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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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the Salvation of Souls Paul yielded to circumcise Timothy for that indifferent thing tho' according to the decrees of the Great Council of the Apostles it was not to be imposed was yet necessary for preserving the peace of the Church as then it was by bearing with the weak Jewish Christians to whom he condescended and with whom he complyed so far as would consist with a safe conscience abating of his own liberty to gratify their Scrupulosities and indulging their weaknesses with his stronger grace so far as he knew he should not offend God to whom he designed to gain those weak Souls thus he also comported with the Apostles in the shaveing of his head afterward Acts 21.24 Yet would not he be compelled to circumcise Titus who was a Native Gentile being a Greek which had he done the false brethren that came to spy out the liberty Paul had in Christ and preached would have won a great advantage against him for defaming him as teaching one thing among the Gentile -Churches and practiceing the contrary among the Jews now when he was come to the Apostles at Jerusalem Gal. 2.3 4. Therefore would he not yield that Titus should be circumcised least he should seem to countenance those privy Spies who held circumcision necessary to Salvation N.B. O what a pattern to posterity doth great humble charitable Paul leave here for future practice performing or forbearing what by the law of God he lawfully might according to the various persuasions of several Christians that he might become an Instrument in any degree for the Salvation of any soul and sure I am no order of men can pretend to a greater superiority as to the Conscience in spiritual matters than he undoubtedly had yet would he not exercise a Lordly dominion over the Faith of others 2 Cor. 1.24 N.B. It was therefore well done by the Ministers of Magdeburgh in stoutly opposing those of Wittenburgh and Lipswich who by their Adcaphora's as they call'd them indifferent things would have paved a way to popery And it was good council Peter Martyr gave to Queen Elizabeth that her Church-Governours should not endeavour to carry the Ark of the Gospel into England upon the Cart of Needless Ceremonies as we are doing at this Day out of it The fifth Remark is God doth not only chuse Men to be Ministers but he also appointeth the time when and the place where they shall labour in their Ministry Two hints hereof we have here both verse 6. They were forbidden by the Holy Chost to Preach the word in Asia and again verse 7. The Spirit suffered them not to go preach in Bithynia N.B. The very Journeyings of those Preachers of the Gospel as well as their Divine Exercises were all ordered by the most wise God they must neither speak act or walk but according to Divine direction as Ambrose and Chrysostom here noteth They must for this time pass by both these fore named places and Mysia too verse 8. Thus God the Great Housholder orders the Candle to be removed from one Room to another he granteth to people or withdraws from them the light of the Gospel as oft as he pleaseth Even so it pleaseth him saith Christ Matth. 11.26 N.B. To have the word forbidden to be preached was an heavyer Judgment upon those Coasts than if their Harvest or the Light of the Sun had been denyed them therefore ought all places and people highly to prize the Preaching of the Gospel as a most singular priviledge They that be without a Teaching Priest are without God also 2 Chron 15.3 Amos's Famine of the word was far worse and more deplorable than Samaria's Famine of Bread in that strait Siege c. N.B. Nor may we think that God denied those places his Grace but only retarded it for that time for afterward Paul preached there about two years together Acts 19.10 why God now with held his Grace the reasons be supposed 1. From some secret cause unrevealed 2. From the freedom of God's good pleasure whereon both our Election and our Vocation hath their foundation depending altogether on the free grace of God and not at all upon the free will of Man 3. Those places and people might be as some say reserved for the Apostle John's ure and care for the sev●a ●●●rches of Asia lay within his line c. 4 Because those provinces were nigh to other places where now famous Churches of the Gentiles were constituted from which if they had a mind they might light their Candle and whereby the knowledge of the Gospel might be easily spread through the lesser Asia But 5. 