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A46823 A help for the understanding of the Holy Scripture intended chiefly for the assistance and information of those that use constantly every day to reade some part of the Bible, and would gladly alwayes understand what they read if they had some man to help them : the first part : containing certain short notes of exposition upon the five books of Moses, to wit Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomie : wherein all such passages in the text are explained as were thought likely to be questioned by any reader of ordinary capacity ... / by Arthur Jackson ... Jackson, Arthur, 1593?-1666. 1643 (1643) Wing J67; ESTC R35433 692,552 595

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And he said unto Aaron Take thee a young calf for a sinne-offering Before Aaron might be suffered to offer up any sacrifice he is commanded by Moses to offer up a young calf as a sinne-offering for himself And hence the Apostle proves the weaknesse and insufficiency of the Leviticall priesthood to wit that those priests were not fit in themselves to stand as Mediatours betwixt God and the people being sinners themselves but were types and shadows of another to come to wit Christ who was holy harmlesse undefiled and separate from sinners c. Heb. 7. 26 27. But since a young bullock is appointed for the high priests sinne-offering Levit. 4. 3. Why is Aaron here commanded to offer a young calf for a sinne-offering I answer between a young calf and a young bullock there was no great difference the one happely was as the Hebrews say of the first year the other of the second but yet of that difference the reason we may conceive to be this because in the fourth chapter a sinne-offering is appointed onely by way of atonement for some particular sinne of ignorance committed by the high priest but this sinne-offering here injoyned was for the sinnes of the priests in generall and that also in a particular case for their first entrance upon the execution of their office and therefore here not a young bullock as there was injoyned but a young calf was offered for their sinne-offering and that by the Lords speciall direction Vers 3. Take yee a kid of the goats for a sinne-offering c. Here also as in a speciall particular case the very same sacrifices are not injoyned either for the sinne-offerings burnt-offerings or peace-offerings of the people that are injoyned by the generall Laws in the former chapters onely respect is had that some of every kind should be now offered by the priests at their first entrance upon their office Vers 4. For to day the Lord will appear unto you See ver 24. Vers 9. And put it upon the horns of the altar c. That is the brasen altar herein also this sinne-offering for the high priest seemeth to differ from others that followed after whose bloud was to be carried into the Sanctuary Levit. 4. 5 6 7. and it was because Aaron as yet had not accesse into the holy place till he had prepared away by this first sacrifice into the court the like is to be observed in the peoples sinne-offering ver 15. compared with Levit. 4. 13 17 18. Vers 10. But the fat and the kidneys and the caul above the liver of the sinne-offering he burnt upon the altar That is he offered them upon the altar and so they were afterward burnt by that fire which came down from heaven ver 24. Vers 15. And he brought the peoples offering and took the goat c. and offered it for sinne as the first That is in the same manner as that for the priest ver 8. and so he burnt it also without the camp as the other was ver 11. for which he is reproved by Moses Lev. 10. 17. Wherefore have ye not eaten the sinne-offering in the holy place seeing it is most holy and God hath given it you c. Vers 17. Beside the burnt sacrifice of the morning That is this was not the burnt-offering and meat-offering which was every morning to be offered as God appointed Exod. 24. 38 39 40. but an extraordinary offering besides which by speciall direction was offered at this time Vers 22. And Aaron lift up his hand toward the people and blessed them This was a kind of applying the sacrifice to them and to make known that God did gratiously accept of those sacrifices from them and it was done according to the manner set down Numb 6. 23 c. Speak unto Aaron and his sonnes saying On this wise shall blesse the children of Israel saying unto them The Lord blesse thee and keep thee the Lord make his face shine upon thee and be gratious unto thee the Lord lift up his countenance upon thee and give thee peace So also it is said of our Saviour that a little before his Ascention he lift up his head and blessed his disciples and indeed Aaron was in this a type of Christ in whom all the Nations of the world are blessed Gen. 18. 18. Vers 22. And came down from offering of the sinne-offering c. That is from the bank or hilly-place of the altar which was higher then the other ground Vers 23. And Moses and Aaron went into the tabernacle c. Hitherto the priests had onely made entrance upon their office in the court of the priests Now Moses went with Aaron into the tabernacle that he might there instruct him concerning the service he was there to perform both about the lights the table of shew-bread and the altar of incense And the glory of the Lord appeared unto all the people That is somme visible signe of Gods glory and favour as by the cloud Exod. 16. 10. Vers 24. And there came a ●ire out from the Lord and consumed upon the altar the burnt-offering and the fat That is either from heaven as 2. Chron. 7. 1. or else out of the tabernacle Which when all the people saw they shouted and fell on their faces With astonishment and joy giving thanks for this signe of Gods favour and of his accepting their sacrifices CHAP. X. Vers 1. ANd Nadab and Abihu the sonnes of Aaron took either of them his c●nser c. No doubt Moses had taught them and enjoyned them that after they had offered the sacrifices on the altar of burnt-offerings then they should go into the tabern●cle and there should light the lamps and burn incense on the altar of incense as God had commanded Exod. 30. 7. Aaron shall burn thereon sweet incense every morning when he dresseth the lamps he shall burn incense on it that is on the altar of incense but withall doubtlesse he had given them direction to use in this service onely the fire of the altar of burnt-offerings which was kindled by fire from heaven for though this be onely implyed covertly Levit. 6. 13. The fire shall ever be burning upon the altar it shall never go out yet I make no question but that it was more fully given them in charge as afterward again Levit. 16. 10. where direction is given for Aarons going into the most holy place He shall take a censer of burning coals of fire from off the altar before the Lord and his hands full of sweet incense beaten small and bring it within the vail But now Nadab and Abihu rashly and inconsiderately forgetting or neglecting their duty in this particular took some other ●ire in their censers that perhaps wherewith they had sod and dressed the ●lesh of their sacrifices and putting incense thereon to carry it and lay it upon the altar of incense and so offered strange fire before the Lord that is the fire which he
fruitfulnesse of the land wherein God had planted them whereof these severall boughs of goodly trees were a● evident signe Vers 43. That your generations may know that I made the children of Israel to dwell in booths c. S●e Exod. 12. 37. CHAP. XXIV Vers 2. Command the children of Israel that they bring unto thee pure oyl-olive c. This which is given here in charge to the Israelites is for the continuall supply both of lamp oyl and shewbread to wit that as they brought them at first so they must still be supplyed by them either therefore these things were provided by the civil magistrate out of the common s●ock or else rather ●hey were provided as were also the daily sacrifices and whatsoever else was offered in the name of the whole people out of the treasury of the temple into which therefore towards the supply of these things both the Princes and people did ordinarily cast in what they were willing to give So it is noted of Hezekiah 2. Chron. 31. 3. He appointed also the Kings portion of his substance for the burnt-offerings to wit for the morning and evening burnt-offerings and the burnt-offerings for the Sabbaths for the new Moons and for the set feasts and of the people Luke 21. 1. He saw the rich men casting their gifts into the treasury and a certain poore widow casting in thither t●o mites Vers 3. In the tabernacle of the congregation shall Aaron order it from the evening unto the morning c. Or his sonnes by his appointment See the note upon Exod. 25. 37. Vers 5. And thou shalt take fine floure and bake twelve cakes thereof These were the cakes of shewbread concerning which see the note upon Exod. 25. 23. The floure was provided at the common charge as is before said upon ver 1. and brought to the priests but the cakes were made and baked by the Levites of the family of Kohath as is evident 1. Chron. 9. 32. where it is said that some of the sonnes of the Kohathites were over the shew-bread to prepare it every Sabbath Vers 6. And shalt set them in two rows six on a row c. The common opinion is that those twelve cakes of shewbread representing the twelve tribes of Israel were not set one by another but six one upon another and six one upon another But because this way it cannot so properly be said that they were set in two orders or rows and because in the following verse there is order given for the putting of frankincense upon each row I rather think that they were set in order along the table six in one row and six in another Vers 7. And you shall put pure frankincense upon each row that it may be on the bread for a memoriall even an offering made by fire unto the Lord. For the incense was burned upon the altar when they took away the bread and was before-hand laid upon the bread as a signe that God would through Christ remember his people with thoughts of favour and gracious acceptance Vers 9. And it shall be Aarons and his sonnes and they shall eat it in the holy place That is after it had stood a week upon the table before the Lord. For it is most holy unto him of the offerings of the Lord c. Because of the incense which was burnt the bread was reputed most holy as if it had been of the offerings made by fire Vers 10. And the sonne of an Israelitish woman whose father was an Egyptian c. Thus by the providence of God in the party thus blaspheming and thus punished for it as is here related they were taught 1. How the curse of God doth usually follow the issue of such unlawfull mixtures as was this of an Egyptian with a● Israelite 2. How severe God must needs be against this sinne in his own genuine people who would not suffer it unpunished in one that was the sonne of a stranger by the fathers side The inserting of this story in this place makes it more then probable that it was done whilst they were yet in the desert of Sinai even whilst the Lord was giving these Laws to Moses which are before mentioned as is expressed in the next chapter ver 1. Whether the Egyptian had this sonne by Shelomith in marriage or by fornication we cannot say but that this their sonne the blasphemer had embraced the religion of the Israelites it is very likely both because he came away with them out of Egypt and also because he is here said to have gone out amongst the children of Israel which implies more then his going in their company namely that he went out amongst them as one of them And this sonne of the Israelitish woman and a man of Israel strove together in the camp This of his striving is expressed to let us know that a blasphemer though provoked is not therefore to be excused Vers 11. And the Israelitish womans sonne blasphemed the name of the Lord and cursed His sinne I conceive was not rash vain and unadvised mentioning Gods name either in swearing cursing the man with whom he was to contend or otherwise but of an higher nature though even these are blasphemy even some execration or reprochfull speeches uttered in his fury directly against God as if for instance we should suppose this that in the heat of contention the Israelite upbraiding him with his idolatrous father and denying him to be a true member of the Church of God he should thereupon speak scornfully and opprobriously of the God of Israel slighting the priviledge of being one of his people Some such blasphemy I conceive this was and that because the Law which God gave them upon this occasion speaks of cursing God ver 15. Whosoever curseth his God shall bear his sinne not cursing in Gods name but directly and expressely of cursing God And they brought him unto Moses c. According to the order mentioned Exod. 18. 26. The hard causes they brought unto Moses Vers 14. Let all that heard him lay their hands upon his head That is those that heard him were to come forth and laying their hands upon his head to give in evidence against him and so thereupon he was to be condemned and the congregation was to stone him Now this ceremony of the witnesses laying their hands upon his head was 1. to signifie that they did charge this sinne upon him and approve of the punishment that was to be inflicted for it 2. that having witnessed nothing but the truth they were free from his death but his bloud must be upon his own head 3. to imply that he was to be sacrificed as it were to the justice of God for as those that brought any sacrifice to the tabernacle were to lay their hand upon the head of the sacrifice thereby signifying their desire and faith that the death of that sacrifice might and should satisfie the justice of God in their behalf so here the laying
was removed But the text resolves us not Vers 41. But on the morrow all the congregation of the children of Israel murmured against Moses c. The very men whose lives Moses had saved the day before by praying to the Lord for them do now murmur against him and it is expresly noted that this they did on the morrow after they had seen that fearfull judgement that fell upon Korah Dathan and Abiram with all the men of their conspiracy thereby to intimate their horrible wickednesse that after the sight of so strange and fearfull a judgement they durst so immediately again make an insurrection against Moses charging him with the death of those rebells and that under the name of the people of the Lord ye have killed say they the people of the Lord when it was so evident that they were destroyed by the immediate hand of God as wretches not worthy to be numbred amongst Gods people Vers 42. And it came to passe when the congregation was gathered against Moses and against Aaron that they looked toward the tabernacle of the congregation That is Moses and Aaron looked to God as having now no other refuge or shelter to fly to And behold the cloud covered it and the glory of the Lord appeared This signe of Gods having somewhat to say to them for at such times the cloud descended stayed the rage of the people and saved Moses and Aaron Vers 46. Take a censer and put fire therein from off the altar c. No doubt the same spirit of God that informed him the plague was begun directed him to this course of offering incense which otherwise might onely be offered in the tabernacle for the staying of it yea and happely that Aarons offering incense might put the people in mind to pray unto the Lord whereof the incense was a signe Vers 48. And he stood between the dead and the living and the plague was stared That is as a mediatour be interposed himself by his intercession to stay the plague from passing any further and to save those from death that were not yet struck with this judgement of God yet it may be probably thought that this plague did not scatter it self through the whole congregation but beginning in one place did like a fire runne along upon those still that were next adjoyning and if it were thus even literally we may understand this place that Aaron set himself in that place where he was betwixt the dead and those that were not yet smitten as it were exposing himself to the wrath of God in the peoples behalf whereby it must needs be the more evident that those who were preserved were preserved by virtue of that atonement which he now made for them And herein was Aaron a type of Christ our Mediatour who made intercession for transgressours See Esa 53. 12. And he bare the sinnes of many and made intercession for the transgressours Luke 23. 34. Father forgive them for they know not what they do Vers 49. Now they that dyed in the plague were fourteen thousand and seven hundred c. What the plague was is not expressed but to this some apply that of the Apostle 1. Cor. 10. 