinne he died and hee had no sonnes Why should the name of our father be done away from among his family because he hath no sonne Give unto us a possession among the brethren of our father And Moses brought their cause before Iehovah And Iehovah said unto Moses saying The daughters of Zelophehad speake right giving thou shalt give them a possession of an inheritance among the brethren of their father and thou shalt cause the inheritance of their father to passe unto them And thou shalt speake unto the sonnes of Israel saying If a man die and he have no sonne then ye shall cause his inheritance to passe unto his daughter And if hee have no daughter then ye shall give his inheritance unto his brethren And if he have no brethren then ye shall give his inheritance unto the brethren of his father And if his father have no brethren then ye shall give his inheritance unto his kinsman that is next to him of his familie and he shall inherit it it shal be unto the sonnes of Israel for a statute of judgement as Iehovah commanded Moses And Iehovah said unto Moses Go thou up into this mountaine of Abarim and see the land w ch I have given to the sons of Israel And thou shalt see it and thou also shalt be gathered unto thy peoples as Aaron thy brother was gathered For ye rebelled against my mouth in the wildernesse of Zin in the strife of the congregation to sanctifie me at the water before their eyes that is the water of Meribah of Kadesh in the wildernesse of Zin And Moses spake unto Iehovah saying Let Iehovah the God of the spirits of all flesh set a man over the congregation Which may go out before them and which may go in before them and which may lead them out and which may bring them in that the congregation of Iehovah be not as sheep which have no shepherd And Iehovah said unto Moses Take unto thee Iosua the son of Nun a man in whom is the spirit and lay thine hand upon him And cause
of the avenger of bloud Deut. 19. 12. Wherefore the Chaldee in stead of meeteth him saith When he shall be condemned unto him by judgement So in vers 21. Vers. 20. of hatred which is inveterate anger and inward grudge differing from enmitie or open hostility spoken of in v. 21. He that hateth dissembleth with his lips and layeth up deceit within him Prov. 26. 24. The Hebrewes say He that hateth if he kill by errour or unadvisedly he is not kept in the citie of refuge as it is said And he was not his enemy Numb 35. 23. c. And who is he that hateth hee that for enmities sake speaketh not unto him for three dayes space Maim Treat of Murder chap. 6. sect 10. cast upon him to wit any instrument as is expressed in vers 22. and so the Greeke explaineth it here by laying of wait with intent and purpose of evill when occasion is offered so Saul laid wait or hunted for Davids soule 1 Sam. 24. 11. the Iewes for Christ Luke 11. 54. and for Pauls life Act. 23. 21. Vers. 21. enmity or hostility ill will open and professed Vers. 22. suddenly or unawares and as it were by chance Vers. 23. with any stone that is have smitten him with any stone as in vers 17. wherewith he may die in Chaldee which is sufficient that he may die therewith See the notes on vers 18. Vers. 25. of the great Priest a figure of Christ called the great Priest over the house of God Hebr. 10. 21. and the great High-Priest that is passed into the heavens Hebr. 4. 14. who is the Mediator of the new Testament that by meanes of death for the redemption of the transgressions under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of the eternall inheritance Heb. 9. 15. As the high Priests whiles they lived by their service and sacrificing made atonement for the sinnes of the people especially one day in the yeare Levit. 16. wherein they figured the worke of Christ for us so at the high Priests death by releasing such as were exiled for unwitting murder there was a shadow of redemption in Israel Vers. 26. going shall goe forth that is shall at any time upon any occasion goe forth So he was not only exiled from his owne citie but confined as a prisoner within the limits of the citie of refuge The Hebrewes say Hee might never goe out of the citie of his refuge no not though it were for a thing commanded as to worship at the solemne feasts or the like or for to beare witnesse whether it were in money matters or to testifie in case of life and death c. Maim Treat of Murder chap. 7. sect 8. Vers. 27. without the border so not the citie onely but the borders and limits of the territories thereof were his refuge Every citie of refuge the borders thereof are a refuge as well as it c. and if the avenger of bloud kill him there he is to be killed for him Notwithstanding though the border be a refuge yet the man-slayer may not dwell in it for it is said in vers 25. AND HE SHALL ABIDE IN IT in it the citie and not in the border of it Maim ibid. chap. 8. sect 11. no bloud shall be unto him that is the avenger shall have no bloud imputed to him or as the Greeke translateth it hee shall not bee guiltie to wit of bloud-shed Vers. 28. into the land of his possession into his owne citie or village that part of the land which he possessed It is holden by the Hebrewes that although by the high Priests death atonement was made for him yet he never returned to the princely state or dignitie that hee had in the citie but was debased from his greatnesse all dis dayes because that great scandall came by his hand Maimon ibid. chap. 7. sect 14. Moreover they say A man-s●ayer upon whom sentence is past that he shall be exi●ed if he die before he go into exile they carry his bones thither And a man-slayer that dieth in the citie of his refuge they bury him there and when the high Priest dieth they carry the man-slayers bones from thence unto the sepulchres of his fathers Ibid. sect 3. Vers. 30. Every one that smiteth a soule that is who so killeth a person to wit him that is a murderer by the mouth that is by the testimony of witnesses which after is explained of two witnesses or three witnesses Deut. 17. 6. and 19. 15. See the Annotations there not answer that is not testifie as the Greeke and Chaldee translate it meaning to have the sentence of death confirmed against him See Deut. 19. 15. to die that is to cause him to die or that he should die See the notes on Gen. 6. 19. Vers. 31. the soule of the man-slayer that is the life of the murderer to redeeme him from death The Iudges are warned that they take no ransome of the murderer and though he could give all the weal●h that is in the world and though the avenger of bloud should be willing to free him for the soule of him that is killed is not the possession of the avenger of bloud but the possession of the holy blessed God Maimon Treat of Murder ch 1. sect 4. guiltie of death Hebr. which is wicked to die that is as the Greeke and Chaldee explaine it guilty or condemned to die According to this phrase David saith When he shall be judged let him goe forth wicked that is condemned Psal. 109. 7. Vers. 32. for him that is fled Hebr. to flee which is explained by Iarchi and others for him that is fled in the land in the land of his possession as in vers 28. Vers. 33. polluteth or impiously staineth foulely deformeth the land This word which Moses here useth of murder and the Prophets after apply unto spirituall whoredome or idolatrie Ierem. 3. 2 9. and ●dolatrous bloud-shed Psal. 106. 38. sheweth the hainousnesse of this sinne that defileth not only him that doth it but the whole land if it be not avenged Hereupon the Hebrewes say Thou hast not any thing concerning which the Law giveth such a charge as for shedding of bloud as it is said in Numb 35. 33. And ye shall not pollute the land c. Maimony Treat of Murder chap. 1. sect 4. the bloud of him that shed it if it were wilfull murder or by the death of the high Priest if it were unwilling man-slaughter Hereupon it is said A man that doth violence to the bloud of any person shall flie to the pit let no man stay him Prov. 28. 17. Vers. 34. I doe dwell the land of Israel was the LORDS land Hos. 9. 3. and by his dwelling there among his people was sanctified and called the holy land Zach. 2. 12. and though he dwelt most specially in his Sanctuary there which afterward was in Ierusalem Psal. 74. 2. and 1 35. 21. yet the whole land was sanctified by
God are taught to hold fast their inheritance in his promises and right in Christ which they enjoy by faith that as the Father hath made them meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light Coloss. 1. 12. so they may keepe the faith and grace which they have obtained unto the end 1 King 21. 3. Ezek. 46. 18. Iude vers 3. Hebr. 6. 12. ESAY 65. 9. I Will bring forth out of Jakob a seed and out of Judah an inheritor of my mountaines and mine elect shall inherit it and my servants shall dwell there EZEK 20. 35 36 37. I will bring you into the wildernesse of peoples and there will I plead with you face to face like as I pleaded with your fathers in the wildernesse of the land of Egypt so will I plead with you saith the Lord God And I will cause you to passe under the rod and I will bring you into the bond of the Covenant c. HEBR. 9. 15. Christ he is the Mediator of the New * Or Testament Covenant that by meanes of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Covenant they which are called might receive the promise of the eternall inheritance ANNOTATIONS VPON THE FIFTH BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED DEVTERONOMIE WHEREIN BY CONFERENCE OF THE Holy Scriptures by comparing the Greeke and Chaldee Versions and Testimonies of Hebrew Writers the Histories Lawes and Ordinances which MOSES a little before his death repeated and enlarged unto ISRAEL in this Booke are explained BY HENRY AINSWORTH IOSVA 1. 8. This booke of the Law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night that thou maiest observe to doe according to all that is written therein for then thou shalt make thy way prosperous and then thou shalt have good successe LVKE 16. 31. If they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rose from the dead LONDON Printed by John Haviland for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. The summe of the Booke of DEVTERONOMIE IN this fifth Booke Moses to prepare the Israelites unto their inheritance in the Holy Land rehearseth the chiefe things that had befallen them in their forty yeares travell thorow the wildernesse exhorteth them to the love of God and observation of his Law repeateth the ten Commandements and explaineth them particularly with the Ordinances to them belonging adding some moe which he had not before mentioned confirmeth the whole Law with promises to those that keepe it and threatnings to the disobedient reneweth the Covenant between God and his people prophesieth of things that should come to passe in ages following blesseth the Tribes of Israel with severall blessings and having viewed the Land of promise from an high mountaine he dyeth and is buried of God Iosua being his successor in the Government of the people More particularly MOses rehearseth Gods calling of Israel from Horeb towards Canaan The Officers set to governe them The Spies sent to view the land and the peoples rebellion following thereupon Chap. 1 How they passed by Edom Moab and Ammon but fought with the Amorites and conquered King Sihon 2 How Ogwas conquered and their Countries allotted to some tribes of Israel 3 An exhortation to obey Gods law and to shun idlatrie 4 Of the ten Commandements given at Horeb and how the people were affected at the giving of the Law 5 An exposition of the first Commandement how God should be knowne loved and obeyed 6 To root out the Canaanites and their Idolatrie 7 To beware lest forgetfulnesse of former mercies or plenty of good things in Canaan turne them from God 8 Moses would humble Israel under the Lord their God by remembrance of their former many rebellions and Gods mercies renewed and continued notwithstanding 9 and 10 Hee exhorteth them to love and obey the Lord by many weighty reasons 11 An explanation of the second Commandement of abolishing false worship and serving God according to his law 12 The third Commandement expounded against abuse of Gods name by false prophets inticers and revolters to Idolatry 13 The holy Communion of Gods people taught by shadowes of cleane meats tithes c. 14 The fourth Commandement explained by the rites of the Sabbath yeare and the solemne feasts c. 15 and 16 The fifth Commandement of obedience to governours civill and ecclesiasticall appointed of God but not to hearken to any heathenish ministers or false Prophets 17 and 18 The sixt Commandement touching man-slaughter wars murder by one unknowne c. 19 20 21 The seventh Commandement touching adultery rape fornication incest 22 The eighth Commandement touching usury payment of vowes liberty in anothers field pledges man-stealers wages almes justice weights and measures c. 23 24 25 The solemne profession of homage unto God in Canaan at the bringing of first-fruits tithes c. 26 Of writing the Law upon stones the blessings and curses openly pronounced and confirmed by the people 27 Moses promiseth many blessings to them that keepe the Law and threatneth many curses to the disobedient 28 The renewing of the Covenant betweene God and Israel 29 A promise of mercie to repentant sinners beleeving in Christ. 30 The people are encouraged to enter into Canaan with Iosua their Captaine Their falling from God is foretold 31 Moses song wherein he prophesieth of the state of Israel untill the latter daies 32 Before his death Moses blesseth the Tribes of Israel 33 Moses vieweth the land and dyeth is buried of God mourned for of the people and praised above all Prophets 34 THE FIFTH BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED DEVTERONOMIE CHAPTER I. 1 Moses speech in the end of the fortieth yeare briefly rehearsing the Story 6 Of Gods promise and offer to give Israel the Land of Canaan 9 Of Officers given them 19 Of Spies sent to search the Land 34 Of Gods anger for Israels incredulitie 41 and disobedience THese bee the words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side Iordan in the wildernesse in the plaine over against the red Sea betweene Pharan and Tophel and Laban and Hazeroth and Dizahab Eleven daies journey from Horeb by the way of mount Seir unto Kadesh-Barnea And it was in the fortieth year in the eleventh moneth in the first day of the moneth Moses spake unto the sonnes of Israel according unto all that Iehovah had commanded him unto them After he had smitten Sihon King of the Amorites which dwelt in Heshbon and Og king of Bashan which dwelt in Ashtaroth in Edrei On this side Iordan in the Land of Moab began Moses to declare this Law saying Iehovah our God spake unto vs in Horeb saying Yee have dwelt long enough in this mountaine Turne you and take your journey and goe to the mount of the Amorite and unto all his neighbours in the plaine in the mountaine and in the vale and in the south and by the Sea side to the land