'T is probable God saw those Cities c. not at all prepared now to receive the Gospel 6. and Lastly God had another new work of greater importance wherein to imploy those Apostles which was to send them speedily into Europe Now come we to Paul's passing over out of Asia into Europe The occasion whereof was a Night-Vision he had of an Angel which appeared to him in the habit of a Graecian-man calling for his help into Macedonia which is a Greek province in Europe extending to the Archipelago Acts 16.9 10 11 12. So came he to Philippi the chief City of that part of Macedonia to help them according to the call of God for Ministers are those means by whom God helpeth a perishing people whereby the Lord plucketh his chosen ones as brands out of the fire Zech. 3.3 he draweth them out of the Devil's drudgery and pulleth them away when hanging over the Chimneys of Hell by one single rotten thread of a frail brittle life from the danger of Damnation N.B. Hereupon God's Ministers are call'd Saviours Obad. v. 21. 1 Tim. 4.16 and Redeemers Job 33.24 28. and Co-workers with Christ 2 Cor. 6.1 Tho' a wicked world take them for tormentors Rev. 11.10 This travel of Paul into Greece is marked out as a new work and such as he never had yet been imployed in namely to preach the Gospel to a Roman plantation for at Philippi the text tells us verse 12. and verse 21. There dwelt a Colony of Roman Citizens who enjoyed the freedom of the City of Rome N.B. He had indeed been always in the Roman Dominions all those Countreys of the East being then Rome's Conquests but still he conversed with other Nations as Jews Greeks Syrians and such like yet never as yet do we read of any Romans till this time now because the Roman Nation lyeth under so many sad brands in Scripture and was now become an abomination to the Jews for ruling so Rigorously over them therefore Paul's going to preach the Gospel to them hath three singular Circummstances Recorded in Scripture as so many Eminent Badges and Advertisements of it For first that when Paul c. would have gone into Asia and Bithynia the Spirit forbade them and diverted them with haste into Macedonia unto this new work of preaching to this Roman plantation Secondly That he was called to this
that they will feed lustily upon dead Horses of the Turkish Gally-slaves that they will Eat Opium an Ounce at a time as if it were Bread and of the Maid in Pliny that did Eat Spiders and of Mithridates who had made Poison so natural to him that when he would have Poisoned himself being Captive to the Romans he could not Yea Joseph Scaliger speaks of Spiders in Italy to have such a Poisonous nature as they will kill him that treads upon them and they will break a Glass if they do but creep over it Yet this Poisonful nature falls far short of the Poyson of sin in as much as Moral poyson is worse than Natural and that which kills the Soul exceeds that which onely can kill the Body T is a wonder how men dare take such hearty and deep Draughts of this Poyson of sin So hateful to God and so hurtful to men 1. T is so hateful to God that it made God 1. Repent he had made Man 2. Destroy all Dumb Creatures with a Deluge 3. Not spare his own Son c. this makes God hate sin with a perfect hatred 2. Hurtful to men the least Sin is Mortal to the Soul as the least Poyson is to the Body and if the Soul dye the Body cannot live This Sinful sin Rom. 7.13 is destructive and Damnable both to Soul and Body Hence the Apostle could find no Name bad enough for it but its own name calling it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sinful Sin If he that provoketh an Earthly King to Anger doth sin against his own Soul Prov. 20.2 how much more he that provokech the King of Heaven by Sin which is so Execrable so Detestable and so Intolerable to him why should it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an easie work as the word signifys Acts 18.14 to be wickedly Lewd or Lewdly wicked and so to Damn our own Souls yea and bodies too and that for ever 'T was therefore well said by Maximilian King of Bohemia and afterwards Emperour to the Pope who perswaded him to be a good Catholick with many promises of profits and preferments The King answered I thank your Holiness for your kind offers but the weal of my Soul is of more worth to me than the whole World to this the Pope angerly replyed that he spoke like a Lutheran See Hist Council of Trent p. 429. Though this wholesom form of speech pleased not the Pope yet that of Lewis King of France displeased the Pope much more who cast his Bulls whereby he required the fruits of Vacancies of all Cathedral Churches in France into the fire saying I had rather the Popes Bulls should Rost in the fire than that my Soul should Fry in Hell Speed 496. year 1152. As the woman with two Children the one loved and pamper'd the other