10. Neither murmur ye as some of them also murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer Vers 50. And Aaron returned unto Moses unto the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation Both to acquaint Moses how he had sped and to return thanks unto the Lord who had so graciously accepted the work of his hands CHAP. XVII Vers 2. Speak unto the children of Israel and take of every one of them a rod c. No doubt the Lord saw that notwithstanding his severe proceeding against those that mutined against Aaron yet the hearts of many amongst them were not sufficiently wrought upon but were still rising against this dignity of Aaron and therefore the Lord in wonderfull mercy by this ensuing miracle labours to overcome their rebellious hearts Now to this end he enjoyns Moses to take of each Prince of the tribes a rod or staff such as men did use ordinarily to carry in their hands as we reade of such a rod that Moses used to go with Exod. 4. 2. And the Lord said unto him What is that in thine hand And he said A rod or rather such as the Princes did use to carry in their hands as the signe of their dignity Numb 21. 18. The Princes digged the well the nobles of the people digged ●t by the direction of the law-giver with their staves for a rod or staff in the hand of governours was a signe of their power and authority from God See Psal 110. 2. The Lord shall send the rod of thy strength out of Zion rule thou in the midst of thine enemies and Jer. 48. 16 17. The calamity of Moab is near to come and his affliction hasteth fast All ye that are about him bemoan him and all ye that know his name say How is the strong staff broken and the beautifull rod and thus the very signe of their authority becomes a signe and witnesse against them that the priesthood belo●ged not to them but to Aaron onely Vers 2. Of all their Princes according to the house of their fathers twelve rods There were twelve severall tribes and twelve Princes of each tribe a Prince and every Prince brought a rod with his name upon it whence to me it seems evident that there were twelve rods besides Aarons as is more fully expressed vers 6. Write thou every mans name upon his rod. Not the name of the Patriar●hs Reuben Simeon c. for we see that not Levies but Aarons name was written on his rod but the name of every Prince who was at present head of the tribe upon his own staff whence also it appears that there were twelve rods besides Aarons else if there were but one rod for the two tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh which of those two Princes names were written on their rod Vers 3. For one rod shall be for the head of the house of their fathers That is though I have distinguisht the tribe of Levi into two parts that of the priests the posterity of Aaron and that of the other Levites yet as in the other tribes there is but one rod for a tribe so must it be for the tribe of Levi and as the head or chief of every tribe hath his name written upon the rod of that tribe so shall Aarons name be written upon the rod of Levi whom I have set in the chief place that hereby my choice of him to serve in the priesthood may be fully made known Vers 4. And thou shalt lay them up in the tabernacle of the congregation before the testimony c. That is before the ark which is called the testimony because therein were kept the tables of the law called the testimony Exod. 25. 26. Either therefore they were to lay these rods in the holy place before the vail where the ark
atonement for him Though burnt-offerings were usually given in signe of thankfulnesse to God and so betokened a new creature and holy life Psal 51. 18 19. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Sion build thou the walls of Jerusalem Then shalt thou be pleased with sacrifices of righteousnesse with burnt-offering and whole burnt-offering and Gen. 8. 20. And Noah builded an altar unto the Lord and took of every clean beast and of every fowl and offered burnt-offerings on the altar yet they were also for atonement and remission of sinnes to wit generall sinnes Job 1. 5. And it was so when the dayes of their feasting were gone about that Job sent and sanctified them and rose up early in the morning and offered burnt-offerings according to the number of them all for Job said It may be that my sonnes have sinned c. whereas for speciall sinnes there was a speciall sacrifice and sinne-offering Levit. 4. Vers 5. And he shall kill the bullock before the Lord. That is the priest in the name of the offerer for this was usually the work of the priests and therefore Moses did it when he supplyed the priests office Exod. 29. 10 11. though sometimes the Levites also helped herein when there were not priests enough to do it 2. Chron. 25. 10 11. The priests stood in their places and the Levites in their courses and they killed the Passeover that is the Passeover-offerings and the priests sprinkled the bloud from their hands as being given of God to be assistant to the priests in such services Numb 8. 19. I have given the Levites as a gift to Aaron and to his sonnes to do the service of the children of Israel in the tabernacle of the congregation and to make an atonement for the children of Israel Now the sacrifice was killed to signifie the death of Christ Who was slain that he might redeem us to God by his bloud Revel 5. 9. and the mortifying of Gods people by the word and spirit and it was killed by the priest to signifie that Christ should offer up himself unto God as being both our priest and sacrifice and that there is no possibility for men to please God by any service they do him but onely in and through the mediation of Christ of whose priesthood the Leviticall priest was a type and figure As for the place where it was killed that may be gathered by the rule of Analogy from that which is expressed verse the 11. concerning the second sort of burnt-offerings namely that it was killed at the north-side of the altar And the priests Aarons sonnes shall bring the bloud and sprinkle the bloud c. And this was done in a large measure so that the corners of the altar were filled with bloud Zach. 9. 15. to teach the people that this bloud of their sacrifice should not be lost as spilt upon the ground but should be accepted of God as a propitiation for their sinnes as being a figure of the bloud of Christ which should be offered up to God and accepted by him in our behalf as for our reconciliation so also for our sanctification who are elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the bloud of Jesus Christ 1. Pet. 1. 2. Vers 6. And he shall flay the burnt-offering That is the priest for the flaying of the sacrifice was also ordinarily the work of the priest who had therefore the skinne for himself Levit. 7. 8. though upon extraordinary occasions as is before noted concerning killing the burnt-offerings even in this also the Levites sometime helped them 2. Chron. 29. 34. The priests were too few so that they could not flay all the burnt-offerings wherefore their brethren the Levites did help them Because the sacrifices were offered as I may say as a holy feast unto the Lord whence the altar is called the table of the Lord and the sacrifice offered thereon his meat Mal. 1. 12. therefore nothing but what was usually eaten by men was burnt upon the altar and hence it was that the skinne was alwayes flayed off Yet withall it is commonly held by Expositours that this flaying of the sacrifice did also signifie First the sufferings of Christ who being first stripped of his garments Matth. 27. 28 they did afterwards most shamefully intreat so that there was no beauty in him why men should desire him Secondly the afflictions of Gods people under the rage of cruell oppressours and persecutours Who as the Prophet speaks Micha 3. 3. eat their flesh and flay their skinne from off them And thirdly the mortification which God requires in those that give up their names to him even that They put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts Ephes 5. 22. Vers 7. And the sonnes of Aaron the priest shall put fire on the altar c. Here the Lord gives direction for the burning of these sacrifices by the inseriour priests enjoyning them first to put fire upon the altar Now because they were to use no strange fire in burning the sacrifices but onely that fire which was continually nourished upon the altar Levit. 6. 12 13. and which at first came down from heaven Levit. 9. 24. therefore by putting fire upon the altar is meant onely the laying of the fire together or laying it on again when they had laid it by for the clearing of the altar Secondly to lay the wood in order and then all the pieces of the sacrifices in order upon the wood which was so appointed because the discreet laying of the wood doth much conduce to the well burning of the fire And then lastly thus to burn all upon the altar The mistery of this might be twofold First to signifie the consecrating of Christ and his members by afflictions and sufferings for as he the Captain of our salvation was made perfect by sufferings Heb. 2. 10. so must his members also be ready alwayes through these fiery trials to enter into glory for every one shall be salted with fire and every sacrifice shall be salted with salt Mark 9. 49. Secondly to signifie that holy zeal whereby we should wholly give up our selves to God through the operation of Gods holy spirit which is often in the Scriptures compared to fire as Matth. 3. 11. He that cometh after me is mightier then I he shall baptize you with the holy Ghost and with fire for as Christ through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot unto God Heb. 9. 14. so likewise it is the spirit whereby we must be enabled to consecrate our selves to Gods service Ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth saith the Apostle Peter through the spirit 1. Pet. 1. 22. to which end we must not onely be carefull not to quench the spirit 1. Thess 5. 19. but also by prayer holy meditation and all other things conducing thereto we must do what we can
either first by way of acknowledgement that it was in his power to save or to destroy this people or secondly as a forcible argument to move the Lord to have mercy on them because they were the work of his hand and he gave them at first their life and being as the prophet pleads for mercy upon the same ground Esa 64. 8. O Lord thou art our father we are the clay and thou our potter and we all are the work of thine hand or thirdly to intimate why the Lord should not destroy all the co●gregation namely because he knew the hearts and spirits of them and was able therefore to distinguish betwixt those that were obstinately rebellious against the ●o●d an● those that we●e onely seduced by the rebels and drawn together onely to see wha● would be done Vers 25. And Moses rose up and went unto Dath●n and Abiram c. Here is no mention of Korah because he was appointed vers 16. to be with his censer amongst the other two hundred and fiftie of his con●piracy before the tabernacle of the Lord. But Dathan and Abiram when Moses sent to call them unto him vers 12 refused to come and therefore now Moses accompanied with the elders of Israel who were not of the conspiracy goes to them both to expostulate with them for this their rebellion and to denounce the judgement threa●ned Vers 26. Depart I pray you from the tents of these wicked men and touch nothing of theirs lest ye be consumed in all their sinnes That is remove your tents and get farre away from them and touch nothing of theirs and so shew your faith and repentance how certainly you believe that the● lie under the wrath of God how throughly you desire to clear your selves from having any hand in their wickednesse by refusing to touch any thing of theirs as judging all they have unclean execrable and therefore to perish with them Vers 27. So they gat up from the tabernacle of Korah Dathan Abiram on every side The tabernacle of Korah who was of the Levites was not in the same place with Dathan and Abirams whereby it seems probable that the earth opened in severall places which indeed must needs make the judgement of God the more evident And Dathan and Abiram came out c. This is added as an expression of their impudent madnesse when they saw the people ●lie from their tabernacles they come forth boldly and stand in the doores of their tabernacles as out-facing Moses and scorning the judgement which he had seemed to threaten Vers 28. And Moses said Hereby ye shall know that the Lord hath sent me to do all these works That is both the former in undertaking the government of the people in conferring the priesthood upon Aaron and his sonnes c. and the latter appointing Korah and his company to bring censers with incense c. Vers 3● And the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up That is Korah Dathan and Abiram the ring-leaders of the rebellion Many Expositours do rather think that Korah was consumed with those two hundred and fiftie men by fire that came out from the Lord. vers 35. But because the people fled from Korahs tabernacle vers ●7 and because it is here evident that Korahs tabernacle with all that appertai●●d ●o him was swallowed up in the earth but especially because chap. 26. 10. it i● s●id expressely that the earth swallowed up Dathan Abiram together with Korah I make no question but he was swallowed up in the earth It is true that Mo●es had ●●●●inted him vers 26. to be with his censer amongst the two hundred and fifty But having assembled them before the tabernacle and perceiving Moses and the Elders to go to Dathan and Abiram it seems he left the two hundred and fifty before the tabernacle and went also to his consederates to encourage and assist them in their confronting of Moses and so either with them or in his own tent was swallowed up And all the men that appertained unto Korah and their goods That is all that were of his family who were at that ti●e in his ta●e nacle for some of his sonnes died not in this destruction chap. 26. 11. Notwithstanding the children of Korah died not either because they joyned not i● their fathers sinne or because they repented and gave over or because they were not present in Korahs tabernacle Vers 37. Speak unto Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the priest that he take up the censers out of the burning c. These mutiners had sought to wrest the priesthood from the posterity of Aaron Eleazar therefore whose cause God had pleaded is imployed in making the censers a memoriall of Gods judgement on them And scatter thou the fire yonder That is without the court of the tabernacle both because happely it was strange fire and that this casting away of the fire might be an expression of Gods rejecting their service and abhorring their sacrifice For they are hallowed To wit because they had been offered before the Lord as is expressed in the following verse Things consecrated to God might not be turned to any other use in the time of the law God therein magnifying the holinesse of that place wherein were the visible signes of his presence yet it follows not hence that where things are given to superstitious use● but intentionally to God it shall be unlawfull for any authority to divert th●se things to civil uses no more then it follows that because under the law if any man did change the tithe of the heard or of the flock both it and the change thereof were holy to the Lord Levit. 27. 32. therefore now where tithes either by custome or law are made due to the minister if any man should fraudulently change the true tenth therefore both it and the change should be the ministers Vers 38. The censers of these sinners against their own s●uls let them make them broad plates for a covering of the altar This altar must needs be the altar of burnt-offerings and yet this was covered with plates of brasse before Exod. 27. 2. so that it is very questionable how the censers beaten into broad plates were a covering for this altar Some hold that it was before made with a frame like a table and boarded now about like a chest which boards were now covered with these plates others hold that it was onely overlayed with brasse before half way down from the top even to the grate within where the fire lay and now that the other parts were also plated with brasse others hold that these plates were fastened upon the other and that the lesse necessity there was of them the fitter they were to be memorials of their sinne But withall it is like they were so ordered that they were both a further ornament and defence to the wood against the fire yea why may not this also be meant of a covering for the top of the altar when it