spake unto the sonnes of Israel after they came forth out of Egypt On this side Iordan in the valley over against Beth-peor in the land of Sihon king of the Amorites who dwelt in Heshbon whom Moses and the sonnes of Israel smote after they were come forth out of Egypt And they possessed his land and the land of Og king of Bashan two kings of the Amorites which were on this side Iordan toward the Sunne rising From Aroer which is by the banke of the river Arnon and unto mount Sion that is Hermon And all the plaine of this side Iordan Eastward and unto the Sea of the plaine under Ashdoth Pisgah Annotations● STatutes or Ordinances which taught the service of God Heb. 9. 1. as the next word judgments are for duties towards men and punishments of transgressours These are often joyned together see Deut. 5. 1. and 6. 1. and 12. 1. Mal. 4. 4. And that Statutes meane the legall services appeareth by the continuall use of this word as in Exod. 12. 24. 43. and 27. 21. and 29. 9. and 30. 21. teach or am teaching this sheweth the worke of the law still urging the conscience to d●● for not the hearers of the Law are just before God but the d●ers of the Law shall be justified Rom. 2. 13. may live Moses describeth the justice which is of the law that the man which doth those things shall live by them Rom. 10. 5. possesse or in●erit the land which was a figure of our heavenly inheritance Gen 12. 5. proposed to them that do the Law but given to them that are of the faith of Christ Ioh. 1. 17. Rom. 4. 13. 16. and 6. 23. Vers. 2. not adde Hereby all doctrines of men are condemned Matt. 15. 9. and the all-sufficiency and authority of Gods word stablished for ever Gal. 3. 1● 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. Adde thou not unto his words lest hee reprove thee and thou be found a lier Prov. 30. 6. diminish for every word of God is pure Prov. 30. 5. and profitable for doctrine for reproofe for correction for instruction in righteousnesse 2 Tim. 3. 16. Till heaven and earth passe one jot or one tittle shall in no wise passe from the Law Matt. 5. 18. for to keepe that is that you may keepe understanding the persons forementioned so in vers 5. see the notes on Gen. 6. 19. Vers. 3. Baal-peor in Greeke Beel-phegor the Idoll of the Moabites unto which many of Israel declined by the counsell of Balaam see Num. 25. 1 2. 18. and 31. 16. Psal. 106. 28. The Chaldee translateth against them that served Baal-peor destroyed or abolished by sending a plague to the death of twenty foure thousand Num. 25. 9. This judgment was remembred after in Ios. 22. 17. Have wee too little for the wickednesse of Peor c. Vers. 4. unto Iehovah the Chaldee saith unto the feare or religion of the Lord. Thus they that keepe themselves pure in generall defections are saved from the common destruction Ezek. 9. 4 6. 2 Tim. 2. 19. Rev. 20. 4. Vers. 6. wisdome Hereupon the Oracles of God are often commended as making wise the simple Psal. 19. 8. making us wiser than ou● enemies and to have more understanding than all our teachers Psal. 119. 98 99. and able to make us wise unto salvation through the faith which is in Christ Iesus 2 Tim. 3. 15. On the contrary it is said They have rejected the word of the Lord and what wisdome is in them Ier. 8. 9. Surely or Onely The Greeke turneth it Behold Vers. 7. what nation is there so great or what other great nation is there meaning there is not any So in vers 8. God nigh or Gods ●igh The Hebrew words are both of the plurall number yet meaning one God in the plurality of persons as the like is in Deut. 5. 26. Ios. 24. 19. The Greeke and Chaldee here translate it singularly God And he is said to be nigh us specially when he heareth and granteth our requests Psal. 145. 18. So the Chaldee here paraphraseth nigh unto the same toreceive the prayer thereof in the time of the tribulation thereof Wee likewise are said to draw nigh unto God when wee call upon him in faith Psal. 73. 28. Heb. 7. 19. Esa. 58. 2. and both are conjoyned in Iam. 4. 8. Vers. 9. thy soule that is thy selfe the soule is often put for the whole man So where one Evangelist saith lose his soule Matth. 16. 26. another saith Iose himselfe Luk. 9. 25. diligently or vehemently so vers 15. and often The word implieth strength as well as diligence See Deut. 6. 5. things Hebr. words which the Greeke also and Chaldee here keepeth lest or that they depart not in Greeke Let them not depart from thy heart Compare Prov. 3. 1. 3. and 4. 21. Vers. 10. Horeb or Choreb called also Sina● see Exod. 19. Paul calleth it The mount that might be touched Heb. 12. 18. Vers. 11. heart that is the midst as the heart of the Sea is the midst thereof Exod. 15. 8. So here the heart of heaven is the middest of the ai●e thicke darknesse or tempestuous darknesse gloc●●●● 〈◊〉 as the Greeke version and the holy Ghost in Heb. 12. 18. implieth See Exod. 20. 21. Vnto this ●●●ible mount where the Law was given Paul opposeth mount Sion or the state of grace by the Gospell Heb. 12. 18 22. It noteth the hidden glory of Gods kingly administration in his Church Psal. 97. 1 2. Vers. 12. voice of words This also Paul mentioneth Heb. 12. 19. In the next verse Moses calleth them ten words that is ten commandements whereof see the notes on Exod. 34. 28. no similitude to wit of God so after save a voice that is the voice of God as in verse 33. Hereupon it is said To whom then will yee liken God or what liken●sse will yee compare unto him Esa. 40. 18. Vers. 13. of stone signifying the perpetuity of these words and also the stoninesse of mens hearts as is noted on Exod. 31. 18. Vers. 14. statutes for the worship of God as judgments were for the repressing and punishing of vice Exod. 21. 1. These were spoken to Moses only and by him written to Israel but the ten words were spoken to all the people and written by the singer of God Vers. 19. the sunne It was a common corruption not onely amongst the heathens but in Israel to worship the Sunne and Starres and host of heaven 2 King 21. 3. and 17. 16. Amos 5. 25 26. of which sinne Iob cleareth himselfe Iob 31. 26 27. driven away or thrust to wit out of the ●ay as is after expressed in Deut. 13. 5. which is meant by the seduction of others or of their own hearts Therefore the Greeke and Chaldee here 〈◊〉 translate it beest deceived or made to erre and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Hebrew word implyeth being after used for the straying of cattell Deut. 22. 1. Imparted or divided distributed as a port●● It noteth Gods
ever Dan. 6. 26. Wherefore that speech of Iob My Redeemer liveth Iob 19. 25. is translated in the Greeke The Eternall is he that shall unloose mee and lived Men till they be redeemed by Christ are through feare of death all their life time subiect to bondage Heb. 2. 15. Though God came not now to judge them neither so much as up braided them with their sinnes past yet could they not heare his voice but as the Apostle noteth they that heard it intreated that the word should not be spoken to them any more for they could not endure that which was commanded Heb. 12. 19 20. Vers. 27. Goe neere thou The people being terrified seeke for a Mediatour and that is the end and use of the Law to drive men unto Christ. Wherefore their affection now pleased God vers 28 29. and he gave them Moses to helpe them for the present and further promised them a Prophet like unto him which was Christ Deut. 18. 15. 18. Act. 3. 22. 26. thou speake unto us The office of a Mediatour as he is a Prophet Deut. 18. 15. is here described which is to goe neere unto God having received the word from him to speake it unto the people This was fulfilled in Christ Ioh. 1. 18. and 3. 13. and 8. 28. Here in the Hebrew doe thou speake the words are in the feminine gender as if they had spoken to a woman which is thought to be a note of the peoples troubled minde see the like in Num. 11. 15. and doc The like they promised before God spake these words Exod. 19. 8. not knowing the impossibilitie of the Law but how farre they were from performing this the golden calfe which they made ere fortie dayes were expired is a witnesse for which sinne Moses brake the Tables of the covenant Exod. 32. Deut. 9. 9. c. yet their good affection pleaseth the Lord. Vers. 28. well said The Greeke translateth they have spoken all things rightly or well Vers. 29. Who will give An Hebrew phrase meaning O that some would give or O that there were and so the Chaldee explaineth it The like is in Iob 6. 8. Psal. 14. 7. and 55. 7. and otherwhere to feare c. The things that God approveth in men are feare humilitie distrust in themselves and a confidence in him with love unto his Law Hereunto God called them by this his covenant drawing them unto Christ. Vers. 31. all the commandement that is the Law in generall or commandements as the Greeke translateth it the singular being often put for the plurall or every commandement So in Deut. 6. 1. and 8. 1. also in 2 Pet. 2. 21. and 3. 2. Vers. 32. observe to doe or and doe as this phrase often signifieth see the notes on Gen. 2. 3. right hand or to the left This signifieth an exact care to walke in Gods Law as in the high way from which men may not turne aside as in Deut. 2. 27. Therefore all aberration from the right way is noted by the turning to the right hand or to the left Esa. 30. 21. So after in Deut. 17. 11. 20. and 28. 14. Prov. 4. 27. CHAP. VI. 1 Moses setting himselfe to explaine Gods commandements exhorteth Israel unto obedience 4 He beginneth with the first and great commandement the love of the Lord 6 and of his Law in their heart 7 and of teaching it to their children 8 and professing it by outward signes 10 He warneth them that they forsake not God by prosperitie 16 nor by adversitie 17 but to keepe his Law for their good 20 and to endevour the continuance and propagation of his religion among their posteritie ANd this is the Commandement the Statutes and the Iudgements which Iehovah your God commanded to teach you to doe in the Land whither yee passe over to possesse it That thou maiest feare Iehovah thy God to keepe all his statutes and his commandements which I command thee thou and thy sonne and thy sonnes sonne all the dayes of thy life and that thy dayes may be prolonged Heare therefore ô Israel and observe to doe that it may be well with thee and that ye may multiplie mightily as Iehovah the God of thy fathers hath spoken unto thee in the land that floweth with milke and honey Heare ô Israel Iehovah our God Iehovah is one And thou shalt love Iehovah thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy might And these words which I command thee this day shall be in thy heart And thou shalt whet them on thy children and shalt speake of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou liest downe and when thou risest up And thou shalt binde them for a signe upon thy hand and they shall be for phylacteries betweene thine eyes And thou shalt write them upon the doore-posts of thine house and on thy gates And it shall be when Iehovah thy God shall have brought thee into the land which he sware unto thy fathers to Abraham to Isaak and to Iakob to give unto thee cities great good which thou buildedst not And houses full of all good things which thou filledst not and wells digged which thou diggedst not vineyards and olive-trees which thou plantedst not and thou shalt have eaten and be full Take heed to thy selfe left thou forget Iehovah which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt out of the house of servants Thou shalt feare Iehovah thy God and serve him and shalt sweare by his name Ye shall not goe after other gods of the gods of the peoples which are round about you For Iehovah thy God is a jealous God in the midst of thee lest the anger of Iehovah thy God be kindled against thee and he destroy thee from off the face of the earth Yee shall not tempt Iehovah your God as ye tempted him in Massah Keeping ye shal● keepe the commandements of Iehovah your God and his testimonies and his statutes which he hath commanded thee And thou shalt doe that which is right and good in the eyes of Iehovah that it may be well with thee and thou maist goe in and possesse the good land which Iehovah sware unto thy fathers To drive out all thy enemies from thy face as Iehovah hath spoken When thy sonne shall aske thee to morrow saying What are the testimonies and the statutes and the judgements which Iehovah our God hath commanded you Then thou shalt say unto thy sonne Wee were servants to Pharaoh in Egypt and Iehovah brought us forth out of Egypt with a strong hand And Iehovah shewed signes and wonders great and evill upon Egypt upon Pharaoh and upon all his house before our eyes And he brought us out from thence that he might bring us in to give unto us the land which he sware unto our fathers And Iehovah commanded us to doe all these statutes to feare Iehovah our God for good unto us all dayes
1 2 c. when thou walkest c. answerable to these are those sayings of Solomon When thou goest it shall lead thee when thou sleepest it shall keepe thee and when thou awakest it shall talke with thee for the Commandement is a Lampe and the Law is a light Prov. 6. 22 23. Vers. 20. doore-posts of this rite see the notes on Deut. 6. 9. Vers. 21. dayes may be multiplied Long life is a blessing often promised to them that keepe Gods Law Heare O my sonne and receceive my sayings and the yeeres of thy life shall be many Prov. 4. 10. dayes of the heavens that is whiles the world endureth for so long by the decree of God in Gen. 8. 22. shall the dayes of heaven be and so long shall the heavens be over the earth And under this eternall life was also figured A like promise was for the kingdome of David or of Christ that his throne should be as the dayes of the heavens Psal. 89. 30. Vers. 22. this commandement the Greek explaineth it these commandements see the notes on Deut. 5. 31. to cleave that is to continue fast united unto him and his Law as is noted on Deut. 10. 20. Vers. 23. drive out according to his former promise in Exod. 23. 23. 27. 31. But because Israel kept not Gods commandement this promise was not fully performed Iudg. 2. 1 2 3. Vers. 24. shall tread The like promise is made after Moses death to Israel under Iesus their Captaine Ios. 1. 3. who was a figure of our Lord Iesus Christ by whom this promise was fulfilled the wildernesse of Paran which was the southerne border of the land of Canaan and Lebanon a mountaine which was the northerne bound By and Lebanon we may understand and unto Lebanon as the next words manifest Euphrates in Hebrew Pherath this is called the river for excellency sake meaning the great river as Deut. 1. 7. Gen. 15. 18. and so the Greeke translateth it here It was the easterne border of their territories hindmost sea or after sea which the Greeke and Chaldee calleth the Westerne sea meaning the maine or great sea toward the going downe of the Sunne as is explained in Ios. 1. 4. which sea is said to be after or behinde them because it was to the West and so their westerne bound For the East is counted the fore-part of the world the West behinde the South on the right hand Psal. 89. 13. and the North on the left all which foure parts are called by these names in Iob 23. 8 9. See this promise fulfilled in 2 Chron. 9. 26. Vers. 25. stand or set himselfe that is resist or withstand you as the Greeke translateth So in Ios. 1. 5. feare in Greeke trembling this was fulfilled before Deut. 2. 25. Psal. 105. 38. and after Ios. 2. 11. and 10. 10. Here beginneth the 47. section 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Lecture of the Law see Genes 6. 9. Vers. 26. I set Hebr. I give this was that they might take their choise of either of these for so the phrase elsewhere meaneth Deut. 30. 19. and so to manifest that if the curse or evill came upon them they caused it themselves Vers. 27. if yee shall hearken or that yee may hearken but the Hebrew Asher That is sometimes used for If as the Greeke here translateth it and in Levit. 4. 22. So Asher in 1. King 8. 31. is Im that is If in 2 Chron. 6. 22. Vers. 28. after other gods in Greeke to serve other gods following other religions or divine services which the Chaldee calleth the idols of the peoples Sol. Iarchi observeth from this place that whosoever committeth idolatry he turneth aside from all the way which was commanded to Israel here upon they say He that professeth idolatry is as if he denied the whole Law Vers. 29. put the blessing Heb. give the blessing that is cause it to be pronounced upon mount Gerizim The manner is shewed in Deut. 27. where this Law is repeated and enlarged A thing is said to be given sometime when it is spoken or pronounced with the mouth as in Iob 36. 3. Deut. 13. 1 2. upon mount Gerizim or towards mount Gerizim which the Greeke calleth Garizim so after towards mount Ebal called in Greeke Gaibal For the people stood halfe of them over against mount Gerizim and halfe of them over against mount Ebal as is recorded in Ios. 8. 33. And the Hebrew gnal sometimes signifieth towards a place as in Exod. 9. 22. towards heaven Vers. 30. Are they not that is Loe they are speaking as of a thing well knowne See the notes on Gen. 4. 7. by the way or after behinde the way of the going downe of the Sunne that is the way towards the West or Sunne-setting Gilgal the place where Israel was circumcised afterward in Iosuahs time Ios. 5. 9. Okes of Moreh or plaines of Moreh as the Chaldee expoundeth it which was a place by Sechem where God first appeared to Abraham after he came into the land of Canaan and there Abraham built an Altar to the Lord Gen. 12. 6 7. And that mount Gerizim was by Sechem in that part of the country which after was called Samaria appeareth in Iudg. 9. 6 7. And the Hebrewes say in Thalmud Bab. in Sotah chap. 7. that Gerizim and Ebal were in Samaria There on mount Gerizim was the Samaritans Temple 2 Maccab. 6. 2. where they worshipped they knew not what Ioh. 4. 20. 22. See also Iosephus Antiq. l. 11. c. 8. It seemeth they tooke occasion of that superstition from this Law thinking Gerizim to be a holy place because the blessings were pronounced on it and they called themselves those that belong to the blessed mount And there have been of them in that place of late yeeres as Benjamin in his Itinerario relateth how he saw the citie in a valley betweene the mountaines Garizim and Ebal wherein the Samaritans dwelled and did sacrifice there on mount Garizim alleaging that which is written in the Law And thou shalt put the blessing upon mount Gerizim CHAP. XII 1 Places and monuments of idolatrie are to be destroyed 4 they may not doe so unto the Lord but must seeke and keepe the place of his service which be himselfe should chuse 5 11 14 Thither all their sacrifices holy things must be brought 12 18 There they and their families and the Levite must eat and reioyce 15 21 For civill use they might kill and eat within their gates 16. 23 Bloud is forbidden to be eaten 29 The manner of service which the Canaanites used may not be inquired after nor the like things done unto the Lord but his commandements only THese are the statutes and the judgements which ye shall observe to doe in the land which Iehovah the God of thy fathers giveth unto thee to possesse it all the dayes that ye live upon the earth Destroying ye shall destroy all the places wherein the nations which ye shall possesse served