Hated and Starved the pamperd child falls sick and dyes and before its Death she cast some care when too late on the Starved child So do too many with the Body and Soul As the woman who had her house on fire was altogether taken up to save her Lumber from the flames and all the while forgot she had left her child in the Cradle but remembring when too late she cryed out most Horribly Oh my child my child I have forgot my child Thus do many men till too late forget their Dear and pretious Souls while Toiling about the Lumber of the world for the Body onely The loss of the Soul is a loss of All and a loss for ever The reasons be these 1. Though foolish Sinners should say after Death when launched out into an Eternity of woe the words of Christ What shall we Give in Exchange for our Souls yet then they have nothing to give for their Souls Redemption Their Riches have then taken the Wing Death robbed Dives of all his possessions Then his friends were scrambling for his Goods Worms for his body and Devils for his Soul when he slept his sleep Psal 76.5 that long Iron Sleep of death as the Poets call it he left his Wealth to others Psal 49.10 when he dyed be carryed nothing away v. 17. Job 1.21 and 1 Tim. 6.7 Eccles 5.15 Death as a Porter stands at the Gate and strips men of all their worldly wealth leaving them not an Half-penny to pay their fare over the Stygian lake as the Poet said And he was but a foolish fellow who when he saw he must dye claps a piece of Gold into his mouth saying Some wiser than some I lle take this along with me Worldly wretches would gladly carry the world out of the world but the Apostle assureth them that it is impossible saying It is certain as we do bring nothing into the world we can carry nothing out of the world 1 Tim. 6.7 Wherewith then shall the Soul be Redeemed in the place of the Damned where there is punishment without pitty misery without mercy sorrow without succour crying without compassion mischief without measure torments without end and past Imagination Therefore 2. Suppose the Damned should have something wherewith they might offer a price of their Redemption Non esset Estimabile It would utterly be Rejected Money may be a Master and a Monarch in this world but it bears no Mastery in the other World If Death will Regard no Reason nor rest satisfyed though ●●●ou would give many Gifts as Soloman saith of Jealousy Prov. 6.35 If a man can never buy off Death though he would give never so much as that Carnal Cardinal Beauford the Chancelor of England in Henery the 6. time upon his Death-bed complained that his Vast riches would not Reprieve him from Death crying out Fie upon it will money do nothing will not Death be Hired wherefore should I die being so Rich If the whole Realm would bribe Death I am able quoth he either by Policy to procure it or by Money to purchase it c. How much More unable is money which cannot buy off Death to buy off Damnation for the Devils those Tormentors of Damned Souls are far worse than those Medes which God set on to destroy Babylon Isa 13.17 who would not regard Silver or Gold for a Ransom but kill all they came to though never so Rich and ready to Redeem their lives with their Riches Alas the Devils have far less Reason to Delight in Silver and Gold than those Medes had who were Men with whom Money bears a Mastery not so with Devils Riches may indeed be the ransom of a Mans life from the wrath of men Prov. ●3 8 but they will not be the Ransom of a Mans Soul from the wrath of God Prov. 11.4 or the Rage of Devils Hence the Rich Glutton is told of a Great Gulph twixt Heaven and Hell Intimating his state of Torment to be uncapable of any ease much less of any Redemption but was an Unchangeable and Eternal State Luke 16.24 26. 3. That the Damned Souls do sink into an irreparable irrecoverable State may be further
in his heart My Lord delayeth his coming c. upon this grew secure and notoriously extravagant Matth. 24.48 49. Even so our Lord hath his Travelling time and his Servants have their Trading time Matth. 25.14 c. And our Lord after this hath his Returning time and his Servants their Reckoning time v. 19 c. Should we know when this time will be we should misimprove the mean time Therefore seeing the coming of that Dreadful Day will be sudden and unexpected as that was upon the World we should always watch Matth. 