2. And unleavened bread and cakes c. This meat-offering of bread and cakes was to be unleavened to signifie the sincerity and incorruption of Christ of whom all sacrifices were types and who is indeed the true bread of life John 6. 55. and secondly of all the sacrifices evangelicall which through him Christians do offer unto God and likewise the oyl wherewith they were mingled signified the pretious anointing of Gods spirit both in Christ and the faithfull 1. John 2. 27. But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you ●nd ye need not that any man teach you but as the same anointing teach●th you all things and is truth and is no lie c. Vers 2. Of wheaten floure shalt thou make them The best of the principle grain signifying the purity of Christ and all Evangelicall sacrifices Vers 4. And Aaron and his sonnes shalt thou bring and shalt wash them with water To wit out of the sanctified laver Exod. 30. 18. And this signified the holinesse that was required in these legall priests that were to be types of Christ Vers 7. Then thou shalt take the anointing oyl and poure it upon his head Here Moses is expressely commanded to poure the anointing oyl for the making whereof there is afterwards direction given Chap. 30. 23. c. upon the head of Aaron but in the two following verses where there is order given for the consecration of his sonnes there is no mention made of anointing them whence many Expositours conclude that onely the high priest Aaron was anointed with this oyl and not his sonnes yet because it is said Exod. 30. 30. Thou shalt anoint Aaron and his sons and Chap. 40. 14 15. Thou shalt bring his sons and cloth● them with coats and thou shalt anoint them as thou didst anoint their father that they may minister unto me in the priests office it is more then probable that at their first consecration both Aaron and his sonnes vvere anointed Indeed in succeeding times it is evident that onely the high priests vvere anointed and therefore Levit. 21. 10. he is distinguished from the inferiour priests hereby He that is the high priest among his brethren upon whose head the anointing oyl was poured But at this present consecration of the priests doubtlesse both Aaron and his sonnes vvere anointed And though vve cannot say that they vvere anointed by the pouring out of the oyl upon their heads as Aaron vvas yet it is hard on the other side to restrain their anointing to the sprinkling of the holy oyl upon them and their garments vvhereof mention is made Levit. 8. 30. And Moses took the anointing oyl and the blo●d which was upon the Altar and sprinkled it upon Aarons and upon his sonnes garments with him c. Vers 10. And thou shalt cause a bullock to be brought c. Which vvas to be a sinne-offering for the priest vers 14. But the flesh of the bullock and his skin and his dung thou shalt burn with fire without the camp it is a sinne-offering And Aaron and his sonnes shall put their hands upon the head of the bullock In vvhich rite by the hand of faith they disburthened themselves of their sinnes and laid them upon the head of the sacrifice that is upon Christ Isa 53. 6. God hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all Vers 11. And thou shalt kill the bullock before the Lord c. Thus till Aaron and his sonnes were fully consecrated for the service of the priesthood Moses himself did by extraordinary warrant from god do the work of the priest in offering these sacrifices whence is that of the Psalmist Psal 99. 6. Moses and Aaron among his priests Vers 12. And thou shalt take of the bloud and put it upon the horns of the altar c. That is the brasen altar of the burnt-offerings which stood in the court yard This first sinne-offering differed from others that were offered for the sinnes of the priests In others the bloud was carried into the tabernacle and put upon the horns of the golden altar of incense Levit. 4. 7. And the priest shall put some of the bloud upon the horns of the altar of sweet incense c. here it was not so First because this was also to sanctifie the altar it self that it might be fit afterwards to sanctifie the sacrifices of the people whereby also was implyed the worthlesnesse of these things in themselves if they be not looked upon with reference to Christ Secondly because Aaron and his sonnes being not yet full priests it was done as was usuall at the sinne-offerings of the common ruler and private person See Levit. 4. 25 30. As for the doing of this with the finger this was used in all sinne-offerings Levit. 4. and onely in them teaching us the efficacy of Christs bloud for the purging away of sinne when it is so particularly presented unto God and applyed by his Spirit Heb. 9. 12 13 14. Neither by the bloud of goats and calves but by his own bloud he entred once into the holy place having obtained eternall redemption for us For if the bloud of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge our conscience from dead works to serve the living God And indeed the finger of God Luk 11. 20. is expounded to be the Spirit of God Matth. 12. 28. And poure all the bloud beside the bottome of the altar It is likely that it was poured out at the bottome of the altar on the inside and so it might be much consumed with the continuall heat of the fire and this signified the full price that should be paid for our redemption Vers 13. And thou shalt take of the fat that covereth the inwards c. By the ●at may be meant the grossenesse of our nature in all the faculties and powers of the soul the understanding in the heart the angry motion in the liver the concupiscence in the kidneyes or reins which being all corrupted are therefore to be purged by the fire of the Spirit and so to be offered unto God But the plainer reason of this ceremony I conceive to be that the people might be taught highly to esteem the worship of God by this direction of giving him the best of the sacrifices Vers 14. But the flesh of the bullock and his skinne and his dung thou shalt burn without the camp c. Thus it was done whereever bullocks were offered for a sinne-offering Levit. 4. and when the bloud was carried into the tabernacle Levit 6. 30. No sinne-offering whereof any of the bloud is brought into the tabernacle of the congregation to reconcile withall in the holy place shall be eaten it shall be burnt in the fire It was to imply how detestable the sinne was which was as it
and keep the charge of the Lord that ye die not and were every day to be consecrated with the same sacrifices and ceremonies as they had been the first day as methinks it is evident Levit. 8. 34. As he hath done this day so the Lord hath commanded to do c. And the continuance of these solemnities seven dayes signified 1. that perfect holinesse which should be in Christ and 2. that the whole course of the priests lives should be consecrated to Gods service See Exod. 12. 15. Vers 31. And seethe his flesh in the holy place That is in the courtyard of the Sanctuary at the doore of the tabernacle for there it was both boyled and eaten Levit. 8. 31. And Moses said unto Aaron and his sonnes Boil the flesh at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation and eat it with the bread c. See Exod. 28. 43. Vers 33. But a stranger shall not eat thereof c. That is none but themselves in other peace-offerings the offerer did eat of it here was no offerer but the priest Vers 34. Then thou shalt burn the remainder with fire Which was done 1. to maintain the peoples reverence toward them by letting them see that they were not to be usedbut in holy uses 2. to prevent the superstitious abuses of them Some peace-offerings might be eaten the next day Levit. 7. 16. But if the sacrifice of his offering be a vow or a voluntary offering it shall be eaten the same day that he offereth his sacrifice and on the morrow also the remainder of it shall be eaten Onely those which were offered for a thanksgiving were to be eaten the same day whereby it may seem that these of the priests were principally for that end See Exod. 12. 10. Vers 35. Seven dayes shalt thou consecrate them See the note above upon ver 30. Vers 36. And thou shalt offer every day a bullock for a sinne-offering for atonement c. This is meant of the same bullock mentioned before ver 10. which was offered for a sinne-offering for the priests Nor doth it follow that there were not two rammes also offered on each of the seven dayes of the priests consecration because it is here onely expressed that there should be a bullock offered on each of these seven dayes For this concerning the sinne-offering is onely repeated to shew that this sinne-offering was not onely for the priests but also to purifie the altar to make an atonement for the altar and to sanctifie it as it is expressed in the following verse Now an atonement is said to be made for the altar not because there was any sinne in the altar but because it was hereby now so perfectly purified and sanctified according to Gods institution that men might without sinne offer sacrifices thereon Vers 37. Whatsoever toucheth the altar shall be holy Some understand this clause thus that none but holy persons might touch the altar but rather it is meant of the sacrifices that were to be offered on this altar that whatsoever should according to Gods institution be offered thereon should be accepted as holy to the Lord the altar sanctifying the sacrifice that was laid thereon according to that which our Saviour saith Matth. 23. 19. Ye fools and blind whether is greater the gift or the altar that sanctifieth the gift Vers 38. Two lambs of the first year day by day continually This was the daily ordinary sacrifice and it was 1. to signifie that the death of Christ the true lambe was available to the Church from the first morning of time to the evening of the same 2. to shew what continuall need they had of reconciliation through Christs bloud applied by faith 3. to sanctifie the morning and evening prayers of the Church by the interceding sacrifices of the Mediatour Vers 40. And with the one lambe a tenth deal of flower mingled with the fourth part of an hin of beaten oyl c. By a tenth deal of flower is meant the tenth part of an ephah or bushell as is expressed Num. 28. 5. which is called an Omer Exod. 16. 36. and by the fourth part of an hin of oyl wherewith the floure was mingled and the fourth part of an hin of wine which was for a drink-offering a pint and an half of each is meant for the hin contained six pints and so the fourth part of an hin was a pint and half Now this meat-offering and drink-offering added to the dayly sacrifice was to shew that Christ by his oblation of himself for us becomes not onely redemption but also food gladnesse and chearing comfort to us yea all in all And the sweetnesse of these things floure and oyl and wine signified both how pleasing to God the sacrifice of Christ should be and also what care was required of Gods people to make their sacrifices by true faith and repentance wherein God delights a sweet savour unto God without which their externall sacrifices must needs be unsavory and such things as could not be likely to please him Vers 42. Where I will meet you to speak there unto thee That is in the tabernacle from the mercy-seat Exod. 30. 6. Before the mercy-seat that is over the testimony where I will meet with thee Wherein we have the reason given why it was called the tabernacle of the congregation namely because there the Lord did by glorious signes witnesse his presence and make known by Moses his will unto them meeting them and making a covenant with them See Exod. 40. 34. Levit 9. 13 24. Vers 43. And the tabernacle shall be sanctified by my glory That is the glorious signes of his glorious presence CHAP. XXX Vers 1. ANd thou shalt make an altar to burn incense upon c. Besides that the Lord did hereby adorn the service of the tabernacle to work the greater reverence in the hearts of the people and did teach them how carefull they should be of defiling their service with any unclean thing it did also signifie that by Christ not onely the whole legall service but particularly also the Saints prayers are wondrous sweet and pleasing to God Revel 8. 3. And another Angel came and stood at the altar having a golden censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne Psal 141. 2. Let my prayer be set forth before thee as incense Rev. 5. 8. And golden vials full of odours which are the prayers of the Saints Vers 2. The horns thereof shall be of the same See the notes upon Exod. 27. 2. Vers 3. And thou shalt overlay it with pure gold c. Shadowing Christ in both his natures his deity yielding glory to his humanity hence it is called the golden altar Numb 4. 11. as the other is called the brazen altar Exod. 38. 30. And thou shalt make unto it a crown of gold round about Which served as an edge to
There was a meat-offering that was alwayes to be joyned with their burnt-offerings for which direction is given elsewhere but here direction is given onely for voluntary meat-offerings and therefore it is said When any will offer a meat-offering c. neither is there any set quantity here appointed but it is left free to the offerer to bring what he pleased whereas for the meat-offering that was brought together with their burnt-offerings of the herd or of the flock there is an expresse law how much there should be of it to wit a tenth deal of flower mingled with the fourth part of an hin of oyl Numb 15. 4. Now these voluntary meat-offerings were for the same end that the burnt-offerings were both to make atonement for them and also to testi●ie their consecrating of themselves to God but withall particularly they were by way of acknowledgement that all their provision they had of his bounty So then the meat-offering signified First Christ his oblation of himself of which the Apostle speaks Ephes 5. 2. Christ hath loved us and given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour and again Heb. 10. 8 9 10. When he said Sacrifice and offering and burnt-offerings and offering for sinne thou wouldst not neither hadst pleasure therein which are offered by the law Then said he Loe I come to do thy will O God! He taketh away the first that he may establish the second By the which will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Secondly Christians wonne to God by the Gospell and then consecrated to his service Esay 66. 20. They shall bring all your brethren for an offering to the Lord out of all nations to my holy mountain Jerusalem saith the Lord as the children of Israel bring an offering in a clean vessel into the house of the Lord. Thirdly all our Evangelicall sacrifices of prayer and praysing God with other services done to the Lord and to his saints for his sake Mal. 1. 11. In every place incense shall be offered unto my name and a pure offering And last of all more particularly their acknowledgement of Gods bounty in all the food they injoyed and therefore it was that in all these meat-offerings they are appointed to bring fine slowre without any mixture of branne to signifie the purity of all Evangelicall sacrifices He shall poure oyl upon it and put frankincense thereon The oyl poured upon the flowre figured the graces and comfort of the holy Ghost whereby we serve God with a willing mind and a chearfull spirit Ye have an unction from the holy one saith the Apostle speaking of this oyl of Gods spirit 1. John 2. 20. and the sweetnesse both of the oyl and frankincense signified how sweet and acceptable their services were unto God in and through the mediation of Christ who hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Ephes 5. 2. whence it was that the Prophet told the Jews that their incense was in vain when God regarded not their sacrifices Jer. 6. 20. To what purpose cometh there to me ●ncense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre countrey your burnt-offerings are not acceptable nor your sacrifices sweet unto me Vers 2. And the priest shall burn the memoriall of it upon the altar That is the handf●ll which he had taken out of the meat-offering which should in stead of all put God in mind which is spoken of God after the manner of men of all this offering which the offerer had given to the Lord and of the covenant which he had made to accept it and withall be a memoriall to the offerer that he acknowledged all the store he had to be from God and therefore to be consecrated wholly to his service and that God would take in good part the offering he had now brought him Vers 3. And the remnant of the meat-offering shall be Aarons and his sonnes To eat the same in the Sanctuary Levit. 6. 16. And the remainer thereof shall Aaron and his sonnes eat with unleavened bread shall it be eaten in the holy place in the court of the tabernacle c. It is a thing most holy of the offerings of the Lord made by fire And therefore onely to be eaten by the priests that offer it Of other offerings others might eat but of the most holy things whereof part was burnt on the altar onely the priests Vers 4. And if thou bring an oblation of a meat-offering baken in the oven These were prepared and baked within the Sanctuary as it seems by Ezekiel 46. 20. This is the place where the priests shall boil the trespasse-offering and the sinne-offering where they shall bake the meat-offering and 1. Chron. 23. 28 29. Their office was to wait on the sons of Aaron c. both for the shew-bread and for the fine flowre for meat-offerings and for the unleavened cakes and for that which is baked in the pan and for that which is fried It shall be an unleavened cake of fine flowre mingled with oyl or unleavened wafers anointed with oyl See the notes upon Exod. 29. 2. and upon the 11. verse of this chapter Vers 11. No meat-offering which ye shall bring unto the Lord shall be made with leaven This must be understood onely of these voluntary oblations part whereof was to be burnt upon the altar for with some eucharisticall or thank-offerings they might bring leavened cakes Levit. 7. 13. as also in the first-fruits Levit. 23. 17. but these were not burnt upon the altar And where leaven was not to be used in the oblation the part remaining the priests might not eat with leaven Levit. 6. 16. because part of the offering was burnt upon the altar Now leaven was thus generally forbidden First to put them still in mind of their deliverance out of Egypt a type of their redemption by Christ Secondly to teach them to worship God as he had appointed and to know that all humane devices therein are an abomination to God Thirdly to shew the perfect purity of Christ in whom there was not the least leaven of sinne and the sincerity that must be in our evangelicall sacrifices for leaven signifieth sinne of all sorts in doctrine and manners distastfull to God and infectious to men Luke 12. 1. Beware ye of the leaven of the Pharisees which is hypocrisie 1. Cor. 5. 8. Let us keep the feast not with old leaven neither with t he leaven of malice and wickednesse but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth For ye shall burn no leaven nor any hony in any offering of the Lord made by fire Not onely leaven but hony also is forbidden First because it hath a kind of leavening nature Secondly the more fully to exclude all humane devices in Gods worship the sweetnesse of hony might be a pretence of mixing it with their sacrifices when neither