any use when it was taken out the house was lawfull Maim treat of Idola●y ch 8. sect 4. shall possesse that is shall subdue and have dominion over them as the word often signifieth see Levit. 25. 45 46. Ier. 49. 2. Psal. 82. 8. gods that is as the Chaldee explaineth it Idolls there are gods so called many but into 〈◊〉 there is but one God 1 Cor. 8. 5 6. mountaines in such high places all nations for the most part used to serve their gods into which corruption Israel sometime fell 2 King 17. 10 11. Ier. 3. 6. Ezek. 20. 28 29. Hos. 4. 13. Vers. 3. pillars or statues standing Images of these see Exod. 23. 24. Levit. 26. 1. greves which were wont to bee as temples unto the heathen as is noted on Exod. 34. 13. See also the annotations on Deut. 7. 5. gods in Chaldee Images of ther Idols names whether in speech for the name of other gods might not bee heard out of their mouths Exod. 23. 13. or imprinted in bookes graven on pillars imposed on places or any other the like So the Reubenites changed the names of cities that carried Idoll names Num. 32. 38. As the beginning of true religion is repentance from dead workes Heb. 6. 1. so in the constituting of Gods true service Moses beginneth with the abolishing of all idolatrous monuments for What agreement hath the temple of God with Idols 2 Cor. 6. 16. Vers. 4. not doe so in any of the former particulars or such like as not to destroy or doe evill to Gods sanctuary or synagogues Psal. 74. 3 6 7 8. not to breake downe his Altars 1 King 19. 10. nor to deface any holy writings or monuments of his name Ier. 36. 23. The Hebrews say Whosoever destroyeth any name of the holy pure names wherby the blessed God is called is by the law to be beaten for 〈◊〉 of Idols hee saith And thou shalt destroy the names of them c. Thou shalt not doe so to the Lord thy God Hee that takes away but one stone by way of destroying from the Altar or from the Temple or from any other part of the Court is to be beaten Likewise he that burneth any of the wood of the sanctuary c. All the holy Scriptures and expositions of them it is unlawfull to burne any of them or destroy them with hand except they be such as are written by heretickes c. But holy Scriptures when they are old are to be laid up Maimony in Iesudei hatorah ch 6. sect 1. 7. 8. Vers. 5. to put his name there that is to have it consecrated unto him and his divine service Such was the Tabernacle of Moses the Temple of Solomon the Citie Ierusalem after God had chosen it for of them God said My name shall be there 1 King 8. 29. and his Name was called upon them Dan. 9. 18. and put there 2 King 21. 4 9. 1 King 14. 11. The Chaldee here expoundeth it to cause 〈◊〉 Majestie or divine presence to dwell there Now Christ hath abolished the earthly Ierusalem and requireth worship in spirit and truth every where Ioh. 4. 11 23. shall yee seeke for answers and oracles which from the mercie-seat and by Vrim and Thummim were given to the people Numb 7. 89. Exod. 25. 22. Numb 27. 21. All other places were forbidden as Seeke not Bethel nor enter into Gilgal c. Amos 5. 5. shalt thou come at all times when thou wilt offer sacrifice Levit. 17. 8 9. but three times in the yeare by expresse commandement Exod. 23. 14. 17. And there the Lord promised to come unto them and blesse them Exod. 20. 24. Vers. 6. sacrifices of all sorts as sinne-offerings peace-offerings and whatsoever pertained to the Alter Sacrifices have their name of slaughter which were staine offered and eaten before the Lord the Chaldee here expoundeth it the slaughter or sacrifice of your holy things tithes the tenth of the h●●d and of the flocke which bo●h Priests and people were to bring and slay before the Lord and eat them in Ierusalem whereof see Levit. 27. 32. and the tiches of cor 〈…〉 c. whereof see vers 17. and Deut. 14. 22 23. heave-offering of your hand the Greeke translateth the first-fruits and in v. 〈◊〉 the first-fruits of your hands These are the first-fruits spoken of in Deut. 26. 2. c. which with their hands they brought into the Sanctuary See the annotations there vowes and your voluntaire offerings such as for Gods blessings they willingly gave unto him The difference of these voluntarie oblations from vowes is shewed on Levit 7. 16. firstlings which were given to the Priests for them to eat after the blood was sprinkled and the fat burned on the Altar see Numb 18. 15 17. Vers. 7. Yee shall eat to wit such things as were lawfull for the people to eat for of all the things forementioned they might not eat Some were for the Priests to eat before the Lord some for the people rejoyce God is to be served with gladnesse Psal. 100. 1 2. and the holy things of God might not be eaten with mourning Deut. 26. 14. Hos. 9. 4. yee put your hand Hebr. the putting to or sending forth of your hand This though it may be applied to that which they might take and eat of the holy things as in Gen. 3. 22. yet it seemeth to be more generall for all things that they should doe and all blessings that they should receive as by comparing this phrase in Deut. 15. 10. and 23. 20. and 28. 8. 20. may appeare So after in vers 18. houses that is housholds children and such like as the Chaldee expoundeth it men of your houses and so Moses explaineth it in vers 12. Vers. 8. which wee doe the Greeke expoundeth it which yee doe Israel committed idolatry in the wildernesse Act. 7. 42 43. Howbeit this speech of Moses seemeth rather to meane the true service of God which was not as yet perfected neither could be in their travels as it was after in Canaan right in his owne eies that is which liketh or pleaseth him so the phrase meaneth in 2 Sam. 19. 6. 1. Chron. 13. 4. and is often spoken of the corruption of men as Iudg. 17. 6. and 21. 25. unto which Moses opposeth that which is right in the Lords eies vers 25 28. and chap. 13. 18. There is a way which is right before a man and the end thereof are the waies of death Prov. 14. 12. Vers. 9. the rest in Chaldee the house or place of rest meaning the land of Canaan and in speciall Ierusalem there 1 Chron. 23. 25. where after their travels and warres the Lord gave rest unto his people as vers 10. and 1 King 8. 56. But David being there speaketh of another rest which remaineth for people of God Psal. 95. 11. into which rest wee that beleeve doe enter and ●●ase from our owne workes Heb. 4 3 8 9 10. Vers. 10. in confident safety or in
acknowledge faces that is be partiall respecting one more than another see Lev. 19. 15. Deut. 1. 17. Prov. 24. 23. take a gift or a bribe this is repeated from Exod. 23. 8. see the Annotations there Vers. 20. Iustice justice that is all manner justice and nothing but justice exactly carefully and continually shalt thou follow the Greeke translateth Iustly that which is just shalt thou follow The doubling of the word is for more vehemency see Deut. 2. 27. and when a word is trebled it is most vehement as in Ezek. 21. 27. Esay 6. 3. Vers. 21. not plant thee or not plant unto thee or for thy selfe see the like phrase in Exod. 20. 4. a grove called in Hebrew Asherah of Felicity or happinesse a blessed grove such the heathens used for the service of their gods as is noted on Exod. 34. 13. but the Lord would not have such neere his altar in his service notwithstanding the Israelites corrupted themselves herewith sundry times as Iudg. 3. 7. and 6. 25. 1 King 14. 23. and 16. 33. 2 King 21. 3. 7. and there were prophets of the groves 1 King 18. 19. For this sin God threatned to root up Israel out of the good land which he gave to their fathers 1 King 14. 15. The Hebrewes say He that planteth a tree neere unto the Altar or in any part of the Court-yard whether it be barren tree or tree that beareth food although he doe it for to adorne the Sanctuary and beautifie it he is to be beaten Deut. 16. 21. Because this was the manner of Idolaters they planted trees by the altars side that the people might assemble there Maimony treat of Idolatrie ch 6. s. 9. Vers. 22. set thee up a pillar or set up for thy selfe a statue or standing image whereof see the annotations on Lev. 26. 1. CHAP. XVII 1 The things sacrificed to the Lord must be unblemished 2 Idolaters are to be stoned to death being convicted by witnesses 8 Hard controversies are to be determined by the Law which the Priests and Iudges shewed which were in the place that the Lord should chuse 12 The contemner of that determination must die 14 The election and dutie of a King THou shalt not sacrifice unto Iehovah thy God Oxe or Lambe wherein is blemish any evill thing for that is an abomination to Iehovah thy God If there be found in the midst of thee in any of thy gates which Iehovah thy God giveth unto thee man or woman that hath done evill in the eyes of Iehovah thy God in transgressing his covenant And hath gone and served other gods and bowed himselfe downe unto them either to the Sunne or to the Moone or to any of the host of the heavens which I have not commanded And it be told thee and thou hast heard of it and hast inquired diligently and behold it be a truth and the thing certaine that this abomination is done in Israel Then thou shalt bring forth that man or that woman which have done this evill thing unto thy gates the man or the woman and shalt stone them with stones and they shall die At the mouth of two witnesses or of three witnesses shall he that is to die be put to death he shall not be put to death at the mouth of one witnesse The hand of the witnesses shall be first upon him to put him to death and afterward the hand of all the people and thou shalt put away the evill from the midst of thee If a matter be too hard for thee in judgment betweene bloud and bloud betweene plea plea and betweene stroke and stroke matters of controversies within thy gates then thou shalt arise and goe up unto the place which Iehovah thy God shall chuse And thou shalt come unto the Priests the Levites and unto the Iudge that shall be in those dayes and thou shalt inquire and they shall shew unto thee the word of judgement And thou shalt doe according to the word which they shall shew unto thee they of that place which Iehovah shall chuse and thou shalt observe to doe according to all that they informe thee According to the Law which they shall teach thee and according to the judgement which they shall say unto thee thou shalt doe thou shalt not decline from the word which they shall shew unto thee to the right hand or to the left And the man that will doe presumptuously not to hearken unto the Priest that standeth to minister there before Iehovah thy God or unto the Iudge even that man shall die and thou shalt put away the evill from Israel And all the people shall heare and feare and not doe presumptuously any more When thou art come into the land which Iehovah thy God giveth unto thee and shalt possesse it and dwell therein shalt say I will set over me a King as all the nations that are round about me Setting thou shalt set over thee a King whom Iehovah thy God shall chuse from among thy brethren shalt thou set over thee a King thou maist not set over thee a man that is a forrainer which is not thy brother But he shall not multiply horses to himselfe nor cause the people to returne to Egypt to the end to multiply horses for Iehovah hath said unto you yee shall not adde to returne this way any more Neither shall hee multiply wives to himselfe that his heart turne not away neither shall he greatly multiply to himselfe silver and gold And it shall be when hee sitteth upon the throne of his kingdome that hee shall write for him-selfe the Copie of this Law in a Booke out of that which is before the Priests the Levites And it shal be with him he shal reade therein all the daies of his life that he may learn to feare Iehovah his God to keepe all the words of this Law and these Statutes to doe them That his heart be not lifted up above his brethren and that hee turne not aside from the commandement to the right hand or to the left to the end that he may prolong his daies in his kingdome hee and his sonnes in the midst of Israel Annotations NOt sacrifice in Greek not offer which is more generall and so the Law also saith in Lev. 22. 20. see the annotations there Oxe or Lambe these are the greatest and the least sacrifices under which two all other are comprehended The Oxe is not to be understood of a gelded beast which wee usually call an Oxe for so it became blemished and unfit for sacrifice but of a Bull as the originall properly signifieth And the Lambe in Hebrew Se● implyeth the Kid also as Exod. 12. 3 5. blemish in Hebrew Mum of which the Chaldee Muma and Greeke Momos are derived Whereupon Christ is called the Lambe amomos that is without blemish 1 Pet. 1. 19. It meaneth any superfluity want or deformity in any part as is more largely shewed on Lev. 22. 22. 24. And it
a day is naught such a day is fit for to doe such a worke such a yeere or moneth is evill for such a thing It is unlawfull to observe times though one doe no worke but make it knowne they are lyes which fooles imagine to bee true and to bee words of wise men c. Maim in treat of Idolatry chap. 11. sect 8. an observer of fortunes one that curiously searcheth observeth and telleth signes of good or evill luck which are learned by experience The Hebrew Nachash is to search and finde out by experience Gen. 30. 27. and 44. 5. whereupon Menachesh the word here used is one that too curiously observeth and abuseth things that doe fall out as luckie or unluckie signes as did the Augures and Soothsaiers among the heathens The Hebrewes describe it thus as if one should say Because the morsell of bread is fallen out of my mouth or my staffe out of mine hand I will not goe to such a place this day for if I goe I shall not speed of my businesse Because a Fox passed by on my right hand I will not goe out of my house this day for if I goe some deceitfull man will meet with mee And so if men heare the chattering of a bird and say it shall be so or not so it is good to doe such a thing or naught to doe such a thing c. And so hee that maketh signes for himselfe if it fall out so or so I will doe such a thing if it fall not out I will not doe it and all things of like sort these all are unlawfull and who-soever doth any act bacause of any of these things is to be beaten Maimony treat of Idolatry chap. 11. sect 4. This sinne was common among the heathens practised of the wisest Numb 24. 1. 1 King 20. 33. and it spread into Israel 2 King 17. 17. 2 Chron. 33. 6. and is at this day too common among Christians though Gods law plainly forbiddeth it here and in Levit. 19. 26. a witch or a sorcerer a magician in Hebrew Mecashsheph in Greeke Pharmakos of this kinde were Iannes and Iambres the sorcerers of Egypt see the notes on Exod. 7. 11. Such were esteemed among the wise and called to tell and interpret dreames Dan. 2. 2. By Gods Law a winch might not bee suffered to live Exod. 22. 18. yet did this evill prevaile in Israel 2 Chron. 33. 6. Ier. 27. 9. Mal. 3. 5. The Hebrews seeme to hold two sorts of these witches or sorcerers some that did hurt others that did hold the eies that is by jugling and sleights beguiled mens senses Mecashsheph the witch is to be stoned to death if be doe the act oft witchcraft but he that heldeth the dies and seemeth to doe that which he doth not is to be beaten Maimony treat of Idolatry ch 11. s. 15. Vers. 11. charmeth a charme or inchanteth an inchantment or conjureth conjuration The Hebrew Chober signifieth conjoyning or consociating the Chaldee name Ratim is of murmuring or mumbling the Greeke Epaidon of charming or inchanting This Charmer is said to be hee that speaketh words of a strange language and without sense and hee in his foolishnesse thinketh that these words are profitable That if one say so or so unto a Serpent or a Scorpion it cannot hurt a man and hee that saith so and so to a m●an be cannot be hurt c. He that whispereth over a wound or readeth a verse out of the Bible likewise he that readeth over an Infant that it may not be frighted or that layeth the booke of the Law the Bible or the Phylacteries upon a childe that it may sleepe such are not onely among inchanters or charmers but of those that generally denie the Law of God because they make the words of the Scripture medicine for the body whereas they are not but medicine for the soule as it is written in Prov. 3. 22. They shall be life unto thy soule Maimony 〈◊〉 of Idolatry chap. 11. sect 10. 12. of a familiar spirit called in Hebrew Ob which signifieth a bottle Ioh 32. 19. applied here and often to Magicians who possessed with an evill spirit speak with hollow voice as out of a bottell and as some say with swollen bellies whereupon the Greeke version usually calleth them Eggastrimuthoi as speaking out of the belly But the holy Ghost in Act. 16. 16. expoundeth it more fully the spirit of Pithon or of divination meaning of the Devill whose answers were given to the heathens by these meanes the chiefe whereof was called Pythius Apollo and his Temple Pythion and his feast Pythia kept to his honour who was faigned to kill the serpent Python The manner of this Oracle the Prophet sheweth to be with an hollow low voice as Thy speech shall bee low out of the dust and thy voice shall be as of one that hath a familiar spirit Esay 29. 4. The Hebrewes explaine it thus that hee which had a familiar spirit stood and burned incense and held a rod of mirtle tree in his hand and waved it And he spake certaine words in secret untill hee that inquired did heare one speake unto him and answer him touching that which hee inquired with words from under the earth with a very low voice c. Likewise one tooke a dead mans skull and burnt incense thereto and inchanted thereby till hee heard a very low voice c. Hee that did any of these acts was to be stoned to death Maim in treat of Idolatry c. 6. s. 1. This was Sauls sinne that he sought to a woman which had a familiar spirit the voice whereof he heard 1. Sam. 28. 7. 15. for which transgression the Lord killed him 1 Chron. 10. 13. and hath threatned to cut off all from among his people that doe inquire of such Levit. 20. 6 wizard or cunning man in Hebrew Iidgnoni so named of his knowledge or cunning and so the Greeke version in other places calleth him Gnostes of knowledge a Prognosticator but here the Greeke is Teratoskopos he that observeth wonders The Chaldee giveth him a name of remembrance Zecuru He is usually joyned with the former that hath a familiar spirit as in Levit. 19. 31. and 20. 6. 2 Chron. 33. 6. 1 Sam. 28. 3. and by the Law they were both of them to die Levit. 20. 27. Such were among the Egyptians and other heathens Esay 19. 3. it is likely therefore that their practise was alike abominable The Hebrewes describe him thus that hee put in his meuth a bone of a bird called Iaduangh burned incense did other workes untill he fell downe as with shame or modestie and spake with his mouth things that were to come to passe Maim treat of Idolatry ch 6. sect 2. that seeketh unto the dead or as the Chaldee and Greeke expound it that inquireth of the dead such wee call of the Greeke name a Necromancer Of him they say that he made himselfe hungry and went and lodged