24.37 38 39 42. and be always ready v. 44. Men are never less safe than when they are most secure Oh what manner of men ought we to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quales quanti Men even to admiration looking up and longing for Christs coming in the Clouds those Chariots which carried him up shall bring him back again We should cry with Sisera's Mother VVhy are his Chariots so long incoming Judg. 5.28 and 2 Pet. 3.11 12. Hastening to meet him upon his way Mark 3. The very Symptoms of the last and worst of times are upon us in our Day We may safely say The time is short 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contracted or rolled up 1 Cor. 7.29 as Sails use to be by Mariners when the Ship draws nigh to Harbour the end of her Voyage Or as a Web of Cloth is rolled up only a little left at the end ungathered So God hath now rolled up most of his Works he hath to work in the World he hath only some few things to do a very little at the end of the World to wit four things 1. The Call of the Jews 2. The Fulness of the Gentiles 3. The Fall of Antichrist 4. The Reign of Jesus Christ and then God will say as he said Gen. 6.13 The end of all flesh is come before me The like doth Ezektel use the end it come is come and so some ten or twelve times is come is come Ezek. 7.2 3 6 c. as if he had said Destruction is at the Door If the Judge of the World were at the Door in the days of James the Apostle and the coming of the Lord did then draw nigh Jam. 5.8 9. sure I am it draws nigh much more now in our days and that great Judge who then stood before the Door is well nigh now got over the Threshold it being above a 1000 years since the Apostle said so Therefore let 1. The Persecuted be patient as v. 7. and hold a blow as we say let Patience have line enough in its perfect work the good Lord strengthen Faith and lengthen Patience when the Judge cometh he will set all to rights in the mean time grudge not v. 9. that is groan not grumble not grow not sour and sullen either to God or to one another 2. Let Persecutors Tremble though they be as tall as the great Giants in Noahs day yet God will sweep them away with a Floud of Fire as then he did them with a Floud of Water and not one of them shall escape his just indignation though the Jews feign that one Og a Giant was saved upon an High-Hill and with his own height or as some Rabbies say by getting and setting astride upon the Ark. Yet all this is said without book for the word saith expresly every man Died c. Gen. 7.21 22. no doubt but some might attempt it though in vain as we read of a fond Fryer that built himself an high house upon Harrow of the hill to save himself when an Astrologer had perswaded him the land should be drowned When this dreadful day comes there will be no flying to the Mountains unless it be a crying to them to cover us as Rev. 6.16 which yet shall be but a poor cover for Mountains shall melt and Rocks rend at this Judges presence Now the symptoms of this destruction are 1. Was there ever more burnings of unlawful lusts the fore-runner of the Floud than now when so many Pockified persons have invited so many Forreign besides Native Physicians for their cure in every corner 2. The Abounding of all manner of Iniquity as if Hell were broke loose amongst us The lost times are the loosest times The Dregs of time must needs be the worst as 't is of Liquor the sink of all the sins of former Ages seemcentred in our times 3. Coldness of love by such aforesaid Quench-Coals Dr. Latimer saw such lack of love to God and His People in his time that he verily thought Dooms-day was then just at hand much more may we think so now c. But beside and before this general Judgment-day wherein the whole World shall be burnt as before it was drown'd particular Dooms-days may come upon places and people our own Chronicles tell us of a Dooms-day-book in the Exchequer containing a survey of all England for proportioning the exactions of the Norman yoke by William the Conqueror God bless this Land from such Dooms-day-books and from such dooms-day-Dooms-day-times as were in the Marian days wherein so many Fires flamed out all over our Land to burn the poor Protestants The Apostle Peter saith Think it not strange concerning fiery Trials which are to try you at if some strange thing happened to you 1 Pet. 4.12 wonder not at it as at some new astonishing thing for there is no new thing under the Sun that which hath been not only may but shall be Eccles 1.9 now that there have been such Dooms-day-times and Fiery Tryals both Sacred and Civil Writings confirm it by a cloud of Witnesses 1. Sacred Frequently mentioning how God proves his people by bringing them into the Furnace or Fiery Trials God tried Job as Gold is tryed in the Furnace Job 23.10 and so he did Israel in a furnace of Iron Deut. 4.20 1 Kin. 8.51 and Jer. 11.4 The Oppression of Egypt was a furnace to Israel and so was Babylons Bondage to the Jews afterwards Those grievous afflictions wherewith they were grievously afficted both in Egypt and Babylon did