flesh Vers 6. And sprinkle of the bloud seaven times before the Lord c. A mysticall number signifying the full satisfaction that was given to God and the full and perfect cleansing of sinne by the sprinkling of the bloud of Jesus Heb. 9. 13 14. For if the blo●d of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctisieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ c. purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God and that our sinnes need much purgation Psalm 51. 2. Wash me throughly from mine iniquities and cleanse me from my sinne Vers 11. And the skin of the bullock and all his flesh c. In other sinne-offerings after the fat was offered upon the altar the remainer of the sacrifice was eaten by the priests chap. 6. 26. The priest that offers it for sinne shall eat it in the holy place shall it be eaten but in the sinne-offering for the priest here another order is given and so likewise in the sinne-offering for the whole congregation vers 21. because there the pries●s were included with the rest to wit that it should be wholly carried forth without the camp and burnt there whence is that law chap. 6. 30. that no sin-offering should be eaten whereof any of the bloud was brought into the tabernacle of the congregation to reconcile withall in the holy place which was onely done in the sinne-offering for the priest and for the congregation but that they should be burnt with fire The literall reason of this doubtlesse was because the offerer himself might not eat of the sinne-offering and in these sinne-offerings the priest himself was the offerer either solely by himself as here or jointly with the rest of the people as in the sinne-offering for the whole congregation but withall assuredly there was a mystery in it for first hereby they we●e taught how detestable a thing sinne is especially the sinnes of sacred persons and common sinnes of a whole Church and people which here were laid as it were upon the bullock that was carried forth out of the camp 2. It signified that Christ the true sinne-offering should be carried out of Jerusalem to suffer as the Apostle himself saith to shew the meaning of this ceremony Heb. 13. 11 12. The bodies of those beasts whose bloud is brought into the Sanctuary by the high priest for sin are burnt without the camp Wherefore Jesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the gate 3. To teach us that by Christs sufferings our sinnes are perfectly forgiven cast as it were out of doores and removed farre away from us As for the person that was to carry forth this bullock for a sinne-osfering without the camp and to burn him there though the words in the 12. vers may seem to have reference to the priest that offered the sinne-offering The whole bullock shall he carry forth without the camp c. yet the meaning onely is that he should see it were done not that he should do it himself and so become unclean thereby as may appear by what is said in another place that is parallel vvith this chap. 16. 27 28. Vers 13. And if the whole congregation of Israel sinne through ignorance c. That is if the vvhole congregation shall of mere ignorance or infirmity vvhich is a kind of ignorance or errour because such as sinne thus are for the time as men blinded carried avvay vvith the strength of their corruptions shall do any thing that is evil and either not take any notice of it or not lay to heart the evil they have done after they come to knovv it or to be touched in conscience for it they shall offer a sinne-offering for their atonement vvhere by the vvay it is vvorth the noting that the vvhole assembly of particular Churches may erre Vers 14. When the sin which they have sinned against it is known then the congregation shall offer a young bullock c. In Numb 15. 24. the Israelites are injoyned to bring a kid of the goats for a sinne-offering for the sinne of the vvhole congregation but that vvas onely for the sinne of omitting any of those ceremoniall duties there injoyned them but this is more generall for all sin vvhatsoever vvhich you may see more fully explained in the note upon that place Vers 20. And he shall do with the bullock as he did with the bullock for a sinne-offering c. That is the bullock for the priests sinne-offering vvhereof before the first bullock as it is called vers 21. Vers 22. When a ruler hath sinned c. and is guilty or if his sinne wherein he hath sinned come to his knowledge c. That is vvhen any civil magistrate hath sinned vvhether he be presently struck vvith an acknovvledgement of his guilt or vvhether his sinne be aftervvards by any means discovered to him so soon as he comes to the knovvledge of it he shall bring his sinne-offering Vers 24. And he shall lay his hand upon the head of the goat and kill it in the place c. That is on the Northside of the altar See Levit. 1. 11. Vers 25. And the priests shall take of the bloud of the sinne-offering with his finger and put it upon the horns of the altar c. The bloud of this sinne-offering for the ruler as likewise that for the common people why was it not as in the former carried into the tabernacle sprinkled before the vail and upon the altar of incense surely because the sinne of the priest and congregation was more hainous then that of the ruler therefore was there a more solemn manner of atonement appointed for their sin then for the rulers or the private persons Vers 26. And he shall burn all his fat upon the altar c. The remainer was eaten by the priests See Levit. 6. 26. whereas the remainer of the sin-offerings for the priest and congregation were burnt without the camp for the reason above shown in the note upon vers 11. Vers 27. And if any one of the common people sinne through ignorance c. That is either Israelite or stranger that is joyned unto them See Numb 15. 15. Vers 30. And the priest shall take of the bloud thereof with his finger and put it upon the horns of the altar c. See the note vers 25. Vers 32. And if he bring a lambe for a sinne-offering c. This sacrifice is spoken of apart from the former of the goat because of the difference in the fat that was burned which was not wholly the same in a lambe as it was in a goat See the note upon chap. 3. 9. CHAP. V. Vers 1. ANd if a soul sinne and hear the voice of swearing and is a witnesse whether he hath seen or known of it c. In this chapter some instances are given of sinnes committed by private persons
burning upon the altar all night unto the morning c. Not onely all day but all night also for as the morning burnt-offering burnt till the evening so the evening burnt-offering burnt all night untill the morning And the fire of the altar shall be burning in it That is shall be nourisht continually Vers 10. And the priest shall put on his linen garment c. That is not onely the linen breeches but also the linen coat And take up the ashes which the fire hath consumed with the burnt-offering c. Ashes are said to be consumed when the wood and sacrifices are consumed and turned to ashes as meal is said to be ground when the corn by grinding is turned to meal Esai 47. 2. Take the milst●ne and grind meal And he shall put them besides the altar See the Notes upon Levit. 1. 16. Vers 11. And carry forth the ashes without the camp unto a clean place The contrary is said to●ching the stones and dust of a leprous house Levit. 14. 40 41. Then the priest shall command that they ●ake the stones in which the plague is and they shall cast them into an unclean place without the city c. Becau●e these came from the Lords holy house therefore they were to be laid in a clean place where no dead carkases dung or other filth was laid Vers 12. And the fire upon the altar shall be burning in it c. That so the ●ire which first came from heaven might in a m●nner by the continuall supply of wood be still preserved upon the altar which might signifie 1. the excluding of all humane devices in Gods worship wherein nothing is allowed but is given by direction from heaven And secondly that no sacrifice is accepted with God but what is offered by the spirit that fire from heaven Matth. 3. 11. He shall baptize you with the holy Ghost and with fire And withall the continuing of this fire which at first came from heaven to testifie Gods favourable acceptance of that sacrifice was to teach them that as at first so still he did continually accept of their sacrifices and service as long as they did it according to the direction of his law And the priest shall burn the wood on it every morning Questionlesse they laid on wood upon the altar to maintain the fire thereon not onely in the morning but all the day long especially at even when the evening burnt-offering was to be burnt upon the altar onely there is a particular direction here for laying on wood in the morning because then having cleansed the altar and taken away the ashes they made the fire anew Vers 16. And the remainer thereof shall Aaron and his sonnes eat The males onely because these things being most holy might not be touched but by consecrated persons With unleavened bread shall it be eaten in the holy place That is in the co●rt of the Sanctuary for so it is explained concerning the sinne-offering verse 26. In the holy place shall it be eaten in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation Other holy things as the tithes and first-fr●its and the shoulder and breast of the peoples peace-offerings c. might be eaten elsewhere and the priests daughters were to have a share therein Numb 18. 11. The heave-offering of their gift with all the wave-offerings of the children of Israel I have given them unto thee and to thy sonnes and to thy daughters with thee by a statute for ever every one that is clean in thy house shall eat of it But those things that were most holy to wit the priests portion of all sacrifices whereof part was burnt upon the altar were onely to be eaten by Aaron and his sonnes and that in the holy place 1. That by their eating in Gods presence they might be put in mind to use these holy things with all sobriety 2. To put them in mind of that singular purity and holinesse which God required in them that were honoured above the people and 3. To signifie perhaps that none but those within Gods holy Church shall have any benefit by Christ As for this charge not to eat it with leavened bread see the note upon chap. 2. 11. Vers 20. This is the offering of Aaron and his ●onnes c. That is this is the offering that Aaron shall offer unto God in the d●y 〈◊〉 he is an●inted and which his sonnes successively that shall come to be high prie●●s shall offer unto the Lord in the day that they are anointed for it is evident that this meat-offering i● appointed for the high priest onely for he onely was anointed in succeeding 〈◊〉 as is shown before upon Exod. 29. 7. to wit Aaron for the present and that son of his successively that should be anointed high priest in his stead as it is expressed ve●se 22. The tenth part of an Ephah of fine flowre for a meat-offering perpetuall c. That is ever to be offered when any of them came to be high priests Vers 23. For every meat-offering for the priest shall be wholly burnt The priests eating of the sinne-offering sigured the bearing of the sinners iniquity Levit. 10. 17. but because no priest being a sinner could make atonement for himself therefore his meat-offering might not be eaten but is all burnt on the altar to teach him to expect salvation not by himself but onely by Christ Vers 26. The priest that offereth it for sinne shall eat it Except in the case mentioned verse 30. when the bloud thereof was carried into the tabernacle Vers 27. And when there is sprinkled of the bloud thereof upon any garment thou shalt wash c. viz. casually Now these ordinances peculiar onely to the sinne-offering because that in speciall sort figured Christ who was made sinne for us shadowed the contagion of sinne and our care to cleanse our selves by repentance and faith Vers 28. But the earthen vessell wherein it is sodden shall be broken and if it be sodden in a brasen pot c. Because the liquour wherein the sin-offering was sodden might soak into an earthen pot therefore that must be broken the rather because the losse of breaking it was not great but if it were sod in an iron or brasse pot that was onely to be scoured and rinsed all which was still to shadow forth the contagion of sinne Vers 30. And no sin-offering whereof any of the bloud is brought into the tabernacle c. Namely the sin-offering for the priest and the congregation See Levit. 4. 16. which were burnt without the camp and this might signifie that men cleaving to the legall priesthood and not seeking for the better priesthood of Christ could not be saved CHAP. VII Vers 1. LIkewise this is the law of the trespasse-offering c. For what transgressions the sinne-offering was appointed and for what the trespasse-offering it is hard to determine Some think the trespasse-offering was for smaller sinnes but I rather conceive
of oyl is commonly thought to be half a pint the three tenth deals of fine flowre were for accessory meat-offerings for the three sacrifices afore mentioned Indeed in the fifteenth of Numbers meat-offerings are appointed onely for burnt-offerings and peace-offerings nor do we any where reade of a meat-offering that was to be joyned either with sinne-offering or trespasse-offering And besides where an offering of fine flowre is injoyned for a sinne-offering Levit. 5. 11. to wit to be offered apart by it self not as accessory to any other sacrifice they were forbidden to put any oyl upon it whereas these are appointed to be mingled with oyl And therefore it seems these sacrifices for the cleansing of the leper had peculiar rites and were not in all things performed according to the ordinary way of other sacrifices Vers 12. And wave them for a wave-offering See the notes upon Exodus 29. 24. Vers 1● And he shall slay the lamb in the place c. See the note upon Levit 1. 11. and upon Levit. 7. 7. Vers 14. And the priest shall put it upon the tip of the right ear c. Hereby was signified that by virtue of Christs bloud the leper was now restored to his former freedome of entercourse and commerce with others as also that the whole man was to be renewed and consecrated to Gods service See the note upon Exod. 29. 