13. all that I shall command This Christ did in his owne person as he said I speake not of my selfe but the Father which sent me he gave me a commandement what I should say and what I should speake and I know that his commandement is life everlasting whatsoever I speake therefore even as the Father said unto mee so I speake Ioh. 12. 49 50. and All things that I have heard of my Father I have made knowne unto you Iob. 15. 15. He did and doth it also by his Ministers for as he gave his Apostles the words which the Father had given him Ioh. 17. 8. so the things which they spake and wrote were the commandements of the Lord 1 Cor. 14. 37. and he requireth of all that If any man speake it should be as the oracles of God 1 Pet. 4. 11. V. 19. my words God here acknowledgeth the words to be his own which Christ should speake as himselfe also said My doctrine is not mine but his that sent me Ioh. 7. 16. And whereas Prophets used to shew signes wonders Deut. 13. 1 2. though Christ did many such Act. 2. 22. yet are they not here mentioned because the word gospell of Christ is the power of God unto salvation Ro. 1. 16. and his commandement is life everlasting Ioh. 12. 50. and Christs name is called the word of God Rev. 19. 13. Io. 1. 1. the word rather than wonders was that w ch the ancient Iewes expected by Christ as their later writers doe witnesse saying Let it not come up into thy mind that the king Christ needeth to do signes wōders the thing is not so for behold Rabbi Akibah was a great wise man of the wise men of the Thalmud and he was armour-bearer to Ben Coziba the King who was thought to be the king Christ. And both he and all the wise men of his age supposed that he had beene Christ the King untill he was killed for his iniquities when he was killed they knew he was not so And the wise men asked not of him any signe or wonder Maim in treat of Kings ch 11. s. 3. Howbeit when the true Christ was indeed come that wicked and adulterous generation sought after a signe Mat. 16. 14. and 12. 38 39. and except they saw signes and wonders they would not beleeve Ioh. 4. 48. and though he did many miracles before them yet they beleeved not in him Ioh. 12. 37. He came in his Fathers name and they received him not another as Beu Coziba came in his own name and him they received Ioh. 5. 43. I will require it to wit by punishmēt for so requiring often signifieth Gen. 9. 5. and 42. 22. and so the Greeke here translateth I will take vengeance on him and the Apostle expoundeth it thus every soule which will not he are that Prophet shall be destroyed from among the people Act. 3. 23. The Chaldee translateth My Word shall require it of him And the Hebrew Doctors so explaine these words He that transgresseth against his words is guiltie of death by the hand of God as it is written in Deut. 18. I will require it of him Maim in Iesude hatorah c. 9. s. 2. This was fulfilled upon the Iewes who would not hearken to the words of Christ therefore he destroyed the Citie and the Sanctuarie as was prophesied Dan. 9. 26. The enemies laid it even with the ground and the children therof within it they left not therein one stone upon another because she knew not the time of her visitation Luk. 19. 44. So they died in their sins Ioh. 8. 24. and wrath came upon them to the uttermost 1 Thess. 2. 16. Vers. 20. shall presume The Greeke and Chaldee expound it shall doe ungodlily and wickedly not commanded of this sin the false Prophets in Israel were commonly guiltie for it reproved as They have seene vanitie and lying divination saying The Lord saith and the Lord hath not sent them Ezek. 13. 6. and I have not sent them saith the Lord yet they prophesie a lie in my name Ier. 27. 15. And of this the Hebrewes say The false Prophet is to bee strangled to death although he prophesie in the name of the Lord and neither addeth nor diminisheth Deut. 18. 20. Whether he prophesieth that which he hath not heard by propheticall vision or who so hath heard the words of his fellow Prophet and saith that this word was said unto him and be prophesieth therby 〈…〉 is a false Prophet and is to be strangled to death Mai● treat of Idolatrie chap. 5. sect 7 8. of other gods as they that prophesied by Baal Ier. 2. 8. and 23. 13. The Hebrewes declare it thus The Prophet that prophesieth in the name of an Idol as he that saith such an Idol or such a starre said unto me that we are commanded to doe this or that or not to doe it though it be to pronounce that uncleane which is uncleane or that cleane which is cleane c. he is to be strangled to death c. And it is unlawfull to aske of him a signe or a wonder and if he doe any of him-selfe they may not regard him who so supposeth of his signes that per adventure they may be true transgresseth this prohibition Deut. 13. 3. Thou shalt not bearken unto the words of that prophet Maim treat of Idolatrie chap. 5. sect 6 7. shall ●ven die that is shall be put to death by the Magistrate and his judgement is to be strangled as before is noted For which strangling they afterward as under the Romans used Crucifying And the Hebrewes say They judged not either a whole tribe or a false Prophet or the high Priest but by the mouth of the Synedrion of 71. Iudges Thalmud Bab. in Sanhedrin chap. 1. This high Synedrion was after in Ierusalem hereupon our Saviour said It cannot be that a Prophet perish out of Ierusalem and ô Ierusalem Ierusalem which killest the Prophets c. Luk. 13. 33 34. Vers. 22. That which in Greeke Whatsoever things meaning of predictions foretelling things to come For touching matters of faith and of the worship of God the people were to hold unto the written Law against which if any Prophet did teach and give a signe or wonder which came to passe yet they were not to beleeve or hearken unto him See Deut. 13. 1 5. the thing or the word be not But Ionas prophesied the destruction of Niniveh within fortie dayes and it came not to passe yet the Lord had spoken that word Ion. 1. and 3. Here then conditions are implied as if men breake not off their sinnes by repentance the evils foretold shall come upon them c. Ezek. 33. 13 14 15. Ier. 26. 12 13 18 19. Especially this is meant concerning prophesies of good things which if they come not to passe the Prophet is found false as Ieremie said to Ananias The Prophets that have beene before mee and before thee of old prophesied
fathers leave in a company that are all vaine and vile persons That a sonne onely not a daughter is to be put to death by this Law and hee not a little one or a childe who is not within the rule or compasse of the commandements not a man that is growne up and is in his owne power So that hee must be at least above twelve yeeres of age And if he be married three moneths and his wife be knowne to be with childe they free him also from this Law because it is said a sonne and not a father Moreover that the father and mother must bring this rebellious sonne first to the court of three Iudges and there complaine of his disobedience bringing with them two witnesses of his stealth and gluttony whereupon he is there beaten as others are for the like crime and this is that chastening in v. 18. If he fall againe to stealth and riot his father and mother bring him againe before the Magistrates with the witnesses and he is condemned to death But if before sentence is passed on him his father and mother doe relent in pitie towards him hee is let goe If he flee away before sentence is gone out against him and be afterward taken when hee is in mans state which they also judge by the haire on his face hee is not put to death but if hee scape away after sentence of condemnation he is stoned to death whensoever hee is taken If his father be willing to bring him to the Magistrate and the mother not or the mother willing and the father not he is not to be judged as a rebellious sonne If either parent have lost their hand or be lame or dumbe or blinde or deafe the sonne passeth not under this condemnation for it is said they must lay hold on him and bring him and must say this our sonne c. hee obeieth not our voice c. These and the like cautions are noted by Maimony in treat of Rebels chap. 7. and in the Bab. Thalmud in Sanhedrin ch 8. but they have not all of them found ground from the Scripture Howbeit if any sonne be by any of these exceptions saved that he die not as a rebellious sonne yet is he under all other punishments which the Magistrates inflict on other riotours and like malefactors the gate of his place that is the gate of the place where he dwelt at which gate the Magistrates used to sit Deut. 22. 15. and 25. 7. So the Chaldee here translateth the gate of the judgement-hall of his place Vers. 20. a glutton or riotour devourer in Hebrew Zolel which hath the signification of vilenesse Ier. 15. 19. The Chaldee addeth a glutton or riotous eater of flesh and a riotous drinker of wine which words seeme also to be understood in the Hebrew and are so expressed in Prov. 23. 20. Be not amongst riotous drinkers of wine amongst riotous eaters of flesh for the riotous drinker and the riotous eater or glutton shall come to poverty Where in the latter sentence the words flesh and wine are omitted as here they are in Moses And to these two flesh and wine the Hebrewes do restraine this law as before is noted but oft times such things are named for an instance and doe imply all other of like sort Vers. 21. and he shall die or that he die The sinnes of riot and drunkennesse were not by Moses Law punishable by death this therefore was in respect of his disobedience to his parents which greatly aggravated his sinne and for which hee was to die when other drunkards scaped with lighter punishment Hereupon Solomon uttered his parable He that keepeth the Law is a wise son but he that is a companion of gluttons shameth his father Prov. 28. 7. all Israel shall heare The like is spoken of the death of some other notorious malefactors as Deut. 13. 11. and 17. 13. and 19. 30. So in this case the Hebrewes say The rebellious sonne must be proclaimed and they publish by writings unto all Israel In such a Court wee stoned such an one because hee was a stubborne and rebellious sonne Maimony treat of Rebels chap. 7. sect 13. Vers. 22. worthy of death Hebr. of the judgement of death which the Chaldee well expoundeth desert of judgement to be killed and thou hang him The Hebrewes understand not this of putting him to death by hanging but of hanging a man up after hee was stoned to death which was done for more detestation of some hainous malefactors Their words are We are commanded to hang the blasphemer and the Idolater and a man is hanged but not a woman After they are stoned to death they fasten a peace of timber in the earth and out of it there commeth a peece of wood then they tie both his hands one to another and hang him neere unto the setting of the Sun and let him downe out of hand and if he abide all night it is a transgression Deut. 21. 23. And we are commanded to burie all that are killed by the Iudges the same day that they are killed They may not be hanged on a tree that groweth on the ground but on that which hath beene plucked up that there may not need any cutting of it downe for the tree that he is hanged on is to be buried with him that there be no evill memoriall of him for men to say this is the tree wheron such a man was hanged And so the stone wherewith the stoned is killed and the sword wherewith a man is put to death and the napkin wherwith he is strangled they all are buried Maimony in Sanhedrin ch 15. sect 6. c. In the Scripture we have examples of Rechab and Baanah who for murdering Ishbosheth were by Davids commandement slaine their hands and feet cut off and they hanged up 2 Sam. 4. 12. where their hanging seemeth to be after their death and so in others as Ios. 10. 26. which might also be the case of the King of Ai Ies. 8. 29. of those Idolaters in Num. 25. 4. And the Scripture sheweth a double punishment for some hainous sinnes as in Achans family who were burned with fire after they were stoned Ios. 7. 25. Among the Romans afterward they hanged or fastned them to the tree alive and such was the death of our Lord Christ who bare our 〈…〉 es in his owne bodie on the tree 1 Pet. 2. 24. Luke 23. 33 39. Vers. 23. burying in Greeke with buriall thou shall burie him that is in any wise burie him This was also sulfilled in our Saviours body which was buried the same day that he was hanged on tree Ioh. 19. 31 38 42. he that is hanged to wit on tree as Gal. 3. 13. This speech as many other of like sort is generall therefore the Greeke translateth every one that is hanged on tree and that interpretation the Apostle alleageth in Gal. 3. 13. the curse that is cursed as the A postle expoundeth it