most kindly melt them and made them more malleable under Gods Hammer of his Word Jer. 23.29 God tryed them as Silver c. yea brought them through Fire and Water Psal 66.10 12. Now neither Reprobate Silver nor Alchymy Gold can bear the seventh Fire as Golden Job did who as the Finest Gold is purged in the Fire and shineth in the Water but quite contrary it is with dirty Clay which the Fire Scorcheth and Water Dissolveth 'T is Gods method to gather together his Vessels and to cast them into his Crucible or Furnace as men do with Silver and Brass to melt them in the midst thereof Ezek. 22.19 20 21 22. That is a most direful Doom there I will leave you in the Furnace God deals so with his Foes bringing them into the Briars and there leaves them to be burned as Vessels of Wood only but not so with his Friends who are Vessels of Gold with those God
Thirteenth brings in God's Command for dividing the Conquered Land unto Joshua when old Age was come upon him ver 1. 't is very credible that Joshua thought that all the Canaanites must be rooted out before any Division of their Lands among the Tribes should be begun now when Joshua felt the Inconveniences of Old Age creep fast upon him he could not chuse but have many Anxious Thoughts of Heart therefore God comes to comfort him and to quiet his fluctuating Mind saying as it were Let not thy heart be troubled as John 14.1 though many Canaanites remain still Vnconquered yet the farther work I have to employ thee in the short remainder of thy Days is in dividing the Land already Conquered and though the Conquest of all Canaan be not now accomplish'd yet this shall be no reason to hinder the distribution of the Land of Promise at this time it shall be delay'd no longer for I will surely subdue the rest that are unsubdued Hereupon Joshua divides the Land already subdued and not only so but distributes by lot all those Lands also that were not yet subdued as if they had been already in Joshua's hands to bestow Some Canaanites were reserv'd for Israel's Exercise Nor had God promis'd that Joshua should Conquer Canaan wholly but only that he should bring Israel into it Deut. 31.23 and divide the Land as their Inheritance Josh 1.6 CHAP. XIV XV XVI XVII XVIII XIX THE following Chapters to the 20th Chapter are one entire Narrative how both God's Promise of giving Canaan and his Precept for dividing the whole Land among the 12 Tribes were performed therefore many Remarks may not be made upon them as upon the foregoing Chapters save only upon those particular Historical passages concerning Caleb and Joshua contained in them Before which take these few Remarks upon the General History The First is The high Encomium and commendation of the Country of Canaan is plainly demonstrated here for tho' its Circuit was so small as to be but an hundred and sixty miles in length from Dan to Beersheba and only sixty in breadth from Joppa to Jordan not near the half of England as good Authors compute it yet was it so rich and fruitful as plentifully to nourish one and thirty Kings and such a vast multitude of Inhabitants in these times insomuch that they came forth against Israel as the Sand on the Sea-shore Josh 11.4 and in the days of David there were above Thirteen Hundred Thousand Fighting Men besides those that were aged and unfit for War and also Women Young Youths and Little Children 2 Sam. 24.9 No wonder then if this Land be called the glory of all Lands Ezek. 20.6 and this Character is given that had God fashioned the World like a Ring as he did like a Globe this Land had been the Gemm of it yet was this best of Lands given to the worst of mankind the cursed Canaanites who fill'd it with their Abominations from one end to the other Ezr. 9.11 until their Land spewed them out Levit. 18.25.28 and made room enough in this narrow neck of Earth to nourish all the Tribes of Israel because it was as 't is oft called a Land that flowed with Milk and Honey now hath it spewed out the Jews for the like Sins and this fruitful Land is made Barren as if sowed with Salt c. N. B Yet what was this Earthly Canaan in its greatest Splendor and Glory comparable to the Heavenly Canaan where that City of Pearl the New Jerusalem is and into which our Redeemer blessed Jesus the Anti type of this Joshua will assuredly bring all his Redeemed Maugre the malice of all their Enemies they shall surely and safely Sail through Christs blood into the Father's bosom 't is the Prayer of our Dear Jesus for us Father I will that where I am there may they be also John 17.24 Where he speaks with Authority Not Father I wish but Father I will as one coequal and in joint Commission with God and this ought to be our Prayer with the Spouse Make