20. Vers 15. And the pr●est shall take some of the log of oyl The oyl in the hand of the priest fignified the spirit by Christ conveyed unto us Vers 16. And sprinkle of the oyl with his finger c. Figuring our consecra●ion to Gods service by the same spirit Vers 17. And the rest of the oyl that is in his hand shall the priest put upon the tip of the right ear c. This signified the sanctification of the whole man by the same spirit Vpon the bloud of the trespasse-offering That is upon the very same place where the bloud was sprinkled Vers 20. And the priest shall offer the burnt-offering To wit that other he-lamb mentioned vers 10. Now by these rites the lepers were to professe their thankfulnesse to God in and through Christ as for the cure of their leprosie so also for the remission of their sinnes which had brought that judgement upon them and for their sanctification by his spirit Vers 31. And the other for a burnt-offering with the meat-offering That is the meat-offering that was to accompany the turtle dove or young pigeon offered for the burnt-offering whereby it appears that even the smaller burnt-offerings of turtle doves had also their meat-o●ferings as well as the greater of lambs c. Vers 36. Then the priest shall command that they all empty the house c. The priest must before he goeth into the house to view the place in the house suspected of leprosie command all that are in the house to come forth and the reason is given that all that are in the house be not made unclean Whereby it is evident that though the house had indeed the plague of leprosie yet the inhabitants that were in the house were not rendred unclean thereby till the priest had pronounced it to be a leprosie but then all that came i●to the house were thereby unclean And so it seems therefore it was with men too that were infected with leprosie No man was unclean by being in the company of a leprous person till the priest had pronounced him to be a leper Vers 40. And they shall cast them into an unclean place without the citie That by the uncleannesse of the place they may be known to be unclean things that so ●o●emay be defiled thereby Vers 41. And he shall cause the house to be scraped c. To wit lest the plague of leprosie should be in any other part of the walls of the house and being hidden under the plaister should not be discovered CHAP. XV. Vers 3. WHether his flesh runne with his issue or his flesh be stopped from his issue it is his uncleannesse That is he shall for it be counted unclean The issue here spoken of which rendred men unclean is that which we call the running of the reins Now because this disease men have in a different manner for sometime their seed being of a thinne substance runs continually from them and sometimes again being of a thicker substance it slows not so freely forth bu● stops in the passage and so putrifies the place through which it should passe in both these cases they are declared to be unclean Now though by this legall pollution they were taught the filthinesse of all sinne whatsoever yet more especially I conceive it was to signifie that originall corruption and filthinesse of our nature which is conveyed unto us in our first conception by that very seed and substance whereof we are made Vers 4. Every bed whereon he lyeth that hath the issue is unclean These laws following shew the contagion of si●ne which defileth not onely men themselves but every thing besides which a wicked man hath to do with for unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure Tit. 1. 15. Vers 12. And every vess●ll of wood shall be rinsed in water That is of wood or any other such strong matter as silver copper brasse c. Vers 16. And if any mans seed of copulation go out c. This is not meant of the issue forespoken of nor when a man lyeth with a woman whereof vers 18. but of the seed of the healthfull issuing by reason of nightly dreams or any such accident whereof see Deut. 23. 10. Vers 19. And wh●soever toucheth her shall be unclean c. To wit every one that is of years of discretion and so fit to be ordered by this law For it is not likely that infants that lay in the arms and sucked on the breasts of their mothers when they were in this condition were rendred unclean thereby Vers 24. And if any man lie with her at all c. To wit ignorantly for if he did it presumptuously not pollution but cutting off was his punishment Levit. 20. 18. And if a man shall lie with a woman having her sicknesse and shall uncover her nakednesse he hath discovered her fountain and he hath uncovered the fountain of her bloud aud both of them shall b● cut off from among the people Yet some conceive that this place is onely meant of lying in the same bed with a woman and not of carnall copulation CHAP. XVI Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake unto Moses after the death of the two sonnes of Aaron c. That is upon that occasion lest they should again endanger themselves by entring into the most holy place as before by offering strange fire and so also within a short time after that happened for it doth not follow that because the Lord upon that occasion gave this ensuing charge therefore the laws set down in the former chapters are transposed and
is his sister and therefore he might not uncover her nakednesse Vers 10. The nakednesse of thy sonnes daughter c. And so other of further descent how much more then his next daughter though she be not named Vers 11. The nakednesse of thy fathers wives daughter c. That is the daughter of thy father not the daughter of thy mother See above vers 9. Vers 16. Thou shalt not uncover the nakednesse of thy brothers wife To wit except in that speciall case when a man deceasing without children his nex● broth●r by an expresse exception of the law Deut. 25. was to marry the wife of the deceased and to raise up ●ee● unto his brother as Onan the so●ne of Judah did Gen. 38. 8. Vers 18. Neither shalt thou take a wife to her sister to vex her c. This is all one with one wife to another as it is translated in the margin of our Bibles as Ezek. 1. 9. the wings of the beast are said to touch a woman to her sister as it is directly in the Hebrew words that is one another Though the ordinary exposition be that this is meant of sisters that man having married any woman must not afterward marry her sister to vex her c. yet these reasons so farre sway me that I cannot but understand it of any two women First because incest with sisters is above forbidden vers 9. 11. Secondly because polygamie is no where else forbidden if not here unlesse to the King Deut. 17. 16. Thirdly because the following words cannot unlesse extremely forced be brought to agree with that exposition of sisters for would not the marriage of her husband with another woman vex her as much as with her sister happely more And why is it added in her life as if it were lawfull for a man to marry his wives sister after his wives decease those things winne me to think that it is meant of any two women Vers 19. Also thou shalt not approch unto a woman to uncover her nakednesse as long as she is put apart c. To wit though she be thy lawfull wife Vers 21. And thou shalt not let any of thy seed passe through the fire to Molech Molech was an idol worshipped by the Ammonites and other heathen called also Moloch Amos 5. 26. But ye have born the tabernacle of your Moloch and is thought of some to be the starre Saturn the highest or the Sunne the chief of the Planets thence called the starre of your God Amos 5. 26. And it is derived of Melech which signifies a Prince or King It is thought by many to b● the same idol that is ordinarily in Scripture called Baal which they gather by comparing together 2. Kings 23. 10. And he defiled Topheth which is in the valley of the children of Hinnom that no man might make his sonne or his daughter to passe through the fire to Molech Jer. 19. 5. They built also the high places of Baal to burn their sonnes with fire for burnt-offerings unto Baal c. chap. 7. 31. And they have built the high places of Tophet which is in the valley of the sonne of Hinnom to burn their sonnes their daughters in the fire c. chap. 32. 35. Now to this idol they caused their children to passe through the fire two wayes for some burned them to death or at least killed them and then burnt them on their altars for so it is said of Ahaz 2. Chron. 28. 3. He burnt incense in the valley of Hinnom and burnt his children in the fire c. and of the Israelites in generall Psal 106. 37 38. They sacrificed their sonnes and their daughters unto devils and shed innocent bloud But some onely made them to go through between two fires as a signe of their consecration This sinne is here forbidden amongst whoredomes and incests because as all idolatry is spirituall fornication so this especially because their seed was here given away unlawfully which i● therefore called a going a whoring after Molech Levit. 20. 3 5. But though this idol be here named yet under this the like wicked service to any idol is forbidden N●ith●r shalt th●u profane the name of thy God This is added as a reason why in the foregoing law they were forbidden to let their seed passe thorow the fire to Molech to wit because it would be a vild profanation of Gods holy name and that first in regard it would be an horrible vilifying of the Lord God to forsake him and yield such ●onour to such a base idol-god and secondly because horrible wickednesse in a people called by his name that is called the people and servants of God would be a dishonour to God and would cause the name of God to be blasphemed even among the Gentiles Vers 24. For in all these the Nations are defiled which I cast out before you That is with all these incestuous mixtures the Canaanites defiled themselves and so provoked me to cast them out of the land and therefore take you heed that you do not provoke me by the same sinnes Now hereby it is manifest that all the severall sorts of incest before mentioned are sinnes against the law and light of nature because the Lord abhorred the heathen that had no other law and punished them so severely for these very sinnes Vers 26. Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements The mention of Gods statutes here doth intimate what a shame it would be for them that had the light of the word to walk in these evil courses whereinto the heathen fell because they lived in darknesse CHAP. XIX Vers 3. YE shall fear every man his mother and his father Because the mother is usually most despised the Lord injoyns the fear of the mother in the first place And keep my Sabbaths Because the commandment for sanctifying Gods Sabbaths is directed to the fathers and mothers of the family who are to take care that children and servants profane not Gods holy day therefore the charge for fearing mother and father is here prefixt bfore this of sanctifying the Sabbath The meaning is that children and servants must have such an awfull fear of their superiours as willingly to be guided by them according to Gods word in the matter of sanctifying Gods Sabbaths and not to resist them in it Vers 6. It shall be eaten the same day ye offer it and on the morrow That is if it were a peace-offering for a vow or a freewill-offering otherwise if it were for a thanksgiving it was to be eaten the same day Levit. 7. 15. And the flesh of the sacrifice of his peace-offering● for thanksgiving shall be eaten the same day that it is offered he shall not leave any of it untill the morning And so that which was left of the one was to be burnt the second day and that which was left of the other upon the third which must needs make them more willing to call the poore to
as we may see chap. 2. 31. Thus the Sanctuary had the middest the most safe and honourable place the greatest camp went foremost the next in greatnesse went hindmost to defend it against enemies before and behind But the Lord himself was he that went before and was the rereward behind as the Prophet speaks Esai 52. 12. For the Lord will go before you and the God of Israel will be your rereward Vers 29. And Moses said unto Hobab the sonne of Raguel the Midianite Moses father in law c. Some conceive that it is Raguel the Medianite and not Hobab that is here called Moses father in law even the same that is elsewhere called Reüel Exod. 2. 18. and Jethro Exod. 3. 1. and that Hobab to whom Moses now spake being the sonne of this Raguel or Jethro was the brother in law of Moses who stayed still with Moses at mount Sinai after their father Reguel or Jethro was returned home to his own countrey Exod. 28. 27. But because Hobab is elsewhere expressely called according to our translation the father in law of Moses Judge 4. 11. it must needs be he also that is here also called Moses father in law even the same that is in Exodus called Jethro and Reüel and that Raguel the Midianite was his father as is noted before upon Exod. 3. 1. And if it be objected that Jethro the father in law of Moses departed from him before Exod. 18. 27. to this I answer as before in the note upon that place that though his going from Moses be mentioned there yet it was not till now that he left him when both Moses and the Israelites were to depart mount Sinai Vers 31. Leave us not I pray thee c. That is go not away from us or if thou goest away return again Though Moses had lived fourty years about these parts yet knowing the difficulties they were likely to meet with in their passage through the wildernesse he much desired the stay of Hobab with them who knew the countrey farre better then himself and might be a great help unto them and therefore he presseth him again to stay with them that he might be to them in stead of eyes that is that he might shew them how they might best advantage themselves in disposing their camp And indeed though the●e was no need of his help to lead them and shew them which way they should go because the pillar of the cloud and the ark went before them to lead them their way yet many other wayes Hobab might be helpfull to them as by telling them when they were to stay in any place where they might have water for their camp where there was most danger of being assayled by the neighbouring nations and in many other particulars whether Hobab yielded hereupon to stay with Moses it is not expressed yet because there is no mention made here of a second denyall it is generally conceived that he did stay But because it is expressely said Exod. 18. 27. that this Hobab or Jethro the father in law of Moses was dismissed by Moses and returned again into his own land it seems more probable that he did now return home to his countrey as is there said But yet that he returned again or at least that some of his posterity were deputed in his room to go along with the Israelites is most manifest and clear because his posterity dwelt afterwards amongst the Israelites in the and of Canaan as we may see Judg. 1. 16. And the children of the Kenite Moses father in law went up out of the cit●e of palmtrees c. and again Judges 4. 11. Heber the Kenite was of the children of Hobab the father in law of Moses Vers 33. And they departed from the mount of the Lord three dayes journey They travelled three dayes together without resting for because the cloud stayed not they might not stay which seems to have been the cause of their complaining chap. 11. ver 1. And the ark af the covenant of the Lord went before them in three dayes journey to search out a resting place for them The Hebrew word signifieth went in their faces or sight which it might do and yet be in the middest of the armies carryed amongst the other holy things by the sonnes of Kohath ver 21. and so the most expound it it went before them that is in their sight as their guide for when the cloud stayed then the priests stayed with the ark and upon the stay of the ark all the armies stayed But I see no reason why we may not think the ark went before in the forefront of their armies though the other holy things went in the midst as ver 21. to wit together with the cloud and that to search out a resting place for them a place convenient to pitch their tents where they might have water and pasture for their flocks c. CHAP. XI Vers 1. ANd when the people complained it displeased the Lord. The word in the originall here translated complained may also be rendred as it is in the margin were as it were complainers and so may intimate that they did onely secretly begin to murmur and mutter and not break forth into such an open complaint as afterwards they did at Kibroth Hattaavah when they lusted for meat Indeed many Expositours understand this and that afterwards mentioned ver 4. of one and the same murmuring which they say is first summarily set down here and afterwards more particularly related in the sequele of the chapter and especially because Psal 78. 19 20 21. the fire that now devoured the people is mentioned as the punishment of their lusting for flesh They said Can God furnish a table in the wildernesse Therefore the Lord heard this and was wroth so a fire was kindled against Jacob and anger also came up against Israel But in that Psalm it is evident that the severall passages of their murmuring are not related historically in order but many things are promiscuously inserted here and there However evident it is that the murmuring for flesh mentioned ver 4. was another from this because it is said here that they wept again and besides that was done at Kibroth Hattaavah this at Taberah The cause of their present complaining indeed is not expressed but in all likelyhood we may conceive it was because they were weary of following the ark three dayes journey through the wildernesse together without intermission whereof there was mention made in the latter end of the former chapter ver 33. And the fire of the Lord burnt among them That is a fire sent from God but whether it brake out of the earth or from the pillar of fire or were poured down upon them from heaven it is not expressed And thus their fiery tongues were punished with fire And consumed them that were in the uttermost parts of the camp This is aded to let us see how the whole army escaped when God sent a fire