people as Christ saith of his sheepe none shall plucke them out of mine hand my Father which gave them mee is greater than all and none is able to pluck them out of my fathers hand Ioh. 10. 28 29. sate downe or were set downe were joyned the Hebrew word T 〈…〉 here used is not found else-where but after the Arabik it signifieth to sit downe and the Greeke word Thake● to sit seemeth to bee borrowed of it And it hath reference here to the Israelites abiding at the foot of mount Sinai to receive the Law Exod. 19. and to the manner of Disciples sitting at their Masters feet to bee taught as Paul saith hee was brought up at the feet of Gamaliel Act. 22. 3. The Greeke translateth and they are under thee the Chaldee and they were led under thy cloud respecting the guidance of Israel thorow the wildernesse Num. 10. ●1 12. Other Hebrewes refer it to the peoples comming into the Sanctuary to learne Gods commandements for that is called the footstoole of his feet Psalme 99. 5. Ezek. 43. 7. Chazkuni on Deut. 33. every one shall receive or hee speaking of the people shall receive which the Greeke translateth he received the Chaldee they received Vers. 4. Moses commanded us these are the words of the people therefore Ionathan in his Thargum prefixeth The sonnes of Israel said Moses commanded c. The Law was first and properly of God but being given by Moses ministery it is called The Law of the Lord by the hand of Moses 2 Chron. 34. 14. and thereupon the Law of Moses 2 King 14. 6. La● 24. 44. Ioh. 7. 23. 1. Cor. 9. 9. And the particular things commanded of God in the Law are said to bee commanded by Moses Mar. 1. 44. and 10. 〈◊〉 The Scripture it selfe openeth this phrase for that which in 2 King 21. 8. is written Moses commanded them is in 2 Chron. 33. 8. expounded by the hand of Moses inheritance or possession to have and enjoy it to them and their posterity as a thing of worth and excellency Hereupon David saith Thy testimonies have I taken as an heritage for ever for they are the joy of mine heart Psal. 119. 111. So men are said to inherit the premises Heb. 6. 12. to inherit the blessing Heb. 12. 17. 1 Pet. 3. 9. to inherit eternall life and salvation Mat. 19. 29. Heb. 1. 14. the Church or congregation in Greeke the Synagogue of Iakob that is of the posterity of Iakob the twelve tribes as Ionathan in his Thargum saith The Church of the tribes of Iakob Vers. 5. he was Moses was in Iesurun a King which the Greeke translateth a Prince So the Hebrewes as Chazkuni on this place say Moses was the King and Maimony in Misn. in Beth habchirah chap. 6. sect 11. Moses our master was a King So Princes are called Kings in Psal. 105. 30. Ier. 19. 3. Or it may be understood of God himselfe that hee was their King as 1 Sam. 12. 12. Ieshurun in the Chaldee Israel see Deut. 32. 15. the heads that is the chiefe the Governours together with the people as was at the giving of the Law Exod. 19. 7 17. Vers. 6. Let Reuben live the Chaldee addeth to life eternall This blessing may respect Reubens sinne with his fathers Concubine for which hee lost his birthright of his father Gen. 35. 22. and 49. 4. and the sinne of the Princes of that tribe which rebelled with Korah Num. 16. 1. c. But mercy is here promised in Christ that hee should live before God among his brethren So hee went armed before them against the Canaanites Ios. 4. 12. and not die the Chaldee expounds it and let him not die the second death by which name the Scripture calleth eternall damnation Revel 20. 6. 14. So Ionathan in his Thargum paraphraseth Let Reuben live in this world and not die with the death wherewith the wicked shall die in the world that is to come It is very vsuall in the Scripture to set downe things of importance and earnestnesse by affirmation of the one part and deniall of the other as in Esay 38. 1. thou shalt dye and not live Num. 4. 14. that they may live not die Ps. 118. 17. I shall not dye but live Gen. 43. 〈◊〉 that wee may live and not die Ier. 20. 14. Cursed bee the day c. Let not that day be blessed 1 Ioh. 2. 27. it is true and is not lying 1 Ioh. 2. 4. he is a lyar and the truth is not in him Ioh. 1. 20. he confessed and denied not 1 Sam. 1. 11. and remember mee and not forget thine handmaid Deut. 9. 7. Remember forget not Deut. 32. 7. O people foolish and not wise and many the like a number by a number may be understood few as in Deut. 4. 27. Gen. 34 30. men of number is a few men so one numbred and in Esay 10. 19. a number meaneth few and then the former deniall not is againe to bee repeated to this sense and his men be not few in number Examples of such understanding the word not are shewed in the Annotations upon Num. 4. 15. Otherwise by a number is meant a great number as the Greeke translateth many in number Onkelos the Chaldee Paraphrast expoundeth it and let his sonnes receive their inheritance by their number and Ionathan paraphraseth Let his young men bee numbred with the young men of his brethren of the house of Israel Vers. 7. the blessing of Iudah the word blessing is to be understood from v. 1. And Ionathan in his Thargum supplieth it So doth the Scripture often as in 1 King 22. 24. which way went the spirit the word way is supplied from 2 Chron. 18. 23. and sundry the like as is noted on Ger. 4. 20. and 24. 33. Here Iudah the fourth brother is in the second place for the honour of the kingdome which was to be in this tribe Gen. 4. 9. and hee marched formost of all the tribes Num. 10. 14. so he is set before Levi here as he is also by his precious stone in Revel 21. 19. Simeon his name is quite omitted in this blessing for by his sinne of old hee lost his honour and was to be scattered in Israel Gen. 49. 5. 7. and his posterity for their sinne in the wildernesse were greatly diminished that being at the first muster fifty nine thousand and three hundred men Num. 1. he was at the latter muster but twenty two thousand and two hundred Num. 26. 14. Neither were there any Iudges of his tribe as God raised up of sundry others Iudg. 2. 16. c. Yet forasmuch as Simeons inheritance was in the midst of the inheritance of the sonnes of Iudah Ios. 19. 1. and he went with his brother Iudah to fight against the Canaanites Iudg. 1. 3. it is thought that his blessing was implied in Iudahs and so Ionathan in his Thargum coupleth Simeon with Iudah in this place Howbeit the Greeke in many copies joyne
he behaved himselfe wisely and ●●ospered and was accepted in the eyes of all the people so that the women of Israel 〈…〉 g of him q Vers. 7. Saul hath slaine his thousands and David his ten thousands But that ●aise r Vers. 8 9. procured him envie from Saul ever after and he sought to slay him but s Vers. 16. all Is●ael loved him And though he after tooke to wife Michal Sauls daughter yet t 1 Sam. 19. c. Saul ●ontinued his hatred against his sonne in law and first secretly then openly sought his 〈…〉 fe so that David was faine to flee and hide himselfe in the land of Israel and in 〈…〉 range countries to the u Psal. 120. 1 Sam. 26. 19. great affliction of his soule When Saul was dead and David x 2 Sam. 5. 4. thirtie yeares of age the men of Iudah y 2 Sam. 2. 4. anointed him King the second time in Hebron over the house of Iudah Ishbosheth Sauls son resisted him but David waxed stronger and stronger Then z 1 Chron. 11. 1 3. all Israel anointed him King over them and he reigned in Ierusalem So the time of all his reigne was a 2 Sam. 5. 4 5. forty yeares In Hebron he reigned over Iudah seven yeeres and six months and in Ierusalem he reigned 33. yeares over all Israel and Iudah During which space the Lord still exercised him with many b 1 Chron. 14. 18. 19. wars abroad and troubles at home as by the defiling of his daughter c 2 Sam. 13. c. Thamar the killing of his son Amnon the treason and death of his son Absalon the rebellion of Sheba and other like sorrowes which God d 2 Sam. 12. 10. for his sins chastised him with so many and so great that the e 2 Sam. 22. 5 6. pangs of death compassed him about the flouds of Belial the ungodly men made him afraid the cords of hell compassed him the snares of death prevented him his f Psal. 55. 4 5. heart was sore pained within him and the terrours of death fell upon him fearfulnesse and trembling came upon him and horrour overwhelmed him His g Psal. 31. 11. life was spent with griefe his yeares with sighing his strength failed and his bones were consumed But alwaies in his feares h Psal. 56. 3 4. he trusted in God and was not afraid what flesh could doe unto him in his distresse i 2 Sam. 22. 7. he called upon the Lord and cried to his God who heard his voice out of his Temple and drew him out of k Vers. 17 18 c. many waters from his strong enemie and from them that hated him and brought him forth into a large place and delivered him because he delighted in him Hee gave him the l Vers. 36 c. shield of his salvation and girded him with strength to battell and gave him the neckes of his enemies that he destroyed those that hated him Therefore he gave thanks unto the Lord m Vers. 50. among the nations and sang praises unto his name n Psal. 57. 8. awaking up his glory awaking up his Psaltery and Harpe awaking himselfe early to praise the Lord among the peoples and to sing unto him among the nations so he sang of his o Psal. 59. 16. power he sang loud of his mercy in the morning that God had beene his defence and refuge in the day of his distresse And hereof this booke of Psalmes most whereof David made is a glorious testimony wherein by manifold Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs he set forth the praises of God his owne●aith in his Word exercise and delight in his Law with narrations of Gods former and present mercies and prophesies of future graces to be fulfilled in Christ whom he being a Prophet p Act. 2. 30. knew that hee should be the fruit of his loines concerning the flesh and should sit upon his throne whose incarnation afflictions death resurrection ascension and eternall glorious kingdome and priesthood he sang by the Spirit with such heavenly melody as may not only delight but draw into admiration every understanding heart and comfort the afflicted soule with such consolation as David himselfe was comforted of the Lord. And these his Psalmes have ever since by the Church of Israel by q Ma● ●1 16. 42. Rom. 4. 6. 11. 9. Christ and his Apostles and by the Saints in all ages been received and honoured as the oracles of God cited for confirmation of true religion sung in the publike assemblies as in Gods Tabernacle and Temple where they sang praise unto the Lord with the r 2 Chron. 29. 30. words of David and with the instrumēts which s 2 Chron. 7. 6. he had made over their t 2 Chron. 29. 25 27 28. burnt-offerings sacrifices Now because many things both for phrase and matter are difficult to such as ar● not acquainted with Davids language I have out of my slender store annexed 〈…〉 few briefe notes comparing the Scriptures and conferring the best Expositors espe 〈…〉 ally the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions whereby if any helpe of understand 〈…〉 may arise the praise be to God the comfort to his people THE BOOKE OF Psalmes or Hymnes PSALME I. 1 The happinesse of the godly whose conversation is described and their prosperitie like a fruitfull tree 4 The contrary course of the wicked for which they and their way doe perish O Blessed is the man that doth not walk in the counsell of the wicked nor stand in the way of sinners non sit in the seat of the scornefull But hath his delight in the law of Iehovah and in his law doth hee meditate day and night And hee shall be as a tree planted by brookes of waters which shall give his fruit in his time and his leafe shall not fade and whatsoever hee shall doe shall prosper Not so the wicked but as the chaffe which the wind driveth it away Therefore the wicked shall not stand up 〈◊〉 judgement and sinners in the assembly of the just For Iehovah knoweth the way of the just and the way of the wicked shall perish Annotations THE Booke of Psalmes so our Lord himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it Luke 20. 42. but the Hebrew title 〈◊〉 signifieth Hymnes or Praises According to the Greeke it is called the Psalter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vers 〈◊〉 O Blessed or O Happy or Well fares 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 joyfull 〈…〉 mation for the mans welf●●● and 〈…〉 cities as going right forward and so having good successe Contrary hereunto is Woe or Alas Eccles. 10. 16 17. Luke 6. 20 24. This word Ashrei in the Hebrew is alwaies applied to men and so differeth from another word Baruc blessed which is ascribed both to God and men Psal. 115. 15 18. the contrary whereto is cursed Psal. 37. 22. doth not walke or hath not walked But the time past and
the warre and a bow of brasse is broken with mine armes And thou hast given to me the shield of thy salvation and thy right hand hath upheld me and thy meeknesse hath made me to increase Thou hast widened my passage under me and my legs have not staggered I followed mine enemies and over tooke them and turned not till I had consumed them I wounded them and they could not rise up they fell under my feet And thou hast girded me with valour to the warre them that rose against mee thou hast made to stoope downe under me And thou hast given to me the necke of mine enemies and them that hated me I have suppressed They cried out but there was none to save unto Iehovah but hee answered them not And I did beat them small as dust before the wind as the clay of the streets I did powre them out Thou hast delivered me from the contentions of the people thou hast put me for the head of the heathens a people whō I have not known doe serve me At the hearing of the eare they obey me the sonnes of the stranger falsly denie unto me The sons of the stranger fade away and shrinke for feare out of their closets Iehovah live blessed be my rocke and exalted be the God of my salvation The God that giveth vengeances to me and subdueth peoples under me My deliverer from mine enemies also from them that rose up against me thou hast exalted me from the man of violent wrong thou hast rid me Therefore I will confesse thee among the heathens Iehovah and to thy name I will sing Psalme Hee maketh great the salvations of his King and doth mercie to his annointed to David and to his seed for ever Annotations THe servant of Iehovah So he intituleth him-selfe here and in Psal. 36. 1. for his service in administring the kingdome This song is also written in 2 Sam. 22. with some little change of a few words which shall be observed hand of Saul which noteth the power of the King above that which is noted by the hand or palme of other enemies yet for this word hand in 2 Sam. 22. 1. is used palme the Chaldee expoundeth it the sword of Saul Vers. 2. I will dearely love or I love heartily with my inmost bowels The originall word is in this place for intire love but otherwhere is often used for tender mercie or bowels of compassion Psal. 25. 6. and 102. 14. and 103. 13. This verse is added here more than in 1 Sam. 22. Vers. 3. fortresse or munition a place or hold to flee unto when one is hunted and chased See Ps. 31. 3. rocke Two names of a Rocke are in this verse the first Selangh a firme stony Rocke or cliffe the latter Tsur a strong or sharpe rocke and is often the title of God himselfe and turned in Greeke Theos that is God as in the 32 and 47 verses of this Psalme Deut. 32. 4. 18. 30 31. Psal. 71. 3. and in many other places horne of my salvation that is the horne that saveth me A horne signifieth power and glory Psal. 92. 11. Amos 6. 13. Hab. 3. 4. therefore hornes are used to signifie Kings Dan 8. 〈◊〉 R●v ●7 12. And Christ is called the horne of salvation Luke 1. 69. high defence or tower 〈…〉 See Psal. 9. 10. In 2. Sa● 2● 〈◊〉 there is added more and my ref●ge my Saviour from violent wrong 〈◊〉 savest 〈◊〉 Vers. 4. P●●ifed that is glorious excellent praise 〈…〉 and accordingly for his 〈◊〉 usually 〈◊〉 of his people So Psal. 48. 〈◊〉 The Chaldee 〈…〉 deth it with a praise o● Hy●ne I prayed before the Lord. And the Greeke praising I will call upon the Lord. Vers. 5. the pangs paines throwes sorrowes as of a woman in childbirth so the originall word signifieth Hos. 13. 13. Esay 13. 8. and 66. 7. and so the Chaldee explaineth it Anguish compassed mee as of a woman which sit●●th in the birth and hath no strength to bring forth and she is in danger of death Or The ●ands the 〈◊〉 as the word also signifieth Iob 36. 8. Prov. 5. 22. For this in 〈◊〉 Sam. 22. 5. another word is used that signifieth breaches which also is applied to the breaking forth of children at the birth H●s 13. 13. E●● 37. 3. and to the 〈◊〉 of the sea Psal. 42. 8. streames or brooks bournes The originall word Nachal is used as our English bourne both for a brooke or streame running in a valley and for the valley it selfe 1 Kings 17 3 4. Waters do often figure out afflictions Psal. 69. 2. 3. ●ournes or stre●●●● of waters meane vehement and violent afflictions Psal. 124. 4. Ier. 47. 2. Belial or 〈◊〉 The Hebrew Bel 〈…〉 which the Apostle in Greek calleth Belial 〈◊〉 Cor. 6. 15. i● used 〈◊〉 extreme mischiefe and wickednesse or most impious and mischie●●ous persons called sonnes of Belial Deut. 13. 13 daughters of B●lial 1 Sam. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 men of Belial 1. Sam. 25. 25. and sometime B 〈…〉 it selfe as in Nah. 1. 15. Belial shall no more passe th 〈…〉 thee and 2 Sam. 23. 6. Belial shall be every one as thornes thrust away and Iob 34. 18. Wilt 〈◊〉 say to a King Belial It is also applied to speciall sinnes and sinners as a witnesse of Belial Prov. 19. 28. a counseller of Beli●l Nah. 1. 15. Also to mischievous thoughts words or things De●t 15. 9. Psal. 41. 9. and 101. 3. The Apostle opposeth Belial to Christ 2 C●● 6. 15. and it seemeth to be put for the Devill or Satan as the Sy●●●● and Arabik translations there explaine Pauls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Antichrist for so Belial is opposed to Christ and his kingdome 2 Sam. 23. 6. By interpretation Belial signifieth an Vnthrift or Without 〈◊〉 lawlesse 〈◊〉 Antichrist is named the lawlesse man 〈◊〉 Thess. 2. 8. and in this Psalme the Greeke 〈◊〉 streames of lawlesnesse or iniquitie which the Chaldee Paraphrast calleth the company of the unrighteous frighted me skar●d or vexed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This word is used of Sauls vexation by a● 〈◊〉 spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 16. 14 15. Vers. 6. of hell which the Chaldee expoundeth a company of ●●●ked persons snares of death deadly sha●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for my death a similitude 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eccles. 9. 12. So 〈◊〉 13. 14. and 14. ●7 The Chaldee explaineth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●rmed with weapons of s●aughter Pre 〈…〉 me that is were ready to take hold on mee 〈…〉 denly and unawares Vers. 7. distresse upon me or to me that is in that my distresse or while it was upon me So Psal. ●6 1● be heard The Hebrew properly is will heare but the time to come is often put for the time past therefore in 2 Sam. 22. 7. it is plainly written and ●e heard so after in the 12. verse ●ee will set which in Samuel is written and ●ee set againe in the 14 verse thundred for which in Samuel is written will thunder the like may be observed of the