hast Oh my Beloved and bring me into those Mountains of Spices Cant. 8.14 The Second General Remark is Whereas not only the Land that was already subdued was distributed among the Tribes of Israel but also that part thereof which was not yet Conquered but Vnsubdued for that was theirs likewise but so as they must win it before they wear it So must we win Heaven also c. The Kingdom of Heaven must be won by force and violence Mat. 12.12 N. B. No doubt but this distribution of the unsubdued Land to Israel did fortifie their Faith and corroborate the considence of those Tribes to whom by lot they belonged They being thus assured of their Title to them and of their interest in them could not chuse but encounter those Countries with a most raised courage seeing nothing could prevent their possession of them but only their being wanting to themselves by their own disobedience accordingly we having any Evidences for Heaven should quit our selves like Men be strong and couragious 1 Cor. 16.13 and the rather because we are already more than conquerors Rom. 8.37 yea Triumphers in Christ 2 Cor. 2.14 who as our Head hath already taken possession of Heaven for all his Members and is gone before to prepare Mansions for us John 14.1 2 3. The Third General Remark is Every Tribe of Israel had their Inheritance assigned them by lot save only the Tribe of Levi the Tribe of Reuben Gad and the half Tribe of Manassah had their Inheritance assigned them beyond Jordan Josh 14.4 according to the Divine direction Josh 13.9 to 29. of all the other Nine Tribes and an half the tribe of Judah hath the first portion on this side Jordan Josh 15. throughout His lot ordered by the Lord Prov. 16.33 came forth first and fell out in the best of the Land to shew God had a purpose to exalt that Tribe out of which Shilo was to come Gen. 49.16 above the rest Next to Judah fell the Province of the of the Tribe of Ephraim Josh 16. throughout as Judah's portion fell on the South of Canaan so this of Joseph on the North by a special Providence that these two the Strongest and most Valiant Tribes might be as Bulwarks on both sides to defend the whole Kingdom from the invasion and incursion of those Foreign Enemies a puissant and potent People who surrounded Canaan on every side The next portion was that of Manasseh Josh 17. ver 1. to 14. for Joseph being the Eldest Son of Rachel Jacob's first intended Wife was to have a double portion Deut. 21.17 one for his Son Ephraim and another for his Son Manasseh and tho' Manasseh was indeed Joseph's First-Born Gen. 41.52 and 46.20 yet the second Son Ephraim had his Portion before him because by God's Decree and Jacob's Blessing Ephraim was preferred before him Gen. 48.14.19 likewise because this was but one half of the Tribe of Manasseh
simplicity of the other as piety without policy is too simple to be safe so policy without piety is too subtle to be good The head of the Serpent and the heart of the Dove do best together as blessed ingredients for the Compound of Christians The fourth Remark is God hath many means and ways whereby to deliver his persecuted Servants as sometimes by the death of persecutors they are dead that sought the Child's life Matth. 2.20 and many in England were saved by the death of Q. Mary c. So at other times by striking a Terrour upon their hearts as here verse 28 29. The chief Captain was afraid he had gone too far already because it was a Capital Crime and accounted no less than Treason for any in Authority to violate the Roman priveledges which Augustus Caesar had bestowed upon Tarsus the City wherein Paul was born as a reward for the Citizens assisting him in his wars with Brutus and Cassius So feared he to be called to an account for his breach of that priviledge as he did then so as to loose Paul's Bands v. 30. The fifth Remark is Our deliverances here are but partial the total is not until Death Paul was but delivered from his Chains not from his confinement but was reserved to appear before the Sanhedrim the next day for tho' that Council had been banished out of Jerusalem long before had their residence at Jabneh yet at this Pentecost-Feast they were come thither The Colonel carries Paul down from the Castle and sets him safe before them for a fair Publick Tryal CHAP. XXIII Paul before the Sanhedrim THIS Chapter contains the Transactions of three days concerning Paul the Prisoner The first days Transaction was when the chief Captain of the Castle had brought his Prisoner down and delivered him up to the Jewish Sanhedrim or Council to be tryed before them himself being an Heathen having no skill in the Jew's Religion about which the Controversie now lay Upon this first days work which consists