stood within behind the vail or else in the most holy place before the ark for upon such extraordinary occasions we need not doubt but Moses used to go into the most holy place and evident it is that after they were bro●ght forth again and Aarons rod was found to flourish the rest continuing dry sticks or staves as they were before that was carryed into the most holy place and therefore the Apostle Heb. 9. 4. mentions Aarons rod that budded amongst those things that were within the vail and yet it is said to be returned to the place where they were all laid before vers 10. Bring Aarons rod again before the testimony However this laying of these rods up before the Lord was to signifie that it was referred to him to determine this controversie concerning the priesthood Vers 5. And I will make to cease from me the murmuring of the children of Israel That is in this particular concerning Aarons priesthood Vers 6. And the rod of Aaron was among their rods That is there being twelve rods brought for the twelve Princes of the twelve tribes which were it seems according to the custome of those times made of the almond tree for such Aarons was vers 8. that bloomed blossomes and yielded almonds they were all laid together and Aarons was put also amongst the other twelve Vers 8. And behold the rod of Aaron for the house of Levi budded c. Hereby the Lord did discover miraculously that he had chosen Aarons and his posterity to be the onely priests that should serve at his altar and withall the flourishing of this rod signified first the budding of Aarons posterity together with the flourishing glory and fruitfulnesse of the priesthood which continued in his posterity secondly the miraculous flourishing glory of Christs priesthood of which Aarons was a type to wit how he that rod out of the stemme of Jesse and branch that grew out of his root Esa 11. 1. though at first he was as a dry and withered s●ick so that there was no beauty nor comlinesse in him Esa 53. 2. and especially in his death and bur●all when he was indeed withered in the eye of reason without hope of recovery and dryed up like a potsheard Psal 22. 15. should yet suddenly sprout forth again to wit in his resurrection and so his priesthood should become an eternall priesthood and l●●e Aarons budding fruitbearing rod should bring forth fruit to man believing on him remission of sinnes righteousnesse and eternall li●e and by the preaching of the Gospel that flourishing rod or sceptre of righteousnesse should become glorious all the world over to the great joy of all those that have interest in him and thirdly that all those that in the dayes of the Gospel were truly set apart to teach the people as Aaron was though in themselves but dry and withered sticks yet by the speciall grace of God should bear and bring forth buds and fruit and that their fruit should remain John 15. 16. Vers 12. And the children of Israel spake unto Moses saying Behold we die we perish we all perish Being by this miracle fully convinced of their sinne and then calling to mind how severely God had punished this their murmuring against Moses and Aaron how some had been burnt with fire some swallowed up into the earth alive some consumed with the plague they are stricken with an apprehension of the like danger the first step to repentance and therefore cry out as men that might justly expect to be every one of them destroyed as they were indeed in danger to be presently taken away by some judgement had not the Lord been the more mercifull to them Vers 13. Whosoever cometh any thing near unto the tabernacle of the Lord shall die This is an amplification of their wofull condition to wit that though God should spare them now yet they should alwayes be in danger if they did never so little presse beyond the limits allowed them whosoever say they cometh any thing near that is nearer then they should and keep not off at their full distance wherein we may easily transgresse we see God will not spare them yea happely as men terrified are indeed wont to conceive their danger greater then it is they complain as if it would be perilous to come near the tabernacle at all Shall we be consumed with dying This may be a deprecation Shall we be consumed that is of thy mercie let us not be consumed for so questions are often used in earnest deprecations as Psal 85. 6. Wilt thou not revive us again that thy people may rejoyce in thee and Esa 64. 12. Wilt thou refrain thy self from these things O Lord wilt thou hold thy peace and afflict us very sore But I rather take it as a bemoaning of their condition CHAP XVIII Vers 1. THou and thy sonnes and thy fathers house with thee shall bear the iniquity of the Sanctuary Because of the peoples astonishment chap. 17. vers 12. Behold we die we perish we all perish the Lord here tells Aaron that he the priests and Levites must bear the iniquity of the Sanctuary that is that if any pollution came to it by the people they should answer for it and therefore it must be their charge to watch over it Thus the Lord shews himself reconciled and makes the priests watch a ground of appeasing the peoples both fear and envy And thou and thy sonnes with thee shall bear the iniquity of your priesthood That is shall be punished if the priesthood be polluted either by your selves or the Levites intruding upon it which your watch should prevent Vers 3. Onely they shall not come nigh the vessels of the Sanctuary and the altar that neither they nor you also die To wit for not preventing the errour of your brethren the Levites by your care Vers 7. Therefore thou and thy sonnes with thee shall keep your priests office for every thing of the altar and within the vail That is for all things that concern the altar of burnt-offerings and for all things that are to be done within the vail that is within the outer vail either in the holy or most holy place Vers 8. Unto thee have I given them by reason of the anointing c. That is for the office sake whereunto thou art anointed because I have separated thee from worldly employments to attend upon mine holy things therefore thou shalt have mine holy things to live upon Vers 9. Every oblation of theirs every meat-offering of theirs c. The particulars are here mentioned of the most holy things reserved from the fire that is the sacrifices whereof part was burnt upon the altar which were allotted to be the priests portion for their maintenance to wit oblations meat-offerings sin-offerings trespasse-offerings and this last is expressed thus every trespasse-offering of theirs which they shall render unto me because trespasse-offerings were brought as by way of recompence for some trespasse committed
up in that dry and barren place which was accordingly done and so thereupon the people sung that ensuing gratulatory song ver 17 18. wher●in with much joy and praise to God they acknowledged the miraculous manner of that wells springing up Spring up O well Sing ye unto it The Princes digged the well the nobles of the people digged it by the direction of the Lawgiver with their staves And this it seems was that renowned well called Beer-elim Esa 15. 8. that is the well of the mighty ones and might have a like spirituall signification as had before those waters that came out of the rock for as that rock was Christ 1. Cor. 10. 4. so this well might be a figure of him who is the fountain of the gardens a well of living waters Cant. 4. 15. secondly the waters springing from thence might signifie that saving doctrine and graces of Gods spirit which from Christ are derived unto the faithfull and are in them alwayes as a well of water springing up unto life everlasting John 4. 14. thirdly the Princes digging of this well with their staves might be a figure of the labour of governours to open and bring forth to the people the ordinances of God the word and the ministry thereof and fourthly the Israelites singing about this well might he a signe of that Christian joy whereof the Prophet speaks Esa 12. 3 4. With joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation and in that day shall ye say Praise the Lord c. Vers 21. And Israel sent messengers to Sihon king of the Amorites c. When they were to passe over the river Arnon mentioned vers 13. God had told them that they should destroy Sihon and possesse his countrey Deut. 2. 24 Rise ye up and passe over the river Arnon Behold I have given into thy hand Sihon the Amorite king of Heshbon and his land c. yet now out of the wildernesse of Kedemo●h Deut. 2. 26. they sent messengers to him doubtlesse not without Gods allowance to desire a peaceable passage through his countrey thereby to render him afterwards the more inexcusable when he was destroyed both in his own conscience and in the judgement of others that should hear of it Vers 22. We will not drink of the waters of the well See the note upon ●hap 20. 17. Vers 24. For the border of the children of Ammon was strong And therefore Sihon had not encroched upon their countrey as he had upon the Moabites at least not beyond the river Jabbok see Josh 13. 25. for this is not added as a reason why the Israelites made not warre upon them Gods command was a restraint sufficient for them Deut. 2. 19. And when thou comest nigh over against the children of Ammon distresse th●m not nor meddle with them c. Vers 25. And Israel took all these cities c. Destroying all the inhabitants Deut. 2. 34. And we took all his cities at that time and utterly destroyed all the men and the women and the little ones c. Vers 26. For Heshbon was the citie of Sihon the king of the Amorites c. Because Heshbon and the countrey adjoyning had been the possession of the Moabites and God had charged the Israelites not to meddle with their countrey Deut. 2. 9. therefore Moses doth largely prove from this place to the end of the 30. verse that both Heshbon and the countrey adjoyning was the possession of Sihon when the Israelites took it Sihon having taken it from the former king of the Moabites that is from him that was king before Balak that was at present their king chap. 22. 4. Concerning which see also what is noted before upon vers 13. Vers 27. Wherefore they that speak in proverbs say c. By proverbs in the Scripture are generally meant all wise and pithie sayings especially when they are grown to be in common use amongst men 1. Sam. 24. 13. As saith the proverb of the antients Wickednesse proceedeth from the wicked and secondly more particularly those are called proverbs first that are expressed with figurative words or by way of similitude as Ezek. 18. 2. What mean ye that ye use this proverb concerning the land of Israel The fathers have ●aten sowre grapes and the childrens teeth are set on edge secondly that are taken up as by-words by way of scorning and d●riding men as Deut. 28. 17. Thou shalt become an astonishment a proverb and a by-word among all nations and Hab. 2. 6. Shall not all these take up a parable and a taunting proverb against him and so consequently by those that speak in proverbs are meant here such as did compose or utter songs or ballads made by way of triumphing over some vanquished enemie and that because in such songs they used to scoff at those that were so vanquished and the severall passages of such songs were usually taken up afterwards as a proverb and by-word Now Moses to prove that Heshbon and the countrey adjoyning now taken by the Israelites had formerly been taken from the Moabites by Sihon alledgeth this proverbiall song which no doubt was first made and used by the Amorites by way of triumphing over the vanquished Moabltes and that the rather because the Israelites now might more justly and so happely did insult over the Amorites with the same proverbiall taunt wherewith they had before derided the Moabites Let the city of Sihon be built and prepared Implying that though Heshbon perished vers 30. being in Moabs hand yet now it should be more fairly and more strongly fort●fied being in Sihons hand and so also being applyed to the Israelites victory that though it were much defaced in Sihons hands yet now the Israelites would build it more fairly Vers 28. For there is a fire gone out of Heshbon a flame from the city of Sihon c. That is the fury of warre which was kindled and began in the subversion and laying waste of Heshbon brake out from thence and consumed the countrey of the Moabites as farre as Ar a chief city of theirs and the Lords of the high places of Arnon that is the princes priests and gods of the Moabites for all these may be comprehended under this word Lords even as farre as Arnon And hence it is that the prophet speaking of the vain confidence of the Moabites in the strength of Heshbon for the Moabites had then recovered this countrey again the Israelites being carryed captives into Assyria he threatens that those cities wherein they trusted should by the Chaldeans be first destroyed and in the words he useth doth manifestly allude to this taunting song of the Amorites when they conquered the Moabites here cited by Moses Jer. 48. 45. A fire shall come forth out of Heshbon and a flame from the middest of Sihon and shall devour the corner of Moab and the crown of the head of the tumultuous ones c. Vers 29. Wo unto thee O Moab thou art undone O people of
mixed people with them Exod. 12. 37 38. and they journey●d in severall troops and armies Vers 2. And Moses wrote their goings out according to their journeys by the commandment of the Lord. That is Moses by the commandment of the Lord wrote this following journall of the Israelites travels from Egypt to the land of Canaan wherein are set down not all the severall places the Israelites came to or all their severall removes from one place to another but all the severall stations of their journeys that is the severall places where they pitched their tents and abode for some time And this was done first the better thereby to assure posterity of this miraculous deliverance of their fathers out of Egypt and of the Lords leading them through the wildernesse to the land of promise this expresse description of the names of their severall stations being a strong evidence of the certainty of this story and s●condly that here in a short compasse as in a little map by the mention of the severall places where such things were done they might be put in mind of the rebellion of their fathers of Gods severity in chastising them for their rebellion but especially his goodnesse and faithfulnesse to the seed of Abraha● notwithstanding the many provocations wherewith they had provoked him to displeasure agains● them Vers 3. And they departed from Rameses in the first moneth c. Whither they assembled by direction of Moses from all parts of the land of Go●hen Vers 4. For the Egyptians buried all their first-born which the Lord had smitten amongst them This intimates the cause why the Egyptians did not at present oppose their going thence to wit because God had pulled down their pride by slaying their first-born Vpon their gods also the Lord executed judgement See the note upon Exod 12. 12. Vers 6. And they departed from Succ●th and pitched in Etham Here the Lord began first to go before them by day in a pillar of cloud and by night in a pillar of fire Vers 7. And they removed from Etham and turned again unto Pi-hahiroth c. A narrow passage between two ledges of mountains into which being entred Pharaoh overtook them with a mighty army and thought they could not now have escaped him but God divided the red sea which the Israelites passing the Egyptians assayed to follow them and were drowned Vers 8. And pitched in Marah Having travelled three dayes journey from the red sea through the wildernesse without any water and finding the waters here very bitter they began to mutiny against Moses but God sweetned the water with a tree Exod. 15. 23. Vers 11. And they removed from the red sea and encamped in the wildernesse of Sin So called from Sin a city in Egypt over against which this wildernesse lay Hither they came a just moneth after their departure from Rameses In this wildernesse they murmured grievously for want of food and God gave them quails and rained manna from heaven which was still continued till they came into Canaan Vers 14. And they removed from Alush and encamped at Rephidim c. A place famous first for the mutiny of the Israelites for want of water wherein they had almost stoned Moses secondly for the water fetched miraculously out of the rock in Horeb thirdly for the victory they had over the Amalekites who there set upon them fourthly for Moses his meeting with Jethro his wife and sonues and the counsel he had of Jethro for the government of the people Vers 15. And they departed from Rephidim and pitched in the wildernesse of Sinai Hither they came the beginning of the third moneth Exod. 19. 1. and stayed there till the twentieth day of the second moneth of the second year Numb 10. 11 12. Here was the Law given and the tabernacle built and the people punished for making and worshipping a golden calf and Nadab and Abihu take● suddenly away for offering strange fire and the people first numbred and then ordered in their severall camps both for their encamping about the tabernacle and their journeying with it to the land of Canaan Vers 16. And they removed from the desert of Sinai and pitched at Kibroth-hattaavah Here the people fell a lusting for ●lesh God again sent them quails yea for a moneth together in great abundance whereon they surfeted and dyed miserably with the flesh between their teeth Vers 17. And they departed from Kibroth-hattaavah and encamped at Hazeroth Here Miriam and Aaron murmured against Moses and she was smitten with leprosie Numb 12. Vers 18. And they departed from Hazeroth and pitched in Rithmah Which was i● the wildernesse of Paran Numb 13. 1. near Kadesh-barnea whence spies were sent to search the land upon whose report the people murmuring God was wroth and appointed Moses to return again to the red sea as having vowed that not one of that generation should enter Canaan save Joshua and Caleb Vers 20. And they departed from Rimmon-parez and pitched in Libnah This some think is the same which is called Laban Deut. 1. 1. Vers 25. And they removed from Haradah and pitched in Makheloth It is interpreted assemblies so called as some think of the mutinous assemblies of Korah Dathan and Abiram there Vers 31. And they departed from Moseroth and pitched in Bene-jaakan c. Thir Moseroth is called Moserah and Bene-jaakan Beroth-bene-jaakan as likewise in the next verses Hor-hagidgad is called Gudgodah and Jotbathah Jotbath Deut. 10. 6 7. See the note there Vers 35. And they departed from Ebronah and encamped at Ezion-gaber A place by the red sea where was a hatbour for shipping in Edoms land 1. Kings 9. 26. See also 1. Kings 22. 48. Vers 36. And they removed from Ezion-gaber and pitched in the wildernesse of Zin which is Kadesh That is at Kadesh in the wildernesse of Zin Here Miriam dyed the people again murmured for water and had water out of a rock but God was displeased with Moses and Aaron for their unbelief Hither they came in the beginning of the fourtieth year and hence they sent to crave a passage through Edoms land but it was denied them Vers 41. And they departed from mount Her and pitched in Zalmonah Which may be so called of Zelem an image it is thought to be the place where the Israelites for their murmuring were ●tung with fiery serpents and the brazen serpent was by Gods appointment erected for their help Vers 45. And they departed from Iim and pitched in Dibon-gad So called because it was repaired and possessed by the tribe of Gad chap. 32. 34. and to distinguish it from another Dibon which was given to the Reubenites See Josh 13. 15 17. Vers 52. Then ye shall drive out all the inhabitants of the land To wit by destroying them Deut. 7. 12. Vers 54. And ye shall divide the land by lot c. See the note upon chap. 26. 55. Vers 55. Those which ye let remain of them shall be pricks in your eyes