oblation or meat-offering to be burnt on the altar unto God with oile and incense for a memoriall Levit. 2. 2. The Hebrew Minchah is generalfy a gift or present carried to any Psal. 45. 13. and 72. 10. Gen. 32. 13. and in speciall a gift or oblation presented to God Gen. 4. 3 4 5. Psal. 96. 8. most specially the oblation of corne or flower called the meat-offering Lev. 2. Num. 29. The Apostle in Greeke turneth it Prosphora an oblation Heb. 10. 5. 8. 10. from Psal. 40. 6. burnt-offering which according to the originall word Ghnolah signifieth an ascension because this kind of sacrifice was wholly given up to God in fire Lev. 1. 3 9. 13. Therefore in Greeke it is translated holocautoma that is a whole burnt-offering turne to ashes that is consume to ashes with heavenly fire for so God approved and accepted the sacrifices of his people Lev. 9. 24 1 Kings 18. 28. Vers. 5. fulfill all thy counsell or accomplish it Counsell is as empty if it be not effected and accomplished and the performance is as the filling thereof So to fill or accomplish petitions in the verse following to fulfill joy Ioh. 3. 29. and 15. 11. to fulfill words is to confirme them 1 Kings 1. 14. and to performe or effect them 1 Kings 2. 27. Vers. 6. We will showt or that we may showt or shrill For these two phrases are used in differently See the note on Psal. 43. 4. thy salvation which thou O King hast received or which thou O God hast given set up the banner or display the slag or ensigne which was for triumph and victorie to honour God and to terrifie the enemies Song 6. 3. 9. Vers. 7. his anointed or Messias that is his King vers 10. Psal. 2. 6. with powers the salvation that is with full power or puissance even with the salvation of his right hand For Gods right hand is of wondrous excellent force and doth valiantly Exod. 15 6. Psal. 118. 16. and 89 14. Vers. 8. These that is Some mention chariots and some horses Chariot is used for chariots as also in Psal. 68. 18. so bird for birds Psal. 8. 9. Angell for Angels Psal. 34. 8. make mention of the name that is make it to be knowne and to be remembred with honour Psal. 45. 18. Esa. 49. 1. 2 Sam. 18. 18. Vers. 9. stand upright or set our selves sure to continue yet So after in Psal. 146. 9. and 147. 6. Vers. 10. the King he answer us By the King here seemeth to be meant Christ of whom this whole Psalme is composed as also the Chaldee Paraphrast understood it and therefore explained this verse thus O word of the Lord redeeme us O mighty King receive our prayer in the day of our invocation But the Seventie not keeping the distinctions turne it in Greeke thus Lord save the king and here us in the day that we call upon thee PSAL. XXI The King giveth thankes for many blessings received 8 He professeth his confidence of further grace and prophesieth the destruction of the wicked To the master of the musicke a Psalme of David IEhovah in thy strength the King shall rejoyce and in thy salvation how vehement glad shall he be Thou hast given to him his hearts desire and the earnest request of his lips thou hast not kept backe Selah For thou preventest him with blessings of goodnesse thou settest on his head a crowne of fine gold Life he asked of thee thou gavest it him length of dayes ever and aye Great is his honour in thy salvation glorious Majestie and comely honour hast thou put upon him For thou hast set him to bee blessings to perpetuall aye thou hast made him chearefull with joy with thy face For the King trusteth in Iehovah and through the mercy of the most high he shall not be moved Thy hand shall find out all thine enemies thy right hand shall find out them that hate thee Thou wilt set them as an oven of fire at the time of thy face Iehovah in his anger wil swallow them up fire shal eat them Their fruit from the earth thou wilt destroy and their seed from the sonnes of Adam For they have intended evill against thee they have thought a craftie purpose but they shall not be able For thou wilt set them as a Butt with thy strings thou wilt make ready against their faces Be thou exalted Iehovah in thy strength we will sing and praise with Psalme thy power Annotations IN thy strength or for thy strength thy kingdome strong helpe and deliverance This Psalm as the former gratulateth the victory and salvation of Christ and is by the Chaldee Paraphrast applied to the reigne of King Messias Also the Hebrew Iismach Shall rejoyce hath the letters being transplaced of the name Mashiach Christ. shall rejoyce or rejoyceth continually Vers. 4. a crowne a signe of glorious victorie and of the Kingdome V. 5. length of dayes that is a long continued life time Isa. 53. 10. Iob 12. 12. So Ps. 23. 6. 93. 5. and 91. 16. On the contrary short of dayes is short lived Iob 14. 1. ever and aie to eternall and perpetuall aie Christ being raised from death dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him Rom. 6. 9 But behold he is alive for evermore Amen Rev. 1. 18. and ever liveth to make intercession for them that come to God by him Hebr. 7. 25. Vers. 7. hast set him blessings that is made him to abound with all manner blessings himselfe to be an example of or to impart blessings unto others So to Abram it was said be thou a blessing Gen. 12. 2. the like promise is to his children Ezek. 24. 36. Isa. 19. 20. with thy face or before thy face in thy presence as Psal. 16. 11. Vers. 9. shall find out all thy enemies to wit to punish them as 〈◊〉 like phrase importeth Isa. 10. 10. or shall find for all that is shall be enough for all thy foes that is sufficiently able to overcome them so finding is used for sufficiencie Num. 11. 22. Iudg. 21. 14. For hand the Chaldee saith the stroke of thine hand Vers. 10. 〈◊〉 set them or put them all and every one 〈◊〉 is noted on Psal. 2. 3. So also after in vers 11. and 13. 〈◊〉 of fire a fierie furnace meaning in 〈◊〉 affliction Lam. 5. 10. the time of thy face that is of thine anger as the Chaldee Paraphrast explaineth it for the face sheweth forth pleasure or displeasure favour or wrath so face is used for anger Psal. 34 17. Lev. 20. 6. Gen. 32. 20. Lam. 4. 〈◊〉 ●er 3. 12. swallow them that is destroy or d 〈…〉 sh them so Psal. 35. 25. and 52. 6. and 55. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Chaldee expoundeth it the fire of Ge 〈…〉 or of H●ll Vers. 11. Their fruit that is their children called the fruit of the body and wombe Psal. 127. 3. and 132. 11. Deut. 28. 4. or their labour and that which
blessing of the Gospell that the meeke and needy shall eat and have enough Psal. 132. 15. God filleth the hungry with good things and sends away the rich empty Luke 1. 53. The meeke meaneth the regenerate who are mortified with Christ and their fierce nature made meeke and humble your heart shall live hee turneth his speech to the meeke and seekers of God who should eat of Christs flesh that was given for the life of the world and thereby live for ever Ioh. 6. 51. The living of the heart importeth also the chearing comfort and solace of the same Gen. 45. 27. the contrary whereof is in the dying of the heart 1 Sam. 25. 37. See also the like promise Psal. 69. 33. The Chaldee yeeldeth this sense The spirit of prophesie shall rest in the thoughts of their heart for ever Vers. 28. All the ends c. that is the dwellers in the utmost parts and ends of the world A prophesie of the calling of the Gentiles by the preaching of the Gospell Rom. 16. 26. Eph. 2. 1 2 c. remember the Chaldee addeth remember his miracles families of the heathens or kindreds of the nations whereof see Gen. 10. 5 18 20 31 32. Vers. 29. ruler among the heathens to reigne over them by his Word and Spirit and so to be God not of the Iewes only but also of the Gentiles Rom. 3. 29 30. Vers. 30. All the fat ones that is the rich and mightie personages fat with plentie Deut. 31. 20. For Kings and Queenes and men of authority and wealth are also called to the participati● of Christs grace in his Church Esay 60. 3 5 10. Rev. 21. 24. 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. Sometime fatnesse is used to note out Gods spirituall blessings Psal. 36. 9. and 63. 6. and 65. 12. and 92. 15. Prov. 28. 25. all that goe downe to the dust this is the poore base and wretched people which for their misery and affliction are said to goe downe and sit in the dust as Psal. 113. 7. Esay 47. 1. and 29. 4. Iob 30. 19. Lament 3. 29. but the Chaldee expounds it the house of the grave that quickeneth not or cannot quicken that is the poore wretched man that doth not or cannot as Psal. 77. 5. keepe alive his soule that cannot nourish him-selfe he shall eat So to keepe alive is to nourish Esa. 7. 21. Or he that revived that is cheered not nor refreshed his soule with comfort as before vers 27. or he that cannot keepe alive his soule that is not save it from wrath and eternall death by his owne workes he shall live by faith in Christ. So this phrase to keepe the soule alive is used Ezek. 18. 27. The Chaldee giveth this sense and he will not keepe alive the soule of the wicked Vers. 31. A seed The posterity of those godly forementioned for God chuseth the seed with the parents Deut. 10. 15. and 30. 6 19. Psal. 69. 37. and 102. 29. Esay 43. 5. and 44. 3. Or the seed of Christ the children which God giveth him as Esa. 53. 10. Hebr. 2. 13. Or a seed that is a small remnant as Rom. 9. 29. the Chaldee saith the seed of Abraham for a generation a race of Gods children as Psal. 73. 15. and 24. 6. or to generation that is for ever through all ages Vers. 32. They shall come The Chaldee explaineth it Their sonnes shall come his justice the justice of God which is by faith in Christ Psal. 71. 〈◊〉 16 24. Rom. 10. 3 4. people that shall be 〈◊〉 hereafter to come or a people borne that is regenarate Psal. 87. 4 5. Ioh. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 1. 33. So people created Psal. 102. 19. that he hath done hath performed or accomplished that justice and all things appertaining to it The Greeke referreth it to the people whom the Lord hath made the Chaldee to the marvellous workes which he hath done PSAL. XXIII David under the similitude of a Shepherd sheweth 〈◊〉 love and mercies to his people whereby their 〈…〉 is confirmed A Psalme of David IEhovah feedeth me I shall not lacke In folds of budding grasse he maketh me lie downe hee easily leadeth mee by the waters of rests He returneth my soule he leadeth me in the beaten paths of justice for his Name sake Yea though I should walk in the valley of the shade of death I will not feare evill for thou wilt be with me thy rod and thy staffe they shall comfort me Thou furnishest before me a table in presence of my distressers thou makest fat my head with oile my cup is abundant Doubtlesse good and mercy shall follow me all the daies of my life and I shall converse in the house of Iehovah to length of daies Annotations FEedeth me or is my Feeder my Pastor The word comprehendeth all duties of a good Herd as together feeding guiding governing and defending his flocke Therefore Kings also have this title and are said to feed their people Psal. 78. 71 72. 2 Sam. 5. 2. Hereupon it is attributed to God and to Christ feeding his Church as the Shepherd of their soules Psal. 80. 2. Ezek. 34. 12 14 15. Esay 40. 11. Ioh. 10. 11. 1 Pet. 2. 25. The Chaldee referreth this to a former worke saying The Lord fed his people in the wildernesse they lacked nothing Vers. 2. of budding grasse pleasant pastures and leas where greene and tender herbs doe spring he maketh me or will make me lie downe to wit for rest from heat This also is another dutie of a good Herder as I will feed my flocke and I will make them lie downe saith the Lord Ezek. 34. 15. and Shew me O thou whom my soule loveth where thou feedest where thou makest lie downe at noone Song 1. 6. easily leadeth or comfortably ●uideth mee it noteth a soft and gentle leading with sustaining of infirmitie as Gen. 33. 14. Esay 40. 11. Therefore the Greeke turneth it he nourisheth mee So Psal. 31. 4. by waters or unto waters of rests that is most quiet or calme waters and such as give rest and refreshing All these things Christ performeth to his flocke as it is written They shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sun light on them nor any heat for the Lambe which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them and shall lead them to the lively fountaines of waters Revel 7. 16 17. Vers. 3. returneth my soule or will returne or restore it and consequently give it rest See Psalm 19. 8. Vers. 4. shade of death that is darke and dreadfull shadow and in a manner the very state of death This speech denoteth imminent danger Jer. 2. 6. sore affliction Psal. 44. 20. and 107. 10. 14. feare and terrour Iob 24. 17. and dreadfull darknesse Iob 10. 21 22. whereto spiritually is opposed the light and comfort of the Gospell and grace of Christ Mat. 4. 16. Luke 1. 79. wilt be with me or art with me and this implieth his good safety
in the world specially his Gospel Act. 18. 25 26. as his salvation is Christ Luke 2. 30. Vers. 4. shall confesse or let them confesse and so af 〈…〉 Vers. 7. The earth or land of Canaan as the Chaldee explaines it the hand of Israel the seat of Gods Church whose fruitfull increase God promised in the Law Levit. 25. 19. and ●6 4 and the Prophets apply it to the spirituall graces of the Gospel Ezek. 34. 27. Zach. 8. 12. Esay 45. 8. and our land or earth is our hearts regenerate to beare fruits to the Lord Matth. 13. 19 23. Heb. 6. 7. PSAL. LXVIII A Prayer at the removing of the Arke with a Prophesie of Christs resurrection 5 An exhortation to praise God for his mercies 8 and for his care of the Church 19 A prophesie of Christs ascension and benefits following for which God is to be blessed 32 and of the conversion of the Gentiles unto his further praise To the Master of the Musicke a Psalme a Song of David LEt God arise let his enemies be scattered and they that hate him flee from his face As smoke is driven away so drive thou them away as wax is melted at the face of fire so let the wicked perish from the face of God And let the just rejoyce let them shew gladsomnesse before the face of God and let them joy with rejoycing Sing ye to God sing Psalme to his name make an high way for him that rideth in the desarts in Iah his name and shew gladnesse before his face He is a father of the fatherlesse and a Iudge of the widowes even God in the mansion of his holinesse God seateth the solitary in house bringeth forth those that are bound in chaines but the rebellious dwell in a dry land O God when thou wentest forth before thy people when thou marchedst in the wildernesse Selah The earth quaked also the heavens dropped at the face of God Sinai it selfe at the face of God the God of Israel A raine of liberalities thou didst shake out O God thine inheritance when it was wearied thou didst confirme it Thy company doe dwell in it thou doest prepare in thy goodnesse for the poore afflicted O God The Lord will give the speech of those that publish glad tidings to the great armie The Kings of the armies shall flee and shee that remaineth in the house shall divide the spoile Though yee lie betweene the pot ranges yee shall bee as the wings of a Dove which is decked with silver and her feathers with yellow gold When the Almighty scattereth abroad Kings in it it shall be snow white in Tsalmon A mountaine of God mount Bashan is an hilly mountaine mount Bashan Why leape ye O hilly mountaines this is the mountaine God desireth for his seat yea Iehovah will dwell in it to perpetuall aye Gods Chariot twise ten thousand thousands of Angels the Lord is with them as in Sinai in the Sanctuarie Thou art ascended to on high thou hast led captive a captivitie thou hast taken gifts unto men and also the rebellious to dwell O Iah God Blessed be the Lord which day by day lodeth us the God our salvation Selah Our God is a God of salvations and to Iehovih the Lord belong the issues of death But surely God will wound the head of his enemies the hairie scalpe of him that goeth on in his guiltinesses The Lord hath said I will bring againe from Bashan I will bring againe from the gulfs of the sea That thy foot may embrew it selfe in bloud the tongue of thy dogs in bloud of thine enemies even of every of them They have seene thy goings O God the goings of my God my King in the Sanctuarie The singers went before the plaiers on instruments after amongst them the Damosels beating on Timbrels In the Churches blesse ye God even the Lord yee of the fountaine of Israel There little Benjamin with their ruler the Princes of Iudah with their assemblie the Princes of Zebulun the Princes of Naphtali Thy God hath commanded thy strength strengthen O God that thou hast wrought for us For thy Palace in Ierusalem Kings shall bring thee a present Rebuke the company of speare men the congregation of mighty bulls with the calves of the peoples and him that submitteth himselfe with peeces of silver he hath scattered abroad the peoples that delight in warres Princely Ambassadours shall come out of Egypt Aethiopia shall hastily stretch her hands unto God Sing unto God ye kingdomes of the earth sing Psalme to the Lord Selah To him that rideth in the heavens of heavens of antiquitie loe hee will give his voice a voice of strength Give the strength to God his high Majestie is upon Israel and his strength in the skies Fearefull art thou O God out of thy Sanctuaries the God of Israel he giveth strength and forces to the people blessed be God Annotations LEt God arise or stand up By God here is meant Christ our Lord for of him is this Psalme interpreted by the Apostle Ephes. 4. 8 9 10. This entrance is taken from Moses Numb 10. 35. where when the host of Israel rose up from mount Sinai to journey towards Canaan the Arke of the covenant of the Lord went before them three dayes iourney to search out a resting place for them And when the Arke went forward Moses said Rise up Iehovah and let thine enemies be scattered c. where Moses respected not onely the Arke the figure of Christ but the promise of God Behold I send an Angell before thee to keepe thee in the way and to bring thee to the place which I have prepared beware of him and heare his voice c. for my name is in him c. Exod. 23. 20 21. This was the Angell of the covenant Mal. 3. 1. the Angell of Gods face or presence which saved the people Isa. 63. 9. even Christ whom they tempted in the wildernesse 1 Cor. 10. 9. in whom God was 2 Cor. 5. 19. and who himselfe is God our all blessed for ever Amen Rom. 9. 5. David applieth these things to his owne time and action of bringing home the Arke 1 Chro. 13. and prophesieth also of things to come as Act. 2. 30 31. Vers. 4. let them joy to wit inwardly with delight as the Greeke explaineth it as the former word signifieth outward ioyfull cariage and exultation Vers. 5. make an high way or exalt but that this is meant of a way or causie first the Hebrew word Sollu naturally beareth as Isa. 62. 10. and 57. 14. secondly the Greeke version hodopoiesate make way confirmeth it thirdly the scope of this place sheweth it compared with Esay 40. 3. where the Voice in the wildernesse crieth to prepare the way of the Lord Christ Matt. 3. 2. desarts places where things are mixed and confused as the word Ghnaraboth properly signifieth So Gnarabah is a desart or wildernesse Isa. 40. 2. and there is a declaration of this place that vallies should