of these Resolves we have a prospect in the general of Paul's Oration made before his Judges and particularly First His Exordium or Prologue Secondly His profession of his own Inocency verse 1. Thirdly The Event thereof Verse 2 3 4 5. Fourthly His Pious Policy Verse 6 7 8 9. Fifthly His Rescue by the Captain Verse 10. And Sixthly His Encouragement from God Verse 11. Wherein observe Paul pleads not guilty and vindicates his own innocency against their Calumnies c verse 1. whereupon the High-Priest looking upon his Vindication of himself as a reflexion upon the Sanhedrim commands the Officers to smite him on the Mouth and so to interrupt him in the very enterance of his Defensive Oration verse 2. N.B. To whom Paul makes a smart repartee for his acting herein as an Unjust Judge in punishing him before he was heard c. contrary to the Law Deut. 17.4 and 25.1 2. Leuit. 19.35 therefore he foretells his dreadful fall verse 3. Hereupon Paul is accused for reviling the High-Priest Ver. 4. By these partial Parasites over-looking this injustice and injury done to the Apostle Paul pleads ignorance as his excuse verse 5. And seeing no plea for his innocency was like to be admitted in so corrupt a Court the head whereof was so unjust and injurious Paul betakes himself to a prudent policy v. 6. Starteth a Notion which setteth not only the Standers by but those on the Bench at Variance among themselves verse 7 8 9. and by this means he was delivered out of his adversaries hands v. 10. and who that night had Divine Consolations in his confinement verse 11. The Remarks from those Resolves of this first day's work are these The first is The Testimony of a good Conscience in a prisoner at the Bar is a brave incouragement This same Comforter had Paul here which so incouraged him as that he could look his Accusers yea and his Judges too in the face for so 't is said he stedfastly beholding the Council ver 1. because his Conscience was good both with the goodness of integrity and with the Goodness of Tranquility also This was his Exercise or Recreation Acts 24.16 Thinking it better to offend the whole world than his own Conscience Nor may we imagine that Paul pleads his own perfection before the Sanhedrim here when he said I have lived in all good Conscience before God until this day for he utterly disowns that Lying and Damnable Doctrine of Perfection in Saying not as if I had attained or were already perfect Phil. 3.12 none are perfectly perfect in this life but only comparatively or conceitedly So Paul was far from conceiting himself without sin or fault seeing he acknowledged and bewailed his Captivity to the Law of Sin Romans 7.23 24. But the sense is he was not Conscious to himself of any Notorious Enormity such as Sacriledg Blasphemy c. Whereof they Accused him c. The second Remark is God is the Avenger of all injuries done to his Servants and will smite their smiters Thus Paul saith here God shall smite thee thou whited Wall who sits to Judge me after the Law yet bids me be smitten contrary to Law verse 2 3. N.B. This was an old practice of the Devil to smite God's Servants by the Fist of wickedness Thus was good Micajah smitten by the fist of a false prophet 1 Kin. 22.24 to whom God's Prophet told his Doom saying thou shalt see in that day when thou shalt go into an inner-Chamber and hide thy self verse 25. Namely from the Sons of Ahab who shall punish thee for putting their Father upon so fatal a war N.B. Thus also the prophet Jeremy was smitten by Pashur another of the Devil 's false prophets Jerem. 20.2 whose Doom was likewise foretold by God's Prophet that he should be a Magor-Missabib and terrour round about a terrour to himself and to all his Friends and that he should die in Babylon c. verse 3 4 5 6. N.B. Yea our Lord himself escaped not the Suffering of this smiting indignity John 18.22 and it may well be granted how easily could the Lord Christ have revenged himself of this Parasitical Officer who smote him the palm of whose hand might soon have rotted off had not the Lord been now acting the part of a Lamb even of the Lamb of God just ready to be offered up a Sacrifice so he mildly answers him verse 23. c. John 18. N.B. And as it was thus disgracefully done to our Lord in both Churlish Strokes and reproachful words Answerest thou the High-Priest so when he had said or done nothing more than making use of the Liberty of their own Jewish Law in not confessing any thing against himself but putting his accusers upon proof of what they laid to his charge yet was the Jewish Government so degenerated at this day that no notice is taken of this disorderly affront in an under Officer to a supposed Criminal That insolent fellow had only a