respect to divers parts of this mountain which had severall names and hence it is that Cant. 4. 8. Shenir and Hermon are mentioned together as distinct mountains Vers 11. For onely Og the King of Bashan remained of the remnant of giants That is there was none left of that gig●ntine race in the kingdome of Bashan but Og onely That there were many other giants at this time in other places is most evident for immediately after the Israelites en●●ed Canaan Caleb drove out of Hebron Sheshai and Ahiman and Tal●ai the children of Anak Josh 15. 14. Yea in Davids time there were many giants as Goliah whom David slew Ishbi-benob and divers others 2. Sam. 21. 16. c. But this is spoken onely of the countrey of Bashan Behold his bedstead was a bedstead of iron is it not in Rabbath of the chil-of Ammon How this bedstead which was made of iron that it might be strong enough to bear his huge mass●e body should come to be in Rabbath the chief citie of the Ammonites being not expressed we cannot say sufficient it is that thither it might be conveyed by many severall means as it might be taken in some war between the Ammoni●es and this King and so kept as a glorious Trophic of their victory or it might be given as a present to the Ammonites and so kept as a strange memoriall of the huge stature of thi● King of Bashan Nine cubits was the length thereof and foure cubits the breadth of it after the cubit of a man That is the common cubit of an ordinary man Now the cubit of a man being usually a foot and half according to this measure his bed was foure yards and a half long and two yards broad Vers 13. And the rest of Gilead and all Bashan being the kingdome of Og gave I unto the half tribe of Manass●h c. See Numb 32. 39 40. Vers 14. Jair the sonne of Manasseh took all the countrey of Argob c. See Numb 32. 41. Vers 17. Chinnereth even unto the sea of the plain even the salt sea under Ashdoth Pisgah Eastward What the sea of Chinnereth was which is mentioned here as a part of the bound of that land which was given to the Reubenites and Gadites you may see in the note upon Numb 34. 11 12. As for Ashdoth Pisgah we see vers 27. that Pisgah was a hill and so Ashdoth Pisgah was after the name of a citie there adjoyning in Reubens land Josh 13. 20. at the foot of this hill Vers 23. And I besought the Lord at that time c. To wit after all these things before related when the Lord bad him go up into a mountain and see the land Numb 27. 12. then did Moses intreat the Lord earnestly that he might go into the land of Canaan as knowing that his threatnings are many times conditionall and therefore it might be the Lord would be intreated by him Vers 24. O Lord God thou hast begun to shew thy servant thy greatnesse c. There is here an argument drawn from former mercies to move God to go on and to perfect the mercy begun Vers 25. I pray thee let me go over and see the good land that is beyond Jordan that goodly mountain and Lebanon There is much arguing amongst Expositours to find out what that goodly mountain is whereof Moses here speaks some understanding it of one mountain some of another but I conceive that it is the land that lay next beyond Jordan which they might see from the place where the Israelites now were that is here called that goodly mountain that is that goodly mountanous countrey and that then he adjoyns Lebanon which was in the farther part of the land of Canaan to imply that he desired to see the land quite through Vers 26. But the Lord was wroth with me for your sakes See the note upon chap. 1. 37. Vers 27. Get thee up into the top of Pisgah c. See the note upon Numb 27. 12. CHAP. IV. Vers 1. NOw therefore hearken O Israel unto the statutes c. They that will have a difference put betwixt the two words here used statutes and judgements say that by statutes or ordinances are meant those laws which taught the service of God called by the Apostle ordinances of divine service and by judgements those laws that concerned their duties towards men and the punishment of transgressours As for the promise of life made here to those that kept these laws see the note upon Levit. 18. 5. Vers 6. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdome and your understanding in the sight of the nations c. Seeing other Nations did alwayes deride and despise the Jews way of worshipping God and made a mock of their whole religion it may seem strange why Moses should here say that their keeping of Gods laws should be counted their wisdome and understanding in the sight of the nations But for this we must theref ore know that the drift of these words is onely to shew that the laws which God had given them were so just and righteous that all men unlesse they should wilfully close their eyes must needs acknowledge them to be such and that even the very heathen if ever they came to hear and know their laws must needs in their consciences think so of them and would if ever their eyes were truly opened to judge of things admire the wisdome and understanding of this people above that which was in other nations Vers 7. For what nation is there so great who hath God so nigh unto them c. That is in that which onely makes a nation truly great and honourable namely the speciall interest they have in God there is no nation under heaven to be compared unto ours who have God alwayes dwelling amongst us as is evident by the miraculous signes of his presence with us alwayes ready at hand to hear our prayers and so to protect and defend us from all evils as the strange miracles and wonders he hath wrought for us these many years do evidently prove Vers 11. And ye came near and stood under the mountain and the mountain burnt with fire c. All these things are here repeated to convince and assure the people that the laws he now speaks of were given of God and not of his devising and therefore the more carefully to be regarded Vers 12. And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire c. Moses here addressing his exhortation to disswade the people from idolatry he puts them in mind how that when the Lord at Sinai gave them his law they saw no similitude onely they heard a voice and that God spake unto them out of the midst of the fire which was indeed purposely done thereby to signifie unto the people that the glory of God was incomprehensible and that there was no drawing nigh unto God to behold him with bodily eyes Vers 14. And the
Lord commanded me at that time to tea●h you statutes and judgements c. That is besides the ten commandments written by the Lord himself he at that time also gave me other statutes and judgements which he commanded me to teach you Vers 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves c. Lest again confidence of themselves should make the Israelites slight this warning of avoiding all idolatry in these words he implyes how prone mans nature is to this sinne charging them to be jealous of themselves in this regard and to watch diligently over themselves lest they should be drawn away into this grosse and brutish finne Vers 19. Which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven Moses speaking here against worshipping the sunne moon and starres and then adding this clause which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven he doth therein imply with what admirable wisdome God hath disposed these lights in severall parts of the heaven whereby the sunne moon and starres do according to their severall stations give light sometimes to one part of the earth sometimes to another and some starres do onely shine in some parts of the world and others to other parts B●● withall the chief drift of this clause is to shew what a baseness● of mind it 〈◊〉 be in Gods people to worship such things as are given for servants unto all men even to infidels and heathens Vers 20. But the Lord hath taken you and brought you forth out of the iron furnace c. This is added to imply in what a speciall tie they were bound to be carefull above other people not thus to dishonour God first because God had redeemed them out of the iron furnace that is the furnace wherein iron is melted and so Egypt is called to set forth the miserable and cruell oppression which there they underwent enough to dissolve the spirits of the stoutest and to have wasted and consumed any people and secondly because having thus redeemed them out of Egypt he had taken them to himself as a people of inheritance that is his own people purchased for himself upon whom this blessing should remain from generation to generation Vers 21. Furthermore the Lord was angry with me for your sakes c. This is added first to set forth the wondrous care that God took of them who was angry with Moses for their sakes because he did not sanctifie the Lord in the eyes of the children of Israel Numb 20. 12. secondly to manifest Gods love and mercy to them granting them that favour which he denied his servant Moses to wit of carrying them into that good land of Canaan thirdly to give them a hint how carefull they had need to be to walk uprightly with God who was so farre displeased with him because of his infidelity Vers 24. For the Lord thy God is a consuming fire even a jealous God c. The Lord is here called a consuming fire because of his ex●eeding great indignation against his people when they provoke him by their rebellions and because when he resolves to take vengeance on them he doth many times consume and destroy th●m even as the fire burns up all that stands in its way and again he is called a j●alous God with respect unto the covenant which he made with his people wherein he had taken them to be his spouse and had engaged himself to be as a husband to them and so was as jealous of having the worship due onely to him to be given to any creature as husbands use to be of their wives dealing falsely with them and Solomon we know saith of jealousie that the coals thereof are coals of fire which hath a most vehement flame Cant. 8. 6. Vers 25. When thou shalt beget children and childrens children and shalt have remained long in the land c. That is be not secure and bold to sinne because you are therein settled for if you do God will soon cast you out again Vers 26. I call heaven and earth to witnesse against you c. This obtestation of heaven and earth may be understood of God and the Angels in heaven and men on earth But I rather conceive it to be meant of the dead and unreasonable creatures and that hereby is implyed first that as surely as there was a heaven and an earth so surely should they perish from off the land secondly that the bruit creatures were not so stupid as they if notwithstanding all these warnings given them they should neverthelesse go after strange gods Vers 34. Or hath God assayed to go and take him a nation from the midst of another nation by temptations c. The miracles and wonders which God wrought in Egypt are here called temptations because he did thereby try both the Egyptians to see whether they would be wonne to yield to him and let the people of Israel go and the Israelites to see whether they would be wonne to ●ear the Lord and to trust in him who had done so great and wonderfull things for them Vers 37. And because he loved thy fathers therefore he chose their seed after them c. Not for any thing which he saw in you or in your fathers did he choose you to be his peculiar people but of his own free grace and love and from that love of his it was merely that he brought thee out of Egypt in his sight that is the eye of his providence being still fixed upon them even as a father causes his child to go before him that he may keep his eye upon him and no● suffer him to fall into any danger Vers 44. And this is the law which Moses set before the children of Israel c. He meane●h that which hereafter followeth this therefore is a preface to the next chapter where the repetition of the laws beginneth Vers 49. And all the plain on this side Jord●● Eastward even unto the sea of the plain c. See chap. 3. 17. CHAP. V. Vers 1. ANd Moses called all Israel and said unto them c. That is all the elders and chief of the people It was not possible that so many hundred thousands as the Israelites now were should hear Moses speaking to them But as Exod. 12. 3. where Moses and Aaron were appoined to speak unto all the congregation of Israel vers 21. it is said that they called for all the elders of Israel so it was here Vers 3. The Lord made not this covenant with our fathers c. That which Moses here speaks of is that which he made with the Israelites at Horeb when he gave them the law as is expressed in the former verse The Lord saith he made not this covenant with our fathers that is with our fathers in Egypt or it may be meant of the Patriarchs Abraham and Isaack and Jacob even including all from Adam unto Moses yea and all their ancesters before the giving of