Melchisedek Gen. 14. 18. afterwards called Ierusalem whereof see the notes on Psal. 51. 20. The Greeke translateth it in Peace which is the interpretation of the name Salem as the Apostle sheweth Heb. 7. 2. The Chaldee paraphrase saith Ierusalem his tabernacle or tent pavilion which is both a meane dwelling and a moveable Lev. 13. 42 43. Heb. 11. 9 10. For both Moses Tabernacle and Solomons Temple were meane cottages in respect of Gods glory 1 King 8. 27. Vers. 4. burning arrowes or fiery darts as the Apostle calleth the tentations of that wicked one Ephes. 6. 16. The Hebrew Ri●●phei is properly burning coles Song 8. 6. figuratively here the glistering brasse-beaded arrowes elsewhere the fiery thunder bolts Psal. 78. 48. and burning plague Deut. 32. 24. Habak 3. 5. likened to arrowes Ps. 91. 5. Here it may leade us to minde this Psalme to celebrate the victories against Satan figured by the vanquishing of the Assyrians and other enemies 2 King 19. 35. The Chaldee explaineth it thus When the house of Israel did his will he placed his divine majesty among them there brake hee the arrowes and bowes of people that warred shield and sword and battle-ray destroyed he for ever and the warre that is the army of warriers the battle-array See Psal. 27. 3. And thus Shalem or Peace is maintained by breaking all warlike instruments as Esa. 2. 4. Vers. 5. Bright made light that is Glorious speaking to God as vers 7. wondrous excellent magnificent see Psal. 8. 2. mounts of prey the mountaines of the Lions and Leopards Song 4. 8. meaning the kingdomes of this world which make prey and spoile one of another like wilde beasts Dan. 7. 4. 5 6 7. whom the Lambe on mount Sion excelleth in power and glory Revel 14. 1. and 17. 14. Or from the mounts of prey that is when thou commest from conquering the enemies which lie in the mountaines to make prey of thy people V. 6. mighty of heart or stout stubborn-hearted a title of the wicked that are farre from justice E 〈…〉 46. 12. called here in Greek unwise in heart their sleepe their eternall sleepe Ier. 51. 39 57. the sl●●pe of death Psa. 13. 4. So in the next verse none of Hebr. all or any have not found that is none found So 1 Ioh. 3. 15. every man-slayer hath not that is none hath life See also Psa. 143. 2. men of power able men for strength courage and riches in which last sense the Greeke taketh it here these did not resist or could not as Psal. 77. 5. They were not able as the Chaldee saith to take their weapons in their hands Vers. 7. thy rebuke that is punishment destruction see Ps. 9. 6. chariot that is Princes and Captaines riding on chariots horses on which they were wont of old to fight Iudg. 4. 3. 1 King 22. 31. 34. These all by Gods rebuke have beene slaine as in the campe of Asshur 2 King 19. 35. and the host of Antichrist Rev. 19. 18 21. Vers. 8. when thou art angry Hebr. from then that is from the time of thine anger after thine anger is once kindled Vers. 9. the earth or the land which the Chaldee understandeth thus the land of the heathens feared the land of Israel was quiet V. 11. shall confesse thee that is shall turne to thy praise when thy people are delivered from the rage of their foes the remnant or the re●●under that is thy people which remaine and perish not in the rages of the wicked thou wilt gird to wit with joyfulnesse that they shall sing praise to thee as the Greek explaineth it shall keepe a feast to thee As in Ioel 1. 13. Gird ye there is understood with sorrow or sackcloth so here seemeth to be understood joy or gladnesse wherewith persons or things are said to be girded Ps. 30. 12. and 65. 13. or thou wilt gird with strength as Ps. 18. 40. Or if we referre it to the hot rage of the wicked the residue thereof thou wilt gird that is binde or restraine from attempting further evill Vers. 12. Vow ye men in danger or deliuered from it were wont to make vowes unto God Genes 28. 20. Iona 1. 16. Psal. 66. 13 14. round about him a description of his people as the twelve tribes pitched round about the Tabernacle Numb 2. 2. and the foure and twenty Elders were round about Gods throne Revel 4. 4. So the Chaldee expoundeth it ye that dwell about his Sanctuary to the feare that is the most fearefull God called Feare or Terrour for more reverence and excellency unto whom all feare is due as Isai. 8. 12. 13. Malach. 1. 6. So Iakob called God the Feare of his father Isaak Genes 31. 53. And this was performed when after Asshurs overthrow many brought offerings to the Lord 2 Chron. 32. 21 23. Vers. 13. To him that gathereth so the Greeke to him that taketh away or wee may reade Hee gathereth or Cutteth off as in vintage a similitude from grape-gatherers which cut off the clusters of the vines applied here to the cutting off the lives of men The like is in Rev. 14. 18 19 20. also in Iudg. 20. 45. The Chaldee explaineth it To him that represseth the pride of the spirit of governours God to be feared above all Kings of the earth ... Governours or Princes Captaines that leade and goe before the people So Gods Angell destroied all the valiant men and Princes and Captaines in the Campe of the King of Asshur 2 Chro. 32. 21. PSAL. LXXVII The Psalmist sheweth what fierce combat hee had with diffidence 11 The victory which he had by consideration of Gods great and gracious workes done of old To the Master of the Musicke to Ieduthun a Psalme of Asaph MY voice was to God and I cried out my voice was to God and he gave eare unto mee In day of my distresse I sought the Lord my hand by night reached out and ceased not my soule refused to be comforted I remembred God and made a troubled noise I meditated and my spirit was overwhelmed Selah Thou heldest the watches of mine eies I was stricken amazed and could not speake I recounted the daies of antiquity the yeeres of ancient times I remembred my melody in the night with my heart I meditated and my spirit searched diligently Will the Lord cast off to eternities and not adde favourably to accept any more Is his mercy ceased to perpetuity is his word ended to generation and generation Hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he shut up in anger his tender mercy Selah And I said doth this make me sicke the change of the right hand of the most high I will record the actions of Iah surely I will remember thy miracle from antiquity And I will meditate of all thy worke and will discourse of thy practises O God thy way is in the sanctuary who is so great a God as God Thou art the God that doest a marvellous worke thou hast
out of one stocke or tree and these were twelve Num. 13. 3 5 16. Vers. 56. And they tempted The Israelites notwithstanding all former mercies tempted God and sinned in Canaan their possession as is manifested in the booke of Iudges Vers. 57. like their fathers whose carkasses fell in the wildernesse For of six hundred thousand men that came out of Egypt not any one came into Canaan save Caleb and Ioshua Exod. 38. 26. Num. 14. 29 30. and 26. 64 65. a warping bow or bow of deceit that shooteth awry and so deceiveth So Hos. 7. 16. Vers. 58. high places Temples Chapels consecrated places on mountaines where the nations used to sacrifice and Israel imitated them Num. 33. 52. Deut. 12. 2. 1 Kings 11. 7. and 12. 31 32. and 14. 23. to jealousie to jealous anger for which a man will not spare in the day of vengeance nor can beare the sight of any ransome Prov. 6. 34 35. unto this God is moved by idolatry which is spirituall fornication Exod. 20. 4 5. Deut. 31. 16 17. and 32. 21. Vers. 59. abhorred or refused with loathsomnesse and contempt So after vers 67. Vers. 60. the dwelling place the tabernacle set in Shilo 1 Sam. 1. 3. There God dwelt among men Exod. 29. 44. 45 46. Vers. 61. his strength the Arke of his covenant called the Arke of his strength Psal. 132. 8. this was captived by the Philistims 1 Sam. 4. 11. The Chaldee translateth it his Law beauteous glory or fatrenesse magnificence meaning the Arke fore-mentioned as Phineas wife said the glory is departed from Israel for the Arke of God is taken 1 Sam. 4. 20 22. Vers. 62. shut up that is delivered his people to the sword of the Philistims who killed thirty thousand Israelites 1 Sam. 4. 10. Vers. 63. The fire that is Gods wrath by the sword of the Philistims as verse 21. So in Ezek. 30. 8. a fire in Egypt signifieth as the Chaldee there expoundeth it a people strong like fire were not praised by hymnes and songs as was the wont at their espousals and marriages that is they were not married Vers. 64. Their Priests Hophni and Phineas 1 Sam. 4. 11. The Hebrew is singularly His Priests and so before and after his choise young men c. meaning Israels who is spoken of as of one man But the Scripture useth these phrases indifferently as All Aedom was servants 2 Sam. 8. 14. for which in 1 Chron. 18. 13. is written All Aedom were servants Of this name Priests see Psal. 99. 6. wept not that is lamented not at their funerall for Phineas wife her selfe died in travell 1 Sam. 4. 19 20. Vers. 65. awaked stirred up himselfe to punish the Philistims where as before he seemed to sleepe as Psal. 44 24. after wine or by reason of wine that is when hee hath drunke wine which cheareth and encourageth the heart so did God behave him-selfe Vers. 66. behinde that is in the hinder secret parts as the Chaldee addeth with emerods in their hinder parts for so God smote the Philistims with pilos or hemoroids for abusing his Arke 1 Sam. 5. 1 6. 9 12. eternall reproach by this punishment and the monuments thereof for the Philistims were forced to make similitudes of their hemoroids and secret parts of gold and send with the Arke home to Israel as an oblation for their sinne 1 Sam. 6. 4 5 11 15 17. Vers. 67. herefused or abhorred despised as verse 59. the tent of Joseph that is the tribe of Ephraim the sonne of Ioseph where the Tabernacle and Arke had remained many yeares in Shiloh God returned not the Arke thither but to Bethshemesh and Kirjathjearim cities of Iudah 1 Sam. 6. 12. and 7. 1 2. Wherefore Shiloh is used after for an example of judgement Ier. 7. 12 14. and 26. 6 9. Or this may be meant of the ten tribes of Israel of whom Ephraim of Ioseph was chiefe which were cast off for idolatrie and captived by the Assyrians 2 Kings 17. Vers. 69. builded his Sanctuary the glorious temple by Solomon sonne of David 1 King 6. 1 2 3 c. like high places Kings palaces or towers The Greeke and Chaldee turne it Unicornes whose hornes are high Psal. 92. 11. For Ramim high places they read Remim Unicornes Vers. 70. from the fold of sheepe that is from base estate For David keeping his fathers sheepe was by Samuel anointed King over Israel 1 Sam. 16. 11. 13. 2 Sam. 7. 8. So Amos 7. 14 15. Vers. 71. to feed Iakob so the Greeke well explaineth the Hebrew phrase to feed in Iakob where in is to be omitted in English as the like phrase sheweth 1 Sam. 16. 11. 17. 34. the Hebrew it selfe often omitteth it as 2 Sam. 5. 2. and 7. 7. So here in the former verse he chose in David that is he chose David Kings are said to feed their people because their office is like to the good shepherds in guiding and governing See Psal. 23. 1. And Pastors are Princes Ier. 6. 3. and 12. 10. Vers. 72. discretion of his hands or Prudencies of his palmes that is with most prudent and discreet administration menaged he them figuring Christ herein who is called David and the great and good Pastor of his flocke Ezek. 34. 23. Ioh. 10. 11. Heb. 13. 20. PSAL. LXXIX The Psalmist complaineth of the desolation of Ierusalem 8 He prayeth for deliverance 13 and promiseth thankefulnesse A Psalme of Asaph O God the heathens are come into thine inheritance they have defiled the Palace of thine Holinesse they have laid Ierusalem on heaps They have given the carkasse of thy servants for meat to the fowle of the heavens the flesh of thy gracious Saints to the wilde beast of the earth They have shed their bloud like waters round about Ierusalem and there was none to bury them We are a reproach to our neighbours a scoffe and a scorne to them that are round about us How long Iehovah wilt thou be angry to perpetuitie shall thy jealousie burne as fire Powre out thy wrathfull heat upō the heathens which know thee not and upon the kingdoms which call not on thy Name For he hath eaten up Iakob and his habitation they have wonderously desolated Remember not against us former iniquities make haste let thy tender mercies prevent us for wee are brought very low Helpe us O God of our salvation because of the glory of thy Name and ridde us free and mercifully cover our sinnes for thy names sake Why shall the heathens say where is their God knowne be among the heathens before our eyes the vengeance of the bloud of thy servants that is shed Let the sighing of the prisoner come before thy face according to the greatnesse of thine arme reserve thou the sons of death And render to our neighbors seven-fold into their bosome their reproach wherewith they have reproached thee O Lord. And we thy people and sheepe of thy pasture will confesse to thee for ever to