work in them a filiall fear and endeavour to obey God in all things whatsoever whence it is that he addes those words in the next verse Therefore thou shalt keep the commandments of the Lord thy God c. Vers 9. A land whose stones are iron and out of whose hills thou mayest dig brasse c. That is a land wherein their is abundance of mines iron mingled with the stones or as plentifull as stones and brasse to be digged almost out of every hill Vers 14. Which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt from the house of bondage This concerning their deliverance out of Egypt is here inserted first that by putting them in mind of their poore originall when they were bondslaves he might prevent their pride whereof he had given them warning in the foregoing words and secondly that by the remembrance of so great a mercy they might be rendred the more carefull to observe his command●ents Vers 15. Who led thee through that great and terrible wildernesse wherein were fierie serpents and scorpions and drought where there was no water Concerning these fierie serpents see the note upon Numb 21. 6. That which is added here concerning the drought of those places through want of water is either added to set forth their exceeding ●traits and danger in those places where there were fiery serpents and scorpions because being bitten with those venemous creatures they became thereby extremely thirsty and yet had no water to quench their thirst so consequently their miraculous preservation in those dangers or else rather to make way to that which followeth concerning Gods fetching water for them out of the rock of flint for it was but onely in some places of the wildernesse where they had no water Vers 16. Who fed thee in the wildernesse with manna which thy fathers knew not that he might humble thee c. This last clause that he might humble thee c. hath respect principally to the a●flictions mentioned before verse 15. wherewith they had been exercised in the wildernesse yet I see not but that Gods feeding them with manna mentioned in the words immediately foregoing might also be said to have been done for the humbling of them because nothing is more effectuall to humble the hearts of sinn●rs then the great and extraordinary mercies of God if duly considered And that he might prove thee to do thee good at thy latter end That is afterwards at last God doth humble and prove his children by afflictions that afterward he may both bestow those blessings which they wanted upon them to wit when by their former want they have learnt how to prize them and also that he may cause them to bring forth the quiet fruit of righteousnesse See Heb. 12. 11. CHAP. IX Vers 1. HEare O Israel thou art to passe over Jordan this day c. Three things must be noted for the understanding of these words first that by this day here is not meant the very day of their passing over Jordan but onely that the time was now come that ere long they were to passe over Jordan and to enter the land of Canaan for in the Scripture day is often used for time as 2. Cor. 6. 2. Now is the accepted time now is the day of salvation secondly that by possessing nations greater and mightier then themselves is meant the possessing of the land of those nations and thirdly Moses here puts them in mind of the wonderfull strength of the inhabitants purposely to prevent all thoughts of vanquishing them by their own strength and that when they had overcome them they might be sure to ascribe all the glory to God as is evident by the inference he makes upon this vers 3. Understand therefore this day that the Lord thy God is he which goeth before thee as a consuming fire that is know therefore by this which hath been said of the exceeding strength of this people that it were not possible that you should so suddenly destroy so many potent nations if there were not a power above that of mans imployed in the work and that Gods hand is as evident herein as if a consuming fire should go before you to burn them up Vers 3. So shalt thou drive them out and destroy them quickly The meaning of this is that the nations with whom they should fight they should suddenly destroy they should not do it with much toil and labour and many battels but they should soon make an end of them Indeed it cannot be said that all the inhabitants of the land were quickly destroyed for they were not driven out and consumed quickly but by little and little as Moses said before Deut. 7. 22. But here he speaks onely of those with whom they should have warre immediately upon their entrance into Canaan Vers 6. For thou art a stiffe-necked people That is a stubborn and rebellious people that will not stoop to the obedience of Gods laws the Metaphor is taken from unruly heifers that will not yield their necks to the yoke Vers 9. I abode in the mount fourty dayes and fourty nights I neither did eat bread nor drink water See the note upon Exod. 24. 18. Vers 10. And the Lord delivered unto me two tables of stone written with the finger of God See the notes upon Exod 31. 18. And on them was written according to all the words which the Lord spake with you in the mount out of the midst of fire in the day of the assembly That is on those tables of stone were written the ten commandments word for word as God spake them from the mount out of the midst of the fire in the day when the people were called and assembled together at the foot of the mount to hear God speak unto them Vers 12. And the Lord said unto me Arise get thee down quickly c. Some Expositours from this word Arise would inferre that Moses was kneeling before God to receive from him what he should give him in charge when he told him of the peoples sinne and willed him therefore presently to go down amongst them They are quickly turned aside out of the way c. See the note upon Exod. 32. 8. Vers 14. Let me alone that I may destroy them c. See the not●s upon Exod. 32. 10. Vers 15. So I turned and came down from the mount To wit after he had first prayed unto God for the people that they might not be destroyed and God had granted his de●ire for so much is expressed in the story Exod. 32. 11 14. though it be not repeated here Vers 17. And I took the two tables and cast them out of my two hands c. See the note upon Exod. 32. 19. Vers 18. And I fell down before the Lord as at the first fourty dayes and fourty nights c. To wit when he went up again into the mount and carried with him two new tables of stone as God enjoyned him Exod. 34. 1. for
one that useth divination is meant one that foretelleth things to come Mich. 3. 11. The prophets thereof divine for money and by an observer of times is meant such as by observing constellations c. ●id pronounce some dayes lucky and some unlucky and undertake to tell men their fortune The diviners were carried much by inward motions these last by outward observations in the creatures So also by a Necromancer vers 11. is meant such as by raising the dead did enquire after secret things Vers 13. Thou shalt be perfect with the Lord thy God That is tho● shalt keep thy self intirely to him and not seek unto any other for help thou shalt in these things before spoken of as in all other things keep thy self exactly to what thy God hath enjoyned thee and not defile thy self with any of these abominations practised amongst other n●tions Vers 15. The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a prophet from the midst of thee c. The heathens that used these unlawfull arts made account that God did by these means reveal himself to them and deemed such high knowledge a high degree of their happinesse lest therefore the Israelites should think much that they were debarred of this the Lord tells them here that he would by prophets raised up to them from amongst their brethren as fully inform them concerning all things necessary for them to know as if God should come down to them out of heaven I doubt not indeed but this which is here spoken is meant first and principally of Christ for the Apostle Peter saith expressely that this was fulfilled in Christ Acts 3. 22. For Moses truly said unto the fathers A Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you and with respect to this place that seems ●o have been spoken by Philip John 1. 45. Philip findeth Nathanael and saith unto him We have found him of whom Moses in the law and the prophets did write Jesus of Nazareth the sonne of Joseph and that by Christ John 5. 46. Had ye believed Moses ye would have believed me for he wrote of me But withall I see not how we can exclude the other Prophets between Moses and Christ the drift of these words being manifestly this to shew that they should have no cause to seek to enchanters and diviners because God would still raise them up Prophets to reveal his will unto them and how could this be a stay to them if it were meant onely of Christ who was not sent unto them above one thousand and foure hundred years after this therefore I think it must be understood principally of Christ as the onely Prophet of his Church but withall inde●initely of all the Prophets as subordinate to Christ sent from him and inspired by him The Jews indeed understand it not commonly of the Messiah but of another notable Prophet besides like unto Moses which was to be sent to them John 1. 25. But herein they were grossely deceived for it is evident by those places Acts 3. 22. and 7. 37. that Christ was the Prophet here principally meant though other Prophets are al●o comprehended as is before said As for that clause a Prophet like unto me though the Prophets afterwards sent to Israel were not equall to Moses Deut. 34. 10. And there arose not a Prophet since in Israel like unto Moses whom the Lord knew face to face yet they were like him men sent from God as he was raised up from amongst their brethren as he was and this is here chiefly intended see vers 16. According to all that thou desiredst of the Lord thy God in Horeb in the day of the assembly saying Let me not hear again the voice of the Lord my God neither let me see this great fire any more that I die not and so was Christ a high priest taken from among men Hebr. 5. 1. yea like him and above him for first as Moses was as a Mediatour betwixt God and the people Deut. 5. 5. I stood between the Lord and you at that time to shew you the word of the Lord for ye were afraid by reason of the fire and went not up into the mount so was Christ Heb. 8. 6. But now hath he obtained a more excellent ministrie by how much also he is the mediatour of a better covenant which was established upon better promises secondly in excellen●y of Moses it is said Numb 12. 6 7. And he said Hear now my words If there be a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known unto him in a vision and will speak unto him in a dream My servant Moses is not so who is faithfull in all mine house and so of Christ John 1. 17 18. For the law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. No man hath seen God at any time the onely begotten sonne which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Thirdly in faithfulnesse for so it is said of Christ Heb. 3. 2. Who was faithfull to him that appointed him as also Moses was faithfull in all his house yea and above Moses vers 5 6. And Moses verily was faithfull in all his house as a servant but Christ as a sonne over his own house Fourthly in that as Moses brought them the law from God so Christ the Gospel out of his Fathers bosome Fifthly in signes and wonders for Christ was a prophet mightie in deed and word Luke 24. 19. as Moses also was yea more mightie John 15. 24. If I had not done among them the works which none other man did they had not had sinne And sixthly as Moses carried the Israelites from their bondage in Egypt to the land of Canaan so Christ delivered his people from their spirituall bondage and opened heaven for them John 6. 40. And this is the will of him that sent me that every one which seeth the sonne and believeth on him may have everlasting life Vers 18. And will put my words in his mouth and he shall speak unto them all that I shall command him This is meant of the faithfulnesse of those Prophets which God would send unto them to wit that they should deliver whatever God gave them in cha●ge and nothing but that which he should put into their mouthes But most eminently was this verified in Chri●t when he came to preach the Gospel unto men for those words of eternall life were the words which God here saith he would put into his mouth and which accordingly he faithfully delivered to the people All things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you John 15. 15. Vers 19. Whosoever will not hearken unto my words which he shall speak in my name I will require it of him That is I will punish him for it and so indeed God did alwayes severely punish those that would not
that I say the sinne here intended is I conceive rash and unadvised swearing and because if a man swore to do good to his neighbour when it was not in his power he did thereby engage himself for some good to his neighbour which afterwards his neighbour could not enjoy and if he swore to do evil to his neighbour there was at least a purpose of trespassing upon him which was in Gods eye as if he had done it therefore he is enjoyned for this sinne to bring a trespasse-offering though at first it be hid from him that is when at first he bound himself by this oath through passion or unadvisedness● he did not know or consider that he sinned in so swearing yet when he knows of it saith the ●ext that is when he i● once convinced that he hath sinned herein then he shall be guilty in one of these then the guilt shall lye upon his conscience whether he hath sworn to do good or evil and for his atonement he must bring a trespasse-offering unto the Lord as is added in the following verses Vers 5. And it shall be when he shall be guilty in one of these things That is when he shall be guilty in one of these three cases before named he shall confesse his sin laying his hand upon the sacrifices head so shall make an atonement for himself Vers 6. And he shall bring his trespasse-offering c. This also no lesse then the sinne-offering was a type of Christ whose soul was made an offering for sinne Isa 53. 10. The word in the originall is the same that is here translated a trespasse-offering Now how the trespasse-offering differed from the sinne-offering is noted befo●e upon the first verse of this chapter Vers 7. And if he be not able to bring a lambe c. This exception was not onely for these particular offenses before named but for all where a sinne-offering was to be brought by the common people that in no case poverty should disable a man to make his peace with God Now concerning these turtle doves and young pigeons see the note upon Levit. 1. 14. One for a sinne-offering and the other for a burnt-offering Which wer● also or atonement Levit. 1. 4. Vers 8. And wring off his head from his neck but shall not divide it asunder This direction concerning the turtle dove or young pigeon that was to be offered for a sinne-offering may be understood two severall wayes either that the priest was to wring off the head but not to divide the body of it asunder or else which is the commonest exposition that he was to break the neck of it asunder but yet not to p●ll the head quite off from the body of which see the note upon Levit. 1. 15. Vers 11. But if he be not able c. then he that sinned shall bring for his offering the tenth part of an Ephah c. That is the tenth part of a bushell the tenth part whereof was called an O●er Exod. 16. 36. near about our pottle He shall put no oyl upon it c. To distinguish this sinne-offering from those other meat-offerings whereof see Lev. 2. 1. Besides this happely might signifie that neither by any grace in us whereof the oyl was a signe nor by any prayersof ours whereof the frankincense might be a signe but onely by Christ we are reconciled unto God whereof this meat-offering was a type or else because the oyl frankin●●nse might signifie the joy gladnesse of him that brought the offering the Lord might appoint these to be left out in the sinne-offering because of the sorrow humiliation of spirit required in him that brought this offering as we may see in a like case Num. 5. 15. Vers 15. If a s●ul commit a trespasse and sinne through ignorance The Hebrew word translated here comm●t a trespasse though it be generally used for all transgression and disloyalty that the inferiour committeth against the superiour yet for the most part it is applyed to evils committed against the Lord in his holy things and so ●●gnifieth sacrilegiously to trespasse upon the Lord and his prie●ts by ●ny wrong done to God in his holy things when by any mans ignorance unadvisednesse or errour for it must not be understood of th● presumptuous defrauding God of those things which belonged to him God was damaged in his offerings as when any man payed not the full tithe due or did work with his first-born bullock or shear his first-born sheep or keep back ought of the price of things dedicated to holy use or take any of the priests portion in the sacrifices c. Then ●e shall bring for his trespass● unto th● Lora a ramme c. A greater sacrifice then was brought for other trespasse-offerings to shew the greatnesse of the sinne of sacriledge With thy estimation by shekels of silver c. That is with as much money as thou the priest shalt value the damage at according to the shekels of the Sanctuary for so it is explained ver 16 18. Vers 16. And shall adde the fifth part thereto c. For so much was also added to holy things redeemed Levit. 27. 13 15 19. But if he will at all re●eem it then he shall adde a fifth part thereof unto thy estimation And if he that sanctified it will redeem his house then he shall adde the fifth part of the money of thy estimation unto it c. Vers 17. And if a soul sinne and commit any of these things c. The ram injoyned for a sinne-offering makes it clear that Moses here speaks concerning the same sinne of sacriledge whereof before onely this particular is again more clearly urged that though he wist it not though he was utterly ignorant yet he must as guilty bring this sacrifice for his atonement CHAP. VI. Vers 2. IF a soul sinne and commit a trespasse against the Lord c. This Law is concerning sinnes done wittingly where an injury is done to a neighbour and God also is particularly offended by a li● and false oath Vers 5. He shall even restore it in the principall That is the very thing it self or the full worth of it And shall adde the fifth part more thereto c. If he were judicially convicted of it he was to be proceeded against according to those judiciall Laws Exod. 22. which injoyn double paiment but this Law is for those who touched in conscience confesse that whereof they could not be convinced by the Law in which case they were onely to adde a fifth part and to give it unto him to whom it appertaineth whether the first owner or the heire c. Vers 9. Command Aaron and his sonn●s c. Hitherto the substance of the sacrifices have been prescribed now the severall rites of each are described more particularly And first for burnt-offerings though the daily burnt-offering which was offered every morning and the last every evening is here chiefly intended Because of the