thy face they shall walke on In thy name they shall be glad all the day and in thy justice shall they be exalted For thou art the glory of their strength and in thy favourable acceptation our horne shal be exalted For of Iehovah is our shield and of the holy one of Israel our King Then spakest thou in a vision to thy gracious Saint and saidst I have put helpe upon a mightie one I have exalted one chosen out of the people I have found David my servant with oile of mine holinesse have I anointed him With whom mine hand shall be established also mine arme shall strengthen him The enemie shall not exact upon him the son of injurious evill shall not afflict him And his distressers I will beat down from his face and them that hate him I will plague And my faithfulnes my mercy shall be with him in my name shall his horn be exalted And I wil set his hand in the sea his right hand in the rivers He shal call on me my father thou my God and Rocke of my salvation I also will give him to be the first borne high above the kings of the earth For ever will I keepe for him my mercie and my covenant shall be faithfull to him And his seed I will put to perpetuitie and his throne as the dayes of heavens If his sonnes shall leave my law and shall not walke in my judgements If they shall profane my statutes and not keepe my commandements Then will I visit their trespasse with the rod their iniquitie with stripes But my mercie I will not make frustrate from with him nor deale falsely against my faithfulnesse I will not profane my covenant and that which is go●e out of my lips I will not change Once I have sworne by my holinesse if I lie unto David His seed shall be for ever and his throne as the Sunne before me As the Moone it shall be stablished for ever and a witnesse in the skie faithfull Selah But thou hast cast off and refused hast bin exceeding wroth with thine Anointed Hast abolished the covenant of thy servant hast prophaned his crowne to the earth Hast burst downe all his hedges hast put his fortresses a ruine All that passe by the way rob him hee is a reproach to his neighbours Thou hast exalted the right hand of his distressers hast rejoyced all his enemies Also thou hast turned the edge of his sword and hast not made him to stand in the battell Thou hast made his brightnesse to cease and his throne thou hast cast downe to the earth Thou hast shortened the dayes of his youth hast enwrapped him with shame Selah How long Iehovah wilt thou hide thy selfe to perpetuitie shall thy hot wrath burne like the fire Remember how transitorie I am unto what vanitie thou hast created all the sonnes of Adam What strong man shall live and not see death shall deliver his soule from the hand of hell Selah Where be those thy former mercies Lord thou swarest to David by thy faithfulnesse Remember Lord the reproach of thy servants that I beare in my bosome of all great peoples Wherewith thine enemies Iehovah doe reproach wherewith they doe reproach the footsteps of thine Anointed Blessed be Iehovah for ever Amen and Amen Annotations OF Aethan see the Note on Psal. 88. 1. V. 3. I said to wit by thy spirit therefore the Greeke changeth the person and translateth thou Lord saidest built up that is conserved propagated increased continually in them or with them that so long as the heavens endure thy faithfulnesse shall continue as vers 30. 37 38. Ps. 72. 5. and 119. 89. or by heavens may spiritually be meant the Church called often heaven and the kingdome of heaven Esa. 66. 22. Revel 4. 1 2. and 12. 1. and 15. 1. Math. 3. 2. and 13. 24 31. and the planting of the Church is called the planting of the heavens Esa. 51. 16. Vers. 4. my chosen mine elect people Therefore the Greeke changeth the number my chosen ones but the Chaldee translateth with Abraham my chosen David the figure and father of Christ according to the flesh who also is called David Ezek. 34. 23. Ier. 30. 9. Hos. 3. 5. of him is this and other Psalmes chiefly to be understood Act. 2. 30. and 13. 36 c. Vers. 5. thy seed Christ and Christians the children of Christ the Sonne of David Heb. 2. 13. Rev. 22. 16. thy throne the kingdome of Christ unto whom God gave the throne of his father David to reigne over the house of Iakob for ever Luke 1. 32 33. 69. Ierusalem is this throne Ier. 3. 17. which is continually builded of God Psal. 147. 2. Vers. 6. the heavens the heavenly creatures Angels and godly men Luk. 2. 13 14. Phil. 3. 20. Rev. 7. 9 10 11 12. So the Chaldee expoundeth it the Angels of heaven See also Ps. 50. 6. in the church or in the congregation to wit shall be confessed or celebrated Vers. 7. sonnes of the mighties or of the Gods that is Princes of the world See Psal. 29. 1. and 82. 1. 6. The Greeke saith sonnes of God whereby also Angels may be meant as Iob 1. 6. and so the Chaldee here paraphraseth Vers. 8. daunting terrible in Greeke glorified See Psa. 10. 18. the secret or mystery or as the Greeke turneth it councell meaning the Church or Congregation where the secrets or mysteries of Gods kingdome are manifested Mat. 13. 11. Rom. 16. 25. 1 Cor. 4. 1. Eph. 3. 4. This word is sundry times used for a Councell or Congregation Ps. 111. 1. Ezek. 13. 9. Ier. 6. 11. and 15. 17. or it may here be understood of the company of Angels as 1 King 22. 19. very much to wit terrible or referring it to the latter in the great secret councell over all or above all see Psal. 76. 12. The Chaldee paraphraseth above all the Angels which stand round about him Vers. 11. Rahab in Greeke the proud hereby may be meant the Egyptians as Psal. 87. 4. and so the Chaldee expounds it of Pharaoh the wicked or the proud sea as Iob 26. 12. both were subdued when Israel came out of Egypt Exod. 14. and 15. See Isa. 51. 9. The raging sea and swelling waters doe also signifie wicked enemies of God and his people Esai 57. 20. Iude 13. Psal. 124. 4 5. thine or to thee the earth to wit belongeth See Psal. 24. 1 2. Vers. 13. The North w ch God hath stretched out over the empty place Iob 26. 7. the right side that is the South as the Chaldee Paraphrast explaineth so called because a man standing with his face to the East as they were wont when they prayed the South is on his right hand So the East is called Kedem before and the West achor that is behinde Ioh. 23. 8. Esai 9. 12. It seemeth that this turned to superstition and idolatry that men prayed towards the East therefore God so ordered
the generation next after let his name be wiped out Let the iniquitie of his fathers bee remembred of Iehovah and the sinne of his mother bee not wiped out Let them bee before Iehovah continually and hee cut off the memory of them from the earth Because that hee remembred not to doe mercy but persecuted the poore afflicted and needy man and the smitten in heart to slay him And hee loved cursing and let it come unto him and he delighted not in blessing and let it bee farre from him And he cloathed himselfe with cursing as his raiment and let it enter as waters into his inward part and as oile into his bones Let it bee to him as a garment wherewith hee may cover himselfe and for a girdle wherewith hee may gird himselfe continually This be the worke of mine adversaries from Iehovah and of them that speake evill against my soule And thou Iehovih Lord doe with mee for thy Name sake for good is thy mercy deliver thou me For I am poore afflicted and needy and mine heart is wounded within me As a shadow when it declineth I am gone away I am tossed as the Grashopper My knees are feeble through fasting and my flesh is leane for fatnesse And I was a reproach to them they saw mee they shaked their head Helpe thou me Iehovah my God save me according to thy mercy And let them know that this is thine hand thou Iehovah hast done it Let them curse and doe thou blesse rise they up and be abashed and let thy servant rejoyce Let mine adversaries be cloathed with ignominie and let them cover themselves with their shame as with a cloke I will confesse Iehovah vehemently with my mouth and in the midst of many will I praise him For he will stand at the right hand of the needy to save him from them that judge his soule Annotations OF my praise that is which art praised of me as Psal. 22. 4. or which praisest and justifiest mee against the calumnies of mine enemies 2 Cor. 10. 18. Rom. 2. 29. Numb 12. 7 8. cease not or bee not silent see Psalme 28. 1. of diceit that is the deceitfull men as the Greeke explaineth it so pride for proud person Psalme 36. 12. are or have opened to wit themselves Vers. 4. and I prayer to wit I made or give my selfe to prayer as the Greeke and Chaldee saith I prayed or I am a man of prayer So I peace Psal. 120. 7. See also 1 Cor. 14. 33. Vers. 6. Set in office or Make visiter or over-seer see verse 8. the wicked one the devill as 1 Ioh. 2. 13 14. and 3. 12. and 5. 18. or generally wicked rulers the adversary in Hebrew Satan in Greeke the Devill who is an adversary to mankind 1 Pet. 5. 8. Rev. 12. 9. at his right hand to resist and overcome him Zach. 3. 1. and this is spoken of all his foes as of one man or of some one speciall as Doeg enemy to David 1 Sam. 22. 9 c. Iudas to Christ Ioh. 13. 2. But God is at the right hand of the poore vers 31. Psal. 16. 8. Vers. 7. wicked that is as the Greeke saith condemned See the Notes on Psal. 1. 1. to sinne that is turned to sinne and so abominable Prov. 28. 9. and 15. 8. Vers. 8. his office or charge visitation bishoprick Episcopée and this is applied to Iudas whose office was derived to Matthias Act. 1. 16 20 26. A Bishop and bishops charge so called of visitation is a common name to all overseers and offices Numb 4. 16. and 31. 14. Ezek. 44. 11. 2 King 11. 15. 2 Chron. 34. 12 17. Nehem. 11. 9. Vers. 9. fatherlesse or orphans and this is a curse of the law Exod. 22. 24. Ier. 18. 21. Vers. 10. wander rogue about as vagabonds Gen. 4. 12. Vers. 11. the Creditor he to whom he is indebted or the extortioner let him seise on all his goods his labour goods gotten by his labour Vers. 13. posteritie or his last end see Psal. 37. 37. to cutting off or appointed to be cut off to perdition or to destruction as the Greeke explaineth The verbe active is of passive signification as Psal. 32. 9. and 36. 3. Vers. 15. memory or memoriall Psal. 34. 17. Iob 18. 17. Vers. 16. smitten with griefe that is sorrowfull or as the Greeke saith pricked in heart So verse 22. See Psal. 102. 5. and 34. 19. Vers. 17. let it come or it shall come and so after Vers. 18. his raiment or a mantell let it enter or it entred It may be understood of his delight in cursing which pleased him as water and oile or of the efficacy of the curse that should pierce his owne bowels and bones as Num. 5. 22. Vers. 20. the worke that is the wage or reward due for his worke so Lev. 19. 13. Isa. 49. 4. Iob 7. 2. Ezek. 29. 20. Vers. 21. Iehovih the Name of God see Psal. 68. 21. doe to wit mercy as the next words shew and is expressed Psal. 18. 51. See also Psal. 103. 9. where the word anger is omitted Vers. 23. I am gone or am made to goe or depart namely towards my grave as Psal. 58. 9. See also Psal. 102. 12. 1 Chron. 17. 11. tossed as the grashopper or shaken off as the Locust which hath no nest or biding place but is driven to and fro being a fearefull creature Nahum 3. 17. Iob 39. 23. or which is carried away with the wind Exodus 10. 1● Vers. 24. feeble or loosened so that I am ready to stumble and fall So Paul calleth them loose or feeble knees Heb. 12. 12. from Isa. 35. 3. for fatnesse or for oile that is for want of fat or oile as for the fruits is for want of the fruits Lam. 4. 9. for five is for want of five Gen. 18. 28. for fornication 1 Cor. 7. 2. is for to avoid fornication Or we may turne it without fat for the Hebrew min sometime signifieth without Iob 21. 9. Vers. 25. shaked or wagged a signe of scorne Psal. 22. 8. Vers. 27. thine hand that is thy handy worke Vers. 28. rise they up to wit against me as the Greeke explaineth it and be they abashed as disappointed of their purpose Vers. 30. of many or of the mighties of great men as the Chaldee saith of wise men but the Greeke translateth of many Vers. 31. at the right hand to assist contrary to Satan verse 6. that judge that is condemne and persecute him to death PSAL. CX David prophesieth of Christs Kingdome 4 his eternall Priesthood 5 his Conquest 7 and his Passion A Psalme of David IEhovah assuredly said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand untill I put thine enemies the footstoole of thy feet Iehovah will send out of Sion the rod of thy strength rule thou in the middes of thine enemies Thy people shall be voluntaries in the day of thy power in the beauties of holinesse of the wombe of the early morning
will runne the way of thy commandements when thou shalt inlarge my heart Psal. 119. 32. Vnder this promise of the Church is contained also the constant suffering of afflictions for and with Christ who being our Fore-runner and being consecrated through sufferings and so entring into his glory Heb. 2. 9. 10. Luke 24. 26. hath herein left us an example that we should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2. 21. and hath said If any man will come after me let him deny himselfe and take up his crosse daily and follow mee Luke 9. 23. Therefore it is written Let us lay aside every weight and the sinne which doth so easily beset us and let us run with patience unto the race that is set before us looking unto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12. 1. 2. into his chambers This sheweth the benefits which they finde that follow Christ they are brought not onely into the Kings palace as in Psal. 45. 16. but into his privy chambers the most secret safe and quiet roomes of his Palace Chambers are places of greatest secrecy 2 King 6. 12. Luke 12. 3. Matth. 6. 6. and of most safety Deut. 32. 25. Ezek. 21. 14. and in such the Bridegroom and Bride used to rejoyce together Ioel 2. 16. Iudg. 15. 1. Hereby is signified the revelation of the mystery of the Gospell the Secret of the Lord which is revealed to them that feare him Psal. 25. 14 and the spiritual comforts which they reape thereby for Eye hath not seene nor eare heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God and thus we have the mind of Christ 1 Cor. 2. 9. 10. 16. and are brought into such chambers as by knowledge are filled with all precious and pleasant riches Prov. 24. 4. Into them Paul as a friend of the Bridegroome endevoured with great strift to bring the Church that their hearts might be comforted being knit together in love and unto all riches of the fulnesse of understanding to the acknowledgement of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ in whom are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Coloss. 2. 1. 2. 3. In these chambers also the Saints are kept safe from evill Psal. 27. 5. delivered from the wrath and judgements of God due for their sinnes and comforted by the words of Christ against the persecution of men that in him they may have peace though in the world they have tribulation Ioh. 16. 33. Therefore unto them hee saith Come my people enter thou into thy chambers and shut thy doores about thee hide thy selfe for a very little moment untill the indignation be overpast Esa. 26. 20. Be glad and rejoyce be glad inwardly and rejoyce outwardly these comforts they finde in the Kings chambers whose Kingdome is not meat and drinke but righteousnesse and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. Wherefore they say I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord my soule shall be joyfull in my God for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation he hath covered me with the robe of righteousnesse as a bridegroome decketh himselfe with ornaments and as a bride adorneth her selfe with jewels Esay 61. 10. and thus they rejoyce with joy unspeakeable and full of glory receiving the end of their faith even the salvation of their soules 1 Pet. 1. 8. 9. will remember thy loves or will record rehearse make-mention of thy loves more then wine or which are better then wine as in vers 2. The foresaid joy of the Saints redoundeth to the praise and glory of Christ whose loves manifested by his sufferings death resurrection ascension and the graces and benefits flowing from them to his Church are remembred inwardly recorded and mentioned outwardly For they with joy drawing water out of the wells of salvation doe say in that day Praise the Lord call upon his name declare his doings among the people make mention that his name is exalted Esay 12. 3. 4. I will mention the loving kindnesses of the Lord the prayses of the Lord according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us and the great goodnesse towards the house of Israel which he hath bestowed on them according to his mercies and according to the multitude of his loving kindnesses Esay 63. 7. I will make mention of thy righteousnesse even of thine onely Psal. 71. 16. I will make thy name to bee remembred in every generation and generation therefore peoples shall confesse thee for ever and aye Psalme 45. 18. The upright love thee Hebr. uprightnesses or righteousnesses love thee whereby righteous or upright persons are meant the virgins fore-mentioned in vers 3. who have upright hearts and righteous conversation as pride in Ier. 50. 31. is for a proud person sin in Prov. 13. 6. is for a sinner thankesgivings in Nehem. 12. 31. for companies of thanksgivers and many the like So this fruit commeth by remembring and mentioning Christs loves that the righteous are confirmed and increased in love towards him more and more as the Apostle wrote to them that beleeved on the name of the Sonne of God that they might beleeve on the name of the Sonne of God that is might be confirmed continued and increased in their beleefe 1 Iohn 5. 13. The Hebrewes ignorant of Christ have applied these things unto Gods ancient mercies towards them in the giving of his Law as the Chaldee paraphrast saith When the people of the house of Israel was come out of Aegypt the divine-presence of the Lord of the world was their guide by the pillar of a cloud by day and by the pillar of fire by night The just men of that generation said O Lord of all the world Draw us after thee and wee will runne after the way of thy goodnesse and bring us neere to the bottome of the mount Sinai and give us thy Law out of thy treasure-house which is in the Firmament and we will be glad and rejoyce in the 22 letters with which it is written and we will remember them and will love thy Godhead and will depart from after the idols of the peoples and all just men which doe that which is right before thee shall feare thee and love thy commandements But the Law being the ministration of death though it was glorious hath no glory in respect of the ministration of the Spirit and of righteousnesse which exceedeth in glory 2 Cor. 3. 7. 10. Therefore the new Testament being now confirmed in Christ those former things which were figures and shadowes are no more remembred as was prophesied in Ier. 3. 16. Vers. 5. I am blacke Hitherto hath beene the Churches first speech unto Christ testifying her faith and love now follow her words to the daughters of Ierusalem against the scandals and offences that might arise for the